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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1979-03-22 - Orange Coast Pilot• Weight hft1ng off dul\ pa)'\ ofl fur rut•f t~hll•r Rt<•k Lu nd quist as he ~xl rtl'J ll'" ll ~t>.tr 11111 Sh..tw-n Holwrl~un from waist deep mud. The boy was visiting Bristol, rrom his home in Littleton, Colo. National . Requested Ne~rtMan, Dr. Small Caused 65, Drowns in Pain,. Illness VOL 71. NO. 11, J SliCTICNIS, .. rAOIES Arw~ PARLIAMENT MEMBERS CONGRATULATE BEGIN Mldc:h East Treaty Talks All Over But the Signing Dayan Visit$ U.S. For Treaty Annex WASHINGTON <A P > - laraeU Foreign Minister Moshe Dayu was Oytna to Wasbingt.oo today to work oul details ol the mllltar) annex to the Egypt- ls r ael peace treaty and a "metn0randum of auurances" lflinFrmul BIAltD Va. <AP) -Fiaurina tbeJ W ihiie to me, abcMll 100 la .... a the Bland Correc- Uollll c.e.r-launched a phony en* ea scheme that luted more Ula a yHr, autborltlea ~ ..... llltted ··-.. 2 men British National C.are Bill Proposed WASIDNGTON (AP) -The Carter admin is tration a n · nounceatoday it · will a sk Congress in the next few months to take a limited first step toward national health in- surance. al a cost SlO billion to $15 billion more than present government spending on health care. But even the preliminary, so- called Phase One plan "wouJd have no significant budgetary impact until Fiscal 1983" and would be contingent on con- gressional approval or effective legislation to curb hospital cost increases. said HEW Secreatary Joseph A. Califano Jr. The barest details of President Carter's proposal were spelled out by Califano in a speech pre- pared for delivery in New York. The secreta r y o f heallh, education and welfare insisted that "the president remains committed to the goal of provid- ing every American with cov· er age for basic health services.•' Califano said Carter will out- line in a message to Congress his plan for a universal and comprehensive health insurance plan, which he promised during his 1976 election campaign. · But ror now, Califano said, congressional leaders agree that Congress "cannot and will not digest a complete national health plan in one bite." The Phase One proposal will offer protection against the high cost or major illness -co·called catastrophic coverage -and un- specified "significant impro~ menl in health care benefits for the ••ed. the poor, for employed (See HEALTH, Pase AZ> Monster Dunt Dol,phins Trained to Search NEW YORK CAP> -Two dolphins are being trained in Florida to aid explorers in their search this summer for the Loch Ness monster in the Scot- tish lake Ness, The New York Times reported today. Dr. Robert H. Rines, who has led a Loch Ness expedition each s ummer the past deca~e. said the animals will carry cameras and strobe lights to sur- vey the deep waters, according to the newspape r. The equipment will be attached to harnesses or vests. Rines said. .~ In training sessions the dolphins have found . tracked, and photographed underwate~ creatures such as sea turtles, the Times quoted Rmes as say- ing. This summer's team will be sponsored by the Academy of Applied Science of Boston. Experts from the U.S. Navy's San Diego Research Center have been consulted on the care and training of the dolphins. According to legend. the Loch Ness monster in- habits a lake in Scotland. Scientists have unsuc- cessfully tried to locate the monster although villagers have reported occasional sightings . Pain, Illness Lagunan Testifies Agaimt Dr. Small BJ aEBECCA HELM Ol_Deity ........... A woman who alle1es abe suf- fered serious lnfectlon and ex- tensive scarring followint tblgh- lift sur1ery by Sanla Ana plastic surgeon Dr. Ralph Small testified al a slate medical board hearing Wednesday. Marcia Weed, 41, of Laguna Beach, sakl she suffered lllness and pain for several months rouowina tbe June 29, 1978, operation. • She wu bedridden at home with a bigh rever for several days, sbe said. Mrs. Weed's testimony came durin& a State Board or Medical Quality Assurance license re- vocation bearing which is now underway in Santa Ana. Tbe 29-year-old physician races allegations or "gross nelllaeoce and incompetence" in connedlon wilb lhe Nov. Z7. 1171, death of Kim Plock. 33, of Santa Ana, and in tbe case ol lln. Weed. Newport Man, 65, Dies in Boat Fall lln. Plock, • mother of three, died five days alter she went in- to cardiac arrest while uaclerao- iq brast implant 1ursery at Small's Santa Ana office, ac- ~ to &Ille .Uesatlona. An Oraqe County Superior Court temporarily barred Small from pnetleinC medicine untll tbe medical board reacbea it.a deelakm. Pollee .W tod81 tlaat ~ • Ae~ lo Newport BNdl Jam• llaelatJre, 11, died Wed· police reports, llaelntJN w• DllUJ ..._ be .,,.,...t.IJ fell ..... • bour earlier br Mftl'al from .......... die ....... ol ""-· all of wllom ........ Newport......... WMtlpdnl offteen dW be ap. llHlllt.t:'• boclr was .... pe8rtldtolil blloalea&M. eoHnda lp.m. Wectneeday near 1111o..tur8lddlaP1111 Pollee bell.wt •1etlltJN'• tbt C--.. bltw ... die moored death•• aeetdeatal *., boet tbat WM Ida bome ~llte furtlalrbmltlcaUoa hllthe .. block of ...,,..._ A~ ouleome ol a C!Ol'Qller'1 J oa tbe ... ._ Pa ' Illa. • , report. ~~~~~~~~:!;.{~.J~-~-- • ......,.,. State DeputJ Al- tarneJ 0•11'11 Darid Cflaadler, zr.111nt''ll tbe IMdleal board, ed Jin. Weed "1 dllpMe ........... coatlDued net· .... ..... Dr. 8ma1l ud,.,...... to ............ llDctol' uaW ()dGk. ··1 didll't eomalt wttb .,... elH beeaue I t~ed blm," lln. Weed ~ii'I Ud to ( ... aJllGDY, I S• Al) Valet ·Also Killed THE HAGUE, Netherlands <AP) Two m yst e rious gunmen shot the British am- bassador to the Netherlands and his valet today outside the en· voy 's home ·and then escaped in morning rush-hour traffic. The two died a short lime later at a hospital. Authorities could not im· mediately explain the motive for the assassination or Sir Richard Sykes. 58, a security expert for the British diplomatic corps. Police said Sykes and the 20- year -old Dutch vale t , Karel Struub, were shot at about 9 a .m. outside the a mbassador's r eside nce as the en voy was about to enter his Rolls·Royce for the 10-minute drive to the British Embassy. It was reported as many as six s hols were fired . The am- bassador was hil at least once, and one buJlet struck the valet. who was holding the car door. police said. Eyewitnesses said the gunmen fled through a nearby aJley and disappeared into traffic, police reported. The killers were between 35 and 40 years old and were dressed in dark suits. the witnesses sald. Sykes' chauffeur, unharmed! in the attack, drove him to UM\ (See SIA y. Pase AZ> Coast Weather Cloudy night and early morning hours and partly cloudy Friday. Lows tonight 44 to so. Hiabs Fri- day 58to64. INSIDE TOD.-Y Saft Frmlc8'CO'•· An •• °" fr• eoor to Mcomtng tlae NC09ld 1ftOlt poplllar t01trid i oftracffolt .. the eotmlfV, U I oaorula dll probing too. Sn ~·· ,1 .... ' ••-..,,._ "" ._umn a .,......_a:-....,..: L.IL.... j r.::~ : ==--·~ Cl = ··~ ..., ...... u I:== .:: =•u i: .... M A DAIL Y PIL.01 MONTPF.Llt,:R, Vt (AP1 Spnna eamf' l(l Monl~ll~r with It whiff and ll prunr . u nHrly ~ rontMlAnl limped napJ)('d and wt1bbll'<I lo lh(I ril) • fourth annui.t Rotten ~nuker ConU·•t (.'lutehlnlC 1urnt h·Ka atMt h11h l4'pp1n1 lht' t'hall4'nf(t'r1t mad• tht•1r wi.y 1wru 5 lht• 11ta.ce of lht• M<1ntrwl11 r tlt·t'reatlott ('4•11\t"r On<' by on Wcdne day look1n1 U._t rt'fUKt"t"' from an ¥lh1tle 1t fUC1l rommerc1al •·••ETTY c ao . rat:TTY 4,&o ," )udu Warr n K1t1n1lll r au1d Mpprovln111ly a. No ~ dt•plot'd hts Uttpl)inu lOD&Ud 'Uoy, oh bov thow 1tr1• dl\l(U\tlnl( ucldf•d K1tin11lln who u1l 1111th:<l ltw t'l11ltw ,,111n on hi ~ ow.1• WM'I m11-.1l y ... how 1111 l'urpu.'lt' vt tht• c·ontt•:.I ~··~ "''ti 11 hM•J lu .,.,., \.aid rt•c·11•otion d111·~·to1 t't•r ry (·,:.tan · It 1'l..irtt-d out JU'll for fun hut 11 i. rt•ull v l(rown 111t11 bOffit'ltU11t1 lht• kull\ look for w ,1rd to t'<H'h y1•.ir ht 11111\1 County Crops Outlook Bright By TOM Bi\RLEV Of IM 0 ... 1, 1'1Mll Su" Rt•ccnl heavy rn1ruo have de lay1•d one or two crops und forced formers to hold hack on some springtime chore:, but the outlook for Orange County agriculture looks very good, agricultural analysts C'ommt:nl eel today "The ooly people re ally atrect.- ed by tbe raan were \he· atrawberry growers," said Dur The tford of the Orange County Farm Bureau. Newport Man Jailed After Rape Attempt A Newport Bcuch man re- mained juilc.>d today following his urrest Wednesday 1n conncc lion with the attempted rape of ;, 1>ludenl nurse The alleged sexual a i;saull of the 21-year-old vts1tor from Mon· tann occurred a wee k earlier as the woman w as :tilting on the bea<'h in the 300 block of Eus t Oc •an l"ront. De lecl1vc Mike McDonough booked Steven Irwin Wuggoner, 24. of 124 28th St. on suspacmn of as1tault to commit rape. He 111 held In 11eu of Sl0,000 bail. Th victim told poUc., her as s a1lunl approached her while she was sitting on the beach and they challcd b4.'fore he attacked her S~ fought h1m off and ran away Ui.inl( 1nformallon from lhut conversation, McDonough tillld. he located Waggoner. F,....P~AJ SLAY ••• hospital while an ambulance picked up the youth. The ambusador's residence, a historic mansion. Is In an af fluent r~idenlial area of th( Dutch capital ··we have not received any threat.a, a nd there b1tve been oo cla •ms since the shootlng," a spokesman al the British Em bassy said. In London, the Bntlsh Foreign Office aaid il knew no reason fOJ the attack. The flag on the Foreign Ministry building in London w•~ lowered lo half-staff aner new~ ot the ambuaador'a killing, and Queen Elizebeth 11 :sent a measage of sympathy lo Liid) Sykea. BacJring Alleged NEW YORK tAP> -A former official al the South African In· formatlon Mln\ttry has said South Africa provided money lo help defe11t former Sen. Dick Clark of Iowa, The New York Times reported today. OftANOI CCMIT ' DAILY PILOT °"'9ee c.i.--~':!.... ...=.i'l:'.:11 'tin.__~ ~ •• , ...... (71 ...... a111ma•Mua I I' I...,. ,,_ ... ~ ..... ....... °11.rtii' .. 'The bt-rrat•b J<ol wet .rnd thnl' wa~ !>Orne !>potlag~ t\11tJ , of eouri.c, they don't last ai. long m lb e m-.rkt'l once they r e pa('ked. "But the strawberry 1rrowt•rs l know urcn't com1>hHn1ng even though they wen• hit by lht· fro~t earli er this year. It won't he u record crop by any means but 1l will be & good one and some de · licloua fruit will be hitting the markets withJn the next week." Jim Harnett of the Orange County Division of A1mculture said the nature of recent rainfall prevented any signiflcitnl damage in the c<Junty'i. field~ and orchards "We had plenty of intervals between s hower:.," he l)a1d "Thul allowed the rain to soak into the ground and it gave farmers a chance to mop up bet wel'n showers.·· Harnett ~•Id hi" s urvey of the (•ounty'l) agricultural acreag<' in d1cates good r r ops with asparagus and cele ry cxpech::d to hit the markets m the nut few days "Man y farmers a re planting now and we expect good crops or RelJ peppers and to mat.oe1o," he sa 1d. "And, of course, the rain ha11 been a bleuln~ for tht' orange, lemon and avocado or -chards. They lov • that s ail free water." Larry Tyler off/le lrvtne Com- pany said he expect.a an unusual ly bigb crop of avocadoea this year. ··our citrus crops are good and the rain will benefit them ." he sajd. "Uut we don't expect any record crops this year since frost killed sorne of our fruit "The o n e thing we can guarantee as that pnccs of much o f our produce , particularly strawberrie9, arc going to be higher ," Tyler said . "The I06ses to frost made that Inevitable." Thetford , Harnett and Tyler agr eed that what Or.nge Coun· ty's farmers need r1ght now Is a s pell of warm, dry weather. "We've had all the rain we need ri11bl now," Tyler said. "We've gOl chores and planting t-0 do and we'd like lo be able t.o gel on wilh ll " ,,...,P.,,eAJ SURGERY. • trusl hlm. r wouJd have lost my reason lf I hadn't." Called lo offer s upporting testimony for Mrs. Weed Wed· nesday wa11 Jane A. Stevens. Mrs . Stevens s aid she is a close friend and stayed In Mrs. Weed 's Laguna Beach home to care for her following the June surgery. During the rive days she 11tayed with S mall's patient, Mn. 8teveM aald er lriend ran a fever up to UM at times and pusaed skln \issue into a bedpan. Mra. St.evens also claimed she repeatedly caUed Small 'a office. The doctor did nol com e to Mni. Weed 's atd until July s. however, she said, when he aenl o m edical t.cchn1clan to ht. pa- Uent '1 house to br1n1 !Mr back lo bla Santa Ana office. . In crou examlnatJon, Small'• defense att.ornoy Torry Giles queaUoned the recall ol events by both .OIMn. He claimed hl1 client dMS try to return Mn. Stevtnt' aad lln. Wttd'• calla on aeveral oc· ~•1lona. ,,._P-AJ HEALTH ••• people IDd for othtn wbo do not now ••• •'3'1&• btalth ca.,. C!OYer.,"C 1D01.W. ....... C.rter'• laklll pip ............ "• IOUlld ltrue· tun for tutar.. ........ 9lld to la&o lfted la iM fllcal yt1r ..,, n'•Od.I, ... •• prHldeat'1 deel1ton .............. l• a ,.rlod of ........., I 1•1111t ... wD a ,, ............... ....... •••l:&:~u.. ...... . ~ ....... ..., ..... .. ........ ~ ..... .... .... . .. . ~~ &o ta •·" Callluo The atmo.phere wu Informal Wf'doeaday and the rults fe w • 'W• do tn1l1l lhal a anener be 1n grunteY condition due lo uac, nc>l abUH, .. CoaUn 111ld. Tiit: 'tJDGt:s POLITELY PRETENDED not to notice u p1ur of Hu.ti f'upp)r• mHqueradtna a8 rotten :mcukens Aoo they turn •d lheir backe while Kelly Bashaw. 9, e11.plained thul "my father let ffll' run over mine whh hli. luwnmowPr ' \)ndt•r Co3lln'11 ~upervlluon, the Judge~ S('ort'<.I the oonteatants in alx ruk1tol"le11 f'yPlets, t.onteuc . 110lc, h el. lu\:~S and over1tll con dltmn 1'hott• who 1turv1ved the fi rst cul returned to demonstrate th~ uaubihty o( their n ·•ker• by running or t.k1pping ro(M' For nl(lt" thun an hour . w Judl(tS ooh'd and aah'd o~er lat \ •rt!d toea, hr !dded sldea and lost lact.~. while other flnahsl:I ex rh111161cd wmir out l<:thnJques Dowra Jtlain Street Margart'l Truclt•au. t'~lrang<:d w1f(' of llll' <'Jnc.tdwn pri m<: msru:.t<.:r, and hl·r !:>ons Justin, 7, rldt 1 and S;wha 5, holr1 huntl!> as they wal k down M ~un Str<~<·t USA dur 1ng CJ visit to Walt 01:.ncy World in FJ11rnJa . $10 Million Suit Filed in 'Attack' ~ promOlions consultant who alleges he was forced at gun point to pay ~.000 to some of the Stephen John Bovan murder defendants and lheir a ssoc1atet. filed suit Wednesday set•k1ng $10.2 milbon Byron Linde alleges in tbt• Orange County Superior Court complaint he was t.osRed a~ainst a wall whHc attending a July 1977 meeting al Prasadam Db tributing International Inc. in Newport Beach. drug s muggling rini.t head quartered along the Orang<' Coast and opcr uted under Ure guise <if leg1limul•• h11s1n1·11s Linde, an l11s c·1v1I complainl, said the thrt>als mad<! ;rgum ... t him forecd ham to S4!11 rt•al estalt' below tl:i value to comt.> up with th'• $3S,OOO 1·a11h He 111 l)Ccking $10 million m punitive damuge~ al(ainr.t th(· defendant~. along with s:m.ooo in general damagf'b and re covering of his SJS,000. "I TIUNK IUC.BALL 18 THE best way," aald ArUlwr 'l'Mr· rlen, 14, a veteran of three coot.eat.a. 0111 Batff. 13. diaasreed. ''If you 11de down the 1treet on your bike with DO brak• and .11t1ck your foet out, you can wear them out quicker." M offered. On stuJ(e , yount: Kevin McCrea -"Capt.ala Purple" to hb friend& dazzled the Judacea with hla tallet"ed .tenniea coattuted against purple socks Right behind ham. No. 28 hill 1llr»Y pieces of sneaker u be hob bl.-<.t from the stage 'rhe Judges were dearly impreued. Af'Tt:B A 8B1£F HVDDLE, T HE score sheet.I were talllt:d und the resuJll! were announced. J ohn ftouelle. 12, n a pped away ~ith first prize a ca~ &f foot powder. a new pair of running shoei; and the koowled•e bl8 entry wi ll enJOY u place of honor at the ~reatioo cent.er for \be next year Car-pole Encounter Dims Lights Electnl'ul power to homt.>s and bustrH.·i.i.e s n ea r H arbor Boulevard and /\dams Avenue was knoc kt·d out ror u IJrwf pc:rwd Wt•rlnc1oday when a <:ar :.mashed into u µowt·r 1>01 • rm Dcodur Avenue. Co~t" Me1ou po lice :.:;rnJ T he driver of \ht vehicle. 1den llfied a1o l',;dward Dale S<.'olt II of l\nah1•1m. was taken lo Co~ta Ml•sa M1·rnoriul lloi.1,1tal for treatment of minor in juries, ac cording lo polic•' Scott told 0H1ceri-he was headed north on Oeodar when he aaw another cur approaching ha m nt'ar t he Buker Str c-et m· krsN·t1on I le su1d he ac<'elerat e d to avoid the other cur , ~lanel'd at ht!> i.rx:edomcler a rnornt·nt. thf'n lookccl up to i.c.:c lilt' power 1x1l«' rn front of him Although he attempted lo brake, Scott could not avoid the pole. shearing 1t Off at the base. Ot he r poles a l s o were damu~ed . caus rn~ a loss or power for an estimated 1,400 c u stomers 1r1 the area . a Sou tht•rn Cal1forn1a Edhon Compa ny spokesman said Blacked out were homes and bus1nt•sscs in the area bounded by Gisler Avenue to the north. Adams to the south. l"a1rvrew lload lo the east and J acaranda t\ vi•n11c on lhc Wf'Rt Som1· huM11t•s1;1•s i.llong lfarbor Houl<'varct ah.o wt•n• without power The spokesm un said it took o n. Jy about LS minutes for Edison crews to rest.ore power to the a rea. The accident occurred al about noon and power was on again at 12: 15, he said. Probe Hampere d N E W YORK <AP ) The GeneraJ Accounting Otrice has c harge d that U S . Attorney General Griffan Bell and CIA Director Stansfield Turner are illegally barring congressional investigato rs from secret in· telllgcnce f1let1 , The Ne w York Times reported today. ,.,....r.,,eAI PEACE .•• The New York Times reported today that the memorandum will include these two prin c1ples Ir Egypt. violates any part of the treaty, the United :-;tale~ would com1ult with ls ruel on what to do next . And if the Umt cd Nations Sc<·ur1ty Counc il takes action aguinst the treaty . the United States would use it~ veto power or othcrwi.se t 1tke necessary steps. The m e morandum of at. suranc~ as similar to a secret series of agreements the United States and Israel M~ned in 1975 after the Sinai disengagement u~rccment But this time . the Stale Department has said the documeut will be made public. Israel's Parliame nt gave lands lide endorsement to the ~ace treaty curly today Capping an orten-raucous 28· hour debate, the 120·m e mber KnessPl voted 95·18 in favor of the treaty that will e nd the JO year slate of war with Egypt, Israel's moet populous Arab foe . return the Sinai Peninsula, cup l ured from Egypt in 1967. arid pave the way for limited Palesll n1an autonomy on the west bank of the Jordan River und ID th•· Gaza Stnp . Most or lhMe voting ag;tinst the treaty we re nationalist:.. many from Begin's own Llkud Party, who oppot;e return of the Sina i a nd the c reat ion of a Palestinian council lo govern th•· West &.ak and Gaza The ltny pro.Soviet Com m unis t Party also opposed the pr1ct, cla1m1n~ 1t did not go for enough towurd Pa lesllruan independence Two deputies abstained, thret: others voted "present," and tw<> were abeent. Begin, grinning, told reporters the vote was "the largest ma. jorlty the Knesset has e ver given on a political issue." President Carte r :;enl con gratulat1ons saying, "Israel'-, Kneuel s poke with a voice heard around the world -a voice for peace." Egypt 's 360-member Parha m ent will consider the pact after it ls si~. And, with a gun al his head, was forced to pay the cash or (ear harm lo t\imself and his family, Unde alleged. Newport Beach police ha ve identified Linde as a con11ultant hired by Prasadum businessmen to help promote "Bionic Bits," a cookie being marketed by the businessmen and endors<..>d b y the "Sb Miiiion Dollar Man." f'rasadam was a Newport &:ach investment firm once controlled by four self·proclatmed Krishna devotees. SENIOR GTIZEN SALE Defendant.a in the suit Include five suspect'\ in the murdl'r of Fountain Valley drug dealer Uo v an, Alexander K·uhk , Raymond Resco, J oseph Oavii., Joseph r cdcrowski and Anthony M ar one Jr., a long with th<' Bovan triggerman. convicted murderer J erry Pete r J.'aori. Other defond1tnts m the civil ault. are the former head or the Laruna Bea<'h Krishna Temple , Roy ChritUopher Richard. An thon)' Muone Sr. and f"rank Ro11I, who all have been callt.od to t.etUly in the lengthy criminal proceedings s temming from Bovan 'a October urn alaylng. Police have alleaed their In ve•tlcaUon Into the Bovan slay In& uncovered an int.ernaUonaJ Public Rates Carter 'Low' NEW YORK (APt -Aller the Camp David Mldeut 1ummlt lut yu.r, ADMtricana' opinion of President Carter soared. But hi• 1ucce11fuJ M•ddle East abutUe d•r.•omHy thl1 monlh didn't raff tu. lladln1 tn tht ·~ .. "'· the l*blic!, an Auatlated II· NBC Newt poll found. Amerlcant do approve of Carter'• .noru to 1tt KcYPt and Israel to liln 1 peace treaty, the poll taket\ Monday and Tuetday .. .. Wluit lhlJ don'J Uke la the way UM pnaldent bH dealt with ,...., _. the eeonomr -t..o 111 ...... ,., Lo Amerleu1' ....,,.., ... dau fONllD .,. f 1lrt. ftle publl~'• raUnp ol ~··wk• mie and tHrtr ,,_..., ere et UM ..... ..,. "" .... ,. tbe =s=..-='.~uouUn ln l I OO's to choose from! PllCD , ••• s1 COITA MllA Mt I.11th IT. (Acal "'°"' lalr:n . '*' to Marte Ca11ndcw1) '42· .. 17 Mon. • ff(. 1().6 lat. te» Oolecl ... Many fabrics. Many styles OVER 100 Recliner Rockers and Wall Recliners IN STOCK hnmedlate FREE DELIVERY SALE ENOS MARCH 31 Showcase • MllllOM VIUO llltlMarpeatte .. , . !Corner of Mareuertte and'Aalloaear) 4t•ltOI Mllf\ .... lo. ... lo.I aa.. ..... l Orange '3oast fOITIQ N " .... ...._ ,,,;I Today's Closln~ N.Y. Steeks VOL~ 72, NO. 81 , 3 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFOANIA THURSDAY, MARCH 22, 1979 N TEN CENT,S Can't Afford UCI' 'Profs Aldrich -, . ') By PIBUP &OSMAAIN Of• o.11, rii. , ..... In the past 18 month~. UC Irvine has failed lo &ltcnct pro fessors to fill 30 Ol>f'll f"culty positions because of low pny ~nd the high cost ol loc:~I bousmg , u." chancellor said today Chancellor Daniel Aldrk b Jr said professors hsted thosu rea sons for deciding to teach at alternate institutions rather than at UCI. A ldr1r h satd comp ~una un IVN. illt''· SU('h IU> lJSC, h1tve grabb<-d up pru~1)l•cltv~ UCl pro lessors bt>cau~~ they o rcer Sttli. 1 • t! percent to SO P"rt~nt htt;ht>r thun tht· bnt UCJ bid tn many or the" <'llses. he u 1d. proft-ssors t'hos•• to teach in other parts of t he country bt't'ause they couldn't afford lo buy ho us e s 1n So ut h ern Califonua "They found tl too expensive .... to ltvt! here." Aldrtch 'laid "They 1n mply swd. 'No thank .vou "' Aldnch said that m the same 18 month period, UCl htts been able lo fill only half a dot.en faculty vucancies on more than u temporary basis "The cost of Ji ving here, and at UCLA. is higher than any other of the campuses of the un- iversity," Aldrich said. In one rase or attempting to Health Package Carter Seeks National Insurance WASHJNGTON tAP> -The Carter a dminis tration a n- nounced today it wi ll a s k Congress in the next few months lo take a limited first step toward national h ealth in· ~ surance,atacost $10billiont.Q$15 • billion more than present govem- ment spending on healthcare. But even the preliminary, so. called Phase One plan "would · have no signWcant budgetary impact until Fiscal 1983" and would be contingen t on con- gressional approval or effective legislation to curb hospital cost increases, said HEW Secretar y JosePh A. Califano Jr. Sickness, , Pain Told c l By Patient ' ,, By REBECCA HELM Of llM Daoll' l"I ... Slaff A woman who alleges she suf· rered serious l.nfectJon and ex· tensive scarring followin1 Wah· llft sur1ery by Sant.a Ana plastic s urgeon Dr. R a lph Small testified al a state medical board bearing Wednesday. Marcia Weed. 41. of ·Laguna Beach. said she suffeted illness and pain for several months following the June 29, 1978, operation. She was bedridden at home with a high fever for. several days, she said. Mrs. Weed's testimony came during a Slate Board of Medical 4 Qua1ily Assurance license re- voealion bearing which is now underway in Santa Ana. The 29·year-old physician faces allegations of ·•gross negligence and incompetence" in connection with the Nov. 27, 1978. death of Kim Plock. 33, of Santa Ana, and in the case of Mrs. Weed. Mrs. Plock, a mother of three, died five days after she went in- to cardiac arrest while undergo- • ing breast implant surgery at Small's Santa Ana office, ac· cording lo the allegations. An Orange County Superior Court temporarily barred Small from practicing medicine until the medical board reaches its decbioo. Wednesday, State Deputy At· torney General David Chandler, representiq the medical board, asked Mrs. Weed wby despite her ordeal, she CODllnued treat· meat with Dr. Small and refused to eomult another doctor until October. , "I didn't consult with anyone else because I trutted bim," Mrs. Weed replied. "l had to. trust him. I would have lost my • reaton ii I hadn't." Called to offer supporting testimony for lln. Weed Wed· • nesday WM Jue A. Stevena. The barest details of President Carter's proposal were speUed out by Califano in a speech pre· pared for delivery in New York. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, {). Mass.. who discussed the plan with Carter and Califano at the White House on Wednesday, told reporters today be was "serious- ly disappointed" in the program, which he described as wasteful. "I couldn't support this pro- gram," he said. Ke nnedy. c hairman ot the Senate health subcommittee and a longtime proponent or com- prehensive health insurance. said tbe plan fails to deal effec- Next Time, Pay the $2 PHOENIX. Ariz. <AP> -Brian Hungerford dido 't think be should get a ticket for parkJng in the desert, so he tossed it on the ground. He then got a ticket ror littering. He appealed the $2 park· ing ticket and 123 dumping fine from city court to Superior Court. Judge A. Melvin McDonald reduced the fine to $10, but ruled that lbe law against dump· i n g applie s t o · Hungerford's acl. The law was designed lo "punish those persons who use the public highways as garbage dumps," the judge said, adding that the lower court sbouJd have reduced tbe frne. Newport Man, 65, Drowns In Boat Fall Police said today that Douglas James Macintyre, 65, died Wed· nesday when he apparently fell from bis boat into the waters of Newport Harbor. Maclntyre's body was re- covered about 2 p.m. Wednesday near bis overturned dinghy in the channel between the moored boat that was his home and the 300 block o( Edgewater Avenue on the Balboa Peninaula. According to Newport Beach police reports, Mactntyre was seen an hour earlier by several witnesses, au of whom told in· vestigatiQI officers that be ap. peared to be intoxicated. Police believe Maclnlyre's de.th wu accidental and plan no further investigation pendlq lhe outcome of a coroner's autopsy r,eport. lively with n smg health care costs.< Related story All.) "I think it would be a major mistake to pour biJl.i ons or dollars into a health system without cost controls." he said. "You add to the fires of inflation in health care a nd bankrupt Middle America.'' The secretary of health. education and welfare insisted that "the president remains committed to the goal of provid- ing every American with cov- erage for basic health services." Califano said Carter will out- line in a messa~e to Con~ress <See HEALTH. Page/\%) Aliso Viejo Plan Halted By Density Orange County super visors stopped just short of endorsing development of a 20,000-home community in the coastaJ hllls east ol Laguna Beach Wednes· day. But by the time an anjmated six·bOW' public bearing in Santa Ana ended, there appeared to be only one obstacle standing in the way of Board of Supervisors ap· proval of the 6,623-a cre Aliso Vi ejo projed. That one obstacle was density. Aliso Viejo Company wants to build 3>,000 residences that will house roughly 53,000 people on the spread that was once known as the Moulton Ranch. However. Supervisor Thomas Riley wants the project wbitUed down to 16,000 housing units. After the public hear ing closed at 4 : 15 p.m., though, Riley's iellow supervisors Indicated they might be as sympathetic toward the company's plan as to Riley's scaJed down version. Therefore. it is conceivable the company next week wUJ win the general plan changes it wants without Riley's vote. As far as the audience who participated in Wednesday's public bearing is concerned, at best they want land use on the ranch held at the status quo. In this case status quo is a limit of roughly 10,000 homes on the slopes surrounded by Laguna Beach, South Laguna. Laguna Hills and Laguna Niguel. Among those opposing board approval for the project was La1una Greenbelt President Tom Alexander. Referring to Aliso Vi e jo parent company Phillip Morris Alexander charged the company with being "an out or state billionaire cigarette manulac· lurer who has come to Callfomla (See VIEJO, Pa~e AZ> fill a vacancy, the chancellor reported. the university was un· able to persuade not onJy its first choice to take t.he job. but its fifth. . Another factor in lhe decision of some professors to turn down appointments al UC J. Aldrich said. is that other universities can guarantee that new pro· fessors will get summer appoint· ments as well. which can add 20 percent to JO percent to their \ I . . ; "' .. .1.. ....... .. / salaries. Because or budget constraints. Mdricb said. UCI cannot. Aldrich said the average sta rt· ing saJary or an assistant pro· ressor at UCJ is $15,000 to $16,000. competing institutions . he said, are able to ofrer the same post for $18.000 to $20.000. The chancellor said. however . that UCI has suffered no maJor attrition because of salary or ho using conditions . Only one candidates for Elvis Biographg ~ professor who left did so ~or 1J. more attractive salary. he said .• Aldrich bailed a university re!· gents plan to finance low-down payment and low-interest hous· ing loans for young faculty m embe rs, and said it would have great Impact in attract.ing new faculty. The univers ity systemwide program would make approx· imately S25 million available for <See. UCI, Page Al> .... , ........ More than 100 a uditioned for lead role-in a planned $10 million film biography of E lvis Presley. Among those were. from left, Bob Guelfi of Petaluma. Calif.; Perry White from Boaz, Ala .: Ennis Wllson Crom Houston. Tex.; Ron King from Alta Loma. Calif.: and Ron Furr from St. Louis. Mo. The auditions were held Wednesday in Los Ange les. A previous audition held in New York attracted 230 men hoping to land the lead in "The King of Rock ·n· Roll." Jolm Wayne. Rains On His Own Parade Officials of the Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Com· merce have scuttled their plans for a boat parade to honor John Wayne and raise funds for cancer research. Chamber Executive Director Dan Rogers said the parade idea grew out of a letter a local resi· dent sent lo the organlzation when Wayne was hospit.alized after undergoing s urgery for . stomach cancer. Chamber members staged a "welcome home" boat parade past Wayne's bay front house in spring of 1978 when he returned from Boston after undergoing UCL4 Coach (!Wu Post LOS ANGELES CAP> - Gary Cunningham an· nounced today he is re- signing as the basketball coach of UCLA because be wants to spend more time with his family. No successor was an· nounced. "During the last year, I had five weekends at home out or 52," Cun- ningham told a news con- ference at the 3Cbool. <See story, Page Bl.) open heart surgery. That event was organized with the star's blessing and be sat on his lawn with a loud speaker to greet the passing boats. This time. it seems chamber officials won't be able to get the actor 's participation. "It would be pretty stupid to have a parade in bis honor if he's not going to be there.'' Rogers said. Rogers said the idea of staglng another event, but making it a fund-raiser for cancer research. caught on with his organization. He said Great · Western Sav- in gs and Loan Association pledged $1,000 toward the fund· raising effort. Wayne appears in television commercials for the savings and loan company. Rogers said the fund-raising would work like a jog-a-thon. "We'd planned to get pledges rrom around the community ror donations of an a mount for every boat that entered," be ex· plained. He said be had gotten offers of organizat ional he lp from chamber members and groups such as Bluing Paddles, the outrigger club that won the (See PARADE, Page AZ> Planners Cut Hearing List In Newport Tonight's Ne wport Beach Planning Commission meeting promise5>to be a short one. Commissioners were to have · he ld IO public he arings. but because of some last-minute changes. only four hearmgs are scheduled at the meeting that begins at 7:30 p.m On~ reason is that 'three com missioners -Paul Balalis, Tim H a iding e r a nd H e l e n McLaughlin are out of town. Because of that fact, city starr members took one hearing off the agenda. It is the proposed amendment to city codes which wo uld reduce to three the number of unrelated people who are allowed to s ha re a res 1dence. The five other hearings were taken off the agenda at the re- quest of applicants. These in· elude the proposed conversion to a condominium of a triplex in the Bluffs by Daon Corp.; the two hearings on Harbor Point, the 21-unit residential develop. ment proposed south of Roger's Gardens; a redrawing of Ule subdivision map covering the l rvine Coast Countrv Club. and the phasing plan for develop· ment of Civic Plaza, a ll by the Irvine company. Coast Weather ' \ Mrs. Stevena said sbe is a f close friend and stayed lo Jlrs. l Wffd's Laauna Beach home to en• fer ber followiq the June ...... ..,. _MUsion HUtory Given Newport Man Jailed After Rape Attempt A Newport Beach man re· mained jailed today following his 1rrest Wednesday in connec- tion with the attempted rape of a student nurse. Cloudy night and early morning hours and partly c loudy Friday. Lows tonight 44 to SO. Highs Fri-day S8to64. f Duriq U. five dQs abe ! 1ta1ed wiUa S••ll '1 paUeat. Mn. ...._ ui4 ber friend ran t a r.-•ID .. at Umet.and • ,..... ... ..._.latoabedpan. • lln. rr.aa.o clalmecl lbe r ...., ••• ., .. .u ....... Tiie...., • eome to Jin. 1 ••••'• aid ••tll Jul7 5,• .......................... J . =•· ........ =t.oldl119-u..: .............. .. ..... AMam.. lo1Detbta1 more· tben th• f amoue 1waJlows retul'Md to Capistrano todat as Oraa1e Couat1 Blsbop Wllllam R. .JobDlml aaaouaeed tbe ...... . ... al • dDcaa-...... , ... ......... al .... CaJllGnlli ...... TM .._. 1nrm11•1111& al .... , ............. ... •or• •I •t a la• I••• C•,........=naf•r•n ....... . ........ iiliwill••m's•••1....,.a; Tilao••• P•••t•~t ~· a: ...... '~ "-0r.-.. ........... ·······~ -· .... :1:--plHlllfl 1'111 • • 1........:&.. i .,,.,... . ........... ~ \ 1 • oote missionaries by age, name and years of service in Callfonda. Tbe documents, detal.tm, the spiritual Ud material 1rowtb OI t.be mi.-., will be stored in the attblwa ol tbe llitsioa San Juan Capbtrano, where Father Junlpero Serra be1u bis work .,, ..... nae ,.... .... pureu..ct bJ ratblr WUliam Krekelbwa, areltlYltt for tlae Catbollc ~ ID Or .... Tbe ht,OOI ...... aYallable ~ • 1rant from '· Robert l"fuor, cllainDan ..... ., euetltift ol· n.-o1 u.. lmM-bued .,.., Corpanliaa. The alleged sexual assault of the 21-year-old visitor from Mon- tana ~ a week earlier as the woman wa1 sittine on the beach in tbe 300 block or Eaat OcHn Front. • Detective Mike McDonou1b booked Steven Irwin Waaoaer. 24, of 13t 29lb St. on supidon ol assault to commJt rape. He is beld lo Ueu al $101000 ball. Tbe vtct!m told police her as· 11ilant a~roaehed her while she was sttUq Oft the beach and they cbatted before be attacked her. Sbe fOUlbt bim ott and ran away. Uslnc lnformatlon from thal convena&ioai llcDonou1b said, he located w...-.r . INSIDE 'l'O•A W San Ftondlco '•· PWr 31, °" it• IOGf to becoming the t«Oftd mcM( populor '°""'' attroction bt tlw covnt,..,, ia GtDCUll Ulitll problem.I too.~~ P.oge 86 . ..... -~ a,.. ..... L.M. .... ........ ~ ~ C....• ~ .,... ...... ............. • .... , 41 ........ ........ ....... , 'f ··-· Q M ... .. M AU ., .... ., • .... .. .. A2 OAIL v PILOT ti lhu,.d'V M1rtn 22, 1ij1f I Lee Marvin's Bar EspWts Detailed . t.os ANOE14 s (AP) A ft'Ultr h-sUfled today that Lff M arvto Wt a trail ol ~la· tidtn11 throu1eh the• bart and r<'slour nt of Malibu •nd when ht' would l(tpt•itr tht c•mplo)'(·t•11 would "', ' Oh uh, twr.-comt• \roub•.-'' P«'H l~MOIM', who ukJ ahfo h»" bc-t>o 11 ~ ulre In tht• ~1t('h c-ommunll)' 17 Y••11r11, u 1d 'lhe euw M rvw , •lt'l :d ur "t•itthlv Despite Hal•• •lllM .. from .cs"rel bar, and r-...nts t.tcawe be am dr'llM .cl ball&t'roua ~ ~ Hld Marvin wo.N "••" Mt arma ~ a aonlla'' wben tw tot drunk al lbt> rlub where' Mlrht•ll1• 1'Tiolo Matv•n •UIS In I~ and hnally roel Marvin'• 11rlfrtt"nd hflr )ob Pelll Ca11t•y, formt•r wlf•· of tht> ow11 r of tht• 'lub !Aid ltw 11.1 lor .itltndN1 M 1111> M •r v1n '11 11huw11 end llW•Yh UUlU.·d pro· bletn "Tht'ft bad to be •n empty 1&ool on etdwr 1tde of h•m." • uld ... blUUH )'OU 'd 'a•l whe~ed In the fac• \I YCMI WW-. 1'1\t ma Ult' rt' " Sh<· a1lJ Ma.rv\n'r. "loud and bol11t orou~" brhitvlor rulnud M 1a11 Murv111 '11 rn•r fQrmunc••i. uml ('0.1 ht!r I h JOh 'She fOuidn 't euncl'lllr •le Sht• wl8 3lnglnc under • atr•ln," abe dild MI H ~cMolne rtmembered Mlaa Marvln would ttltphont' ban \ooklnc f« lhe actor and later cocne to take him hom when he wiH thrown out. Sb• qoot.ed many burt-0ndcr11 all telUng Mnrvtn· "Time to KO home now No mor•· to drink " M lt111 t...cMomc. recalllna the nunw or eitrh bartund<·r who cul off Murvm'a drlnb . said the uc· tor would become "very loud, very bollt.erous. arau mentatave. Wh.-n they wouldn't serv hlm. ht> Wal'I very unha&Pf>Y n Scvernt tlmeA, 8hl' su1d, h~ would wt•ove Into a t>ur -.lrcady 1ncbrl(tl.c.>d "They wouldn't t.crve hJm ," stw t1uld Al lh · rt:•l'l<1Uranl wh(lrc she 11' emplovt'<i. the S.:u Lion. s tw iuud Ma rv in WQ S permanently hannt-d • ·We were t.old by tho mana....-, lf be ever comee 1n heTe a.cajn, no food, no driDk," abe said, recalling: "I just know wc'd tiff him "ad aay, 'Oh, oh, her~ come8 trouble.' " At that point the courtroom burst Into laughwr. and Mitrvm threw back hit. head and laughed with CVl'ljlOne clie. County Cro}>s Outlook Bright Pathologist Testifies Returns to Stand in Wad.dill Murder Tried Dr. Shirl<'y Driscoll . u lfarvurd Unlvenslty pathologist, w :u1 back on the w1tne11s stand today, fucmg Crofl8·examinat1on 1n the murder trial of Dr. Willi am WaddlU of Uuntington Harbour. Today Or Drbcoll, al1SO Ch.le( of Pathology 1at Bost.on flospital for Wo m eb. s tood hy bcr medical findJnp under lhc qucs t1onang of Wet.-dmun Weedman questioned th~ ac· t•uritcy of Or. Orlscoll'11 finding~ b•'CSJUfl(• Bat>y Clrl Wf·uv~r's re· m ;.11n~ w•·re not 1mmt:th utcly rc•frlgerakd after s ht: wa~ pro- nouncc.'<f deud. with accurate analysis of cauae of death. ln response. Or. Driscoll said that while refrigeration Is de· sirable and ls practiced at her hospital 1t would not have made that much difference in Baby Girl Weaver's case 8)' TO• BAaLt;Y OI -'"°'' ,..... ~ lke\'nt twuvy ri.1011 huvt.• de I J )'t'd ont-or t wu c ro&lt. and forct-d rumer to hold ba('k on ~wmt' :.vringtune chor\'tt but the out look for Oran1tt County ugr1cultun• looki. very jlOod, unr1l'11.llurnl •rnaly:itlj comment c:d tc)(l11y "Tht> only proplc really ~feet t· d b y t he r u 1 n w \' re t be s trawberry growers," !>a id Our 'J'hetrord of the Orange County 1-'arm Bureau. ·'The bemes ~ol wcl and l~rt' was some spoilage. And, of tourse. they don't last as IQllR in the market once lhcy·r e pack~ "But the 11trawberry growers J know aren't complairung even though they were hit by the fro&t tarher Um year. It won 't be a record crop by any.means but it .,JIJ be a good one and· some de· lscaous fruit will be blUJng l~ markets W1thin the next week." Jim llamell of the Orange Cpunty Oivts1on of AgncuJture said the nature of recent ralnlall prevented a n y s1g n1f1 cant damage in the county '~ fields 11nd orchards "We had plenty of rnt~rvals iwtween showers," he s aid. "That aJlowed the rain to souk into the gr<>Und and 1l gave farm\'r'> a rhanre lo mor1 up b1•t ween !>h<IWl·n. · · llurn1•lt !-illld hi!> survey of llll' rounty''> agncultural acreuge Ill tJ1<'<Jtl'!f good c ropi. with 1111parugu.'> and ct'lery expected to h1l the markets an lht next r•·v. days · Muny f;JrmPrs arc planting now and.,., •. <'Xpt:C'l good crop!> of Hl'll fX'PJlCr' and tom<Jlo<!l>," he su1d "And, of course, the rwn bas been a blessing for t.b e Qr~nge, lemon etnd av~ado or 4hards Th •y love thut sail free wakr" Larry Tyler of the Irvine Com- pany sa1(j he cxpccl.'1 an unusual ly h1 l{h crop of avocadoes t.rua year ··our citrus croptt are good and the rain will benefit them," tlC said. .. Sul we don 'l expect ~Y record crops this year l'lincl\. frost killed some or our fruit. "The one thing we can guarantee is that prices ot much M our produce. particularly ~1rawbcrr1ea, aro going to be F ..... r..-AJ PARADE ••. Molokai cbump1on~hip race last rail. 8ut lbe Idea went down the drain, according to Rogers when Pat Story, the actor's secretary ruportt..'Ct that Wayne wasn't in· turested. Roger1 &ald be waa never able to discuu lbe melter d ireetly wlt.b Lhe movie star. "We lbougbt It waa a IJUl 1d,e. We'd be pu1Un1 totttber u a community Lo honor a cre•t m•a ud do sometbin1 poait.lve al u.e 11me Ume by ralllng mpoey for eancer re.earcb," be commented. ''I peea we JWJ\ didn't tel our 'du acro11 to Mr. Wayoe very w;n." DAILY PILOT ........... ,~ ... ,........ •••.e-. v-.. ... --c... .. ....., '--=9! I '=·~==- ~·'-......... ........................... T-...1111(P14t .... Qln,,...Msosl1I ,...,. l'J.l!!L!'~~· •• ~ ;;;TI;.;..,, .... ,. -...::.... ................. • ' ' Mahl•r ." 1)1f'r 1d "The l~t l<'I fro11t mudl' tht1l lnevllablt· " Thl'tlor<t. Uur nctt .u\d 1'yll'r agreed lhut what OranHt: C-Ouo ty'r. farmer?'I nt.'t!'d rit¢ht now lb a 11pctl o< warm, dry wt"ather ''Wt-'ve hatl ull the rau• Wll nt>~d rl&hl now," ·r y h.ir 1u11d "We've aot chort'b and 1>lant1ng to do amd w •'d hkt' lo t>.• 1i1ble lo ~cl on Wllh II " F ...... r..-AI UCI ... the )oallh Besides new faculty, the l<Htns would be available to junior faculty, retildenl al the universa· ty for up to seven years who have ool attained tenure. Regents voted preliminary ap· proval or the plan on March 16. ,.~inal apPr<>val is expected in May. Tbe nrst loans couJd be granted th.ls summer. There probably would he funds available for about 250 home loans. under the pro(>054..1d bond issue that would finance the program. Loans arc expect ed lo average $85,000 to $10,000. Down payments could be as low as S percent, compart.>d Wllh the standard 20 percent down Interest rates arc envisioned at 81/• percent rather than the con vcnlionaJ JO:Y.. percent <JUJwalwa Aids Missing Auto Case BIRMlNGllAM, Ala CAP > Police have solved a reported auto lheft in which the only om• to land bctund barb was a two pound Chibuabuet ac<:u:ted of biting lhe hand that fed it. Jt began when the ownerb of two similar automobiles went to tbe same cocktail lounge. The owner of one car got into the other car when he lef\ the lounge. 11.Js ignition key worked a nd he drove home. The other car's owner later reported hi1:1 car stolen. ln•ide the ~imllar vehicle left 1n the lot was a hi((h·s trung Chihuahua that dutifully stood guard for nearly thr~ days. "An employee al the lounge fed. watered and olherwlRe took care of lhe doJ( best he could. But the dog bit him on the finger and we had to call rahles control to lock the dog up," !'laid Police Sgt. Carl Wideman. Meanwhile, the man whQ took the other car noticed the dis· crepancy and reported his car stolen. Wideman said that's when omcers unraveled the m)'atery. .~ ....... SLAIN IN HOLLAND Ambaaaador Syk•• Gunmen Kill Britain Envoy And Valet Ttl E HA(;U E . Netherlands (AP > Two tn yaterlous gunmen shot the British am· bassador to the Nelherlarids and his valet today outaldc the tin· voy's home and then et1caped in morning rush-h<>ur tr<trflc The two died a short time lale r at a hospital. AuJ,.borit1e:. could not 1m· mediately explain the motive for the assas~1nat1on of Sir Richard Sykl'!), 58, a sl'curily t·xpl•rt for the UriUsh d1plomat1c corps. Polirf' said Sykes and the 20· year -old Dutch valet, Karel Struub. were shot al tthoul 9 a m outs1df' the umhassador·~ residence as thl' envoy wa~ about to enter his Rolls Royct! for the 10-manute drive to the British Embassy It was reported as many al> six ~h o ts W(•rl' fired Thl· ;im bai.sador wais hit at lea11l once. and on e bullet struck tho valet. who wai. holding the car door, police ttaid. l!:ycwitnesscs sa1d the gunmen fled through a nearby alJey and disappeared Into traffic. police r eported The k i llers were between ~ and 40 years old and were dressed in dark sults, the witnesses sald. Sykes' chauffeur, unharmed In the attack, drove him Lo the hospital while an ambulttnce picked up the youth . The ambassador's residence. a historic mansion, Is In an af· fluent residential area of lht Dutch capital. "We have not rcoeeived any threat.I, and lll&;re have ~n no claims since fhc shooting." a 1'pokes man at the British Em baasy said. In London, th • British Foreign OHlce said It knew no reason for the attack. The fl »H on the fo'or e 1gn Ministry buHding in London wa~ lowered to half-staff after nowf or the ambuKsador's killing, and Queen Ellubeth 11 sent a message of sympathy to Lad) Sykes. Nixon Gate-crash Suspect Arraigned LOS ANGELES <AP I -A man accuaect of asuulllng a Secrel Service agent af\er ram- mlnc bl8 car lhn)u1h a a•te al lhe est.ate of former Prt81dent Richard Nhlon hH been ar· u11ned b•fore a federal ma•lttrale. A U .S . attorne1'• 1pok•woman Hid Qon J. ColJ· lo••· 31, of La1una Beach was formaJly ebaraed Wednesday before a federal ma,Ulral.e with OM C!omt of .. ault on • federal off leer. ColJlaaie wu lhen released in· to tlM ~ of bll motber oa tb• concllUon tbat be seek r,,'cblatrtc care pendln& bi• ~ eUrp eoateftda ~· erulMd Ida car throqb tbt,... ol Nt-·1 la Clemtate tltal.e • ..., ... told. pard be ... ' 00od'1...,.. •Dlf bad come to pl ell •9 fllftxoa." He then rammed bAI ear blCo a wellkle ... ,,. Pro&eeled HAii.AN, Kr. '(AP) -Non· ............ NblrMdto work wtt.houl IMtdeat todaf at .,....,.., .. do....,.. ... . rtdt ................... ...,.· ¥let.cl bf .lericdl ....... lae . •I . driven by a Secret Scrvlc:e agent, the chur1e claimed. The Nixon family 'Nb not home al the Ume, lbe U.S. at· lorney's oftlce Hid. Frem r.,,e A J HEALTH •.. hl• plan for • ·unl•eraal aed compreheMtve healtll l111urance plan, which he promlffd durlna hit 19'7e election campal1n. But for now, Callfano 1.td. coacr-'onal leaden acree that. Con1reu "cannot and wUI not dl&Ht a complet• 1uUoaal bealtb IUD in one bite." TIM PbMt Oo• propo1a1 wUJ offer prcUetiOll aaelAlt tM 116.P Cot~~ l1lDete -IO-ealied Cl C CO¥era1e -aad UD• •Pff "1lplflcant lmprove. m.at la health care benefttt f« lbe .,..., ._poor, for .. ,..,,.. l*IM .... for otberl wbo do -now U.. aMQuale healUll care ~ve,...," Callfno Hid. He Mkl Carwr'1 laltlal plan would ..Ubllllt "• IOUlld ltlw· ture for fvtare pha .. 1" and would ..... tftMt ..... fllca) 7ear:bqlnnl1110ct.1, 1•. .. Teallfyi11•: for the proserulion Wc>dnetlduy, l>r Oruwoll told the Orange County Supera<>r Court JUr)' thal :the found no evidence of aaJioo dama"e to the baby that Waddill had aborted. The prosecution c laims Watt dill bolChl'd thi· abortion und later s tran.clcd ttw 1nfont ''' d<>:1lh Dr Drii.coll Lold the court 11he reached her conclusion on no damage by the 1wline '>Olulmn used lo cuuse ltll' ah<1rt1on ufkr !ihe s tudied tissue samples from the infant known as Oaby Girl Weaver. lier pc>Sation was contradicted by '!urlier tes timony by rinother pathologist, Dr. Robert Richard.a. He believed there was saline damage lo the infant. Waddill. <13 , is accused of strangling the infant on March 2, 1971. His firs t murder trial ended in a hung Jury. reportedly 7 lo 5 in favor of acquill11I. Prosecutor Robert Chatwrt.on contends Waddlll wa1t deeply in debt 1.1l the lime of the abortion. lacked lru;ur;ince 1.1nd reared a laws uit based on brain damugc lo the 1nfanl Ocft'OSl' attornt·y C harle:-. Weedman dcm1•i. thl' indebted nesi. claim insti.l1ng that hi11 client was financially S<'cure flt• a lso contends lh\• h:1by was beyond re vi val when Waddill ex· a mined her an the ho:;pital VIEJO ••• to try to cr am 20,000 more houses and 60,000 more pt.>0plt· into this part of the county " Riiey was more conciliatory, however fie c<amc to the meet ing carry\ng a list of 12 condi· tions he wanted attached lo ap· prov at or the huge project. Forernoel among those condJ lions was JimlUng the number of housing units allowed on lhc form<'r ranch !iilc to 16,000. H • siud dckrioraUon to the re· mains becawH.• of the· luck of a c•old l1•mperat urt• 1ttll'rfcrNI The lack of th<' cold tem· pcraturc was compensated for by placement of the baby's re· mains m chemical fhalivc Im· mediately 1n a laboratory en· v1ronrnf•nt aflN h..r death County Employment Hits Record High Orange County '~ unemploy • mcnt rote dropped to 4 2 pncent in FebTuary as the number of employed people reached a rec ord high994,700. According lo the monthly lahor report from the Slate Employme nt Oevelopmcnl J>epartment (EDD). February'!) uncmployml'nl raw w11.s one per cent below the !)&me month a year ago And ~ Orangt· County's tol;1I t•rnploy mcnt f1 gun• inc:hr-s up lowurd the one million mark, E U() labor analy11,t /\Ila Yetter pr\'dH'tt·d a ('11nlrnuN1 '>WIOJ: up ward "M ;inufoc·turmi: .-mpluymcnl will rt0C't'1 vt• .1 ~trong boo~l ov1·r th•· <·omang three months us new 1>1Jnt11 hf·~10 ope r ot1on1> .rnrl workl'rS ure ret•ullt·<.I after lt·m porary l;iyoffs." Mrs Yt'tlt•1 -.aid · 'Tra<k. ~crv1c1·s and con ~I rurt1on will cxp:md hl!Ul>Onally durin~ the second quarter 1or 1979 >," sh(• atlded And to c·on<:lude her opt1m1st1t• analy1ul'I , M rr;. Yeller said , "lJ nt>mploymenl (in Orang1• County 1 is expected to remain al a low l*!vi'I relative to neighbor ing counties, the 1>late und the nation " Last month. l>Ccisonol hiring in i.crv1cc 1ndw.tnes -especially ut a musement parkt. and in recreation areas -paced the climb an employment and the <iccompanylng downward move 10 unemployment. According to EDD's report, ('mployment ln the construction industry was slowed by rauu. dur1ng February. But lhere was a 700.job 11 gain m govemm nt employment and a pickup of 400 JObtl ta manufac· tu ring However , 1t wa1> 10 non· m anufacturing employment of ull kmd where the F'ebruary ~a m wa~ ~trongcst, 3,600 new JUb~. 1nl'ludin~ tho~<' 1.1l tht• amus1·nwnl purk11 and tt·cn :<J twn n•ntt-r1> Newton Jury Weighs Fate 01\ KL.AND f A P > /\ Jury, uuablt• to rcuch a V<'rdrct in lhl' f1r:.t two hours of deliberation.., 111 lht• llucy Newton murder - trial, Si'Cnl the night locked an ;in 0Dklnnd hotel and was or d1•red to resume today their con· s1deralions of the rate of the Black Panther leader . The jury or 11 whites and OM: hl nck recommenced delibera t1on today al 9 a.m . CPSTl. The nine women and three men got the <'88l' lut(! Wednesday after noon but were sequestered fot the night when they did nor agree on a verdict. SE••• SALE anzm I 00•1 to choose frotn! Many fabrics. Mmwy styln PaiCll , ... s1 OVER 100 Recliner Rockers and Wall Recliners IN STOCK ........ FREE DELIVERY SALE ENDS MARCH 31 • Showcase MllllON VllJO 211t2 .. 1u11t1e .... ~ (Comer of Marguerite and Via .... , J • , .. llOI Mar\·M lO. tal. 1().6 o.-...,.. • Lobbyist Proposal Shelved County 1overnm ent '• on· a1aln. otf a1ain plan to hh~ a Wallalaatoa. o c . lobbyist is on ....... 1"all tl•. lbe Or anat Coul'lt.y Boanl ol Supnvbon votf'd Wed· neada)' t o tt au df' the SlOO.OOO·•·year lobbyist plan that wu approved two months a10 on a 4 1 vote. The tablin& move wa. the third Ume ln the pHt SUt ye'I~' county supervisor-g abandoned plan1 lo eat.abhsh an outpost in the nation's opltal after agree. an1 to hire a lobby 1st. Aa b@lore. the retreat came art.er candidates for the lobbyist job had been interviewed and the choice narrowed down to Juat a few Wednesday Supervtsor Har. riell W.eder's fellow s upervisors virtually elbowed one another aside in their rush lo join Mrs. Weider's opposition to the lob- byist plan. Supervisor Ra lph Diedrich. for example. came to the board meeting c&1Ty1ng his own writ· ten call for retreat. Diedrich said, "The days of grantsmanship bringing home federal dollars are apparenUy over and I think we musl rec. ognizeit." Oljty ~ ... .,......., lti( .... ,.. ·- Oiedrich's call lo abandon the lobbyist plan was echoed in a written statement signed jointly by Supervisors Thomas Riley and Ralph Clark. .. Although eacb of.the talented individu a ls who w ere i n · terviewed d e monstrated ex- pertise in many areas, perhaps no one could meet our expecta. tions," the Clark·Riley memo said. RASCAL THE RACCOON MAKES A BLIND CHILD'S DAY Dorothy De Bolt And Twe, 11; Fondle Pet De Bolts Visit The memo noted ''it appears that a full and enthusiastic com- mitment lo open a Washington office is absent " lion CoWllry Hosts Family UnUke the Clark·Riley call for retreat~ the Diedric h position e_aper called for an effort to ex· pand Orange County's influence in Washington, O.C., through other means. One me thod suggested by the Fullerton supervisor was a re· enlistment in the National As· sociation or Counties CNACO). Supervisors let the county's NACO membersh1p drop in 1975 art.er complaining they were not getting enough "bang for our bucks." In addition to rejoining NACO. Diedrich said each su~rvisor should work more closely wilh the county's legislative delega. lion in Washington, D.C. Gilmore Ward, lmnber Firm F01D1der, Dies Funeral se rvices are scheduled Friday in Fullerton for C. Gilmore Ward, tbe co- founder and former president or Orange County's Ward and H!l'"· rington Lumber Co. Mr. Ward died Tuesday in St. Jude Hospital, Fullerton. He was 85. Mr. Ward was president of Ward and Harrington rrom 1943 until the business was sold in 1973. He was a member or the Fullerton Elks Lodge and was active in the a ffairs of the Morn· ingside Presbyterian Church in that city. He is survived by his wife, Mildred E. Ward or Fullerton; a daughter, Mildred A. Kiernan of Laguna Beach; three sisters. Violet Case of Laguna Beach. Vera Boutelle or Florida and Me ree Sadler of Spokane, Wash .• and three grandsons and a granddaughter. The services are scheduled for 2 p.m. Friday at McAulay and Wallace Mortuary. FulJerton. The family has s uggested memorial contributions to the charity of the donor's choice. By TOM BARLEY OI -O.lly Pl ... St.ttt Bob De Bolt recalled with a grin Wedqesday that when be and Dorothy married nine years ago he was warned that he was t.ak· ing on quite an undertaking. His widowed bride brought seven children lo the marriage. Bob had a daughter by a pre· vious marriage and so there were 10 De Bolts at the wedding. "Guess l just wasn't listen· ing," he laughed as the De Bolts led a family parade through the gates of Lion Country Safari in Laguna Hills. "Today there a re 22 or us and I've a feeling thal we aren't through yet." Nine or those children are han· dicapped youngsters. several of whom come from South Viet· nam. But, physic.ally ailing or physically able, the De Bolt children comprise a unique t.eam who rigidly adhere to the family watchword -"don't help yourself until you've he lped somebody else." "It's the only possible way we can operate and ma intain our Ufestyle," Dorothy said. "Bob and I are often away on public speaking engagements and so the older kids pitch in and do our family thing while we're away." The De Bolt children r ange in age from Mike, 31, to Wendy, 10. And most or them were with their parents Wednesday when Lion Country attendants in· troduced the De Bolt clan lo tbe Irvine animal park. "It would be easy lo especially cater to the most severely han· dicapped members or our rami· ly," De Bolt said. "~ut we don't do that; pity is simply a four· letter word and it has no place in the De Bolt scheme or things. "We don't want any thanks from the kids or any sense or martyraom when they make their own way in the world," he explained. "Our joy comes from the fact that they made it with our help and became happy, responsible members of our society." He pointed out Karen, 12. an American orphan who was born without arms and legs. Karen, sporting a yellow T· shirt with the legend 'Tm A De Bolt," used her artificial limbs skillfully as she reached down to ·Monster Hunt l)ol,phim Trained to Search NEW YORK <AP> -Two dolphins are being trained in Florida to aid explorers in their search this summer for the Loeb Ness mpnster in the Scot· tish lake Neu, The New York Times reported today. Dr. Robert H. Rines, who has led a Loeb Ness expedition each summer the past decade, said the animals will carry cameru and strobe lil .. to sur- vey tbe deep waters, according to the newspaper. The eq......_. will be attached to hamesaes or vest.I, Rlneslafcl. Jn trainlnl sessions the dolphins have found, traeUCI, aDd ~ underwater creatures nch u sea turtles. the Times quoted Rin• as HY· . iq. nu. summer'• team wtD be 1pomored by the Acaclem1 ol Applied Sdenee of Bolton. Experts fN1D tM U.S. ~avy'1 San Dle10 Reaarcb ~ter bave bem mmulted on tbe care aod traialn1 of the clolph••. ·~lo -1he Loeb Nea monster in· :=n ....... ___.... Seilnllllo ..... Wiie· ...... tO licate tile moillter altlaoup ...... aeca1ionallllbffnp ' pet a curious raccoon. Then she flashed her father a big grin. "Hey, he's neat," she laughed while the rac coon romped around her. Close by was "J .R .. " 14, who was blind and paralyzed when he came lo the De Bolt home. But he kept up a constant chat · ter from his wh~lchair while me mbers or the family took turns in propelling him around Lion Country. ··Handicapped or not. these kids work their way through col- lege and into the mainstream of American life," De Bolt said . ·'Certainly"' we help, just as ail parents help their children. But the emphasis in our home at Piedmont. California. is on self help, and these kids, whatever their problems, soon forget their troubles and pit.ch in like the rest of the clan." The revenue needed to s upport those of the 22 De Bolts who are still at home comes from the many public speaking e ngage· meats both parents uodert.ake throughout the United States. And both are grateful for the many gifts that come their way after such appearances. They are $1,800 better orr today as a result of donations from Orange County residents who wanted to chip into the De Bolt budl.!el 'De Bolt was asked what his advice would be for anyone who contemplated adopting a han· d icapped child or children. The answer was firm and im· m ediate and it came from Dorothy. "Do it," she said while her husband reached for her band. ·'When Dorothy aod I mar · ried, l had an inscription placed on our wedding ring," De Boll recalled. "It says 'Thank You. God'." "We bad eight re asons for tha nking God on that happy day," be said. "Now there are 20 reasons why we thank him for these many blessings and the privilege of givin~ all these beautiful De Bolts a happy and productive We. "We come from all kinds of backgrounds, Hindu. Buddhist. CatboJic, Protestant, you na me it,'' De Bolt said. "But we know where our strength comes from and you can put what name you like lo it -God, a supreme be· ing, a higher power, or whatever you wUJ. Bob De Bolt put a hand on the shoulder or a reporte r who had leaned o\'er to kiss the smiling Karen.· "Yes. tell her you love her," he said. "And tell he r how glad you are that she made it here to· day. "But don't ever tell ·her or any other De Bolt that you're sorry (or U..m." he said. "We don't aJ . low that. We're never sorry tor ourselves and t.hal 's one reason wby we've been able lo do what Wedo." A blind and paralysed De Boll weat by in.bis wheelcbalr. happily relytq on a Umpillf De Bolt t6ex· plain ti-e mqic of a I.Jon Country be couJdn 'tsee. . "He's hariu a great day." ha father said. "iul then every day ls• 1reat day. You tee, he's a De Bolt." • FOID" Enter Race L08 ANO&Ll:S <AP) -Four perlOal have ftled peUtlonl to cballlDI• school board Prell· dent Howard Miller when be facet reeall tn conjunction wlt.b UM llQ a mualdpal electlm. , • Suit Asks Hospital Money Owners of a secood Orange County hospital once controlled by convicted embezzler Dr . Louis CeUa filed suit Wednesday lo recover hos pital funds al· legedly funneled by Cella into political campaigns. Officials or Mission Communi· ty Hospital Inc. in Mission Viejo f iled the Orange County Superior Cow1 suit against 50 unnamed pohlical ca mpaign committ.ees and 50 unnamed in- dividuals . A similar suit was filed March 9 by operators or Mercy Genera l Hospital in Santa Ana. which also once was controlled by the former poUUcaJ kingmaker. Filing the two suits a nd leav. iog the defendants unnamed is an apparent effort lo preserve hospital officials ' prerogatives to eventually collect some of the money channeled into political campaign coffers by Cella. However, years of investiga. tion and criminal legal proceed· ings that began in 1975 have failed lo indicate that any or the recipients or Cella·s political generosity knew that his dona· lions were. in fart oth'!r people's property. Cella. once one of California ·s top campaign donors is now serving a federal prison term for embezzlement of hospital funds. The Mission hospital suit, like the one filed on behalf or Mercy. alleges that betw~n 1969 and 1975 Cella turn ed at least $150.000 tn hospital funds and as· sets over lo the 100 unnamed de· !end a nts. His actions. the suits asserted. made the 100 defendants "in- volunt ary trus tees " of the hospital funds. DAil. v PILOT Af ~II In Mind Memory Expert Tells Secret By llOBEltT BAAKE& Ol U. Deity.._.._.. When Jim Gerspach goes lo the grocery store. it ls with vision.s or loaves of bread danclog on shelves and an- gry cows stomping on dotena oC eggs. GE.SPACH, A memory expert who also ia a dav.ision c:hief ia the Huntington Beach Fire Department. conJures up these kinds or ill>ages instead of carrying shopping lists. "I remember to buy bread by imaginging lbat it is dancing on the shelves. "U I also Deed milk I think or the loaves of bread gel · ting out of control and ban2in2 up against a cow's udder." Ir be also needs eggs, it is easy lo 1 ,,,.... remember them, too. ''THE LOAVES of the bread bang into the cow's udder , she g~ts angry and kicks her feet and stomps doiens of eggs. "I really imagine hearing those eggs burst open. The trick is to vis· ualize these things and make them do something funny." ouuaCH Gerspach said the first lime he tried this technique without a shopping list he remembered 20 or so items perfectly. "l was reaUy proud of myself. Then I got up to t.he checkout stand and realized I didn't have any money. "The first thing I remember now is m:, wallet." GERSPACH SAID he picked up on memory training al a man.agement conference and has berome fascinated with the subject. . He said he has done a great deal of research and 1s of· fering his services to local groups ror a fee. . He said the art is called mnemonics and the Greeks tn· troduced it thousands of years ago. . Gerspach can keep track of the order !>f 52 play~ng cards by using menta l imagery and phonetic numbering techniques. HE ALSO IS an expert on remembering names, dates. appointments. shopping Jists. etc. . . . To remember his own name, he v1sualiies a diamond or gem. For Gerspach he thinks or a dog growling at the side or a backpack. It comes out Gem Grrrs -Pack. (f one asks Gerspach lo name the five Great Lakes he thinks oC lbe bodies or water in their primitive state and populated by Indians. . . . "The lakes were their homes," he said. HOM ES m ~1s case is the acronym for the five lakes -Huron, Ontario . Michigan. Erie and Superior. Save on magnificently carved, richly covered accent chairs • Introductory savings for a Umited time! • Choice of custom designs! ScH! '619. each ·~ $710 to SHO s.t•sn .. • .......... ,,. \ Tomorrow·s antrqu~? They mav weft bl!. ye1 mdny of tht."<' chem., am rh,• v1•rv 04.?\WSI in our Hentclge • <1ccvnr cht1rr coll ... c11on ··They rl! vours dunng rhr' srncrly ltm1tt'd l'Vcnt. upholsrer\'d 1n your ch01cc of more than h00 Hl•nt.>l'J<' l<1bncs ,,, one sale pnce' Ar th.?w e111r,1ord1nc11 v "dV1n<J't. th1~ h1h 10 tx• thl' mo .. r 101po1t<1nt chcllr v.ilu• "\••r. horn fc>mou .. H,•nr.~·· Ynu will (ind C'h.11r.;; in ruh!->.·<f qlowmq lru1twnud 11111 .. h,' ~k1cl-lc1u1t11 1 .111d, '·"J,1111Ir,.nch1vurv. l'i<Hh "1th t hrno1:..:n,• B.1t I.. rr,•.itnwnr.. d fl' bcc1u11ful. rhrt'ughour -<>m-.· 1A.llh dnubk wl'lh·d 1,11lt>nnu ,•v...-n nt-w cu\hron·nn cu'-h1on consirucuon fh,• 141>0<.I lrolml'" <1rt' "'~··c1 .ind lmi..hl!d with unernnq .1111-.trv -.inJ rh,•rot .1r.· hro.?rullv scor...-s ol luxunou"" l..ibnci; JI your cnmm.i'1d1 W1: mvite vou 10 mal..,• vour '*''•'Ctton~ rh" Wt·l'k I\ Hl·n•.1•.Jo.' ch111r s.11.• or '>UCh "p..!Cloll n.itur.! m.1v nol !:><· .. ((,·r,•1 I -.onn .19,111'' Heritage Eb. Sale '4 St HCa. •'9-'570 ..... s Your F•llOflt• ~ Will B• Happy To A1aiat You. H.J.GAl\~ETf fURNll1J~E PAOFE9StONAt. INTERIOA OE8'GNEA8 22 t I HAUCHt ILYD. COSTA MISA 64M271 • t ] • • it • II • • • r D a ,. ~ • • , • • " a I . . , . . ' • t , .. . . :: • :;, -; • A4 DAIL y PILOT Thul'9d1y, M1rch 22. 1919 Just ting Q wUh~f( Tom~~' Marplalne Puttering Along ON 1'IE aOAD DEPT. Twice etch w~k. I havf' lho m•xect expen~<' of lt-avlna my happy ofncf' In the II arbor Area and motor1nc up th San Ote10 Ft'ffway durina rUAb hour to t.tach a nJl(bt cla 11 at the univenslty In Lona !:leach Teachlna ls pretty much okay u ·~ lh motonnc thul can get to you The &n Diego f'r eway during rush hour Is a d · b1btatrna uerca.ti Y t, aa a twice a week only commutt'r , I a m awed by th fact that people from our coa!ilal region suffer lhul gha tly agony every duy, five-day11 per week. THt:N. ON WEEIU!NDS, some of th m eet out on tht: freeways just for the fun of it Som.i Ume back. I used w grind up Harbor Boulevard in Costa Meu lo order to connect with the San Diego t'reeway and 11.S ever· present afternoon trarhc snarl My boss finally explained lo me l was doing 1t the dumb way Avoid Harbor &ulevard. Go out Newport New-fangled Vehic~ for Slow Races on the Son I>Wgo FrtewaJI Boulevard, then catch that funny little section or freeway that lnlercepts the San Diego route. He was right. That odd lllUe stretch Is virtually vacant or commuters. You roar right along. TIDS GETS YOU Into the San Diego Freeway traffic jam a whole lot faster. As far as I .can tell. no highway savant really un- derstands why Interstate 5 clogs to a three-mile-per -hou r ~rind bet~een Harbor lloulcvar<t and Brookbursl Street up m Fountain Valley. But it does. ~LMOST ANY LITTLE incident can bring_ u.pco~t tram~ to a complete halt. Yesterday afternoon, a jogger clad m brl.ght yellow pants jogged across one freeway overpass. Everything on the freeway stopped., When he vanished, traffic started up agaln. The amazing part was that this guy wasn't even a very good jogger. Af~r some months on our freeways, pooping along at two miles per h?ur reading interesting lic;ense plates, you know how we m1.ght be able to gel some freeway improve- ments in our region. Make CalTrans officials drive both ways on I-5 every day al rusb hour. Thal ought to do it. ~SAN UPCOAST MOTORIST, you might think you've got 1l tough until you take a Seventh Street offramp over the freeway and get a look at the hapless southbound crowd. They're Just parked-as far as the eye can see. Back when I was a youngster, we had a game we played on our bicycles. We called it a Slow Race. The Idea was to barely pedal your bike and keep it balanced without touchmg your feet. Last bike over the finish line was the winner . YOU GOT SO you could really crawl along, waggling the front '.Nheel for balance and hardly moving al all. I thought lhls was enormous fun . Li~lle did I know that I was actually training for slow races lD later years on the San Diego Freeway. ;, R e payment Ordered for Wall Work LOS ANGELES CAPl -The U.S. Labor Department has or- dered U>s Angeles County to re· pay all the federal jobs program funds spent to repair a crumbl· ·~· Ing wall for some of Supervisor • Pete Sc:babarum 's constituents. County officials s aid they believe action to recover about $70,000 is the first time a county C ETA prog ram h as been torpedot.'d after the spending OC· curred. . ~ Kurds Pobed Iran Reports. Uneasy · Truce SANANDAJ , Iran <AP> -An ~aay truce prevailed in Sanandaj today aa • c&ote associate ot Ayatollah Ruhollah Kbomelni nesotiat· ed wlth Kurdish rebels sUU lo control of the capital of the Kurdistan r•11ioa after four day• of fl&hUng. khomelru. the Shiite Moslem leader of the Iranian revolution sent Ayatollah Mahmoud Teleghani ' to try to check the local uprialng about 200 troops since Sunday, by th4' autooomy·seeklng Sunni di d d d Moslem Kurds before It spread e own aroun midnight to the rt.oat of the lribe lo w~tern Wednesday, and the city was Iran calm today. TELEGHANI, THE Shiite re· tlgious leader ln Tehran. met with leading local tribesmen In the second-story cafeteria at Sunandaj University. He sug- teealed that they submit a list of their demands so he could as- sess them. Teleghani was accompanied by the loterior minister in Prime ~t'!ister MehdJ Bazargan's pro- v1s1on.al government, Seyyed Javad1. Heavy firing around the army barracks. where the Kurds had besieged the local garrison of Speculation linked to Board Exec THE GOVERNMENT said m or e than 100 people were killed, but independent sources in Sanandaj said al least 200 were dead a nd there were hun· dreds or wounded, most of tbem Kurds. The casualties included many women and children cut down by mortar barrage I r om tbe troops inside the barracks and firing by helicopter gunships on heavily populated a reas of lbe town. The Kurds were armed with light a utomatic weapons and rifles, some of World War l vin· tage. Their weapons were not powerful e nough to penetrate the thick cement wall a round lbe a rmy barrack s, which is strategically located at.op a rise with a 500-yard no m an's land around lt . The Kurdish outbreak was the most serious threat to Kho· melnt's revolution since ll swept the country five weeks ago. Younger Than Spring Sus.an Randall .. 10, a nd her two-week-old lamb know it's spring. They hve on a tarm near Mount Nebo, Pa., and Susan has been bottle-feeding the lam b since its birth. And no, Susan says, it's not just puppy love. WAS HINGTON (AP) - Federal officials have identified the vice c hairman or the Chicago Board or Trade as one of the professional grain speculators involved in an al- leged attempt to corner the wh eat market, the Washington Post said today. RIP: Rall Era to End The newspaper reported that Leslie Rosenthal also sat in on Board of-'frade talkc&~at barred federal authorities from taking action against feared future market manipulations. Rosenth al co uld not be reached immediately for com- ment. THE COMMODITY Futures Trading CoQlmlssioti suspended trading in wheat futures for March. delive ry last week because of an alleged squeeze in short-term wheat suppUes. The board sued the commission and won in federal court. The cm· bargo was Wled Monday. F utures trading Is the con- t racting for the future sale and delivery or commJ>dities ranging from com and oats to orange juice and gold. Rosenthal was elected vice chairman of the board last year. He also sits on the board or directors, which oversees the world's largest commodity ex· change. ... THE POST QUOTE D ex- change officials as saying that In his position, be attended meet· Inga in whic h the appar ent wheal irregularities were dis· cussed. But board president Robert Wilmouth was quoted as saying Rosenthal "disqualified himself absolutely'' from lbe discussions and did not vote on a resolution concerning the crisis . Ptdlman to Stop Making Pmsenger Cars CHICAGO <AP> -Pullman Inc.. is ending production of railroad passenge1 cars. i~lud· ing the sleepers associat.e<I fo r more than a century· with long. r ange rail travel. The firm's passenger ca r division will close after 1980 because of foreign competition and the ract that the division has turned a profit in only four of its last 25 years, vice president John S. Burr said. The decision was made Wednesday by the company's board of directors. "WHAT WE CAN'T figure out is how these foreign companies can produce the cars, have them shipped here and pay duties on them and still have prices 2S to 30 percent lower than ours." Burr said T he passenger div1s1on will close after two major contracts orders for 60 cars from Boston and 284 cars from Am· trak -are completed in 1980, Burr said. lie said the diVlsion lost $23 million after taxes dur· ing the last four years. The decision lo close the passenger division does not af- fect the profitable freight and truck trailer divisions, he said. The firm's engineering and con· structlon operation also will con· Uoue. P ULLMAN IS THE latest cor-. porate casualty in the railroad passenger car manufacturing business. Besides Ceneral Elec- tric. Burr s a.id the onJy other maJOr manufacturer in the Urul· c~ States is Budd Co rp., owned by a German steel company. Pullman officials say they are uncertam what will happen to 2,000 employees at the Chicago and Ha mmond, Ind., plants whose jobs will be affected. The company said it would like to find jobs for them in the 12 other Pullman plants around the country that produce freight cars aod truck trailers. The company nurtured itself on the vision of George M. Pullman , a n i nve ntor and b u s iness m an who b e g a n manufacturing sleeping cars in l858. .• Denver Loses Power AllleftY ............ AllOlll• ... 11 ....... ..... 9"1111 ........ Olk ... CIMIMttl c......- 0.1 "'· Wiii Detwer Oel~ ...ntefd ........ ....._._ ........ ,,..,. ..... , J.CU'wllte ICM 'tClty Letv..-Lntttllitcll LMA,.._. ... ....... ........... Ml-' ......... ........... ........ .... Orft .... Yd Ollte. CllY Olllelle ar...... ............. ........ =:: . ~-Ml.Wit ...,Le .. a-oe... EIJerly Couple Killed in Texas F~ Ml LA ''' ... t7 .. :M .01 eo " '1 M ,. at » .. ,. n 4J JI 11 n ... M '* ... 1t .a u ,14 . , " •$ ,. » II tl .. ti .. Al tl ,. u S1 u 47 ,. 42 ... Je » .04 .. ,, ,. w ., .. " .. .. » .. .. ,. " ... , .. Cl ., ., 1.11 -... ts " ., ., . t) .... .. ., ,. . .. . II II .. .. .. .. ... ,., ,._,., ... IDllJ ... _ ~-~ -- - "--· o.o4"4o41 --------- ' . All ...... ., ~ _, llllltcl lele WIW ... y ...... !Mir pi<hip In.<• • .......... flff , .... 70 ,,... • , ..... ,_ .... ,,.... -s-1 .. 1er. ,,,.., ••rt ld1111llled '' Reymond Wttlllf1910ft ,..._.,, .... end hll wife • Maie111. "·-...of s-1wtter • T OfMdli9t _. .,.,.... "'"' .. _ Air l"~t 9-, TeUt Md IO 1111 to11111t11t tf Gto1!>yt011, "9111 40 MllU NH ef L...-.Cll, TH. No ...,,..... *' lfllwlilt _.. ,..... __ ...... ,,..,.,, ... ''"'"'""'" .,.,.,.. ..,. •• ,__.. '"'" n '" 0 ....... MIMlt., .. n '" l(ey WHI, , .. . nd ,, Amira" use the Daily Pilot to Kevin Bar!1es a 0 'ginal Singing Telegrams. help their business -rt ORIGINAL s.INGING TELEGRAMS Dear Daily Pilot, people r eally care about m Y I feel your business. h f t things 1 did when I ope ned mY One of .t ~ irs ms business in Newport Original smgmg T~legra d advertise with the Beach was subscribe to an Daily.Pilot. h as been a great help to m Y Your paper . thank you. company, an~ I'd bke totsa:c, compliment Arlee n I esp e.c1 a\~y wanadvertising, who ca\\s me Lindstedt m display bout bus iness and off er regularly to .ask a advertising .advice. LOVIN' section for Va\entin~·s My ad m your and needless to say, 1 m· Day was a gre.at su~~~~e D~ily Pilot on a regular tend to advertise w basis. Thanks, f r Kevin Barnes and the star o Or\ginal Singing Telegrams. Put an ad to work for you In th• DAILY PILOT \ I ( ( ( ] ' .... is wl m m be eq ra me an re1 bic .. , wb Pu in IN tiot ma .. ,, tll• not Tbll al. = or :;i CAWF~A DAil. y PU>T AS Measure Two Steps From State Ballot I . ! SACRAMENTO (Al' l A It.Me COGIUtuUonal amendOlC.'ol r~ maodalo ry bu lnJ1 for ..._.aUoo, aimed al ~tov P'lll &M 1-AQatl.-1 busJns pro II'•. waa only tv.-o litcps IU) from tM ltate ballot toch1y Wltb approval In to\lay·, •dleduled. Assrmbly vott>, thr measuu would nN~d only rouUne coocurren('t.' by thr• Seaate to quaUfy for the b.,uot TBI! MEASU&E. SC 2 b\ Sen. Alan Robbins, U·Vian Nu~i.. is • product of istronJ: oppos1 Uon. particularly m :.uburb11n areaa, to the Loe Angeles bw.111t: pfOlram Uurt st.arted last fall ''Tbe Loe Angeles compulsory bualQg program is a dasruster dasrupUnR th.-acbool llvctt of tboUJaodl ot younc•tera, roc-cloJc famll lo r1 the dls\Jict lo avoid forc.~<~od bullng, aad eo1Uni taxr.•ytra nf'edleq mllllons or dol aral" the noor 11ponaor. Ar. emhlyman Bruce Youna. 1> Cerntos, a&ld In • atat.ement on the Ul' of lh1> vol . The measur s urvived u erurl;il ll"St h•bt we k wbeo tht> Assembly Jud.lei ry Co mmttt". normally the jiCraveyard ror anta bu8ing propouls, p&ued ll 10 2 S('A 2 would rcqulru 11tah: tou~ to follow f('(feral stand :ird11 in de egregaUon orders So far, feder al courts have~­ <tulred busing only lo cues or d eliberate t.egrcgallon by school d ist n ets ROBBIN S s ay s h is meH"1'e, ll approved b)' voters. would atop Los Aoicles busing lmm~attly abd would prevent 11mll1r ordel'1 lo olher cities wh e r e •o-called de fa c to aegre1ratJon 8 product or hous· Ing patterns rather than de llbt>ratlf' act.$ by school boards was fotlnd. Opponents have questioned that prediction on two grounds al least ooe Judge round that Los Angeles segregation was de- liberately caused, and SCA 2 Itself may cons titute a de- liberate act or segregatlQn. Another goaJ of the measure 1s to prevent t h e ~o ·ca ll e d Pipeline Permits Asked April Ruling Forecast on Sohio Issue LOS ANGELES (AP) -The South Coast Air Quality Manage· ment Dut.rict's chairman says the board could rule on Standard Oil Co. of Ohio's request for en- vironmental permits for its 011 pipeline project by April 15. But the chairman or the state Air Resources Board said Wed- nesday be is not sure Sohio will ever go abead with the pipeline whose iotitial cost and 20-year operating expense is estimated by Sobio to be $1 bilHon. The proposed line would transport Alaska crude oil from CaHforrua to Texas The Cleveland-based oil firm resubmitted an application to lhe AQMD on Wednesday seek· ing the necessary permits for the pipeline operation. The AQllD and the ARB must both evaluate the plan Sohio abandoned last week because or delays in obtaining approvals. U:Ad~Hired SACRAMENTO CAP> The University of California t)as hired a $210.a-day consultant to adviff lta president on dealing with the news media University spokeswoman Sarah Molla said Wednesday that MWTay Fromson, a former CBS television correspondent J ( /tlem....a Defeatfti STATE who was a de puty campaign manager and media adviser for Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. la.st year, is being paid mostly from state funds. SACRAMENTO .CAP) Should boWed water be taxed? Should diabetics have to pay tax on their needles and syringes? The state Senate Revenue and Taxation Committee says oo in both cases. It voted 6-0 Wednesday on bills sending the proposals to tbe Senate Finance Committee. LOS ANGELES <AP) -Tbe home of former California Al· torney General EveUe Younger has been ransacked by one or more intruders, police report. Younger's gardener d is- covered a broken side window and notined police Wednesday afternoon, Lt. Warren Larson said. Younger, in private law practice in Los Angeles, was out of town at the lime. ~llneo~ BERKELEY <AP> -Police say there may be more arrests in lhe case of a University or California senior who was ar-rested and booked for investiga- tion of attempting to sell copies of final examinations. Police sald 21-year-old Quincy Fassette was arrested Tuesday afler six copies of final examlna- tions were found in bis Oakland apartment.. The committee also voted 4 ·2 on SB 56 by Sen. David Roberti. D-Los Angeles, to increase the deduction for transportation ex- penses as part or a charitable contribution from 7 cents to 17 cents a mile. Jt needed five votes for passage. Lalld..arlc ........ LOS ANGELES <AP> -A ma· jor nre at the former Wallach's Music City,.. a Hollywood lan dmark for two decades, caused an estimated $250,000 damage early today, fire of- ficials said. Spokesman Martin Gana said 19 fire companies battled the bla:te at Spelvin's Musical lnatrumenl Co. a t the comer of Sunset and Vlne. He said the rare apparenUy broke out in a crawl space between the first and second stories, but the flames burned a larae section of both floors. eee Naturally the real thing looks good . But ifs cold. hard. noisy, expensive ... and a chore to maintain. Why not go NATURAL the eesy way with NEW natural bnck or slate realism found in a no-wax Solanan floor from Armstrong! These incredibly natural-looking NEW Solanan floors stay looking like new with just regular washings. thanks to Armstrong's exclusive Mirabond• no-wax surface. It protects the rich natural colors underneath .. colors that are built up of thousands of vancolored vfnyt granules for unusual depth, richness of color. and design realism. Natural- looking Solarlan floors really are easier .•. easier to live with .. walk on ... maintain. See how easy it Is to GO NATURAL with no-wax Solarian floors trorr Armstrong .... starting as low as *216 ,., ............ -... ...... ...-~ naturmly tt'a trom @ mstrong ssaG&aPs-rGo. _,,..,., ..... ,.._ #119·~ • rT"~~ft ,~ !!!!•DOe!l.'!.'L..11.~ ta=.-;;·~~~a.. l:.."1..,11\ (n.,aNltl = e LOI~-- ........ metropolitan plan, recom · mended to a Los Anaeles judge by a group of experts because of the declining number of wblte s tudents in the district. The plan would e"tend man· datory bullng beyond the city limits to a number of largely white suburban areas in Los Angeles County and possibly Orange County. Slaughter Of Goats Scheduled SAN DIEGO <AP> -A repeat of the 1976 wild goat slaughter on San Clemente Island that killed s.ooo of the animals and enraged the public is being planned for tltis summer', ac· cording to the Navy. Some 3,000 goats must be eradicated by Nav y sharpshooters to thin an over- populated herd that threatens the island's ecology, The San Diego Union reported today. "WE ARE under rederal man· date to maintain the ecology of the island." s aid a Navy spokesman who asked not to be identified. The mass shooting program will begin around June l and will utilize Marine marksmen firing from helicopters as well as on the ground. The Andalusian goats. native to Spain. are believed to be an· cestors of a small herd brought to San Clemente by Spaniards over 200 years a go to provide food for future explorers. AT ONE time. the goat population was estimated at 10,000 before depopulation ef· forts were launched when lhe island .was denuded or foliage. Deer have been exterminated from the island. Used as a Navy gunnery range since 1936. the island, located 55 miles northwest of San Diego. is 20 miles loog and ranges from two to slx miles wide . It's Mine AP ....... Alvilla holds her newborn baby gorilla at Roeding Park Zoo in Fresno. The fem a le inf ant is the first gorilla born at the zoo. Alvilla is on a breeding loan from San Diego Zoo whJch will get the baby gorilla. The mother was transferred to Fresno after failing to mate with male gorillas at San Diego Zoo. Airliner Slates W w Fare Plans OAKLAND CAP> -World Airways announced plans for scheduled daily fll ghts across country for $99.99 beginning April 12. .. It's lhe average person's turn to Oy on a budget without fidit· ing red t~pe. fine print and other hassles," Edward J . Daly, presiaent oftbeOal<land-based airline said Wednesday. The onl y other $99 transcontinental nights are operated on a once-a-week charter basis between New York and Los Angeles by the Oakland-based Trans International Airlines. The Trans International fights are offered through lbe Councii of International Education Exchange, an educational travel service. THE WORLD AIRWAYS eastbound ffights are scheduled lo depart at 7:20 a .m ., stop in Los Angeles and arrive ln Newark at 5:20 p.m. The night schedule calls for flights leaving Los Angeles at 10:15 p.m., stopping in Newark and arriving ln Baltimore at8:45 a.m. The westbound travel schedule caJls for a Newark departure at 7 p.m .. a stop in Los Angeles and arrival in Oakland at U :4S p.m. Another flight schedule calls for departtllft from Baltimore at 10 :30 a.m., a st.op at Newark llnd a destinaUoo in Los Angeles at 3: 10 p.m. SPRI POWER TOOL S A LE 19.99 Rockwell • Develops 10.000 opm. Flush sand' on J side,. along 11ert1· ul surfaces and tn corners f ront and rear handl~s tor pog11111e co•wot Ooilble 1nsulatod for otec1,.c.11 safety 4401 2-SPEED JIG SAW Bas" tills 45' '" "'lhcr dirllC· t1on rn cut wood. ltghl or ho.ivy m~tal compos111on. ple-•gtus. plasr.c. f mgeN •P ~peed S!"lector. an11-sp111 bJse insert 4310 1..ffP DELUXE ROUTI:R Heavv·dutv• Precision cali- brated on ll64·•n .• vort•cat depth ad1ustmen1s. 22.000 rpm 7616 Y•-ln. POWER 13-Pc.Dri llBitSet DRILL 13 high-speed bits lrom For l1ght·dutv wor~. Orllla \116 lhrough 1/4 In. For Comp11c:t and llgh1we1gh1t Y.·rn. steel.*'"· hlldWOOO, wood,metal,plu11c. With Hal 9.0 wnp motor. 1"" Wrap.around sh~: dO<Jble '1004 fined lndeKed c:ue. 513 H.P. T9'eeoopl"Q bfede insulatod. With combtnaUon •••••••••I gL9d. ~incl. 4611 blade. 7300 ·-------.. --------- ~; 19.95 VISE Mvll and lodl'·MMI ti-. •·Jn. i-for ,,_.. Ind pipe, 4-ln. ~ 514 ' P' Alawoc . ..,c. SCREWDRIVER SET Sciv-re bltdet fOf extra tum• Ing power. Sloued llpt. Cfwome VlnldtUm. TS8SO HOMEU1£ 10-IN. GAS SAW With Sllf.T·Tip•, FettllfN ell·potl· tlon ~rburetOI', tutometic c:h11n Oiiing, 1tl-W'Nthet Ignition. XL STOllHOUIS ....... Frf. •• f s.t.N.S.. IM \ - J " • • • .. • ti IE a1 " I ~ .. Wt p. ,. • tic • .. , ·• ' o ra ngcC<>astoa.1vP•101 Editorial Page ------~~~ ......................................................... .. Robtrt N . WHd/Publlshtr Thur.c:tey. March 22. 1979 Barbclra Krvlbich/Edltorlal Pao-Editor Election Action , 'Gets Early Start It'~ 13 month unUI th next municipal c·l rt1on 1n Nl'wport Beocb, y l tht.• rur~nt pac or act ivity in l'lty politic~ ls mor; ukln lo full blo wn ca mpa11n than u non t-l{'('tlon year "'or lru tam•l'. lhcri • m • uboul 10 JK·orl who ur • 'thinking about runnint< (or the 1ty Counci <1r who art' actuall,y chorgrnic uh •ad w ith t-leru on plans At th • ~uml' Im • the Newport llurbor J\rcu Chumber o( ·omm re t hos luunchl'd lh 1nlt1 a tl t' c mpolg n to alter cit y cl •ell~ by t•hanging th•• d.ne on '4hlc h th y om held Chumber offi<·utls Ol)('nly say tht· point or tht•tr t:Hort ii. to get mor • voh·r~ to tum out Wha t 1 le rt. uns aid li. lht! hope that if more J)l.-Ople how up. lht.> r •wt:r votes th re'll be ror the env1ronmentaUsu wno·v..-scor d lmpresJ>lvcly In the hibl two <'1ty Council elections This frantic c ampaaa n ac ti vity Is trac a ble tn part1cuJlitr to the la~t mumc1pa1 el cllon which saw ti ' voter turnout Q( 27 per<'ent put four n •w council mcmberl) into om cc Sincc thr Clf those ro ur a rc alhed with th~ • forces OPi>OM:d to dc vclopm nt, the rc:sult hai; bt:c n a ~hift tn philosophy of the council majority , u s hift that rankles tho~~ who o nrc held the reins of powe r But •vt•n m ore compelhng a force behind the present s urjte of po htac king m :.ay be the fuel that the ne w council majority hai, LJnomplu~hed virtually nothing 10 a ycur in orr.('<' That·~ not to ~ay that t he lac·k of progreb~ in solving N •wporl'!'t problemi. lb t1 ne w trend many of the dlrfic ult d •t•1!-tlon:, now racing City Counc il members arc the lc~uc 1c~ of willful inaction on t he part o f other council!.. Wha t m uy be parltc ulurly vexing about the curre nt situation is the convicllon by opponents that lhe council majority lack:, the ab1hty to take a constructive step toward solving these problems because it is governed by a hard-line leade rship. The wilLingncss to compromise hus been a hallmark of past City Councils . These opponents-s u ch a s membe r s of the chamber -fmd 1t all too easy to point to the council maJority's efforts on meas ures suc h as the traffic phas ing ordina nce in iL5 myriad and cons tantly revis ed f<Jrms to back their contentions that this is a city c ouncil dedicated to blocking improvements instead or c ourting problem-solving efforts. The more time that passes with problems mounting 'and no CJCt1on taken . the hotter the brewing polltical pot will gel Street Change Rerun? Th(.• s ccn<.1rio is s o familia r. it 's almos t too muc h to hop(' fo r ~omcthin g djffe rc nt: A g roup of neighborhood residents. us ually the board or directors of a ho m eowners ' associa tion, has a pla n for Improving I.he local streets. This c<.tn e ntail c h anging a nything from the direction of the flow of traffu: to pa rking regulation:, to the :>pe ed limit We ll m ea ning a nd sincere. they p e r s uade c ity councilmen to com:.idc r their pla n. The city fathers do thei r best lo n o tify neighborhood res idents of the sugf.tcst.cd chCJngc, but comes the day of the hearing and nobody shows up but the people who proposed the change in the first place. Councilme n, seeing nothing but support for the plan. enact it. As soon as the change goes into effect, the howls of prote;t can be heard for miles . Apathetic residents who hadn't bothered to acquaint themselves with what was proposed or to show up to voice their protests are now furious with the ir association, the city staff and the city council. Such. we hope, will not be the fate of the changes proposed on Seashore Drive in West Newport. It would be a r e freshing change to find a good c ross section of homt.'Owners who will let councilmen know how they reel about turning the street into two one-way seg m enur so councilme n catt make an informc.ad vote on the issue. The hcCJring will be held April 23. • Oplnions.expresaed In the space above are those of lhe Daily Pilot. Other views expressod on this page are those of lheir authors and artists. Reader comment is Invited. Address The Dally Pilot. P.O. Bil:)K 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) &42·4321 . Boyd/Husbands By L.M. llOYD A vera~e Bulgarian man s pends nve hours a week helpln1 out around the house. Diaguating. Walt, that's un· called for. Merely comment w preliminary to the report that no other male national anywhere devMel 10 much time doing houtehold chorea. Thero la a ac:hool of thought, )'OU knoW, which hold• that buab1nda who dive Into the bomemaldna Jobs tend to threaten their wives indirect· I)'. Not all ladies appreciate tbe competlUon> You know wb1t old Andre Maurois aald: "Housekeepln1 ln com· mon ia for women the acid teat.'' lt'a known, Incidental· ly, that the husband least Ulsely to tackle houaehold taak1 ia Lbe En1Hsbman. Ever hear of a predatory tree? Neither bed •· But a Dear Gloomy Gus Tb• lron1 of the Newport a.aeh Cttf. Coundl '• lortured • • fort• to define "rea· aoaabl....," 11 U.at tbe eoaoU maJortt1 ud t.11111' Mcbn lane Dntr Mown tMJ UA• dent.Ill ... word. LOIT . 'I client reports that such there be The strangler fig. ll kills other trees in Its struggle to reach for light. Q. "Which U.S. Presidents never held any oth.,r elective office?" A. Grant, Taft, Hoover and Eisenhower. The earliest passport was a French docume nt called "puser le port" which eave legal permiaalon to shipe lo enter or leave a harbor. More Greeks llve In Melbourne, Australia, than ln any other clty, except for Athena. Albert Einstein didn't like to wear a hat. But once when It waa ratnina, hi• wile Insist· ed he do so. A 1entle sort, Elntt.ein. He wore the th1na ballway to his Princeton of. flee and carried It Ute rnt ot tbe way. Re then canfully noted exactly bow loa1 It took f« both bil bat and ltalr to dry. Tlaat ........... told bit wife tbe neulta. H1t balr dried more qukkJ7 dam u. bat, wbidl he left oa U.. rack lbeaeeforward. Polllml ubd a 1luble aampleoll*.....,.,........ I.bey Wied ldoolJ... and ~,... cent uld ,.., 'IM ,..._. put Ille ........... to • 1imU. _..., ol teaellen, and_., •,.,..t Mid,.... Credit tb• wHp, none otW, .... tlllebmMlallol ~ paper. ..... _ .. _ .. .., ..... -........ d•l•ld. Jack Ander80n •1 Pilot Fatigue Problem Evaded WASIONGTON The scent.' wu all too famJllur thJt dfly a.t thl' 111r port Th l' W\•ary r r ti w m t.'m bent of u U.S •Ir frel.chtl'r looked bonl' t i r e d c1nd 11pc>lw alm0$t lncoht'U:ntly wh n thtoy ur rived M\ th (l t.'ld And wUh good rcaw n Tht:Y h1&d only three hounf slc~p after nine houn In flight und a total of 23 hours on duty ·rhcir Uoeing 707 freighter took Ult.' entJre runway to g(.,1. off the ground. AM It fin;ally lifted orr. the plane veered sharply to the right. then left. before collld· mtc with a trnc and a utility pole. Ciarecnina out o f control. the giant rrnfl ripped through trt'CS. polc11 and rooftops und began dl:.lntegruting before it crashc.-d ups ide down on a playrng fidd. THE CREW w as killed . and 77 11crsons on the ground we re crushed by debris or burned lo death in the Ou ming inferno In vcstigators on the sce ne found that the plane's controls had been improperly set, deprav· ing It of critical power needed for s ufficient takeoff thrust. Thl'y blamed the mistake on the exhausted condition of the crew. The tragedy occurred on Oct. 13. 1976. at Santa Cruz. Bolivw. Yet it could have occurred to a U.S. crew virtually any limo and anywhere. It could have oc- curred lo a crew transportJng passengers. instead or freight. For the shocking fact about tho Santa Cruz dh~ast.er 1s that tho crew of the aircraft was operut· Ing with.In Federal Av~lton Ad- ministration safety regulations . The rull>s regarding fatigue are alarmingly 1:.ix and have not been s ignific antly modified since 1934 While pilot fatigue 1::. a recur· Mailbox rent theme in roreign accident report&. American Investigators have cited (atigue a!'I a flClOr In only one conlmercia l alrrinl' c rash between 1973 ;,and 1977 "Human error" iis cited as the cause o( moist accidents. AN o•·•'ICIAL for the Na· tlonal Transpo rtatio n Safely Board, whi ch inves tigates &tr crashes. told our reporters Tom RoseruUel and Moira Forbes. "We stay away from it CfatJgue l In offlciaJ board reports. unless we have hard evidence" that the pilots stretched their night re gula Uon.s or spent their rOtit tlme carousing lnRtcad of sleeping. But pilots thf!mselves told us shocking storacl of falling asleep at the control:s. or of drinking to overcome the insomnia lnducc."'<J by their long und Irregular hours. "I've lx,>en a basket case from flying so many weird hours," said Harns Ot!xt.er. a pilot for a major airline Another pilot. who asked to have hJs name withheld. told us he ust.-d to drink a pitcher or two or beer to comhat sleeple8sness. a chronic problem for pilots who must try to sleep during normal waking hours. Sleeping p ll" arc a common remedy, he added. Th~ crew or one plane rePort· ed that its 111lot fell asleep on a landin.c approach just h¥1' a mile from the runway. A co-pilot told us he saw has captain fall as leep at 2,000 feel momenb after lakeorf. NIGHT FLIGHTS, changing time zones. erratic schedules and bnef layovers all contribute to a n lmpalrmenl or the human body known t o mos t air travelers a!> "Je t lag.·· This familiar condition is an inconve· nience to a busintissman or vacationer. 1t can be a tragedy when 1t occurs to an airline pilot with hundreds of h vci. in ha:, care A Univers ity of California study concur!> .. When human:. <Jrc asked to perform al a time 1n their <24·hourl cycle when they are us ually asleep. their performance is impaired_" Yet the 1-'AA discounts such warnings. "We do not perceive any thre at to l>afety" in the FAA 's current regulations gov · e rnang fatigue. said Dr. 11.L. Reighard. the f'AA 's c.1r sur geon. Fallgue. he told us, is "a subjective factor only the pilot knows if he 1s !>uffering from it." The f'AA does not plc.n to allocate mor<' money to do re search on fatigue. Footnot.c· The f'AA 's disturb 1n g offic ial altitude 1s con tradicted by other ft..'<leral ex· perts . Gerntt J . Walhoot, tht: N at1onal Transportation Safety Board":, human factor :. 11pecrnlast. i.a1d thc.t more re l>earch would lead to s uch dramallc t·hangcs a:, "d1Herunt wo rking hours. different night ll'gs and different home baM!i. for pilots." Jet Noise Victims Find Complaints Futile To the Editor: Re : Letter of 3/lS/79 titled "Noise ComplaJnts": With such an impressive title of "Executive Director, Com· munlty Airport Council". Mr. Joseph E. Irvine s hould be ashamed lo pres ent s uch ridiculous aJrport "statistics " on the numbers of persons who have r egistered complaints about airport noise. It is ludicrous to compare the numbers or complaints filed, against the t.otaJ population or Orange County. llow can the roar of the jets taking ofr from the Orange County Airport ln any way disturb the residents of Fountain Valley. Huntington Beach or any other location ex- cept In the immediate vicinity of the airport? MOREOVER, s ince no punitive action ls l4iken a1ainst planes that violate the pre· scribed take off pattern and/or exceed the allowable noise. the frustrated residents or Newport Beach are justified in conch.Id· fog that their calls or protest are futile and t.herefore other action must be taken to preserve our ri«ht.a a1a1nst this noise pollu- tion . Mr. Irvine's conclualoo1 prove that startln1 from an Invalid premise, statistics can be made to jualily any point of view. 11.K. LEVINSON To the Editor: Tuesday. March 6 had con· alderable meanla& for tbe voters resld.toC In the various cities and townabipe that make up Coa•t Community Colleie Dlatrlct. Tuesday wu a "non-election" day ln which voters did not go to the polla to elect their ac:hool board members. Because ol 1 law paaaed ln Sacramento 1 .. t year, 1ebool board electiona for moet diatricta have been mov..t ahead to November. Altboalb the wildom ol Ulla decllioa ii ct. b9table, It ta 1 fall aeeompU. Tbe period between Mareb aa4 November can be Uled to reYtew anddMemltMman1illuee...S problelm that bet« our loeal edueaUonal 111tem . /u ''ltal'Wa,'' I m1Cbt aua..t: -Review and cfiin1e, .. necHHry, tbe preaent pro· cedane wblcb permit UM boud member (lneumbellO to remain In office ad lallaltum. Some elected officials who know their constlluencles and are able to meet their needs . The election of board members at-large in a col- lege district that spans over ao· square miles, 11 cities a nd towns, and 600,000 people does not serve the interests of locaJ control. The time may be ripe in this Proposition 13 era to man· date election by district. There is a n urgent need for valid information and data which the interested citizen can use to appraise lbe things that are going on in education. The practice or spoonfeeding the public limited doses or data should be replaced by a more adequate lnlormalion program which deals with failures as well as accomplishments. Recent aJ- legaUons by a teachers' 1roup that the dJstrict bas misused public funds concerns the average citizen who h as re- ceived no or very little informa· tlon from hls elected offlcials. There are other Issues, I'm sure. The months ahead should see them discussed and debated with great.er public interest and active l::iclpatlon. LE RlS LA VRAKAS, PhD tw••·•· ..... To the Edit.or: The status quo, no growth, no hl1hway improvement majority on the present Newport Beach Clty Council should be-"able lo learn a leuon from the traffic problems Laguna Beach ls s ul· ferin1 with aa a result or years of neglect and procrastination In making much needed highway improvements. f,,aguna Beach tried to stand still whlle the world around them was prosresslvely growing and now you can He the dlrflcult and tra,1c end reaulta. Tratnc conge•Oon, a mounting number of deaths a nd Injuries on hJ1bw1y1 that should bave been Improved years 110. You can't stop ~; ll you try you are only younell, you either arow, Improve and up 1rade or youveaut.e. Unle11 the preeent Ctty Coun· ell majority baa eom• l .. al ••1 of f enetnc otf and IDOftttortlll the lnc:omina outalde traffic, there 11 no way that ant1·ht1hwa1 Im· provement tbinkln1 will won to the advaa&ace ol lbe people o1 Newport Beacb. eomanudtl• baH rHtrie&ed IN VIEW of tbe 11Uoplu a. lotalb el.a.cl offtelala .. a nation and the pendln1 Oaan ll.W ..aber ol terma. TM t1xtn1 limitation lnlUatlH, Co••' •rd aveH1e1 out to Newport Beaeb etty operat.IGm °"' d ,..,. ID omce Of' u. are ICl6al to be an dire atralta ... .......................... leal-lt ........_ Ill tax bue. Tbll doll -Me1D poulble UD· -.... mu• ol "IOlal eoD• der the aad·aowtb policy that trol" can "belt be """ by now eidl&a, wtuch ia U.re•Mnlac • ' I the welfare and continued J)ro· gress of our fair city. Theft! ts no way the city can afford to make the essential am · provements in our h ighway system unless the City Council can encourage some outside financial assistance as they have done In the City of Irvine. You can't look to CalTrans ror this kind of help, because it Is commo n knowledge that Newport Beach is not on their list or favored cities. We believe In sensible and practical controls, but you can't • operate and rule Newport Beach as an island by itself. with no re- gard for what is happening and going on around you It Is hoped that some improve · ment in the wisdom or the City Council majority will soon sur- face. To the Editor: Re : March 15, 1979 editorial "Airport Noise." The statistics rationalized by the hired hack Joseph Irvine are deliberately dJ storted. For every complaining call , lherc arc a thous and silent s c r eams as the thunderous aircraft Invade our homes and batter our sensitivities. Because the majority of us sul· ferin1 residents no longer com- plain does not mean we do not care about lhls encroachment. It means we are desper ately try· Ing lo do our Jobs and live our lives in spite of the jet noise stress. Other means will be found to c urb this trauma a s we no longer have the lime nor the pa- tience to ring lhMt number lo no avail. WINIFRED VOEGELIN SJN'llfd•• .... ,. To the F.dJtor : Your ~torial of March I~. said that t.be repretent1llves of the Chamber ol Commerce were not allowed to •r:ak fOf' the aJ. lotted five m nutea at our Newport Beacb Council meetlna of March 12. As you may know, the Cbamber w .. on the aceoda for a late time In t.M eveninc and, aa it I.Urned out, It was qutte lite -In fact, the moraine ol the next day. Gordon Wnt and Mlke Gerln1 came to the pOdlum when an earlier 11enda Item was under conalderallon. There was 1 very hHvy agenda that •vtniq, and 1 number of people were preMnt 11 c:onnecUon With the varloua 11end1 ltem1. ft IBUIS obvious that If peo- ple were allowed to speak at any Ume on an, aubject, the order of t.M meetins could be dt1rupted r ' and tho6e waiting for their own agenda it.em would be forced lo · wait that much longer. When their tum camt'. Gordon West had left :(and l don't hlame tum because of the hour >. but Uit: re presentatives who wailed it out were advised they could have as much tame as they wanted. I (t'CI your c.'<filorial. in fairness, should have p0int.c.'<f out this fact. There was no intention of depriving anyone of their ab11tty to speak before the council, and I hope that no one has been deprived of that right. Ite ms can be taken out of order on the agenda for good rea~on. bul or· dinarlly it seems to me impor· tant <in fairness to everyone) that the agenda Items be c.'On· s1dered in order. PAUL RYCKOFF Mayor The councU WO-' c<nUlderiftg item F·l , the ··~u" &tandard /or traffu: pho.smg. The Cbambn' &poke1men were gaoelled down when they tned to ~ on tbat item. The fact tbat t~y were or ~re not permitted to ~ later on a d11/tttftt .agnda 1~m 1a not the point.at iuw. Edilor. E•lerre Cite L•., To the FAit.or: It is unfortunah· that your edit.oriaJ writ.er chose not to pre- sent both aides of the issue re· gardlng Orange County Transit District vs. transportation for the disabled thousands living and visiting in Orange County. In th.is age of space travel it's a n insult to one 's Intelligence to statu ''there's just not a relluble lift available." Whnl's being used by other transit districts which are complying with slate a nd federal laws? Wh1&t does OCTD use on dial·•·lift? VOtJ CITE cost as a major factor In the board's decision not to comply with the law. yet you neslect to IMntion the Identical Cott of air condttionios which is provided on each bus. No law re- quiree UUs: to aa, nothini ol ed· diUouJ fUel required to opera&e It. Acceuiblllty modification 11 a one·tlme ftpenM wbicb would obvloualy lncre... revenue of ocro -hardly a total '*· Sympalh, la not need4Ml or welcome. Rat.her, impleDMftC.a· tlon and enforcement of current law Is expected! Now ii the Ume becauae the law aay1 eo. YVONNE BAOSTAD, President oc Cbllpts. CaW. Aaoc. of the Pbyakally Handic8')1)ed • I.et .. ,. ,,_ ......,,. -"*-· '"' """ .. ( ... II .. teNft .. flt -·er .. loll_ I ... It ,. ..................... _.., ........ .. t •••ll tftltrtll<t. All lttttt•lftHt .. ... \ltMI---llllt ...... llllt ....... .,.., .. •tllNM t11 ,._... N llMICitM ,..._. •• .. .-r.m. """VWIM ................ . ...... ....... I I p •• Nick Tbimme,ch Old Programs Live On ' .... is wl m m be eq ra m1 an r e1 bici ... wb Pu in lN WASIUNC1'0N -Norman Mineta, born In San Jos ... \allr . was once l~ victim of » b8d federaJ Pf'C)lram In UM:? u~ i. 10-year<Otd wurlnK a Cub St-out uniform, he was haul :-ti away lo a "relocation" camp fo r Japanese-Americans. Now u a U.S. cont"tHSman, be a. trying to do away with many othfor f ederal programs. so me of whic h might ulso be cull1•d ''bad." As chiairman or the llOUSl' e.ub rommlttee on oversight uod r\· view. M1nela wants to re· duce the 492 categorical aid programJ to 22 .. budget runctions." and let many programs fall b y t b c wayside. lie is also co· author ol a "sunset" bill which would put a time limit Oil all federal legislatioo, and require Congress to reenact it after 1t had la~. It is· j>opular on the HllJ thctie days to talk of legislative "over· sight," phas ing out obsolete laws and heeding the Proposi· lion 13 ~yndrome. This rhetoric has floated before, though in smaller quantities. Still, House Speaker "Tip" O'Neill has re· tented, and endorsed the "sun· set" legislation which is now given a chance to pass this year. "THE QUESTION is, do we need programs that go back as far as the '30s?" Mineta says. .. There is a generational gap working here. For two years J have bffn trying to kill the Federal Renegotiation Board which spends $5 for every one It collects. ·•It was all set to absolutely die March 31 , 1979, only the Pl'esidenl put money in the 1980 budget for it because Hyman Ri ckover told him lo. Besides, the bill 's author . Re p. Joe Minish <D·N.J.) is not going to. let it go: either. Getting rid of an obsolete unit or government is like killing a snake : you cut it up, it wriggles around, and it's alive again." Indeed, the collection or pro- grams <some estimate there are J,000) and the 146 formulas to ti01 m• BLEYLE ::~ FOR ~ HOOPER =: ASSOCIATES or ia galery on two. south = coast plaza. costo mesa; san dego freeway at bris· tol (71•)549-8300. d1atrlbute tMm. 11 mount to u lt>gl1lat1vt> snakepit The heal heads on th<' 11111 and In th<> buruu<'rary "dmit there 111 a l•<'k tlf rullon{cllty whit'h r.111es the h~Ullty or the rlUienry. FOa EXAMPLE, the 197'7 P\lblit' Works Employment Act <S4 bUUon> mandated that e.ch state wu tntlUt d to a $30 million minimum grant Thu purpoM' WUS lO ('O!)(• With the 7 fi pt•rt'ent national uncmploynwnt But South Dakota had only 3 6 pt-rrent. nnd cJ1cJn 'l rcully ne1'<1 a ll that federal money. But 1t had to take 1t, and a unit Uke Pennington County (4 2 percent> was pressed to spend the S4.5 mlllion the reds dumped on It. F e d e ral involvement in transportation is a mess, and one doesn't even have to thank Amtrak. There are 114 federal programs (65 al HEW alone) providing transportation ror the e lder ly, Medicaid patients, Headstart c hildren, s heltered wor kshop workers -all worthy ride rs to be sure. But one lederally purchased van with two riders may follow another empty one down the same city street because they were funded out or separate budgets. Moreover. there has been so much bureaucratic inconsisten· cy over the contract for manufacture o r 530 new · 'tra nsbuses." with s pecial features for the handicapped, that the gove rnm e nt h as serious trouble getting bidders. CONFLICTING lederal pro- grams help confuse the already controversial situa tion at the Seabrook, N.H., nuclear plant. They also allow the Soil Conservation Service to help Quotes "The ultimate responsibility for really making these pro- g ra ms work over the long run rests with the local people ... If schools are going to change, they have to learn to change themselves -to learn bow to teach better." -Paul Berman of the Rand Corp. on a study that said billions of federal dollars bave bad little impact on educa· ti on. --· farmt9fl drain their llelds. thereby uuslna dowm;tream land owners lO Cllll the Corps or JO;nalnffrs to h Ip stop the flood · lnR runofr. Mineta. as mayor or San Jose. ran into the !iume perplexing •llu1Uoo. "We were picked as a demonlttaUon city to aet one blo c k 1ran t instead of categoricals," he explained. "We wanted $500,000 for a sewage grant, and $2 million for com mwtity centers. They said they 'Nould give us $750,000 for the centers and asked us to think up $1 .5 million for sewers. 1 told them that was ludicrous , we on· ly needed what we needed.'' His exasperations led him to ch air a National League of Cities Conference on how to de· velop communities with federal aid. One result was the Com· munlty Development Act of 1974 -a block grant program giving local officials latitude in using lederal money. "But now," la- ments Mineta, "Congress has tacked so many rules and re· gulations on, It looks like categorical all over again." THE NEED to consolidate federal programs dates to the Johnson Administration when Joseph Califano. then a Whjte House assistant, pushed for It. In late 1972. President Nixon's de· te rmination to decentralize the federal government into 10 re· g ional councils and r eplace politically popular categorical programs with block grants, might have ke pt him from doing his duty to clean up Watergate. "I was one or the mayors to com e out for Nixon 's New Federalism," Mineta says. "Be· ing a Democrat caused some to say, hey dummy, why are you doing what Nixon wants? But I feel strongly about decentraliza· lion and having spending priori· ty set by local offic ials and not b y unseen bureaucrats in Washington." Now, 14 years after the avalanche of Great Society legis lation. Congress makes noises to consolidate and rectify it all. But congressmen also know that there are many COil· stiluencies out there that don't want their favorite programs scuttled. and Mineta might wind up a weary chairman indeed. ~.March 22, 1979 DAIL V PILOT ,,4 7 . -___ _,, "Thank you, we'll let you know-next!" .. .. . . . . . . ~ . . . . . , . . . . . . ' • I . l ' ~ ' ) • . . . .. • . . • . . . . . . . . . r- ' . .,. For Hometown ews ,, WE COVER THE WATERFRONT Events in 'the communities served by the Daily Pilot are the first order of business seven days a week for our No other newspaper hi Orange County cov- ers the Orange Coast as completely as the Dally Pilot . In Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley, Costa Mesa, Newport Beach, Irvine, Laguna Niguel, Laguna Beach, South Laguna, Capistrano Beach, Dana Point, San Juan Capistrano and San Clemente the Dally Pilot Is the leading news source people trust. · The Information· you need lo fully ap- preciate and participate ID life along &be Orange Coast Is presented In clear, eaQdo· read f alblon from the front pa1e to the con- veident, loeal el1111Q¥ 1ds, every claYi I writers, photographers and editors. Every day you'll find thorough coverage of your school board, your city council, your planning commission and the important people in your community detailed in words and pictures placed up front in the Daily Pilot. • "' N CL MENTE I I j • I t . s Thundey. MICCh 22. 1979 Ml have a i.uper idea. Mr. Sampson. Why don't I Just nn11 up your ""'"-' and llll.plain you 10 her?" la Pasatleaa Hotel Green Up For Sale PASADENA <AP) -Jn 191.5, the Hotel Green circulated a brochure inviting tourists "lo a large winter season attraction, to a warmth and softness of climate almost tropical, and to a floral and verdant perfume which never palls." Those familiar with Southern California's re· cent rather wet winters may scoff at that description of lhe local weather. Indeed, the once-elegant resort hotel has come down in the world, too, reduced from a luxurious tum-of·the·century spa lo a senior citizen'sapartment building called Castle Green. Btrr rrs OPULENT MOOBJSB architecture and ornate design remain intact, and can be bad by anyonewith$9.'5milUon lo spare. Castle Green-the quintessential "Hotel California" -is for sale. George Copans, president of the Beverly Hills r.eal estate firm handling the Castle Green sale, said, ··All potential buyers indicate they wish to retain the uniqueness of the property. It would be a pity lo dis· assemble the lovely artisan work ... available only in those days." The building appeared in the movie, "The Sling," and its picturesque design puts it constantly in de mand for films and TV THE CASTLE GREEN IS SOMETBJNG of an hi11torical landmark as well as an architectural one. George Washington may not have slept there, but Presideals Benjamin Harrison, Grover Cleveland, Theodore Roosevelt, John Kennedy and Richard Nlxondid. The hotel was popular with East' Coast millionaires escaping lo a milder climate. John 0 . Rockef'eUer Sr. gave shiny new dimes to the staff during bis visit. Copans saJd. Modem visitors might be impressed with the hotel's elaborate carvings, iron grille work, cavernous ceilings, enormous fireplaces and other painstaking details inpossible to reproduce today becauseoftbecostoflabor and materials. BlJT IN 1115, THE H<n'EL'S brochure em· pbasized its "telephones. sanitary bathrooms and electric lights in most or the large closets made cspecialJy to pl ease the ladies, and well ventilated.·· And, said the brochure, Pasadena's scenic roads "traverse the fruitful regions of many lovely valleys, where there are the homes of successful ranchers ... They are endless ln the charm and variety of con- stant happy surprises." AU this could be had, in 191S,for$J.SOa day. Copans said one buyer Is interested in reopening the Castle Green "as a hotel in all its former opulence.·• If he goes thr ough with the deal, he un· doubtedly will have to add a little present-day opulence to the rates. l- Breast Cancer Surgery Viewed CAMBRIDGE, Mass. <AP> -Radical surgery is no more effective in saving the lives of women with breast cancer than more c:omervative, less muUlating treatment, an MIT researcher says. Profeaor Maurice S. Fox said teats in Den· mark and Great Britain show there ts no survival benefit provided by radical mutectomy that is not equaJly provided by simple mastectomy plus radiation therapy. &A.DICAL MASTEcroMY INCL1JDE8 re· moval or the breut, lymph nodes under tbe arm and chest muscle. Simple mastectomy ii limited lo removal of the breut. Tbe Massachusetts lnaUtute of Technology biololist wrote in the Journal of tbe American Medical Auociation about bis research. conducted while oa sabbatical leave at the Harvard School of Public Health. Fa ukl t.bere bas been a dramatic increase ln tbe reported incidence of breut cancer since 1915. llowner, -~ tbla lacreue in early detec· lion, tbe rtlk of I of breut cancer bu re· mained 1IDCbanled or 40 yean. FOX llJGGEITED TllAT TB.Ba& MAY be lar1e numben of women wbo b&Ye a coaditlon that loob like cancer to the patbolosllt but does not bawe the lethal cbaracteriltics ol tbe dileue. Thia mum that tbe eoaata.nt deatb rate in tbe face of an IDenaMd IDcldenee of reported dlleae may re11eet more detec:tloa of a beDlp eondiUoa that don aat......., requlre • ..., • .. a ,...,. poutble um mucb ot tbe bldchn or wtr dlMue dNNd bJ ~ would MYer llillalt.lt itHlf u malptat dlM ... la a llOl'lllal .......... be Mid. IHIS AD GS-200 ~H.P. CHAIN DRIVE GS-450D ~ H.P. SCREW DRIVE lfowacla,. • a.µ.. £i.c&ic O.rag• Door Opener -·~ _... a luzury. Coming home at night end Mine aW. tc> push a button. ha,,. your garage door ~ OJM$l and " Ught come on t.o reveal tM lNide ia nice security. not juat a gadget. ·111788 And.~ wh-.. it Taine. ian't it nice to ~tout in the d1'f 9arap? f lo.,. the thift9. Had cm• !or years with an old tu.be ~ trannnitter (today'• ar• solid stat.)~ Tb~da of codM to make i.t almost ~la far anyosM to haft JOUN. rn.tall yOWMH °" .. can do it. 50' HEAVY DUTY EITEISION CORD 444 Thia is 16 -3 &JT (don't ask me what that meana. I'm .iill working on the ch icken aitting on the bird hoUM). 3 ....u-.. ARVIN BEAT " EIC:BUGEI \\\\Wi\'\ • 4999 LIMITED OUANTITIF.S Trickier, the grate ia part of thia eet-up u the cooler air ia heated and blown out the front. Un.natural. with fan. 31" POT BELLY STOVE 2288 Not too many of th ... left, either. ( Did they all go on a diet and loee their pot beW..?) Oh, 90rry, bad joke. Limited quantities. FIREllRD I FIREPLACE BEATING SYSTEM 1.7 88 Ha"n't qot a lot of th-. left. They work nice. Pull the cold air in at the bottom and blow it out the top. Naturally, no fan. CIEVROI POLBOON 11 IOGROW GRASS CARPET I 'Pt a kick out of the 497 title. "No grow." Any~ out theN 8till LIN FT in clouht? Dwnh ue. 12 · • foot wt.Ith. I Year Wanant7. NORMAL INST.; noN OF OUR mar ... 98.00 SllL 7 114 II SUPER DUTY WORM DRIVE SAW 117!7 Thia ia..n~ t h1M• you buy to cut a few boards on~,,a year. Thu ia one you buy for life. a real professional tool. Worth the m oney. 2x4x95" DOUGLAS FIR STUDS ~J 16!. . 1~Y::J ••l'IJ-1::-1=u Standard or better. I don't know why they are ju.st one inch under 8 feet. but they aure sell for lea that way. 5/a" T-111 SIDING 1 S~~HErf Tatuncl and QTOO"d fir. Great siding material. Seal natural or paint. Big ah.eta make it fut and ...,. to wo1'a with. 4" o.c. DISS TOI SAWS PACIFIC LATTICE PATIO KIT 99s~.rr. The complete package ready to usemble on your slab. Includes 2:a:3 wood lattice tc cover, headers, beams, posts, and all fasteners. Size determines number of posta. ROOFING NO. l CEDAR SHINGLES 63~~so.rr. HEAVY CEDAR SHAKES GRAY ENAMEL SHELF IRACIETS 5.6 13· 6a8 • 'Sc 19· 131114 •• •. BdO Enameled steel. that calm gny colot-. No raYlno beaut!• but when lt 1 com. to .U.neth th-. ha" it. I J Nick Thimmesch Old Programs Live On • • WAIHINOTON -Norman Mlneta, born ln San Jose, Calif • was once the vic:Um of • bad federal proeram, In 1942 os a lO·year-old wtartnc a (\ab Scout uniform, he wa hauled away to a "relocation" r amp for Japanese-Amerkana N()w as u U.S . congrHSrnan. he 1~ tryu\Q to do away wlth many othfr fe deral pro1rams, 11ome or whic b m •1 hl a lso be called "bad." . As chairman of the llou.t' sub- committee on oversl1ht and re· view, Minela wanta to re· duce the 492 cat egor i ca l aid programs to 22 "budget runctlons ... and let many programs fall b y t h c wayside. fie is alfO CO · author of a "sun et" blll which would put a time limit on aJI federal legislation, and require Congress ~ reenact it aft.er it had lapsed. It ls popular on the Hill these days t.o talk or-legislative "over- slgbt," phas ing out obsolete laws and heeding the Proposi· lion 13 Syndrome . This rhetoric has floated before, though in s maller quantities. Still, House Speaker "Tip" O'Neill has re· lented. and endorsed the "sun- set" legislation which is now given a chance to pass this year. ••THE QUESTION is, do we need programs that go back as far as the '30s?" Mlneta says. "There .. is a generational gap working here. For two years l have been trying to kill the Federal Renegotiation Board which spends $5 for every one it col1ects. "It was all set to absolutely die March 31, 19'19, only the President put money in the 1980 budget for it because Hyman Rickover told him to. Besides, the bill 's author, Re p. J oe Minish ( O.N .J.) is not going to. let it go: either. Getting rid of an obsolete unit or government is like killing a snake: you cut it • up, tt wriggles around, and it's alive again." Indeed, the collection of pro- grams (some estimate there are 1,000) and the 146 formulas t.o dl1tr1bote them. a mount to a •~1l1lative anak<'rlt The be t heads oo tbe Hiii a nd ln the bur('aucracy admit th rf' I' lade of rallonaht whld'I r11:;t•11 tht hosUllty of lht cltl&enry FOR EXAMPLF., lht 197'1 Public Work!' Employml·nt Art c S4 blllkM>> m8ndalNI thot l'Uth U te was t-otlllt-d . tu a S30 million mlnlmum ~rant Th" purpoff WU t.o ~ with the 7 6 pt>n·<-nt ll•UonaJ unemploymtnl But South Oakot1 had only J 6 percent , and dadn't re lly net.'<.l all th8t ff'der•l money. But 1l had to takl' II . and a unit like P.-nnm~ton County (4 2 perei!nt > wu pressed lo spend the $4 ~ million tM foch dum ped on It. F e d e ra l involve m e nt an transportation 1s a me!\s, and one doesn't e ven have to thank Amtrak. Tht>rc are 114 federal pro1rams (65 al HEW aJonel providing transportation for the e lderly, Medicaid patients. Headstart children, s heltered workshop workers -all worthy r id ers to be s ure . But one rederally purchased van with two riders may follow another e mpty one down the same city street because they were funded out or separate budgets. Moreover. there has been so much bureaucratic inconsisten- cy over the contract for m a nufac tu r e of 530 n e w • 'trans buses," with s pecial features for the handicapped, tha t the gove rnme nt h as serious trouble getting bidders. CONn.ICTING federal pro· grams help confuse the already controversial situation at the Seabrook, N.H., nuclear plant. They also allow the Soil Conservation Service to help Quotes "The ultimate responsibility for really m aking these pro· grams work over the long run rests with the local people . . . If , schools are· going to change, they have to learn to change themselves -to learn how to teach better ." -Pa11l Berman or the Rand Corp. on a study thal s aid billions of rederal dollars have bad little impact on educa- tion. rarmtrt draln their fleld•. tbt1rtb)' cau1ln1 down11troam land ownen t.o call the Corpe ot l'~nllMertJ Lo ht1lp fitOp the nood· ana runorr. Mln4"ta, ~ muyor or San Jose. ran Into th<' s1Hoe pc rplcxani: 111tuat1on "We w~re picked as a dc-monatratloo cltr to get ooe bloc k 1rant n s t ead or t·a te1or1cals," he explained. .. We wanted SS00,000 for a sewa1e grant, and $2 million for community centers. They s41d they would give us flS0,000 for the· centers and asked us t.o think up $1.S million for sewers . I told them that was ludicrous, we on· ly needed what we needed." His eusperations led him t.o c hair a National Leag ue of C1l1es Conference on how to de- velop communities with federal aid. One result was the Com- munity Development Act or 1974 -a block grant program giving loc al officials latitude in using federal money. "But now," la· ments Mlneta, "Congress bas tacked so many rules and re- g u l a Uon' on, It looks like categorical all over again." THE NEED to consolidate federal programs dales t.o the J ohnson Administration when Joseph Califano, then a White House assistant. pushed for it. In late 1972, President Nixon's de- lc rm I nation t.o decentralize the federal government into JO re- gional councils and replace politically popular categorical programs with block grants, might have kept him from doing bis duty t.o clean up Watergate. "I was ooe of the mayors t.o come out for Nixon's New Federalism," Mlneta says. "Be· lng a Democrat caused some t.o say, hey dummy, why are you doing what Nixon wants? But I feel .strongly about decentraJiza- . ti.on and having spending prioM· ty set by local officials a nd not by unseen bureauc r ats in .Washington." Now, 14 year s a fte r the av a lanche or Great Society legis lation, Congress makes noises t.o consolidate and rectify it all. But congressmen also know that there a re many con· stiluencies out there that don't want their favorite programs scuttled, and Mi.neta might wind up a weary chairman indeed. ~. Mwc:h 22, 1979 "Thank you, we'll le1 you know-next!" DAIL v PILOT A 7 ' . . ·-· A• DNl.YPtLOT s ThurMtay, March 22. t97i "I have a super idu, Mr. Samp on. Why don't I Jui.t ring up }Our w1fo and explain you to her?" In Pasallena Hotel Green Up For Sale PASADENA fAP> -In 1915, the Hotel Green circulated a brochure inviting tourists "to a large winter season attractio n, to a warmth and softness or c limate almost tropical, and to a floral and verdant perfume which never palls." Those familiar with Southern California's re- cent rather wet winters m ay scoff at that descr iption or tbe local weather. Indeed, the once-elegant resort hotel has come down in the world, too, reduced from a luxurious tum-of-the-century spa to a senior citiien's apartme ntbuildingcalledCasUeGreen. BUT ITS OPULENT llOOIUSH architecture and ornate design remain intact, and can be bad by anyone wilh$9.S million to spare. Castle Green -the quintessential ••Hotel Cahfomia • · -is for sale. George Copans, president of the Beverly Hills real estate firm handling the Castle Green sale, said, •'A II potential buyers indicate they wish to retajn the uniqueness of the property. It would be a pity to dis· assemble the lovely a rtisan work ... available only in those days." The building appeared in the movie, "The S ting," and its picturesque design puts it constantly in demand for films and TV THE CASTLE GREEN IS SOMETHING or an h istorical landmark as well as an ar chitectural one. George Washington may not have slept there, but Presidents Benjamin Harrison, Grover Cleveland, Theodore Roosevelt, John Kennedy and Richard Nixon did. The hote l was popular with East Coas t millionaires escaping to a milder cHmate. John 0 . Rockefeller Sr. gave shiny new dimes to the starr during his visit. Copans salcl. Modern visitors might be impressed with the hotel's e laborate c a rvings, iron grille work, cavernous ceilings, enormous fireplaces and other pajnstaking details inpossible to reproduce today because of the cost of labor and materials. BUT IN 1115, THE H<n'EL'S brochure em- phasized its "telephones, sanitary bathrooms and electric lights in most. or the large closets made especially to please the ladies, and well ventilated.·' And, said the brochure, Pasadena's scenic roads ·'traverse the fruitful regions of many lovely valleys, whe re there are the homes or successful ranchers ... They are endless in the charm and variety or con. s tanl happy surprises.·• - AU this could be had, in 1915, for $1 .50 a day. Copans said one buyer is interested in reopening tbe Castle Green "as a hotel in all il5 former opulence." If he goes through with the deal, be un· doubted.ly will have to add a little present·day opulence to the rates. Breast Cancer Surgery Viewed CAMBRlDGE, Maas. <AP l -Radical surgery is no more effective in s aving the lives of women with breast cancer than more couenaUve, less mut.ilat.l.nl treatment, an MIT researcher says. Professor Maurice S. F9X said teats in Den· m ark and Great Britain show there ls no survival benefit provided by radical mutectomy that. la not equally provided by simple mastectomy plus radialioo therapy. &ADICAL MASTECl'OMY INCLUDES re- moval of the breast, lymph nodes under the arm and chest muscle. Simple mastectomy ll ljmited to removal of the breast. The Jlaaaacbuaetts lnaUtute of Technolon biololilt Wl'Gte in the Journal of tbe American Medical AlloclaUon about bis raearcb, conducted while on sabNUcal leave at tbe Harvard School of Public Health. • Fox Nici there bu been a dramatic lDcreue in tbe reported lnddence of breut caneer since tts5. However, del~tbis lncreue iD early detec- tion, tbe rilk of of breut caneer bu re· mained. uncbanaed or 40 yean. J'OS 8l100B8TSD THAT Tll&&S llAY be larae numben of women wbo bave a eoadlUon t.bat loob like caneer to the patbololllt bllt doet not b.ve tbe lethal cbaracterlltica of the dlleue. Tbll IDUlll tbat tbe coa1tant deatb rate in tbe face ol aa lDereMecl lncldeace of reported diHue may reflect more detecUoa of • beDlan CODCUUon that doea aol 8dUallJ Nqaln ......,. "It nm••• poulble tbat mucb ol tbe blclchsl or ....., dlaeue detftted by ~ would ... .,. .....,_ itMlf u mabp•at dlleue ta a .................. Aid. Roota Fee Soupt GS-200 '14 H.P. CHAIN DRIVE GS-450D ~ H.P. SCREW DRIVE i . < lfoa .a.,.• Genie ~tiic Garap Door Opener illn .. 9'M'lh • lu.wy. Comin9 home at night and Wng .W.'to puah a button, iu-.. your gar&fJ• cloor oame open and a liqht c<>m• on to reveal tM t.naid. is nice ..CUlity, not j~t a gadget. ••7 88 .Ancl. H.y. w~ it raina, isn't it nice to ~tout in th.tJ Or, 9ara19a? I lov. the-.-thing. IUd one for years with an old tube type tran91ftitter (today'• ue solid staw). ~•of codM to m&M it a!mioet ~for anycnwt ~haft~ In.tall ~°" .. can do it. SO' HEAVY DUTY EXTENSION CORD 4•• - Thia is 16-3 SJT (don't aals me what that means. rm .till working on the chicken sitting on the bird houae). 3 wire. ARVIN BEAT EXCHANGER 4999 LIMITED OUAN'JTI'IES Trickier, the grate is part of this Mt· up as the cooler air is heated and blown out the front. Unnatural. with fan. 31" POT BELLY STOVE 2288 Not too many of th.-left, either. ( Did they all go on a diet and loee their pot beW..?) Oh. eorry, bad joke. LUnited quantities. FIREllRD I FIREPLACE B~TllG SYSTEM 1788 Ha,,.n't qot a lot of th... left. They work niC9. Pull the cold air in at the bottom and blow it out the top. Naturally, no fan. HAPPY GRASS I Z YR. WAllWITY UN.'rr.I ~~E Still th.ink they were plaJing with the title. little, but this 18 Noe indoor· outdoor gr .. carpet which ehoulcl make eomeone happy. (The kid'• not f•llng NORMAL INST ~ON OF OUR UNIT ... 98.00 De WALT DELUXE 10'' POWER SHOP ~239??45 l.U.mited O\.Ulnti t ie• It h as Black and Decker quality with DeWalt reputation. Comes with legs and the dust catcher. Plenty features. SKIL 7 1/t II SUPER DUTY WORM DRIVE SAW 117!7 This is not the saw you buy to cut a £ew boards once a year. Thia is one you buy for life, a real professional tool. Worth the money. Zx4x95" DOUGLAS FIR STUDS ~.Jl",_E~ 16?. _l_J~3 •••tJJ-c:·,=~_. Standard or better. I don't k.now why they are just one inch under 8 feet, but they •ure aell for less that way. Tenured and qroov.d fir. Great sidinq material. Seal natural or paint. Big .beets make it fut and euy to work with. 4" O.C. • R.m•mh.r. he who laugha Lut lat.ha last. ( s.,. REDWOOD LATH 4FOOT 13~. 6FOOT 17~. tNt thNe times nal fast. What maw lt WOrM u th.at I don't Ian-wh.at lt mN.NJ.) 23 ~. 8 FOOT wn. PACIFIC LATTICE PATIO KIT 99!.rr. The complete package ready t o aaemble on your slab. Includes 2z3 wood lattice tc: cover, headers, beanu, post.a, and all fasteners. Size determine• number of posts. ROOFING NO. l CEDAR SHINGLES 63~~so.rr. HEAVY CEDAR SHAKES 73~~so.rr. ELECTRO GALVANIZED ROOFING NAILS 21~~.BO~ Choice of W ', l ", 1 ~". or H'a". Like 44t a pound when you buy the big hos, not bad.• well.) t-----------------------------1~-------------------------+----------------------------· ---~­~~11 ,, '') ·. : .. . , .. CBmON POLnOOM II IOCIOW '. '' ... ' ' . I ·"· .... '. • I . "'/' .,,.,, '"' GIASSCllPET I Pt a lack out of the 497 title, "No ITOW·" An7boclY out there .till LIN -in cloubt? Dwnlt \18. 12 . ~ •. toot wt.Ith. I y..., Wananty. DISS TOI SAWS 8 PT. OR 10 PT. 26" HANDSAW 666 u •Rl ~ ~~- PREMltJM BACK SAW K-1 12" •" 14" 5 11 GRAY ENAMEL ·s&ELF aucms Sa6 13· 'Sc 6z8 10.12 29~ . 8d0 19c 12al4 49• - l " l Lubric:at.. retards nat, clisper... m oist.UN. (Hey, I bought one of thoee TV ncord offers. Nel.90n Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald. What do you mean? Who?) p • • QUAID STATE .10~1CER DELUIE 20/50 ,;; STATE WEIGHT· MOTOR OIL ~ 63!r. wrnm 011 What doee it m.an when they say "cleluse?" LOse Del~ lfamlrurver (with meat?), Deluse Shon1 (with handle?), Del use 8ot'friend ( with job?). SCOTTS TURF BUILDER 2000 so. rr. 4 88 4000 so. rr. . au · eoooso. rr. 1188 ~ dl7 formula that t..u Oft!' ..... of time. ALLISON STRAW BAT ~ FOAM CUSHION H-.y duty WOftl\ outer, foam and sprin11 inner. Keeps your other side cool and maybe .,,.n helps t~pers in crazy traffic. 366 Pump it up in MCOnda and really get in there to ... what need. doing. SIAIL JAIL ; 166 Thinctay, March 22. 1.919 s DAIL y PILOT A. . ALLISON · TRAVEL.MUG · Nice id.a. H.u a hue it Mt.a in and the hue hu a .. lf ·sticking bottom to keep it in plac. on the clash or whel'9Mr. With snug lid, too. ~1·· 12" ADJUSTABLE JAc1~sTDD 2~ Steel. adjustable with poetiwe pln stop, handles up to 3,000 lb.. Get one, beau thoee block.a a.nd boards. Up to 10 timee st1'0n991' tMn the trad.iUonal Jock. Jimmy proof. IDEAL SECURITY SUPER GUARD LOCI II ~ER 1699 ~ER 1999 EVEREADY BATTERIES CORD. 17C 1938 1r 1950 EA. ~· 77c Get plent7. We may h.a" this apin 800I\ and then .. may not and JOU don't want to pay 80me of tM prtc. I h.a" 8MI\ el.Mwh.re. ALLISON STEElllG WHEEL COVERS I!~~ Choice of nylon or terry. (Did you notice last Sunday'• ada? Not one joke. I was sick. Oh. you didn't notice the difference?) CLEAIWELD so1.m.01 WEI.DEi llT 1699 Lightweight portable rig that generates b ig h-ta. N011J J'OU can hr&M, weld, and hanc~le aoldering job. easier. NATIONAL LUMBER HOUSE PAINTS COOD LD'E FUTllTDIOI 01 SUIDAICE STUCCO I JWOllY LATEI BOUSE PAllT YOUR CHOICE ' COLORS OR WHITE DGIOLIA WRITE TOii.ET SEAT 3 99 tMIOO Nothing mam a john look more nm- down than a beat-up toti.t .. ~get a new one if 8UCh .ia the CMe with JOUN. . 1• .,. .. , . . · ' . . .. " ' -. 4 J .. .. . . ' ... ,. ' ... . . . - ~ ~ -. , .. .... :J .. . . ...... • -· . I . . . l ! ' I I . , . I l ~ . -~· ... ~ .. . Vp, Vp anCI Ateatf Ray Raphoon. 11 , goes airborne on his bike over a ramp built by neighborhood kids in the 2000 block of Continental Avenue in Cost a Mesa. Wat ching (from left ) are Davie and Travis Heil , aged 7 and 10. and Matthew a nd Joe Clay, 9 and 10. Candidates Tell Views Trustees Interview Hope/uh /or Board Seqt, Concern over ways to finance future school operations. The loss of local control. Strikes by public employees and binding arbltraUon. Not surprisingly, there were as many divergent opinions on these laa1,1e5 as there were school bo•rd candidates at a meeting tld1week. him for assistance and data. With 18 months' experience on a school advisory committee a nd having visited all the schools In the district, Bandaruk said be was qualWed for the va· cant bMrd seal. -~-"'D Wllllam DeBerry, 1010 ~1'8ariat Circle, Costa llllesa, sAid' his bJggeBt concern as • board apember would be "...,. THE EXCEPTION of trytias W'I \ell the community several key issues about wllicb w=~rict Is doing with its the 10 hopefuls vying for a .$eat r / · would like to see the district est,fblish a vocational high school to help students develop job·related skills. ON 'ftlE ISSUE of strikes by public employees, mo:it of the 10 candidates said they opposed s uc h action , especially by teachers. Binding arbitration to end negotiating stalemates also was not back~ too heavily. Creely took the stronges t stand on the issue, saying the district woulcl need to "win at aJl costs" In a strike siluat.jon. La1una Beach flnaUy certified lls 1enera1 plan aa complete when ctly Council members vot· ed unanimously to accept a seismic and 1alety element out· Un.la1 natwal llasards in· the 1 l'eaalde co•nuanity, ,. The actioe pavn the ·way ror conalderaUori' of 10 tentative tract IDaPI and 13 divisions of land that were waiting for tbe seismic and sa(ety elements to be approved. A SPOKESWOMAN for the cl· ty pluaiDC 1talf •itid that a schedule for consideralion of tbe · lteJD• would ~ worked out by Friday, but iDdicated lhe 10 pro- jects Md aot ~lved basic COD· sideratlon yet and-eould contain ,pr~blems that ~4, d~lay their approval. 1 Most diacuaaion wu limited to sug1estton1 by Councilman Wayne Baglin that areas in the document's policy portion be amendecNo cover only high and exLceme danger areas. For example, the policy re· quires that solls and geology re· port.s be prepared on any prop. u ty included in geologically pro~lem·prooe areas designated as moderate, high or extreme. BAGLIN WANTED the re· quirement eliminated for the moderate clauiflcatton, Doting m.t teVeral area covered by the detignaUoaa -ere already developed. But Councilwoman Sally Bellerue~ .. lf yoa're IOlni to be cutting back on it (the potic1> l'd like to know more about \(," she said, indicaltng she would like further' · study. Council members agreed to approve lhe offered document without-changes, however , noting tbat the. c1ty planning staff WW ~ re.working several portions ol the general plan over the next year.· THE VoTE CONCLUDED a months-Ion& proeesa tbat began last Noyeriber w• pl.nning commlllloeen tint~ considered an initial draft ot the seismic and Hfety element. ~. t.Wch 22. 1979 N I llp a Tree .. DAILY P1 LOT A• I D•il• l'lleUt.ff ~ : Ii Laurie Sheflin . 18. of Costa Mesa takes advantage of in- termittent sunshine on the first day of s pring Wednesday to practice her tree c li mbing. Don't forget your umbrella. Laurie. Hospital Addition Ap~oyed. in· Valley on 'tlae Newport· Mesa ~~hool 119-. , J1e also said be felt a boarJI seemed to agr ee, ~ .wu pOte~~em for the district aa evenlq of intei:eatia,C ad -COlllcLbe Nrtecl ~ing_. "I am oplaloaated discussion ;n .,._e pen0aally opposed to Tf," he "9tute ol educatJon in -0ruii6 told lail,lntervlewera. €cMlllty. I -Cllrt1&.pller Creely. 2752 ~ lnlstees were etitig In Me ndoza Drive, Cos ta Mesa, Ufflal Haaion at th / ~r said,_ he w.-nie«t to aee the role or C..m11olty Center n COit.a edu~atiod ttecome more people· "You back away from a fj&ht you're not wlllln" to win," -he said. Vanderwalle said •trikes by public employees are dp truc· live, especially on s tude nt morale. To circumvent a strike, he sai.d, bi ndin1 ubltratlon would be a suitable alternative. The documel\t cover.fi· geologie_., fire, fioodlng and lidal wave PrOble ma that could occur la tbei A.rt Colony. Councilmen bad stated they would not approve subdivisions and parcel maps until the ele· ment WJll finished since the city's 1eneral plan wasn't com· plete. . Fountain Valley city councilmen t)ave overturned planning com· miJsion decision blocking a 61 ,000 square.fool add\tton to Fountain Valley Community Hosp1'8.I. . T.he 'WfanipM>us council action T\Je&day means hospital officials cad 10 ahead With the $5 million ,m>ject, set for completion in about · two years. : · ~ '1 Meu to Interview t JO,··tu· relMedandnotmOdey-rel•ted. dldates for Duke o· rtea•a va· Cnel1 said schools should be eaat ~ 2 seat. boahl will helpin1 students to stand on p6c:IC O'Brien's auoceasor next t.beir own and function In the week. . bro•der society: Tbe applicants and tile es· -••rea L. McGll•n. 2365 ...ee of their positions were ex.' Notre Dame Road, told the prnaed thusly: board abe would like to see the -•--• S.ndarak, 2«8 An· district maintain Its sense of dover Place. Costa Mesa, said local control. he would endeavor to be a "key Mrs. McGUnn said the district expert" for the district so other is faced with the specter of 106· board members would lean on Ing Its ability to adequately gov· Man Gets 16 · Years for Sex ll(AMI <AP) -Leon Field, M, bu been sentenced to 16 y1an in prison on charges of . sexually abusing a 14-year-old 1trl wbo stayed In his house aJ..o.t two yean and bore li1m a -· Cireilit J~~yjd Levy sen· __.Mal >' to 15 years for lewd and lascivious conduct aDCI one year for child •buae, the maJ~ Ndl COBYlctioa. Tiie lb'I diaapPeaHd fl"GID • ~ Jaome in llay tm ud WND't found unW the i.bJ was ... &be tesWied she Ud IU witla t'i8ld more tban ~80 times, UYJli• In Field's small laoqie Ml'OM tbe alley Imm the girl's •pareata. Field's lawyer said t'leld H~ fdr her "like • 'dau ........ " ' . Dog Clinic hlrounced ern its own affairs. -Jerome Vandewalle, 2810 San Juan Lane, Costa Mesa, said be would like to see the dis· trict mar shal its human re· sources for the common good of all In the district. ·'The re 's a great deal of ener gy In the district, but its de· voted In opposition to othe r energies ln the district ," he said. -K. PHI Raver, 3037 Royce Lane, Costa Mesa, 1ald the squeeze on finances ln he af· termath of Proposition 13 ls a problem he feel• the district will have to cope with. Raver said employee relaUons alto would consume more and more time and that the loss of loul control <u, it bad Mrs. M~GU.nn) trou~btm too . . . . . ' I BUT WESTIA.KE said binding arbitraUon would strip the dia· Crict of Ill management abilities and he therefore opposed It. Raver said the re were nQ "clear and hard fast answers" in the realm of employee rela· · Hons because it was such a sensitive area. Trlgilio said he frowned on strikes by public employees and Mrs. McGlihn also satd she did not think favorably of that kind of action. AUiO EXPREMING opposi· tlon to public employee strikes was McLaughlin. Bandaruk is a consultin& engineer ; Creely is a bookstore owner; DeBerry is a school ad· mlnlstrator in Santa Ana. Mrs. McGllnn is active in civic affairs and PTA w'ork; McLau~hlin is a lawyer; Mrs. Pelichowski is an active volunteer; Raver Is an analyst with the county; Trigillo ls a di $trlcl circula tio n ma~ager·; Vande walle is a me~h'anlcaJ en1Liteer, and Westlake works..for. a steamabip com~y, ... -. Tbe document. which includes maps defaJU.., various bazard areas lo tbe oomlDUDlty, is availa· 1ble at City Uall'for residents who would like to see what potential problems may exist in the vicinity of t~~lr residence . 'Ibief Takes Mon~y, Gold A Laguna Beach man told of. flcers be lost cash and acrap gold valued at $1,050 from bis home sometime during the 'nlght lhis week. .. Officers said they believe thieves slipped open a door lock at the rear of tbe home of David T. Barrett, a Laguna Beach city employee, at 195 Cypress Drive sometime llooday evening. Taken was '8C>O In cash, three gold bands, and scrap cold valued at '400. I HOWEVER, A SECOND mo· tion from councilman Ben Nielson that carried in a 4 to 1 vote requires hospital officials to • come up with a tentative master plao for the rest of tbe un· de ve lope d a c reage. Mayor Marvin Adler voted no. Tbe lacl(Of a master plan was one of 'the reasons the planning commission rejected the new hospitaJ wing last month, noted city Planning Director Cli nt Sberr9'1. He recommended tha t the council support the project, but said the building is "poorly placed" and "the arcbit.ectll!'e is r e l a tive ly start a nd un -• imaginative." BEN SA•UELS. facilities coordinator for Fountain Valley Medtcal Development Company, told the councU that the place· me-nt of the building is crucial because it must tie ln with the main corridor of the existing building. He added that the wing is de· signed as "just a plaJn building" to match with the existing. facility. The new wing will be built on the wester ly portion of t he hospital's acreage along Warner Avem11e. Access lo the building . would be provided by a widt•r · entr,-nce on Euclid Street. THE ADDITIONAL s pace would not increase bed capacity at the hospital , officials said. It would allow them to cul down on the number of triple bed rooms now being used and add 16 more double rooms and 60 singles in the new building. The structure, a split· level one· and two·story building, will also reature expanded m aternity wa rd facilities and a sm all auditorium. officials said. ··r don't see any reason why the planning commission or city council should try and design the hosp ital." said counc llman Bernie Svalstad, who made the motion to reverse the planners' action. NIELSON LATER added an amendment that will block is· suance of building permits for the new wing until a master plan for the l)bepital's future Is s ub· milted. • The approved amendment is .not ellpected to cause any delay in building the n~w wing, city of· fi clp\s $a;d. Hospital representatives we re ~sked tO present a schematic plan of how the hospital may be ex~nctect in the future as the ci· ty processes needed building permit.a over the next four to six. weeks. Woman Sues For Pet Cat •ueANVILLE (AP> -A woman wbo HY• her daugbler's . Pft nl ... doused with 1a10llne and llt afire la suing for $t0,000 lD 1eneral •nd exemplary • I "da..._. . Newport Beach atr eo.u....-Svebn llart. left. and OIOrt1 8p_oaner, of Harl9or View HWa Oll'deD Club CllDlaY ddclUon pique lnttalled 1t E.;=1 ltw Park B~ llemortal ard. Clmller ..... ln pwk on curr Drive WU donated by lln. Spooner'a club and Newport Beach Garden Qub IO city would have permanent blcem.mlal remembrance. , J ' , I TM IVil wu flied In Luten CoatJ tluperior Court Wtdnes· da1 br Joy Simoa In behalf of dau1bier Suale Andru1. Named u defendants were :c tllnie Jweailea from suburban 1 W11twood. and tbelr parenta. TIM auk uld the cat lived, but ' ... W to be removed aur-•• ea~. \ ; ,. •• DAILY PILOT Thurtd1y, M1.,;1'1 22, 1979 Butterfly and Pelican _ __ .. , __ Caught in SlucJge Flap . THE aVUNO CAME In a lawau1t riled by Pacific Legal Found1Uon, a Sacramento·ba ed public· nterest law farm. t rfly'a .ole breedinc grounds in El s.~aundo 8&81' EMPHASIZED that the ru-1· Ina bas not settled th~ dumplng dls· put~ ''The Judge d id oot rule that they had t.o continue dumping sludge ln the <>ttM," be nid. "He just ruled 1hat they must consider t~ impact on endangered apeciea before stop- ping lt." Best added: "We believe Crom the lnfol'matlon we bave received that the sludge ls probably doing more good than harm in the ocean .... that the environmental Impacts will be worse ii the sludge is moved to land rather than dumped lo the ocean " Robert &st. attorney with the Graffi·ti• A-.,0 ...,.:,.ed foundation, explained the pelican '-"& ~--...... feeds on anchovies which ln turn live 1 M p E R 1 A , 1 t a 1 y < A p ) oft organ.re mat.ertal ln the sludge. Authonties in th.is Riviera city have _ The El Setundo Blue butterfly was installed blank panels on public walls ~ DAILY PHDT i nvolved be cause the city's m the hope that grafitti artists will s: . ~VSIFIED .a .,.5 alternative disposal plan included concentrate efforts "ln an orderly !'... ~-,,,.., dryiq and trucking sludge t.o dump · · d k bll 1 :.,, M2·M18 sites, one of w .... ' .. b was al ... _ but-w a Y' an eep pu c P aces .. UJ" un; cleaner. ~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--! ,,,. ... -. .=--r i= ... ... . .... .. -.. -""" . >-~ ~ •, ... • • .. -. E "" ,. ,,. .. #< -.. ... ... . .. .. . .. . .. . .. . . .. -: . :.. " ' . . ... -"'. .. 1-: ... .r:: .· .. :: '". ~: :· ... .,.: : .. .. : ·:: . ~: .. :: . -:: . Reg. Separate Items 110980 SAVE 31()80 • R•llistic9 STA-20000 AM/FM St.,.,, R~•r wnh Dolby Fii (15 1111.m min. RMS p.r thMll•I «I olJms. 20-20.000 Hz. 0.11" tlhl ~ _,,,,_, • T• Md o .. e W*' VHHr Floor Sp.at.rs rWdl 15" A~c-8 .. ••• WHIMS • RHliltk 1.M-1tl0 6dl..Orin c-.,., whtB.._ 12s.ss-v• RHlistic/S/#1,. M..,,.lk CM1,._ CHARGE IT (MOST STORES) ENJOY REALISTIC SOUND FOR LESS! ":..~V!" s~sgsAVE 6/j 4275 2·WAY FLOOR/SHELF SPEAKERS -u.9byR-49!! Reg. 59" Pair SAVE•10 Buy the pair for under $50! 22"- hlgh air-suspen- sion speakers with 8" woofer. 3" tweet- er. 40-914 • R .. lisfic STA-41 AM/FM St1rH R1e•w" (ID ,,.,,, ,,,;,,. RMS ,., d11111•I at I oAms. 20·20,IJ(}O Hz. O.~ tlllll 11.,,,.,,;c tlist1rtiNJ • Two M-..~.g s,._.,, S;rstM1 • R1#istic LA8·5J C,,_,,, s,,,_ • Nor•"'-30 StlfH H111fpbon1s lnduda Dust Cover Ind Magnetic Clftrldge SILENT BELT-DRIVE CHANCER SAVE •30 LAB-65 by Reelistlc 14995~{ R Our finest auto-1.;:~ matlc changer! ltidllllll 129. .. Vlllt Adjustable antl- llllllllc Clrnfll. skate. cue/ ...,... Dlllt CMr pause. 42-2111 Alll/n. STEREO I-TRACK SYST91 OUR FINEST CARTRIDGE Modutette•-1 by Aeellstlc sAVE 12% .. ":; • Lets you play 39• your car tapes Reg. at home! Enjoy 49" FM sfereo'or AJA. too. Match- ing speakers. 12-1402 ECOLOGY starts Friday at .9:30 a.m. many limited quantities ... not all sizes may be available in each grouping .•. colors and styles limited to stock on hand, so shop early for best selection! these items available in our Huntington Beach Store women's sportswear 48PANTTOPS 59 JUNIOR PANT TOPS 62 JUNIOR BODYSUITS 47 JUNIOR SKIRTS 61 FAMOUS MAKER TOPS 47 JUNIOR PANTS 96 COORDINATES n COORDINATES 54JUNIOR CARDIGANS S8 JUNIOR TEE SHIRTS 67 FULL AGURE PANT TOPS 112 MISSY TURTLENECKS 179 MISSY TEE SHIRTS dresses, pant suits N<YW 7.98 2.98 1.98 1.98 1.98 7.98 7.98 5.98 4.98 4.98 3.98 2.98 1.98 N<YW 30 JUNIOR DRESSES 9.98 .. 30MISSES'ORESSES . 9.98 12JUNIORPANTSUITS 14.98 12 BASEBALL OR PVC JACKETS 14.98 lingerie, loungewear NOW 75HALFSUPS. . 1.98 147 NYLON OR COTTON PANTIES 88c 49 FLEECE ROBES 9.98 50 JUNtOA FLEECE ROBES 4.98 55 TERRY LOUNGERS . . 6.98 30LONGGOWNS 4.98 women's accessories 12 CORLEY TOP DRYERS 392 PIECES COSTUME JEWELRY 92 DISCO BAGS 6751&.KFLOWEAS 43 08LONG SCARVES 26HATS ... 112SUNKYSHAWLS 48SCARVES 59LEOTAROS 111BELTS . 49 VINYL HANDBAGS savings for infants 20 BLANKET SLEEPERS 60 OtAPER BAGS 35KtMONOS .. 45 PILLOW CASES 25 DIAPER SETS . . 55 SWEATER KNIT PANTSUITS 30 SCREEN PAINT TEE SHIRTS 45 BOYS KNfTSHIRTS 50 BOYS PAJAMAS 35 GIRLS KMTSHIRTS 70 GIRLS GOWNS 35 GIRLS PANTS 23 CARDfGAN SWEATERS savings for girls rtPUASES . . 280 llf(N Oft BAIEF UNDERWEAR 410AlllE84-61 . JO PANTS4-14 . . MIJMlm7•14 .. 12aou11s ... x 1•aouan1-1c . . . tUllCKEYMOUSE8CREENTEES ..... 70 IWIATDYISTS ... 14 ~JSMLOYIRSWEATPS 7·14 llCMDIQANIWUTIRI 4-1( 120ILllPWIAR . . •Kil .N ,_TTEE SHNnS •vlngs for boys NOW 11.98 48c 2.98 28c 1.98 1.98 2.98 98c 3.98 1.98 3.98 NOW 2.98 3.98 98c 48c 1.98 1.98 NOW 98c 98c 2.98 98c 2.98 2.98 2.98 NOW 1.48 28C 4.98 2.98 S.98 1.98 2.98 . 9IC 98c 2.98 2.98 2.98 98C savings for boys NOW 75 LONG SLEEVE KNITS 3.98 99 STUDENT JEANS 6.98 100 STUDENT BIG BOYS PANTS 4.98 75 SPORT SHORTS • 2.98 125BIGBOYSSWIMWEAR .. 2.98 savings for men 65 VINYL JACKETS 99 S. SLY. SPORT SHIRTS 110 FAMOUS MAKER KNIT SHIRT 50 THERMAL UNDERWEAR 20ISPORTSOCKS 99 FAMOUS MAKER WHITE SLACKS 35 YOUNG MEN'S JEANS 41WIN08AEAKERJACKETS 45 DRESS SHIRTS 10SLSlV.KNITTEESHIRTS . 31 FAMOUS MAKER COTTON JEANS 15SPOATCOATS 82 L SlV. LEISURE SHIRTS 60 POL VESTER VESTS . 37 LEISURE JACKETS 46 HAWAIIAN PRINT SPORT SHIRT 206 NOVEL TY PRINT TEE SHIRTS 50 FOOTBALL JERSEYS 40 STRIPED KNIT SHIRTS . 33 SHIRT /SWEATER SETS 45 L SLV. WESTERN SHIRTS 103 KNIT TEE SHIRTS NOW 9.98 3.98 9.98 2.48 98e 7.98 5.98 . 3.98 . 4.98 .. . 3.18 .... 19.98 5.98 . . 2.98 . 3.98 3.98 2.98 2.98 2.98 6.98 5.98 1.98 savings on shoes 400 WOMEN'S SANDALS 250 WOMEN'S FLAT SANDALS 100CHILDREN'S SANDALS yardage, notions 1n YOS POLYESTER INTERLOCKS 99YOSOIANA 78 YOS POLY /COTTON DENIM 278 YOS. KETILECLOTH PRINTS 74 VOS CHALLIS SOLlDS 241 YOSBEDFORDCOlJDUAOY 899 VOS BROADCLOTH PRINTS 59 VOS SUPER SUEDE n YDS INTERFACING 81 VOS CORDUROY PRINTS 233 RUG AND CRAFT YARN 501 PERSIAN CREWEL YARN 112MACRAME BEADS 35 MACRAME COAD 49 POP-OUT ANIMAL STITCHERY 51 STITCHERY OR WEAVING KITS NOW 7.97 3.97 5.97 NOW 98c 1.98 98c 98c 1.48 1.48 98c 1.91 48c . 1.48 28c .15c 11c 1.98 3.91 1.88 savi.,. for the home NOW 203KITCHENCURTAINS . .. . . . 98c 174 HAND TOWELS . 98c 32QIKF1TTEDSHEETS • . 1.98 29 FURNITURE THROWS .... 1.98 91 PRINT BLANKETS . . . . . . : 3.98 2SSHEERPANELS . . 4.98 23SH~PANELS .. . 7.98 1SOUEEHWATERBEDSHEETS . . .. 4.91 190TWINPERCALESHEETS . . 2.98 120FUUPERCALESHEETS . . . ...... 3.98 110QUEEN PERCALE SHEETS.. . .. • . . . 4.98 109 KING PERCALE SHEETS. . .•....•.. 4.91 180STAHOARDPILLOWCASES . .' ... 1.18 110 KJNGn.LOWCASES . . . . . . . . . 2.98' savings on fine jewelry NOW 14MEN'SWATCHES . • . .. . . .. . 11.98 18MEN'SWATCHES ..... . .... 1 .... 12.98 savings on toys 400AMU. NOW . ...... . NOW 35STMTCHOOLLS ..... I.II ..... 1 .. •LITTLllOY8' LI. kfltlTS t•LONG SUEYE IHIRTS 3.48 IOCHARUE'SAHGELDOLLS 1.91 71.UTUREMETALMEN ........ I 9811 ADAMS AVENUE, HUNTINGTON BEACH-963-9731 } I ., ... lie 'Thur9d11v, Mwch 22. 1979 DAIL v Pft.OT A J J lsilverwoodsl Just arrived for Spring! ..... ~ Let'• Lear11 to Sd• Bonnie, a mother p<>lur bear, tries to coax her baby rnto the water in order to teach it to sWlm. Tbe cub, bom December 7 at the San Diego l.oo. vtmlured outside tfus week for the first time. The sex or the cub 1sn't known to zoo 0Hic1als yet. If it's a girl, they may call her .. Pearl " Four Inf ants Die; Vaccine Recalled WASIDNGTON <AP> The gov- ernment bas announced the recall of more than 100,000 doses of vacci.Qe designed to protect infants from diphtheria, whooping cough and tetanus following the deaths or four babies wjt.bin 24 hours after receiving the vaccine. Tbe U.S. Center for Disease Con - trol said Wednesday the action was being taken by Wyeth Laboratories or Philadelphia at the request of the Food and Drug Administration "out of an abundance of caution" and that there is oo evidence the deaths in Tennessee were linked directly to the vaccine. THE DEATHS APPARENTLY re- sulted from the little-understood sud - den infant death syndrome, also known as crib death, the CDC said. But the statement said. "The events in Tennessee raise questions for which we have no ready answers." against diphtheria. pertussis, whoop· in~cough and tetanus, sometimes cal d lockjaw. It ls known In the m ical community as DPT or DTP. THE GOVERNMENT SAID the Tennessee Health Departme nt noticed a possible connection between one lol of Wyeth vaccine and the sud- den deaths of eight infants. But it took no immediate action un- til it realized this month that four of tbe deaths occurred within 2-t hours or a DTP vaccination. Because the vaccinations and sud· den infant death syndrome generally occur during the sam~ period in a baby's life, some deaths could be ex- pected to occur shortly after im- munization "by chance alone." the CDC said, and scientists searching for causes or crib death have looked explicitly for a relationship with the DPT shot without finding one. Tone-on-tone Sport Shirt Long i.ltttMt tone·orHone sport 1h1rt hldlUrtlb SlllQld noieolti tdlloflng ~ ....,_ throughout Dacron polyosrer ..,....,...nil dnd cotton blend so It's machine ~ Wd&h n dry Oramalk: dailt ~ tones. Navy. bf own. burgundy, rust. 10.90 Reg. 17.50 ..,., Barrister Slip-on Dress Shoe Now·s the 11ght lime lo buy I~ tialldsome Barrisler all leather s11poo dresi. shoes Get QUilllly, s1y1e dlld great SdV11'1QS 100 Comes 1n enner black or t>urn1shedb1own fuc11uru!. :,marl bra100d lea!tlur H~rtt 39.90 Reg. 50.00 New! Vested Suits 159.90 Aeg.185.00PlaidsandstrlPOS- New! Foursomes 189.90-189.90 Reg. 195.00 to 215.00 V1nsaole sohd and plaid combos New! Sport Coats 89.90-99.90 Reg. 110.00.125.00 Including bidlC• s1yles Checks and plaids. New! Men's Slacks 27.90-34.90 Reg. 35.0(µ2.50 Lightweight ano year 'round lat>ocs . • Look lor additional Spring Savings In all departments •.. Men's Clothing, ,,_,_ Fum,,hlng•. Shoe• ~ And it is those questions rather than scientific evidence that prompt- ed natioowide recall of the vaccine that is routinely given to infants beginning at two months or age. . The shot provides protection- "BOTH THE MANUFACTURER'S tests and those conducted by the Bureau or Biologics in the Food and Drug Administr ation on this particular lot of vaccine were satisfactory," the CDC said. 45 FASHION ISLAND• NEWPORT BEACH ·American Health · Costs 'Soaring' WASHINGTON <APl -The secretary of health, education and welfare says Americans "are among the healthiest people in the world," bu\ the costs or staying that way are high. Joseph A. Califano Jr. made that assessment in his third annual report to the Congress on the nation's health. The naUon's health bill in 1977 was $163 billion, or $737 per person, and consumed 8.8 percent or the Gross National Product, its highest share ever. In 1950, 4.5 percent of the GNP went for health care. HEALTH COSTS THIS YEAR are expected to top $200 billion. The 500-page report "shows that we have made considerable progress in improving the health status of Americans," said Califano, who cited the record life expectancy at birth of 72.8 years in 1976 and the historic low death rate of 8.8 per 1,000 persons in 1977. But the report also catalogs what Califano called the "serious problems that remain," includ-ing· -ESTIMATES THAT 1 IN 8 deaths might have been prevented with appropriate medical "intervention." -~uarter of the women who have babies did not see a physician during the fU"St trimester or pregnancy, when prenatal care is crucial. -Half of Americans did not see a dentist in 1977, and 20 percent of adults and school-age children had not seen a dentist in at least five ye an. . -One-third of Americana over age 40 have never bad an electrocardiogram. CAUFANO SAID THE PRICE OF medical semes bu "mushroomed, .. with the cost or a semlDrivate bo8pital room tripling and physicians' fees clnubltng between U6S and 1975. Califano said the productivity or health care providers and the services they render must be improved Uthe nation ls to receive better.care and keep costs rrom continuing their "alarming"tise. Califano is leading the Carter admloistratioo's fi1bt for a bill that would impose a lid on bolpitals' rnenues next year if they fail to keep the inflation nte of tbelr expenditures below 9. 7 percent this year. Tbe report said heart dileue and cancer re-... Americans' No. 1udNo.2 killera, 19ttOUDt· Ill for aeartJ • pereeat of the naUoa's deatb toll. lat tbe ~ deatb rate for lleut dileue fell wr1J • pereent between 1981 and 1'fl, while ... ewer-deatb rate bu rlleD 5.5 pereeat llDee la.· Par people under qe 45, the cancer deatb .... 9dU8Jb bu fallen. ,_ UPOaT SAID TlllC PSSCSNT.&GS of amwrted teen-ase women wbo are sexually ae· lift pww flam ft ,.reeat ta un fo 3S percent in 11'11. wlllle tM proportion wbo sakl tbeJ always ..S Ollllltlmeepticm ........ from ll pereeat to 30 ........ About 1.1 mllUoa abolUom were reported in .... 0111J 10 pereeat wen performed on women Wll9 Wiil _.,.. tWr .._. ltatel to bave •bor· .... 11 ., ............... ta 1111, tbe __,.... .. U.& las t:m a.rt=-=' ......... Tela· :a• :t.._. •w 7u.1r1111111a1, ... ..., ~-... ,.,,....... ....... ,....., ,, ....... Shown In a durable Wide Wale 100% Herculon Corduroy Fabric Your choice Available as a regular sofa or as a sleep sOla at the same price ~Sola . Value $699 $ .MMI 'lbur choice • .,,., 1.-..8• ~$499$399 Sale • Van Nuys • Canoga Park • Ventura LaHabra · Whittler Open Mon .. Thun.. Frt.10 to 9 P.M.• lba .. Wed. It S.t.10 to 6 P.i-1.• Sun.12 to 5 P.M . FRf.E DEUVERV. BANKAMER1CARD • MASTER OtARGE • REVOUllNG OtARGE ' AJ2 DAA.V PtLOT Thurtd•Y. Merch 22. 1979 , Jolis Program Clouded CVSD Action Threateru Vocaiional Plan ~ The fUture of the South Oranae • County blah school Reatonal <X-I cupatlonal Pro1ram rematnt • cloudf'd thlt W U aner OM of the school dUltr1ct.A tnvolvfd wtlh • thf jolnt powers nacrt>~mf'nt ! rhangrd lhf' 1979 80 proposed • pncl ~ Coplstrono Unlfi<'d &hoot r>ts I · tri<·l lrustl't·~ tncludt.•tl u pro I• v1, Ion m tht> ROP JHH'l Monda.y that would allow lhfm to d" -&()Iv\' tht• proi;tram If llwy bt.•lh•ve fund.loll I lnudequ.11t• : t t~AGUNA BEACH l '111t1 NJ • St·hool ()tstrl<.'l lruittc lu11t wt•ek I approved the 1979 80 ht1ith 'lchool La1una BHeb achool board Pruldent Roa CbUeote Hid that ht •Ill aak hl1 fellow trutlt!M If they want t.o bold a apeclal meellna prior to the April l 1pprovaJ deadUn to con sider Caplatrano acbool omciau· ltist mlnu~ chan1r ~hool otnclala aay the ._.,,,... rnf'nt 11 uppost'd to ht-ratlOt.-d 00 da)"' prior to lht> end of tht• 'chool 'ff'ar ,. "PISTRANO Ta USTt;t:s Mondnv 110111 lh<•y wuntt'd lo kt't'I' Rnr runcttonlng but nld they wt•n• d11 pleued with th ~ 1-Mgunu lh•u('h SC'hool bo1Ard '11> .!il1tnre on • Lht> proj,lram ty of I.be atudenll In the procram are from 'aplatrano Vnlfled School DtJLr1ct CAPl8T•ANO Tau TEES took no action on the fifth ROP bo.rd member issue Monday. The only cbunae an the prol)Oled lln9 80 flop pact was the diasolu· ti on c hu.ast• Hut Cnvh1trono trustees have t.lt•c1ded to take a "wail and see" posal11111 unlit Laguna Reach 11<·hool bourd rnembcrs decide wht•Lhf'r to arc·.-pt lhc amended JtO l' 1>11rl propolllll Film magnate Jo se ph E . Levine has sold his collection of 26 Andrew Wyeth paintings to Arthur Magill, a retired South Carolina industrialist, for $4.5 million. LOCAL I CALIFORNIA l0%off evefY paperbilclL For a limited time only. BRENTANOS Offe r available only at: South Coast Plaza (714) 556-7533 American Express, Master Charge, Visa, Diner8 Club accepted. vocut1onnl tr at run" procru m pttC'l I without the new dlt.~olutroo -Nause .. Hy not a1treelng lo (the oow d11\'l11luuon claust' I, they arc thv mo:iit petty group of p<.'Oplt' l 'vt> t'VN run into," said Caplslrano Truistt!e Edward Westbera. "If th · tl1stncl!> can't work out t h1•1 r dtffort>nce:., then there .. tto uld ool be an agreement," i.uad Cupa:.trano Trustee Ted KOJll' PUBLIC NOTICE ... STEREO LIOUIOATION "l have found them to be rea- sonable people . ll 's Jwsl the a dm1nt s tr a ta on ," s aid ap1stn1no school board Presa dent George White. Contract 0 K' d For S. Coast Courtroom C.fonla Stereo Liqlll.._,.., • •••sfec:I• er'1 rf.:H•latl•• w• clspoH of tlleir ill•entory wrpllll of MW stereo ............ lhwK lhtecl below wll be sold°" a flnko•• flnkenecl Miis •tile .. . CAPISTRANO TRUSTEES said again Monday they want u lie -breaking member on the four- m e m ber ROP Board. AMBASSADOR INN ... Cont. Room 2277 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa But Capistrano schools chief Jerome Thomsley said il ~as unlikely Laguna Beach trustees would agree to appointment of a fifth ROP board member unless the tie breaker was not a member or either school board. A $71,000 contract t.o convert o Uice space Into a rourtt\ courtroom at the South Orange County Municipal Courthouse was awarded to a Santa Ana firm. SATURDAY, MAR. 24, 1979-9:00 A.M. to 4:00 P.M. ~ Se11te11eetl ,,,, . . ~ : · Irwin Schiff. author of a • book accusing the federal • · goven}mcnt of "conning" Capistrano trustees believe they s hould hav ~ a third member from their board sll on the ROP panel since the majori· Fu-~'"Station Project OK'd A new $7,800 drive way was ap. proved this week for the South Laguna Fire Station. County supervisors hired the firm of Means and Ulrich for the work on the Lag una· Niguel facility. The offices now house the sheriffs south county substa· lion. The deputies pl an t.o move int.o a temporary trailer facility on the courthouse site. The Santa Ana firm's bid was well below the only other s ub· milled o rrer of $89,000, and $20,000 less t h a n county estimates for project cost, of. ficiais said. Drivers OK Pact ·· OML Y WHILE QUANTITIES LAST ... 20 =.~rd~ ......... S119 s49 ~r 18 Qtf ~-UJJalllefS s 159 s 59 kl fa.~ Wattage......... each 23=.~ay~ .......... · .. s49 s19 paK 10 ~NMM in Oasn S190 $69 Cmettes f Of Small Cars . . . . each 'll. ~ "'1tfM/Cassettes s 225 s-09 kl Ca With Auto Reverse . . . . U each 27 ()iy "'1/FM/Power Boosters S 89 S 29 flJ Stereo. High Wattage . . each 20 :t :~ ~~~ ......... S 59 S 19 pau the public has been s en- tenced to one year in prison a nd fined $10,000 for·failing to file income tax returns for 1974 and 1975. Orange County supe r visors approved plans for replacing lhc existing concrete and asphalt slab at lbe 2nd Street station. Cou.oly officials said the pres· enl drive is "defective and un· safe" because of large cracks and boles running through it. SAN DIEGO CAP> -Union bus drivers voted 252 to 46 th.is week to accept a three-year con· tract providing no pay in· crease for 18 months, union of· ficials said. ALL IRAND MEW MBCHAMDISI wmt RILL WAlllAMTIES 1-r OM or al ......... r• l•a ht.4 -TM~ 1 .... ihcl! VISA. MA.STU CHARGE, C SH or f'EISOMAL CHECICS WELCOMED · State Solons 2-step Hikes In Pay Backed • SACRAMENTO CAP> -Trying to cool pubUc • wrath over legislative pay raises, the Senate's : leadership committee unanimously has approved ~ its bill phasing in the next pay hike in two steps. ~. Fin;:cee mci,~~ftte~8 ;;\ w~ s:~e~0 ~~ft= : vote. THE BILL WOULD GIVE lawmakers cost-of· • living increases or up t.o s percent ln December I, 1980 and Decembf!r 1981 instead of one 10 percent raise. t Lawmakers receive $2:5,555 a year in salary, • I . plus $46 a day in expense money during leglslatlve ' sessions and free cars and gaaoli.ne. i , The slate Constitution allows legislators t.o J give themselves s percent cost-of·llvlne increases ! each year, but those pay bikes have been given as • one 10 percent raise every two years. ! LEGISLATORS HAVE COMPLAINED, ' however, that lbeir saJaries have not kept up with : inflation. • ~ Senate President Pro Tern James Mills, D-San ' Diego, said when the bill was Introduced that It j was designed to "remove lhe stigma U$ll we are , apparently gelling more than slate employees." t Slate employees were denied a cott-of·living t boost last year after the passage of Proposition 13, ~ but la~akers got a previously approved 10 per· cent raise after the Senate blocked a move t.o kill il t UNDER THE RULES COMMl'M'EE bill. legislators would 1et raises of up t.o s percent u lonl u they did not exceed the increase in tbe coet ol llvinC or raiaes given state employees. Tbe two 5 percent increases could not exceed l one 10 percent raise, since the second 5 percent bike would be baaed on lbe current salary. I llllla, tbe Rules Committee chairman, predict· eel lawmakers would 1et less t.ban 1tate workers, • which b6 said bu been lbe siluaUon in m01t yean. -' .. We have always been treated worse than other .Ute employees wttb tbe exception of one 1ear and tide won't change the altuatloa," be said. Speed Slllt Heane Driver Target KANSAS CITY, llo. <AP) -'1ve brotben ud ..,. bave fUed a S10,000 IUlt •tJeclnl &M drt"" fl a ........ la tbe fUMral proe111AOll fOr tbelr .. ,.... .............. 1,...s.d up ud left tbem beb1Dd •lie C!Ollld ltop ud Ht a MDdwtcb. Tbe tbUdnD ot Neille 11. Oearbart sa1 lbe la· ..... oeeurred ........... Oct. :M fuMral ..... • 1•1• fralll Kwu city to lAmar, a dllUaee ot I •-_...U-. Tbe ault wu ftled ., ....... 8lmlDW • ,..,.. llDIDe. t illill& all.... tJM drt..,, Who WU D0t .... ~,,.I 1Mllwe9"Dbit1 .. OHE DAY OMLYI SATUIDAY. MAa. 24 OMLY WHIU 9UAMTfTllS LAST Cal)llt Town~ Annual Spring Sale ~ll'lg Carpet Town's Spectacular Annual Spring S.le ... • Wt wUI •m1de normal lnslall•hon 1bsolvttty FREE wtten YoU purchas~ c1rpe1 and padding during lhis sale. • AIMf ••• dvnftlJ lhis sp1cr1t sale, on all orders over $200 wltll Z'5'9 down If lime at order or lnstallallon. and your lood credit -ONE YEAR INTEREST FREE CREDIT . SAME AS C SH ••. WIJH NO MYMENTS Till MAY! Ml·LOLOOP Conllnuoua fllamenl nylon pile In • aculplut'ed penem. ChOOM "°"' "" ,,... .... 1111 Flllona. sen NYLON Hl·LOTWalD Soll hiding. t•C199tloneuy long weerlng quellllH !Mic• '"'• cerp.llng P«· feet tor ttlt buelnl tl"N In your home.$ 89 M> •O SAXONY PLUSH A "'Y ~.Mat eat nylon ptte plu8" OllfJ»9I In bMullful mutlf.toM cot· or91tona. NYLON PLUSH Chooa• tram • color•· tton.. Ont of°"' tint Mlf. Ing carpete, long wellring end precUc... apecltlly prad. s7~J IN COMPLIANCE WITH SECTION 1'6 Of THE TRUlH IN LENDING ACT OF NOV., 1174, THE 'OllOWtNO STATEMINT MUST IE INCLUOID IN OUR AO: '"COIT Of CMOIT 11 INCLUO.D IN PRICH QUOTED'°" QOOOI AND SlfMCH,'" WllTMIMSTB 11111 RACH IL VD. ' .................. ,, .............. ,,..... ........... ................ ltJ.7146 SAXONY ~·· to<* al • 1pecl11 low prlc•. Seven aolld ~lo chooH from, In 100"l!. nylon heel u t pma. s7~.P LIMITED TIME ONLYI .,,..., • few ef tM • .,.. .. lft .-............ ..,, .,. lated lft thla 114 ••• ..,.., ..._ lwndfied• of haxurlous •trl•• encl,.,......_ oolenl AND ••• during thle Hmlted Hie, we win ,,. ..................... u ........ ....., , .......... ,... ...,., ..... ~ .... , ..•.. s.rry, dtla .-c .. I offftt ~ ... "°' -.pay to ................. ......, CUT&LOOP 100% nylon heal atl yama lor ••tra long wear. ll"Pf 111 new loOll lonpr. C.,ooH from I mulll· CGtof1. $ 99 ao •o CUT&LOOP 100% nylon. 9 aubtle Col· ora, with •II the moat Mmtd '""""' lco4ch-gtrd•d for •••Y car•, 5-year reeld9ntlal weer gue,. ... sgn ore ........ 11 ..... . ·~ ....... ...... CUT PILI PLUSH 100% nylon with 1 S·Y"' we•r guarantee. Choo99 from 12 tnhlon-ftghl cot· ora. DenM and long w.tlf• '"9· sg!Q CUT&LOOP 9 colorellona In lov•IY aubtle earth t0f19•. One carpet lhet'a grHI tor any d.cor, mocMf'n Of tradf· t~I. s1111 • • · HOWIV'P, '°" THll IPl!C&Al IAl..E AHOLUT'flY NO INT!ftUT Oft OTHlft CMDfT CHAROll WILL M PAID BY THI CU8TOMlft fOft ONE YEAR. HAii.AMOS ESPANOL TH9 II AN ttOMIT ,,_. CMDfT PM>MOTION. SANTAANA 29 I I SO. lllSTOL Town • ... ~ ..... C.-"-.................. . . ....,. .............. .. ,, ... 21,. WU~OAYI lll\t•IAI llU t•IUl'ICM\' ti f t ,.. llf-"l"'l'Ol.ll' "°""-• fAtY CllCIOU •t-•.It ~to el'I\' NO"""""" ..CC ft e-•-.C•M • "'"'1111 C""-"Gt C--t ~ .. ._ lllVIMG CAL.alllA POI ti YIAIS ' ( • ~. Merch 22. 1979 DAILY PILOT .4Ja Gourt DecUion HaiWd S.Lapnan Heam Clw Area Diocese W elcom 8 Church-state Ruling Doulla L. Upchurch, t on of Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Upchurch of South Latuna, bu been elected student body 8y TOM aAaLto;Y ... ~ ........... A U.S. &apnmo Court nillnR lbat. ln .rfeet. prohibit.a f..stral interveaUoa ln lhe a ffair of paroeMa,I ~boob cmploym, lay te1theu has been warmly weleomed by Roman Catholic 1ulhoriUet ln Oranae Counc.y. "SlaN we've alway11 been too rell16ou1 for ftderat ald, we simply have to be Immune from thla Ir.ind ol federal lnterven lion," Brother Dominic. 11uperln lendenl ol CalhOlk School m lbe Diocese o f Orance. u id Wedneeday. ••'fHY CAN'T UAVE \hear cue aad eat lt,' • he said "The rulln1 clearly re flects lht• separalioo of church and state " Divided 5 to 4, the high court ruled Wednesday that the federal government may not force p1roch1 1I 1chool1 to bariam wltb Ul)JODI repr nt 1n1 lay teacbet-1. 1'hP ded k>ft dlretll)' l rf I.I aom(' 101,000 l•y t ache r11 e mployed 1n nearly 10,000 elemen tary and secondary H hools run by tho Rom~n Calholk Church tn th United States. 8R01'11ER DOMINIC 1m1d the ruling aflt>cls M lay teacbn11 t-mploytd by lhe Orunge County choce-se In two hluh 1C'hool11 Mater (){>1 tn Santa Aota and Uoury an 1-"ullerton "But I don't thank it wtll have the impact on WI tbal It might have in other areas," he said "Our reJaUonshlp with these teachers and their union Is very cordial and I lhink il will remain so .. In effect, the decision tells the Seminar Examines ·Social Changes A day·long semina r on social history and theory, examining an approach to history that focuses on social change and lhe role of social groups and institutions, is scheduled at UC Irvine on March 31 The symposium is the second of what organizers hope will be an annual meeting of scholars in history. the humanities and the social sciences. LAST YEAJt•s CONFERENCE, according to Spencer Olin, chairman of the UCI department of history, drew 300 people from 30 eoUeges and universities. , The seminar is scheduled from 9:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. in the Fine Arts Village Theatre, on campus orr Bridge Road. Workshop topics include psychoanalysis and feminism, en- vironmental history. fictions and history and urban history. RegistTation for the session is $9. It includes lunch and a recep· lion. More information is available from Dr. Olin at 933-6522. Autlwr;t Scheduled For Series at UCI • N1tlonal Labor Rel1Uons Board that It hat no aulhorlty over lttbor dllputea that might arise In parocblal tchoola. TH08£ Dl8PllTU stemmed from the pay demands or lay teachers who have. In growing numbf'r"9, replaced the nun1 who onc4' fUled aJmoet all such poei· lions "We see "° escape rrom con- m cta nowtng from the board's cxercl•e or Jurisdiction over teachua In church-operated schools and the consequent serio us Firs t Am e ndment freedom or religion questions that would rollow," Chier J ustice Warren E. Burger wrote in the maJority optnion. However , the ruling didn 'l rest on lbe freedom or religion question. Instead, il wa.s based on the court's interpretation of the National Labor Relations Act. .FIVE .IUSTICES ruled that Congress never intended the law lo give NLRB authority over e mploymen t prac ti ces i n. parochial schools. Wednesday's ruling had its origin in the decision by Catholic dioceses in Chicago and Indiana to r e fuse to bargain with· teache rs' unions. They said Fir st Amendment rights ex· empted the m from federal labor law The NLRB cited the church of· ficlals for unfair labor practices and ordered tbem to negotiate with the unions. 'VERY CORDtAL' Brother Dominic .............. 'N0ESCAP£' Ju'stlc:e Burger The beginning monthly salary for nurses in county jails and probation facilities has been in· creased S200 by Orange Co unty Supervisors. The salary hike from $1, 187 monthly to Sl.387 for the 37 correctiona l nurse positions is retroac· tive to Feb. t. THE BOARD ALSO APPROVED propor· tionate salary adjustments for nurses hired before Feb. 1. Cost to the county for this year's increases is S7, 148, officials said. Seven vacancies are open on the nursing staff, officials said. Previously the $1.387 monthly salary was of· fered only lo .. exceptionally well·qualified" nurses. The board ruled that, although ------------------the schools were religiously af. rmated, their teaching of secular courses removed any exemption tbey might have enjoyed. An appellate court reversed the ruling. And tbat reversal was defended by the Supreme Court. ---~-----~----- -·- D~ILY PILOT pr esi d e nt a t th e ~~~~~~~~~ Ame rican College in -;; Paris, France. M, \--i ..w4r1> A 1972 graduate o f l . \.esa .vel ~ Laguna Beach High CUT RAT£ · School, he is an lnterna· TC".4qr~ . tional business a d · DI UVl ministratioo major and 1----------1 will receive a 8 .A. IMYlftU ~., ... $ 69 .9 degree ln June. nwv1 VlllA I Ullr EXCEPTIONAL WINES $5AMDUMDH IAICla AT HAUoa . 549-4044 Color Your Garden "SPRINGTIME" 10% Discount If you purchase a full flat ... ~~~ 6-Color Packs 12-Pony Packs 16·4 inch Pots Each full flat must be the same type container AND ~~--the same variety of plant. .,~~ (Colors may be mixed.) Sorry ... NO EXCEPTIONS Chilean and British authors and a Hebrew poet are s peakers at UC Irvine in April for lhe International Writers Series. residence at UCI for the spring quarter, plans to present a talk about modem Hebrew poetry on April 16. More information is avaUable from the UCI Commiltee on Lectures, al 833-5588. Get in the act during Active Week, March 23-31. The series, s ponsored by the studenl·FacuJty Colloquia. and the School ol·Humanities, is open to the public without fee. The lectures wm be at noon in the WriUng Center, room 126 or the Humanities Office Buildln«. Chilean fe minist Me rcedes Valdivtaeo, aulhor of a portrait of Mao Tse-Tung, "Eyes of Bamboo," is scheduled to speak on femlnlsm in the Third World on April 2. British ps ychotherapist Juliet Mitchell will talk about new perspee- ti ves in femini&t theory on April 1 l. Harold Schemmel , poet-in· Newspaper Cited > The Branding Iron, Golden WeSt College's student newspaper, look honors as the state's second-best com· munlty college tabloid durinc a coo· ven_tion Qf the CaJiromia ~wapaper ~ PubHahers Association, school of· facials said. The Branding Iron starr submitted three editions for the compeUUon. Ex· ecutive editor then was R. Paul Zieke. SWEDISH DISHRACK •An old Swedish tradition . . •. dry dishes in a wooden rack. •Handmade and handsome .... in genuine fir from Sweden. •When not In uee. fold it up. 788 SalaCI Spl•er ...... " 688 Modef tM75 •The lddl will beg to dry the salad greens! •Spl .. OUt 111 tM...., jn 1n inetant. .......... ~ .... fruit. •EleQlnt too. ,, ., We'll bet our bean sprouts you've already got a favorite sport. After all. this is Southern California. Maybe it's roller-skating, dancing. golfing or biking. But. there are still lots of other fitness flings you can have. This week, we'll introduce you to a few. Read on ... Yoga : Friday, March 23, 1-2 p.m. Come and, see what it's all about. Laura and Belinda of Ecclesia will demonstrate many of the techniques for body or mental well-being. Town & Travel. Middle Level Date shakes: Saturday, March 24, 12-3 p.m. Ever sip a Hadley's date shake? It's great. Be sure to stop by for your sample. Town & Travel, Middle Level Aerobic dancing: Saturday, March 24 & 31, 12-3 p.m. A fashionably fun way to reduce inches and loose a little of Winter's weight. Town & Travel. Middle Level Jack La Lanne: Thursday, March 29, 1-2 p.m. The 'king' of "inhale and down, exhale and up" will be with us for fitness tips. Hope you will! Town & Travel. Middle Level The Body Buddies: Friday, March 30, 1·2 p.m. Channel 9's TV personalltres-a couple of good-natured. fitness freaks-will share some of their secrets Town & Travel. Middle Level Elvis Presley's bodyguard : Saturday. March 31 . 12-3 p.m. He's Dave Habler, and does he have a few things to teach you about self-defense ! Men's Department. Middle Level Shop Mon-Fri, 10-8:30, Sit. 1CMI, Sun. 124. Bullock's South Coast Plaza, 3333 Bristol Street, Costa Meu, phone 666-0811 ) 4ds Ban ~d ·-'1,-Court METROMEDIA Inc. and Pacific Outdoor Ad · vertising Co. Inc., both 10 the out.door advertis· i •& business, brought tbe suits challenging the validity or the or· din a nee. A diSS('nl by Justice William Clark termed the outdoor s ign a .. venerable medium for e xpressing political, social and commercial ideas " HE SAID billboards were protected by the Fin;t Amendment. The court also reject· ed arguments rrom the blllboard firms thal the ordlnanc1' would e n - danger the state's share of federal highway fl01ds, that Uie ordinance denies equaJ protection, that the amortization provisions were un- reasonable and that the city failed to comply with the California Environ· mental Quality Act. Snakes On Meno In Korea SEOUL, South Korea <AP) -How about a snack of snake to boost your vUaUty? Health-minded res•· dents here eat an ettimated 30,000 snakes daily durtng visits to 'restaurants that ex · cluaively serve a snake soup called "balm tan1", the Korea Research Institute of Human Settlements aaya. Tbe report iays there are about 800 s nake ealeriel here Uutl offer a bW al Ian from S20 to ~bowl. But tbe e1iur baa not been medically proven and tbe dty bu ordered 1Dake lbopl to move to back aUeya and quit dia· ~·tt.~""::t:~" EqaalRlghta SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -JuvenUM eom- mlu.d to u.e CalllonU• Youtb Autborlty beve tl9e ..... rtcllt to lood •• erdt aad crecht ... tam. ....... ~ H tlletr M•lt COUG• ............... Court otA""91bMnled. LOCAL I CALtFOR.NIA· Deaf iit Peril Helped Emergency Number Set Up for Weai Countia1UJ May Company So. Coast Plaza ... one week only Montice lo broadloom so e Save $3 to $5 per sq. yd. on every style from Monticello Carpets. 10.99 to 20.99 sq. yd. ... ~ , 1 .. 't ~. • . " . .. · l I t ! . •• "\ ~ . ~ . I' ). I I includes normal installation over your choice of waffle or rubber pad . . . . I ' . ' . I /. . · " CARPET .. ' .. ;" .. , ~ " . , ~ . . . , .:i •• 1 ·., -.. · .. company • • . .. . • I • \ coeta men -touth coeat ptaze -3333 ao. bristol -~1 , ,_ .... ' . • The entire residential line of Monticello carpets is on sa le during thi s extraordinary annual event. • Come in today and see a caravan of luxurious carpeting in today's newest style~ including soft thick plush. exciting Saxonies. carved textures and natural Berber styling. • Choose from Ansd., and Antron~ nylon • T revira • polyester in a variety of colors and styles. For 1 ·week only you can talk to our carpet expert and see the best. most complete a ssortment available. tlOof cove11ng 32 Here are just a few of the super values you will find ''Wind song" TrlverO''· polyester 1n a low level. t1ghfly woven plush. Save now at this fantastic installed price. Come earl y 10. 99 sq . yd. inst. reg. $14 sq. yd. inst. "Callf. Sunset" Luxurt0us Antrorf'J Ill nyloo in a carved textured carpet You'll love lhe colOfs and the decorator touch it'll give your home. 14. 99 sq. yd. inst. reg. $18 sq. yd. inst. "Sandrlft" Trivera'•) polyester in a thick luxuriO\Js pfush carpel. Outstanding selection of today's colors. JO in all 17 • 99 sq. yd. Inst. reg. $22 sq. yd. Inst. "First Affair" Anso· nylon tn th e newest decOfator carpel The u1t1mo1e 1n low tight "velvet" plush •YG)Jf choice of 20 new COIOfS. 20. 99 sq, yd. I~. reg. $25 sq. yd. Inst. LOCAL I CAL:IFORNIA World Plowing Mark NAUIOBI. ltaya (AP> -Kea.Yan farmer Panle Kru1er claimed a world plowlnc endurance record. plowiJll bia father's farm non·stop Jor 5' boun, 24 mlnutea. Kenyan gov. ernmeat olficen supervised the feat. Kru1er left the tract.or seat for only 24 mlnutes. Prop.13 'Rescue' Bill Cut SACRAMENTO (AP> -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. baa cut $5. 7 million from a post-Proposition 13 rescue bill and signed into law the remaining $30 million appropria- tion for spedal districts. bis office 8DllOUlleed. The blll, SB 31 by Sen. John Nejedly. R-Walnut Creek, wu drafted to help part, fire, library. mosquito abatement and other special districts wbicb said they were shortchanged in last yea r •a $4.2 billion bailout bill for local gov· ernmenta. TBOSB DUT&ICTS were espedml)J bani hit by the $7 billion cut ln property tax• mandat- ed by voter approval of ProPoSitiOO 13 since they rely almost entirely on property taxes for their revenues. The Nejedly bill ap propriates funds im· mediately lo h e lp special districts meet their payrolls and COD· tinue procrams ln the current fiscal year. State aid for the 1979-80 fiscal year, which begins July 1, is Still UD resolved for all portions of local government. THE SPECIAL dis-, tricts got only $162 million from the 1179 bailout bill, which 1ave most of the funds to counties and schools. Different analysts estimated the extra money needed to keep those districts funetioa· inc at $20 million to $175 m ii lion. The $17 I million figure wa• selected in Le1ialaU•e hearinp after tbe bill was limited to tboM .... tricts which reeelve no support from tbe coan- Uea. IN A WSITTSN mesaage on 111• •P· propriaUon veto, Bnwa gave a brief expl••Uaa Wednesday for eaWq the amount lo tli millioa: ''Tbe spend1na rallle- tioll ii la keepiq wllll lbe llKal clileipllae n- qaired to aYOMt tu ... ereues In tbe period abead. Wltb tbia ,... Uoa, I 8Plftft Seadl awn•• Older adulta will be u.....-o1aelulGf ~nerel8ee, ealled 11bMllftdaal Ac· u ....... " .... wUI belia Aprlf 11 tllroa111 COa•llbM CommanltJ 001111 ,... .......... fro• II a.m. to DOOD ... .,. ......... aeaei TLC, at IOI 'PMaaAw., 11,. tr ..... Worma- Uoa It •••11••1• at It Was ·Well lnte,,.d * ONLY PILOT A 1• You're - so busy. Being brightly stylish· In large and lovely tops Vou11 wont to wear lightweight and comfortable · . tops In the hottest fashion. designed just for you. And. In the newest vibrant colo<S. Slzes 38-44. • Shown: Cotton gauze mandarin split-sleeve top. Jade and · raspberry. By Tomorrow's Dream. $22 TOb-rol sleeve baseball toP In Celanese Fortr~ · polyester and rayon. Turquoise. By Tomorrow's Dream. $26 : Shirt -tall tunic print top. Sheer polyester. • Block/white. red/white. $28; . lorge and lovely 85-may COfJlPO"Y . South Coost Plaza & WMtminster Mall 'FortreC Is a trademark of Fiber Industries, Inc .• a subsidiary of Celanese · I• sure to drop by ~ our 11Large and Lovely" fashion lhow : Ms. Carole Shaw. edtor of "Big Beautlful Worn<re" ~ wl serve as comment9.for for ow · spr1"Q aportawear show In tt'9 Large and lovefY departments of the fotlowtng stores: Frtday, Moren 23. Wettmlnlter 12:30 p .m.: Friday, Morch 23 •. souttl Coalt Pima 7:30 p.m. {iU~ j Toorderbyphgnacaltollree~~~~.c!job is to make your job 0asier . • ' ) AJ• ONLY PILOT SHARES OWNl!'ASHIP 8'Hy Carter · .. ,..,,,...,.._ CAUSE OF PROBE? Bert Lance Thur.oey. Match u . 1871 . Pro·be Spotlight Turns • WASHJNGTON (APJ -The 6nveaU11l01'1' apotll&bt, IJ..,... In I.hf' •Y" of &..rt Lane for nurly 17 monUu1, •• lurnlnc now to the t 'artt'r War houM, • peanut bu1i.neu owned by lh4S pr I d nt, tU mothfor •od b1a brolber 8Uly The a.b1I\ look place thka ~k with the •P poantmml of a IJ»edaJ couud t.o quarterback tho Wirt' lnvNUc•Uon Tbe Laoc: Inquiry, near t0mple0on, renuiln1 In lM luindl of a. loo ral arand JW'l' ln AUanta Tho appo ntmenl or J'4"<'1 I COOnM'I Paul J C'u,.r•n 111 an t-frort to dt."n rct uapaclon.11 tbal ft'dt>ral offlth•li m lght .\,.;M,\ t\ U .).\I \ a1vt' Uw pr . ld«nt 'lpcelol lr<-•lmflnl In pun ulnK lh ' <'Ompln wart'bouitt• ln\l~tlgallon Qutttlona have 11"° been rallt'd a11 t.o whether Biiiy Carter uaed aom e of the loan money ror personal reaut0ns. Q: It die prnlde•t dfredly l.volYtd? A 1'b•t bHn 't been determined. Recently publl11h00 reporta alleae t.tuit war~ records m1y have been alt.er d and coU1t.eral te rms may ha ve bffn viola~ ln the Pfriod before Jlmmy Cart.er iiavc up control or \ho warchowie. However, there have bt'tln no rcporl8 that be wu personally Involved ln 11\Y or these alleged actMtJes. Biiiy Carter wu runnlnl( the warehouse on a day-to-day brula ut I.be time. Q: lltw dJd Ute "peaaut probe" begin? A. 'l1'e wt1rehouse Inquiry Is an offshoot t.o the 17 month lnvestlgulion of Lance, the Atlantu b1tnker who followed Carter to Wa.'lhlngt.on as head of lhl' Office of Management 1md Budget . lo lnvt"SUgallng Lance's banking fracllces at Q: Wlaal I• a pnHt w•rrlllHM, uywey! lbc National Bank of Georgia, a federa grand jury A 11lt' Cuter wart>howM.> buyw r aw peamulb atarted looking Into the J>08SlbUity or wTongdolng from rrowen for prot'e sing aand ma rketlng to an connccllonwlthloanstolheCarterwarehouse. llt>rt' ar lM un11wera IO vartou., 11u.--.1ton11 about the Cartl'r warflhou11· <'Ofllrovert1y manularturnt who make product.I aucb u peanut * * * but~rorpeanutou Counsel Draws Fire Q : WU& U &M ••la luM fadq C.rna ud Illa l•nAl~a&onT WASIUNGTON <AP> -A decision to apPolnt A· In 197~ and 1976, the Carter warehouse r • a speclaJ counsel ralhei: than a special pro t•elved M 8 mtlUon In loana from I.he NaUonal Bank secutor to <.'Onduct the government's lnvesUga- of Oeorgaa lnveattlgatora hope to determine tioo of President Carter's /amlly peanut bwslness whether any of the money was illegally d1vert1.-'(f lo lb drawing fire Jimmy CartN's 1976 pre sld('ntlal campaign The lat.cbt lo crallclzc the action as Senate DemocruUc Leader Robert C. Ryrd. who said he to Carter aq ~ ~•eaa tlMt pUd Juy lau dra,.1• A: Hardly. -The two lnveaU1aUooa have been separated and the Lance ioqu.lry la drawtnc t.o a clote. There have been broadcast reports t.bat the Jus tice Department la ready to leek Laoce'a ln· dlctment. Q: How wW Liiie spedaJ eawel'a ellke wen? A: "My mandate la lO look at the loan tranaac· Uona and follow Jt where it deserves to be followed, II Curran said Tuesday• "I'm aoinc to call the sbot.s u I see them H best I can and I'm golnc to finish it (the lnvesUgaUon> as quickly as I can." Curran, a federal prosecutor under presidents Nlxon a nd Ford, will not have lhe sweeplng a uthority or Leon Jawo rski, the s pedal proeecut.or who headed the Watergate probe. For example. eventual decisions oo whether IO seek lndktment.a will remain with the head of tbe JuaUce Depart· ment 'scriminaJ dlvlslon, PbilUp lleymuM . Q: Wbat l• U11e prealde •t•a role la &h ware~ par1Denlllp't A: PTesldent Carter owns 63 percent of the business, b1a mother aod b1a brother Bllly own the rest. J immy Carter held legal authority over warehouse matters unUI July 1976 wben bis brother, BIUy Carter , was authorized to act on bla behalf. Many of the queiJUona concerning the bank loans to Carter Warehouse Inc.. Involve Biiiy Carter's tenure as warehouse boss. Q An-U...r.-othe r i8su,11? wus dJs uppoanted that Paul G. Curran will not Q: Aad today? /\ Curran ulso hOJICS lo dolcrmanl' whether huvc the tall<' of special prosecutor und its powers A: The president's anten'St lb an a blind trust lhl'l l' havt• lwt·n vrolataom. of bunJung or lendm~ Byrd. in o Scn1tte fl oor sl)<.-cch Wt.'<fncsduy. mun aged by Charles Kirbo, an AUetnla letwycr and ... tatuh't\ Tht·1w law11 un· extremely comphcutcd bUld Uwrc must be u written gu:.aranll!e that Cur Carter confidant. K arbo is trying to sell the qut>11t1ons involve ullcgcd vaolutioru; or collutcral ran will have u free hund lo conduct the mvt.!Sltga warehouse. In the meanline at as being managed vrov11uons und luk repayment or the loans. lton of the Plains. Gu .. peanut warehouse. by a private firm. LOAN PROBED President Carter ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ fumtians File In Federal Court The fo llo wing h ave f l le d pellllona of bankruptcy In Santa Ana fedcr aJ court: DCC. I o+-w oeo .... 1'101 .,_. QUln. H""'l"910ft 8"<11, ~ 11\led no •s.-b0<ti<llllllllh. O•nlel Mt'"""' O'Rouro., @nd 01-E.l11eo.111 0 Rour~•. 10011 ConUllullon Ort•t. Huntington e •• , ... n._.. t•tt•d no .,\ .. h 0' ••.c.1111~ OEC U Fr-I• Co<-t """"'°""•· 671 Wn l WJtliOll, <:mt. -· IW• ll"fld "•l>lllllft of "°·~' -•swt• o1 """° -A_, £-d CT-UQ7 C..11• Mir-, S.. J.-GaclillrMIO. lc><merly dOlno busln••u es Mot Goft"11tlnQ. ~ 11\t41d llMllllU~ o1 UOt,tm--•ol~.000 Wltllem A.., !>utborlJUOll "41 l41P1 51 .. W.stmtn\l•r, ""' ll•ted 11•1>11111 .. of $1. l)t efld UHi\ ol ,,...,, -0-.. ~ 8ol•..,. 1Ull ~tod<Poft OriW, i._.. Hiii,, ""' ll•ted llat>illti<K Of .~ .... -•\,..I\ o1 it.no JAN 4 -Pltntlp Mic-• S.19y, ,.,, Cl•t'll 0.1... Huntlftgton -"· II•• 11i1"' ll•Dttlttn of 19,0)I •llCI •IMh of u,aoo ·Etll9 MHltr 8"19y, ,.., Fronti.r CJr< i., H\il>lfnolon ti.«11, rws tilted llebllllles 0t \t,60l •net ,., .... ol U.2'S ~L•tl~ M. HArrl•. 334~1 llllt4t W•Y. 0-Pelnt, ""• llltfJCI llO UMtS orl~llti.. 'Ielephone'lransCer. interest than at ~y bank. lmpt·rial p11y~ mort· intl'J 1·~1 than 1an\ lwnk.. Ahv11yi. hu1>. t\ncl 1111w Wt' pit); !i', " on lcllt· dwdung dollan. 11i. wt'll 111' :.;r\•1111(1>. With Tr/rphor1e n v111sji·1·. jusl kcc.·p $1000 in 1111 h nperi11l Vll' i\ccount Wc•'ll g ivt.• you 11 pc.·rsonul Vil ' Card. Call our loll free n umber ony liuw, <lay or night, seven dnys a w.:t•k . We Hwilch money from your exislin~ chcrk.Jng uccount to your lmpl•rifll ttavingi. accounr. Anet vice vcnu:i. \Vilhout a ny sc:rvkt: chnrgeR, addillonul d1l·ck t·osts or any of tl1t• hidden payment:. vu11 lllu\• lw makinl( on ;1 bunk'i. r hl'dun1.(/ i.a\•111~1> intt·rc·i.t plun. Wt• gifll• )'OU more l11u11 mo"''( Ciw your i.1od l!Jrokt'r your VII numht<r. 'fht:n he nm m ow uny lluthoai~'fl fi.mcb lrom your bllvings ut counl lo your block uccount ... by phone. So you C'Un movt· ll'> f 111>1 ""the mnrkl•t ! Getaway Weekend-;. Om· cull wilh your Vi r numb1·r orrungC's your trnwl to Awpulco,Vt·~tis. ~11n rnmc·i&e·o ... wht•revt·r you wunt to gcrawny 10. COiia MMll-3310 nrtatol Sf. (714) 6'&0·76!>1 ~.wpon Beach-.'J3<1G Via Udo (714) G73-31~l0 Newport C~nltt-MO Newport Cl'nlPr Or. {714) 044 ·1461 .. . II ''"'' w:uat 11111n· nion••\' rhan vuu 1·1111 lwni.. 011 .11 .1 li:111k ... ii rmi want i JU .I. 111111' Mt\'t'I' M'l'\'11 t·~ ... j( \"IHI \.\'1101 ::,.~ l1111io q l>dund v1111 1111d f)(J ollk1·i. all nrou11d you ... i·1mw to Lnapt•raal for yow \'ii' C1m l to<luy. ll'i; likl' m on1·v in tfw h.111k. <Inly ht~ltc:r: · H1mPERIAL sAV1nos ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION Mak.Inf( }'Our pln uN ~u1ppen. .. . -. . -. ~ -. . . . . ~. Mwch 22. 1979 DAIL v ptLOT A J 7 ~----'\Qu_EEN_IE _ __,EPA Junket Probe Due [l;b""''illMC{ Selii:lle Panel Focuaes on Hawaii, Paris Trips . . . . 312. "Try IO look .ii 11 Lhll> \lo d) lhc Lord gl\clh ,md '.I.• t:.keth " WASHINGTON (Ari From thl' ex.htlaraUn1 alahu or Parib to ttt. r~lnlnfC surf of llaw•ll . ome f.:nvtronm.-ntal Protettloo A1ency olfada.ll h1v • purified thl'tr aplrit.a wh.ale c1~ao1n1 up oo the taapayur • s.-nule in vt1Ulf(8tOr8 88)'. An Appropr1otlom. C'ommittc.-e 5taff report Wt.'dnc:sd uy c·hargcd tht"re wt re wade prt-1t1 ubwwa. of bu lness trip" b y EPA f'mployees. jncludloR un assls· tanl admlnlittrator who. in v«!1 tlgaton1 said. t raveled re pcatedly with hl11 l\ecretury THE at:POaT l;AID seveta.l ca11es were rouod of EPA of f1cutls ta.Jnnc uhreported vaca- tions. some abroad, while oo government travel. The panel's mvesugators al8o cr1t1C1zed the agency for holding thne u.a" al a Senate heanng later ln the week. ALTHOUGH THE REPORT did not name individuals, two committee sources who asked not to be identified told The As - sociated Press it was Assistant Admlnlatrator Stephen J . Gage who "frequently" took his secretary, Susan Hall, on field trips, even though local EPA clerical help was available at most destinations. A review of the seven-month period from December 19TI to June 1978 showed that Gage's secretary accompanied him on eight trips at a cost or $2,900. and that all but one were to loca': lions where the EPA mafatains a local office, investigators said. travela with the boss helped her ··to stay abreast of develop- ments." "We do not believe a coovin- cing case bu been made to de· monstrate the need for a Washington-based secretary lo accompany an ass istant ad· ministrat.or to senior staff meet- 1 ngs where local s ecretarial service is available," the report declared. Sen. William Proxmire. D· Wis .. said U,e report shows the EPA has "a very lax system of internal controls. Undoubtedly, lax money is being wasted, and the.re is a very real potential for ~serious misbehavior.'• PllOXMJ&E SAID ms sub- committee on independent agen- cies would question EPA leaders today about the alleged abuses. -------------------iop management "retreats" al far.flung locations. aod said a Gage, apparently on the road again. was not available im- mediately ror comment. A col- league who asked oot to be named said she did not know ex- actly where he was, except that be was .. sort of betwixt and between." Miss Hall a lso was reported out of the office, although not, said the same co- worker, with Gage. The invesUgatlons stair said it found another EPA employee who twice traveled to Paris within eight months for what he described as meetings on the "m a nagement of industrial river basins." While he reported that those meetings lasted three days each. investigatoc; said he had taken 10 days more for personal purposes while abroad. without charg ing that time against his leave allowance. "Got a problem? Then w hte lo /'at Dunn /'at Wlll c1't red tape. getting the answers and °':llOn you neffi to solve inequities m government and b1m11e.~s Mail your quest10M to Pat Dunn. At Your Serv1c:1>. Orange Coad DaUy PlWt. P.O Box 15'ill. Costa Mesa. CA 92626 As many letteTS as possible will be answered. but phoned inquines or letters not mcludmg the reader's ML name. address and bwmess hours' phone number cannot becomulert>d. Thiscolumnaprearsdai- ly except Salurdays " A9ftlCll If a•dles ,..,..,,.fl Pla•t DEAR PAT: Where ao I complain about a small industrial firm in this city that bas an of- fensive. noxious odor coming from its plant? H.S .. San Juan Capistrano C.-.ct Gary MUcbeU, San Juan Capistrano land ue coordinator, by pboolng 493-Zl71. °'"""fl ProJflbe• Delt"ertl DEAR PAT. Help! Here's another "I sent them a check, they cashed it, and I didn't get anything" complaint. Mine involves an offer for a small Coming dish. I ordered it in November from a Dallas P.O. Box number. I've written there twice, but haven't received any answer. P.G .. Corona del Ma r CornJng Glass Works reports a short supply • problem existed for awblle wilb th.is preml•m of- fer from Monon Froaen Foodl, but sblpments now ;. are betaC compleeed. Tbe fa1flllmeat lloase will be •. contacted by Corning lo make aue you don't have :~ tewattany·lollger. · DrPpo.U• Mui Meet Criteria • DEA.a READERS: Security and cleaning de· ·• po91'9 ue a wWe area of dispute between teaanta aad laadlonls. Wiien moving Into an apartment, tlile tenant sboald find oat and put into wrttlng wllat type ol deposit ls belng paid. Dtrrerent naJea oe rei-ds apply dependlng on how tbe deposit ls cllaraderbed. A boaaa depostt ls given to tbe landlord to hold aa apartment and may aot be retanaed aoless otlterwlle agreed upon, sad as a written agree. meat lbat It wUI be applied to tbe first month's real. . A cleaning deposit la beld lo pay for cleaning ·. of the prembes after tbe tenant bas moved. A security deposit caa be used onJy for tllrtt reasocis: if the tenant Is t.ehlnd In bis rent tbe landlord may apply ~ depoeit to cover back rent; lo pay for any da .. age lo the premises cauaed by the tenant or gaesta; and for cleaning if tile cleaning deposit does llOt suffidently cover eosts. A landlord ls required to fllnlllb a tenant wUb H Itemized statemeat of ... am deposits and fees are ued and any su• of ...,, &Mt ls remalalQg from tbe secarlty aad cleaalq de,.ut mast be re- hinted wWaln two weella from tlile Ume am tenant , llaa moved or bas beea evided. 'ftele provbloas 1 are lJtchlded in seetloas 1151.S and lt51.7(a) of the avu Code. Tee U.tle Time Fer Ortler spot cheek showed maoy of- ficials failed to me financial dis- closure st&temenls as required by four laws. EPA s pokesman Ma rvin Fitzwater sn1d, "Although these incidents appear to be limited, w e are concerned about any abuses or conflicts of interest." He added. "We 'll be reviewing INVESTIGATORS SAJD they we re unimpressed b y the secretary's explanation that her New beauty in the kitchen I 052 lnlM • Wntdfff rtaaa • Newport leach 541-1614 If you think a new Looking kitchen is costly, get set for a pleasant surprise. Due to our special purchase-of countertops, you can re-decorate easily and economi- cally. These tops are preformed and lam- inated with Formica to assure long-last- ing beauty. They're constructed in one piece with back splash and built-in rolled edge. So come in. Add new beauty to your kitchen with a value-packed countertop from our store. But hurry. Your selection is subject to stock and colors on hand. PREFORMED COUNTER TOPS a· LONG 10' LONG 12' LONG 16.88 22.88 28.88 DEAR PAT: I ordered 1everal spectaJ sale 1----------------..--------------,---------------,,..--------------t items from Starer-est of California. and enclosed my S23.11 check as full payment. I haven't re- ceived anything and thlDk I 1boulcl at least gel a . refund if the articlel can't be seal to me. I bave sent my. canceled cheek as proof of payment, but 1 still can't get any reaulta. W.E., Costa Mesa Y• eo.&aded AYS las ..._ l•r weeks after ,..,. .., ... Dlaeed. 8larenM .. ,,........ 199r .., mee&. tr It la 1111& reeetftd after six: weeU. . .._ Plloae StarcreM'• ea&omer service '••n.e.& a& Mf.1171. ,&M....,.. llall •all•rMr ftnl .. lecated la C..U ._., .nen an neelftld , fn• all ewer dte· ceutrJ ... dtey are ftlled oa a ! fln&-eome-ftnt·MnM U.. M leu& r..r weeka '--' M allowed for..., •aD -*r ....._, .. t.P i ...................................... ..., I. ti ..... _. •1tlee1, uleta.....,.lle lta~ a. UM •ert11e•• . Al-. mnerlellll a cUHledea.. up....,tlpaJ· 'l --t.Atn,..-~~~ ......... Md.,tlw ..... ll ................. ,... ....... • A router to root for E>ccellent tool for hobbyist or pro. Culs. routs. grooves. trims and decorates in wood. plaatlc1 and compoaltlona. 1 H.P. burnout protected motor. Model tt76t6. BLACK & DECKER ROUTER. Reg.59.99 48.88 Spring cleaning sensation Make the walls In the kitchen. kids' room and everywhere else In your home look clean. fresh Ind new. Give your appliances a clean. gleaming appearance 100. tn tact. luat about any cleaning job is done belier with lhis all·purpose tormula11on. It lakos leas time and work, 100. FANTASTIK W"H SPRAYER, Rtg. 1.69 1.28 6' OZ. REFILL, Reg.2.39 1.88 One beautiful broom Beautiful. because il's boilt to last a tong 11me. and perform like new almost every lime. And now that Spring cteantng time la here. you need 1t more lhan ever. So tor tops in elliclency and economy. pick one up loday. MAIDEN BROOM, Reg.3.99 1.98 HEAVY SHORT DUST PAN. Reg. 2.49 1.48 ... <41. ·~ .' / ward & Harrington MotMr~-c..c.- I Nalls, nails, nails Why risk running out of nails right in the middle or a project? Sieck up now and get the highest Qu&hlY plus eoonomy. Even If you don't nbed them today. ti's only a matter of time. Smooth box 8<I and 16d only. One pound box. SMOOTH BOX NAILS. Reg. 79C lb. 48c lb. • coeTA MllA 1276 Bristol W -1 500 • Open Mon. thru Fri. 9 to 9 Sat. 9 to 7 Sun. 9 to 6 U.... ClllO¥I 770J Gardin Grove Btvc.. 637-9571 or 893·6523 • Open Mon. thru Fri. 7:30 to 9 Sat. 9 to 7 Sun-. 9 toe Pl• '•toll 301 lo. State College 870-0050 • Open Mon. ttKu Fri. 9 to 8 Sat. 9 to 7 Sun. 9 to 8 Sele detee Merolt 22 thrOUlb M9fOb 27. . . • r • • ·~ • ' ' • ' • . ' t "· • L I .418 DAA.Y PtlOT Le1al R •leN Solon Cites Artist Rights SACRAM ENTO <AP> AM~mbb'man Ah&n 5' roty hu aympalhr ror an artlat whose donated mobll• "CaJdt1r red' was repalnled by the Pltltl· buqc h A)rport Comm11'1'lon ln P1tLt1burgh'll col· or a. tret"n and kOld T ha t wu one reason lht l.oa Angeles OemO<'rat tltfd Wt'dnHd•)' when h proposed a thret·t>lll p1.H'ku1e lnc.•ret&l'>IOH artislll' rlghll a nd tax adv1nla.c«>11 tnt!aOTl' S~ID IN THE A.S•; h6 m'nt oned, artl•t Ali>1t8nder CahJ(•r "WUll rur1ou11 but hnd no lt>gal rcml'<iy" ut(lllnMt the uJrvort commiss ion. Sltroty'1 SIJ 868 would tallow artists to bring I '"81 net on 10 bl<><"k u work or urt from being an tenllontally injurt>d or de11l royed or lo collect damage..,. wht•n the nrt hH bc.>en harmed Croemt CORte11ders The bill would a lso proh.~ an artist's right to niter or deatroy a work ttw> artist 11Ull owns The b'11 would not apply to murals and otber arts that u nnot ~ removed from buJldingi., uruess lherc Is a written apeement lo the contrary SIE&OTY SAID A SIMILAR ball won passage in both houses to win final pu.ssugc In 1t11 umcnded form In the session's closing hours. One of thsc 10 f inalists WllJ becomt..• M1:,s San J uan Capistrano Apnl 21 In judging schcdull•d for Capis t rano Valley High School. &-eking htlc are. clockwise from bottom left . Tamm a Marc hello, 17, M ach('lle Minette, 18, Rochell\! Roban:,on. 18. Claudia Devotch. 19. Sylvia Shcun. 20. T<Jmmy Davis. 20. Km. Mocah~. 18. Dodw Savala, 17, a nd Teresa Camacho. 18. S1eroty's other two bills are· SB 669 would allow professional artists to make a state inc..'Ome t ax deduction for the fair market value of a rt they donute to charity. SB 670 would make California inheritance l;iw mirror feder al law by permitting an artist 's family to put orr payment of s tate inheritance lax· es for rave years and then pay the tax due over a 10-year period at 4 percent Interest. ~ 100th A }i)~ (fjpJ ""1"•,.sa,.y / \\lool'''~'rtl~ Thank You, America. Sturdy Plastic Helpers Perfect laundry-aids f o r kit c he n or bathroom! And t hey're extremely durable and hard-wearing ! Choose the 32-quart waste b skat, handy laundry basket. 17'' w a s 't e ba s k e t. a sw i ng -top bas ke t and much more. 10-pack Panties Your cho.ce ol elastlc leg bnels bikinis or h•P hu99ers Reg. 4.99 4.44 Thermo "Air Jug" 1.9 Litre 8.88 ~ . 1 2.00 each HAPPY HOME Paper Towels 2/$1 MARCH 21st Q thru MARCH 27th 20°/o OFF all Hull Pottery Overproof Dinnerware Reg. 20.99 13.88 In Stock 16 pc. starter set ..1 {~~1€ · 11r. n y 'lO'to, f ~1,'1 ~""-­•• Mabelllne Nall Color Vida I Sassoon Heir Mlal, Shampoo Fas t dr yi n g . and F i n is h i n g condUk>n1ng formula. ForlTUa. 8 oz. 9132 oz. 1.67 each Junior F1etder's BASEBALL GLOVE ~~.9 99 WINFILD SOFTBALL OR BASEBALL JOHNNY BENCH BAm8G TRA•ER fielder's ...... IP s1 YOUR CHOICE! VINYL COVER 8laok wtttt white 1tr1pet.. tor ett .......... 10.131 1·12. The fun way to improve 3 99 ba ..... 1 Reo. 1 . tting .,.., Is. Adjustable, for both right and lef t· 10" handed hitters.Use indoors and outdoors. Regent VIDA BLUE ...._,,, .... MTUMTIMW Colorful net and fr•me fOld1 for HIY 1tor-oe. ••56" I lle. Gr Ht A 2270 Cowhide leather with pigskin 11n1no. leather well & laotno TOP pn tteerhlde w ith deep well pooket, double-X 1•no ~e IALLS ..... IM 'I 3.88 eeofl °" """"· feet Of lloWPllch AT WOOLWORTH •• , . LOCAL I CALIFORNIA Ed11raelea 'I'~ Minority Parley Set Al"WIA~ UCI Speaker WHeon Rlfe1 Will 1tudenta who com e from low. Income and minority ra m1Ues find it ea1ler to get Into college In the L980s t.han they have ? That 'a the subject or a conference of educators a nd legislators at a day· long symposium scheduled Tuesday at UC Irvine. SP EAKERS INC LU D E Wilson Riles, state superintendent or public instrucUon: Patrick Canan. direct.or or t he California Postsecondary Edu cation Commission ; Willia m Cr aig, chancellor of the California Community Colleges; Alice Cox, UC assistant vice preside nt for student a c ade mic servic es ; a nd K att Haycock, consultant to the California Student Aid Cornmlssaon. THE SYMPOSIUM, from 8 a .m. to 4:30 p.m., will be held lo the Social Science Hall on campus . It stemmed from a UC-s ponsored r e port publis hed last s pr ing that s howed race and Income were major factors relating to stude nt levels or achievement tn high school, and 1n dete rmirung who will go on to aUend college. s~cular, ca tch a Spring breeze and SOAR! spirited ·~ .. Kl ·TES (2) (7) --,1-0) ... C1 (1) llcytlnkt a high lift, low d rag aerodynamic phenomenon -bulld variations -tandems, trains, g lalif or stunt -suit your w him or the wind. kits to b ulld 1 or 4 kites. J.70 and 9.00 Tetrakh, 4 triangular soll kit. 6.IO TetraKJte oord, 500 feet 30 lb. test. 1.IO (2) Parafotl, the ·soft" kite, no rigid frame, some design used ror recovery or space vehicles. muttt-colored nylon cloth for long use. 28'' x 35". with 500 feet or 100 lb. test string, cloth pouch, rrom me Kite Fac tory. 40.00 (3) .. Ootar" the Ootopw, brillia nt, menacing race with ·multl-tenocle" streamers that flutter In the wind with resonant IOUftd, .t.00 ( 4) Winged lox. space age dellgn -4, 6 or 8 wing sizes. aerodynamic so lls ror added lln and g_llde. 6.IO to 11.IO (Ol Kooky Kite, make It swoop. d ive. loo p and spiral through the a ir at your command I 54" wrn~n wl1h 4 25' sky streaks. dual control grips and string Included. 7.00 61 Pranolloo PtrelMll, vibrant sun colors Jn durable Mylar. 26' toll. by Kite world. 6.00 lllry. the ftylng ribbon, 10 feet long, nies In most any wind. a Mylar Star Kite. 2.00 lpeo"•Dlagon. splendid. many-hued g raphic s In tough Mylo~ giant 45' toll. t .00 =a. onooee rrom auofted d9'1gns, sizes. vivid colors. 1.00 to 11.00 (9) c omfoftabfe ln_.de handgrtp. easy line release. reef In. 10. 20, 30 lb. test.'-IO (10) -· --Wood lpoot. lndlOn Import, procttcol fOf free-style kite ftylng 1. 71 not llluatrated TM "*" double alrfofl for extra llft and romfet octton. nylon sp innaker cloth. 17.00 ~ ICMI .,_, vibrant muttt-cotor stripes. 6'1' wlngapan. 19.IO f' Del9. made of "rlPllOC>~ nylon, designed for mo>ermum lift. U.• Ololl Drago-. strong r'tyton cloth to fly tor years, brtght color appllquea, In 8 d l"9..nt deltgnl. ..... and ~,,..,. k .... -and ltrtng. and apoofl . a..-... VIM, MalllliOt .... ., .............. not al dellgr,1 avaltable at evety ltOf9 b\I special of'defl gladly token South CoHt Plaza 545-G431 ,......HIH•llall WMICowlnlPelhlonPlm DelAmoP....._....,. Open .-111g1 tncl Surdrv . ......... .. , INSIDE: •Stocks •Business ~.March 22. 19f9 OAllV PILOT ., ~-· •Movies •Television -~~~~~~~-Rai~oadhbor~e~ke?-~~~~~~~~ \ ' I ' I J I { I ' • ' '· ' ~ . ( t Newport Controversy Still Boiling 111 aOOJ!R <'A RI.SO °' ... hllY ~ ... '"'" No roac.-tung apJ)01ntmrnt along tht> Orange Coatit trt'a 1n rt>c-t'nt memor) haa sllrttd mor.-conlroVl'rsy nd comment than lhc rcct"nl nnnllng of Ha nk Cochrant' a:. lh<' \ 8r.ilt fOQt ball coac.-h ut Newport Harbor lhl!h ~hoot. Ordinarily, tht· naming or 1n in dividual >A llh ('ochrant•';, uhllHlt's would cause no morl' thon •• r1p1;lt> l•f conversallon COCHRANE'S ADii.i T\" ron1 mands respert among h1' &M't'~ ht!> quahhes are nol questioned The rub is lhul ;10 out.spok••n group of boo5ters did not get "their man" seleded for the JOb The Daily Pilot puhhshed a lett~r by one of those who was dh.appo1nted with Principal Tom Jacobson'!) choice, and honored u request lo withhold the name of the writer The result was a chain reaction or rrbutta.111. 1n uddlllon to the <.'Ondcm na tion or th O ut ly Pilot for publl hln&: th'• lelln wllhOut thti writer's name attach<.'11 to 1t WHILE IT IS Tllu•: th ' laJik to ('ritltlzc Is cuy whM the wnter do4!i. not hhc to back It up with hl" or her namt -th re Is irnoth r :;Ide to \he coin. 'rhU. p rtkulur writer hui. it son tn \Olvcd In Nt>wport Ha rbor High fool· hull, and whether the fear or repnsaJ • ., "~hd or not, to the writer 1t is real The factt. conct.·rning the vacancy '·reatt."d by the retirement of 8111 l11iz1ca arc as follows There were three candidates Cochrane. Earl Byers and John McGee, all who have been in thl' Sailors' program for years MCGEE, WHO HAS BEEN the fres hma n coarh the past seven years, reportedly was the choice or 58 of 70 footbaJI players in a hurry· up vote and the results were passed on to Jacob8on orally. Reportedly, of that 70. 58 were fre hmen and sophomores, l2 were juniors and oo seniors were included. The assumption that lhls "vote" should have any validity. however, makes as much sense as the time a CO!ll!llENTAR~ rew years back when an Estancia football coach decided to leave it up to a team vole as to who would be the starters for a particular game. Nevertheless, McGee was the choice. And not a bad choice, con- sidering his record. MCGEE'S CREDENTIALS lnclude a 48-7·1 record a s M a rquette University High ~hoot bead coach (1946·53 >; an 11·8-l record at Loyola High of Los Angeles (1954·SS l; a 4·0 record with the Ma rquette University freshman team (1956); a 32·16·2 re· cord at Milwaukee's Pulaski High Cunriinghant Quits Larry Brown Next UCLA Coach? LOS ANGELES (AP> Gary Cunningham, who gujded UCLA to Paciric-10 basketball cham- pionships each of his two years, as head coach or the Bruins, announced his resignation today. ll was confirmed Wednesday that Cun- Brown, the former Denver Nuggets coach. Brown, 38, has reportedly already conferred with UCLA Athletic Director J .D. Morgan, and is expected to meet with him again Friday. <1958·&0: and an 87·25·4 record as a liChlweighl coach at Estancia and Newport Harbor High the past 14 years. He was a member of the College All-stars in the UMl game and spent World War 11 ln the Navy. BUT JACOBSON, with his chief ad· visor , athletic director Jules Gage, decided on Cochrane, an assistant with the varsity program the past seven years . Some cry foul. They say it was a railroad job. They may be right. Ir a railroad job means choosing the man you want, then maybe it is a railroad job. Some say McGee was passed up because he might create waves with a more volatile style, in contrast to Cochrane's easier nature. SOME SAY THE CHOICE had been made before Piziica ever an· See NEWPORT. Page 82 HANK COCHRANE Indiana's Carter Hits A Wmller ningham was quilting the coaching job, and t sources close to the Bruins' athJetic program saicf • he will take an administrative post al the school. Citing tens ion and poor health, Brown resigned as the Nuggets coach last Feb. t , and expressed a desire to become a college coach. He had a 272-158 record in 41h seasons al Denver. NEW YORK CAP> -~ The In· diana Hoosiers wanted to stop J oe Barry Carroll and they suc- ceeded, but that isn't what gave the m the championship of the National Invitation Tourna ment. Carroll was held to 14 points afte r scoring 42 in Purdue's semifinal vi ctory over Alabama. But while the Boilermakers'_all · Big Te n center was held in rhPc.-k . Indiana's o wn all· confe rence perfor!ner, Mike Woodson. got only 10 points on 5-of-16 shooting. (, His decision came as a surprise, and an in· 1· formed source said Cunningham did not like the pressure or the UCLA coaching job. where success is still measured against John CUNNINGHAM, 39, has a doctorate in educa- tional administration and was executive director of the UCLA Alumni Association for two years before becoming the Bruins' head coach. ~ Woode n's 10 NCAA c hampionships in 12 years. His tie to the Bruins began when he played for Wooden, and as a senior in 1962, Cunningham was a member of the first UCLA team to make the Final Four io the NCAA playoffs. C unningham 's Bruin teams had a two- ' year record or 50-8. but I lost in the NCAA West He coached in The Philippines for two years. then became a Wooden assistant. The Bruins' freshman coach for six seasons, Cunningham guided his teams to a 101·1S record. ,' Regional playoffs each year. This year's team made it to the NCAA re· gional nnals before los· HE SERVED as Wooden's top assistant for four seasons, 1971 -75, and took the alumni job when Gene Bartow was named to replace Wooden when he retired in 1975. ing to DePaul. CUNNINGHAM THE TOP CANDIDATE to replace Cun- ninghaD} at the Bruins' helm is reportedly Larry Bartow, citing the pressure of the job. then re- signed after two seasons to move to the Un1versity of Alabama-Birmipgham, a nd Cunningham became the Bruins' coach. Soeeer's A vis? Surf Tries Harder At Altering Image By ERNIE CASTILLO Of 111e 0.11, .. , ... s .. tt After an Avis season last year, the California Surf pulled out of the Rent-a -Star market, trading in players on loan for those it could own. Stability replaced uncertainty, established stars took over for marginal unknowns and while the club's bank account dwindled, its stock went up proportionately. For only by making wholesale trades and purchases could the Surf keep up with "the Joneses" or the North American Soccer League. When lbe season begins Saturday night in San Diego, the Surf will have eight new faces on lbe roster. But that's just the begin· ning of a long list of sweeping changes Whereas Coach John Sewell was bid· ing time in the early going last year while the loan players were finishing their Euro· pean season, he figures to have his team intact from start to finish in 1979, the Surf's sophomore season in Anaheim. ·•we had a lot of pl ayers last year who were considered starters who weren't ln and that led to problems,·• says Sewell. "This year, we've got everybody in. "WE'RE BASICALLY SET but It all depends on bow things go. If we need to strengthen the club, we will. There again, it's up to the players. If they play well and SEWELL work hard, we'll be satisfied. It's really in the players' hands." The decision lo eliminate the loan player, especially since the European season won't make them available until late season, has been a definite plus for the Surf, Sewell says. "Loan players are not 100 percent behind the company becauae they've got another club to go back to," Sewell says. "You never know when they're 1olng to come into camp and you never know when they're golnc to settle down. That's why we're not 10· lng to have 811)' loan players. It takes away from what we're trJin1 to put tosether." WllNI' TBS 81JaJ' BAI PlJT tocet.her. is its atranceat lineup 1lnce tbe fraoc:bile be1aa operating in 1961 as tbe St. Lauil stars. Late llllt year, GeeeraJ llaaaaer Paul Deele acquired Steve, David ud Wolf Piii Sulmhob, two former m.-ben ot the rlnl Loa Aaaea. Allen. ID the off-seuoa, be picked up Fram Knutbauaen ... AMI N .... •u from tbe Saa Dieto Soeken. ~ rr, WM the NASL aeortng leader la botb 1175 aM 11'7'7. Sae..,.. _. KraalU--. batb JI, pla7.t on lite same Barera llmdeb tam that Included Fram Beckenbauer of tbe Coemoe. coaaldend the NASL 's best all-around pla,yer. TQlltber, tbe1 abould beM up a atOriq attack that wu the =....,.. weUlleaa last year when tbey strucglecl to a 13.17 TD mGGBIT DEAL, however, wu one that sent midfielder Al T....a. tlll tam upUln wbo bad been wtlb tbe club llDce W13, to tlll llMtle lounden for IMll• Tony Cbank7. Trott wu lut 1ear'1 llM'• ICIONI' aad tbe No. I pol.at producer la club b.latory but became Ufllldable wbea the Surf plebd up Krau&Muaea, ..... boll md llartJ Cobell. a:_., •••wlllle, pOltal ... llautcNU lul 1ear and ba 25 18 jail tine .._. At a, U. C•Mdlaa cltlun ii already ClOll· ......... tlll taa ..,.Ue la Nortll AoMrtea. 19 ....... U. s...f ...... r.ward Jtm RlD~b. tbe MVP of U. ~-So;;., Leape la lt'Je and an All·atar selectlon In ~--; ....... Ooh house Doors Open To Wo01en By FRED ROTHENBERG A .. s.-t1 Wrltff Major league baseball locker rooms are raucous, bawdy, crowded and sweaty. They are possibly the most uncomfortable places for journalists to in· terview athletes. Samantha Stevenson wants to see all this for hersell because she's a writer and that's where the athletes are. Stevenson will soon see what male writers have been seeing for years -lots of card games, lots of shrugs and some downright surliness. Steve n son and th e Philadelphia Phillies recently reached an out-of-court setUe- ment of her suit against the Na· tiooal League club for barring ber from the locker room last year. Although the welcome mat is not out, the door Is defmitely' open. And that's all Stevenson wants. ,.NOW WE CAN get on with the reporting of baseball from the viewpoint of women,'' Stevenson said. "Now women reporters in Philadelphia can finally compete equally with men -and finally show what we can do." Most of the teams surveyed in a random study by The Associat· ed Press will be like the Phillies, allowing women to. tread in the previously all-male locker room. Among the contact· ed teams, Atlanta, Texas, San Dleco, Boston and Seattle will allow all properly credentialed reporters Into the clubhouse without any Ume restrictions . The St. Louis Cardinals said they would open the locker rooms to everybody for 30 minutes immediately after the came, tbeo cloee them to all re· porters. lllllWOU, CinclnnaU, Kansas City, Callforale, Loa Ancelea and tbe New York Yankees were . also contacted but said they • hadn't reecbed a policy potlt.ion yet. AND lllLWAl1KB·E and Cleveland aald fPICiaJ Interview areu outatde the l~ker room woald be Mt up to 1ceommod•t• women reporten. Only tbll ap- proacb wOuJd be contrary to baaebaJJ Commlsaloner Bowte leeWOllSN,P• ... ,. ............. Obviously . s ince the lwu teams had already played each other twice before Wednesday night, they knew exactly what lo do to stop the other. SO IN THE END, one Indiana shot that went in a nd one Boilermaker shot that didn't de· termined the outcome . Butch Carte r bit a 20-foo• jumper with six seconds left to give Indiana a 53·52 vi ctory, a triumph not clinched until senior J erry Sicht.ing's baseline shot bounced off the back or the rim at the buzzer. "The y con centra t e d on Woodson and we obviously con· ceotrated hard on Carroll, and it showed in the statistics." s aid Indiana Coach Bobby Knight, who won the NIT in his seventh try. twice as coach at Indiana and five times al Army , dating back to 1964. Woodson. whom Knight called "the best player ever who didn't even gel honorable me ntion AJI · America," was supposed to gel the final shot for the Hoosiers, although Knight said Carter and Randy Wittman were alternate choices if Woodson was covered. THAT WAS THE case, so Carter. who scored 12 points along with fellow Most Valuable Player Ray Tolbert, launched the game-winner. A lilUe more than a minute earlier and with Purdue ahead 52-51. Carter had climaxed a 3112-minule stall by Indiana that ran the clock from 4: 30 to 1: 10 by throwing an interception. But CLEMON JOHNSON DUNKS OVER LA'S DAVE ROBISCH. See INDIANA, Page 83 Portland Steals Victory ~r Turnover Proves Costly in 114-110 Loss lNGLEWOOO <AP) -Portland Coach J ack Ramsay explained the Trail Bluers' victory simp- ly, "We played awfully well on both ends or the court.·· Maurice Lu cas turned in the offensive play or the game in the waning moments of Wednesday night's contest. and Bob Gross iced the Trail Blazers' 114·110 victory over the Los Angeles Lakers with a good defensive play. Lucu scored on a layin with 14 seconds re · maining in the contest to snap a 110·110 lie, then Gross stole a Laker pass. was fouled and made two free throws. A Pl.BASED U•SAY said afterward: ''This. ls the healthiest we've been all year. Lately, the overall maturation of our younc players bas helped ua play well down the stretch in cloee ball 1ame.." Even Laker Coach Jerry West was Impressed, saytnc. "I really tbou1bt we played as well as we could bave. I said all year that Portland has as mucb talent u UJ NBA club. '"Ibey keep brtnliq lood athletes off the bench, end that was the difference. We, on the other hand, do not have the beat talent, and we bave to pley our belt l•DM to win a1ainst teams Ilk• PortleDd ... DISPl'l'S WUT08 appra111l or the two teams' taleDt. Loi Aqea. ii tblrd la tbe National BuJlet- b 1 II A11a. '• Pectflc Dlvlaloa, 2\.\ 1amea baek ot INder SeatUe, wblle Portland II bl fifth place. '"' 1ama out of flnt. Lueaa and Tom Owens paced tbe Trail Blaaera' victory wl~ 20 poiata eacb, wblle I Mychal Thompson and Ron Brewer added 18 apiece. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar led the Lakers with 28 points, Norm Nixon had 26 and Jamaal Wiikes 23. PORTLAND HAD TRAILED 98-88 with 7:20 remaining in the contes t, but came back to go ahead 106-105 on two free throws by Gross. The teams then exchanged baskets until Lucas scored on an assist from Lionel Hollins to put the Trail Blazers ahead to stay. The Trail Bluers played almost error-free basketball on the offensive end or the court in the second half, commitUnc Just one turnover. They won the game by taking advantace or Laker mjstakes. A ·Real Fish Story PALMER, Kan. (AP) -Bob Lov1ren, es. loves fishing, especially for the blg, yellow catfish of the streams and lall:ea in north cehtral Kansas. He abo has a tall story to tell about tbe 1randdaddy ol them all that tot away. That monster, be says, yanked blm out of his boat and into t.be river. Not to be outdone by a ftlb. Lovsren followed b1I flablq Uae under w1ter and found t.be celflsb bidlq la· slde a submersed car . "I reached in to 1rab him, but he rolled the window up on my arm," Lftsren said, wltJlout even cracklq a amUe .• . • l 112 DAILY PILOT Thurlday, Marc;h 22, 19'79 A C•p•ulo Report From ttt. Wortd of Sportt Padr ' 1980 Opener May Be Played in Japan Fre• AP °'8petdtn SAN DI EOO -II plana work oul, the Ill Padrea' 1980 "home opener'' 11a1oal lhe San Frant'lt<"O Olanta wlll be 5,000 mUes from home n Japan {'onlirmaUon lhal the Ma&oo-0perun1 "'' la bel~ n goUalfd Umt' Wt'dne1day fr om lhe Ofnril of 8aa.,ball C'ommla111oMr Bowie Kul\n Uob to'ontal~. P1drC' • 1en ral mana1t•r, aald l.bcl deal 1• &till In the> "developm~nul 't•lt>" and ml1hl take two months to hamlhtr out lh complex details M£lny lhll development us ttw lattc•1t move toward a n t-ventual alob•I World S.-r1c·• Travel difflcultle and jet 111( poae ma~r problems To break up UMi trip and ket•p Ult' tl'aou 1harp, a 1tlopover in llawoU la 1monc the corulderntlonJ. aald l"onta.lne The Padr ~ 1harcd lbelr 'Pring lra.lniog rocnplex the pnl two yean with lb Yakult Swa.llowa Japan'• na tlunal <'hatmplona In 11J78 Thrre or.-lndlcaUona other JaponeM! team11 wlll train in th•· lJ111lt>d States Amencan teams huvt b(>1•n tounng J apao tor mor., than three dccadelj, bul lhJ8 would mark the fi rst time lwo l\mt>rtcan tcam11 met In )tame:. lhut counted In th«J st~nd· 111~'1 .------Quotr ol ilw Da.,,,.._ ____ ..., Tennl 1 Coach Vie Brade•, refusing to aC'knowlt.'d.ic that good players must ruah the net: "Chris Evt.'rt ~ocs to the net every other April, and goes lo the bank cvt>ry Friday." E'r~ Pa~n <:Upper lt'la O~ lt'arrfers Lloyd ••rtt !>Cored 35 points, giving hJm m 2.010 for the 1wason, and led lbe San Oi~go Cllr>· pers t.o a 106-103 National Basketball Assn. vie· tory ovt!r ~ Golden Swte Warriors ... Filling . the void caw;cd by Inj uries lo three of lhe team's.lop four :.c9rers, Elvto Hayes poured In 31 point.a and collected 22 rebounds lo pace the Washlngtoo Bullet.a to a 119-108 romp over lhe New York Knlcks ... Three straight field 1oals by Steve Hawe. early in the fourth quarter brought the Atlanta Hawks from behind and sparked a lll·104 vie· t.ory over lbe Detroit Pistons . . . Billy Knight scored 24 polots, leading an In· diana attack that placed six players ln double figures and carried the Pacers lo a 114· 105 Vlctory over the Chicago Bulls . . . Guard Geor1e Gervta scored 24 points and forward Larry Keaoa added 23 as the San Antonio Spurs snapped a four-game losing streak with a J23.116 r11 u victory over the Kans as City Kings ... Waltu Davi•. Paul Westphal and Alvin Adams combined for 84 point:> u:. the Phoenix Suns swamped the Boston Celtics. 134·113 ... Julius Enla1 scored 22 points, eight in the final quarter. to lcud the Philadelphia 76ers to a 114·108 v1clory over lhc I louslon Rockets. ...., Na8N!'ff Dl•trlft C'..n •I l'aar Southern CaJ 's depost..>d &It Boyd hu been m named NCAA Oiatrlet 8 Basketball Coach of the Year by his fellow coaches. Boyd announced b1a resignation at midseason and then led lbe Tro- 1ans to a second-place finish In the Paclllc·lO Conference . . l,ake Kell)'. bas ketball coach at Oral Roberts University for the past two years, bas resigned under pressure. Out Dodger Le/ ty Sidelined VERO BEACH. Fla . (AP) Left·hande d reliever Terry Jo~orater. recur.eraUng from arm t urgery, wont be ablo lo pitch for the Los Angeles Dodgers un· tll May, team physician Frank Jobe says. The Dodgers had hoped Font.er would be ready to go by the start of the seaaon. but Jobe said Wednesday: "lie will be able to pitch some by May, but ll takes a certain amount of Ume ror the healing proceas. It may take a year before he can be a full·fiedged, every.day man." FORS'l'Ell, WHO HAD a $-4 r ecord, 22 saves ,and a 1.94 earned run average for Los AD&eles lut aeuon. underwent 1urgery Jut November for re· moval ol bone s pun and the re· location or the ulnar nerve ln hi.a pltchina arm. Tbe Dodaen said tbey oow plan lo place the 27·year-old pitcher on the 21-day diaab&ed Uat. Meanwhlle, private pllot Don SUtton reportedly drew a floe for tardlneu. Pitcher Don Sutton, however, bad a better day. 8V'M'ON WAS s upposed t~ start for the Dodgl!H ln their ex· hlbltlon game against the New York Meta In St. Pete rsburg Wednesday. But be piloted a prlvat.e plane from Vero Beach, arrived 15 mlnutet lale and was reportedly fined an undisclosed suro by Dodger Mana1er Tom Lasorda. But Sutton worked the lut alx lna1n11 for the Doctaers, f.viD1 up Juat one earned run an pkt· ln1 up the vlctory u Loa An1eles downed the Melt 7-5. IN nl&EE exhibition ouUnp tbl1 aprtnc, 8uUon bu 1tven up three earned nm1in17 lnn!Gp. Gerald IJaDnaha pitched tbe firs t three Innings t or the Dodgers. ........ , 8e•1er1 AW r•••• t'le• ... .... 8da•W& hit two home runs wblle Pele · • .._ eollecu:d .b1I HC0"4t hJt of the aprina and flrsl nm batted ln u the PhiladelDIU1 PbilUet dowtNd Ute Te•u 1tao1ttS, UM la nhibitioa baaebaU • • . MlnnetOta scored twice in UM tlthth oa a tbrow1ftc error b1 ,....,. .&eued1 and • dropped ny ball by aaa.. ... ...,. to beat CtodMatJ, 1-4 ... 8eeU 1u. .,.._ ......... and h.W ..... combined OD a t.btff·bltter HUM Montru.l ~poe de· f eated the Houaton A1troe, 4·0 •.. LarTJ lkWWla•• and Geee Ganer combf.Ded to hold Baltimore lo two..,hiu 11 tbe Atlanta Braves abut out the Ortol•. 2.0 .•. A t.bree·r'Wl homer by rookl• ••••• •allorJ and conaec:uUve el•bt.b lnn1DI bluu by a., llewell. _,.. ... ,...., ud OUo Veles powered the Toronto Blue Jax• lo a 7·3 victory over the St. Lou.ls Cardinals . . . The SeatUe Marioen mauled Cleveland's .c-1or atartina pAicher, David Clyde, for 12 r\ln• In JYI lnnlnJC• aod outscored UM lndins, 14·11 ..• Chicago's ..._ ON bluLed bb third home run of lb& 1pr1ng ln Lbe Uth lonlnc to break a Ue and alve the White: Sox u 7 5 victory ovtir Lbe Kamas City Royals. An elgbtb Inning stnale by •Ike Rarirove scored Ouk SmH.• from third to anap a 3-3 Ue and llll the San Die10 Padres lo a 4·3 trtumph over the Chicago Cubs ••. Rookie Kirk Glbeoe blaatt..'<I a two.run homer and S&eve Kemp bad a solo ahot. while Milt Wlleos pltcbed 1eveo stronc Innings as the Detroit Tigers defeated the Boston RedSox,5-1 ... <..'llarlea O. f'laley, owner ot the Oakland A's, lndlcat.ec that the only thing holdine up lbe sale of his baaebal fraochiAe la a abow ot cub . . . Ricbt·ba.nder Jim WrtiM, Pblladelphia'a prize rookie ptichlog proepect, br~e a booe in hia lhrowiq arm durlnc an exhibitk>o 1ame Wedoet· day. He la expected lo be l015t lo the club for the remainder or the season . . . PllU Nieluo, who bas pitched for the Atlanta Braves lhe past 15 years, Is hopiog the club will trade him to a pennant·conlendlng team. ca.--, a111a Tie -GftNlf•'• G-1 TMmaa Gradla scored the tylng goal ~ midway through the aecond period as the Van-, couver Canucu battled SL Louis lo a 1·1 de· adlock and remained eight polnl.8 ahead or the Blues ln their battJe for a National Hockey League playoff berth ... Buffalo's GU hrreaalt scored an unassisted goal wttb 4:1S remaining lo lift the Sabres lo a 3·2 vict.ory over the Colorado Rockies . . . Aoclen Bedbera scored twice and Pet llkkey once in the third period, helping the New York Ranien au.rvtve a nve.goal Chicago rally aod .record a 7-6 triumph over the Black Hawks ... Mlke 1Plcller and !Mewe taJM each scored three aoals for lbe• flnl time in their careen, powering the Minnesota North Stan to a 7-3 triumph over the Philadelphia Flyers ... Daa Labraa&ea and DH Boldac scored third-period goals leaa than two minutes apart, giving the streaking Detroit Red Wlnga a 4·2 wla over the Toronto Maple Leafs ... Deala lla..U scored hls 29lb coal of tbe seaaoo at 6:39 of the t.bird period, givlog the Washington Capitals a 2·2 tie with the Pittaburgb Penguins . . . The Detroit Red Wlngs have been fined $S,000 for derogatory stat.cmcnt.s directed attbeNHLPlayera' Assn. D-..e n... .. 8 .... • lt'ltla GN'ftl ... Daaae Tllomaa, the runnlog back whose tryout with the Green Bay Packers last .fall £9] touched off a storm of controversy. bas .signed with the National Football League club, the Packers announced Wednesday. Thomas, 31, hasn't played since 197S. T~o11,llatllo TV: Horse Racing -Today at Santa Anita, 7:30 p.m .. Channel~. &ADIO: Hockey -St. Louis at the Kings, 7:50 p.m .• KRLA U11Q>. Frida)''a lladjo Bueball -Dodgers vs. CiocinnaU at Tampa Bay, 10:25 a.m., KABC <790>. 10 Surf Games . On Television 11lls Season Ten ol the Callfomla Surf's North American Soccer Leasue 1amea will be televlaed over Channel 5 th1a aeuon, be&lna1ng wltb Saturday aicbt '• opener. The road game •f•lmt the San Dleto Sockera wll be broad· cast on a ta~-delayed basis, atartln& at 8 o clock, and la a re· match from a 1978 playoff game in which the Sockers won, 2·1. Gil Stratton will announce all 10 1ame1. Only the Aug. 1 clash a1alnst San Jose wilt be carried Uve. The schedule, with Weal Coast alrin1 times: AprU 28-At Dallu, I p.m.; May 19-At Portlaod, 10 p.m.; May 30-At Phlladelpbla, 8:30 p.m .: June &-At New Eqland, 8 p.m.· June 30-At Hout.on, 10 p.m.; July 7 -At Mempbla, 10 p.m.: July 11 -At Tampa Bay, 8 p .m .; July 28 -Al SeaWe, 10 p.m.; Aue. l -At San Jose, 8 p.m. (live). Bird Heads All-star Team , .......... WICillTA, Kan (AP> -In· dJana State All·American Lany Bird heada the U.t of playen teleeled for the annual charity all·atar basketball 1•me aebeduled for &be Laa Ve1u Coavemion Center' llarell 11. The 8-foot·t Bird r•celved 2.GOl,D'7 ..,... lD the DIUolawlde publlc t.Jl0Un1 -more lbaD twice u may u 1ny player lD tbe pnrioUI Mvea years ol tbe compettdoa. SURF TRIES HARDER ••• lt7T. Hlncb sat out 111t year bee1UH ot contractual difftcultlea but teems to have found a home wttb tbe 8urf. SBWSU. ADMITS "It la a bla turnover" but quickly adda the teem bu molded qwt.e well wb1le JIOIUDI a S.H 11blblUOa record. ''MOil ol tbl 1U11 bave been lD II.Dee fib. 1 ud .....,W., bu 1one ftnt," be .. ,.. "W•'ve pl11ed IOOd nblblUon 1amea, Ud lood pr9dleet ud •v•'b~ la CCJllMnt." SelltltC'4Hlda Capistrano Valley High foot· ball coa('h Bill Cuncrty has been chosen to g uide the South in the annual Or a nge Coun ty All-s t ar footba ll game , tentatively set for July 12 at Santa Ana Bowl. Knapp Sharp As Angels Belt Giants PALM S PRINGS (AP> Chris Knapp, appearing lo bt: m m1d·se1tson form. turned m the longest oullng by a California Angels' pitt'her lhla s pring and s aid be t'ould have thrown mort'. ··I only threw something like 65 pitchel\, so t could have gone :som e mor1>, ·· Knapp s aid Wednesday after pitching six in· olngs w the Angels' 9·3 exhJb1Uon victory over the San Francisco -Giants. "I threw curve balls for the fi rst time in flvc years, and they st!i!med lo do the job.·• Knapp, known as a fastball pitcher, gave up two hit.a and one run and now bas a 1-0 record a nd a 2.25 (':trncd run average lo show for hu. 16 innings or work this spring Wednesday's victory gave the Angels a ff 8 1•xhib1lion record, while> th<' G1anb are 8·6. San FrunC'1sc·o scored Its onJv run off thl' n~hl·handed Knapp in the lhfrd Inning when Roh An· drews triplf'd and scored on Knapp in an 1nf1cld out by BilJ North. San Franc1i.t•o starter Vida Blue allowed fi ve runs and six hits In his three innings of work, witb three or the runs earned. The Angels picked up nine hits. They went ahead 2-0 In the rirst Inning on a two-run double by Joe Rudi, then a two·run lrt· pie by Rick Mill er keyed a threc·run outburst in the second frame BASEBALL I SOCCER Fr .. r-.e•• NEWPORT •• oouo~ed bia decl1ioo t.o step down. Maybe it wa1. Who would know more about the three can dldatea than Jacobson and Oaae? The three c andidates were not exactly 1tran1era. · Some say McGee h as the re· cotd-but there ls a cllche lhal 1oes: "What have you done for me lately?" Cochrane waa the maatermlrxt and cat.alyat of a defense that hH kept the Sallon alive and well in the touahfft of vanity competlt10n for several years, iocludlnl the last two seasons whf'n Newport Harbor went to the CIF Big Five semifinals . McGee? His 1978 freshman team dld not win a sln1le same. MCGEE IS SURELY deserv Ing of the support he rece1v(•s. and Earl Byer11 la no slouch. either. Nevertheless, a choke had lo be made and J acobson picked lhe man be wanted. Newport Harbor football ha."I been the object or cr iticism year-in and year-out by a de· maodlng corps or followers, which hu conststcntly amazt..'<I me. Assuming that the averag(I adult fo llower o f N e wpor t llarbor Is a graduate of tht• Hl ueJackcls ' t·a mpus f rom 193J-l965 tthat would muke our fan In t.he 31-66 age bracket), h1· would have come from a 35-yeu r e ra that produced l26 wans, M7 losses and 20 tics a winn1nv percentuge or .461 TllOSF. FIGURES include ont• Sunset Leagu<' champ1onsh11, '1942) Sm ee 1965, Newport Harbor teams have won 84, lost 44, tll'd 1 for a winning percentage of 656. including one Sunset Leagu1· c r o wn outr ight , t wo co championshJps and two bcrthb 1n the Big Fiv~ semis . Despite a s uicide schedult·, Newport's worst year11 in that t3.year span are 4·5 campaJgn:-. In 1972 and 1975. It w ou ld appear t h at Cochrane. Bycrs and McGee ull have helped provide the type of coach ing that m a kes winning teams and rightfully one ha:-. been elevated lO lhc head jo'b. While dt.•t'is1ons somct1mc'S cut deep. the Sailors need a quirk healing remedy, because they have too much lo contend with In the Suns<'t League to be saddled with dissension. Wdcox Leading MILWAUKE fo~ t AP) -John Wiicox averaged 252 Wednesday to lake the first·round lead in a pro bowling tournament. Wilcox, a left-hander from Wllkes·Barre, Pa , had a 37·Ptn lead over Tom Baker after six games. Wilcox rolled games of 247, 233, 268, 24S. 278 and 24tl. Voted to lbe EMt ... la 8d· dlUoa to Btrd were Ttm JOJC!e, Obio Ual..nky: Jlm &paaaral, Dulle; Brue• l'lowera. Notre Dame; Reale Kiq, Alabama; Jlm Pauon, Dayton; Jeff Tropt, Ceatral Micbt11a and Wiiey Peek, lllwl11._. aat.. pt for 1011M mlDOr lddlUool, Sewell feels tbl a.am la Mt fOf' ,..,. to tome. '"'ID LUGUS 011'11--.... ™u eo Htomatkallf everybody II atrea.uata. Lbe&r team" NJI. "lt'1 "'7 dtf· ftcult to.,.. boW'JOU7re IDlDI to do llDlU tbl Muon ltarU 1lnee h•rybodJ la makt111 tlMlr produet bitter ud tbt tu,_.., for eaela d• ll about 40 pere.M. Orange County's oldest Lincoln-Mercury Dealer hip Voled to tbe-tlelt 14ud 1"N ...., llaaorlef, Arbuu; '1m Krhae1, Tea•1 ; D,Yld a, ......... UCLA; Lr•Mrt ................... c.a. Niitii0ut11n& IANll8D8; \a.- • I tfMI\ ..,..i La,•Wll'lfl .. l•I ................ SAit' ,. ...... r.v ..... ~::~~=====·~ .. ~·.~~~ pt w cwllteneJ in our elub. 'l'Ut would'" alM 1lve ua aome fan ldlnUftlat ... " 8wd CID ..... UeUl .... , Onla9i Clal) Ml.......; NC• _.... .. faet.a1Mlmfll ... AilllllU..i.t•uoe,tbe ............ ,. __ ....... ~ ..... ,.. ........ ...... ~. . ,,.. ................... c1r1111•a.rr11••"-• .... . .,, ..... _ ... , ... . • JCHNSC?f l SCN THE FAMILY LINCOLN-MERCURY TORE 2626 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa ~40-5630 Home of the Golden Touch IMl1IMlll' l?tlllt•?••••s•s•••= ... ••a .. -. ...... --~----~ -.. · · . . ' l BASKETBALL I TENNIS RANDY HE10£NAEICH TRUIETT HATTON Two From Marina Three Area Stars Earn CIF Honors Marina High 's Ran d y Heidenreich and Truiett Hatton and Mater Dei's J ohn Saunder.. have been accorded All-ClF 4-A basketball honors as !\elected by the Citizens Savings Athletic Foundation board. Heidenreich and Hatton. who led Marina's Vikings to the Sunset League championship and a 22-4 overaJJ record. are third team choices. , SAUNDEllS. THE 6·3 Mater Dei senior wh o scored in double figures in every game while leading the Monarchs to the Angelus League cham· pionship and a 19-5 overall rec- ord. earned a second team berth. Player of the Year laurels are shared by Cliff Pruitt of CIF champion Verbum Dei and Pasadena Hig h 's Michael Holton. Heide nrei c h and Hatton. who shared the Daily Pilot's Player of the Year honors in the Sunset League, formed Manna's inside-outside punch with Heidenreic h's 13.S scoring average and Hatton's 12.6 scor· ing, t he key to the Vikings' baJance JOHN SAUNDERS Saunde r s. the Angelus League's Most Valuable Player. scored as many as 33 points in ooe game. was in lbe 20s 10 times aod was one of lbe key re- bounders ~o Mater Dei 's game: ~lers Tunilile,.6-2 Golden West College's bid to move closer towards first place in the Southern Cal Coolerence baseball standings fell further behind Wednesday a s the Rustlers dropped a 6-2 decision to first-place Cypress on the loser's field. Cypress. 8-0 by virtue of its win, moves three games ahead or Golden West. whose record now stands at S-3 in league play. 8-9 overall. Jell Heathcock went the dis· Yaz'·Pact Extended Two Years WINTER HAVEN , Fla. <AP> -Veteran sl u gger Carl Yastnemski, set for his lttb s eason with the Boston Red Sox, today received a two-year ex- tension of his contract wttb an undiscJoeed pay bike. Yutnemaki, wbo will be 40 in August, neaottaded bis own ex- temion btncling him to. tbe American Lea1ue team tllrou8b i.i. No n.v-were umounced, but General Manager RaJWOOd Sullivan said, .. It would be inaullinl to him" If be didn't receive a raiie in bis reported 1275,000 per year COD· traet. .. "I'm laaDPY aad very sau.fted, .. -'Yatnemat said. ••1 atarted In BolStoD /: 1111 and plan Oil " • • .., playiag ca..-llll'e. .. la a flt of aa1er. Yaatl 11 P H tluuteaed lut .......... tbe 1"' ....... ..... • fne ~ manet ... ,_... ....... qul.W dowa ud re- ,.... to trllilllal eamp ••Wlle•e.,.,• ••~10Uatloaa wltb .................. ........ •"I ••••r reall1 .... fl'! .... not .... . ..... y ...... ...... WM• war I would a.ft .......... ..., .......... It.'' 1•111••• nld tbat D U 111 I llid ''-9 1ilit, • at a rapid ~=,.~--. , ...... lance for the Rus~ers. who scored two runs early in the game. Cypress came back. though, with two runs in tbe fifth, three in the seventh and one more in tbe ninth . Heathcock recorded 10 strikeouts and surrendered seven bits as bis record dropped to 4-3 for the season. Joe Nemeth and Frank Meraz sparked lbe offense for Golden West. Nemeth bad two hits in three at-bats while Meraz bad a single and double in four trips. .......... ~.J WOMEN •.. Kuhn's policy slat ment liUg · ;tttUna that the tlub8 Initiate a non·d11crimlnatory poUcy and provid6 "ldenUctil access in one way or another to all r porters " That po1ltion did not come toaaily to Kuhn, who only r ached it after baseball and the- Yank~ loet ·a dlscr1minatlofll t aae IHl September brought ogainat tht>m by Melissa Ludlke- Llncoln, u reporter for Sports li· lust rated. Di s trict Court Judge Constance Baker Motley ruled in that suit that the locker room ban again t women reporters wu unronatituUonal. She said the Yankees couJd bar all re- porters or no reporters. They t·ould open the doors or close the doors. And they could even pro- v id~ s winging doors or curt.ams for each cubicle or dir~t all ballplayers lo use towels or bathrobes. But they couJd nol discriminate. MOST OF THE Yankee players grudgingly accepted the entrance of women reporters last season. "I'm not uncomfortable," said Jay Johnstone. "But when I take my clothes ore. there won't be anv ladies in the locker room. lley, tf tbe ladies are allowed in here. why can't men writers go into the showers to interview Chris Evert and Billie Jean King'!" Fro111PageBJ INDIANA .•. ne insisted he wasn't thinking of the error in the closing seconds. "I was taught that if you make a bad play you don't think about 1t or you'll make another bad play," said Carter. "So I wasn't about to redeem myself with that shot. lf you think about a bad play you might make a bad foul or another bad pass." BUT KNIGHT SAID of his 6-5 junior guard, "I think he was really upset after the intercep- tion. but he came back and made two good plays -the foul on Car- roll and the shot. The 7·1 Carroll. who hit only two or eight free throws, was fouled by Carter near midcourt after Carter's bad pass. But with a chance to salt the game away for the Boilermakers, Carroll missed the rtrst or a one-and-one free throw opportunity and In· diana got the rebound. Knight said of the unorthodox stall, "I've never held the ball like that when I was behind. But with us one point down 1 was content to bold the ball and re- duce it to a 20-second game in· stead of 41h minutes." Connolly Picked SACRAMENTO <AP> -The Senate Rules Committee has approved the nomination of Olympic gold medal winner Olga Fikotova Connolly as a member or the state Athletic Com mission. Thuredlly. Match 22. 1979 Heathix>te Hates Being Favored SALT LAKE CITY <AP > - Michigan St.ate Coach Jud Heathcote says he's got the best team in the NCAA Final P'our, but he hates belflg favor and bis players are off-limits to news media until after their se final game Saturday against Pe . he Spartans arrived in Salt Lake ednesday. a day ahead of lbe other three finalists in the NCAA basket· baU tournament, and Heathcote im- mediately served notice their prac- tices would be closed. "WE AKE OUT HERE early to get away from all the distractions s ur· facing at this time." he said Wednes· day in a telephone news conference with lbe head coaches or the other three fmalists. "We've bad a number of colum- nists in our area indicate there is no need even to come out here . . . that we've won it already. We hope t hey're right. but we doo't think that's the kind of columns that we want our players reading at lbe pres- ent time." When lbe Spartans were ranked No. 1 during the regular season for two weeks. Heathcote said, '"We lost four of six games." "l'M NOT BLAMING the <ic · colades heaped on tbe club at that time." be said, ''but I think there was a tendency to think we could win without defense and intensity, which have been our strengths the entire 1 year." · Despite Heathcote's claims that top-ranked and unbeaten Indiana State should be favored, he reels his 24·6 Spartans, energized by brilliant g4ard Earvin "Magic" Johnson and high·scoring forward Greg Kelser, should win. 1 "We're coming into the tournament with the worst won-loss record of all the teams, but I honestly Uunk we're the best team." he said. "But in a tournament it's not how good you are, it's how good you're playing. You can taJk about tough schedules and tough leagues, but when you get to the Final Four. that's all behind you. I can't believe Indiana State can come into here with a 32-0 record, having been ranked No. l for SU< or seven weeks. and suddenly we end up being the favorite. "No, I can't understand that." HEATHCOTE'S SPARTANS are favored by as many as 17 pomlc; in their Saturday tipoff against Ivy League champion Penn. and Lndiana State is favored over DePauJ m their semifmal. Saturday's losers Wiii play for third-place Monday followl>d by the chamPtOnship game. DAILY PILOT 83 ALL MAKES! 833-0555 Ask For Our LWE SPECWJST at HOWARD Chevrolet (hft* nt °""" .. tttWJ 01111 I it.•• NEWPORT BEACH ( S\ D,'\t;\ UARKIS ) KEEPS YOU ON YOUR TOES In the DAILY PILOT . . . Connors Upset By Gullikson STEEL BELTED RADIAL WHITEWALLS! NEW ORLEANS <AP> -"It was JUSt one of those days when you're playing out of your mind." said Tom Gullikson after upsetting top-ranked Jimmy Connors io lhe New Orleans Tennis Festival. Gullikson, wbo bad won only two singles matches all year. came up with a big serve and. volley game to top Connors, 6-4, 3-6. 6·2 Wednesday night. He said the victory ((ave him new confidence. "When you beat6Connors, you know you can beat anyone." be added. Meanwhile, tournament direetor Peter Curtis said he planned to try to gel Vilas Gerulallis sus- pended from the professional tour for six weeks for backing out or the New Orleans event. GERULAJTIS, RANKED fourth international· Jy, notified Curtis on March 14 that be bad the nu and would be unable to play. However. Curtis said, GeruJaitis played an ex· hibition match against llie Nastase in Monroe on Monday -the same day the New Orleans Tennis Festival started. "If you're lit enough to play in one, you're fit enough to play in the other,·• Curtis said. CURTIS SAID he plans to file a written report with the Pro Council asking for the maximum penalty against Gerulaitis. That would be a six- week suspension. The council is an international body made up of three players, three tournament directors and three members of the International Tennis Federation. It is scheduled to meet next month. "Vilas bas broken his contract." Curtis said. "The rules are now very, very strict on player behavior. I want to see the rules just as strict to protect the moral interests or the tournaments ... While They Last! The General Dual-Steel Aad1al. A great long mileage tire. Built with two steel belts and radial-pty construction for long economical mileage. Sill s 1 sso .... ,_ SALE sa1e Prices good thru Maren 25, 1979 ~·[2] Non hSIStorType spark Plugs ·4}i 44S. 45. 455 74c. ~~.~'.:'.~~.... ea. ReSIStOrfYpe .c. Spark Plugs ea. tll44T, ~ R4_~ R4~~4~ R45TSX, R-. RllOS, R40 I. RllO I :i • 'tuOOtlCltO P'IC.w ~-~ PCV valve tCW?IC. CV154C tc:v7a1C ,. ..... super Flush • one step, ReQulres No Neutralizer • Removes Radiator Rust . 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II ,.,._, 11'11 MALllU ·~-'.," 7>'10<k cod 1U>W \Od, SA•TA 8A'-8AllA • .tl'IQl•rl. ~ •oo ~ "'"· 1) '" .,.._,, 'I) ,,,., .. ,.1, ~ UtllCt Dt.U IMll'•lllAL 81AC:H 10 •nQlel\ t S ""9 tod, H~ ,.,,.. tud ••C>OMOO 7••1'1?1~•• JtOroo '"h V•"TUllA JI •'Ill"" 1,1 r•O >ll•jjj)o'•, JO tow c:oc:I, • 11no coo. 11.1. roo <eel \ANTA MONICA , •• ,..,, .. ,. 11 ll•ltllUI, • twr11tO, J 0.tl4U.IC)4, J lt.tfltl W•\ f'AltADll• cov• )I •nolel\, MS '°'" <Od, IS bOllllO, I IMlllDUI. I,,." O X•AltO 1141 el'IQl<lt\, 1,1>10 toe~ <Ufl, 71 t ow coo, 1• Uf'Q cod MAltlNA OliL 11•V 11 itl'IQlel\, J!S •ocll <.od '""" Dll!OO CMw111Clll•I Pl"I H e l'IQl•f\, 1 beit ... ude, 10 OOl'ltll>, 1 U lllO Den. '9 '°"" ll•h, JllJ nle<••••I MO•ltO aAY IVtrt'• ut1o9llltl •O •l'IOl•r>, I' lll'IQ c.od. ~ ro< ll cod LONG laAC:H IOVet"'' Wllerfl •11111.,., 90roc~ WCI OC•AN\10& 11 •nQI•"· • 1>•0. I h•llDvl. ',,,... •••••• 11 •o<t. ,,, .. t•AI. a•ACH Ji 1or1111t1,, llO ""' lOO ~ . . .,, " WOMl•'S SOl'T8ALI. ~W.,. lllY"itll ... •1 ,, .... , .• a...... I p n) (,Vl!Jt(t Wo.i "'' W .. I Vt lltY l 1 C..m•no "\ Mitt._. Ar11 J 11 m , • ., .. .,..,.. v• -fM•k, ClMOOI o LA Vtlloty I fl m -w1n11tr • Qtmt' one •nd I wo 1..0 .. t••---·-• )0 P m w,_,, .. MM 1111 .. ••WI '°", ..... .. ..,.,,.. '"'" llld ·-~1 ....... , ............. I 11 rtt , j P rn, I .IO Pm., IOMr \ D•e<hl Q•f'llt• Io m, ~tl\lp Mlnlllln•I• ..... .. " ...... 10 t .1'1. .__,., br•O.•I t•m• I D 1'I Cl\el'l'llllonW!lp Q- I p,n.. (11.itlilj)Cllft\lllf) VMn•, II -II. M•• "l ... ICMOO'-Mlllll ........ ..-11114, • ....,.._II" '-1-~ CH81 I t1 Hone 1'1t11utll• IMO) • t , lll"'tt T•t1 IH•I I I ll•Vll fOOlft IHUI I), l'aralltl lln CIMO Il l 1 4, HorllO.llM 8M• fMI" INll • • 411 A 1 OUftll f llOll'I Odl I 40 l Misc. MUT-.UO acllM CCNMHTIO•' .............. -OM,__.,._M• .. ............ ,....,.....,...,_. ....., .. _, .......... __ .. .... ..,. .......... ....,. .......... I ........ _...., _____ .. ......... IMMt,/..,.. llfU .., ...... . ......... -....... -.,... .. . .................. '"'"''..,"'"'· ......... _,,.... .. __ ... ,, .......................... .. '"'' ........... -ll lM .......... _ .. • 11ete -...111t11-., ,.,. t11t1n O!Mf•lllll> ... ..... '"'" llllllft •I -..... -·~~-· ,, . ., .... , ... ,... ... _...,. ___ ,_ ... ........ flW <llelrt"9f ...... ...... tell t• --··-.. -..... t ..... llkM•, lllr .. Ulein '"'""" ---, ..... ... _ ................. , ............ 1111 ............. ,.. -... ,.,.. ---... "' .... ,, ...... ""'"" ..., ..... ~ ... ......... ...:E.. Vet ... t>tl, ............... JUDI GARMAN Busti rs Favored ht T o urney (;uld1•n W1·11t <:11ll••ic•· will Ii•• lll'HVIJy fUVClrl'tl lo C'ltllfUrt' 11 11111 v1t11tior1ul 11ofthull lour1111m1•11t this w('<•k1•r1<1 un I h•• I wo lh~ht1·1J c•a rOl)U1' fH·ltlH Wiiii urllon 1<4•t ·1111g t.llW~•r Wll V .. 'r1rl uy Hrlll 1-.111 dutlinJ{ Su111lay c:olctf•n Wt·"t 11lays Wt•\l Va llc•y in 1l!) 01wrwr "'rlduy ut I with ft:I Camino focmit Mei.a. A r11 al lh 1· '4am1· hour on diamond two. f'ai.udt"na mc<'t'> Moorpark and Chubol fac<.>S LA Valley at 3 to complete f1r~L round action 1n the caght-leum l'vent TllERE.A.Jl£ TWO GAM•:S al 7 and two more al U Friday evening Coach Judi c;arman °1> Ull clt•ft·at<'tl 113 0 > Golden W1•11t Huslh·r::. un· paced by u patc hing lrlo that bousl.'i un ERA of o Iii with cl~hl shutouts in t he 13 VH' tori N I Cind<'c Secrist 1s thl' h.wdl·r with a 7 O rf'cord and no <!Drnf'(l runs allowt•d. S h(' h11s u JO inning no hitter and In !'it 11:1 in nings hn.s glv('n up hut eight hiti. a nd has 40 strikt.'<luts lo' R E S II M /\ N J U L I •: A od<.'rson has a 4 0 record with a 0.27 ERA and amother freshman. Kim Llbell is U with a 0 J I ft~RA. The tno has allowed but two runs in LOO innings. Karen Owens. a freshman tatcher-0ulficlder 11 the leading hiller with a 400 average. Dora Young as hilling 3.13, Secr ist .3.1.'l and Helen Gilligan .. 300 with 11 HUI Secrist play1 centerfl<'hl whf'n she isn't p1ll'hing F~ THE RECORD I SOFTBALL I SKIING 'C••e Fel lo• Me' Poste r Poll Has Skiing Pope No. 1 By IJAV•-: ClJNNI NOllAM Oft• O•lly l'ilel "•" Who do you 8\,IPJ>OSC IJJ tho leading pOl'll<:r personality In lluly'> John 'truvolia., Farrah Fawc1·tt Majors'' Wrong. It's the Skiing Pope. A poster of Pope John Paul II on skas 1s outselling the most popular Travolta poster seven to one, and out.distances the sexy i'"'awcett-Majora pot1\er 15 I TUE SK.J ING POPE 1i. u J>hoto from u movu> made by a Polii>h mf•dleaJ student who is an acqu:untancc or the Pope Tht• Ulle of the postt•r, 'C'om<· Follow Ml'" <St l.uktl 18 22 >. whar h appears an th•· :.1 x lunguai:<''> "lpoken by tht> Pope, come:. from the theme of one of hi~ lllX'l'l'ht•\ 1n Whit•h h•· ('ailed for lhc young Jll'()fllt• or the• world to follow him In a ~pmtual r .. volut1on ( ____ sKJ_I N_C ___,,) • • • n erore the :.arrival of lht• Vatcc·an Sk1<'r . l"arrah ,..UW<'l'lt Major:. WKS th•· lcudcn.: J.10:-.tcr ~cllcr in ltJly :-.NOW VAJ.J.t:Y 11/\l'I ollllll)Url('t•d plan\ to add fl Vl' 111.'W d1a1rltfL .... fou1 or them lo Sl'rv1r 1• the Slide J>t:uk area Thi• m•w lifts will orwn au add1t1onal AO ucrPi. or lcrra111, 11111s1 11r 1t 111krm1•d1at1· Also during the comtnj( summt•r, Sn1.1w V:1ll t>y plani. to rcm11 v1· the rope tows . re work the ;m ·a uncl install a he~ann..r hfl Major purp<>se of the lift wall bt• t.o fuc·thtalt· t'4'Utnntnl( l>kl 1•l;1s:.1·:-.. whcch 11r1·vlously have had lo rt•ly on thl' rop•·" ••• TfUS TIME OF YE/\R many of tht• lut'kll'r n•111Jrl\ ml"lutlf' th•· rollowmg term 1n lht>+r s-k1 ( .. )fldlllOfl 11:porl,t, C'OCO s now. Whal!. <'<>rn snow" It's like skiing on mallcon. .. 11f uny bull b••arini.:•,, :ind turn.., Jn· l'Usier on com t han any other kind or ... now It doesn'L last Jong and. hk1• pow1l1·r <'11mei. un<.I ~"c" al Lh• whim of nature. It':-. usually found Jl h11~h1·r t•lt·valton\ 111 lh•· t.':irl} morning when the snow 1s tran:.fnrm1111: from har<l lo sort Like powder IO th<' wantn c:urn .. now 1.., d 1srovnt d unly tn those who happen to be 1n lht• r 1ght plac1· al the right Lim<· • • • SOU'RIERN CAU .FOlll'!l.lA LJ.::illrt)> hav1· lwrn hlessc•d with ~ Lo two feel o f new snow during Uw .. torm whlC'h ju'll muvuf through, virtually ai.s unnJ( llll'nl 11r l!1t11d ·.k1 11111c1t1111n ... throuyh Eas ter De pths now r1:1n1w rrom 24 1111·lw" '.1t lhc· l11w..r ~now l'lumm1t elevataorus lo 00 1nchci. at Ml W:tlt·1 man 'l'ltat i. m11n· i.now than Mammoth Mountain h J •, r1 f.'ltl now Sierrn r angt• n·i.1.>rtx wl11 d1 J f1 •w w1•1•l<.., ·•W> w1·rt· lt•nlat1vcly prt•1l11·ting th1·1r ..,,•ai.1111 ~1111ltl luxt lhf(1ug h 1-;al>lcr ~Jrc now 1•1111 f111l·ntly pl anning t11 kl't'I> 1 h•· lift.., or14·n 111t11 May .... f<'OK THOSR WllO Kt:t;1• lah ... on "uc:h lh1ni.:s. Toni f''orlund or Norwuy was th.t· lolJ mu1wy w1nm·r .ct Snow Summ1t 's rcrent women's pro downhill romp••t1t1o n Forlund look home $4 ,000 .1rt•·1 •• photo rm111h Ill tht· final run "' the dual i.lalum .• lcJ<'<'IYnt' P•·rr1llal tla-.t y1·.1r .., ..,r<•nrh 1·hamp111n ' hit the Umin~ A&l • J U!!l 11111· thouM1n11lh 11( .1 ..,,.1·111111 lwh1nd Forlund • • • THE FAR .EST Ski /\i.sn 11; omc1ully on rt>eord as oppo:.ing the propoeed closure or gai. 1>tat1oru. on weekendb a11 0 80lut1on to the oil supply shurt:.i ge Obviously , shutting down gu:. \lJt11m.., 1111 ~et•k1•ncJ:. would bt· disastrous for sk• reM>rt::. Uut tht· FWSA as nol t·ndr>r ... 1ng any "l1t't'1f1r allernul1vt• Th•· National Ski Are<t8 /\:.sn '" .tlt.o 011r>c1..,1•<1 tu gai. '>lul1on dosurci. nnd hos urged l'l'H'mherc; lo wrill' lo lht•cr luwmJkcr'> hul uguin. no spt·cifac alternative ii. t•ndoc ..,,.d Betting by Machine Hollypark Move R esults in Tlueat of· Strike IN GLEW OOD (AP 1 llollywood Park plari11 t.o Install new automatic belling m achines for it.a 1979 seuson ::ind the plan has resuJtcd In a threat of str ike 'from the Parl·mutuel Union "The machines will be there," said OI C'k Hughes, director of In d u 11lri~1 1 r c l allons for th e Callfomlu ft'erlf'rntlo,, or flacintc Assoclnt10M ' "WE A&E COMMI TTED t.o a total contrul·t Wo have wired the plant lO put the system In, and we're going to put the KY8Lt>m In." Mich ae l J McDe rmoU, In tcrnaUonal reprc.iaenlatlvo tor the Service Employees Union, aaid the new machine• are being introduced "wtthout concern for employees, amrmallve action pro1ram1 ond the u fely and welfare ol the public.'' McDermott t11lld he hH litml a wire to Gov t-:dmund c; Brown Jr askini.t t hut llw g11v1•rnor rormully oppow ltw hc•t·nt.111•'· or nny struck r.•t••· t 1 .irk. 111d111ltn1-' Hollywood Park 'l'h•· tr a r k 1:, KCh t•duletl lo uµl'n """'' 11 Mrr>t;RM OT'r ~A IU llollywood Park wai. lht· nlOl\l affluent mcmtw r " or tht• ff'dt•ra t1on or racinu a1.>1>uc1ut1011s in tht· state and clw rned thl· fNlt•rnllon was ··cmb~1rk1·d 011 11 hUJ.!l' 1o h 1·utting progr;un " T he uruon hui. rl'<1uci.1 l'd 11 on1· yea r morat.onum on lnKt11llut1011 o( lh1• muchhws nnd h m1 hrok1·11 orr n egol1at1ons w1 lh lht• ownership fed<•r1t11.1n Hollywood Purk lrnR lcm1ed 4!'IO of the machineH, ('u1·h or whi<·h wlll be hooked up lo 11 mm1lcr computer. The• mul.'hlnf'H allow track p1tron11 lo mnk~ b ·t 'I and c88h wlnnlnJ.t llcketN ut th(' 11um1· window Bland ~ads GWC /\T l\(ll'l•:Ull«T 111 N!·w York . mut11•·l l'll'rk11 huvt? ht·e n 1dlt.'Cf :111 1loyi. 111 ,, luhor clt:-.11ull' Thi• u11 1011 hJ.., lulwl4'11 1t a lockout and mun.•i·•·m<·nt termi. It u hlrikt· hut 1 h1• 1111clt•rlyrnJ,t r·auM· ci-. un 11m 1·11nc·1·r11 11v••r ;11•11va1 ion 11( aulomJlt'd twlt1nu •.c·hcdult•d l11 i.tarl M.I\ 13 Suh,.11 1ut1· 1•h•rk ... huvt' bt.·t·rt wflrklll~ th1· Ac1u<'tlU<'I m•·t·hrlH Md)1•1 moll c·lu1mt•d, 1n hi'> w 1r1• lo tht• govc•rnor, lhal llollywood l'urk ulreudy 1s al tem1Jl1111( t u rc>cr u1t s tr1k1· rcplucemcntR in what l.hc luhor offu·1al culled "th • m1.1sl dlv1R1ve 11nd anti l11bor mov•• an tho hi~ 1o ry of Cuhforniu ractnf(." Ot•scriOlng u mul'tum:, llught•:. s nhl, "It's not out<im atcd or 11utomnllr ui; Romt: people hav•· been t•11 ll111 g II. lt'K com puterizctJ ond it '11 u time saver." Wll.MINOTON Mc ledey Bhand 11cored 34 polntt t.o brt>ak a 11lngle·11me scorlna record for Golden Weil and lead the RuAllors· ~omen's bu kttball ltam p11t hot1t l.A Harbor Colleie. 107·56. In the Southern Callfornl• Conferencc open(•r W~11 nl1ht. SIMPEllT It marb the 11th victory wl~ a IOAs ror Golden West and the sixth Ume lhl• aeuon that the Ruttier women have broken tht too.point bar· rler. The prevk>ul 1ln1le·1am• acor1n1 record 1t Golden Weat ••• 30 pOlnta, ahared by Bland and Cindi Cooper U.1711. Alto' 1cor1n1 In doub~e t11ure• were (>am Bank• (30 1, Kim &11.nhart tlt) and Kuen Ga1e (13). I HB Shooting Stars Vie HAWTHORN! The Sbocltlnt Stan. • 1lrl '1 AV&O IOCNr t.am bued ln Hua&laltoD Beach. wUI n.-undefeated c.....a Torrance Saturday afternoon <I JO> lot &M Dlatrict I ellamptOftlbtp, here . Tiie 8hooUna R&an , ..... coach Doe Clllay, are ll-0-l for &6e ...._, llavlDI .,... 13·0·1 ln lea1ue play, S·O ln lbl plaJGlll, ud 1.0 In MeUonal action • n.r. an &I ..,_, ... If.II, -:l'rtletPIM OD ~'1:-.. wtD W ...,.. It t Nd l Ha"'81irM. M·301 , ........ .ct . ... .... ........ ... t•5SA10 VTT 8-Tlt. 315 01 11588A12 VTT B·Tll •OT• 14158 .. 13 VTT B·TIL 37 se I 15&8A 13 VTT 8 ·TIL .. , 80 1e:sR13 VTT B·T9L 43'b0 17 SA13 VTT D·TBL 49 47 1t68A14 VTT B·TIL •9ee 175SA14 VTT B·TIL •IHllS HllSSA14 VTT 8-Tll O? 63 1 &68A115 VTT B·TIL 49118 18159 .. 16 VTT B~T l .. , 0 .. .... . .... ''·" 1 015 ..... 1.34 JJ.tt , 32 14.H , .. , ..... 186 11.tt 1 85 ..... '71 Jt.tt 199 2u• '13 JI.ff 1 es ..... 1 l'IS c ... lotti. Ce•• •ottte A•tall lletell ReU.11 IL ENDS flllldwnlnn'I Plllanld, l.75·LITER 10.95 61 .07 10.33 w.a..1....,111, QUART . . 4.37 49.41 4.12 Kealler's, 1.7S·LITEA ........ . . 9.79 SS.33 9.23 Seag,...·s 7-Crown, us.urER 10.98 &2.01 10.35 Sunnybrook llMd, 1.75·LITER . . . 8.64 48.88 8.15 ANCIENT AGE BOURBON 1.75-LITER PO POV VODKA 1.75-LITER RUM BoHle CeN Retatl Retell C.-. Light or Dlrtl, 750·ML .............. 3.43 38. 75 3.23 •rnJllftllcan, 750·ML ..................... 6.85 11.50 8.46 Ron Rico, White, 1.75·LITER ................. 9.84 55.65 9.28 Ron Rico, Gold, QUART ......................... 5.33 60.37 5.03 SCOTCH Ballantine, 1so.ML .................................. 6.39 12.21 6.02 Blaclc & White, QUART .......................... 1.65 86.52 7.21 Chlvas Regal, 1.7s-L1reR ..................... 26.97 152.63 25.44 Cluny,1.7S.LITER ................................... 12.05 68.17 11 .37 . Cutty Sarti, 1.1s-L1TeR .......................... 15.90 89.95 15.00 Dewar's, 1.15.ureR .............................. 15.21 85.99 14.34 J & B, 750-ML ............................................ 7.36 83.25 6.94 JohMle Walker, Blacll, 150-ML. ...... 10.10 114.24 9.52 OAtLV PILOT CHEMIN BLANC Botti• .Retell a.tng•, 750·ML ..................................... 2.75 Celiw Select, 750-_ML ............................ 1.17 Chmies Krvg, 375-ML ........................... 1.75 Fnmclscan, 1so-ML ................................ 3.23 Louis M..Unl, 1so-ML .......................... 2.39 Mlrrasou, 750-ML ................................... 2.90 Monterey, 1so-ML ................................ 3.19 c ... R•tall 30.00 12.67 38.06 35.15 26.00 31 .46 34.71 SMUGGLER SCOTCH SEAGRAM'S GIN c ... Botti• Retail 2.50 1.06 1.59 2.93 2.1 7 2.63 2.63 6,,,..~.,,,. Johmle Walker, Red, 1.75-LITER ..... 15.89 89.93 14.99 912 669 1.75-LITER QUART 846 411 BOURBON Daviess County, 1.1s-unR .................. 8.96 50.70 8.45 EarlJfimll, 750·Ml .............................. 4.54 51.33 4.28 Walker 10 High, auART ....................... 4.9~ 55.45 4.63 l.W. Harper, 86-Pr., 750-ML ................ 5.69 64.37 5.37 Jim Beam, 80-Pr., QUART ................... 5.57 62.95 5.25 Wiid Turkey, 101.Pr., QUART .......... 12.43 140.72 11.73 Christian Bros., QUART ........................ 5.89 88.58 '!Ul5 E & J Brandy, QUART ............................ 5. 75 82.53 5.22 Korbel, 750-ML ......................................... 5.04 58.97 4. 75 loll Flavored, 24-<>Z ............................. 3.98 44.91 3. 7 4 Wiiis Flavored, QUART ..................... 4.92 55.84 4.84 Almaden, QUART .................................... 5. 77 65.26 5.44 COGNAC CourvolllerV.S.,750.ML ................... 11.93 135.00 11.25 Ccuvolaler VSOP. 750·ML.. ............... 14.32 162.03 13.51 H ... ueyV.S., 750-ML ..................... 11.98 135.25 11.28 lallgftlC V,$,, 750·ML ............................ 8.38 94.78 7.90 lldllleu Nap, 150.ML ............................. 8.49 73.35 8.12 CANADIAN llacll Velvet, 1.75-LITER ...................... 10.83 60.09 10.02 CllllCllln Club, 750-ML ......................... 8.70 75.84 8.32 CllllCllln Lord Cllv.-t, QUART ......... 5.83 65.95 S.IO CllllCllln Mist. 750-ML ........................ 4.63 52.32 4.38 11111•11'1 Crown Royal, 750-ML ....... 11.37 121. 72 10, 73 ........... o., 7ICMIL .................... K .... 8,70 75,84 8.32 llN llGIJ.IJ,7IO-ML ...................................... 8.57~ 74.25 8.18 ....... """ & Dry, 750-ML. ................ 4.54 51.31 4.28 . ... ,,l,QUART ...................................... 5.17 58.41 4,17 ......... , 790-ML ................................... 3.11 4f.IO 3. 7& 11111 •"1, 1.75·LITIR ........................... 1.84 M.52 9,08 ,.....,, 710·ML ................................ 8.77 71.52 8.31 IUM ............ ,QUART ........................ 5.51 .,.08 5,28 llGMllllYS, 7IO-ML ......................... 4.55 51 .44 4,29 2•a lauder's, QUART .............. , ..................... 5.79 65.52 5.4& Old Smuggler, 750·ML ........................... 4.08 46.06 3.84 Passport. 150-ML .................................... s.04 58.99 4. 75 Scoresby, 1.75-LITER ............................ 9.81 55.49 9.25 ~-., IRISH John Jameson, 1.75-LITER ................. 13.11 74.2H 2;3 ,__,__,,,,,_ Old Bushmllls, 150-ML ........................... 6. 73 76.11 8.35 Tulamore Dew, 150-ML ...................... 1.00 79.13 6.60 TEQUILA Monl8Zlna Gold or White, 1so.ML ..... 4.31 48.68 4.06 Cusvo White, 1.7s-L1TER .................... 11 .15 66.47 11.08 Pepe Lopez, QUART ............................... 5.29 59.78 4.99 Two Fingers, White. 150-ML ............... 4.97 56.25 4.89 VODKA Crown Russe, ID-Pr., 1.75·LITER ....... 7.92 44.80 7.47 Gllbey's, 150-ML ...................................... 3.39 38.21 3.19 COORS BEER 12-0Z. CANS 12-PAK 297 HENRY WEI NH ARD B.EEA 12-0Z. CASE OF 24 719 KMIClllaa, 80-Pr., QUART ................ 4.19 47.35 3.95 Relsb,auART ........................................ 4.19 47.35 3.95 Snllmotf, IO-Pr., 1.75·UTER .............. 10.17 57.54 9.59 Smlrnoft, 100-Pr., QUART .................. 6.43 72.84 8.08 Stollchnlya, 80-Pr ., FIFTH .................. 7 .55 85.41 7 .12 WoltllDnldt, IO-Pr •• auART ............. 4.87 55.00 4.59 LIQUEURS Gl'lllCI ........ , 23-0Z ......................... 11 .19 126.50 10.55 am.11taDIS.0181J,2a-0z .............. 9.74 110.05 8.17 · Tll .... Cone, 23-0Z ......................... 8.27 93.49 7.80 Dl'lllllulll ...... , 2S-OZ .................. 10.03 113.50 8.48 Cl*'IOAlrlondndo, 710·ML .............. 7.1 4 80.88 8.73 ZINFANDEL 10.11 .91 30.00 2.50 57.20 4.77 35.20 2.84 21.00 2.17 11.00 1.51 21.00 Z.14 17.IO 1.47 22.00 1.14 21 .14 1.12 12.00 Z.17 M.10 ~= 11.00 44.00 U7 41.11 1.17 ., .. 4.77 Fetzer Blanc de Blanc, 1~-ML ........ 2.09 22.ao Wente Blanc de Blanc. 150-ML ........... 2.64 28.00 IMPORTED WINES Dry Sack Sherry, 25.oz ..................... 5.17 56.35 Blue Nun Llebframnllch. 23-02 ......... 3.58 38.95 Moc Barn Rose, 24.oz .......................... 2.57 21 .90 Langenbach Uebfrlumllch. 1-L•TeR ... 3.67 40.00 Rluntte Lambrusco. 24.oz .................. 2.01 22.45 Almaden, 1so.ML ................................... 2.94 Christian Bros., 150-ML ...................... 3.30 Cresta Blanca. 150-ML ........................ 3.24 Los Hermanos, 1so-ML ......................... 2.46 Monterey Vineyards, 1so.M L ............. 4. 84 Sonoma, 150-ML ...................................... 4.31 Charles Lafrance, 150-ML .................. 5.05 REISLING Beringer, 1so-ML ..................................... 4.45 Gallo, 1.5·L•TER ........................................ 2.21 Charles Krug, 1so-ML ............................ 2.96 Monterey Vineyards. 150.ML. ...... ""· 3.19 Paul Masson, 150-ML ........................... 1.98 SouvM'lln, 1so-ML ................................. 2.62 St. Michelle. 1so.ML ............................ 4.14 8UR8UNDY ... Ing•, 2s.a-oz .................................... 2.03 Cresta lllnca, 150.ML .......................... 1. 10 Louis Martini, 150-ML ............................ 1.92 CABElllET SAUVIGNON Almlden, 750·ML .................................... 2.94 Cellar Select, 750•ML ............................ 1.37 Charlel Krug, 750-Ml ............................ 4.04 • Clllt•u St • ., ... Rouge, 150-Ml ....... 3.83 • Robert MClldlvl, 750-ML ..................... 5.88 ............. 750-Ml ................................. 3.22 • lanoml AllXllldlr Crown. 7SO·ML .... 8.08 MlrraloU. 750-ML ................................... 4.48 Clwtllan lroa., 150-ML ........................ 3.13 32.00 2.67 36.00 30.01 35.20 2.94 26.84 2.24 52.80 4.40 46.82 3.9 1 55.00 4.58 48.40 4.04 12.36 2.06 32.00 2.67 34.71 2.90 21.50 1.60 28.49 2.38 45.10 3.76 22.00 18.37 20.80 32.00 2.67 14.85 1.24 44.00 3.67 39.60 3.30 84.00 5.34 35.00 2.92 88.05 7.34 48.40 4.04 34.00 2.84 FRANZI A CHAMPAGNE KAHLUA LIOU EUR ORSPUMANTI 23l>iiNCE .3i750o 729 -~--(CAii O' 11 "II.ff) (CAIE 0, 12 '17.40) ' -OAll.Y PtLOT ............. Business . People and Protilems • SAN P'RAN('IS("O I AP> Wtwre burly lof11<1horcmen once load !d ..U~ with lh 1>roducu ot C'1llfomla, horde of vllnlon1 arc flO<'klna lo S•n i''rund•co'11 nt•wt>tl louru1l attrucllon l-A>Ult'<t fl ahorl walk from fi'\11bt>rman'11 Wha.rf. 1t'11 ,. giant 1 urn of I.he cNltury umu11Cmcnt, 11hopplnl( and dlnlnK complex culled P1tr 39, in honor of th · lihlpp n.c ptt>r at. r •pluc ed Tiit: u•;vt;L()f't:R prcdlClS it wlll he lhl' ~eoruJ most populur .u11u11cmt•nt allractl<ln in lht' c·ountry th111 year Hut all lit not rosy at l'l<•r 39 Sinc<• 1t opcrK"d f1 v<• month.-. UJ.tO. 1l haa blot•n tut by ., burrugc of 1nves tJj(U\IC)f\.'4 lnlO ;11lt>"UUOOS or c•orruptlon an tht• way 1l wu~ de vclol)('tl "On lht· wc<'kf'nds Uw pt'Oph• ur1• shouJdt·r to s houlder." i.uy~ 1lcvt"lo1M.·r Warren Simmons. a hurd·drlvlnit. :u -year·old rNarcd airline pilot "Whtm 1t ralni., the p11oph.• un· umbn·ll~ to urn brt.>llu " vuuroas PARK IN u n•·w 1,000 car ~ara~e and stroll uvcr w.:>atht'rl'd plankan~ to rl<I<• a double d1•ck earou~el In a luv1i-h run hOUSt', broWM' tn 105 stm11s l hat RCll t•vc rything from t:X JWn'livc <"lolhc-:. to watntwd'I for pet11, or .line m 23 n•st:wrant:. nll with mu~niftt'lt'nl v1t:wh nr the Gol den t;utt· Urid g1•, AlcatraL or Trcus urc Is land. Street musaclaru, und m1m1·-. t:n· tt'rt.a1n. Both Flock to Pier 39, Where Wnlroversy Joim With Croux:IA troveray wag l)tirrnd by bwu nesemen ut l''tsherman's Wharf, who fe ar 108.ll or bwslnc11s lo Pier 39. Under tbc le1.111c . Slmmoos pays a minimum or $370,000 a year lo rent. That will Increase afte r the fifth year under it com pllc aled rormula that Agnosl has called "distorted" and "a very strange provision lo have ln u o u s 1ness leus e .'' Sim mo n . ., responds that it watt modelf'(1 arter a lease on another pier that has not been dt·velo1n·d vlalton. Simmons rredlct.s more than 13 million wll come to Pier 39 this year, 3 million more than visit Dianeyland annually. Sim- mons says the only amusement complex with more vinitors 1s Durney World In ft'lorida. which has 14 million visitors a year. T H E U4 MILLION proJ<.>el 1i. the fir st major development since World War II on San Fran c1sco's n orthern waterfront, once a thriving shipping area that fell into dususe a s most ocean rommerr •moved across the bay to Oakland's m o d e rn con ta1nerized cargo port Sammons spent m ore than $1 million und s everal years m ethodically colh:ctin~ permits from JJ govemml'nlal agc nc11.>s lie succ(.'{'ded where red Lupe hopeleb:.ly mired waterfront projects proposed by othen; tic spt•nl about S34 million de vclop1ng th e pier and con cess1onutrt'S spent ubout $:W million more fi x ing up their shops and rt.•stauranls AGNO&'T <LUM~ the re was connlct or lnwresi and fraud In · vo l vlng Port Comm I salon personnel lie also is tryln~ to incr ease t.he property tax as sessment on Pier 39 Simmons emphaUcally denies wrongdoing and flied a l'la1m with the city for SS-0 mtlllon lwcause or Agnost't> actions. ''Georf(c Agnosl Is a politically a mbitious mao who hu:. the uoi£1ue ab1hty of driving buslncs:. out of San ft'ranc1sco." \ SIMMONS CLAIMS the ~·on Reeord Salt.•s As ide from the lcn111·, J\gnost c laims the city tax asses110r ':. Judgment that Pier 30':. land 1:. worth 695,000 is 20 lo 23 t1m4>!> t.oo low. He had l wo 1ndcf)4!ndent ap. praisers valut• lhe lund. and they cam e up with $15 mllllon und $16 3 m1lbon Champagne Vitners Celebrated in '78 ri\lllS IAP I Champugn(•, lh•· bubbly mutnstay of re::.lrvt• oc c:1!11on.,, solo ut a rl'<'ord pu<'1· in t1Y78. n :ach1ng IK5 9 mllhon bolllt'!I Wl'lrldw1dt· Thi· bulk or 1l rf'maincd al home . where WIO·C:lovang f''1 t·m·h1ni·11 '4JVOrt.'d l31 H m1lhon botth-s. Thi· C'hampe1gnt• pro<lut·t•f\ asMX:ial1on said 1n 1th rc~rt that l!J7K salt'!I wert· up !J 2 p<•rct·nl ovt·r 1977'11 170 2 m t I hon bottll'b 'THE PEOPLE ARE SHOULDER TO SHOULDER' Sim,.,ns, Right. Emphotlcally Denies Wrongdoing The 45-acn• complex, most of 1t over wakr. ubo mt'ludt!8 a J!>O·boat marrna for pc rrn;rncnt li\>ups for 1wa-w1•ary voya.:eri. Hus._'d on Uw cur nmt. ralc of THE BALDING d e vt·lo p c r took his f1 r11t turn at businct>i. ul ug~ 9, sellin~ newt.papers on San f"ranc1sco streets. fie becamt· a multa milllonairc rounding the highly successful chain or Tia Maria Mexican rei,tuuranls und the D1 sro department i.l on· <·ham. lit> sold the rcstuurnnts for $4.5 m1lbOO to help rlnJnt:c Pier 39. ITALIA~S WERt: THI: BIGGt;ST 1mr>0rtcrs. buying H !! m1llton botllt•1i Clo,•· lwhtnd wne lht· Uralli.h . HI mtlhon, Jnd the· JJch.:rnn:.. 7 .:J rn11lw11 The n1lt'<.I St:1h·:. 1m1iort1'<l 7 I mtlhon boltlt·'>. uµ u whopp111H 411 !"> p•:rn•nl from 1!177"'> 4 K m1l11on boll le::. Coast Workers Cited Bul with his SUCCl'bb has t:Oml· a rogiJlg controvl'r'Y J\ rounty grand Jury rc p11rkd ly 1s exam1run~ dctuilb of S im nwn:.' 60-year lcaM· ror the prn p •rty. and City Attorncy <i1-.ir1••· i\1-(nosl frl~ s uit a month :ago lu nullify lhl· lt•abc Also tnc rt·a'>tr)l.I l h1·1r \hart• ur t•hampagrw drinking \H·rc troop:. of th1· North Atlant11· Treaty Org<1n1zJl1on, wh11·h has a :o.t•paralt· lis ting Tht• sold1t•r-, bou,...hl 4~.7~)(1 bottl•·:., up from 397,809. fort llh pl:w1· cm ttw world h-.t Larry R. KoprH·N h11s 101m'fl J . Mui.ch & As · -.ocla~. Inc .. 111Jv1•rt1i.i11~ :1J!t•nc'y. Nt•wport Beach . J S U('('(JUlll t'Xl'l'UllV(• ffr 11r1·v1oui.ly c·oordinc1t1·d adv1•rt1s1ng for 'ever;1I !11 v1i.ioni. of Hohl'rlshitw Controb Co . C'orona • Oavld P. < 'n rl<'y hui. l>e~n name11 the: h r..t vice pn-s1dent rn the nine yi!ur htblory of Clay Publlcom , lrvmt· fl4.' rejOJncd the r1rm last yeur after a four· year ab6ence Prev1ou1tly, he hud bt!en with the agency for three year:.. lie· c•ontmui·s a1> an i.t<'Count executive und sup ·rvltiet. marketing :inct adverlls1ng funct1oni. • WUllam R. •·rank~. Irvine , hai. been numcrl assistant vice pn•1-11dcnt und loan officer at Bank of Newport'" main branch m Newport Beach lie u1 a formt•r vice pn..'l,ident :it f'...entral Hank an Oullu:. «Jnd IJf'fore lhut wa:, v ice prei11dcnl at t"arst City Hank, flou1>lon • Comput.-r i\utomatton, loc ., frvane, hui. ap po1nkd a new 1wnernl rnona1wr for Ill> lar~est d1v1i.1on and rt•asMgnt:d two other exccut1vei. ''° I he t•orporalC' slf1H Paul llachltel1.n, Nt•wpor1 UN1ch, u ,,en1or ex· l'Cullvt• W1lh ITT and other t•le<'lronici. firms, 1s the gene ral manager or the "Naked Mini" dlv1s1on. fie also hali been elet·ll>d u corporate vice preRldent Gf'OrJCe Da11blell, rormn gt•nnul m unugcr of the dlVUilOn, ha:. bel!n 31)1.IOlnk'<J VICt' prc'l1dcnl Of admlnlRtral11>n , a n ew post thut 1n<·lude11 respon111b11ity for rorpotul(' swff Hervlces and lht· company'i; Aulilm, Texui.. development center Dr. Earl Jacobs, vice prei.ldcnl rcspon!lll)lt: for corporate devclopmerll und expunisloo progrumi., has been assigned Lo dlrt•cl the cornp1my'11 produ<'I plunnlnu ft<'tlv1lics m udd1llor1 to other dullc~ The ct>fl)()ralA> produl't 1>lan111ng position hu:t IJ~"" va C'a nt since lu11l 1>ummc>r, wh •n vl<'e prf'h1dent Stuart Dale was named mtfnugang director of Com put.er Automation I rclund, Ltd , 11 munufuctur mg plant near Oublln • Mark W. Chlld ha!'> b en appolnlt'd bran<'h vice preisldcnt at t'ld~llly •·.-dcral !S•vlngs aod Loan -------.Farm VaJue TOO MANY PIOf1..I AH WA~ MONIY E8C81ale8 'l!m: R. Ph. On•• of ttw' mcl!lt <·rHl<'al h1•:tllh JlroblemtJ lOdA)' Iii thl' num~r of J'l'OPlt" who ore> not tuklnir th .. prf'11r rllwd 'IUllnllty of druH 11Rf'r havinA lht"lr prt>11trlptlon11 flll ed. Non <'OOl1>h11nN•, 1111 It Is callf'd. c1tn rt'llllll In 11 lrn11tbrnf'd lllneH •nd addltlonal t•xp nllt" to revl11lt the do<'lor and lo acquire a ne w dru11 aupply. Ont• you are tick, we ura• you lo follow your docton advtte and to OM lite pranipUon M 11v .. you exactly •• we di1ptnM tt. Don't w .. ,. rourmoney. YOUR DOCTOR CAN P.HONll US when ,you IMlecl a medk-tae. Pkk up rour ,,....np0on ll lhos>· ptq ...rby, or we will dell•• ........... )' wWlout HtH eltarp. A 1rHt ... y ....... eatrult .. wttll .... ,,..m.,uo... II •Y •• umpound roun• WASHINGTON <AP > t'arm rt>al est.ale values, booRt.ed by rising commodity prlecs a nd net rarm income. have c limbed 14 percent In the pus t year . the Agriculture Department says. That repres nts the blgge&L incr~ase In twoyean. 1'he deportment Raid the value or land In California polled the largest aalnl..c;_l~mblng 21 percML to ~ an acre In lbe year enclina Feb.· 11. PMITO AU.If ~ ' . AssoC'iatlon. lit.· ti. mana~wr of lh<' ai.soc1auon s Nt•wport l~1ffh/B<1ys1de ofrlC't- • II. IA>e Rowell hm, b<•••n promoted to vice prch1 dt•nt und director of industry relutlons for Avco flniitncial Ser vle••1., Newport Reach Ills rc-sponi.1h1llt1cs are malnly conc:ern<'d with lt•g1i.lal1ve and admtnllitratlVt.' mutters arrectmg the finan(•e industry 1n the United Stales and Canada. • Tbomu Casey of F1r11t American Trust Co has been t>lci:~ted president or the Newport Center Association for 1979. Othf'r new off1<.•c r~ an· vice prei.1de nt:. Maurlct! 0.-Wald ''' Pt!;.al , M;Jtw1ck, Mitchell & Co . and llon Rohrer or Glcnn;ilt• Fe deral S avrngs. secretary John St .. lnbru1tge o f Stein brugge & Thomas, Inc , and treas urer TbomaH Vuadl of Crocker Nallonal Bank Olh"'r mt.' m bt• r i. of th<• board of d1rc<'tors c.irc t~arllne l.oop, or Av c o t"1nanc1al &orvtct•H , Larry Harrett, Har· r"tt Prop<>rty Servm:i;; Mlcba1•I BIHell, lht' Irvan•· C'o • Thomas c..so Sanllt'y, Pu<'1f1(· Mutual Life Insurance, Gerald Slnykin, M, 0 , Be rnard Schneidf'r, Virtue & Schc<'k, In<.·, und IJ1.1 n Hocers or Newport llarbor Art>a Chumbn or ('omrnt•rct•, itn ex-offlc10 dlrcc tor • Th.-('oro t''oundatlon, n national orgamution for t rulning Ill puhltc• nftfllNl, has honor<.-d five SfJuth••r n C'uhforn111n'I with t:agle Awards for out· Hta11ct1n1t t•ontrllJ11llun11 In lhl•lf rcispt•CllVC f~clds Amonl( lht·111 IH Waltf,r ft. Gf'rke n, chairman of the• bo11rd of l'1H'lflc' Mutual I.if • Insurance Co . Nl'Wl>flrl lk•uf'11 , 111 th•• hu11lnt·ns c•utt>l(ory Ottwr11 111" l\11n11 filnl( Arnold, rlvlc leader and r>hllanth rop111l . for c·ommunlly se r vice; P •tc Wll:wn, nauyor flf San Olugo, for government, t;llnor Cih·1111, rctlrect genural ma)lager. Los Anuclc11 County l':mployccll Loc11I 434, for labor, nnd 0 nc Autry, chulrmllll oft.he board and pr~11l· dent. Golden Went Uroodraaters, for media. • Lylld• L•wrenc:.,, NCW)IOl't. lkJach, ha11 been uppolnled director or cHcnt ser vices Ml 8 .J . 8'ew1rt Ad'vertl•l•I aDd hblJe Rel1tkM11, Int., Newport &ach. She Is former MSSO(IBte edit.Qr or New World& rnugazlne, pubU11hed by thf' Irvine C'o Sbe la reaponttlhle ror dlrectlnu cr<1at1v1· materiulfl ror clle nt8. She b•s work l'1 1111 u fret' hmcc wrlter In anv~rtl11lnK 11nd publlc rC'lallons. Author or lhrct• 11clf·help books, sho bus ulH() t•o authored u flnuncllll lt>xthook, and wrll\cn o noVf•I und Hhort 11t.orleA. Sh founded tho Sourtt· Book, a directory or crtiallvt> 11ervketl Ip Orantcc County, anc1 hH lectured on lr<.'-0 lance writ Inf. • • • • On tht• oth1•1 ..ru1 or lilt' '>l"Jlt-. llw dS!:>Ot'IJtton n·portt•d th.if V11•lnam tmporfr<l ;p; l>f1ll l1·-. or 1·h.llTIIJ••.:m· Jilli Mow mhu~w· ~ ()vt•r Tiu· Cou n 1 •· r HASOLI•tinq' MUTUAL FUND . . . . . .. •. ' STOCKS I BUSINESS.. ThurMday' t :loroin~ Pr iC'~M ' NY~ COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS o..i•1i.. w1_ .,_.,. llW -y .. , 1o1i...t1. "Klfl<. "IW, ... -. OtlAit-CllOC"""ll ''°'' •«N1'41t•-f-'-1111¥-N ..... •IA•-.. llell .. 1-c111lll••O.•llit•-lfl\tlllet_ ~. Mwch 22, 1979 N DAILY PtLOT •1 Food Priees Manufacturers Seek Alternates By SYLVIA PORTEil ............. ~ When prices of certain foods or lngredients ..oar. con· sumers are not a lone ln trying to find low~-priced alternatives. Food manufacturers do the same . The latest example: vanilla: A vanilla shortage is eJCpected late in 1979 or ea1·ly in 1980, and a vanilla crunch almost surely wiU force th~ supermarket price or vanilla extract ttigher. MADAGASCAR, AN ISLAND OFF THE east coast of Africa, grows most of the vanilla beans used by American fl avoring manufacturers and food producers. Its govern· ment has fixed vanilla bean prices for years, raising them steady even during times of surplus. As a result of poor weather and a sharp rise in demand from EurQpean users, a shortage or vanilla beans has de· veloped and prices have jumped dramatically. A kilo of beans that sold in Madagascar for $23 a year ago costs $30 tht5 year. In Ul80, the price could jump t.o S45 or SSO. It Is futile to try to predict the impact or a vaniJla squeeze on the contents or price of ice cream, soft drinks, candy, baked goods or other products that use the Oavor- ing. Although vanilla adds lo the taste of many products, only a s m all amount i s n eeded . Also. som e users have built up fair· ly large inventories or have commitments for Money's Worth deliveries. But others may be fort'ed to substitute artificial vanilla. One firm that s witched long ago to a vanilla substitute called vanHUn -is Hershey Food Corp., the can- dymaker. First, it had trouble obtaining a steady supply or good quality vanilla. Then it round that consumers could not tell the dlfrerence between products flavored with vanillin and products flavored with vanilla. In blind taste tests, consumers often s aid they preferred products made with v anillin. At the other extreme is Kraft Inc .. which makes the "all-natural" Dreyers ice cream . It won't consider making a switch. "WE WOULD TAKE A PRODUCT OFF the market before we would compromise our formula," said Alan Geoffrey, marketing manager for the company's dairy group. "We've built up the Oreyers brand and customer satisfaction by maintaing all natural ingredients ." Will consumers switch for the sake of their J)()<'ket. books? The answer, of course. depends on consumers and corporations. Some consumers will never give up steal<, just as some companies will continue using real vanilla. No one knows how high prices must rise to compel con· sumers to change buying habits. As one 11lustration, when m argarine prices began ris ing in the mid-1970s, butter sales picked up, even though margarine still was priced about 32 cents less per pound and most consumers were. aware margarine is better for health. Nert: Ready·made li'ood.! Stock Market Hovers Around 860 Level NEW YORK <API -1be stock market struggled to- day, with the Dow Jones industrial average vacillating around lbe 860 level. The widely recognized average or 30 blue chips, which climbed more than 7 points Wednesday, was up another 3.55 to861.31 today. Gainers outpaced losers by more than a 2·1 margin in the broad tally o( New York Stock Exchange-listed issues. Si0«-lu In Th*" Spoi llgllt NE W YORI( CAPI SAU:$ NEW YORK CAPI ·NY StoO wlft ._.... 1...i .. ~..-.eoo Proo ... ~ NY • l l,110,000 w--. . . ... . 7',)10,000 MOnth -• 16,2'0,000 YH• -• • • 11,1'0,000 Two YHr& ~ ... lt,650,000 JMI I 10 a... ... l,SS.1,lti.161 1ne to ci.w 1 11.1,110.oao 1'11 lo ,,... • 1,24', 140.000 -AT AMElt 010 NEW YORI( CAP) ' DNLV PILOT T~uraday, Merch 22. 187~ Television TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS , EVEN I NO uo1•• NlW9 ltotPOENCr\' ~· l n 10Ult 10 e lll'llf•IOl'I • pau1oe "' ti. 1020 I••• 411\glntt. 11\41 f'.01 em.dlUI .... ettib.111•__, ov • ,..., hft D tAONllOI! Tll-•• ,... lhe llfnlllhh co.J• llOM 11"1 ll•lll•h tO<\Wlllt • THe MA.DY ~H I ht Or ..Oy lx•y'l II i\)hltln In.II ~., ... ,.11h U 111 .. lli tilk.turofd "~" aod Ill<> !l!!. .. l>O. ~ .. I tlJ STMETS °'SAN FMNCt&OO An V• fl<i.>a.w rt•l11tn1 IO n... 1od•1et w>11 OI Ifft tu • n.atp Mlt.t Ind D<tfl llnU tll\I m<1f<M1r111 ol ,_ lrlOjl(l tD OVEREASY Gue11 Oat!>O<• Kllll•n IHI ID OUIONIHO HOMl INTENOAS ' Space P~"'IIDQ C88NEW8 A8CNEW8 I LOVE LUCY Lucy toes to rll\lnlt• .i vemiuan gondQIMlt ,.1th h•i I>< ol he<. WllO liv.;s tfl Amei • oc:a Ork Fitted &l MICHAEL JAa<80N Guest 11uthor Mfll Roo1Dr1 '1!) HOME GARDENER Robin Wtllaam s mus t recharge his ex tr,1lt:rrcst1al battcr1c::, on "Mork a nd Mindy" tonight at 8 on ABC, Channel 7 W atering , (I) CR08&-WITS (fO) MEAV OAIFFIN Guests B1H Cot>by. Lo•" Fa1ond. Oeney Torno, 8arns1a1>10 l w.na Aller Freel ha~ an occident 1n the poc:t.-up rrucll, nu U..Clelel ,.., 1• 1,olle<109 lrom wh1pl1t:ifl 6 TICTACOOOGH 0) ADAM-12 0111<.er Re60 9e1s r1efl<lted oy .1 1e11ow 011teer lo• n1~ ldltn '" mnn 7:00 IJ CBS NEWS 8 NBC NEWS fr) MACNEIL/ LEHRER REPORT fr) 28TOHIOHT 8 MEWL YWEO OAME D ABC NEWS '1!) HUMANITIES THROUGH THE ARTS Thft PohllCS And Eco 11om1cs 0 1 Consumer Cnl<l1f' G ()) JOKER'S WILD G) SIX MILLION DOLLAR MAN MUSIC Meaning Through Structure" '1!) NEWSCHECK Steve s p1ans 10 b11ng a sc.ent•SI and lllS young IOt1 out ol Ruasra are htndefed wnen the bOy refuses 10 leave 7:30 IJ 526.000 PYRAMID 8 IN SEARCH Of ... "Clontng"·The othleal and 11e1en11lte d1f'l\6ns1ons of 11ngte peren1 hum&ns are ei amlned Cl) sua BEAUTY SHOW @) MATCH GAME P.M. 8:00 fJ Cl) THE WALTONS Ooc4imen1auon croo111ng the se111emen1 ol Wallon s Moun101n-10 the oncost~s Of tne Baldwin siarers and Ike OOdsey 11 unearthed during a Foundo•'s Doy cetebf et ion G) SANFOAO AND SON B DATIHO GAME THE OOHO SHOW Chann~I Li•• Ing• 11 KNXT !CBS> Los Angele!. D KNBC (NBCJ Los Angeles D K1 L A find J Los Angtttes II KABC TV (ABC) Los Angeles Cl) KFMB !CBS) San Diego D KHJ-TV (Ind) Los Anqeles @) KCST (ABC) San Otego G) KTIV (Ind) Los Angelt:~ m KCOP· TV (Ind) Los Angeles Sl KCET-TV !PBS) Los Angelu.., m KOCE-TV !PBS) Huntinqton Beac.h 0 HARAISANO COMPA.NY A mlsundetstendlng about u school asa1gnment helps 1><1ng the Horns family oven close< togelhe< 0 MOVIE * • '• "Kono Coast" f 19681 R1Gh<1rel Boone Vera Miles A young wom. un Cites of a drng overdose and the man wno gave her the drugs must answer to h<!r tougn. seo-oornq Pre-packaged Hit By JERRY BUCK HOLLYWOOD <AP) -rt's funny Uie way people in television find new meanings for old words and phrases. A "hit" used to be a show that had earned acceptance from the au- Jfience. Now the networks advertise $hows as hits before they've even been on the air. Or take .. hammock," in which you Jie during the summer . In TV, it's when one of those unsung "hits" is positioned between two solid sue ~esses. With a guaranteed tune-in Jike that, your Aunt Martha could read her favorite recipes and get a Cood rating. POSmONEO IN a "hammock'' is ABC's new "hit" series "Angie.'' a velop and find an audience on its own, a luxury that's denied lo the new comedies on NBC and CBS. They don't have many posts to hitch the hamrpock to. During a break in rehearsal at Paramount Studios, where the show is filmed before an audience, Miss Pescow said she was first offered "Angie" about eight months ago, just after she'd appeared as love-smitten Annette in the smash movie "Satur- day Night Fever." "Garry Marshall called me about the show," she recall ed. "Surprising. ly. he bad not seen my work before ·Saturday Night Fever .• So even • though it was a dramatic role, Garry has an eye for people's work and can tell how you would do in other work, like comedy. fJll\ef (:1 llft • 8 MOM&M~Y ~«Hit 1 11our1 ern numtiv•....t unltlH he r.1111 11• t • ~ 1ec.h•roe 11om hla •110 ·•lleped glHk 1 ti111oro hit birthday'"'"" G MOVlf • •.,. lh1t l)nf~givtll"' ( t9MI Audrvy Hepburn lt111I L~ tllf A~ 1.m'4ly tltuOOIH o01in11 ttl<l no1111e t<iow• tr10111os wno 1..ta1m that l h• '''°'*" • r.JOpltd deuQll· 1"' 11 u rr>Ombot ol lhult tr1tie 17 Iv• I G) CAAOL BURNETT AHOFRIEN08 uUffll Tim Conway Key111 ll.allard ' Cl) MOVIE • • • 11111 S1lyer Chabco f t\lll!ll P1u1 Newman VI< 1Jll111t Mayo A young Oriti)!.. dHtgnl llltl l a~I $u1>1>41t dullltti 12 hrs I ED NOVA Th• lnlloKI Alle•nlil\Vtf " •,e1•nt1.ie tlespe•ately ..u.i•ch f04 $Om8 form of po.at cootrOI to replace (.hef"IClll peSllCtdOS. 8$ 40% or the wOfld's cropli • ,,a lent to Insects eacn yiur (RI '1!) ANYONEFOR T£NNVSON? • Robetl And Ehlllbelh Browning ' Sever&! ol Robert's 8•troord1nary dramatic; monologues and !>elveltO<ll lrom Eltzabeth s popular "Sonne1s From Tho Portuguo" are l)t!rl0<meel 8:30 0 ®) ANOIE Ttwt unexpected happens whim Angie s mom and Brad·s dad meet again (D THE ODO COUPLE How11re1 Cosell and Oscar have a d1lfeung or opfnlOfls when they meet by cnanoe 1n Fel1x·11 studio '1!) TURNABOUT • Too Soon" felte•a Lowe exom•nes wnet nappens to the more than one mllllon Amencan IO«l·llQ«• who beeome ptegnant every yeD< 11:00 IJ (I) HAWAII FIVE-0 A writer's money-metc1ng gc;t>eme impedes tho prog- roH of McGOHllll"S seoreh for "The Stcytlno Kille• " D QUINCY Quincy battles government rod 1ope and a co<porato power 10 save e 5"'1011 town from a deadly 01><domte 0 @) BARNEY MlllER A young woman wllO llnds , her latnor 1n a moo·s bmn- nouse after o 28-yeor TUBE TOPPERS ai.rt wben Indians ll'llUI· Of\ Wat Unl•I they Q411 lbelf country bllcio Stranger'" I t9'4n Otbof lh Kerr. Trtvor Howerd. Through 118( hllf'td ot Ille 8t ttlth. • young lrith git! unwltllngly becomes a vtlueble HHt to the NuJ8 (2 h<t.) KCOP.8)8:00-"The Silver Chalice." 0 CAPTIC*E.O A8C NEW8 Paul Newman made his movie debut in this story or a young sculptor who creates the cup used at the Last Supper. MORNING :00 8 TWILIGHT ZONE '"WKI Tht Rael M.,llan Please Stand Up" An advanc. teOut f~ • M11r- Uan ~ leod• on .,..,, 8t ALFAE> HfTCHCOCK PM8EHT8 2:001..ws 2:26 MCME KOCE 9 8.30 -Turnabout. Teen- ugc pregnancy is the s ubject of this re - port . hoslc.'<i by Feli cia Lowe. '"Bel• Otlta Gamma" A 1111ern1ty beach party tekes on a gr1m se<IOu•· ,_, wtien • precuc .. toll• Q411 • out of hand • * '"T.,get Zllfo" ( 11156) Chucl( ConnofS. Peggie Cattle. A 1teu1en1nt ettemptt 10 lead hta men to 111Ctory during the Kore- .,. Wer. ( 1 hf .• 50 min.I .. KCET@ 10 :00 -Arthur Fielder. The vcne rabte conductor of the Boston Pops Orchestra is profiled in this biographical study m OETSMART Smll1 trlM 10 conceal 1111 occupation trom his '1Slt· 1~rel•tlves uo l = • • • "Oom' To Town'" I 1935) Mee Watt. Paut Cavan911h. Tlwl wealthy widow of • cattle ru111« mes to bfeak 1n10 high :iOClety. (1 hr., 25 min } G)MOW 5e8'Ch creates a d1stur- banoe whtc:h lllllds them bOth 1n ta.ii (RI tD MEAV OAlf'FIN G.-11 8111 COSby. Lola Felana. Oeney Terrio. Bamstt ble Twins, Gary Larrimore and Oeteware. Oeorg1e Tele, Chrrs ChalCHI m WOAlO "The Clouded Window .. Guest host Danlel &:not< dlSCUIHS lnternallon•I Oew5 gathe<"'O (RI a!) THE ASCENT OF MAN The Starry Messenger Man s early attempts to map the f0<ces that cont•ol 1n11 universe become firmly llect with hl5 lallh unlit the Sc1ent1ftC Re.,roi...11on of OiJllleo 11:30 0 @) DEL TA HOUSE Tho Deltas lake some embarass1no photos ot Dean w~mer 1n a llQht 1imbrace w.th a co-eel 10:00 8 (j) BARNABY JONES Barnaby s continued 1nves1igett0<1 of tile Adams case leods him to a m1ss- 1ng 01rl and a aelt-99P01nt- ed "mets11n." (Part 2 ot 21 D MAS. COUJMBO Mrs Columbo suspects tile d&11lh ot a chic Bevefty Hiiis cateror was not as llCG!dental as u appeared to be. 00 NEWS fl®) FAMILY «!) NIGHT GALLERY 'The Heart Thel Wouldn't Stay Buried" A psychic 1nves11gotor conducts an oxper1menl 10 recervu v1b4ahons trom a scalpel. ED ARTHUR FIEDLER Jusl Call Me Maestro" A blOQ!Bphteal porlroll OI the Boston Pops' conductor m NEWSCHECK 10:30 m «I) NEWS l1i) FOOTSTEPS "I Love Yov Wilen You re OoOd" A married oouplo ''* to con·~ a woman that lhe lhouldn'1 raise her ~lld II\ O<der to gain-tile ~anee al other• 11:001· U 8 ()) ®l NEWS MAKE ME LAUGH . MOVIE • * * "The Night 01goe< ,' 111171) Patrlc'8 NMI, Pam- ela 84own A women llees the elute'-of he< tyrann•· cal mother by talung a pay chottC k1ll8f wnh he< 10 Scotland ( t hr • !18 min \ G) CAROl BURNETT ANOFJUENOS Ouosts. John Byner Fr11n Pne Beets 0) THE OOOOIES Tim &nd Graef'!\0 lry ~unq tu whrlo 8111 becomes m.i~ ter ot the arr ot oc~y thump " ED DICK CAVETT Guests Furman Bt511op David lsrMll. MO<rll Sieget. Odt Young (Part 3 ot 31 11:306()) M•A•s •H Hawtleye Ms trouble get- ting a ll'M!SS808 10 h" lathe< that he has not been i.Hled. de1p11e Army r~s to the contrary (RI D TONIGHT Host Johnny Carson Guests. Jack Lemmon. Shecky Greone 8 SOUPY SAl.E.S ®J STAASKY& HUTCH The detectives tr<1vtll 10 d luaury hotel stalled by 1>eau11tul women 10 1nves11- 9ate a series 01 murdets (Par1 2 of 2) (RI (D THE GONO SHOW 0) OETSMART Smart call:. a maximum 2:06 9 ()) C88 LAT£ MOVIE * * •;, "McCloud SllOw· down At Tlmel Squ.,8" ( 19751 0.nnls Weav&r, Chief Dan G90fge. A dis· pule over McC1oue1 ·, investigation ot en 1nc:t1an ot11ef's son teeds 10 th& lawman's resignation 12:30 8 MOVIE • • • .. , Want You" ( 19521 011ne And<ews, Dorothy McGuire Ourin<J the K~e­ an War. a young mon's can 10 m1H1ory di.tty provoluts serious an1410<>nlsm among h11 IOved ones ( 1 hr . 55 min) m MOVIE • • "Devil's Canyon · f t9531 V1tglflla Mayo. Dato Robertson A 1ormor marsnat. 1n puson lor h&v ing <:ommrlleel murder m sell·delt1ns11. g111, enme.hecl 1n h•S ·•ettow prisoners' plan tor ., breakout 12 hrs I 0) MOVIE • * '• ''When Tomorrow Comes" I 19391 Char"1s Boyer. ••-Dunne A mamed man vt<>1a1es Ills wedd•ng vows wnen he attempts 10 get a prf'llV young waitress 10 oocom· pany Nm 10 P1111s (2 hrs I 12:37 D (Ill MAHHIX A wealthv 1>u11neuman wno attempts 10 kilt Man- "'• r eruse. to dlsclos4! wno 1s 1>et11ne1 tne plot 12:58 U LOVE EXPERTS 1:00 0 TOMOAAOW Guests Marlen and RobOft Bailey, owner:. of An1mJI 9enavl0< Enterpn5.l'i. 1:28() WANTED: OEAO OR AU\IE 1:451 NEWS 1:55 NEWS t·58 • MOVIE • • •• 'I Seo A 0<1rll Love A•on' Retarded • •.,., '"Bed For Eech Othllf" I 19541 Cha111on Heston. Llllbelh Scott An Army sutgoon mull decide whether 10 cater to a rlcn cl+entele ~ netdy ooal S:5S lm1"81'=h1 .• 30 min.) 3:58 MOVIE • * • "Kings Row'" ( 194 11 Ronald Re911an. Ann She<· Klan. Alie< re1um1ng to flis nometown to practioe. a young doct~ becomes 1nvotved In 11\o pe<sonal kvea ot "'' patleflts (2 hr1.1 4·008 MOVIE • • "Batlle Beyond Tile Sun·· ( 1963) Andy S1ewa1t. Edd PttrtV. The NOfthO<n c1nd Southetn hem1S()hertll. 01 Earth compete to reach Mats. bul tne11 spocesh1ps gl\t drve< I eel and llln<S Q11 an Ofbitlf19 star ( t hr . 30 mtnl m MOVIE * •,. "Creature~ 0 1 Destruction' ( 19681 Ll!S Tremayne. Aton KlflCald. • 4:161) ST£VEEDWARD8 f"'riday"• Dayf illW ,,.o.,i~• AFTERNOON 12:00 6 • •'>"Belle Stan" I t9'1) 0-Tierney. Ran· dolph S<:ott m * • • 'f> ··Mar1orie Morningstar'" (Part 21 f 19581 Oene Ketty, Natalie Wood 3:00 ~ • • "l he Love God?" ( 19691 Don Knott~. (Omonel 0 Bflen 3:30 0 •••,"The Sll<H1lf" ( 1970) 0ss;e 0JVl50 Ruby Dee TV Fjlm Touches By PETER J . BOER LOS ANGELES CAP> ~A curious species, the TV networ executive. One moment be offers a gram on- ly lhe most mindless v er could (TV REVIEW) appreciate, the next ment be schedules a sensitive, w drama ernmeot grant expires, she's back at attractive to the most ·tical au-home with "I Love Lucy" reruns. dience. HER FATHER <aOBERT Log. Consider CBS and s e of its gia), a well-to-do builder, wants to made-for-TV movies thi year. The put Janet in a high-class sanitarium: CBS movie man, William tr, took a her mother wants her at home. Enter lik ing to trucks and the adles that brother Bruce <Scott Jacoby), who drive them, offering two y trucker becomes Janet 's freedom fighter. lie movies I dumb ones. too) a month. reahzes his sister is capable of lffe on And yet. Self is the gu who gave ,her own. and brings her to a pleasant us "And Your Name is nah" and hostel for young adults who. like '"Silent Victory: The ty O'Neil Janet, are marginally retarded. Story," two thoughtful. tertaining There s he falls in love with stories dealin~ with deaf Richard Thomas, the spirited, clever SELF GOES ONE up the plus Andrew Madison. Andrew, too, is re· perky comedy s tarring Donna Pescow as a waitress who mar- ries a doctor from a Philadelphia Main Une family. It airs tonight al 8:30 on Channel 7. "I HAD PRETTY much stayed away from TV until 'Angie.' I wanted to really find something good for me as an actor. Nol just be there every A Dirt11 Slaow column this weekend wit h.is choice larded, but Thomas manages to prc- o( "No Other Love" ' the CBS sent his character In a manner that Saturday Movie at 9 on annel 2. It directs your attention past his han· APWI,,.,_ week.'' At the time she was negotiating for a new picture and turned down the television orrer. But whentbe picture Cheryl Ladd tussles with actors <Don Correia ~l left; oth~rs unidentified > in a mud pen dur- ing the ta pmg of he r ABC special, which will be aired April 9 in conjunction with the Academy Awards. is the story or a fhargina retarded dicap. couple who fa ll in love a try to get ANDREW ANO JANET don't play married, a human conlll yarn that games; they know they're retarded. manages to be senli ntal and But they don't think or themselves us One rope of the hammo ck is hitched to .. Mork deal fell through, Marshall was back --------------------at her doorstep and signed ~r for touching without getting t gooey. freaks. either. When they fall in love. The stars are CBS a l ni. Julie they want to be married. But her Kavner, late o r "Rh parents, normal adults that they arc. ,.1scow a n d M i n d y , • • among lhe medjum's top-rated shows, and the other to "Barney Miller." "Angie" has fmished consistently among the 1t lop-rated shows. It doesn 't hurl, e ither, Chat •·Angie" was created by the same eple who came up with the Man rom Or~. Garry Marshall and Dale Raven. Mars hall also created .. Happy Da)"S" and "Laverne & Sbir1ey." ITS FAVOaEO position in the ral- n1s will give "Angle" time to de- ·fXJIDIE mm ABC ' ,f HOLLYWOOD <AP) -Goldie tfawn tlas signed a contract wilb ~BC to star in her own specials and •velop television and theatrical movie.. cJllM Hawn, currently starring in Toal Pia)'," will be exclusive to BC for television. FROM Fash ion Island New~rt Beach ' "Angie.'' It's not really her first series. She spent four months on the ABC soap opera "One Lile to Live." All or her experience had been on the stage, as in the national tour or "Ab, Wilderness'' arter graudation from lhe American Academy or Dramatic Arts. "I TOOK A COURSE ln camera and soap 0P4!1'a techniques," she said. ..One of my teachers was the castinl director for 'One Lile to Live• and sbe asked me to come in. I didn't get the role, but tbey signed me as the bal check girl. Every &tme they had a restaurant scene I tot a few lines." She never got a contract ror the s oap open, which was lucky, because it left her free to accept t.he part ln "Saturday Night Fever." Mias Pescow spent two years ol in- tense study to lose her Brooklyn ac- cent -then bad to reacquire It for "Fever." KOCE Gets Grant Richard Thomas, who u Walton's Mountain as trytoputtbekiboshontheirplans. They're good. They underestimate the young lov- A grant for $10,000 has County news with its cur-Miss Kavner plays Jan ers, as they've underes timated their been awarded by the rent twice· a· week 22. retarded, addicted t daughter aJI or her life. Harry G. Steele Founda-format. The broadcasts and living under the ov "No Other Love," Saturday on lion or Newport Beach, a r e r epealed on bl k t r h 'll 1 h CBS. Cheers to Mr. Self for t .. 's one. 1 to KOCE-TV, Channel T d d Th d an e o er gu1 . a n mot er m ues ays an u.rs ays <Elizabeth Allen) Ja t ·s d ft hope this doesn't mean we're due for 50, Orange County tlO 30 · 1 e pu~Uc televlslon, it was r=a==:=p=.=m=.======e=n=o=u=g=b=to=ho=l=d•a=jo=b=1=b=u:;-t+_n_a_g_o_v_-__ a_no_t_h_e_r _tru_c_k_er_n_ic_k_. ------ an•ounced by the Board or Trustees. The grant will be used to support the public television station's news program, "NeW5check," which appears at 7:30 p.,.. on Tuesday and Th1rsday evenings, ac· cording to William A. Fufniss. Vice President and General Manager of the"PBS station. "Newscbeck" i.s one or the local public arf alrs pre>Jrams on Channel 50, and focuses on Orange 11==·1 Q_ fi1Jf£JJ ©rli~=- lllOOllMUflST A,,_herrn f 12 6'146 CIMMA Cl•Tlfl CO!.t.l M"" 979,4141 MUITl•TIMI Hun11ng1011 lltich 8410388 OllUlll MAU 011110f 837·03'0 lfllA 'lAlA 81U!i29 ~9 UIDUIACl [I IOtO !lal ~880 Clll(MAWHT Wn11™ns1er 191·4493 S UDtUM INIM·I• Or~nge &39 8710 ~UNDS OF THE HARBOR • «so f • r .... .# ....... -- 1'T .. PASSA&E11 .. , .... ,_OIS'"'INt ........ -.000.uTI WIAllLACr ............... .. -.. - ENTEATAINM NT / INTERMISSION T teo Otller• C'losi•g A · ACADEMY AWARD •NOMINATIONS Inducing: BEST AC I MESS 3 New Shows Arriving Ellen Alan Burstyn Alda ~'lime. C.Nexf ~" NOW PLAYING a.IDOllf lDWUDI' •IWPOIJT South Cout Repertory's latat production and a pair nt ~11.,tela~ drama.s take the spotlight this we<-keod m lout lhculrical acllvily. Molkrt'• "The Learned Ladles" arrives of- Ocl11ly on the SCR t l•8e oext Tuesday. but the Costa MNa proft81lonal theater I.a offering four l01W ·Prked ~"lewii of lhe abow be1ln.oing Friday. Golden Wetl CoUe1e launches a three-weekend t>ngattcm~nt of lb • Aeatbti Christie mystery "The Uollow" Friday Aod Onw.ae Coaat College wlll mou.nt a producUon of lbe adult dra.ma "Ashes" nf'Xl wttk, playing Wednesday through Saturday everuna,s °''not 634 l~ NewPotl Bo.11:11 644 0760 I ROBF.&T BENEDETTI IS guest director for ....____ ----_:_"The Learned Ladies" al SCR, whlch will stage on<·~ In al.1.,11 .•. "AN INllMATE AND VF.RY NF.ARLY PERFECT LOVE STORY.'~. < h.lli., t "''lll111 i.,.,,, i\,.,_.._.., I~"" flif1f\1U111• nt ~"4rl~ .....-• d(\A/ra._n.qnlOI\. ... .-y 'PQ; ·~ " FrnrJ< D G*°Y l\lm ,....., ,__ .._£.t 011<.!r I•• g • ., •... HARBOR TWIN HAH OllATWIUOH.COSTAMISA 646-0573 646-3266 M U •l U PYIN FAST •EAKIPOI ""'' ONI ON 0 .. f'OI _______________ .... preview performances Fnda,y through Sunday at 8 p.m and a Sunday matinee at 2:30. The show opens Tuesday ror a five·w~k run. The Mollere comedy will be oo stage through April 2.8 at the Fourth Step Theater. 655 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. Reservations 957-4033. At Golden West. drama instructor Charles Mitchell is directing "The Hollow" at the Actors Playbox, where audiences will be given a chance to guess both the victim and the killer during in· terml.ssk>n. P ESFORMANCES WILL BE given Friday and Saturday of this week. March 29-30-31 and April 5-0-7 at 8:30 and April 8 at 2:30. Reservations 892·7711. "Ashes," a drama by English playwright David Rudkin. will feature OCC drama instructor William Purkiss in the leading role under the direction of John Ferzacca, also a drama teacher al Orange Coast. The play centers around a couple's desperate attempt to produce a child. Pamela Smith, Teri Ciranna and Tt>m Arnold will play other major roles in the show. which will be presented Wednesday through Saturday at 8 p.m. (or one week only at the OCC Drama Lab Utility Helps Out Anti-nuke Movie RAINlER. Ore. <AP) -Other utilities wanted no part of helping act.or-producer Mike Douglas make "The China Syndrome," a film described by -------------------some as anti-nuclear. CNU(K NOftlS G000 CMIY S WI At "'6(1( l"'O I But with the help of Portland General Electric Co .. moviegoers will see a reproduction of the con· -----------------lrol room at the Trojan nuclear plant on the ..... -·-·-·-........ T .. CHINA SYNDIOMI tl'OI 1:00 e l1U e S:lO e 714S & 10.00 lellfrelt ........... "4·2400 h ., ... ....... ,.,, .. ,... .... ,, o,,.,.,,, • ,.,....., ...... Columbia River . "PERHAPS OUR HONESTY ls our own worst -~:r.r:i_...:..-:.-:.-=.-:...-..,,-----------n enemy at times." says PGE spokesman Bruce .. ~ --·--•-'°"""'" Landrey. T.. PAS SAGI ttl PIUI IN ,IAISI 0, OUll• WOMIN 111 994·2400 11J1sJl-9~ THI CHINA SYHM<>MI C"01 He has'--to add that the near-meltdown or lli4S e l!OO e S:lO e 1:00 & IO!U &C'I~ --------------~,.the fictional Ventana plant in lbe film is "certainly not the kind or thing that ever happened at Tro· jan.'' Jn a New York Times interview, Douglas says -----------------people at Trojan "were amazingly cooperative, M12:s1:) -H• ~c: ... -:-:::~:: C~r.~r,~ Cbin:s:n~::.:~~re ~ ~ • ....-..-THE CHINA SYNDROME is nuclear talk for a • ~ .., ....,.. ... •nooe runaway reactor that would melt its way into Ole ?13/Sll·tslO MUIDH IY DIClll cMI earth -all the way to China, alt.bough that is •==::::::;:-'-'"-•_i_,,_, _•_•_••_• _•_•1_u_a_1°_••.'ll technically imPoSaible. · •t -·-~1514 It -,_..._ .. " 494·1514 YAMUSA._...ft "A••TMA·cm "MIA T TRAIN •llQ"'l.,.I,..~,,,.- DIANA ROSS "THE WIZ" (PQ) "HEAVEN CAN WAIT" .... llilo'I ... 111 e "' !ti 1oO UI e -llo'1 11 IU IMPOllTllf NOTICll CHILDREN UMDlR 1Z fRlEI ...... .,...,_,,.,., ._. talft#• •t *. ~ ...... n11oe UYUI •YOND , .. DOOi, 11111 PlUI rT'S ALIYI, lltt1 &NTNONT Qll-e J&•I MAIOft T .. ,AISAOI ttl 'LllS T .. INfottal111 ""' J&lK e N ftl IO'l'U , .. ••HtC'S JOll'Ol •u1s STAI CIASH CNI ID_I_,..,..._.._... nt OINI INllM ll'OI !'\US nl I• Of nt WOILlll'OI atuc• ...... .... Gwyt w-.._.111 •LUI Mii IMICKLll 1111 .. fi ) =-~ ----&OOICINO IOI ... OOODM• II CMutK NOlll• IOOO GUTS #IH NACll 111 PLUS Mii ICNUOUll 111 PGE Public Af(airs Manager Ed W'1elan says he's oot so sure lbey told him about that. "But, if they did, ll wouldn't have made any difrerence," he said. . 0.. - I YllON lASICY &. Lii wma.preenc • · rDJtl lllCHAIDln "TltlTOY" (PG~ • film written~ procM.ed by flAHCIS W.U wllh IACQUIS f'ltANCOIS. MKMl IOUQU[T, DANE. QCCAUll .acld r,uaa c.alCO DAILY7 & tPM SUNDAY MATINEES · 2.-00 PM fMTINEES SATURDAY & SUNQ~Y "HARD CORE" (R) "THE EYES-OF LAURA MARS" WALT DISNEY PROOUC'TlONS "NORTH AVENUE IRREGULARS" "ICE CASTLES" PG (G), "SAME TIME NEXT YEAR" "CALIFORNIA SUITE" (PO) JANE FONDA "THE CHINA SYNORONE" (PO) "FAST BREAK" (PG) "THE ONE ANO ONLY" "AGATHA"CPG) Intermission 'Tom Titus Theater. 'ncketa will be available at the door. Winding up their respective local engagements thla weekend are "Ladies ln Retirement" at the Newport Harbor Community Theater and 0 Tbe Fox Laughs'' at the Sao Clemente Community Theater. "LADIES" WILL BE staged Friday and SaturdaY. at 8·30 and Sunday at 7 .30 at tbc Newport ' Theater Arts Center, 2501 Clirr Drive. Newport Beach <673·5115). The "Fox" will have bis last laugh tonight through Saturday at 8:30 in the Cabrillo Playhouse, 202 Avenida CabrUlo, San Clemente (492·0465>. Four other stage productions continuing their performances along the Orange Coast are: -"Mao of La Mancha" at Sebastian's West Dinner Playhouse. 140 Aveoida Pico, San Clemente (492·9950>. Performances nightly ex· cept Monday at varying curtain times through April 15. -"SUNDAY IN NEW YORK" at the Westminster Community Theater, 7272 Maple St .. Westminster (893-8626 >. Performances Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30 through April 7. -"The Hound of the Baskervilles" at the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse on lbe Orange County Fairgrou nd s, Costa Me s a <754 -5 159 ). Performances Fridays and Saturdays at 8 :30 through April 7. "Come Blow Your Horn" at the Harlequin Dinner Playhouse. 3503 S. Harbor Blvd .. Santa Ana <979-5511 ). Performances nightly except Mon· day~ through April 22. Detective Film Next For Benji HOLLYWOOD <AP > -Benji, the dog that seems almost human . will become even more so in h1s newest picture, "Oh Heavenly Dog." The movie is about a private detective who is killed and forced lo re· " tum to earth as a dog lo solve his own murder. Benji has also run into some very human • bureaucracy. Producer APWlrepMte J oe Camp wants to film I COllCert the movie in London, but 11 so far British officials Jazz singer Sarah are sticking to their rule Vaughn is giving that all dogs enter ing three concerts this the country must spend m onth at Carnegie six months in quaran- Hall in New York. tine . ~ ~ned !PAd~ "HILAAIOUSI" Sp!clal Low-Prlctd Pre~w• Thie w .. undl '11.1 9"".-• .... STARTS TOMORROW Paalonea de sangre explotan en el boulevard -y el boulevard exJate de noche Everything happens on the boulevard - and the boulevard happens at night. "MURDER ON J'HE ORIENT EXPRESS" -~ ......., ........... _ '"' ....... . .... 10UlllT 1UP•1 "EVERY WHICH WAY BUT LOOSE" "BEYOND THe DOOR, PART 2" "CALIFORNIA SUITE"' "H!AYEN CAN WAlr (PG) "THEWIZ" "CAR WASH" (PG) "ICE CASTLES'' "TAKE DOWN" (PG) M.LD•tv ..................... , _.,...,,.~ .................. . • ! --· ~-·""°' ........ .-.. ~~u DEER '" HUNTER ·"~ -·t-•• r111r•.•-•·"·•M.••••• ... ....... - Chrl•tol)Mr L" Britt Eldend "THE WICKER MAN'' PLUS If') "BEYOND THE DOOR. II" "RICHARD PRYOR, FllMED LIVE IN CONCERT" DAILY PILOT 89 FAST BREAK Phi• (PO) WlnMtoft Academy Aw•111 Nom1n1tlon• "HEAVEN CAN WAIT" .... IKll, ACAHMTA•-~ Soo• "°"' NO--CJun.a.. wtJll L -SUPERMAJll ii~--· MAll~OllllllAM>O ~ ~ I• c:t11t ~•c,.•u• ~ --""· ••tt Mon . ..frl. 7:15, t:30 "" • oo • o • • '' Set/Sun. 12:45, 3:00, 5:30 IAl'SUOIUJO )li,tOO,tH.11 ll 8:00.10:15 " ,.,-... ~ .. ·-_,,_. ~ eUTrote't\MI ~!lfv" HEAVEN \i' CAN WAIT PLUS '" WINNER 4 ACADfMY AWARD NOMINATIONS "THE WIZ" 1m OC\110 g ('\~fl\' W'"IRU\) THE CAEAT • TRiii I llOHERY •·· I Britt Eld1nd ChrlttopMr Lff ~IA! "THE WICKE~ ,,..", MAN " CHUCll NONtll "GOOD GUYS WEAR BLACK'' (flO) ChlolCll Nome AIM~ "GOOD GUYS WEAR BLACK'' ''STAR CRASH" " ....... ,,.., 7:•,1:11 I J ••• OAILY PILOT Thuraday. M.,c;h 22. IVT9 .. NATION 'Kiiler' Bees Pose Problem to Bone~ Industry NEW YORK (At> I Al ltad pl aye" in an t'nd or lbe world . c nano, they're fau1h111bl A-. mt-mbe-ra of an invadlng hof'(I , lhey rt' a Oop · Rut lau1hab1 or not,,~ Abturult'd oc "killer" btt ar.-bunana ttad1ly through Vt>nn~I• on a northwanl trelt that a.om~ uy 11hould br1n1 thc>m lo lh1• United Stal 11 arount1 IM , flVt' or take a yt>ar AND &ATH•~· THAN ) 1-:UNC a public out cry. t~y·r~ postn(C a tlUf' Uon for •clt•ntl•b tn tcr l'1ted 111 populallon Qt•l\t'llCI Will lht' bet'' rclC'h UM tJ S bordt"r w1lh nmy ttml)tntm nt In fact~ ' Some C'nlomo lottl•t " exp.-ct the bt•t•ll \fi ·•ntt•rmht ~Ith l<t<•al h<'•"' Iona t.M w•y and 106f' .tb~tr h.-gcndury bud b •mpt>rs "I don't l'D)' tht•y'n• u per(f'('tly lovable bt.~ Wh•l l'rn etayma is lh~y ·re dam good bont•.Y pro ductr11." 1» ys Or l<O(l(•r A Mo ~ ot Cornell Unlven11ty. u "ktllt•r" b<.'o ddend r who htP• s tudied tht•lr habits an Hru&ll Uut otiwr IH'tt•ntt~h. llkt• l>r Orlt•y n Tuylur J r , head of u U S Agru·ulture lkpat'\ment rt- 11t-arch prOJl'cl on l ht~ bceb. four that 1r lht>y reach North Amcn ca untaml'd, they wall pose a sticky problem for the country i. $125 malhon a year honey industry .. THE A•'RICAN "K ILLE R " BEES were brou1hl to this hemisphere In 1956 to un ex ' peramental brcedmg bl<lllon at Sao Paiulo, 6ra21I, "'a'hc re 1l wbs ho~'<.I their honey-producing power& il'lould be lapped Instead, 26 queens escaped the following year • and began mating with loeul bees. The Alncans were used to tougher natural pre dators t h an l he andlginous bees. who h ad descended from European stock. They acquired a reputation for nas tiness. "A pig bumps up agoinsl a beehive.and four or five thousand bees <'Ome out and sturt :.tanging ever ything within 200 meters. When 1t 's over. s eve ral anjmals are dead, several people arc slung a Dft the beekeeper 1s scared to dt•ath," s ay s Taylor. professor of entomology ut lhc University of Kansas. T HE "KILLER " BEES WERE BLAMED for the deaths or 150 people a nd thousandi. of unamab m the ooxt two decades. Who's a pretty boy, then? 1,.._"._..-.. ~.,,"""" ...... (.•<-.f•...., .,.,,.," __ ... ~---...... .~ ........... ~ ~•'-""""'-•r •• ...,_...,..,....,..~-·~"'Wl'lt,,.,. ..... tr.I .. .:-. ,,..I# ...... ··-~­--~ _. ,_,..,.,, ... ,,_. ~ .,,,.,.., .......... ~ .... ...,.-........ -~ .... -"""'V--"-,......._,,. ,.._,._ """--,...,.. .... __.. . .,._..., _...._ ........ _._,, ......,...,,,_, • .,... •• --•• .I",,.. .. _ . ....._ ___ . .................. ~--·~ ..... ~ V"•1t••.,.....•·-· ..... ............... --~··· ........ . ,._ .. ., _____ .. ,.. ···-..... _... .. ..,.,.._ ....... ·-.-.. ,. ....... _. .... .., .. .. .. _ ... _., ..... ···-··-~ -· . '-··--.......... . I 1. ··~·-·-· --.. -.... 'I ! ,._._,., ... ,,.. •"'-,..,.. '•-.. _,., _ .......... -.... ~ I • lj ., ,_,.. • .....__ •• ..,, .,.,, _,""" ,, ..... ,...,_,...,._ ....,.._,...,"-t"• l!]Jr<U • ... I j •• \._!!,_..I -.... ..,........_.., .. _.,,.,,..,.,_.~, ..... _ .. , ........ ..,_,_ ..... _,...._ ._.___, . -..,;.. ,_ .... -................ .. ,....,~, ........ _ """"""_""'_ ..... _ ·-__ ,.._ ................ .., -...-........ .., ...... ... _.-.he•-·-·--"""" ""'41 , ........ ....,._ ..... , ...... ...., .. ,.,.,. ______ .... ,.. "·-.,....41 ... ·-''" -~ ·-... ·-" .... ,.,., ....... ,. ....... , .. ..-·-· ..... -........... . -· ,., .... ·-· ·-· ,, ... -"'""'"""''' .. -'·-·· ... ... .... ,._, ,_ .............. ,, ''" ............. " -... ............. ,.,,.. , ..... ~,, ._ ......... _. .. ,~·· ''""'·-··· .,, .. , ... , ..... , .. , ....... , .. Satuf artion ,,,..,,..,.... A smile of s alisf action graces the face or edric, advertising symbol for Boar Mate. • n product des igned to get amorous pigs together at the rig ht time. The ad points oµt that the product works so well tcuser bourds urn not needed. Solon Showers rroposal Loses MADISON, Wis. 1/\P) A propo11al to llpend *'9.000 for shower racllltlcs for noon-time Joggurs ie. five atale om c" buildings at M11dlson and llllwau.kee hH gone down the drain. !.f The propoul, approved by the s tate Building Gflllmluion. drew a n1ry protetl8 rrom some tax· '*1en, prompting Gov. Lee Dreyfus and several ~bera or the commission to change their votes. The commlaslon, voting again, rejected t h4' project 5-3. ' Dreyfus aald he t1tlll thlnka the 1howers are a good ktea, even If the public doetn't want lhem. "It makes aense to me," ho said. "ll does not make aenae to those people or the State or Wlaconaln who made them &Clvcs heard." Couple Win Suit Against Daughter CHICAGO CAPl A Judae baa awarded S7to,OOO to a couple who rueci ault 111tnst their deu1b&er u a .... ult of an auto acddent ~n 117t that left the modMI' with permanent bralndama1e. 1 Clreuit Court Jud•• Imna Norman llped the out·of ·~rt H tllement awardlDI d1m11ea to Latbel Boren. '4, and hil wtfe, Ilaria, 4t, of Woodef'LUe. Burtoa JOlf!l)b, the Borena' aUomty Hid UM da m ... wtU be paid .. Y Uberty llutual imuruee eo., wldda bllund the nat.ed ear drl'9D bJ &be dau11Ur. Herta Hu1ler Wlkoa, M, of Cbleqo. But 8rn1lll n1 uy ear& qf lnlcrmlxinC have "COMMERCI AL Bf!EKEEP E R8 A a E mt•llo~t"d lht• lrrlhabh· fellow or iented to pulling colonlett on a truck and llu(lo Muoft-ldl. former ptc111dt•nt or the moving them a round." uys Martin. "If you have llruHiall 8ttk •cplnll Ait!l()('1111tlon. uyt1 lhcrti'is bees lhal ul) and leave the hive when they're ir bt· •n r;o t ffttt on th country':; 5,000 ton onnu•l rltated, that co~pUcates the bu1h:aes8 <>f pulling hont-y produrUon the m on wheels. Nevtl'Uw>letft, U S bc-t>kCCl>tll'1' romaln wary Some have url(t1d that ttw> bec11 bf· 11topped as that the hybrlda rould hurt buslnesis U e1 !"~hey pus through the nar row nation of P1m1tmu. 115.000 lOnl of hont-y n year In lhc U"llt..>d Sl•les ul Taylor say8 young African q ueen bf•cs can and ht'lp polllnate 90 croJ)I , lnclud n11 moet frullll travel up to 100 miles before e11t1blh1hln1 a new and null. · colony. mnklnfC o biological or physical barrier J>r Hurt Murtln, tlatt clt•nti•t ror beea al the next to lmpotuilble. · SOA ~arch center in Helt.ville. Md • says the a111reu1v ttnd ncle11 probably can be bred oul or the beet But Marlin le worrit-d about two other undealrablt· trait. their h!ndcncy to iswerm un- predirtably und their lt.'nd ·ncy lo abscond. or ubandoo a hlvt' I' ~· I • • • ........ f ... Out exptrls Point out that 110 far. the bec1t' ra pid expunalon hM been Into rcl11llvtly bee.free urttut Then• or<' only about 200.000 beehives und •r human l'tll'(' In Vl'!1t''uclo. Colombia and thl' Cen tral American countries, Taylor sayis. But Mexico has more than a milhon managed hives a nd the Uotl.!d States has more than ·4 mllUon. ' "ONCE TUEY RE~CH JlEXJCO ]'HEY hit the first large concentr ation or managed bees and the efrect of lhls on a wild bee population ls dlf· flcult to predict." he soy11. Other scientis ts thi nk North Ame r ican beekeepers. who are better organbed and bette r informed than thos' in South America , would be able to right oH any ''killer " bee Invasion. "lf l w<•re a com mercial beekeeper in Texas and these things were comtnl!. I'd get some friends and a name thrower and go bum them out. That's whot you do with a nuis ance," says Or. Konnelh Tucker of the USDA 's bee brt"C;-ding lab in Baton Rouge, La let vigoro slug it out with the snails! Attracts and kills slugs and snails fast ... Vlgoro Snell & Slug pellets or meal. 2-lb. box. Reg. 1.45 boWgreenll your,..., " comln' lhru .. ,,. for a rose or any aa.now• go to any lengths! forno-wony holwats o.p.ndable, tff*=leflt gu water hHter1. QlaH·llned tank1, hot water recovery 1y1tem and hlgh·temp. •hut· on. 79'!.... • ................. 14.11 •11l 1n ............ HM.II ,. ................. 114.11 Of your lewn? Vlgoto'a new Lawn FerUl!zer with time , ...... tonnula .... keep It rMlly green! 25-lb.Aeg. 8.96 beg. 7!.' QUiity ryie .,.. Ned from Germain. Big 1~b. b99 for MW lewna Of r• ... dlng. Reg. 3.48 221 : ·· · T7ME·AU wlll switch or reaepllclll Wall Nllcf\ l•tur• quiet awttoh, ample wiring room & d&aet pr*<Jtlon, #1 421. Wall reoep 11c1 e with Ql'Oijftd. 11215. 35!. Random length of quallty hose to faahlon your own hOaes and exten1lon1. 10 to 15-foot lengths. Reg. 2.99 1!? kid's cen1 knock It , ~ INSIDE: •Ann Landen. •Horoscope •Erma Bombeck •Singles C.lendar .,,_..,March 22. 1m DALY l'ILOT SupOn' Anaheim Stadium Surf· Soccer team 's new rah rah squad will lead cheers to beat of '50s California surfin' music By ~DIE EG.U- °'-~,.... ._. When the California Surf soettr team takes to the field this season. It'll be joined by a sup- port team -the Surf's new California Girls cbeerleading squad. .. The 12 members of the California Girls squad plus two alternates were selected from a mong 42 finalists during a fun.filled afternoon or judging at Anaheim Stadium, which included an impromptu birthday celebration ror one or the judges, Jan Torrence or Jan and Dean sing ing fame. Finalists were judged on personality, danc- ing ability -especially the ability to ·learn dance st.epSiong since forgotten except perhaps by their parents -plus personality and ap- pearance. Cheers & Whoops During many of the contestants' 45-second tlance routines, the 13-member jury c&eered and whooped with delight at some of the moves de monstrated to ··surfin' U.S.A." Judges included J an and Dean and the five members of Papa Doo Run Run singing group from Northern California. Wolfgang Suhnholz. Surf Assistant coach and midfielder Lynne Saunders. Surf assistant general manager; Stephen John. Surf m arketing director. Bryce Bailey or Bailey's Young World dance studio. and two local news reporters. Bailey served as the panel expert during Judging of the dance portion or competition. He has been hired by the Surf to choreograph routines for the California Girls and to get them ready for their Saturday, March 24. debut at San 01eg Slad1um when the Surf goe~ against the San Diego Sockers. During the March 24 game. which will be televised over KTLA-TV. the Surf ctlffrleaders will be introduced to the public as a group for lt'..e first time. The California Girls won't be performing dance routines in San Diego, though. They're saving that for hometown fans. Wednesday, March 28, they'll be formally introduced to Surf fans during an exhibition match against the New York Cosmos in Anaheim Stadium Then, Friday. March 30. when the Surf plays the Chicago Sting lD the NASL home opener, the California Girts will show their stuff. Plans caJI for the m to perform dance routines during pre-J ame and halftime festivities. They'll dance to '50s California surf- ing music Their debut will be accompanied by another debut. the Surf's new theme song, which is an old Beach Boys tune called "Be True to Your School." that Jan and Dean rewrote for the Surf. Two designers are working on costumes for the cbffring squad, and Ball~y and bis instruc- tors are coacbi.og their dancing. "We want to put together Wild routines with California flavor and look," Balley said. "We're taking the ooetalgia movement and putting .it. together with subtle jau dancing." Bailey said the California Girls "will be dlf- f erent than other cheerleaders." partly becauae or the kinds of routines they'll perform and because of the nostalgia angJe. In addition to performing at Surf games. the cheerleaders will represent the club at charity functions and public speaking engugements. They'll also travel with the team but they're not allowed to date players. Another restriction for the new squad is that they can't smoke or drink "on Surf time." a spokesman for the club noted. Basically, the club spokesman said, the California Girls will perform public relations duties for the Surf. During the judging session, at least 50 per- cent of the finalists said they hoped to go into public relations as a career. Me mbers of the California Girls and alternates Jre:~<;_.n>ress College studenLLisa_ Gay. 20, Anaheim; Surf ticket sales e mployee Maria Sanez. 21. Fullerton: Cypress College stu· dent Donna Lussier. 18. Fullerton; Orange Coast College student Anna Nixon, 20, Garden Grove: Cal State Fullerton student Teri Free. JS, Brea: UCI pharmacology st.adent Sherye Cantrell. 20, Fullerton; ft~oothill High School pupil Shannon Cleye, 18. Santa Ana; model Teri Vanderstaay. 18. Anaheim : Cal State Fullerton undergraduate Bonnie Tatting, 19. Anaheim: Santa Ana College enrollee Lauri Oades. 19. Villa Park : a nd Fullerton Junior College anthropology major Laura Johnson. 19. Fullerton. Also selected California Girls were: Melin· da Snow. 21. Anaheim, who said she wants to become a professional model; bank teller Carol Chiaravalloti, 19. Anaheim : and Capistrano Valley High School pupil Kathleen Schaller , 18, of Mission Viejo. Two members of the new squad. Miss Can- trell and Miss Johnson. are back with the Surf for the second year. Last year they were mem· bers of the club's Breakers squad. the forerun- ner to the new California Girls cbeerleading t.mam. Bailey noted that most of the new Surf cheerleaders "have had a little bit of dancing experience." J • • • . . • CJ Rnalists. above. in Surf Soccer team's corrpetition to select California Girls cheerfeading squad dance up a storm to onginal California surf in ' sound music rre.de famous during the sos by the Beach Boys and Jan and Dean. The dancers ' inspiration came from tunes such as "Surf City U.S.A.," "Surfin' Safari," and Wipe Out." Below. dance instructor Debbie Alward, far right, helps drill finalists in nostalgic dance routi nes during an hour-long pre-judging_ rehearsal outside Anaheim Stadium. • Why cheerleaders? "Basicall y." said the Surf spokesman. "the California Girls wilt represent the youth of Califorrua in a very positive manner." Not to be outdone by the distaff aide, Sutt defender Andy McBride demonstta'8S his dance style atop the ·~ Stadium left field dugout. As patt d the cheerleader competition, each finalist perlonned a Surfln' sound duo Jan (Berry) and Dean (Torrence) took theii'1 45-Hcond tOUtin_e to demonsttate her adaptablllty fO dance · judging duty seriously although at times, they joined spectators _. popular during the '50s. and other judges in cheering the contestants on. J ~ 5, Industry demands equal time for its side of the wavy, bedtime story 0....-.................... rn. Jola• MeNetll, YIH pretidnt of La1uu •• ..,,.._. a flrm wldell .U. waterbed fn .. 11111 MC•IDrtel Md ii IDeated witbia * lnlill IDllmtrtal Compla. la llli ..., polite a.u.r, lleRellt '21ut1• out ......... ftrlla......,. 4IO ............. .. to ................. to ....... ,.. .... Mr" to "" aa ''obJfftln report to rour ,. ......... .......... '° .............. _ .... witll 1old·1pee~ed mlrrort and .,aaatlc atalaed-.... w\ndowa, I •• diaappolnted to. ftnd tbe Lapa plant quite ~ -mld-dle-elw m fact -with e.mveMIOiaa' llUltebiq bedroom .... ID early Almricaa. Spentu and eoaa.......,, ltJU.nl•. s.. ....... watenedl bad tbelr roots In tbe now.-PDWW Hatcbt-AlbburJ era ol the .... Amertoa Md bolllOllllbed lbem lib In· ceue aad ......_ and "* lbem out u early llluioa Viejo tract bom•. Aa I wu leavtq, llcNeW, aatub drelled In auit and tie, 9Ullelted I attend lbe Waterbed llanulactunr'a AuoclaUoa trade show at the Aaabelm C..--Ceater. Aa a reporter wttla ID ablllation to live an objeetift report. I foreed .,..U to '°' IDlkle tbe b .... tr• .,_ with '100 booths and mon tbu .IM ............. I WU beartened to'" aa abundant nwnberlf "llr. Slkb" witb Burt Re7nold1' f acea, .. ., present 1old .Mis--... Usbt. tlPt llaeb . ..... tbem..,. IOllM bcMmey, abort-atlrted and COltmned women uaiatant5 wttb Farah Fawcett-Majors bairdo9 and Racquel Welcb figures. AJtboucb there were ~ of reepeetab17 middJe.claa Items -like waterbed bunb, utbs · and baby baaainets -there were al80 aome \ spectacular ensembles witb Iota ot mirror ud 1 ~ cbrome. Jn addition, there were provocatlye I' waterbed couches and love seats and MJl7 bedroom lelt1np wttb cushy velvet bedapnada t udrealP•"Md·llwwtndon. To oat wbole aeaae. have not beeo uaautt- ed for IOIDe time, I went home bubbllq .._ ~ rinu. ol no.taUoa sleep. Wat.erbecll ... far .. I WU coaeenMd, .... on tbe verse ol &akial over the world. At leat tf tlaat. '1 &be way I felt until lat nllbt at mkWIM ' I when our bed 1pruq a leak. It toot more tb.aa q a.om-to clean gp tile mess. ., oe ,, ,, ·~ '" .. '" ... !S & '· I• ... lo •r ot I H ~·· UI 01 • . ,,, o l E , 10 ..... '"" ttd un .E . CA tot .... .C" "~ ••ct lf~t Hot ~, .. AV ON lo ,,... Ille .. 0 ..... ,. .. ...... Cl· ~ 'of ,.., "'" ••i .. Id '"' •uot .. ,. OAA.Y ptLOf Thulllday. March 22. t171 ANN LANDERS I HOROSCOPE I ~AMA BOMBECK I SINGLES CALENDAR .. • , ,. W""1 my son moved .•Ml of our houtf' and Into ~'' own a partmenl, I t ned v ry h•rd lo hold buJl the ~ars The ne1t wlitmpty I bit m y 11 p 1 I • lboucht. tioodbyt-IJnd• rtonald and 8Ub' Jod G oodby~ purc-, or tc••lc, hon~y herbal .l)ceplt"d shamP<>O that fOlt Sl 50 an ouo~ •nd lay oo its 1udf' wlthOut u nap ruooln& down thti ~rJl_tn. Goodbyt> empty milk ·~'rton s In th e ref tlger11lor and ddt'd· out lunch mett. Cood bye label• tha t rod, "lland wu h only." Goodbye porch li ght that bu been burning rlay and night for tbret! years Goodbye mtld ~wed • towels and empty Ice • ..._ trays. Goodbye ont> ~tt g l ov~. park1n~ Hclrnts for b<M'lkm nrks • :artd boxl"' or ncwi.pap('r WHed. "HANDS OFJ.'1" So Ion~ thre~·h our • l\Owen.. ::.bare<t ruzor blades. und unopened roall with Muntc1p1l C'-0urt. Dtvtslon of Trar h e ln UK-upper k'tt hard roroer l could s tand I\ no lon1er. I rushed t.o lbe door. threw It open and yelled. "Mother's Day Is Ov~r!" My huaband was m tM pl"O<"eN ol chantclntc thtt loc'ttl wht'n I said . "Ooo 'l lake oo so Aft~r an. YoU haven't 108t a 500. you've &aioed a U N Jick for YoUr car." It wu too&h. but we :sa id hello t o pastel towf'ls ood a little shell to hold the soap. He llo to oh ve~ th11t you rouJd leave in plain s1(Chl t.n the refngeralor · Hello hair dryer. He llo d i nner whenever w~ wanted it. r Horoscope ) FamA v. •Aam ZJ By SYDNEY OMAaa AIUES tMarcb 21-AprU 19>: Emphasis on diplomacy. giv1ng and receiving gifts, winning friends and mfluencmg people. Taurus. Ubra, ~corpio persons figure promlnenUy. Stubborn colleague is testing you. Maintain "cool"! Surprise dividend resuJts from recent business endeavor. TAUllUS <April 20·May 20): You get "truth" from one capable of making decisions on executive level. Key is lo know what to do with information once you obtain it. FamUy member makes fine contribution t.o harmony. :;ecurity. Another Taurus plays role in scenario. GEMINI <May 21.Juoe ~>: Define terms. ~rfect techniques, perce ive difference between wlsbruJ thinking and the "genuine article." Pisces, Virgo individuals figure prominently. Accent on communication. spirituality. cduca· lion, getting views across in meaningful man· ner · CANCER (June 21.July 22>: Emphasis on digging deep, being frank about money, taxes, emotional commitments. One clale to you wants somelhJng which would in.sure security. Discuss l)riorities. Shake ofr tendency to duck Import.ant i•ues, Capricorn person is cantankerow1 but , honest. LEO (July 23·Aug. 22>: Cycle not bJgh - , lcnow lt and be caullous. Pla,y waitlng game . ,. bon 't get caught lo legal snarl. Do plenty or ~ening where mate, partner enter picture. Rold off on asserting, de manding, caJolinl, in· s~ting -do more listening than in recent put. · ·You can Ue some "loose ends." VIaGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Co-worter. or ... one who shares basic concerns, wa~es en· thusiasUc about a "new deal." Be receptive, but be sure about "bolts and screws." Means don't wager on house of cards. ~k mechanics or operation, Insist oo quality, care. dedication. You'll understand! LIBllA <Sept. 23~0ct. 22>: Emotions dominate. Don't fight feelings. Accent change, be lenient with children. In matters ot specula· tion, stay with number tl. Follow through on hunch. Call or compliment former teacher. You get verification -· and green light to proceed on "important project." SO>llPIO tOcl. 23-Nov. 21>: You Oourish ,wlthin environment. Means acres of dlamonds can be round in your own backyard. You'll feel ,; ~,ood, vindicated. Gemini. Sagittarius persons could figure promine ntly. You le arn basic , ·~na and profit as result. "' 8AGITl'AllJV8 (Nov. 22,Dec. 21): Study "• ~orplo message. Stick to factual data. Relativet may be rettleaa, but you have your "1>,rn life to Uve. It la now, not a rehea.rul. Kaow ~ '.il and doo't sell abort your own deaires, oeeda .. ·i:.ttultlve nuh providet auwers needed to .... ~llmlute red &a • • . ..,, CAP&IOOa: <Dec. 22-Jan. 19>: Spotllaht ··~bll bome and improvement, coeu In conDection with buic security. TaUl'UI, Ubra, Sa&itt.ariua persons could play a ctive roles. What bad been mlu lnl ii due to be recovered. Income paten. tlal i1 heightened. AQVAJlJUS <Jan. 20·Feb. 18> Obtain hlat from Capricorn mess&f(e. Be receptive to ldea proffered by famUy member. Judament. lntui· ilon are on target -sense of tlmln1 becomes ' definite asset. You have right to be confldenl. Stress directness. initlative, ori1lnal 1pproach. PISCES <Feb. 19-March 20). Closed·door conference is on agenda. Be discreet. f'eeUn1 ol confinement is temporary. You gain access to "lnaide lnlormatlon." Dream could be pro· "" ,ahetlc -strive for proper interpretation. fiumber 7 figure1 prominently. I "'" •• 9'MUTT '" Lll4'tMAW Ha•arLltes ,.. ........ ..... ,., .... ~ .... c.... .... ..... 20°/oOFF <Witt\ TNt Ad) ................ W.SHADES ............ .................. --,m; I OPEN Y Joy-riding Dangers · Told by Sad Nurse tl t llo &urne d oH aardfn bOte. Hello to t httM" that dido 't have to bl' cut n hall to gel Md Of the e.-poeed part neuo family car that we used any Ume Wl' w1nt. He llo 1rocery t boppln& ooee 1t week. llello lelephoH e1Us th1l are IOI' ut. Hello dinner parties without Uw fruit plate ha lf con". Ht1llo •olt mualc and eooveraaUon. He llo p"nc ll by the l)h o n c a nd H e llo eflovt:rs. This week . lw moved back W L· s hou ld h uvc moved the ocsl wtuJc we hud the chance. Loving Can Hurt PRINCETON, N .J . c AP> Do you expect your Jover to be every· Designing Women planning fund-raising thing lo you! lf you do, for u.. .... L n-... -h S hool f you 're expecting too beneftt u"3 aguna ~ c o DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1 am a re· 1i1ler•d nurse at a mecUeal center lo a 1tate which 1ball remain oameleN. Today I uw a boy who ii 19 yean old in Ute lalenaive care unlt . He bu two boles ln the m lddle of bla skull con· nected t.o traction. He also ha s bad a tracheotomy to make an airway throuch lbe mid· die of bis neck lo lbe windpipe. Tbil ia booked up to a machine that be lPJ him breathe. His back la broken in rour places. He ia paralyied from the s houlders down. He la baodaome and atett and knows everytblng that .. hap- pening around him. Tb .. boy bad a great future -but no more. What happened? H e was joy-riding with two others guys -drinklnR and popping pills. They were racing another car at 70 mpb. and tried to make a curve. One boy died In that accident. Another Is near death as I write this. I 've bad a few wild times and golt.en drunk in my younger days and when I think that wha t happened lo him couJd Cnu.rses Planned much rrom love. and Art are, from left.. Mrs. Raymond Contino, you could be hurt by the in charge of seating and reservations; experlence. says Dr:-M ~ ... -8 ,, rl'u chairman· and Debora Phillips , a rs. ""''°'" 6C".1~ pa •• , ' Topics for seminars. behav\or lberapiat who Mrs. Boyd Jeffries, in charge of f#owerS. worUbops and college lives aod practices here. The committee members met in fArs. Jet-classes coming up range You may call it love. , L B h home from law lo child study . but she says It could fries aguna eac · Legal rights or con· more precisely be caJlcd sum e r s wt II b e c x · a dependency. anuned al 7:30 p.m. Fri· ·Dependency doesn't ( ] da y, March 30, when al e q u a l closeness o r Sittgf.es torney T rudy Polsky intim acy," says Ms. s peaks on "You and Phillips. "It's a need for Calendar Tod ay's Law" at a an object; for someone ?ublic gathering in the lo be there. t.o bolster up · F ullerton College Stu- insecurity." d ent Center, 321 E . And if you think your NEWPOllT JEWISH SINGLES: Meet old Chapman Ave. love life may be a de· and new friends at Ruth Howard's home in Child Study Group. a pendency, you're fa r Newport Beach at 7:30 p.m. Sunday, March 25. course in understanding rrom alone, says Ms . Call for reservations: 64S-23l7. a nd co P. in g w 1th Phillips. Most American c hildre n s behavior . marriages are based on SINGLE EXPERIENCE: .. Communication w i It be offered b y false assumptions as t.o for Singles" will be the topic of a program. at Coastline Community what kwe ts and what the Self Center ln Ora nge at s p.m . Friday, College from 9 to 11:30 have happened to me. it 's sca r y . An n , I wouJdn 't wish tbtS on my worst enemy. This boy would give anything if he could re· Uve that rught. But it 's too late. He will NEVER be the same. He will have to spend the rest of his nre in a wheelchair. Please print thls letter and maybe JUSt one teenager wm think twice before he mixes pills I s ay she is insecure and behaving In a very adolescent manner. lier mother says "Poor child." Will you ph:ast· give me your opinion of this? -G.W.F. DEAR G.W.t'.: Th~ gJrl is lnsecore -and she ls a "poor ~blld." I ltope s he gets some coanseUn.c. Her attach· m e at t o h er "300 friends" is a symp&om of deeper proble ms. a nd booze and gch ----------behind the wheel or a car. -A SAO RN DEAll llN: I can't tltlllk of one thing to 1dd to yoa.r letter. You u ld It au. · DEAR ANN LANDERS · Why would a 22-year-old girl ke<!P a r oom full of s turfl'd animals? They are dir ty, worn and old. She says she doesn't want to S<O to college becaust· she could never get a roont large eoough for her 300 friends. RUFFEll'S UPHOLSTERY ... ,.w ... .. '"' . 1922 Herbof et¥d. Cqsta ... -$48.-11 se Raise Funds for your Club, ~Belbe Ybnan"1ll WfttoBel . .... .-u ~··· ........ ~· toot .,,"'°""-"""' --.-M1• "'•' -(JI a~ .q-.~M-J!i<(lflw~ ...-~ 11•-'Q"" -~ ~·N 1'•\ C411 IOO.IY ..,. •flt'""""' ............... ""' f;l~Jf #1 ~•":i•M •1 n. ~'-Ifft,,.,...,,, ORANGE COUNTY 3 TOWN & COUNTRY ORANGE (714) 5'17-1221 Organization ------· 11 yoor non·oroht club ( ') or or9anrza1ton needi. ~H.'K THUOlt:Sl 'Hj 10 raise funds call --------Hunltnglon Center la THOUGHTFUL 897·2533 and we Wiii send YoU our Communify in the Helo details DAILY PILOT p eople should expect March 23. Call 99'1 •9600 for directions. a . m . We d n es d a y s . rrom it. lt's one reason beg l nni n g A pr ii 18. -;::::::==================::::; so many or them end In SAFAlll SINGLES: Greek Independence Classes will be held at divorce. she says. Day will be celebrated in Los Angeles from 6 Bayview . Center. 2531 "We have grown up p.m . to midnight Sunday, Mar:ch z:;. Call Ann, Orchard Drive, Santa with a myth that we can 631.ms,fordetailsandreservauons. Ana Heights. For in· find somj!One t.o fulfill formation, call 963.o824. all our needs, tbat ·•women, Culture and there's aoiDI to be one BETH EJIET 81NGLF.8: A new group for Theory: Bread and person ciut there who ts siocles over 40. Dance to Uve music at 8 p.m. Roses and a Critical going to do that for ua," Saturda,y, March 24. For more information, call Perspective," a con· she ~ys. "And so many 772 ... 720. ference to be held Fri· people keep finding a • ... ...,,. .. Q1ll"9 CLUB·. For information about day. Saturday and Sun· person lo do that.•' un,a-.,n &HU day, April 6 through 8. It doesn't work, 11he the upcoming Chill Cookofr. call Wayne Hoover at UCI, wm examine s ays. and they keep at 645-'11"19. such laauea as women looldn1. and tbe arts, the U · "They just think they OaANGIE COAST SlNGLF.S: The over·39 istence or a fe minine f o u n d t h e w r o n g sin•les group is planning a cookout at Allyn nature and retaUonsbJps peuon," s ays Ms . Cooksey'a home beginning at 6:30 p.m. Satur· or class. race and sex. Phllllps. "They don't day, March 31. Call Allyn at 526-31'71 fordetaUs. For details. contact con· learn thalll's a myth." rerence coordinator And. she says, that SINGLES DA.NCIE: The American Legion Emily Hi cks, or the UCl c:an be dangerous. Han . 1'3 S. Lemon. Orange, will ~the settine ngllsb and Comparative Dr. Edward Sachar. ror a dance at 9 p.m . Saturday, Aprd 7. All ages. Literature Department director of the New or call 833·6874 or York State Psychiatric SINGLES llAP: The Advanced Health 494.4910. WOMEN: ADVANCE )OUR CAREER By earning a B.A. or M.B.A. in business. The UNVentty of Bt-wrly Hills N S c:kvC'loped ~pro­ gr.tm.S l<k.,.Uy su111;.-d to women "'->t w~>n 25 Jnd SO Yl'Ml> of .sgc pl.tnn1ng or puouinJ; caf\'I''°' in bustnl'~"-. Apply your l»chelor'i. dl"Sn!t' (in rrwny ht-kb) cowdJ'1:1<. ii MJ~ll.',.., m Bu:.i· nt.~ Admirui.tr.ttlOt'l Or .ipply 60 uruh 01 roUl'B" m'<ilt or Jn A A. degl\.'t' towJrtb ttw Umvl'l'!>lty'., "'-'<lu\•ntwl B.1c:h,·l1!r'')! Mal.l\'r'i. prow.im m Bu1>1~. By building on your pn>VIOU' worlc Jnd bfe expenenc1...,, thf compleie progr•m u'ually tilkeit lrom 12 to 114 month~. No classroom attendanr1• '" fl'qUtrl>d Jndcpcndt•nl cour"l' work a.s dell!~ around your ..chedule and Jn.>J' o< prof\ .... siorwl mten.>St. &m a valu.'bkt adv.111<'\-d rotJci;;e degree th.it will .illow you ta ,ocn 1tw thou)J.)nd' of wonwn now adv.:1ncm~ rh.-ir G:lfl'Cf'S in bu1.1oc ... q. CaU or wnh· tor mort' lnformanon UNIVERSITY Of BEVERLY HILLS JnaUtute in New York Center ln Newport Beach la sponsoring a dis· A weekend training City, says sucb people cuasion on overcoming depression at 7:30 p.m . seminar on overcomlng 8SOOW!Wun!Blvd .O...>pt Kt•BeveriyHUb.CAq('t211 crave love so much it Wednesday. March .. 28. For information caU shyness. building self· (21J)()Sq.1((X) becomes an "addle · 975-0700. ••--·"' .. ···"'I "-con r ide n c e and Au1horized to confer dt'g n•c"• by 1he Stale of C.1l1lorn1J Uon." "Mu and Women Relauvr&MUp8 wu IJ"C eatabUahing rewarding ~====Su=pe=n=nt=eod=en=t=of=Pu=bl=ic=l=ns=tTUCtlon===· ===::z!! T b el r 1y m pto m s the subiect o( another rap aeasion ror single&, at relalioaahips will be pre· .;. often come to light as a 7:30 p.m. Friday, M11rch 30. sented Friday and chpr ... ion f0Uowin1 the Saturday, March 30 and Iota of t.betr love object, 31 , by Golden West In which tbey tbrlnk 8INGLD Dl8Clf88ION8: Jerrold Cobeo. College. The seminar, from Ille, becoming Pb.D., ii·~ a teries of rap groups at called "Social Effective· apathetJc, aaya Sachar. 7:IO p.m. oo Frida.ya. Call a:D-1353 for further oeaa TraininC." will be When ln love, they are lnformaUoa. lead by Alan Gamer. euphoric, be aaya. member of the extension It's very dltticult for SINGLES UBEllATION: Robert Davidson, faculty at Cal State aucb a person ID the Ph.D .. will lead a seven week aeries betlnniDI Loni Beach and author tbron of Iott love lo ac· Tbunday. March 29. Call UCI's Women's Op· or "Overcome Your Shy· cept a compllment. portunitles Center al 833·7128 for rurther in· neas With the Opposite because they don 't reel formaUoo. Sex ... worthy of tt. 1ays Ma. ~..:.::.:::::::::.:..~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Phillipe. They don't feel liked by others. s he says . s.tl er .,... YMr efCI 11r11 fHt wttll • new Sllil ... c1a11Hitd M In tM Dally PllOt. 642·5'71 HARBOR LITES ... .... . .......... , . • • , ...... ,. ll'ftL c ... ..... ......... .... ,.,,,l. ~/,,,, I ~,,,. ,. I ()(1 { --------.... A Classic From Grccc.c Cypru s ... Bone Perforated Kid witti nollKol molded leather $Ole on d 'tod heel ~ .ffuli~ SHOIS ' . . . ~·~-T' ,--\. LAGUNA BEACH SCHOOL OF ART Sprtno au.rter Apr. 2 -June 2 •Jewelry • An H111orv • P11nt1ng-Beg1nn1ng & AdVenced • Drewing & Comit0111ion • Scu1p1u1e • ~coor1pny • Lile Or1w1no • wacmcolOf • Co10t a 0e11on • Prlncmeluno • Cer•mlcs • ~aku • Ch11df•n"1 Art • Stooe C11rv1ng • Commuotceuon oes1on EllENINO CLASSES • Peinung • Pnoro0rep1ty • CttllTllCI • Or11w•no • Jewelry .., en IC:hool 1xpsrl9ne1 wfttt • unique envlrOMllnt -. .. .. . ..... ,. . . . . ~TION/ OBITUARIES 1., ............. " ..... ..,., ..... --·-..... .. .._ •• ............. •• ....... "-" ..... ........ .. ._ ... ·--. , .. . _ .... .. ,_ .... ·--... -... , ................ ..... ""' .... .,.,,. ~ ........ ...... ...... ..,. ··-"-., ... .. ~ ... _ ...... .~ ....... ·-. ... -... ._ ........... 0.,. ··- Orlando T lls Of 'Nightm8re' .NEW YORK <AP> A "lhree·monlb involve- ment with cocaine" triggered Tony Orlando's nervous breakdown, the suiger ts quoted as saying. Orlando said that when he was hospitalized in July tm. be was suffering from "drug psychosis, which is ool too far removed from an acid <LSD > lrip," the March issue of Ladies Home Journal magazine reported. OIUANDO SAID B E LIVED AND worked "night and day" in a Hollywood saturated with drugs and never paid for cocaine . "People would say, here's a lilUe gill," he said. The article reported it is common for Hollywood agents to provide clients with drugs, especially cocaine. Orlando said be was having .. personal and professional pro- blems," and cocaine became a ··synthetic boost." Later, the drug 's effects became "a nightmare," be said. JUST PRIOR TO hos pitalization, Orlando's s ister died and his friend. actor.comedian Freddie Prime, killed himself, the magazine said . Orlando is performing again. but not with the duo, Dawn. Dftd• Notlen Record ft•r"-P Lltt>11 ... llUa t c,..llY Ml •Ot 14-1 M Jr U.. •NI ~--.... H Nfll 111 ''""' ....,,, ... 11_ .. Nllllt>N '>MAl ll 'f """'" NtOHI II '""" "'°'•"h -·• lJ 0941\ "'""'"'""'"'~ un . ll NC Ul ' I(,) ~ ..... l,wy• . I • n4 H••>'•~lu<l U...•I\, ~ t.11•1\IV """ 11 ... Wl>olhff -·. '° ll"l lllllAL ... ,., P•ljl .Ill, •n(I "''"• II '~1. °"'" •' ''"',,. MAlll I MllllMt ~ !U M "th•UH Nell\l\<ttil Jl Qt lt"llW -""" ' h •I •11u111 -·. C.U f lt.NICLl PNl(l J•'°'*• J , .0. •AO C,~t• it_.. .. °""'"' ~ '~-.... t"llfMtNG PAI/ 1• ... 1 ~r•ntr. U ti H11 ... 1"\jlon llH;.11 •nG P•l\<ttl• It t4 .. L6\ .,_. N<o'ol filAlitl\ANI t~IN AtKll'W )I 111 l•Qllh• Hllh •l\O Jt~>I• M J), 111 \l•ftfUft 'Pill' For Male TOK YO I AP > Chinese scientists have de veloped a safe, highly effective male oral con- traceptive derived from lbe cotton plant, the of- fl c i a I Hsinhua n e ws agency reported. It said trial use by more than 10.000 men "gave an effective con· traception rate of up to 99.89 perce nt." Half those tested had used tbe substance -called gossypol -more than two years and some for as long as four years, it reported. $47,000 FOR KJDS PUBU NOTICE P\J llLIC NOTICE ll't(TlftOU\ IU\INH S • N-1 UAJIMINT fl\o IOOOWlnQ --ll doit'q bu\! llnlt\ MA.~HAll. 90Af COMPANY, ''°' M~ Or.. r.,,1111, c.eu""''• tt..O J11le (. ~·. 291 $4~--· Nd CM1t ~ ... ""4•'-lllt .,._ fl\h ~\ I~ <Of'CllKMCI by .., 111 dlVldv•I• JUie c. ""-'"""" '"'' \~ •t\ II ... wtltl IM Covnfy Cle'11 04 Of-Couf!IV on M•1<"'· r•M l<llMU P\ibli\lled Or ... 0..•1 0..fy PllOI Mu u. n. 1' -""" s. 1m •n·T• ----------- PUBUC NOTICE l<IC'TlTIOUI IUSINISS N-1! STATl'MINT ~. Merch 22. 197'9 D ILYPtLOT G PVBLIC NOTICI PUBUC NOTICE P'U'Bl.JC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE .. DM.YN.OT ; IMADUKE 'Why couldn't you t>. like other ~le and bring In your ACCOUNTANT? ' SUPERHEROES "':' ~ .. t' I ~ :. .. .... ... I'VE SPfNT 100 MuCH11M£ IN 80PY 8UILDINcQ l:>10SS tr .AL.L AWAY. By Bll Keene \. DINNIS THE MINACI , I• PUNKY WINK ERIEAN ' I 1 by llenl & Tom Johnson OOIDO JUDGE PARKIR NANCY l'LI. ctfVI VOU A CRN;KIR IF YOU IAAt< TWfCI DRAllLE I ~ f I ' , . . . . lty Tom lduk (;&&\ I 1-r's t:.Aus• ~ c..tlARN•P A L.C1" ~ROM M.Y H CJS e»ANC). WHO Rt!STO"l!!S 0 &,..(:) CARS •.. by Gus Anioll -----WT ~ ""'~ 51 ~ ~' • ................ ~1d{c. by ...,.. Lt Doux lty ... '""'"'"" THI COIT OP LtVINCt HA' (t()NE UP F'OR Ml, Too J ... __,). ... COMfCO I OA:>SSWORD PEANUTS by Ch.,ln ~ SCftllll by Kevin F~n ~'VfJ et81!!N U P ON e>i...OCKS I N OUR GAR A/Oe "OR "'T'MfJ L.A ST N IN 9 Y'l!IARS .' TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACMOSS I F'oel S S111pon 10 Ent<>Y tflt 66 B<itMIO 59 Entoy 6l Nlpe pelm 6' Fiu1 or a UNITED FHture Syndicate WedMMll'fl Puule Solved. aun 11nvs 1• MtiQuer 2 words IS IANI •Eye pert 11 To thelleJ 17 Keeps 17 Af'llW)ty II h eel II C.rtl lfl 69 Pronoun 20 Wlltvd on 10 Scneclule 11 Ofu1T11Mr1 7t Stumps 23 OrNk rt1ls· 1>0WN i.nee group 1 Heeogur '5 WIH one 2 Ey11 26 Aleutlan 3 Stare Island • "Gulltver'i. 30 Annoy - 34 Exp!Oded ~ Swap1 1• Adepln@U .. Em1cl1tl0n ~ PffS)OS•tl<>n I Jec>tMSe 26 Gtrm1n 41 Wllh<Xlt )7 lenatble coin n.tvat » Mlntrll 1 Sup• wesset • Wtrt I-Moun-U SYcklt ltefnt ll•na: Alf 28 Mountain C AIMflC4ln reng. rtdge lndMft I Un~lll.o 29 PlneaPC)le U Nlc'I and ~: 31 -ecole: m1ner1ls ~ G111n sp.kc 51 Glum 53 Flowftf loal 55SNson 51 Stat.1 S7 low Nofl 'I pet 'wordl Equine d EtbOw boftt 10 Hound• moves 61 Prim. donna .. Heultd I I Mtlll: Abbf. 32 Join IO Joi 41 w...., 17 Wlltlered 33 lnllrumonta 61 Ob111e111 50 OunmeketS ll Acute 38 Crown 52 Po11ass1vo • S2 Aodtnta 11 Co;lnposed 40 Abruplntaa woro &4 TOt>-notch '2 Alter -41 Pcltert 65 Coterie • - " ,. .... -~ -...... ' . --The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast DAll.:Y ~ll:OY·_CLASSIFIEI> ADS. You Can Sell It, Find It,,. Trade It With a Want Ad EQUAL HOUSeNG OPPORTUNIT~ , tr a -. Moller. All -1ellateadv~ ill di.la newspaper la sub· jed to the Federal Fal Houain1 Act or lH wblcb makee it ·~··· aclvertiae "•or pre· r.--.. Umhauoa. o dilcrtminatioa based nee..:={~. sex. OI ori&m. or a inteatioo to make any such pnfereoce. limita- tion. or diacriminatloo. • • 1bit newspaper will n Jmowintly accept any advertfainl for rea eltal.e which ls in viola- tion ol tbe law. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •• .. 1002 ....................... ........ Better than new . ~ 4 bedroom, 2 tmb bome with a large ID8lter suite overlookina a IUlb. tropical atrium court. ft'a well located on a quiet cul·de·sac io Costa lleu '1 lines nelpborbood. $114,000. Don't bealtate .•. call 151.ml. CSELECT T'PROPERTIES EASTSIDI llAUTY Recently remodele tbruout. Front tll eourtyrd. Sklli&bt In fm ly rm bria,bteu you kitchen too w I it dleerfw pn1en wiDdow • ..,., appliances. per plumbina. R 8k1race area. Hurry t.lala ooe! Open Eve• 56Mt ~ Walkr.r fi Lr.t! a.am.i.te OCEAMNOMT QuaUty craf~manshlp in mahog. tram & oak noors sets otf this landmark; 4 BR. 3 ba. home ln finest location. Established trees & lawns. S48S.OOO. IACK IAY Fine 4 bdrm., 2th bath family home on quiet cul de sac. Oversized pool playhouse. storage $169,000. Terms. IAYFIOMT' Several fine bayfront homes with pier & slip AVALON Well constructed, 3 BR. l ba. pak floor. partial basement. concrete f oundalion. Flats area. $120.000-Fee. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 111 k""'"d1· Dr·~· ~. P. I> 'C, 616. ~COATS & WALLACE ':J:IJ REAL ESTATE . INC.· A LOUHL Y OWN£0 COM PAN~ St iMNC THE SOlllH CO~SI ARfl\ SINCf 1%l EASTSIDI COSTA MISA -Just listed. It's a neat. trim 2 Bdrm beauty with l ~ baths, double garage, hardwood floors, fireplace, builtins, patios, With BBQ, large back yard, fruit trees. HEAVY SHA.KE ROOF .•• 000. C .. 14Ml41 Ser 11 n q C o '>I .i Mc ·; d I r v 1 n •' H 1111!1 nqton B1· ;1c h -N :!wport B(_• c1c h IJPl.O CLOSE TO llACH 2 Bedroom . West ns •! ~ ExcelJent COD· ""' , dilioa. Room to t!OW. 2 B e d r m u n 1 t s . 2 IDltM COTT A~E Completely remodeled. 1 year old dream cot- Gretlt Income Excellent tage. Vault.eel beam ceil· ~~meat.. Call fast! in11 • garden patio. Of'f11tl1t9·11~1UN IOt11N~r· Under market, CdM. ['11111--0 --3-l9IOOM----tllSA WOODS ~-, • , £sdlfnl, l•ly 4 br home -.t~... w/frmJ din rm • tge __.... ·~ ~ flDl1 rm. Great Balboa Island Rltalty Giant back bay bargain! fJoar plan for entertain· "''""'~~r-.v._.,.,, Over 3'00 ft. of peacefu ial • fmly eQ)oyment. 673•1700 living. 4 Bedrma + hol lhed lot. Abundant --------baths·OR·3 Bedrm + ltOrqe. Call now to in· .....,a&e 1uesl/maid' ~c:t. Only $124,900. qtn. __ Formal livina rm. OpeaEwls.5U-IM81 f'amil1 rm. 2 Fplca. Cov ered brick 1>9Uo. Pottin houae--and muc more at a bargain price! *VETERANS* Let a Vet Help You find ~ WalkP.r f; Lee . Real Estate that bome you want. o down up to $100,000. CGI ._,, A#J, 24111'1 O.Unowtoaee, m-8550. --------- -O"tN IH 9 •II S It.JN 108t IW(t WORLD I.I 543-1722 ' THE REAL ESTATERS I JUST LISTED!! --- S CONDO'S UNDE SH,000. Now It tb Recent changes In V.A .... mkt, Dnl ,ea rep may enabJe you to tbele wlU be $111,000. Bu qualify for :1~000 home for bm or lllv•tmeo loam wilb utely NO _,._.=..;._&a._1114_. ----t DOWN PAY II ENT. Good as newl Don't wa.it toseethisjewell A prime locale! Cloeest quality home to S. Coal Plaza . Elegant bedrooms, cracklln1 fireplace wanm luu.rioua Uvtn1 room. brilbl. IUD ablny ki&cben, ••r alze yard w/relaxing pool • jacuzzi I Treat yourself today! Call~ - w ............. an ~ County firm :WreiD~A= tbat belp tbe VETS. ·Fcirmorelnfo. ca.11: ............ 141-1100 f U~f_ST E OLSON .•ae r -c SSCAIHSS far .JOllf ....... iD JI 1111'11.. Call World l'IDaDce ~l-m7 34 air CGllONA • MAa lweepla1 uo• view of Ocean, llarbGI' • --lllatl frOm tllll complMIJ nmo4elecl, euatom dll1.._.. I P, f..U, rm boml. hie. ID •Mtli ~ · aourmet ~lt..,laea • llalal oak lloor · ............ poal • a few al die many Cuturea. 1111.eoo. Bell• Cb..e 1-IM mD. fr·lGO> (642-5878] One Call Service Fast Credit Approval ucwsava. Y Youn ... From the front row spectacular bay a nd ocean c lose-up view to its oversized 2 car garage with storage. this 3,000 sq. ft. home bas everything! The all·brick pool deck and front patio, lovely new landscaping and neat location make this completely remodeled 3 bedroom, 2~ baths the kind <X living you've been looking for! Our exclusive at $515,000, including the land!! U ,_. l()U I: t1()Ml:S REAL TOAS1, 675·6000 2443 East Coast Highway. Corona del Mar J ISO in MC'SCI Vrrde. J I 546·5990 ... ACKIA'r Just steps from the Back Bay & Newport Golf Cours e . 3 la rge bedrooms, 2th bath. 2 story end uniL This towobome is just right - Beautiful community pool, jacuzzi & toddler play area. The lowest price in the .. Back Bay Village," this is a great buy at $110,900. Let us show you! .~ R.C. TAROI CO. 648-5112 HEWPOIT AXH 4 BR + den $122.500 nus 3 Bdrm home is ~5001 steps from the beach. on s .. l 1 • lh .. Peolnaula. It de· unaen v og room' IUJRIS SPICIAL-OML Y SI 22. tlO Only ''W" model available! Sharp & newly decorated! 3 B<irms (including : lge master BRw-sitting area> 2Ye -· baths. "Swedish" firepl in living rm. Spanish tile in f amity area & kitchen. mirrored wall in dining area, fabric & flocked wallpapers, wood paneling. WISLIY M. TAYLott CO.. llALTOIS Jiii S-Ju, 'n ....... •, MIWPOD CIMTa M.L MMtlO ~JOit llAM>MIW " Bridt fa.replace. All re· ·--...... LAGUHA finitely needs TLC. but modeled kitchen. Ex· -..in bas tremendoust.oJ:ten· cellent location. Im· AIAIGAIMI Look no furlber! 3 bedloom. formal dioiol. country kitcben. de- tacbed 2·car gara1e. fruit b'eel lt mucb more ill what this charmer bas toolfer. This ill a probate sale, IO doo't wait. Full price $72,SOO . Call 5116-:aBllO. usnt• S un n y. brig ht Immaculate 3 Bd Bluffs condo wl assumable 9-.<. loan . Fantaat terms. Call f appointment. = bYt~'!_.,_ ... ,~ r::·. Bring I nga~'f: n . C !'fl mac\llate bargain! Call ....... ....., ....... faal! To late advantage! beaut ful Towobome. 5tl>-ll.Sl 7SH100 • Panoramic view or ()l'f"ll•I O••I P v;•Otlltv<r• ~f:~:~ l~Clfillll lower level. Furniture -------• can~. tool call 646--7171 te$A DB. MAil OPfN Ill O•,, ~ IUN 108' M(I ' CUFAIAYIM SPICIAL RI Ill~ 1~···. ,eftiHI e-~~t: ~ "="=• ~.· c'l: OPl!MDAILY 1·5 ,..-, ., 9-.-•=••••••-paeaib&e.$149.500 neat•aharp. Airy! New 673-31163 642·2253 Eves plmb crpta it kitcben ap. 54tntMHI associated WATBROMT RmUC• s I0,000! BJJn .. r w·. Uf" T w'; C:SELECT T'PROPERTIES JUSTUSTm '\&lw•/Hohl O.Oawfw..e in Newport Beacb. 3 LGU. 4 atores, 16 apart· ment.s, bu1e storage g.arqe. Ownet-will cam 10% Interest. $795.000. Beacbtime Realty 4S'7U&ll. ' . New homes! Two story. 3 BR , s und ecks , microwaves. 1215.000. 1509 D ,., ... CdM Like new, vacant. 3 BR. talteful, pool, incredible viewolyacbts. ~15.000. Pier/float ; duplex on lelal R·2 lot: cloee lo sbopa. Lido Village -a re· al value far S238.500! t : .,. ,. I> •• ~llance• in 1978. Hardwood floon, RV ac· ceu. EDdrcle this one for sure It call fOf" appt now! Open Eves. 5U-~l ~ Walker 1; Lee PlltOI.: VIEW-FRESH & MEI! ..... ..,.....,. ....... •'75-7060. 506Ua;mrlt. 3 BR. weod aicliq, two -------• story, cbarm1q a.2 lot eona.o inoldCdM. Sl'll,000. 3 8dia. 2 ba + pool. .3'210..C4M :::.,~·~:C,~fn~ 3 Bit, jacuzzi, s pec· stalled. v .A. Apprv'd t.ac:War vtew. ba.rdwood Brc*s. floors.1575.~-. a.'1853 GllAT IMCOMI! IALIOA ISLE YIAUDO SeU thlnp f aat with Daily PUot Want Ads . DOYBSHOllS Ivan Wells custom. Spacious fam. home. Tile & parquet noon. open beams, fireplace, private beach. $374,500. • CCUMa&.. IAP«9 co. 644·9080 BUOY .., ...... Oc1mfl ... ad ltllh ~ .. • ........... ,... Miii• ::-:.% . •c•ll••• /11• .... llt > ,_..,. ................. ! ~ .................... ·-·~· tot11 i ........ , .. .._...,_ wlllt ............ . FDIEYEI VD OF CATAl.llA WATERFRONT 1 . HOMES lac. 2436 W Coast Highway ! Newport ~ach 631-1400 RetldenUal + 2 com· SopbiaUcated Uvin& at mercla1 rentable tpaces. It's best. DeliabtluJ four s Car parking. 1 block to bedroom condoallnium ~.3~m3~~~~~.~~1;~~~----~~~-~-~~~==========~=~~ it. Fireplace. super for 00 your spacious brtck 1. swomer /winter rates. terrace and onto your m3560 boet. Plans unc1er-.ay to Ol'l"ll1tO•ll\IUNIO l!INl(1• ~ee~boatsllp !!llNlil E1~t::.-~ ~;& $4116.000. It: •llDUCID• COLI OF MIWPOIT Coming In April I lo-t po"tpourrl llALTOU E111ll1b T•dor style 67Mll-I ~a bdrm, a ba, 2 ·-------~ ..ault CIODdo. Pocil • jacu11i • sauna • chabbouae 6 rec rm. TMe OYer subject to ex· ~~loan at 9.2'll>. c::= Walker t: lr!e HAllOI HLHDS- POOI. XTRA WIDE LOT. ..,.00... 3 Bdrm, family room home. Plenty of room for ramlly ac· tivlt.lea-enjoy tbe LARGl:J;'~·500. r~ CE na111 1L111s aa. OVER 60 YEARS OF SERV1CE SPICTACULAI SPY•~SS Lovely I BR Coronado lldl WI ~ht IJJzbt Vu. Pral. Ludlcaped Yard W/ll1ay Extras · Pool, lac.,m Sauna. Entry 1Aadl To Lra LV 6 i'wmai Dia Rm. QmpletelY Modern Kitchen. Dwnatrs Game JBeom. Call For Appt to Inspect. ........ &IJFS I ,.,., a• MODIL Gori--3 BR a Ba BDcl Unit. SMclaUI LR. Lr1 ••t BR ... a Slr,111bt1. Hl Wood Beamed C~1 . Patio W /So Expo• O'La Tbe Finest Green 8eJt Area. OlilJ SW,000, A ••Joy Of Newport'' LllUq. . 111·1• ••. IO'll iiii That's pot.pou,..,.;: a confused collection. a miscellaneous m ixture, a hodgepodge. Piiot Potpourri i• our ••Y of obMf'Ving INTERNATIONAL CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING WEEK by extending Nving• of up to 50 percent It's • good ttme to cle•n out •nd tpruce up. APRIL 4th !Wed·> t1n APRIL 1'lh <Set.> • H•ve a GARAGE SALE! • Seti your extra PLANTS & GREENERY! ._.....,..__._... • Get your neighl>ora together & have =~... your own SWAP MEETI I ! Ad• are limited to mi~• merchandiH tot .... onfy! I (No Real Es .. t•> Wf'lt• 1 wor~ HCh apec:e. min6mum aue ltd ia 3 tines. THERE IS PLENTY OF TIME TO GET IT ALL TOGETHER! ! l '"' In the Haftdy order bt•nk betow -DO IT TODAY! f ! I ' NO. OF C DAYS WOADS 12 5.00 . 16 6.00 20 7 .00 • 24 8.00 ~ 28 9.00 . ~'-10.UO . 36 11.00 40 S12.00 ------------------------------~-----~---~--------,... ........... "" .... ,, ... ,.. ........ -...... , ... a,.1111t ..... , .... ....... of..,,. Ne,.... ter..., HIUl .. •alL ......... II ....... er.......,__, tN °'pl••• thafoe tM 80: 8-nt!Amtrl(.nl, VISA NO ........................ Expires ...... . Me,terCt\lrQt No. , •..••••••••.• • • • • • • • • • • •••••••••••••••••••••••• ExpfNs .••.•••• •·• Ntme ••. • .•••••••••..•••.••••••.. •·· •• ••. """9., •.... ,ArN ~. ·••••• •• H*J>t ..... ,, . , ... City ••••.•• , •••••••••• ;'~.~0:.1:~ ~~~~-L:t=.•:::. :--P.O .... INlfttl lnlD OM of lite DelJ Piiot oflloea. T .. Grlftlt CO.st 0•111 ~~IN rttM IO_., er rtted eftf ~tlllll ~. DAil Y PILOT I I J . . . . . ....... ,... w. ........ ,_ w. Ho.In For w. ........... w. ....... ,.,. s.. Ollilfo .... .... •...............•.....• •••••••....••.....•.... ......•........•.•..... ....................••• .........•....•........ ...................... . LMll w /OPftOM t lll!• .... ~. • ..._ di611MC'9 to llun ~ "l9Mtb a.art. r 9000TBMS CM tbla nke 4 bedrm. 2 bllth Weet.mln»l~r homt' ~llri~. m.960. WISTSIOI of Hu.ollnaton IW a<'h, Dewt)t painted 3 b4:d rm. l~ ti.th. Jl\all pnce, only ...., l•IOOMS Meredkh Gankn llome i.n S. H.a.inlton 8.a~h wttb ~ 3000 sq.ft. 0 luxury U vtna area. cu•o111ons ·~• PNl&lllOlll l«'aU<m •• q_llalaty he-. ·••th CAN'Y'ON VI£ W & prh'~Y Sal\jllf' lt'\'tl 3 bdrm , 2 ti.lia 6 for mal d.INna rm You •111 <'OJOY ~ ht"atC'd Ir rlltf'red pool m your own )'cutt Pl.US you b•' a ke) to the private oc Ml\ bt'itCh. ~MO 1007 • •••••••••••••••••••••• . ......,. ...... .,.. .. , Mrm 2 bath tloa,., lo•d•d with t btrm It f et hl r~• t utto m wood w orll thrUCM.tl Shutl4Jr• 11 nd .,.,,.__. flcJiuH For mor delaill all MS 51111 · ~ • HERITAGE HtAllOH!". MW91Wlth APool MMa Vf'rdfo botno loul l'd • buat "urn r lot • 3 bedrooms. d In 1n1 room Ne• plu-.h "''" la 2 pttiol a.nil u tior14t'ou• SWUUU NG 1'001. Won t tut $00,000 <'1111 !M(). I '12\) TllRIRL. I -· "'DUMtH WITH DtSTIMCTIOM" 'lll1I lovely ('W1lom built home nu r the Meu Verdct COW'llt')' Club 111 ooe ol a k Ind . ll realu."'41 1044 ...... 1044 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• WOODBRIDGE WAY Of LIFE Hert· art' a few of the fin home1 we have! uvallabM to show you In the vlllol(e or Woodbridge . Creriu Id Aapen $98,500 Broadmoor Wildwood 99,500 Creek.side Willow 119,900 Broadmoor Laurelwood 129,995 Th Croeslng Ashford 145,000 To" any qt the above properties. or any othen available In Woodbridge. please call . /ti -'" • •>ftl<•I • ,f " Ht 4t I l '>~ 1 .IOOO 1026 ••••••••••••••••••••••• PKKVU!W SllOWINIJ MMUNlTA r ,...lhllUUI rf'•UlflOCCll n t'•r lho mar1nu ~o "' i • .cu3 40011 : 831~ MAR~EnE I.Jell greenbelt location ror popular VIiiage J1 model. Clean & Sharp. Jbr. ram rm. 2 frplcs. $121,500. 4 Chicory. ~9385. T..tltrock Vl•w $127,000 4 Oc:lnn, 3 baltu!. ramtly 1---------room and for nlal dlnm.i room t'or an avpulnl mmt t.o fft•, call 54* ~ ~~HERITAGE HE Al.TONS ~s t'111tA1llc re4·rutloo11I n H1lmunll)'. 3 Udrm11 & dl'f1. :.~., ba ur.wnlm .1 Wcl bllr\ rrpl<'. tra1h l'Omp, poo1. Jar • 2 11una11 {'IQMt• to bl•a\'11 & horllQr An r•N"Jitional v1tlue 11t SMIJ.llOO (Nit\ .. ( Vurutloo & lnv('lltmrnt l'ryp.1rtl~ Inc. 4tJ.tJI I°" 4tU700 P l u s h exec u tive townhouso. unbellevea - ble vww with.too many up.irudes to list. Uest locat1on 11nd pric~ and h•rms in lrvlnu. Call l"IM's()llly RB>CARn"r IJl-lJIO 30x85' kit -Owner is ob· ••••••••••••••••••••••• viculY anxioos, ifs got· ~ JASMl.NE AV£. UNIVasm ,. ARK Pt'tH's Townbome, rare plun C. De4utifol enle r- ia.lnment home, gourmet .............. I 040 kitchen. ••••••••••••••••••••••• B. G r o unds A gent for y OU MEW llACH HOME Ml·4682 eves. t a be good at only Princ oolY.$129.S00.2Br, S2»~. Iba, lrg paUo & ttarage. , JACOIS IUALTY Super cute & cln, all •-~ Y By builde r, block lo ORAHGITRH AIN ours beach. ocean view. 5 BR. Patiohome2 bdrm, 2 ba. Fall ln love with lhls 4 ~~l ba,_3000• 209sq15n,h, slrgt. rormal dlnlng, central 67M670 freshly done. By owner. e;·..,....--------1 (808) 87M073 or (714) ---------1 536-18S7. bedroom family home .,. coru..... aJ.r $78 900 wkb a 3 car earage, a $195,000. Also 4 BR, 2v, · · · · ~COUISEVU Great Back Bay location. 'lhis big S bedroom home feab.na a huge family I · · rm addition bi~ or your pool ta· ble ect for lbe bi~ family and the price is rllht •t $118,500. MLBIEALTY 546-0814 ~~LLSTATE REALTORS --------formal dining room , baat60117thSl.$129,000. B . Gro unds Agent ZIDRMCOTTACH family room and a stone _536-_1_7_18_. -----Ml-4682cves. ,..~&Wt fireplace. Bar with bar ~Storylmld tllrll By Owner. Never llved in, f>et(gedhardwoodOoors, s tool s. Pati o . B y 4 Bdrm, 21,o\ ba, for mal new 2br, 2ba Wiiiow beamed ceilings, 2 brick gorgeous park. $118,900. dining, f'/R. 2 frplcs. Grove twnhm. Sacrifice fireplaces and nice coun-540-172011 2100 sq ft. 1 mi beach. under mukcl. Xlnt try lutchen 'ltllllllll. Asking Sl08.000. Owner t e r m s . S 9 2 , 9 5 0 -PLUS --· 964·2182. Open House _84()._.1S90 __ 1848_M_l3_. __ _ 2 Bdrm. 2 balh income --__;==:....---Sa /SU unlt with private patio IRA.MD HEW t n. COU!GE ,ARK and yard. TOWHHOMES Allaumable 8:V.VA SuperPurduemodel2Br, Red to $115,000 ... IH• Woodl" 2br IYlba Condo. Owner de n or could 3 Br. FOR INFORMATION ("'-~-.Ide ·~ ,.ta Me"a > will help finance. Evea. Original owner has gi vcn Ceil 644-7211 .,...,..., Cos " 536-8011 this home much love . /Jn Nlr,Et Dl\'lfY & l\')50Cll\T£5 ........ Offwed 2 unita1.~ loeaUoo on oomer 1CJL 10% down. G. H. Robertllon, Rllr. ~ 2432Santa Ana Ave. Lowest priced in are a. vnaAHS SO 0. Cal~pt. tosce. 5 homes available from HEW,.ORT MK to $80K. HURRY! RW.TY 975-0616 Vet Agt.. &11 ·2227 ll I ·2227 Wocdwtdge CCMldo 24111'HotlM! 2 er. t 'At Ba, or lake. pool/spa . Seller may finance. $69,000. Bkr . 566-6171 . UH DER COHSTRUCTIOH Popular Gr ee nbria r Model. 4 bedrooms. 2 baths, large atrium & sl.l\ken llvtng room. Only 3 houses from Wood · bridge North Lake on quiet cw-de·sac. Ready for occupancy within 45 days. Call Leroy Pearson at552-4J01. lrvine Pacirlc ==== 4le*°°"'• Rare4 bdrmComell plan on comer lot in super cond. It's light, bright & airy with a $75,800 as· sumable loan at 9~% Int. Only Sl05 000. CALLQUJCK &SAVE 644-72tt /Jn N!r1fl llA1l.[Y & l\55UCll\T ES WE HAVE IT!! lf you're looking for a J bdrm. + r am . rm . townhome In Deerfield. This home Is what you need. It 's In excellent oondlUon Inside and out! D11•t1•'1 BlllAT Woodsy ~una C= estate. Redwood cedar Hard &o find In a pine forest . ·call for direcUclm. '230,000. A COWWILL 1A14111 co. 496-7222 831·0838 SKINNY DIPPER'S Oell«'it! Beautlrut pool aod jac1ml wllh loll of privacy! Call and we 'll tell ~ou a bout lhe beauW'uJ home lhut it In· eluded with the pool. T .. toledc-..• W.U..! 754-UOZ ........... 1041 . ..................... . A TllllFIC DUPUX! Loc.ted ...... S.. Clt•11le • • lte .... l••::r.... ., .. ............. w. -two ........ h ........................ .._h 90Mtoo. Sllt,100. Lingo .... b .... 493-1112 •BRAND NEW• Dbl wlde, KJ.og1brook, 28r, .JBa, Wet bu. f rwy die. OnlJ R8,toO. ~..._. ALMOSTMIW "18 Skyline, a1n&Je "l:i at lees tbao appra value. ~dlt pk, 2Br w /lldd OD pc>Rb " abed. (SO'Jll) Mlllle ..._ "°" ...-s ___ _ 38E.DROOM Dbl wide Homette new cpl&, a ll appliances. On the Orange Coast-look to lingo ftrst. acroea rrom pool, great •DWI.IX* buy at $2 1 ,000 Ocean aide ol hwy, level (Jl'ELD-66) lot. euy a~cns to beach. • .. .,...,. IHdl 1069 ... _,.,. .._. 1069 t todsrey M. tto..s = i:1~t'ro~~~er4l •••••••••••••••• ••••••• "•••••••••••••••••••• • 1---839-653S-· -· ---- loco-me. Hurry, only ~T-·-STEPS1TOOCEAN1 ft.AIGANT UYIMCi S145,.llOO ~ Buy or ease opt on. Al an affordable price. M.1ssioo Realty 494-0731 Ji.at reduced to $1441900. Bealll. 1&. 2 story family "T1 dbl wide Lancer, 2Br Ablohlle ly lmmacwate. home. 545-8828. on the bch In Nwpt. 1t•ALD IAY LOT . 3 Bdnn. 2'11 ba~. formal BEAr.I DUPLEX (SSZ17J.2) S7!Ml6:M dining, s plit le ve l '-" ....... .._Store townbome. Open space ~ Blk to ocean W. $1.19,SSO BY OWNER I Br view from living room Newport. 2br + 2br + 848-8895 house, steps to ~•ch, aod master sui te. Now lbr guest a pt Great ADULT PET PAR.K I o t s o I l I g h t . vacant. Owner anxious. swnmet!WUlt.er rentals Super sharp upgraded Evea/wkods: 497-3933. Cal.1540-11.51 X 1 n t 1 n c 0 m e · db( wide FesU, new cpls, Days (213) 722-6460, 0pen( 2J3)79()..223J. 8£ !>wner. owne r mov ing from X226. Principals only U.39th1TSal Sun 1·4, area. <KN5364·72) ·------St rt ....,,.,., M • .._. r-~ 111« IETHIFIRST TO C 839 6S3S 2 Br, 1 ba. all wood cot · waleffront, s Br, 3 ba. . tage. & l Br, 1 ba tn rear . den . F DR , opening I IPUANA Legal duplex. Deep back s skylights . 3000 Sq rt. Lfta yard. Assume loan. No · 1 Decorator papers. Buy at $12 950 paints. $10,000 down Home on Lido ror one today's price. close July , ::J;,OOO~J'..o~wner. Prin dollar ... ~ lot on Lido '79. $210.000. Days Low s pace rent includes · Island for $214,999 & for ~.eves.645-3051. ulil. ($140). Beauttrut one dollar more, we will cood, l0x"3 Spal'ton n'!w include the house. cpt.s, refrig, wlk to town, bch, (EH1393-57) OCEAN .... Hot. Store ONE BLOCK .::::.: 00 RWTY Lovely 4 Bdrm, private SPECIAL• • UHlq&.IECHilM :r::::ite~m~::~~~ •$14.900• Cedar&spruce paneling. '7>-7l00 and waiting. $124.500. New single wide K&B skyUtes, loft & 2 frpl •0 ... ,. "" _ ..... Call645-9161 located in rt:ntral OC Large famlly area. Bnck --------•I Park w/10 rt:nl of $110. wafkways th ru lush Sol pet OK landscaping. $149,500. Lia, Prime ~X MrMtet'y M. HOMe1 tAOOlDP> Pa rlial oct:a n view. 1 ____ 839 6S3S Slepi to bch Cedar /llle, 1'1---e Be h tB bl frplc, s undeck . 3br, ........ ...,.. a<' r, 1 k too G1twr1w ~ •. ...,_.,edt 2balh each. By Owner .1--------•I t.o ocean. St2.500 646-5678 $270,000. 67S-SS20 BY OWNER. 3 BR 2 Ba. FR. compl redone, 2 car detached, lge lot. As · sumable loan. Redwood deck, qu.iet tree lined ltlnet. Sl35.000. MS-m37 ONA CLEAR DAY ••• )'OU can see forever · Catalina & Ne wpo rt Center lights to Pa los Verdes · from lhis quah· --------•I ty 3 bdrm. home 1n Seavlew. To see elegan<.'e •HODOWlh •PAYMENT lnro rm a tio n OA C . 1·2·3-Br·all w.reas. Adlt, family & pet parks ~OfMS SHORECLIFFS VIEW at $299,000, call for an a--------- COSTA MESA Owner i>ays "SELL! .. th is re m o d e l e d 4 app'l. today! New '79 Lancer. 241148. 2Br, 2Ba, adll park Only $27.950 . (S36945). Amt!rlcan Mobile Home Sales S57 -9390 ----Ca bedroom home in this usey gracious nt!ighborhood & Price reduced $115,000. JRluxc 24x60 Skylark an Bnngusacreat1veoffcr. G2.2..86QO;:::-p,~.;..I Beach Park. 2 Br. 2ba. CompanV ~ W.I ram rm, island kitchen. .1 la!Md.ry po~h. elc. l''ull DEFBRED porch, awn1ngs, etc. On· DOWM 21 't573CAMPll5Da·IRVtNE ly 6 mos old. Reas. rent. See t o a ppreciat e . PEACE 4c QUIET. ~ s..taAINI 1010 ~5844 SWEEPING OCEAN· He~C...... .. ..................... •---------CANYON VIEWS FROM r-NEARS.COAST PLAZA IMMACULATE·Mo b1lc 11DS TWO BEDROOft!: 640.5157 8.,.,% assumable loan Ho me. 20x55, full y 2 BA1lf + HUGE DEl'I $68,ooo. 3 BR 2 BA: furnished. lndscpd, 11 .8 . HOME LOCATED ON ----W-M--R-IC--m500 675-7924 QUIET CUL·DE·SAC. 0 A ET! 548-0738. broker ___..:~----- NEEDS CARPETS & Elegant 3 Br, 20x40 pool . Investors De lig ht! 3 PA I NT . V E R Y spa, huge ya rd, xlnt bdrm, frplc. new carpet CR EAT IV E I'~ I N AN · _area __ . _Agt.;;_... 6_7_3-4_3_l_l _. --& drapes. $69.000. As· CING. $119,500 F.astbluff Twnh. 3br 2•,; sum. FHA. A11ent Mike • 1104 So. Coast Jllway in Village Fair LAGUNA BEACH 497·2"57 &.agi..11..,... 1052 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Laguna Niguel Realty •. b a 1 • 7 0 o s q . f t . Bryant, 497-3000 Professionally decorat· f_.. I OtO ed. Reduced $13.000. Must sell this week . ••••••••••··~··•••••••• SJ 10,000. 644"8304 Investors Delight! 3 bd. TRY LEASE OPTION frplc , new c a rpet & drapes. '89.000. Assum FHA. Age n t. Mik e Bryant, 497-3009 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ......--. in Baycrest. V acanl 3 br. fw S. I I 00 2 ba & fireplace. Best ••••••••••••••••••••••• buy at Sl~.000. Call now! , ........... ,-. ••aec DAMAn.DUPLEX 64.$-7121 _. r-u ,.."" In a great location w/o· ~ Sul>er aharpdlbwlde JBr cean view. 1 unit w/3 dbl Broadmoor w/exp•n· Bdrms & 2 baths, the do. C.referee lndscp, other w/2 Bdrms, 1~ 21 won't last a t $23,000 baths . Both h av e 15629-73) fittplaces & lrg wooden ~ Mt:al11er M. Hw1 decks to enjoy the WeStdff RHlty ----~-----1allboa t1 or 1u1Het1. ______ _:..._ $145,000. 4tM4t4 495-1220 4' .. 241 l HO.IOIO WHlllWATla DeautllUl 34'°6 Signature 2Br. 2811. lam rm, all the ..wroaT CREST ext.rat h11ide • lovely COMOO l.ndsqln1 outalde. in SJC Plan 3, 3 br 2i,., bab gd 5 Star Pk. "5,000. <SSS > local, uptraded, wet ar, S79 mUTored wardrbe comm Dhc 1 ..... n •EXCITING• IHcllAl'H Beau t iful 1 9 7 6 SHvercrest 24x.53. 3Br, 2Ba. 5 Star Adil Pet Park. <MT1027) S..C.&5-Mh A beautiful •FAMILY• Paradise. 24x60, 2Br. 2Ba home, over looking the Blue Pacirlc. pvt beach, 5 minutes from Fa s hi o n I s l and . Reasonable Park Rent. (PK.l006>. L.,..aHlls S,.Clalltly BeauWw s Star Adlt Pk, 3'x8> Seacrest. 2 lge Br. 2Ba, wilh all the xtras. Only. $29,SOO. • CAUfORHIA ,.ACIFtC MOlllHOME SALIS 2706 Harbor' Ste 206-A 540-1917 Monarch Bay T.,,-ace Nu wtocean vu, superb Fr. Prov.' BR, 3 rrplc'a, 2 alyllgbta . Only SIJ,5,000. Seller will help finance.MO.Q51 =:~cuul. tennis crts, 4912.23111 ~ Beach·S nna, dbl PCM Realty 8J3.M30 CASH llfUMOn kit. Park rees. $168 Incl <i~ Could make down P•Y· utlt. $12,900 T erma. •IYOWMB• mentl on your owni-*"°'5--1------ Harbor View Palermo Mobile HOmel Many late Aal• for SGle 1200 C\lltOmized rusUc look. model boale8 avaO ror ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4br 2"'ba. Spa, 2 BBQ'a. •ales tax only d own. Dup&exLots St.ant.oa 66' Owoer wtU carry large OAC. You'll never have a x 145' u . PllU, perml.S a: 2.nd. T.D. Sll•,OOO. 2012 better chance to be a ens. Incl. Total price ... .,......... 106t PortBristolClr.644·4438 homeowner! Euy quall· rro,ooo. Subord. ssa.ooo. ....................... Harbor View Homes Mon· r~i.\~~::.-=-Prinonly. 714·982·2577. CONDO UYI... teto. 4br 2ba newly de· OPIM SPACI eorated, cloee toacboola, HMIOO llRJ CHEAP Sil hat• ::n7•6f'zn'y'1 8Y.~1!!i FOR SALE I• Seldom · _., -avail 5 Star Capo Valley Mldina lot.a -I acres; t.opr...t.:::, ft,';.~~-=·~~ evea. Eltate28r,J8a, fam rm, 2~ acres; 5 acrea; 10 IUicwloallY UlltlPlrNed In W. END. 11. ram. home 3 Mh/clr1, Muat aeel Only acres. Whatever you aiill OODdlliaD oa17l11' + BB, 1'4 ba; 00 a.2 eo "11,cm. <•> •· nnt, we have It, wtth tn· old. Mial ~-wtew. ft. hulldable lot. -. Dll11 L t ••n veet.Gl"I t.erml. New!art-Llf•tJle at u 7101 Seashore. PrtD· --PAaeO I.I. .,,,,.. .. r91,,. _ _..._.._1,pr1e. .... m1 dpUODIJ.MS-1410 LMllwrntOPTIOM 1161H7lT l /UM4G -Wi1l k1:r 1; I 1!1! Ne-Part. Ba1 De ADH Ada.It ParllL...~ralttr· .-.... abr,--. rrp1c , ................... ..... *· --· c.li ..... wb.• •••. ..... l1W'S TO OCU.M Nice..,, r.w.r ,_1151 5 bldo c.ur. area; '"' N I • t d a. a 1Wo Pan tnia.. acnpa.rcell, $100,oooruu •• 1 reno• • a beautiful bom~ price, terms: muat Mil. duple!l; 1ood 1umintr ('"-) Call •-.. _. AllJ..l'J'MllM rtDtal area. 2 Bdrm. ,... ,.,. ... fl'Glll ..,... • l·bdrm. tlldl ecre \IMw parcel Vt.ta • • patio. llU.009 ............ Stwe w/avocadoa. =In• ~llACH HMIOO ~pr ac,8[: IM&.n 671-1642 ~1-;no11::, n4,,..Htr.m.-e W'•• ••o-•CH ....... i&a, ram rm. IOACll ..,.. •' ..,. wood barnlDI frple IHVDTllDIT ......... .......llrll ID lovely al PABCEL • 1 Bdr!t\.~-ball. slat Nido Pk. Must aee I R-o .t .. Ntar ..S. __. mCLlllvated, --on>•· Bmcllo :.l;li :tll. Boiler •• _,. ........... , .. , l4" ... i 1....._ ... , I • r i • p I. 2 0 • r. • I ~ •2 ll I r-,0 e. ( . ~ i)r' IA 'l. ~. Jn ... to te 1). 10 ~ • . ~t Wa ,. ~: a ... )8 ••• II. lD u. l>n SI· ba ·g. all 1rn •n · •• 8 0 ... ,; r3 .. @13 Ul n. tll T4 -ba tie ; :r. to IB. IO ... St. •11 ....._ tb. ire. by. io ••• ....._ Nr 'tltl • rr: • uo ,_ ~., tlO rail ••r DO • ••• I .... f)' • .. . llO .... to •t =-... """'• ..... ._... - • Ill -- --------..-..-.......--- f I m.-........ ~......... .......u.......... .......u.fwwl•d ...... u ..... .._. ....... OAILVP9LOT l!7 ................. • ••• •• •• • • • •• •• •• • • • • • • • • • • .; ••• •• • •• • • • •••••••••• •• •• •• • •••••••• .. •••• • ._. •• .. •••••• ••••••••••••• ...... ••••••••••• .. •••• ~----·-M_~_h_22_._1_919-•r•'"-----------""""'a:.._ ~&Mt/ II ~-~!!!!!? •• ~!!! ~.~~ ... ?~!~ ~ .. ~ .. ~~ ..... ?~!! ~:~ . .' . .'!!! ...... ??~~ ~~ ....... ~!~ ~~ ...... ~!~ =~~ ..... ~~ !~ .. ~!!.~!'~••i ..:::11:.............. fOUIUMIT's.c.M.. ~araatrpk, I BR. 2 ba .• wblt• water Neal s br, 2 ba, frplc. LAMAMCMAAPTI Delme 11.-Verde tb for '-'a&.:: Be 8Ml 8'9&0. Akov• of ""-".,. 1 It owwn tt.rt.Vu Homel vWlwa, 2 bib. l.O buch. dlbwbt, patio, hlcd 1d. i..,.. 1,au bd ianMa 1~ bll atudio la \r1Dlex. Dlluu W bdrm•!:: OD atJ .... I ; • llfemortH Pu View unit. z b9, trpJ, a-ur •SM.NopeLI . New appliances. new ca.r.KJdt•pet.aok.USS. apll. Adulta. Dsbwbr, Walk to evnytb1n1. «'MDDHl'Vh.'t.or lll01 SISnileiy pr epl. ~II Ihm PTk. u10 Inc ...... J.J&r,Zbe,\11\ita .... ,.. WM kitcben • batha, A&\. no fee. "'25&8; bltm encl ~ar cu bbq n>c:I. iar. mo No Ptl.I newly decorated. beated afterSp.m.541-Ull. _.____. ..-•• --.4 • ..._. .. LalWUI .. 50 _.. -1 · · • ' m34il2 pool. elevator, 1ubterra· W"-'";,~':p,;--1 ~lavttmta"'2•1803 c.M..._. lJZ4 ,._ ... ltiWe.M.75.si .,,,_, . Pool. Gu .. T18 Scott nean J>trltln(. H25. Coado OD ski •lo~ an Owe -··•-•••• .. ••••••••• _ - --Pl. 642-!ICnl, 6'S-56U 3 bdrm. yard, pool. Quiet -...s. Snowmua, Colo. Wkly C n.W .._. Vente lbr Iba fno IS> DI&. ocean vie• con· C1 11 JI •1 NewZbclnncondOI frplc t.ype l•ni. pref. NO tbru M arcb-Aprl I Po SI ., 16 llACH AHA rm tp&c. b10M. feaced. di>. a8R. Iba. ms &ktu 11•1d l4J5 ~. 2 car garage. $4.50: PETS. S38Smo. 54.9-U40 Oeeu view. oew 2 BR ~miiii.aoziiiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii .... ••-•••••••••••• "-'aa..-mortcacr.no ocwl)' decorutd No ~t:a BR.2b41.N. ••••••••••••••••••••••• as up. 107& Canyoo Dr. OV mobUe home, Treai ure,. 1111.000CASH tc... r.. hat esnow Pits ~ w lW or ~WOOM01 IM. 2 Br, 2 ba~ny Htrllll, ~. 9U'CIC M IJH lllaod prk. $850 mo. Kava~~ wllb '500.000. ~~..2n!!._,..£b"!!1 .. t n 1-411M ACeot ~l chuit °"· ...,. 6'2· 1008 or •• 1 • ...... T • _ New &side townhouse, 2 SCZ..LIOl2t7S-05'5 dys. W _ Wll'!Q• _.1319 17).$781. ___ _..,~ br, 1~ ba. Over UOO sq. 28 18 1 anu •DC• CO'lot.Y evti'wUldl • Available now, 2 br, 1 ba •-... l~so ~ •v~_~~llLI ft Small child · J>et ok r\ a , o cn v ew, i~rty Call Cbll<lk · ... _._ Small .. rd 41 _,..... • ""'".,. ·--s:i15. mo. Drive by 2538 patto/yd, kitchenette, Utt R. g Broker -.. -•.· ,u ••••••••••••••••••••••• •o•..+1111 2 br apt. Pool. jacuui fr ., _ _._•-a •ve, , .. _call MOO mo. Move in aowt -. • C.M.OUP\D ~ Adu!ta.1'1~ 8 ' ---· BBQaru,Encl.~ge. ~IW n ..._. Calll.O ~2317 . Nk'olt unit on Amrrlcen lA!i9wo Wurld oew 2 r \ktulll•d 3525 SORRY NOP IG«l.82. ___ see_. ____ _ Av~. 1911 soo A it Zbc' tbla New rrpt.s. dfl*, lib• condo. Wa•her I ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,. __ Id "d 1 f d .._....,.,..... 116' CAil.SiAD .... , I beamed wuna•. toncl. drytr, A/C, aott COUl"IHI. New 2 Br twnhle w/encl 1T1111.22NDST. ~t.s e, I ea or ar. ···-·················•""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ Qiimni. tf'Dtet for u.le 1•r. Yrd No r eta. ~ adwt.s pet.a D Costa Neu 645-2498 sleeper, 2 Br 1 Ba1 poo, P'•-~IT r- 38.0001q f\of 1wre i~« .,_.pin 00 UK-NOd In CJ7:imo 7)J.Q43 :f..8.io.~lev~ ys, ~ .... --patio. no pets. Kias OK. _,_"'""' BIGBEAJlC.biD,alpsH. uo 2.17 ac:'l'\'6. l'laL l"f'ft Ne p o rt e b 1 _....__. 1~5• .._,,..._....aA $280.548--0916 Bacbelora, 1 or 2 pool t.abae, cc*>r TV. 2 w ea c 4 Br 6 dton 1111 ba ..._ blk --.--......,...... • • 2br,2nba,every amenl· Bedrooma6Townbowses fJ'1)1cs.~16. tn1 kx'aUon MW!al ~lka ~b rtlUtbla~ fron Nwpt Back Da1 ••-••••••••••••••••••• D I u.tw. 3600 ty, 1850 sq. rt. Dble Nice 1 BR, re.rrtg lncld, From$349 50 ~:;.1:ic~;_;., ~cc!~1 ~~A'!·,~~:> Oty~c 11.ie pool, tennl1 Ni1~ ~ri4 br, 2 bo . :.!•!~.............. 1arage. Huge yard. patio deck, adult. no pet. Speetacu.lar apa, total .... toSIMre 4300 Ill Dalley, Matlow-1 2 m~or mori: ctt, •••uni ·"' sauna iar. C:::· at um. 3 car 2 BR. private garden, w/room for lrlr, etc. $27S. As k for Bill, recreation program. ·-·••••••••••••••••••• Keno" d y Corp , A,flnt Mike Bryant IS1S 11 &46--~l ___ l'l: __ .. 7~1~1• tennis garage,nr•hopping&St. Ml5-67:MW&:00·9666 546-5880 social program. 7pools.8 ROOMM•TES Tl~/".u-•1-_,. -&~_,. .. _.'""" •-~· Ch h Id If nd temlacourt.s. M Fashion A • ........ .... -· .-.... N.!'w 1piectous coodo. 2 br rv""" • W'C • ea or Almost new condo 2 BR 2 $325. Beaut. bra oew 1 lslaod, Jamboree & San S,_.e-M-S... ~ ACREl'ROJEC' -TWODUPlUH 2ba wtcomm.pool ~'. 2tlr.~tv.•alu~>.l'ool,Jac. ~Cimo'tiz.en ...... ,;.1Sa802' nta Ana. Ba, complete kitc hen br. frplc, laundry rm. JCWIHillsRoad. ~more.Pay&esal ~a OP ,, •. TR rno..Nos>eU 6'4~ tra>lcJ No peta. 5S7~ .,_, -. (blt·lns, dishwasher. lmmed.occupy. 71416 .... 1_0 .., l rlNu c: t:N Near C M. rtdf'\•~lup --dys,83Hl90eves. trash compactor ) gas TSLMcmt 6'2·94.12 ~ •v A&es&Weslyles. Growt.b area nut lo Po. meot area, ea wut ha~ 2 2br lba, dbl gar. lge yrd ., la::i• FwewillMd BBQ frplc w/W carpets Wee6eck References <¥flee• City Ila.ti Plans BB. l BA. em-I. aar , yrd. &tove $4001no :>48-7114 or .....__'-vi...t-·~67 dra,.:.. 2 car oar .. electr '. 1325. 2 br, l 'A ba, balcony, OCIAM FllOHT Cti1546-4212 itvall. San l>leao Co lncocnetll80prmo. Bolb ~ -•...-~A •••-•••••••••••••••••• doo~r ~ne"r. Nr Or. lalmdry rm. Adult. No 3br,2ba.w/ofrice. Year-.._. 1 1 1 B" , • 70 ooo p 1 ............................. ranh •• 3707 "' Adul Cut living pensest. rrinc p es on y. ar .or .1 , . no on ~ ---Coast . ·~-mo + pets. ts,D-Opels. ly,Fn>lc,gar,$1050. ~~. nL.a~.MS-t476 Owner °'°6ce Mesa Verde area 4 Oil the Laite. gorge<>u& vu ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ TSLM t 6421603 tSLMigm.t 642·1603 Shore a nome or apt ---------t ""'.-____ -----• Udrm, 2 bt.i, ram rm, 2Br2Babra.ndnucondo. Weekly rentals to July 1. s2oo clea n de pos it. gm · Hou...M•tn UnMm.'ted By OWMrD rrplc. 15 min to bch. Lge a4brsec. $SOO.S86-8345 oceanfront comp!. furn. 2 557'"'3 meatiBAB 2 br, 2 ba, (rplc, steps Poonoors 1n Roommate COSTA.MBA Ca 1rcW 1250 sq ft bwlding, nr busy Wesuide mtersec- Uon.. Owner wLlJ fananc qualified buyer. $92,500 BURR WHITE REAL TOR , IMC. 6 7!>-4630 nu backyard s 5 5 0 . br, frpl. balcony. gar. s:m. 3BR2ba carport No from ocean, brand new. matching SlnCf.l 1971 .. o"nLEXES for Sale 213 / 9 7 o 7 5 7 2 d y, Exoeptiooal 3 .br, 2, ba, 6tlM784 • · New beauliru.1 guden )'T'ly. $850. 632-8344 or Featured on TV shOws. ~ vr near park with view pdS. Children OK. 1021 pool & 67s-5864 wnuen uo in Tome magazine. Owner ~u t;:'ry With 714/6'1S-7lll wlrnd/ev. Gardener & water Dd: 1 BdnD, yearly, orr street Valencia.~ apt.si.3t E. ~~eet . /.m~r U1mt1/1 ' 1.5% rona del 2 Br, l ba, clo&ed garage, Incl. re fr g. frp I c. parking. Avail Im med. 2 Bdrm, l'h baicfiatio, sml 646-a16 IAY VIEW 7141832-4134 .:. • Mar.67$-3956 la·~~area.rencedvd, dahwbr, covered patto S325.Ph646-6238 ~..t. h1 --. .. 2bedroom,lbatb $340 Ulteaboose.Gnraeous2 Fem'ltosharew/fem1•2 ....... ~ t 9an fncd d ....,.,._,DOC teD. -... ~ .. By Owne r 2 4-Plexes. new crpts, drps & paint. w/ -.-. Y • garage CoroM .. Mar 3722 per mo. 64S-9100. 22SOVanguard Way br. 2 ba. Frplc. Pool. ln br 2 ba Condo nr So. Cfl $205 000 each w 111 $340. l.8t& last+ deposit. w/opner. Kl& & pets ok. ' 544).9626 Eastblurl. Ma tu re Plaza$200mo. 968-~, finance. Prloc.' only. Call(714lT10.5629. $525. Ag t , no fee. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Comforublenew2br,2ba. tbedroom $.120 adults No pets $495 --..,.f $-053654Q.Ul9 fMW..2586;973-2971. Small cozy studio, No kids ok, no pets. 2032 Adults,nopets. 640-03'9 · · WANTEDPror.remal•io --------2 Bdrm house-: garage. kitchen. Pool. $225. Inc. Wallace C M SS7-m85 · share large bch ~ 5 UNITS, ORANGE. Two Adults, no pets. $400/mo. Super 3 br, ~ ba, frplc, uUL N<>-smoke640-4999. S365mo.' · · · 0-,_. 3826 WATER pr l v . b r & b~. :J.BR,2ba-Three2·BR, 23llOEldenWE,CM ~whr. paUo, fncd yd, ••••••••••••••••••••••• $475 mo, yearly, cute W /ha~dsome ha Y 2 ba.1.erovacancies.no . gar.Kids&petsok.$445. Newport Beach's finest 3 Bdrm, 2 bath a pt. SlOOFREERENT 2Br,nopets.olderpre· easygo&ng26yroldm . def'erred mamt. f1exible TwoBrandnewEastC.M. Agt, no fee. 964·2566 : 2br, 2ba. On the water. Adult.1, $450. mo. Gas 3 Br, 21,oCJ ba studio. Pvt ferred 67J.8l4S ~-Camd~lal~-"'ow• an terms Agent 640-5ll2 Townhouses. l-3br, 2ba, 973-297L Ocean &c bay view. Pool paJd.00·5073, fncd patio. Encl. garage. -Y--F---,-k-.--,-.._.. fw t 700 · • lilll5 annual lse. 1·2br, 2 & jacuzzi. $1400 mo. 6 lAts of $49S 33552 llG CAHYOM VU ng em · oo ang or ••••••••••••••••• •••••• tN'TS UHITS UNITS 2ba. $495 annual ise. Both mo. tse. Call for details Newly decorated 3 br. 2 ba Blue ~m. 496-9230, Sharp 2 b 2 b Ea tblutr same to shr 2 BR 2 BA Sneak preview! Newport Crest. 2 bd with ocean view. Mirrored wet-bar. 2 car gar. $118,000. Agent. 497-3009. 24-plexes/L.B. $79,900 have 2 car garg, tennis, Ml....,.. leoch 3269 6424783wkdays. townhouse. Spacious, 496-3354or496-52'15. coodo. C:ihed~al ~il'gs. ~J!!l· Park Newport. ea.4-Plex $108,000 pool, jac. & c lbhs . ••••••••••••••••••••••• CostaMno 3724 fireplace & pool. Quiet wood-bumlngrrplc,encl. _....,......... _______ _ C.M. Triplex $135, M5-12S1. llG CAHYOH area. Adults, no pets. BToro 3132 2 car ... gar, pool & t-ec. • .-..·s meet•. Young man. •••••••• •• ••• • • ••• • • • • • $400. 645-3381: 675-5949 •••••••••••••• ••••• •• • • ~ 44-pl~xes/HB Sl4SM ea Huge 3 br, 2 ba, fam rm. 2 DEANE COMDO SUS CASIT AS facilities. No pets. $525. 31. involved In motioa IOU~ $160, rrp1cs, bii fncd yd. $S25 For lease; avail. now. 3 EASTSIDE 2 Bdrm, ~ac. new, next lo 7S2-lM96; 67S-7Cll6. pictures. travel. dance. 10Uruts $225, 67U336; 642-9666 Bdrms., 3 baths, with Large & reg. 1 bdrm, everytbing. Sml pet OK. and· dress. Des ires to 16Units $385, .......v. .. Jiv area Love· enc[ gar. $2S5. & up. Del'.'1e2br,2baloftapt. 1365.496-86ll,768-9'51. STEPSTOBEACH,2 br,1 sbareapl/bousew/male 1.00 Call f d ·1 B b l d v____. · · Adults no pets 2110 PaUo & upgrades. N ba. pool la--.. -·, encl. now or etai s on 3 r l 'h a, g yar • ly yard &c entry area. • · children or pets. 180 E. IW't• leodl 1140 aror. ~s'. ~ or female roommat.e(s). ••••••••••••••••••••••• any ol our lnvestment gara1e.kklsok.oodogs. $13X>Mo.inclgardener NewportBl.548-4968. 2181 St. 5435. Days •••••-:;:••••••••••••••• D--Re ntal costs are no EAS:t'SIDE property. 54Q.36<J6, SUI mo. 645-7522. a&H HUDSOH tWilll)t• leoch 37 40 646-4262; eves 64S-9543 SHARP, beach 1.2 & 3 BR. . TIIE ~OV E restriction. as long as ft ~ umts 00 lge. lot; 0 D Deluxe condo 3br den IEALTOI 644-0322 ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• frplc dishwshr garage BaysideDrive, l Br, den, benefit rrom each other ~ett::.c~~w1n;~~~~: frplc, pool, garage'drop: WeHtv Rates ~~~':~~ !,,_~los. No pets . 1~~~1::~.~lt ~eI"::"~atr8:"~t mg & roof. Only $88,500 nr.$425. 759-1914· N~~la:~ 'Pa~G~~ gp";ci~'studlos& NEW2story,2 Bdrm, lt,CJ _,_ ~um (714 ) 5:$-2375. or you. °"1ner646-0917 . 3 Br, 2 ba, dshwbr, frplc. m-49128k.r. lBedroomSuites bath duplex. Vaulted Townhouse. lovely, spac. Prestig ious. All adult way write · ~·J~emy~ e.c-,..a party 200 V lwllt-Ho .. I ~1~t! ~ ·c1c!s! 2t~ 3 b d r m . 2 lh b a . ~°i:~~~a~~~t;,e~· ceilings & skylites in ea & home-like. 2 br with garden apts. East Blutr u: lsv ~~.;a~ st u ~ i~j . ....................... O.Ocemfaowt So; est Plaza. SS25 mo. Townhouse. Beautifully Maid Service ·TV ~-C.fft!~ ~{~ ~u!~~:,~tr:i~: !u~ area. 2br. 2ba $-400. Distributors, POB 89a, 4Homes&Dplx .. Mewportleoeh $250 security dep . decorated, boat . slip lMiletoOc~an bltns & dishwasher _ garage. Swimming pool. Sorry,nopets.644-8726. Uni ver sal CitY1 Ca S 2BR 1 lBR with 3lots,4 stores,16apart. 548-8475. avail. $850 per mo. R alS •te PLUSfireplaceintbe liv· Jacuui.Tenniscourts.l NewlbrNpt.lfts.l Adul 9taJ8. --~-- garages & yards. Great ments, huge storage 819-6310or~5 ;oy~ .. S Ing rm. F/A beat. Jaun· blk to Huntington shop. No Pets Stove & refrig. Fem. Large 2 BR. 2 ba E.asl.sidelocation.$60,000 garage.Ownerwillcarry 0-'olalt 3226 3'FTBOATSUP 3br 3ha 72'fvorktownat dry facilities. Ample plngcentermall.Adults. $285.&46-61ll /642-7745 condo. Frplc , pool, down. Owner will carry 10% interest. S79S.~. ••••••••••••••••••••••• coodo Motor boat only Beach Blvd storage In prl vate, No pets. From $-435. 55--0799 contract. Fu II price Just listed. Beacbtime · 536-CM I I or enclosed garage. One Seawind Village, 155SS 1 BR. uW pd, $280 mo. Te· G~+. 634-tlOSO, 9 · m>,000. Realty673-6511. ~·J:::~~~~~~ aft.4~19 543-2000 has a yard tool Close to RtmliogtonVillageLane, oant mu.st be able to1--·------- f 1€HOl'l 'T'<ts---------1 Buccaneer.493-m1 Beautiful Dover Shores In 1 _..__._ ~7... scbooll, shopping & bus. H.B. (TI4)898-9961. qualify 642-9601 or M&Aet.oshare2brhouse in _ __ 1 IMYISTMBIT OPP Newport Beach. S bdrm. _,..... __.. ~ -Ooly $400 &c $425 per mo. 675-0144 M. v. $200 + 'fl uti I. Clean i.odustrial bldg· .. 4 BR. 2 ba, tri-level. Nr Swimmiogfoo l , 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Kida OK. Call now It Condo. 3,!ir, 2Nba. Total ~.76 ;ro.7429 att.ePM. leased until l982. Prime bdl. Year lse, no pets. ftrelllaces. Poo & lawn LAGUNA BEACH MTR move In April 15th! Call rec. P•~· o p ets. S.Q1•• -33.13W.Coast ffwy,NB area near Van Nuys t625mo.714m5-0239. rnafnterwnce incl. Only INN. $75/Wk & up. Maid 548-4900 6-8pm. $365+ut1l. 675·1706, _ ..................... Young female , non 645-6646 $1175.. per mo. UUI. xtra. l!En'., color TV, heated ' ~2223 Deluxe 2 Br 2-aty near smoker, neat, respons1· = 14,720 Sq. ft. In· Ask for Frank ~3000 pool. Util. (TI4 ) 494-5294. Ne w 2 Bdrm, ·1 bath beach/sbopplog. $-475 ble to share 2br, 2ba 7 ... ITS-C.M. f 3200s1q . fl.. ioo!-F t•v.., 3234 days,MU936eves. 985N.CoastHwy. w/frr>lc, gar. Sml patio. ~--·-u1 Vil&..e mo.Call832-2256orAgt. Irvine home w/garg. Beaut. new building. ices. Comp etely air--•••••••••••••••••••• M251mo. 7~ _... IU ~ 4Q2.-00llO S200 mo. + 11.a ulil. Call l"\repWces,xlntlocatioo. oond .• wtlb heavy duty Z.st.)'4brxlnLarea.Walk HarborView4br,2ba,up. t .. wportleaclt 3769 IBrba-'--lora.,.uti"lpd, New 1"2 bdrm luxury U·-oo--chl-t,t•-2 833-9M2eves. TSLlnVJDts 642·l603 1.000 amp power. An xlnt l.O ML Sq Prk Prk 1.ze grades .. single1tory, like ••••••••••••••••••••••• "''""' .... adult apt.s in 14 plans ·~ ...,. "'" .,. investment opportunity yrd liJIB.zi2o 963.eooe s model. $750. 640-0735 ~~{~r~f. I~. ~!~ from $315. + pools, ten-BR apts available. New· Fem roommate for rum * * * * * at$480,000 ' ' · Back Bay area, 2 Br, 642-78'7lor SSM.2S5 ni.s, waterfalls. ponds! ly redecoc'at.ed ; stove & Bal Isle. Resp, non· 67M400 From Sao Diego Frwy refrig, private patio. s moker p I ease . 19 ._....... H'a.ABOA ,._...._.._. 3240 garage, lg.patio. Mature sroNNING l~e2br 2ba drive North oo Beach to a4564or21¥9'5=1555 $225/mo +util & mo By owner. -f>rices ex .. •-•••••••••••••••••••• adults. No pets. $400. arde t I McFadden lbeo West on .r-+-•-••ao deaninc. 3 Br, 3ba. t.remely low. Seller will New-de•anl·2 bedroom Available April lO. g n ap · 00 ' rec. Mc'Faddeo to Seawlnd ---752 1700 675 S994 Gert carry all rinanclog al Sit!O, or Zbedroom + den 642-"267. area. $325. 710 W · 18th St. Village. <714 )893-5198. ••-••••••••••••••••••• ~ • 9Wlb. $575 Cedar & window 3 Bdrm 2 ba f -•1 I Bedroom 1 Br with natural wood. Condo 2br, l~baf blt-ins,•---------. • • allM Y rm. F··-:-Led Great East.sJde location Deluxe beach apts. f!.Plc. AC. sauna, poo as jac. Fem. »30 wanted to sbr 3 "--C .... Aow A 1>h·tM11t1 or home. Five blocks lo Newport Heights. Yard, '"™ S2l60 835-8544 encl garage, patios. New Crpl. Nr So. Coast Br 2 Ba apt. I blk rrom LowO...,.,w.t llarborlml'stml·o1t:o r~~.PFi:ii~e :i~ci~~ pr,$800.673-3576. Apartments . . Pecgy,960-4392. Plaza.$400.5.58-8420eves beadl.NB. $180. 67S-*3 •.714/142-1676 · yard. Adu.Its. No 2Br28a+atwly~ + Large l & 2 bdrm from 3br3ba and H all6PM. all&. CALL FOR SETUP WU Npl u... A ail 6/1 • Plua Beautiful 1265. Quiet building with br new unl. ---------* * * * * peta. Inquire at 527 18th . ·~•· v beatuflul landscaping. Harbour area. $475. mo. DllalcMcl ADh M/F wanted to sbr 2 Br 2 ______ _,LohfwS. 2200 Street. (714)960-6331. Eves631-3378 Single,&2Bedroom Ideal for adults over 35. Days 536-6663. 536·8705 2 Bdrm, 1 ba, kicls OK. Ba apt, CDM. $200. ---------••••••••••••••••••••••• Move right in. 3 br, 2 ba, WOW! Mini ocean view, (Fwn.& Unfum.) No pets. LEEWARD eve.840-5949 $320mo+dep. Avail oow. 644eves·687. 9 AM, 675-5663 ,..._.._. ....... OCEANVIEW,beachac· patio, reocd yard , Newport C rest •AllUtiliU..Paid APTS. 2020 Fullerton1.arg __ e_ho_m_e_lik_e_2_b_r_,-2-~ APPROX 3 \'RS YOUNG ceu builder pckg ror 3 garage. Kida & pets ok. Townhouse, 3BR, 2&n ba. • Not.a.. Required Ave, (1 blk east Newport ba townbome a p t. 1 Bdrm t b a t b . Young Prof. w/3br hse 10 M\JSTBESOLD coodoslnSaoClemente. $425. Agt. no ree. fool, tennis, Jae. AvaU Ave & 1 blk south of Enclosed pvt patio & $27S+dep.Availnow. HB (011 GWC) Non-SCOTTlllALn All approvals, ready to 964-256111;973-2971 Aprill.S,$650mo,lyrlse. •Swim"""9.Tennia. Bay).631-0397. garage. Deluxe kitchen 'Ca11Renata5S6-7707 smoker. Avail now. Call s~.a.75•• go. $190,000. Very 642-9865. lllliorda .u.a .... I .,. w/bltns. incl. refrig. li"-"-~·-8 . Hansen, 644·9174 •-•~ motivated seller. Great family home with •ActmtieeD!tector. "'""--ODSClllJllll'l91 SmaU pet ok. $410. mo. --Yv 1197-6026 ---------83IMi!llZ1 Act . frplc. 3+den. 2 ba, ~tio. 3 er. 2 ba. 2 blkl to ocean. Free Swidcry INDdl IRAHD MEW 17610 Cameron St. • •••••••••••••••••••••• ___ . _____ _ ~~-4-0wnePLEX,NrS:<>t· t1 t•o...rt. !:!~a~~£'·&;!~~-.~:. pools. ·~~-ClllkScnto-. ~ml 2 bGath aCpMts. GeminlRlty 839-6623 2 br'-.2rbad•.•gaVlrdleln9a'pts. ~~~~5!1'e3::·r!.~~ --. r._... r ~ UDI . lttlort 2400 ok. $465. A"', 00 fee. ,.......... n :11ed 1or 2. reat . . p I Under market. Pnn. on-••••••••••••••••••••••• SM-2566; 973-2971. HAUOtt VllW PLUS MUCH MOREi location. $375& S395. Just 1;!1!-;~~~n~ach; no Tustin. Gym, sauna. ~~ oo . wshr/dryr l)'.Aat.549-1366 18'75000Fumilbed Tbun 41r,2'/2 ... 2frplc'1, a few left! CaU ror de· ,....~Month.536-7357 ::o'r::· ~~~~~n~'. ~~o;i.=er, $159- ---derbird Hu . ..:.15,ooO Walk to beach, 3 BR, 2 Ba. (•-'1u rm. Great loca· Oakwood tails. t N t F -fplc dbl 0 ar sundeck _......,., 3br2ba •--:. I 0 ewpor rwy. Roommate wanted to 0¥8 120 Unf. Bermuda Dunes • .. • • tlon. Immaculate. $850. Garden Apartments newk...,......,' poo • 831 2909 vw-T•SUSTID SJl>.000 fun>.,....,,.. pMlo.fncd.Nopets.$065 ..... ..,. lll9 "'-·'"' .oec.Avall. --·-------•share expensive 2 BR ~ landS30,000to$35.000per IN2-9093 Newporthach/North immed.$550.213·919·5541 Af hm•Fw ... d coodo.$1.25mo + Yl util. =Place Propertie acre. Coml. Buildings 2 bdrm. 1 ba Close to Newport Terra~e 3br, 8801rnne New 2 & 3 bdrm. large Ol"Ulifwlll1•1d 3900 lh mi. so. ol S.O. Fwy. 187 ~ aa'fes 0::d $660,000. llltcbell as beach. No petS $400 per Z"ilba condo,~~~ r=k (at 16th) sundeck or ya.rd. In encl. •••••••••••••••••••••••1_fM8._9Gt __ • ----......... - -..a.. .. R .. es lutyear Ou Rummon1 Realtors, mo.SJ6.&12 . garage~_wOasK -e11. (714)64~5~ R.C.T•YLORCO. garage, quiet area. no 1llEEXCITlNO Roommatewanted.Woiit-~ • 71.537 Hwy Ill Rancho up. J(j..., • _.,.,. no .,.. t $350 $425 D p••uM15• •99e mveotory or pride o Mlraae C• •568.3607 ___ ...... Hell HB peta.645-0266 Newport Beach/South 640-SI 12 pe a. · · ys _,.. .,....,..,~ log male 25.30 yrs to own er s h I p a n d --~·-· .... 11 ,...._ ~ • ...,... ~ • • 1100 16th St 848-2655. Eves 534·2306. MINUTE.5 TO NPT BCH share 2br duplex m· HB. Nickerson type unit .,."'""_...,_or....,._, Rent or lse Very nice . SEAVIEW (Doveratl6thl New 2 BR, l &n b a Bach,l&28R MZ-5489 eves Anni. shows more than 50 in· l•tcS........ $575 mo. 846·7548 , 3 Br, 2~ ba, family (114)642-8170 townhouse, Crpk, pvt 2Br, = Condo, new, from$2SS&up. Gs come projecta ror sale Gnwes 2700 tM&-1371. room. view, pool, tennis, patio, encl gar. Adlts . ~· t, pool, carport, Adults. No pets. tl..81.:.t 4350 ~= !'!'!~x;:vet~alth -·••• .. ••••••••••• .,..... 3244 $LOliO.Cal17S.1082 M~.!80::J·C:u~? $390.64S-4074. ~~nly. $335 mo. ($~la~~~:.,..,,.rt -·•••••••••••••••• ·--45A Rub)' Red Gr•pefruit. -·-••••••••••••••••• BOAT SLIP, 2 Br, 2 bath Blvd> .. ...., UXZlalley access. 19th St. oura,eatatocollvia~~~-utinre tliCIOO PIA. WlU consider Northwooda 4 br, 3 ba, lowel' unit w/fi-iace. New 2br 2ba apts . MIW2&31DI . ~-.. cu&arl1' to ..,..-., ..., g lnde (7l4) m ,,_ 2000 ft r ily u..,.,. Ba Icon y &c fr p I c . 9am·Spm 546-9860 VI.&"' _e. SSO. mo. C.11 andweb8veabrokeron · .,_,, ~··am rm, '150/mo. STB'STOllACH $395.mo. 845·6441 or Extralarge&prtvate. aft.8,1-197-0198 ..wiedllaffUcensedin ......... frJilc, wbr, focd yd, m.iWATER.2Br,2ba 4BR,2ba.,wntr.$550 64().lMS DramaUdloorplans. Studio. Straight, oon -------~ TeuundNevacla. W..t.d 2900 :'if·.:'.::" as ~':eoer c.ondo.llllSO/mo. aBR.2ba.,wotr.$550 Slater&VanBuren · smoar. mature. Share Gd:i'9 with ~ batll. --•••••-••••••••••• JQdl ok, 00ne.!,; •. A . .;. m• 00°· Wa~ron.1i,!!omes 2BR,2ba .• wntr. $400 Large B.lcb. Unit, bltins, 8f7-7137 960-4370 pool. Laguna Beucb. $300 I ror boa~ atoraft. We have open1aas fo --ooo 11> ,..H .,..... &• ... u -prv pello etc. No kids o 8 h 1 mo. ~1 Lamcbinc ramp nearby. sever•I licensed, ex -. ~ fee. •Z588; '73-29'7l. pet1. 1110 Victor I a . a c · e 0 r a P l • $ISO per mo 675-4312 D9lieae.d ~-·I-a ffnec1'eatwltb'500,000. _ _.. • 4 Bdrm, 3 b8, new cpt, ~ stove/refrig, util pd. -4000 · .__;,__. ·IO i.o joln ... --..... Wanta Or•DI• County __..,_ new paldl.. Walk to bcb. 422~ 9lb ~ 9118-CJ020 aft -.. ••••••••••••••• Offlee-44 J our •ta ff E"'· C•ll Cbuck 28R,2b8 ........... = A..Unow.-.1'73-"441 Sbarp 2 br, 1ara1e, fncd IPll. --• .. •••••••••••••• .... :r=.:J~tf! , a . 1: Broiler, 2BR.,2ti.,turn .... w 1 *Y_..LM .,.UO.Smallpeto1t.sm. ·~HOUSE ........ .,._. Ph.-bomc..~7"sta tlaJ taeome or com-mo JBR,Jbll ..... $t'JS/lOOO ..,,_., 87Mi.138. Vl""liil"'ll LovelJprdem·Brooka ft in ldnt bldt. 18tb 4c merel•I properties Is COM IKRIX IBR. 2~ b8 ........ '650 :....beMb.=l lln, mature 2Br f le dultl Sat/Sun 9-5. 2bd, 2ba. wtr. fall New P o r t B I v d . needad. 4 BR, 2~ ba •••••... *700 ...._ ..:~ It for 1 I.« BM!belor, avail. Utru -.., rp •a •no peta. New, cllx, quiet, rrpl. 7782 •Kltcben Facll. av all. M5-Zl.ll!MH31D. WANTED. Wlll tude 2BR.!_~Ctemea~/aoo _.,.._ Iune,stepetosand.$180. -M0-50Cl6 Newman.Nr.bch. •J8CUlli,be•teclpool Uab lftllable Include l'.lltbhlff 5 BR. Pvt P\y, ._.. ""' .,.._ Cnt condo, ele~ant 211/44Mll:IO, 446-4750 98CM1'5. •Wltly«dallY maid arv. eq ft 1 rm suite. M' ._......____ • -.un nw.-. n.-i-2 br l ba I 'JV._.....__ ail bl O.C. Aiport. NB. Av•l ...,,_. .... : 5-21,S.3'1, ar, 2~, F.R. ool, 1711W.Oeeaafront.Avall. ~.. • •enc · Love!y 2 br, 2 ba, new *' •...-av a e llarl.eont..d752.m3" M's.S.U'1.N '1, 1Z.l4,... .....'125.17WJU now wkly to Oct. pr'ale. Mature aidlllb. <:rP&. Multi $335 lnq Low•S72.J0Wll 15,4-1"1,11,11,2-2011, ..__. '"& FllmilieloalY873-767'7. Nopeits.SllOmo.964-1055 u-. Apt c,' 818i Sa~ 2ZT7Harbor 2 rmsuit.e.390sqftJ..a~ s.at't.l-ll't,21,•,27,21. ....................... ,_....,..nn1olc!efora " _. l)r a.tallesa 84$-4840 pertt, utJ incl A/t,.; a: •Ni's. M, m.-. 60, .....,.._ .... ,. lew moatbs? J br Nwpt W.l•21A = .orcallcoUect cent to Sec. Paci ic •+. a.ur1, 121. IDOi.el. ....................... fflilllta.'550.ea.-~f='•d Upetafrs, f•mlly, no )a3US. Room /kit benet Bdlt. Near E. ntb ,, ..... nUremeat bome. ........... 3106 2 BR 2 BA Bluth -.... p e t I . • s 5 0 . l BR condo, crpll, drp1, _,,"!.__..C._u le Or~ae. C.M. 842-4210 C!lall&en oft1 -................... .._.._:-:t.__, n ·-······· .. •••••••• Mf.81M81111·21ll wUrr/~, refrta. pool, -... ~t7:. p. Roxie • V • .. -· ma cent •• A ••02 •-•-b db 11 N _.. -1--------. =•.ra, lbr: elm l~b8 New' .. de· .._ •&A -• -a..8u z Bel •a-a-re ......... 811 a · o ft __........ ln ~ ,..__ -2....-. -· · • -· -••••••••••••••••• """' · ...... -· ........... _ o pe•--... 5Z1 ~office La Paa -• ' __ ..._ -YT.4'JGO ext -u d1ys O"-'"-SA Cou::Jl.atr mo.~~ ... -n--·""'""" Laswla 11---1 Rd. · · of a-N-0· ...,. .. buiad ta-l7Wli4 · '523CAMfltsll!~ ....... neaiwllld1; •18riDLmla8Mcbnear Q."":j cu '1ar. . ._.,_ ~--or mootb. PWy. • mo:th, 4'::!1 n.rr1.-=:.. ......... 1141 QIM&..U ...... 48t ..... ~.:rim-Siii uUl Gl·llll llatS. Mt. S190 per mo. . now.ea.an.eu.m. ' - ~................ 111811 W .......... •'. ~ClmWM S br, 2 .._.......:..... TOMlllll .....U Pltk>. Private, clole to ROOll WANTSD: Eldfr. I Rm offtct -~-ftll ft111.-bl De n.r~lDI -•M bellCILUM31J 11 ._.,ads uf room _... .cuPeled ..... ~ 10IJ •o•r•• wlti 1111111111••• .......... ~M+loeamon. '"'-Jl44 w/ldl.prtv,Coat.l11 .... ~.=:.,rt.,:~ie .. PLACI •FEE ,_.,~rm com· a,:::.~'=· ·-.................... _MNMI_.....,. _____ _ Narami-.,..._.._....._ .. ~."\':1rl':cr.8'o~: rrlr. rura oraaf: ';:'J::·.,-=~,.f: ,,~~:.:,r=..,~e~ ..._a room ta lntM. C::t::fr.r::-~ ...... II 1iM11 ,,_ •1 ,_. •ML ._ a.,MN111 . f11'/4CIMl4l · Sl10 mo. All faeillUet _.la llllltiu 111._ _..far J bedrooms to cm'.... ...._Call..,.... PduW •1m0. ...- "" ,_. Wiii for • .. a rt 1176 i_:: = ... ";!I-q:!!!, IM Br aP.t•, 1tov• • Walmll $41..,. 2 bdrm Z«N"dlMnm Nr bclL or-.iiM I l D ,_. Ml la-1111111111111 .......... ~ rv _..,, ~ Adilta.-,, ""'· c o n d o a I c , /ldl prt-iii d pct. --------- .. Sii •..-.JI la m ...... lbr, • Nopeta..... ....._,drni-,AQporcb, ~t ·i .. r+ •tOOdap fllllleGftlc.'efGrnatwr ...._..... I I....._ IWl rear Ccwww .. ..._. •21 J Br ar Falrwlew • pool. S450. mo. Open m.'sus.-.... · O.CA1111o11 .... ,..mo. •""9 ti ..... ....................... 8IMr Act.na ~ no SM/9Ua 1-s_ 14517 Ov•l. &eeept/ Secretariat • ~ ......... lllr. Illa.an larlermt ,.... ... _. ' ..._...orl'75-IOU. ._...._ 4110 ..-v•••.U.St01m all. CJll)-...U. ..... bl daaeta, CJeck 0# ....................... otncee .... .... !! Uvlq rm, 1ar. Very KIDIOK ........... J141 lndMdual caN for adift eeptioalat Her ...... ... ...... ..J~!Jf!!!!§~-l=p; ... 1111 1171 •lee. t4'11 JflJ IH. 111' llla,pool.-.mo ..... -..... _ ....... ..._ • 4c ov.r. ht. cal _,.,_,~: .... 5............ _:;;; .......... -..ii ......... .,,.. a~" ...... llcenaad llo'me ..... ._ ... OlelO -1i:;_-.1lil, ...... 1a111A ___ -··-·--.... ::"u111 ..... : ~:;: ::::'1 c':~: ~:.::;o,;;,.•jto. i.;,.._ -..'iiiU .... 1.\.."m.,•• ..... ~..,. '1IO : ' •• =.:> .... for :.=-.~'" u. ~=dat \ OM.Y PtLOT ._..l•lln c...tJC111r• I' JalaW ,alb 11/P•rt.t ...... Jl.tplilr ~~···'············ ....... ,............... .....,. ........................................................................................................... . ... vea.o-y• F'OWld•Uou, re\alni n1 Mowin,t.&dcla16 HOM Ii • A PT8 . Cle J 1Aflho.lr Malnteuno 6 or PETERSPAJNTINO ~~tcbealiteaturee H&IDSbindtoofi.n& Drlvewa)'l•Parkliaa lot wall•. b lou1. patlo1 ClunUpJobt ....... pl~b.crpolry, C411,,... 141 .. f4f J..Utoriel Hrvlcee, In· E•pr'd. ReH Ratee. ,..IST. lfl-141' ShaM.ahlqk!,tomp,re · •&epaln •Seakoat1n1 Ut"d ~IJ.~~ o.a.duuo tile. llll/ba remodel dwtriaUrmeclJcalbldp. P'ree Ett. Call Gene cover, 1hla1le •ldew•ll :!:.!L.~~c,·M 8 6 S ~ .._11 ot all )iodt Li • ..... AJlce'a HouHCIH nlo1. •119 562-0658 PATCH PLAS?ERINO for YoW' exterior. John. --· -......... .. i a -.... -a:.•-r•Uab1-... All type1 . P'r e e w.m7T11 ,.,_ ~ "' )'n "•~r __ ................... ...... ~-· .,..i '"' 1 .. • ' 1 C1$il 9 • Prof pelnt.lq. E~ • Int. fllbmat.. Calls:ll-7113 Ma; .... I A.lto~lrwalJa Ul-O'J~7 Oerd..iat d eu UJ* It .............. ,........ '13-UIM......., ... _.................. Low rates R.efa. f'rte S,.. --·1•••••••••••• CllJWC... land1~•plo1 <ieor1e OCX:ltudtot 1Toatnack Por e a cellenc e I n l'Alropean Landicaper . Mt..511-4'710,538-4313 Pla tter Patc b t n1 : -••••••••••••••••• BABY ITTIN O M y .... ••••••••••••••••••• ,...... 04S707I Ttull, U.. trim Oan houaecleanlnf C all Too work. Fair price. Pl atter. atuc co ., Redwood hot tuba in-._ larb ..,.. llll f U 'd hool • ct ._. RoaW-$703 Clu o1na Uni m1t ed . Rela.ltMt'ltdya/evee. WAL.LP.,.... drywall. fot./E.xt. Free ltaJlalloa fr catm deck ,_ l4yn tu.... c ..,_<' 1>' YA.RD Al"""°'UVENATION -' ......, ...,_ Reftolfend. £ve1, flll.54&-1"10eorge con1trucllon. Llc·d. -r are Alu J 10 nr Tre trlmrnlnC 6 r• Haw, ~~tr, dump .,.,."*,_ 0 ' H"'•k• llUa/Harbor MH'4S4 moval. yard ck!aoup • tl'll. ll • tu• wrk. HHnalttl.. S PEC 1 AL 1 ZED 631·30ll5.S'15-~ Home s , Addllionls, _fM0._70i!0_ ..... _9.._s_. ---- ·--••••••••••••••••• Cl ' Q•--;;I -1prio1 planllna Ho b ~llonat'tc• 831 1..267 .. ••••••••••••••••••••• LANDSCAPE Atrium. QUALJTV PAfNTrNG R e a t u cc o . 0 v e r seer...,.. llf\IORCf! from tlli.n1 to =:_ ... ] ...... ::;...... ._,,.. _ Mlml Your lhnn«'t lnc. ~~u~:,iarc>u:~1f~ lnt/E:xt. Neat. Rea.on•· Bloc:lcw•1la. Low rate1 ........ •••••••••••••••• ftAa1 ~~~ u.aat OOMNEVSW~trV •VF.RY LOW f'klCf.8• ~'tu~~:.~~:1~· Booded r.Uable people waterfall. Do l r1ghl the ble. Wayne UXOYE > 9-4192. All 11\&k.ee ti modela. Dia· Tyflial U' u.11ann"P1atenpert an lud.tupemalnl <'kilt R.eu ~~u wW""foryourhome .. lit time, call Glen'• 6t&C2S " ti 1 count pri ces. USA 8AM<RUPTCY Jotm Qlllda m-<JGO <l«lra• Ml 201$ pd.a 87f.-$701 Lmdacape7~ ~ Wallpa&>erinc -••••••••••••••••••••• Stereo. 3721 S. Bristol. ~.rUfd.compl~ w 'U llnodl your #()()(°'' Clun up1, tla ut1n1 :!W~~r~~~1~1J:, '--T• Let Ut Jn.tall a NEW AUWonGuar. Freet"At. PtwnbtnR repalr. Spec. In _~ __ u_1 _____ _ tld * Artloa 14 181 Pf'OiHAtonally 6 kHp L•ndar apln• lmm ... d *z:t!i2 -••••••••••••••••••••• Land s c • P e o r 173-41.58 rtmodeling,copper re · T,_s.rnc. 1YPlal ~MU ~ tiouae tl.-an Tup kt"VIC'llll M2 tl0'7 INOOMETAX RETURNS REJUVENATE Tite Old Painting . INT I EXT. ~· Free est. Top Hal ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hat Cblmney 8 •~ ...... OIU'den.-r 1' HAUUNG tt CLl:!ANUr o--~.reuonable One. St. Contr. Lie . "'-'--• ... _. 12 umbln&.~·3UM ALPINETREE ..-" ... 0~1d .. C I I ~ ,..,....,. •-. .__., rea.s., -i<•vnERTS M><l\11 ' · ,ra ,..a~r ~,.. ommcrc • · NewportBch.~119 •3Mll9~16. yra. fJXp. Ltc'd. Dave HOMESAVERS. Plumb· c.AT ~ t;'.t'"'t" t:at An)' C t..., :::.!· .r:;!·~~·~T::tett c 1c1a 1 *' LINDA'S Maa.-, llM-1°'5. Ing & heating. Free Trmlnt prllning, tf P- 111.ae ""-'-•II "llan "' t'a•1+•h11 T •vs L'ft Vl''L: ••••••••••••••••••••••• estlmates.t15 hr.Honest P n g r e m o v a i.. '"'-.. '&M -" ••••••••••••••••••••••• ··-·--•• ""' .,, .... r. EXCELL1'::NT •· r"li ab"l~e s•r v1ce. 114-an-OIWO. Uc/in.a. ·-v -Newronat. apt• N'!ildt-o Ctnupa, l1Ut•ll111001t, Ir ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pera/Bus Income T ox Brickwork. Small Jobs . PAINTING "' "coK " CU~vf'<)M lnl..nor t'•"'l>t!nlry by J at • MZ·MQ Lou't C.ri-ot.ry ~ tn u t Doors. wlnduwa, PllUoll. moocklm& etc I .Ac 11 tw MI 2m4 LILI balh fl kit remodel/I, rmtm. reb1.1hle wk •l re * ROBI N'S HOUSE Call8C2M39forappl. Newport, Costa Mesia & Reas.rate6. Free efll. BAIM .m--ll06S " I • ratl'fi. suited to meet CL .. '""'INQ S'"'RVICE 1-.1 ...... 67"'317"'ev..... ..-E I ..._.,. •--'-•m ~r~• .. iA..f.~ tcr rou~ .... ~d11 Jon 5 flf'M for ~"Uw,.. ...... h),. clean BUS" PERSONAL .. u... ~ " "'0 .....-2'106 xpr'd ~--r- PlllUnulJI, uc _, .,_, ~...,..,.. "°'* 540 iii,7 Income Tax returns. CUst.om malOIU'.)'. patios. Palnting & papering, 26 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~model . re pair• 'C!n C&ll 640-1700 for appt fireplaces, wa lls, garden yrs Harbor area St . Lie l(jt.dlceo & Dath:-Finesl in u rrw.nt ry , old l imt• Mowtn1. e<S1101. tri m Wanta Rl';ALLV CLEAN & retain. lOO'a ol local l8328lfteb.642-235fi rabinetry design. f'ree cntfiin1Dlhjp 16 )'l"lf in ml.n& (2 Ua}f)t; mo1 Sl8 HOUSE? Call OIJ1gham ref1. 645-8512 eat. Heritage lutcbens . tin'ti 1.Jc'd Mr Palom M wllJ:/mo Cle•n up, .Girt f~t'llt MS-51.23 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ InL Pa&nt & wallpaper. 661-0428 Bob. ,,....Service ··~···················· Low C06l typing of adcn- tlcal original letters on your letterhe ad. Free in· ro. Kann. 1s1.Q83 ---- bo -~14 Iii.Ni a~~-••tfw"dlis.t.co ,_ .. ..,. Qual. work, reas . pr. 0-..._..-_-,-.---.,...--l-C.,..~ G1 I lllSer\rkn "JUST us·· hou.seelean Specialitlng In auto 6 ....................... t'reetlil.Steve 547"'281 ....,.,..,.....,ung, no r"' 00 ••-••••••••••••••••••• De&lp. remod.:linac. i.dd1 l.ng. We're hooeet" efll· homeowner coverages. "Movin& Out 6 About"" sml or big. Root repairs $1.17 per DAY • ..__ 1 t ••••••••••••••••••••••• deot.Call873-0163. ..-... ._ "Don't Delai· Call To fmeext.erPainUng by R & w a t e rproo f1nR Shampoo ti &team clei.n ~· new COC\ll rue 10fl _,,_ S48--0512 Cob' bnlhteners; wht Uc d. 640-7020. 9S •9iia. FIXIT• Walb, celling.e. flooni & IM. Assoc., htc. day" LocaJ s~te·wtde Slnor. St. lie., in.I. Try --------'lb.al'• ALL you pay fora rpU 10 min bleacb <.:le•n Bedrtcd Carpenter, p•lnlln fi WUldowa cleaned 67S.0562 ~24 hrs. 7 days me.836-SSS5?.4hn. Remodeling layout de · llv , din rm, hall SU. Avll ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rea&. rat.et. 15 yri. n 646-6145 CUstom hou.sepainting. 12 Signs. Res. comm, & of. 30da)' ad lnthe nn '7.50, coucb $10, chr F.l.'"',_..JCIAN p d l&f'r.I 548-1752 ---Werior°"'91 Moving & h a ulin g . yni exp. NB/CM aru. lke.493-3089 S5 Guer ellm pet odor CA, .. , nee t'ORSALE W1Jlclcan thoroughly. Ex ••••••••••••••••••••••• Freight, bldg materials. rm small. prices a re --------- Cpl ~ir IS yrs e x pr nght·free estlmat\! on C 0 N S T K u CT 1 0 N J)erienced. Keliable.'call CUstom Paint, d~a riea, tahld goods etc. Lowe11t 11u.ll. 675-3014 ......... Do ~o .... m· ""'elf RelQ lq eorarnall jobli. J an.548·542'7 l " :.u_ ... _ ww s tile t I t J h ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. ~" ~.. · • ucensed 673.0359 ~'TAKES ....,,..., · ' • r a es n own ° n PAJNTTNG 531-0101 " -~ __ 23IC..bnllo,CM MRSt CLEANMAKES IT paper,st~,~rpet,lic 956-2M4 •-....... or. ex• .. n'or, ""'m· Rep111r & Re roo(. All DAILY PILOT SEIVICE llRECTORY O&rpet Mill dtrect. Wood a • _._.....c 548·1444 CL.EEM . bach, apts. tt Moving Sale: 24th & 2Sth. merclal & re11dent1al. rockshakes·compo-t a I....... d ........ ......_. ...,.,...,.,.,. uM:J"• "" .. v t 'I p es . s b 1 n g I es{ lloonffa qu.aUty install•· ~11174 Whrt md 5,o.t. hornet. s.9-9372 Jntori.. F\Jrn., appUances, CB 645-21678 Free ~t. 541-5930 F1 lJOn -rt'all56-043S Quiet s witches & new ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• 2 reliable wo men will -••••••••••••••••••••• equap. 6802 Relhorford. Elc,p p&111t.uut. reasonable Avail ------- plup u:iatalled. $2.50 ea . 5" Alwrunum seamless-ck!an YOW' home. f:lfl. OHi ce. Indu s t r l a I. H.B. :Goldenwest & Ed rates Ava ilable now ! tte roof " rc pa1 r. Al I DO IT NOW ! Tite fut.est draw in t.b CaJl Bpb 751·9529 bU.edooenamel·Cwitom oently, reaaon. Cell free rest a urant & ho m e ~ CaJIBnace .543-2045 types Lic 'd .. Work Weit .. a Dally Pll made on job. 542-&.at2or est..64Ul74 <Lynd•_) _ cleanlne. Refs. Lic/bon Ftnd what you want In aua r an t eed . 24 h r 642-5671 au.med Ad. &f2..S678 Waat Ada Cell 6'2·5678 SS'l·SD Clauiftf!d Ada 642-5678 ded/lna. 562·5166 O.Oy PUol Classifieds.:..._ Want Ad Help? &&2·5678 642-9496 ~~ ..... ~~-~. ~~ ..... !~.~~ ~-~~ ... ~~-~~ Maio:JI'" , ..... 5035 ~.~.~ ...... ~?.~~ ~;::e ......... !~.~~ ~~~ ..... ?!~ ~~~ ..... ?!~ ~~~ ..... ?!.~~ Deluxe med1u l 11ultel Will remodel lo l ull le· Fem Sehl teacher nda yr ••••••••••••••••••••••• c-...... , GIRL APT MANAGER l{rOUnd nr., Corona de n11nt Up to 1500 sq. ft. md apt on Bal 111 under LOST : Young fe male ~'" For $5 unill in Costa Mar llt'alonomlcaCorp. Good l>utlneaa are.. DlO Call646-496t. LOWEST s~pberd mix. 23rd & •ESCORTS * Mesa. Exper'd couple. 67S4700 From $376. Call Sandra S Sarila Ana. C.M. Sal. Husband must have ----------1 673-Q62 ml a pl or house, nr .....,......... J.17. 631~ alt. OPM Hrs 957-8474 mai..Dt. exr. Wife bkkpg 2$C).$00 sq rt. 0Hlce1. · Superior Ave, CM. S200 htT.D.'a..t.o 546-8560 before 5l'M . -24--·----exp Cal 642·5073 o r From SJ~ Ind uUI. Office space · Newport incl. utU. 646-5854 MT.D. &.o.a. Julie. A GD. looking, educated (213>865-3851. W. L9lb St.~22JOO. Center . Larae om ce FalrftltTermttlnce 1949 Lo8l: Pearl bracelet. 3 w/guy-New to Ca seeks --.,,,--.-MAHA---.. -.--S- ---H w /v le w , r ecept.. a 1• IM/lrrt"t/ SattlerMtc).Co. strands. Vic: Aladdin, fe male 17·22 yrs. for CZ':~~~-;~oi;, u~t~rn"'sr. ~ewi.!~w~ndni.! ucmalel A • c:• 642-1171 545-0611 WUd.roee or St. Olaf's meaningfuJ rclaUoo.shlp CoAd~t·~-~~ i'::'::Ji~1!2 ,,__ Cll I .,...,.,e '"' "' ... ••••••••••••••••••••••• Churc h on Saturday. lf ~are a culle under ....... VI"" 2·rm o ce a va1 . 7:59-0215. ard 5'2 ', slim, a loving girl. Office mamt.eoance ex-SH0. 96().1558. ...Inns ~ AVAii.AiLE Rew •840·l8S2. but serious Call (Don) perreqwred.545-1006 JD> IQ ft. looking over ~P ISilfwlltr 5005 2NDTD LOANS LOST: Black dog, turning ~11172eves. C/M ON THE Laguna, underground •••• •••••••••••••••••• SWJNG LOANS gray. Mixed Hea1ile . APT MANAGER for 13 parklnit. Nf'w r arpet. AUTOMOTIVI INTEREST ONLY AnAwers to Gigi. Vic. •FOXY LADY* oc-w 2 .Bdrm, 2 ba units · WATER! draJ)e5 & pi.int .. air cond. fUlly eqwpped vw re· LOANS AVAii.. 0 151 e r & 0 r e g 0 n . OUTCALL ONLY DutieK · Rent urul.8. col· PLUSH SUITES ~J L86M7·5870 conditioning buiineas. David P. Carey & Aasoc Reward! 546-9291 lect rents, litr main· 3.'!0to l.300 aq.ft NEWPORT BEACH 600 8ody-pa1nl·mcch up· R.E.Brollcr,960-1957 •972-1138• ~Compens L'l Sl.50 ,..._tkVlewt sq fl, 3 blks lo O.C hols tery-puta . Fully l..A)ST: Grey 6 mos. old ,..._..Senkff5l60 per month rent red uc· Wet Ban a irport. acrou fro m scheduh-d 8 wka ahead . .tau c•c••llh/ Welmarane r . Fe m ........................ tion.Call640-Sl l2,aRcnl • 1..._ .._.__..__ Shenton. $465 mo. Sharp ~ reqwred 839~ _ r.. •••I B e a c b It fl e I I . .._ --i a .-..a & -.:........1 REWARD! 847-04452 v~ Uptta rt fronl W/hte RllJTAURANT/CKTLS ._ ~ -....... balcony, pvt ba, A/C. •Laguna on hwy, t eals ••••••••••••••••••••••• * UW.AllD * Newport 615-8662 4321 Birch St, Suite 200. 145. •Newr;:rt by the t H u ••Rh 5100 --K lnve1tment.t 754 7900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• for lost male Irish Seller. SJllO Ue. Office•ttore, 480 • • waler S1 5,000 F . P . l~yr. Lost In Capistrano ft, A/C 17~J Beach Bl, kh'M...... 4450 .c>ranae Aojel Stadium, POSTAL BOX RENTALS Bch area for 21!. wk.s. No llB. LEASE842·2.83C. •-•••••••••••••••••••• 90.000mo,1eal8 210. Private, Conve nient. tap. Pleue caU James i--------•I All. 7Sl-1400 1548 Adams1 CM. Aak 4Q3..-0665 ~ .. "S MIU about lntroauct. otrer . PIUMELOCATION NJll~L:c;~.A~!.,n~~: Call73MS85. P'OUND: watch.,dSo. cl,•l. on WATER. Avtllable lady. E xcellent area . Notice 11 hereby given !:!!~~~ ent Y wr s TCL 1rr BLDG tH Wl'UH 1 UI Al H . , ... ' .. Exciting ENTERTAIN- MENT by S t eve Schreiner . Dianeyland Ma1lcian tinc e 1965 ~c and Comedy for all a1tes. For Info. call 539·2444 , 539-541 5 , 534--7312. ·=-= ••••••••••••••••••••••• forrdAllorfrolKtlOHI Owner moving. Agl. that The Sawduat otnce.. Toe.a of 3000 sq 751·1400 Fe!ltlvaJ Corp. P 0 . Box Found Ma I am u le (or ,,. W..ted. 7075 d lded I ·-~ La .. A h Ca H k ? f I ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ,,11 Mr linwd"l 1,45 t.;101 ft. Caa be iv nto WA N T E 0 B U S ""'"• Laguna ...,ac . . u a y ) em a e smaller unlta. Drive by · · baa filed an appUcal1on 6 45-1508 / 644 . 3 6 5 6 Hardworking respon 16 yr m:sw C.OUtHwy NB PARTNERlorFantat tlc with the So. Coast N.B.AnimalSheltcr oldmalutudentndaP/T tbencail ' ' Jewelry ~lneul ! ! Will Reclonal Commlulon work. CM. Pref food ln· w.._.,_..._, =r ~~~~ ~~sir~! for a temporary arts & ~ !,~'!.C:1.r;:i ~e: d~try.CallS48·S282. 631·1400 market I Need craf\aman cralll exhibit. r ermlt 645·1508/644·3656 N, 8 Hlfp W..t.d 7100 ARa.TECTURAL Profed Arc.Wtedt .w.c., ..... Well eltabUahed Oran1te OJunty firm wtth 1tron1t design & advanced pro- ducUon syatems orienta- tion offers perma nent poelUonA w /xlnt benellta • opportunltles for ad· vaocemeat. Ml.namum 3 )Tl • experience In Type I arm HaiPITALS. COM MER C IAL R.ECREATION. ........ OpealRIJS O..LRowt.d &AuocW...htc. 776-1150,Ala .. alM ---__ _,. _________ , larrullar w/silver·work, #A'790043 . AnJmalShellcr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• metal a. H ml·preclou!I scnau •(JS Accounlfl Payable •A reliable person needed •CDMSUITU• <lwm1.n1 32$ aq fl off k t> • ...,. wllh vel')' aurac tive new wallpaper wtltt.e abutt.en. Mutt se to•~•t.e. S275/mo. For st.on! & officupace at lt.OQeJ. Call: MS-6427, or IUUlt1. f' o u n d : 8 I k m n I e Trainee, Irvine . unmed for stripping rum tellOft•bAerat.ea. write Ad W4B!i, c /o The Cockapoo 3/18/79. Vic: 979-M&O & miac. jobs Cdays> Call PLUS prtllt.llS<M a detk apa qui« offk'e aul~. plua ~pin old Cd <.-harm, ceoltaJI.)' loc:a wtth beautlfuJ larce tWl ny in.mdeck, oceaJa1lde CoMt Hwy. WUI mak ~t COl1). office. !MIO • tt. Only 1386/mo. aoe•SUA&.TY 671-HI I ~': ~=h':· ~lev!:l~~:.yCISattslcfledM. ANSWERS M:Zt8C:1a:ro:~.~~~~t _________ , ~r c.~~ am . 4 pm . PLAZA .... ... • · · Wlndow -Truly lar.963-3663alt.er3pm. Accountlna 1.52.SM Vnt p; C M 91!1627. n1er-Forger -MMIZJ° · ' U your tnt In • v~ing JTOROW f'ow)d: Blk Lab, M.: aP.· ---------1 11e, call ue. We'll eave As the polUlclan tald. "I prox l yr, vie. 18th St. HAllOl l&.VD. 'JOU '6IX> by 1ellinl you never promlted )'Ou • H.B. 53M74't ,Jf .... 5p .... _,.,, rose garden, Just the ---------81.onJOdO +"' lce,1450 ours ..... m,_.._,,. stuff that m akes IT Found: In Turtle rockl ;a ft. kUI . ._ Pett mo. WM C.... GROW... Jo'em. 1JE hr Tortoise Shel .87$-8700 l..AOUNA BEACH c.-....a Cat.915&-2:189 Orew9• CoHty '=Mariner'• Mlle. TutlncUcenae. ..--SISO FOUND Y" fire •nant la j tf Alld '° b ....................... ft ~ __. DOl'l IQ fl at.ore or Unique bu1lne111, lg grey 1trlp t ger cat. ......., otn~. -..C Avon. LOW poten\lal. 185,000 ReUrtld An1ela llClllOn Me a a Ve rde Arc a . W••r. --.zut-·7001 ticket holder d eslree -· ,_.. •• ' abate ndee to ar lrom 557.-... ASSIMILIR For pressure lns tru· rnt'nl.t. Small co. Local are.. NaluraJ destenty • auentioo to detail nee. Call s.w-0250. A S SEMBLER S - Sailboat. We will lraln. SS p e r hr & up . MacGreeor Yachts. 1631 Plarenua. C.M. O.bysllt.er. 3 dya pr wk. Beauty operator needed for 15 mo o ld boy. wuna Beach area with ~2825 folfowing. Commission Babysitter ne'lded to babyaal al my house. Ref't & d ependable 892-01.81 eves. Partnendup l)0551ble, no 1nvelitment nece10sary 499-3831. ----- BEAUTY SHOP Booth for rent. J ack·, Ba.byaru.erneeded, Infant, Hair F1uh1 ons . (;M 5 dys. my home. Non-549-l8JI smkr. Refs. 770-0927. -------- Beauty Operator Babysitter for 6 m Ofi old HAIRDllSSlll girl. 11·2. My home pre (<'f'l"ed. Fat.rview/Baker ~ Manll'urisl needed 567·3:567 sea Mist H 1ursty hn ~ llSU282HB Babysitter · Start 3-27 to oa.i..-•·ic Contr ct. . &14. T ues & Thurs. 8-1 ..... .,. · • a 1ni: My home 673-6955 preferred . C. M. area 548.-564.3 Ullnklng Blueprint.er needed. f ul I f/TTB.&.B tame, In a sma ll but requir ed . Southwest J rowlng shop . Hunt Bank. Laguna Beach. tngtoo Beach Bluepnot cau Joan. 497-177 L ~29216 ---------1.1 ANKJ NG IOC*ll--F /C DPIRllMCB) Pol. w/prom. F.l. R.E TIU.lllS Invest. firm. Xlnt oppty sourHCOAST for exp. & m alu rt• NATION AL BANK person. Ca 11640-0123 An Lndependeot Baok 848 Sunllower St. Bookkeeper· E xperieuced. C-Osta Mesa R.eoe Boubque 714/S40-S300 Laaima Beach 484-5485 BanldnR IOOfO(-· Ii TB I FRS NOfl•YY MGI-, Part tame nJghta 6 Satur for busy rea~ estatr •'! duy al our South Coast vestment office nr 0 (_ Plaza branch. Please Airport Call 979·853.I oil Ralph K.innmgs at anytime for more in· S40-t0&6, 3333 Bnat.ol St. I fonna_t_lon_. __ _ Coilta Mesa. 9262.6 ...... / .... ..a..... Suturday only at o ur ••11-nper AIRV CoatM Mesa Bra n ch Chev. dlr. will add on Please call Georgt' clerka for hshl book· Wagner al 546-2300. 2700 keeping, 1n 1ng. Part Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa tJme or lull·time. Wiii 113626 traiD In auto. accounting. f"'1J tame new accounts OMV Interesting. for our Coeta Mesa o<-Pl('asanl s urroundings. rice. Pleue call Georse Opp. for advancement. Wagner at 546-2300. 2700 SeeOffke Mgr. Harbor Blvd . Co s ta HOWAJU>Clle•rold Meta, 9al211. Dove & Quail Sts. c.lf, ,_.,... Nf:WPORT BEACH s..Mtt & Lo. BOY l&-17 years. muat be '-9al Opp II twWty ub&e t.o work wkdys J -6, ......,,_ M/F jtO()d 111~~2102 _ S. J. CAPISTRANO 600 gamea.CM557-~ Co 11 1 e O er man llGllaRW' 11111.1''9 4'1111•larT ...... i --------• aq.ft.1t.ore,2 bllta.No.of -Lolf----&-,.....-----5-1-0-0 Shepherd/Lab 4 mo•. Orange Co Mfa of elec cabinel maker w/lns t. ~-Sq.-. ~o. Cott Mitlkln.8'76-0176 ....................... had 3 aboU & booster. accoun1mn'5 trot mechanical pro · A .... i.... e.xp., 963-0S~ dys. or ~·v r~.., Needs good ho m e "' duct.s,ls11eekin°lraineeJ> ....,......_ ,..,.,.....,.. eaa . ...,., nc . u .kw --R.OWRS & GlfTS 640-8720 daya. 55'1 4814 for day & t WUI« shift, to ""'""~ " M ........ I I \II ............. •.-..&.-ll 4500 .. ~ .a.y10 .... s ,._-__ ....... ev_._. __ _ A/C.Tom,S..2200• Cr.,°',OOOyr.1dlrm1 eves. There are m1ny ne auem ble ('l('ctronlc ladultnal llCIO to 1800 aq f\ ....... FOUND ADS --------firms moving Into lb swftches & displays Xlot OFFICER CAILITY ~:.~.:x'un'?~r~· ~molf~~~ewi><>rt. ~H20US1 E Lott: 7 yr old blk ._ bm Oran1e County are co. bencf1U1. Apply In A career position is So. H.B. location. ldea _...,. __ 1...;.._______ -Marcil • 10-5 ID£ FREE SUuneae. N1med Sebos· =1~: ~:::~ r~ !~ penon. available In our Costa SYSTIMSncH Mln 2 'ftl ex per req 'd. for Jo'/UJJ'le Tech to provide preveaUve 6 corrective mBml on ~ATV system. Xlnt benel11.H. Apply : rul utale office "Art.lat.r)'loFlowera" M tian .. REWARD. Pia call perlenced Accounllo Mu tenSpeclaJty Me11a branch which of. ..... WANTED , ~JunAli•c,•,a,IPl ... ~a:·ony. c..aL _MU38 __ 1 ______ and Data Proce u ln lMOMonrovla.C.M. (en M desirable, warm .._ .. "-• ~ • _. .. p 1 M working atmoaphe re Jnduttrial apace with premlaee.751-1400, .a..a.1671 ,.,._; .. ern. UIJ, lan, blk penoNle · Auls taot anage r . 'the lndlvldual we seek e&ec. fr water 20 x 40 In 581-1.IOlSundt'/ --face/ears . Scare d of f1brl c1, experience t1hould bave 3_. years ...... your offlc. n.. CO.ta Mesa or Irvine........ ~~~~~~~~~ lt«m.Reward.S.·'7115 CPA'S neceuary.~ Snlnl• " Loan ex· )N' boM. lharp decor ~m 4t4·a4'7 !vet 6 ......... IOIOI-FOUND: M. COCKIR Mdltws AUTOCOMTIACTS pertencelncl\ldina l year THI llVIMI CO um Camelbatk lrvlne 640.9010 ser_~_~omputer · ....................... lclltor P'omad • r:!' Call dot. BUs~. 8tltr bind T•MH•1twta Beach area dealer needs •;-:rv\aory experl:l'cT; ~-=--Mnlce avail,~ 1111J.8-tft M .~~~· 8"da model 11)1 eletlrtc ~..? .. '.:e·~~ t~a,:;e .... Oc. u. H.S.84'7 .. UI c.tAccu lwt1 df!pendablc alrl with ~u = l:te~l'ftfe<t. In CARPENTER-Flni:ch _.. --1e1 . ...u.... CMll ......... lt'71, auto. --. -I • Found larJ• Mt or keya. Sr. Ace•••-· OMV e.xpenence. Phone JomlnC our procresslve formaj remodelinl . Call new bld1, A /C olfc, .... tax butt.oft. '900. L.ldMt.Uwrs.tkowatch Balboa Ptninaula. 3.11. l11LL11~ra Mary49'-ll31. and crowtlll Savmas • K!4m BURR WHIH: 5UALTOR INC.. lo 1'> 41.JO h'oGU 00 Moulton,°'__. loltdownt.ownHB.area 175-1941 Ac1Ltlqe""9 Auto Mechanics. All =eaae callThomas · IAM rcnet, a. ... by .. e • 3/lA. CaJJUl-9500 ---------CAil WASH HILP OWDar ... ,.., hi·•-FOUND: l rlah Setter, DtN~ cate1orle. Ford ex · · (714 )97f.....,10. ... A_ II l d °Ml lsaltif. 1011 Lott· REWAID · Y111 N s. Bria\01 6 Rea KjP()plr .... a pertwe pttlerred Top f'\dl,,PatVfime __,... 1ma n ut\rlll Mff(J ...... , ......... 4ol'Weilaft £11thound, Hll\. CM. 979.1965 , pay plaatr benefll11.See Wc!otrer "uchbenelitaa1 l.UrOvt>r bulldln1. Weal Coata l«>lllOWNEU Ible &oat.,.... La p11 __, u ._,are not aware of iervfce mir. Phil Loni( aroup m e d ica l In · METRO CAR WASH ,..._ lrff. About 700 aq P\a JOUr _,., to ~ r * 'NI Sii ' J-,J I Ford I n i n e Auto euranc.-e.1rouplon1wrm 21150 HarborBl,CM It. ?U/U&·UU or tatblamw wo •• :.4krJe .• ;;. irey _F_O_U_N_D_:_S_e_a_r_t _P_k_•· ~ :,,~0~ n: ~:,..SIM. diaabWty, •S:OUP Ille In· rMIM!ll.,.tlMll..... 1 ..... 1l&wt a.21-79. PlelN ldeftU(y. ~ij';;~l\uaat;.,.~ew MJ'ro.METALMANM/f' llUl'W.,paldreUrement c=.o&~: i~~=~u~ i.e.. ~ ,...,. houH SISO REWARD fort.be re· Vi c Buaba rd • r . V. locaUon. We wlll be hap· Le. clean, very but )' plan. t tock purcbaH, eS'llon over 26 for our mdoaatanuttoll .. lait. tllrft ol mtHl•• do1a. 714-87..,., PJIOcl1ac\laaltwitb10... thop own tool• 50% andfrMpartinl. coau Meu branc h WW -SLI0,000 Ulla MiMlal from Humane • 111 IJIO Weare•aa.ct lnlbe· ' ' aeon. Mln~n ex~r. 'I • ir w t t h 8 0 c I • ' , . v I c • ,. • I • comm, -.......wooD Cleb6er', 11 • o(c •ooo+pat•l'•I 11)% PCH/N••land. Hunt. _................. OOUJWICLLBANKl:R t.arryRtatAut.oCtr. ~·.... a Oood~/fl Uft:ll. ==rL~ .... .,.~· =..:.~4~.·::.~= '==~~~r BUJLDINO ::i::.--.~.:.":; SAVINGS & ~. br.,.1,Tn~e ~. --·· oa ••t1t . &1rJ..:.:on Oukallt-l,•·1111 &ua&el300 --LO•...a "' ...,..... omn 1,. .--------• .._ = _.... ,_ •----------No. Broedw11 "'" 1111Ntno11 Blv • eo.u IMA.Onw ......... 4600 · ••·-,. ICI••--S..UADI Au&omoblle Contnct • J.MOAdamsAve ....._ld.1m. __ .,... 11111111111••H•H••• .......... .._ 1111 ~ ... &aa tolor. It • • 1714111MIOJ OMV t&en. Eaperteoce OlllUll ... CA ... ...... ... &bl .. , "9M1, ...... ,......... ............. ........ •0.. .. ,, --, ..... ._. C!.yft..alnt wa1u 6 CAIHIJ:R, T~ tt ~~· •· •or. DI t601 la eurf''' I•· • .--:::::P EQual~·-.. .n-1 ,... ..._'i:":l!'~ ... :..;:' ·••k• o•• _/NEED ..... t.11. , ... , ·"· UAll..aAll ... ,, ... ~~~~-~~~~1 ... · .. llr. 8pottt ~;."'' ;;;.,-:.... • r:':~~ r . '"'.I:' ... °"UE:'&.I: 'I( ~ ·~ UllDAHICKI ________ , BARWICKlllPORTB --lllHIOtl Viejo brantb ""*M-. -. -:s ...._ rau~· a... ..... ~ ~·:z~~:U AUrOPAITI Baltmder-•..,..... .......... •,,. .. ,.,. -:...~--=· i.r:-3::. ./MONEY =-~-or ew':.'lE=-eo. ~, <:e,: :"~:: .... ~--=~i ~si~'!a~~~~ ~ ... --. -. ' Lall: ... P'••· OOtw --------..,a....,. buaa... la ....,.._.,ll.ibenU lutb waltr11lft. Sa· ~ 111..-Vie· M ......_ aMI a& W.~ ---~-,...----• • aa. ""' ....,..., bl• MAll,el ::~.I for U•ot• I•· ... ~ ,.,:r~,· ,.::'~..;.!':& jo.-.otn. :::u:o~.=;. ,..,tz..~= ..... .,,r-..... t1••MO•• .-:·.:r1v~~ ...... --• · -1a:.1;7. MOTICI Cftll :,: C: =-== i'Wi.:; llCom 1~·~-~-~-~~~I !..9-~~:: I:' f!...~~ Hwat. f:. '!:' g.,a.=~ ~-· i\SE~ ~~'\: -·-·-·-----°i.':ii' F'""e Ta'.:::;:;~,~ ~.wJ ..,.-:=.:... ==·~~'i* ~ ·r.r• .......... W•IW . cau Caro . =OWN TOOLS, LPUotctw&n_.Ad. ='.;tHlh. it ou iliiiiiim.1.ia;;;i=:=======:J.;i==i=::===-=~==::::;:::======J-==-----.;=------.. ....... i:=. • t •• . . ,. .... . .... l ... -.. . . W..te4 7100 ..... W.... 7100 Tiu!dl!y.~hZ2.1119 DAILYN.01' Q w..-. 71 ~W..t.4 71 '~?.~·• 7tOO ~Wmlls• ?!~ ~ ......................................... ~w:-&.....11 710 ~w..._, 7100 W..eM 7100 -.......... ~........... ........_~,,.. -0 •••••••• ................... .................. .. ...... ........ .................. . ............................... . c.llW•...._., pt·U.• anu •AM•U ~ ~~~ HIKPG PORTUER.,:: ----'~ .._ t -_, kbool teacber. Production worker Reeeptionlat, N.PTB. boat • -.turtimmed. AJ>PlY ,.. PQ, medical la .,..,._. .,... b 1 Mldait•·•·a&am. •--r •· ..-ma. COiia 11... Deeded for labOrat.ory. tne bulilMu. now . . Ila,..... at""'° GU)'• 0.. •tit te•porary '""'~-• paid vau couat• P•~ .. • • M•f Call for appt ........... fer llUMu _ _,.. Experienced pref. but n aummer laeludu hillh.a.11 mJf'airYW• fara~.wMuNI uw. Muat bve o-" ~ ot _ • .., • ....., eirt• ......_.~ ..... 1 TJ0. .. 1 .-...m caue.u.1100 MC.II ' dout >'OU· l••odlat• · WUI "• A 1 ta1 full beneflta. 1 • be able to 111adaiaitt pre. ~ s.1es .... Prr. notoeceaa.ry. •-------· ---~ . _..-top PQ. Call for ~rtH to u3'fPl ~.I.Al lkb. tlO'l"D.llllbt• ... "-·••· ~'*'8from_Jr{nta, aMliavemllaimumlyr PRODUCTION 81£EPJ10NlSTw~~· QIMilr, Ptr ......... pr -~..... IWt.lal .....,. Aaa Aak ,. .,..., ..... NCR llO, ~ • ~•rbal In· HperlHee. Appl)' In TRAINEE CllMDlnc female, f&ICllQ• wl.-' be a•allable ,_ 111 ..... I fialrKft ... art. . OENDA.LOFFICE t....a 9Pft!al. ADDb 1truttloa. Apply in penca. Uo,d't Nttnery Rubber hole prod~ta. iJT11wp. Applybyull· worl..C_... APPIJ w 8~ ffi · .... I ....._ -0 -P'raller rruer:s.n .....-: • Laadecape. 2038 Irvine area. Muat PH• i... Siie at John Wayne .,.._ Uo1d'• !lf~0 ~ O Ce • Drhw ....,: ~ ~ • 1 •a-_,.._... N . •v S:...te IH. 115 W · ....... ~laity Newport Bl. Cll. M&-7441 company physical ID· T:..Club~. It Ludaupe. JOH overload r"° wtt.111 ••· del.lv., :zmt:,»~p.~bt:•'j: A~lltplaadlta.&C. -~.C.M. f 11 eluding back a ·ra)'. RECEPTIONIST ~ Bl.CM.M&-l"'l \QI Plll*S to Hrrien well 1roomed Xlat _ ___.__. --NurMl"1 Hletman, u 567638. E.O.E. .__._ exper required. XJat part Ome Mk-om• ad u...t&Mnera -'• ltlidl. •llPIY .. ~ Inn at t l me M u s t b a v e ..-.-Caab ltr Part Tl f f' WHtmlHttr Huet' oportlllUly for ~ llUlllhavecar. La1ua. JU N. Coast minimum l yr ex· Qualified Conetructlon t y p In I 5 S w Pm Restaurant Mon· rl CXXXTAJI.. WAIT1lESS-i Ruc h Snt'• Ana 1D1111 Compan~!m · $4f.93'72 '!"r·Laluu •~h perlence. Apply in auperinuadent. Apply at +eakWalor. Small firm U·J :»pm Jaclllrvlne niObPff'WMk_orevel')' Heral~ E•amlnu. C.Uforlnterv. · . t . . penon.Lioyd'aN.anery BartonDevelopmentCo. w /1ood growth OullhoUle. 714.7300 oth.r weOead •·t2 l6tGI book HouNUeper w/ear. x Mai41. ADDly ln penon. ai Landtcape. 2038 17401 ML Cliffwood Cir. poealbllitles for right -Pnv!te Club. O~'H 21 o-nl office. lue .. . per only. Refereocea. Surf N'Sand Hotel, NewpartBI CllMl-7'41 FV 12708. S.0·4531. perton, Costa Mesa CASKIER·F\&U lime, ~· ~ =· ·~-'bOH PWdee.alll.,.7tZll '---8Hch. U$I s . Relwnerequeated. AeMecallM2·1ll3 per. Must hav~ ba It •fllS ty. . o.tltwy. NURSEAJDES7am .. apm . ~=;;..;_-=-----1...:..::.:=::..;.;:.;,;__...;_ __ plaoto oxper.Pboto CiiWJIW......_ Menorwocnen ~yrsor HQUSEKEgPER ·Sd•Y• ~orcerUfied. R.&Dt.ate ReceDtioaiatTypitt -Uolmll..,, I ...... -. KMw , .. ,..., l'CllBll •-· 11.t'•-· --ff "r br. lleH MAHM•41MT Law firm . ~ 8Nie981vd H tl. di.-Ncit SllO a__. or ....,.. ~ ~. full Ume. v_. c.v. Hoep. •1 .. .._..,... Be.ich. Pleuut -;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ ~, ... ~~~m~:t more. Oru,• Cont OfflCE ~-alilOputt.l.me • ..-. Olmla',eo.taM... ·~ ~ty 6 typ· • ..,.,.. ~"''-Yellow C.b, TaOO lfL ~---~ n___.. pro. 1ft1. Salary open Seod l'~llOS ....._ 7'1•9* HerrmaH, r ou.tah' The o.-a.p CeNt DaU.J U--. ...... &o tMt Mmds ....... I dap a OffieeProeotloD sram demand \aleftted n!IWM &o M27.' Daily WU c------Oflla Valley <No of Slater Nat 111M M lam.d ..... weotlllut.muatallo .._SeedilfMo&el. tf911pieeeededforPtr new leeden. New com· PUot.P0Box1*,Costa ~' llllll b• t w ra Na• ho pe • = iD ow Claullled '-P 11M " coolt meall ..,... '-WY oftlee promo-mi8lioft 1ptiL Our people ..... ea. am U"olru UIMrtt Day 1blft. I.all timed Ewlid> mat fw a full . for N.B. couple. M~ft MANAGER for daUdreea tiaa-wart for Sberaton earn over twice Ute ln· _ __..._,./ Ull .,.. I .J ps"ID&MOl. £aftr ~ cu. ,_.... I>uUa ln· i.w eqis. Sat/Su """ · So Nlwport Hotel. ~-per ct..try averqe. Call Guy ~ 1 ""'"'~, •• ,...._,. APP4' lill•__.,.,. __ 1 dldtlO~adder.flle1 Xllatpa,aeeordiae&oex· ~~·~og' bour. No exper nee. DWow.~11 _...,...Y 0paii1np DOW available peraoa. betwe e n ---~-aad li&e typiD1. Some per. Call Tammy at ~"-:~aee ui Hours avaU: t-1, 1·S & ._... ,. for fUJf aDd part·Ume aoa.1.Pm.ao MP'O ,..... ot NaUoeaJ trade ~ experience -.an WHlt----.MeemHry. u . Mk fOf' Miu Layton, For front otnce. Typlng ~l:'."."N:"e~,te~ =,yAw.H.B. ~~~~o"e:o~u!:~ belpful but not 1t••1AT1 Call $49·1411 for ln· frollldelt.~~· RealFAute ~.=~~~:~ti~: neeeaury. we train. <W/Btadl,S/Garfield) data for In-depth (~ ::':!7at:-1:frb ~~: PAITTIMI temewaPpt-~Pl.::l.t:'eM.i poUltment. SWt at SS per hour. ad· Equ.al()ppor Emplyer t.o) markelin& artlclH. perimce. Excellent com a.LOYMINf M.ANDARIN CHINESE llrdL ' ~~j;iiiiii;;ijiiiiii;j;iiiiii;;iiiiiiii;' vwemenl oppo .. unlly Will do telephone 10· pany ......... Por In· SANa.£11ENTE OOOK.w/atleaat!yrex. fi!rlof -... ,.,. REALESTATESALES RECEPTfTYPIST l'ormanapmentposltlon tervtews,surveystudlea. terview,pleuecall: 11'e DAILY PILOT la G:".S750mo.40brwk.W . .._ on ~lephone lite Ucensedorwe wllltrain Prestigious local firm ~~n!t. i:: i!'t~~~,.~ COMPUTER ~cte :.~i:r r :dTt Personnel Of~ l'CmOlidatiD&. tubatan· J'• ~:re:· « accurate typing t~~i~~d 1!~::/·~:ai has entry level position go &oat.ore 36, Mond11y submit ted articles. ~-Gl,ext. Ual put of it.a diltribu· 1De. JlllZS " ·• eoutructlon exp pre· • -805 7 Apromotablespot. 9am-l,pcn: oprnATOR Should have 2 yrs work· ~COAST ticmlatopaft: routes re· C.M. (714)"2-7112 fa'Ted. Permanent poel· CauseyftCo.494 IrvtnePenonnelA.tency •G&enneyre tft tng experience. Salary: DAILY PILOT ~wring a ternoon deci ~Ptr&odevelop tlon. Hl·'225 btwn eE17th,Costa642es~0 Bdl.,04·1ZSS w. _.. ....... • ._ start~. lrvlne loca· aW.BaySt. ~~otorlae aaleafrc:ilficeprocedurea ..: .. :..:10~:3D~·------SWteZM ·H ~~~~~E~m~pk>~ye~r~ •ti•llllwlltaaf ..... I ~Bo~~':v"u,~~. eos;~llDit •Liberal income al· ::.S~~-=co.re· Order DeU·bus)'. Heavy llCll.._CURI = ••-rte.c• oa ....,13 J:qual Y lowaaoe plus bonua plan · pbooea typing req 'd. l'\al1 time. retaU clothing ~t 0 111•e11w--. ..... --· Em tr o6bort wortdnl boun (7 L 5 rt Oood memory nee atott. £aperieoce pre· TIA.It& .;;.,.. u. ctaemlcal re Cl•.!:!_ c ... fledron.lc T~hnlcian . dayapel'week) ....... , ... , Beoefita, ulary open: f9'T'ed. W-a..11 train. Hours Fun spol for l ndi v llally IU5 &oatart. De ~JI or d :" f\Al.IUme.Salaryopen. OENERALOJl'FICE •£1ceUent partUme iD· Mlttion Vlejo Fabric 8:31»:30, Mon th.ru Fri. w:=n& personality lllllllltabU\.. flilbac u ' If 556-2112 Come won temporary For det~ contact Noexperieaceaeceuary Wbol9aier'. no.211122. l~Call~N~ancy~~~·su.~wr~o~.~~I ~:.~=:it"~~: d1• 1W3 Cll' won ex/:i M-,........ for a compuy who cares l'blter Ouellet 4M eaoo We wlll train you to Pwt time. M /F, willing tor ing. Sta llity a must. w/cbem eala belp ul ELECTRONIC AS· about you. lmmedlete between e :3oAM ·7PM. maketeiepbooe appoint· 'Mrtbard,aomeknldgof Receptionist/Sec'y, front Very friend I>' c o · E .0 .£. '714 /S0· 328 1"h h • 900CI c_..... SDl)ll.ERS needed Im· work-top pay. Call for M·F. menta with tM.111.nea ex· sourqaet cookware. olface Metzleur, Skelton! wonen. xlftt ratses & _Nl_ICllt=---_Slalft __ oo_._10%_._.., 1,.1 halty wttWa a mediately. See our ad In anappointmeot. eoiiws tor officers of creative. sales oriented & Whitmore. 1450 N. E bem. Many otber jobs CIVIL.... rapidly ••c••dl•t todoty's paper under 557.oo61 l~!!',an1~9>•ta 'orllethaae oureompeny. ... hr penneeded.m-14«>. ~?eaRe a l, San avail. Call S40·60SS. LAND DEV · .. ca 11s11 Y osp •· YICTOlt ~ ~ o ice • rllht•al. we split the ;r:a":et wm be fre'. PutUmestenocie.rtt,re· cy,"27'90Harbor,CM L MT ·-It It I GENERAL. 8 ff . ......... ._ .. open,, co .... ,A .. salary ... pel' .....,....,.._, . r--~t.a.1 Personnel Agen· WATER We offer a tood overload alphabet of customers queaUiaubalaDUal. ~lat. 20 hrs per RICS'T/sac;Y Neveucoettoyou F\all time, career op ....., m rew•••t ~'~·~11~·~·~Senkes.~~~ for dlveralflcatlon of ~ mar work lorbotb• week. Hours ne1otiable for engr firm. Great ~or~~ri:~~ bHeflt1 pacll•t•· = duties. Our smooth ..:. ahlfta. 8:30am till Mature r eraon pre · bmd> ot l\IYS t.o work RESTAURANT &li7.-Reliatered Clvl rteaH Oflc!'' to ISCAOW openUoft eliminate. the ~ 12:3CM:30. Ple..e t.red.Cal 8'4--006l. for. small ofc atmoep. Fllll &: e1ume poeiUons ... .-Ao SIC,..,._.,. UllAl1 aceaey pressure. callfOf'appt. p ti S •tary/ Front olc appear. Beaut avallab e. Prepare or· &ICM-n. exr:neo r. n•1I _. ,..,._ • o.neralYICTOl MlmS Top ~-lluat bave ex· 714/$57-GIZ Bart ,_ !!-'e p!crr .. Non Irv k>e. Typitt IS5wpm, .. _. operale cash re· Desl1nen. alente Youni. attractive, per. -•I la com· •-··• .,._..i...,___. n... oo .... ee .. . ~ Good ~fits """"''" Draftsmen , e&..,...._ ..... w/typil nl • epellln1 -,., • ....._._ ;....._,,.a_,•>.:::: .. : ............. =.:-'..,....,.....,.. ... .,.,. llDQker. FamlUar with Call .. -~.;...... ~ · giater & serve over Ettlmaton for aub ~•,.w• skills. Xlnt potenUal for l!U ._.~ ~ -· ----Y account rece ive/pay. •·-·-ClOlmter.Applylnperson. divtaioD 6 laod deve TUSTIN learnln1 to become WAREHOlJSEPWPLE .aoo MATERW.HANDLING l.m.&onmfroatofflcefor Receptioa.iat required for Monthrurriday,2pmto mentwortt.Strona1ra COMMUNITY .:.erow omcer w/hllb PCBBOAIU> PanaS&ockpenon amall EDCllaeeria1 Co. busy Newport Buch Spm.AslllforPat. inc·~ knowledf compenaaUOa, w/a sue· ASSEMBLY ~--Experience clealred DOt ..:•~IOOl=-----llJOl't&apf\naodalfirm. TlleAllH•• ....... aou1bt. 01lt10::_1 HOSPITAL cealuJ &: divenlrted co. :~~.' -··--required. Wiii lraan. PMJ TIME Ute typln1. Neat ar,· llOI Dyerld. U ~draudftlnsaeweworr .. al~ 1001 M. T ..... Aft Mr. Taliaman ... l.2SS TRAINEEASSEJllBLY AJM aceoey bu open. 11.u•t pan company s-ranee a muat. App y n--"~-'--\ • .. R.-&.. •-CA 92705 """"\ET Rl_, Incl U. cuttocner service pbyalcal l.neludlq back In penon from Mat 230 .........,.,...,.. ~·'!:t~ =el UIWS-3111 .!lilcrow S.,..,nP11A . s.o ana., ww-uce ex~r lt·~ lrvllae. 540-7139. EYOINGS NewportCeaterDr,1200. WORK CLOSE Work Hmplet lo Mr l:qual()ppt7Emp!M/F !SCltOWMAMA•B Nev9'~1"ee.~your belp(ulbutDOtaec. ll E. Adultawttbo.atat.aDding. NB. TOHOME ~ at Robert Be -ExttUent oPPortwlity t own da19 7 la boun. Call x.tbf atstt.llll. Medkal RecePUoniat in attractive penoaaliOea Pr Recept/Bkkpr. 3 days Williama. P'roal & Assoc. COOK/COMPANION partidpate 1D lrowtb of immediately busy =dlatri.cl claann''st of· wbo eajoy worttlq with per week. Call weekdays WIMt 140tQualJSl.,Npt.8ch. t maJor dlvlsioe of faat YICTOI 1..-..ee . nee. enced only. u.£.. n...er 21. Start at btwnl6$,IG.-.. UA9_.N retired couple wan l SllL Good R---t....-VI .. b h ..1 -.-"" lllVR_ healthy, and pleaunt ~ ni · T srw ~~-FomtalD •"' ranc "' ....-0 $3.50 per hour. Phone R E c E PT I o N I ST I DRAPllY IUSSlflED metun lady to live·ln. open.i~Co=::u~~ ~~~b eeS::u ~;bas Medical Assletant1 ex· ~4lT~~~NE:~00.~~g0 TYPIST Wanted recep-STOHS II lluat be &ood cook ft President. Irvine Sav· I 120 perteaced front owflce. nu. . tioa6at typqt for IJ'OWlnl lllUrBT'lft driver. Heavy cleanln1 & p o Bo 19$7 l Typlq, bUllnl col lee· ..--conatructlon co. H v Y Start 10W' well paying NllUUhll lndry not expected. lnp, . irnsx ' mS.llalD Tit.al• tioftl, appolntm9nt.a, ln· Asl&fwA•*-ia phone, must type SS w In retailinl with 'n. D.il7 Ptlot la seek· Room a bath w/pvt en· ~,CA · M/F Onm&e Noaptriencenec. au.ranee. Salary com· F.qual()pportwalty WPM. Seed reswne to..: ~ ... D!.!tr.-f2\raiD!!!_~,:ro11c· ialaJ*90D&o•.asmen try. Refs. Aft.Dooa/ev... IJ5-26U Salary commeaeurate menaurate w/ea· Emplo)'ef' atauaa Builden. 1"31 __ .... ,_ rh our au.Aliod Advertla .... -.... w~ a abWt1 All co ---......, ,... lrva·ne Blvd. Ste aot, '°'1 leam. of op-1111 cleputmeet for ln· ...;•~•-....;__ ______ , Elcp'd~wan'9d. beDeflta. Call itatby, ...,..........,._.._ PBX Am tenl«:eklmmed Tultin.Ca -port\llUty for . <advance· s&a. telephone talet. COOK AllDl.Ybtwalla4:IO. llMW. llEDICALSECRETARY opwlnp 1 &owor varied · · IDllDt.. Pleuut worklng Oalsilled or telepbon m.5lll~Elcamllao.S.C. a...aotnee c.11. f'P omc:.. lbcUey In• W11mda. Pd vac. --------i condWons • employee u I ea ea Perl• D c 4 .,_ ~ week COav · «l.tlll, -.-i ..,..., IOMllT . ~cy worklDI with u b r wk • W r I t e mtd U. la pd trabLla1. .__./fft'ht bmeftta lDclcl employee ~DEMENT& :~ris~~~~~.?. MCTOltYWoa•s Tl••• ~ btoefitllan ~r.t:~f::, m4)865-PIX~ ~~~C,:.!~ ::_:~.:e•:~~:u;: --OO:uos: ea~ Coava ... c.ot, Female macb•ae ~o!:..tnlltlDdi= neeiiltGJRLFRJDA for ei...a ..... ca.w. pnfd'led. re-OllllMllc UI our Lacuna =--·-::.i.l•••••· c .11 . II:::&:-; to fperue uw ==~.:=.-... ~~~~,:~ =-::·,,::•~•;;.: =-=-~:..:,':,~ Dtpedable ........ C.UMI=-dlmene~~e.s:::a_e callW Dodor...., warm• be able &o work aome -Monica Hollawa y, OoDd1P"lr1ft1Yo6C. Q9Cem. ...--111 eat'M•'Mt~.....-toaa· W9elloDC11. TyplDI 3$ -770·1001. Moran Plr•IDI penimality COOK MCTOIY WO.•S dudra ma.a ud vartoue 1NSRNCE ftL& a.UK sill blm lit mab"r\lnc a wpm req .. 1 red. E • · Dnpert Store9 Salary commeuurat EaDUdlDI restaurant llBN WANTED cMMa. Lllltt tnlal-ID· a.p-n apot for =t new pr8dlce. Im. • blll· pertnce pNferNd or 81£EPTIONIST . Souiht --=--•---·--- wtllt ~+com ebalDWitboverSOUDlta. o.&a ..... a1.cnoo tervMwlq:=,,•-~~. ,.lam~· pencm. Owerfal 4ce mt~ belpluJ, WW tnlo. Many com· by comm. lnsur / -..a .S.C9Utat com Faml11~ Ol'laDl.u· ...-•...-" esper. pre er re · t1l*t nau&red. i.e. ... PM1 baMft&.t. hit time mortpae nrm. for new ~.....,...Uroua Uon offers pleaunt PACTQIYTIAIMll American or· PIMaantwortdnccoadi· Hiiia. Call 7TO·iOH orpartUme,daylaaft.er· olfice lit ,,_use N.B. •mNlloul la wut to workln1 condltlont. Atta 6 craft• Hper. ·~School, 4401 t.lona, wttb opportunity brl..-10.12. noon·e-HDIDI shifts locaUoo. Neat. respoaai· paid for 1011r effort Good opportunjtles0for helpful. We bave full Birch Street<N' Ne~ for ~~vane:· .. edJcaJ Aatstant·C.M. available. Please call ble. type SOWpm. +Ex· .-..eallrormten .. w: edvanetmeaL .... ace eat time openln~ day • Bucb. ear 0 · mmt.37~ ·~Ii • om lAd X Ra ..._ tbna Fri. 5Q.4130 per. pref. Top sal. & aJJ •r DAY ~4111~t. m == J>:.'l9..!::'A:f; = ::f' ...J..~~ =~>~.:£,"~~. P =~:·~a. f.i~· :sa ~n per .,;..{. ..;&.~O.;..·...;&.______ bent. For appt. call •·S. o&U•ICOAST lDpenmto: ply Kincb Co. 17352 -IMYISTMIMT Wrtte &o Clalalfled Ad PIOOUC110HASST ...:.•_·_3112_. _____ , ~·s a.f ,OU pay for a 3Dda.)' .ct ia the DAILY PILOT SllYICI D&•'YPILOT -...;;3o1lglMtr. Armatron1, Irvine. GmenalOffice ,..,.....,..,_ ~C:.:i1:~~: Ptr Hunt.lqton Beach lecld ......... /fnht ,.... -541).&iQ Immediate openln1 for ~-m area, WOltiDC w111aaa. Accura te l 'y ping 33DW.Ba1Street • Jt'l nlab Carpenter. derical worker. Simple Expao~ln Newport •7m.AalllforTom. minimwn eo wpm. Good Oo9taM•• . ., ·~ ''"" u;mrnym• ..... required. matb howled .. of Breda Co Meda MdealP'roDtOfftte-Part otficeakllls.549-lm DlllCTOIY DOITNOW! ~~unltJ s:mW.CoutHwy Apply .r·aarton calcu\ator re~~d. ~'Ta::!. t::''::~ UIDt 5eoce onlY. Hawrom~want SELL kl.le Items with a mploye N Beach Dewlopment Co. 17408 Some ovwtime. 7· -'--'-OcmlldtDUal in· HM~ wori. to ..UT C acla do DaUy PUot Cluallled Acl.1-------- llt.. Clift'..s ctr. PV, AallforPatCll'Carol. -Witte Ac1MS3.1.::•W1U=.IG=·=Sl78.===:.!.:::::;::::::=====;:__-------, MIMUI t.mew. Call 15Mlll. o.&17 Ptlot. llO W. Baylr .,. •MeMA bb1.Jeu/Oaurttlde St, Coat• lleaa. Ca. NA MJ.5671 PULL TDIS. ~-re· lWDT yroldt. Reta. NCI d. far -...... rllilu. •. ....-.,._, .. ~ ome. Aa ...... Daal•sr PmtUme.Cblldeare~or baa•mmectta .. Cll*»n11 -. POMO tall GmW7 looktill for 175-4112; 1514"4 n• lllsr I !IOfl to wart In -=--~=·~ ........ T ft-&..:.~=: ·'·:.::sit.'6,~o.~~: EMPLO¥MENT .......... s••1s •01 MOW ,.. IN loc*IDI lot muat r:'DdJ.. I um e t 0 ---S-AIDIMI -• llllaundl" ~ble Qe='IW Ad Nil. Dally ONM a ... '° wO..k wtmc1a Piiot, • w. Ba1 St. BULLETIN 210lSU.=nHJaRd GOOD PAY..1. GOOD XlDt aalary a frln1e ei...a ...... ca.---------1 HOURS, GOuD CON· b-trftt& Pb BtUa Davia, um.aw·~ l DITIONS. MANY _._.. -... ,....,_ rood prtparat on. -JNOE BENEFITS. _.,., FACTORYWORKl:U female, over counter, rn •A 0 COM ...__.. m.cnoo prepare aandwlchet, FN1r O.nuWIN • Lapls.cntarJ . _... eaa. 144·0110 PANY PROMOTES Newpwt Btacb. N 1" MOl>a.tl. femalt ...;:...;..------· ro~~·~ r::~o9Til~~ ~~~pnf. 11 AN AGE II SN T braefttl. Send nnmt to -·~ •-•-· STARTS •'IM· tm.DUl1Pllot.P08oa lilDdtllllaleOr,._le II SD I AT ELY ' ' · ·-Caeta M... Ca -...--.___ X S Y B 0 A R D iii3i ' . ----~& BXPSRISNCE Weare a ~ ™ ~s:N =::·~ ...... PROGRAM PUT ON BY Pff Cll' rrr ...., COID· you .... Mi1ou •bout 'l'HS OOONTRY'S TOP mwurate ·~~ can mod •••• ,.... nil ORGAN IALSS llr.~---""-Dl..-0 gs2P~sa CAjL0 Al Uquordtft, ,.... Yorti: ••t INTSRVISW. ORGAN P/l'a&lbtl. .......~ &XCHA.NGS, STAN --175WlMIUfJlBcb NUNNTM/m-71111. J At General C>/f\amics we're hard at work on aotld contracts that spell pfenty of wort< tor years to come . Right now we're rapidly expanding and we need the belt people In Southern California. tt you'r9 good at what you do, and proud of lt-jofn the Pomona team NOW. · - • SHEET METAL MECHANICS • GENERAL MACHINISTS • JIG BORER MACHINISTS • LATHE MACHINl8T8 • MIWNG MACHINE MACHINISTS • TOOL a DIE MAKERS • ENGINI! LATHE OPERATORS e MIWNG MACHINE OPERATORS • GRINDER OPl!AATOR8 e IORING MACHIN! OPl!AATOR8 •TURRET LATHE OPIRATORI • N/C MACHIN! OPl!AATORS • DRIJ. PREii OP!RATORI ~In pnon •our~ Offtce, 8AM-4:30PM MONDAY thru FRIDAY Cl•N•AAL DYNAMIC• Pomon• Dlvl•lon 1875 W. Ml•lon Blvd., Pomona. CA. /tit--== ........ ,, UI. I ._... • .. . Qt 0NL V .,.OT 0 ....... w. tw.W-.4 710 t '' 1U•11 .. IOH L.S. IOll "-&0...-IOtO IMh.IMtl/ .. _ ............... .. ~;~T................... ....................... ....................... ....................... 1Clk .... toll . ... I ..... ....... 71111M.ia W..eiM 1111 .... Wmih4 7t00 ·rn.~til A&MWY tC•p PT Olllom Wrou1ht Iron d•· Sit. Suo Marth a. ••. VPIUOHT PiUOI .. to ....................... a::• ••1• _ ........... -...... , .............. -....... ....................... tntldt-t7 oulald• 11ln. rnrator room divider. Upri.,_ ,,.....,., power Sl.t50. C1raad• from Q:aalW IAPIU'J •• Ol '15' ........ ~ ............ . 5-TtUnalPO.IUon.Typ eJI nsucm 1'1Cll '2'' 1001. IUO, mower. table HW. U .250. llebld'•· ,.. maklr' y~bt. RH.1oaa· '4U'ORDWOODI~ lhl IOwpm, 1rapa.1u. ""--.....1•-d ...... HCed Gl-Za ~ arut be111aw .• twah'p,t~. -... ~. dally. wtelEly. f\&Uy~l 113,000 To ~ ..-,, .aw.. .,.-._. ,.__.., C a Almooct Tree Lane. ~ D. ~· minnorrTS-me. 6'7Hl81 Mectka11n1 :a ~ ,.."'111 lra.1.o fut lJpaal §r-.lr'vtM. -Hamilt.oftAve,ue .... w '°'o ~.u:' 11.A. aru. u --~ .ff?• !.!'! ...... ~~-~! s.e. :u• only, w. Drum m.ms ....................... '41 ~i:fiWo1~oo~. a.iiat -~ ""' toU mall~ an Imm aound proJeC'tor •et, blllea, exercycle, G _ _..... --.. -·.,. ..... Sc ... ~k Ketch 50hp con · 1 0 r. ·--AaY U\M M6"1ric.' hum• Hlnte 0.-PfllOOO,newl!OO. carp41t bum.,.r pool, u.:fih~ "di.el:-"tti~t quality fM0.2730 dye, 61S·7l~7 -· lllt•i;& with ua ut t.....aal ~ delk, hl·ll, eta1ere ._ for owit•CMhftC vaJ..,... Mut er • Builder's ev•lwlmda ____ _ Twoilslofc lA Knain.tr· Uata Htirvlre.\ l1'102 m&K. L8lU~stubope Pbloo rebuUdlAI • r•· Pwnon&l •-*· ('114> MO-TD 52, fire'°" n.-d ••1f hi•• oft Jr. l~looWvd, Tuaun. &llh1 Dep 1040 <Harbcw Vie• Homea> llnlabADa. :ws.1.M2 CIHn lhruout. llf>•t nlft·r tier'rftAly pclflllklft 1111.n 4 21!1 ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• N & )Ira ••P. flllm•. ltP" Q>ckd c.... .. u.a "'1p1plea ---------tt.rryD.0.,.t w .. 1tt•ll u w /Nllp . aver S'1:i00. 497 ~ or •?Owpm Pd ucaU•in TWlhf• AKC. ~1125.suo'. ......_ MOOff.amHtonAve.HB ~Oct '79. Cstm 4M-0333 ____ _ N&PWAMm UnlqutS Home1 lo M a Verde 11 t>ookilllCI Over a mUUon doUan ln llllM"IU'k"e • profi.t aha1 .... , .... ,.. 642>lli2. ---r 1070 53M775 teak Interior " deck. '63CornlrCoovertlblc l1'C r.aJI * 2114, Mk for t)pPQrtun1ty 11111th In· -••••••••••••••••••••••• vamalw Grand 11\ 41n Lollded. SUper buy. Mu11l Sl500. atesr A eimall tract of homel. 3 dally o pen houat>a tc> man. enUctna c:ommLUioo apUt + an exclUnc bonus plan. You'll 1tl o benefH from IOl~, lnaplrlnfC Wf.9 meet.inas und a aurr of •3 cooperative. competent &al asaoclat.m. If you are new, Qf' caperleoced ln local real c late plea:»e call S.ody Ork>wlk.1 at 546·5880 few u appointment to dlacusa opportulUUes. Mn IMf lttnahonal C"PA flrrn TuyPoucllt"puppleshAKC. J.adlee 2 .08 Marqulli ~Syniold l895o · aee.P.P.•2:!80ev". 54M21116. ._,.__ Nt·wpor-t t<'nlC"r oUlni' 11tver male, c amp diamond, weddlnf' sut S44·3'78 ' · _ _,,. ()Wilsmdlol(poi.lil-Oofor bl~. Adorable . w /4 baageuea, G.l :A. HOBIE 10' Ford '23, llouo11tur ,,. fllAIMClOTMIS *'U1111iflt-tlt•1Aridldal011 v.x llr»7 , , cerl. USOO. Ntigo . .-.. (714)1:5&--0087 J>llM. touJ'\ng. Sacrlfkc. Pmnw • P /Tlm., 14 1"4'Ut•nt lk'~dlt.a. lfoh1ry NMd~U-tedSamoyed 6t$Q2'1 Sldllg IOtl _.., $7300. Sbow c:ond ps hour l'leU4.i apply In """'° ~UH -w1(l00d coolirmllt.k>o for Ladlet1' dJnoer riog, 3Crta ••••••••••••••••••••••• l.Met'. ll.lnt eood, compl. ~~lit ___ _ ~R'":.:O:SJ~:.er;~n0n~, l'l'W&Jlr a,d•Y•· Y.xp'd w.t~ce~~ F.meralda, l.4Scrt8 w/dolly Jlarktm rachet PAOCARO '51, dht Patn ~.SA •inl.>' l>vt~~Club Oft'maln~ puppy, ~178am~to~.100ApMparak'elsoefd s l*>ck,lllfS0.64().5631 ~~.'·md~~tx_a,n.t 2:~.!5. ·~~ Emp'°yt•r .-.,.... fentale, II mo AKC, tl'C' 'MwalsfU.675-4382. . ;-~0tMsOT:n ~_, WAMT'm DllYlll champ llnea $350/olr IMh. Sllpa/ __ _ secua.m OflftCB SUND A y OML y 8ln <lOt l8K Gold Ho le. 0 MT 1111W' Docb to 70 ltcrMHaalll Ma.t1tt.'f' ~k Philippe N .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• V~ 9530 A pett Umf' • full t1m1 1'o <Wllvt'r 011lly l'Hol <kr. Short haired Poanl(:r UIKpockd wa~h 20lheir ---•v•11 •••1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ •vall•blt-. ro.ild bwldlt to c•11mt•nc ltt• fo'em IOmotl /\KC Cham· Gold pkt wtch 497 3157 -_. •.,. _. __ Int' l ud" "van 1 n K 111.tr v11n ot llmi.-1t11 ' Pi<lfl Imes Ne~ lrg · lJlled llocbland ski boota, YACNewport~..!._ '711 OMC Cum~r V11n .: r. vt' )'.rd II nd I 0 f uoo Wll"llfl 11rw1 Ii l(ood yrd ,, klta of love 1150 u ..a. 1075 IZ 7, $2S ..... J......... ...___. ~ W--"-... Xlnl cond. saooo. 498-663:1 I J,._,I l JI I i M ~ 00u'11 for IOlt}OI dnVllljl n •rord Phunt• 8'75-0184ev~wknd .... tDw v• _,,, -......... between 11 6pm nr.na.eowrt1•hc,t>vlnt< ~:! 4321 1.nd 1111k for ••••••••••••••••••••••• llr. e.~15 4wt..1Drh" 9550 HE.AL TOR:,• !>46 bUOO l !Jib Ml-W VNd Draw, [<1\1, Cottd M \4 <tl)Q 111 C.1111111,t 1h•I M.11 . <11 h /•1 ~I rl'lhl t'r t:•perlt>tH'\· ll11 r ry S..·.-l1•y ur l>on 2kyrOldlullbreed Bliy Gelding 11 )'Citl'li okJ "'f·1.t·~M IOtl Shp needed in Nt•wport ••••••••••••••••••••••• nere11ary J<;.r.,llcnt WlllJ1t1~ <.:ex erSpaolt>I, M • ~ Good allow & trail hor11c larbour • beoel11a f°' f\AU Om• "" ":QlJ/\I, 548--.S S'1~ c.1111n5. 831 2396 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~J~~ sailboat 111.Y to ad t'43. cto The Ol'l'<>KTUNITY . -H@autilw 25" color TV, z Dally Piiot, Po IJO • t.:MPt.on:u Af..~.~c.f:c"'!..,.,~an t-ltal•1o.a IOIO yr wmty, free deUvery, Want.ed ~'11hp. 1*. ea.ta ll a. CA ......,c ~V'U"" op ..... , or •••••••••••••••••••~•.•• Sl2K 646-1]86. 768-6274 -W~m1u1, re i>on11i loving pet.8. Kea.a. t.crms 0 '"'-'ll "·· T ....,, .. ....., 1100 ~ ll(S -· WIU trade pu~ for rur & •~ ~ix·rswt 8 t""' 23" ('()kw Magnavox TV ....,.. ~ bl pcrlion for fabric give cub 646 ~ or 11t••m ii . U11ed o n ce at.ereocombo $300 RtUU SU. Cleft l' rr, ln door plantln~ ••xv req'd Mature fomalt'. J)t\'.f t.'fT'ed C.11 lor a ppl. 'lH,.~.:mz Jo::Sc1tla& JM'OVM ~rvice ... ________ warehou11e <.;ood op ..,..... c.tue8o'tl1Ull0 548-0256 F.arn to ssoo weekly '" Portwuty w/gruwlnl( co ~......... 615 M20. loeh. Speed & oomm , "wUI lhow you SICY /l.ICB'T lrvloo llitlU. St1h.1ry l.'Om AKC Keefihond pupplt•ll, 6 Carpclt Mill CIOll«>uls Son t Mod ,1 Sid tOIO "'*to earn up w SJOO Uoiqw~bualneula meoaurate w /e xper. wks , s h ot s M ·$l7:i Nylon Pl1&&h 1400 & up • Y B t<reo rtt. c ••••••••••••••••••••••• daU1 •lartlnlt thJa week! ~ '°" e~p full ume ~7915. 1''·'200.642 3408 _5494ll.81 /675-~ · =ks~. &X~Y .. ~~ 15'3" 8olJt.on Wh11ltT, 10 l<elu1I Carn on S11 hll· < AAml.et bcl p. Fu II ti me. Mam .Pholo Service. Ca II Mr Droller for appt. No 011ht r•llw. No pft'S w/typ&ni skUlJ & ---~wSHaftlH 642-982'1 hp Jo:v1nrude, 50 h r11 . wukend work. Only •b•llty to o r f(aolz". WI~ -~ OMtm aeat puddal, full etac reaf)On111ble lk•avyphoo{'ll m1&11teo-WAltlHOUSICLHK FteeloYOll 1045 Wooden 1 huttc r 11 . Stereo walnut cublnet. c•M.-r. Repl&r t·m ·nt wan~ for J*rrn. joy wor\dng with J>t,'Ople Undid M ti•. I• ....................... roiJublincb, woven wood,11 fisher umphfu•r, Jensen S7000, ~1114100 M2 S61!>. ' , __ ,.dJtloo fr"m .. ra wtt.h CASH CARO. S&J deJ>t•ndent 011 ea" ....... ::% ft.II M. O.t, loog hair. l"t>m. &wtndowlinlmg. 20·40"# xpt>akers . lieout aful £J&.zm6 ~ ..,.,... -.. • " M lb Fr ' 11hortholr spayed c al. off all items wtuMd. O.d Of' wa11t:t;. Call9M-tt74. 00 ru 1 COl••y---.Call Goodw/kJds.6468600 ASPJo:N · ~~l pici•e S200. evenings Inboard Ska ISo11l 130 f.ong Bt>ach areu . Sales "SGAIDIMS lolboa Marl11•, ---7t....-,lf7(11 T hund erh1r d 1·n a.: 714-IMZ-0577. Mature 8.-lady, fl'(f' Z!OlSanJoa~wn 549.9671 for appt. 8 mo old gray kitten Newport Rt'sll'h Tt•nnt1' 2 M(YJ'OROf~A P/\C:Jo:1ts St.even11 hull, 1•1t11y nn Hallmark Puty Shop. Hilla Roa E.O.I. M/F l''emole. Free to good U uh Jo\all t'amlly Mem 3 u II t• M o tJ I L t; l(a.", alnl ff1'XI SJ200/~t SALES A...••_.....,.10 <.:DM 640504<4, _____ • ____ home.C311873-880\I ber1'hlp 642·0 11 2, RADIOS olr~O '-'All-• '' ~ 1H1'220UHF898-188ff lllUNI Fe male, small, purl F.\SHIOMS SALISPBSOH Service Station Allen Woman. nn t1 mkr, lo •luy Whippet, fawn & black, Dowr Shores exqwt1il~ ~yT;re,-Recorder reel Expr 'd for womeo'i; dant, eaper 'd. Day & watb my sml mother l\.\yn1.Lo_vltlg.S48·l200 bral\Sha.ol(uiglampSlOO •• 1 ...... ; ~/tv>W"r ~mp Necd.'I women wbo love clothing •tore. 17th & E.'Ves f\all & p/Ume AP wkdys In my home nr 1f118 .. • .... ~ -""" .. • flDblao. ha.II or pt-Umei. T ustin, N 8 . t'u II & ply, Shell Station. 17th It llurbor/Wllson. approx Save from pound. Patty, 64fr --New heads Xlnl cond . 1'\m&r$111i clotbes. No p/time.142-9380 t.mne,NB. 75rM Prcpurt' ~omc 11m 4 mo blc k /Lab fia;TOFF1CE80X~ Mu.alSee.SJ00.547·~ cxpenencenecessary,oo ..:..-----------------food & 1u1slstnnrt> to Soanl~I. loves people If 1our aro l.n need of IMh&..._.. ~t. DA-7470. SALIS PlllSOM S«vlce auUon at.teodant. balh. Or your home Sun 6f3.5293eves. P.O bolt ltl II B Call '' 'p 1 .. ., .. , l>C! so. COA.51' PLAZA day work. full lime. 392ti eve lbru f'ri Cu.II ufl Beach Postal Service ... •••••••••••••••••••• T1 I Wloll . ..................... . c ,.,.., S./ .... tl 20 ~ , ... -... .......a-y E.Coaalllwy CDM 6PM&w1cnds646-$471 f'wwihae I050 S4S-8300 G -" tOIO HABYLANDneeds2am· -• •-~ ' . -------••••••••••••••••••••• .u•w I .Fr b .... _j boull e...,__. ~~ .... H l oea:led •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• ... •••••••••••••••••••• blll()Ulmat..u.repeopeto enc uatl{Mf' · """3•.,... e p im WORDPROC IJogprtalbfod,w~lchalr. Sl4 000 A..W-tO' Cabovtr All vum e~pertaot motbt>rs que. Beaulllul surround· med. FuU or p/t. Apply 1 'I 8 8 CP I BUY walker S58 3636 wkdys, • "0 'j"' 1 & in tbetr bom('tii by appt 1nga, e..legaot client.el 9110E.Cat Hwy,N.B. ~~':nrn:~ckio~g VYDA~ ** * * 833-2fl83eve&wknds M.an.oeh.atdware" sup· ~~1{W0~ • .,:; only. We prefer coemeuc MU&t be matured, poclud SEWING LADY needed 1200 (}ptorator. Pref 3•5 Good used Fu m ature & Cnb & mattrClls $30. 6 pbeti LOCI apr.rox. ~ 67s.81Zl party~ or 111mllar ex & 1ophlsc1tte . all 1"'_ •'--· Sat. ,. .. 11 for yrs exp an wont pr()(' & Appliances-OR I will cqp. & 4 exc.: . di.isl . Inv. per Stt·ltdy U>p piay + 5&2213forappt. ~;'Pt~Non ·s~ker . CPI\ exp ht'lprut Salary sellorSEU..forVou dower 1·hul $30 4 xtra Matioriaacllllln 9140 boGW1ea. llo11p. 1tva1I. SALIS N1kk1 's Fl o·g Shop, oogoc.. Good eo benr inc MASTBSAUCTIOH l>Ofllt•r !Mid $25. Masc ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1'racy:i47-0122 1uD 5l66 maj ml't11col & group 646-16" Ir llJ.9625 543-291t7 LYNCH H.E . 731·5131 TIIE MO.PEDDL.~H ---~pet'li(lrUl(!I Women's _,. · -SaJe1 <.:lerb & <.:ashwr11 ~.ogshopinNewp()rt .,......_ .... ~ ... ~ST l..rm Ith-lni.. Ca ll Woterless cookwore , ...... ttuiull••C•/ Nu..w VF.UGfo:OT MC> needed for 2 w~kb. llest fft'h requires de<lkaled. _...,..,...,... .. ~ &W-4'1!'!0 uxk for Kalhy CASll P/\ID never USl•d , must 11cll s.r-..ic. 9020 PEDS Rel( $46&, Now hired will be k ep t muture.slnbll'f)('rstulllll · respondf<irllettingupor llurv1•y. For gd used fum, unU· Aft5,9684t272 ••••••••••••••••••••••• S319.631·3ti30 ~rmanently. No t•xp ty . MuaH bt' fu11h111n dent •• .'b'On'lltroflllmd~i lnvf.n x "3y 'fi·i·h l'urt tim\• qucs&clr'l'V's95J-8l33 s.iun. "tlS dryr. nr rll'w, Medl.aruc Monoe da.-sel rit.'(: Good opportuost" .. _.,1....iuaabl••. cre···t •v1· tor)'"' ' 11 o a ng. r.x o h k -"' •· I .. T ''I'-, "'""''""'" ~ .. , I ... I fi l "' p1•r W<'e . TWIHC>aFUL·L l'Ui.to m wall unit 3 WIS"' eec .. om n a cr '78 Moto becunt• VLC Perf. rond rnck, ba~ii ID> ml $395 675 :1641 12 lnternatwna l 1 ~.na f'11wt•r \l r (¥.Ill 714,f;73 f;,T1. Xlnl d lt. TOY C H Y,\. V 12'7 ""•· nvf'Tffn v,., mUJiil ""II 111 JM!f u.r~ t:t:n1 5.¥1. 9560 ....................... 1977 FORD COUlllH '1a U, 1 i pet:d, AM fo'M ~tt'r•·•" Ull)t'. ~.nom1r•I s n I l'nl(1nt• & Id .((II) ,,,,,. m 1 I 1· ' < I 11 M t. l <1 'j 1 CSUt lt37114T > Sl678 THEODORE ROBINS FORD 1060 HARBOR BLVD. COSTAMISA 642·0010 for M le nt'W to the &t'fl'"Y coorduwtmo fin(• per on y .... 11 ary ncuothJ L'u"'h••·n l~l "lld . N. l' u .. --e C:•O ......,, 11 ,_ .. hi A""I "I'"' r '"' v u .. • 11helvt·11. <'U.'llClm l>JJ:Jl'C mJHUI • .,,..,._, ----ur tia. 3.29/hr Ca t:W'(lfJtol'IJ'I m{'rChand11w e. ,..,,, y m person." """' fl•/\··~" . Mlrttress or box SJ>nni:s ""d "7" 01""' rt -H33.en or t133 6228 from for our c hcntelc. Ruht· W. MacArthur, SA ,,..,._ $28. eiach pc. (~LS only). i.avcr ,,e " " "" u i'~xtenor boat washing: ~7wkdyaE.01!;. nes11 refe renres r e · SHI pp 1 N 0 & ~H (~sc:.-ts $89.King 11cts tiPM -Reasonable m onthly t trtc:°:I ',CS/ ti SO ·~ f''ord 111 T., pullma11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• she-JI. new elutrh. good .._.,,,.. "'~-·-Yamaha 7 •. ,. lJrt.~. 11upcr deao, SlliOO SAl.fo~ quan.'Jli. Salary open. Ap· RECEIVING CL t;RK. ••••••••••••••••••••••• $99. S;imples must be Beaut. c ustom l'Ornt•r rau-s. call Jeff. •-lOPM . 0 e 11 ., 0 er i. a 1 es ply tn person at Apropos "'1ll time. Call Jvun for ......... 1005 l>Old Immediately from group $200/b&t. Mun'11 10 497.um .. Faahaon bland °' call 8..,. l<Ml_,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ourwurehou.'le. Woothru itpd Ouwcs bake SSO • ..:..:....,_ . t040 ......... ._.. '" ,,., 631·1718 Spee .. 1800 mt. Sdlll for coordinato r com · ..... ...,... .,,...._.........., -..,_,... a.ion sale8 Poll•UOO ln _ ..... __________ Son. Credit Avail. (/\tao s tereo co m pon e n t ... •••••••••••••••••••• .. _, I buJld ,,.., """"TRAINEES' SRACCOUNTCLEHK AnUqueMusic Bolles! uvaU. living rm, bdrm. 1>yswm s:iO. 20t'i'J Ooy.1, 17, ~·--~ Mu•··y ,78 rdJucu 18 er up .,.,.,.,,....., To pnform difficult & SloUlachlnesl ClockJll bookcaaes, lampe, end 81.67~14 w..:• ..... • fCl'9de oPllOO dept. Mw.t EQUIPMENT SALES lbl •-· 1 .. ,_ ... _) - -----130 olvo enf; under be .... allab'-wee:keod.s "· No ,.__ Or respons e c ... nca ac llUGESELECTION [.,.,,,on.... l LC IR L'LJ I ...... tr b t.ol •n ... .. l ....... pany, ange ~work. 2 yrt. of .. _... ca....,M*ltto.e w lt;t; II/\ ...... : WAIT. nc..... • n 1 for scheduled appt.a. dur· Co. area. Multi-major ftn.toclaJ clmul ex per. _...c. Dbcomt ,...._ E&J Walker with a •tsl. cood. MWll sell.~ 1271. ms Wttk. CarJM!l. floor brand o ffice copying ..._ _ __... -..0 to...,,.... mo. We....tt..a 548·11168 --•~ r1 d WI I .-n:ou -· .. ......, 549-..,,,,., ---------'71t Scarab·330 TS out· mg~ exl>t1 M ee c syate ms . I train Applyl.npenon fountain Galerift """ l'llred. Apply Urcm Co. highly motivated and Vallev School Dial. OoenWed.LhruSat. 19''ZautbTV,slbod 8 /W dnves.~hounl.Loaded! s:n.85 Will sell fo,. $2900 ~ . l972 HONDA F.hunorc Entire 81kt< Hecently Rebullt. !';xcellcnt cond. Sl.000. Ca ll cv•u 4M-4747, M M.-c ot 462 St /\nn 's Or .. Lag una '72Coum·r, 11hell. new valw job, good coo dlllOO 486-tr..!5tl ----Must 11ell "73 Cht-vy 1"2 T . 0.l·yl, 3 11pd, l:.t. $2300 t.alu~ Ud 5PM . 631 46;:1 aft S. 5'5a4 llH '74 GMC ~ ton l 'll'k l 'fl •· 500 Newport Cenwr Or. ccmpetluve indivlduala Corne, r I d & lb Kette I l''or sale, Early Amen can plays ~ood. $30. Vacuum. ~ mph J.I~ Stored on ~~:~ Ne wport for career po11llon lo ~~N~;.::"o.1o;. (7l4)7~~:,.,"· ~~of1.~~att $1.5.646-12i.____ ~· 1.111t11ell /bt:::itof H@ach. ---cyl 4 11pd Xlnt runnrn~ sak!tl Ouarant.eeds.lary 6 Fenwi ck Hass, Trout 731-1216t..__I 2Hodab dirt b1k1.':'!. Grt'at <BXS $2000 586 6471 + ~ + bonus. If you s:roac '-t•L -----------~ h .. " .......... ~E SHOW pok-9 l20 & $2S. Orettn. lt.llL uootwortit Exp'd uh•• for Jr. undtlrl\and th»t t I! Needed lmmedutt.cly for """" Klng sltebed $2S.S48-D832. ~ 1 titlt'tttt.o1ucce.ssillh11rd at ock In fa a h lonul DSALE ComplcteSlOO Ask forJerryPerkans ~~f. ~ YM:ii:~ wor k, dedication and women'a wear 11tore Ill llunUngtoo <A:ntcr Mull, 631·3875 LarJ<t> Suico & Raphus ·--------- oonditJon. 6'15·1883 art~r 7PM '76 Lov. new Iran~. 4.4,0oo ma C11nv:1:. C':JM1Jc1 78 Kltwasalt1 650, lo mi. Grt>al rond Mu:.t :wll xJnl cond , $2.000 or bt-11t ~ 67~123 1\ve. 8aJ 18. 813-M42 penlAt.encer call Kuren Fashion lsla.nd. Only ex April 5,6,7,8. Exhibitor h palms. Tramt•r mower Drotda, 84108 Manager. per need Hl>ply pleruse ! spuce u vallnblc. t:M. Couch & loveseat, cru~ •• ~~ 5hp v1tc 11wceper lHtc': Sa1'!sl Full·T1mc 97&-2:333 Call Apply m per1!0n at PtR.f; EXlllDIT IONS. gm velvcl, very l:vuu Pff(' blower Hllli hdte Lnau Ex~'d No-Nll<.'11 c AL I F c 0 p y I N G ~ Jo'aahlon b land ~5341. oond. $200. 631-2.665_ S4-"l-32()f M~~:;~~I!~~~ ____ P_RO_D_. ___ ore 1644-21652. ..... men ---1010 Solabd SJ15., chHds dka & Q.rpeUntt Gree; Shug USED BOATS St.-1~ rrom over 100 ACTION BOAT olfer S.'J9,.(}2:5g '78 llond a Ha wk II ~ht niiw 3 H· n>. Sl 350 732·2004 dy:c. 631 l!6A5 c~ 3$fo'uahiooSqSantaAna SALESWOMAN STOCIC ••••••••••••••••••••••• hte<idboard S20 .• & Approx 125 yrds S300 MATURE 547•51186 .As.SISTANT MGR Olll .-CHAMDISEIS FRt;IOllT DAM AO EO dl'C88er $60 .. l><lr NCl $85 , 0.11495 lfl41aft6 pm Bulta('O 2:50 Sherd11l & 175 ------·-abopSo. Coast Plaza, Cll· JUYPPQINT SALi': 3308 lf(r. desk & rhr. S75., tbl Alp1na. lake new, $475 ::w.le8 per,mature.Ba-26t3 A ul11 l I n movlnM ""' • · &•cbr'8S .• 751·St20 Air Conditione r, sooo .~ .... •sc• .... ~* ts11/b6t -~ t714t 536-lltl furniture onto the sale• W. Warner nr llurbor, -------BTU. ~ Ste rL'O con.'I. ~ llUIU"t ----... c.rtw Sales-W&rd It Jlanin~ floor .. b e l p with SantilAna.979·2921 K.lna al.rod wliter bed on walnut, S75. 81k'1!.I' l(arls •WB.l.CUFT• '76 llooda 250XL. strcN/ laicbtshaberdutxor. bulmmedlat.eopen1n1&5 c ustomer plck·up" CA.ClllPAID tugn.~1~~1base.tlmo aJ",Sl5,mf•ns26"3spd , •IOSTOMWHAl.IR dirt, very rehablc. $650. 111Puhion111la.nd Mall, for quallHed .. 1.,, P/\ime only. S.l 4' Sun· W•hr/Uryr s/R cfrlHH , old"°" """" $25. 8unk ~'<L<J ... wal?ut. Phoen SC.or Onl , 4W7-449Laguna Reh ~~ii_::~~~~ C*:::~~S:.~: d11!1.~ylnl)t'ni0!\.on woritlngorootUS7-8133 Dellk·flat. top, W a lnut. S40 Oeilk2AXSS metal. ( EVeMltuOI Y ..._.Ho.a.W./ Awfywithln _ Uuefe. E .O .E . 1275 Mon. arch 28 from ---40"x75" fldrawN11 7V.'' ~·7528419' eoo:iewaervace~pt. ...,/St.oge fl60 '7U Chevy 12' V Jn 'l'ru•· k with rump, auto VK mic;.~·M~ '63 f'"cird P11·k Up i.l•'P :o<W. 1wrfet·t body & 1•11.a.: <.:an be 111·1·11 rat l!44:• 1-:lden, <'o:.rn M t<i.;i (UwTlcrof t-:M1•11 & ~ant a L'Pibl-1 I lllk off N\·v. Port l:jjYt1) SlUtlO ur bo.•:.t Mu .. 1 bdl1mmt.>d '78 llanctll'ru <; T /\ M ff M 11wn , AC, wr i.hock-.. KYH. 11.000 ma undr wmly ~ b4!I (11~ ............ "-t.a.. "°°"~!~· BAROAINS.U~ refrip, ovt'rtlang ~ •IM-7551 5 raSIAN IUGS ~ ....... at "~n•··r ••••••••••••••••••••••• --·..ova -Ma. ,_NM• r Glillld wshn, dry"', g11rur, hfnit - ---... , ""' "' 'IOI n.-• ... S..... ho • .-. W"ei rv sappl. Refit 1'S0"'"' •-s' WVESL~•T. _Pvt_Pty 131 9107 art6PM wport Blvd. RENT 23' FIHJo:BALL 8C'rMa prinllnl produe· .. ,._.. -.,. .,..,,.. ' -rn • .. _" Cos M 11~15 Sfo~Lfo' <.:ONT/\ IN Jo;O '40 Jo'ord Plt'kup Not run Uon mana1er want~d. Appl 53fl~l .~~ brushed ve lour .. xlnt Dbl hj(je·a ·bd In ouk t bnl, 212Sta E.~pache Blvd: Rt:A..'iONAHL•:. CALL mAA No btod Best oHcr M.ultbaveexp.540-9110. Telephooc~ ..... -.!-1,,tllu.!,·Xl'n~n/ WASHEH DRYER S/\LJo; ~nnd, rURt/bm sohd rol rost $300 &cl l $40 Tr mp~ Ari io n a ~2283. tak.e:'l 9632863/~>dn4 .__ .. ..,., • •' M, 01•lu•e mulll·cydc or. Mool~rranean i>lyl 842-0t32 ' 002-89' 11643 SIAMSTllSS/lunt rl , 6 ·9pm Call m odelti CC>mpletely int(.llestolr ovrt250for -· ------RF.NT Lu•ury Motor 'tllOwv •lOnflallx-d a. Laauoa Ruc'h. 'f'ull 1l4/$4&-~. nibll, reflnlshedj. 1 yr. both. /\ft 5 30 a. bef Elegant wedding gwn. 23· Mako '76 255hp an· ho me 22· Pal omar c·r,1. Nt!w r lult'I\ & un ... UrM 0 lOpm,645-9866.CM. lM«' bod, 11~r slvil, hd bonnt, Marlin 'rower. Sl~Jlll 6 $295/wcek + lt irst SlHOO tdkt·:. It. Telephunt• Operutor KUaranl c o Ivery. ~ l 1 l80 675 07M 645-LOOl ...a5J6 ctuer, varlod 1h1rt11, 5 Vou1' t Mice SL39 ea. Side "Rfo:A.N BAG" COUCH, 5' ', ra n, · fo\alJ fiah equp. Portablt> Wml. ~ __ . _ daya /w eek . Ound md.-132(1 So. C0111t AP· dlu. i loose plllow1. Jiiltc"••-ht•1td, twin batteri.-is. '71 WUU>ebago 20·. l''ull v-tS70 benefit.a. Newpotter lnn ptla.ntc53'7-2542 veJour print. Perf. (.'OC\d. W..a.d IOI I =~~ce ai\llill. SIR,SOO. pwl'. air, gen, top cond. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1107 J11r>borM Rd . N.H S'1'5.5484)67l ••-••••••••••••••••••• evn. $8500. 2057 Ocean UI , 8"-l700 .:650 Julio Portii llotoolnt 9 ~cu f\, manual W"" .--stLVll S .. 4 1 .. ..... ._ ,..__.. v delrMlj 3 prong elec· lrumil"•o tor aaJe, odd• & _..,_ S..JACIC 21 ... boa. bi...-.-.7 "' .. """ an convenaon.. E.O.E. lti ll1n cood -.. l ban P•Y f1 ti• 76 like wi v 1 -,---Has pwr. 11tecr1nK & caJ Pu« l.n, l • eoda. oz. 1' .... 50 new, t " 0 vo Tl"lllln. Trent 9170 hnakt'll, 11lr 1•ond .• rodi11I xm8aJ• $l2iS.63l·l129 842-iM18 Pn-Ul&4 00 Oii, P•Y .... V 8 · M u 1 t 1 e 1 1 · ....................... llre11, crul11e1 control, * loo •01 ... a Ncwtruh "Ompa""'or In eeonedoUstrfacevalue , llOOO+T.C'.P.641·41'789 .......... 1 11 t r "' • ... "~ c I l Ki I d .... 7 -.... 1 ..... aveci(l se con . AM/FM R tr.-ck & HOUI WllK• counter. Colt S2:90. sen .;::r"' 3ed ."et. ".:~. Dene-·-· Searay 22 '14 h•rdtop. Cu11l. built, 11leepa o. cust.om intenor whlth in· NOW Lf:J'S GET RACK SL60 497_.137 evet. S.11885 Mlllk4l8 cabin , aalley. bead 111.ras. Sl995 673-7187 elude& ,iceibo•, tabll•, TO REALITY 'rlf E • • .....,_... 1013 Mere 1/0 full cover. lo 76 ..... 5._ ..... M turpel11J.. 14wl vel ch111r~· R&ALITY THAT SAYS Stove, llke new IJOld, LMdies wooden drop front ....................... hrs. A beauty. Alikln1 Alft '"-1 .. .1tc Nr;WI rrt. pty A YOU CAN EARN *350 /\ ctramlc top, 2 ovcnR, de•k wllb 3 drawers. 11\ndtr R.hodee 88 sulltnte Sl.0$0. PP. 8*9418. EXCfo;LL/\ 31' sucrillee til WJ:.. Cull WJ:Ek COMM18S10N makeolfer. f7Ulll0 6'.W767 aft. 6. model. XlnL cond .111()(). ..,_.,,N uru&• ..... R MiN'O wovt· oven and all (1141 ~37·56611 or <714 I FORA21flOURWY.Y.K ~l-&CiO DU<:UV ... n.w..r ulru. No m1lt:1tl(t'. G:"r1 ... •Phoeo"'-&uppll~' · 0 .1';. REFRJG. Sofa, k>veaeat. dln'g rm New 15' lt1t '70 hi> Sl6,000 • ---•Nlc9~0fflceli O.E. 15 ru. ft. fl'09l free t.bl & rhra, bdrm 11wte Yamaha Clat11lcal gwtar Mercury. TraUer, cover. ~or675 0068 HIO Ford vun. Xlnt Int. •lllbeal conunlallon In ""'11. whit•. tz:!O/Offer. w/dnt'r It nl :.lnd, qn u w/i;~. ~ jl(lnl cond. &more.M5-'M73. AMWM cOIJs & mor(• thelndwt.ry -.WS•IU b«I. COMOlo tv w/atereo. 541J.7maA6PM. "73 SUnflower, elf ront . Mtlllt lll'C'. S'l750/btlt ofr .. llboun . tm-L882;87lMIG6 Cl.ASSIC 26' C HRIS w/A1r & fol'<'c."1 ulr heat, 831 1309 t<vc11, 770-9900 ~ 11,~ .. w .... r Kmmoreelectrtc dryer, l ~Pwwllwt A CRAPTapeed boat, lwan blt..lnli, w/l?.zy llft M rh, d)'a. ·•..---._ ~ .. ,..., · yrold $125 ()tdoek1w1veldelkcha1r, .. 1015 -•.On!y2lnSo.Cu.Call 3~'. SSOOO /h11 t o lr. --'but wlll train .. .-.-.. .. ft5PM -Cell I =:r '72 "' d V l L _.., .. ,a -· •••• •••••••••••••••••• ,,,~m1. &2583,4922011 .. or an, ti oca, SALEB·P /T , eameu '*'t.i;":,~: ~ ........ copper 41'7·1971 Xln&newfruaedolcfurn ~ ---nwp,newtr•na.bralt • .... ,..._, llllllt ..... ....11-. AM'°' llr . ..._ Sl2$./make offer. enm......i....i. VlP -1 tble. plan ni. wk beach~ 21>' .. Skipjadtl '-~daed,lu J>' «>mp. ae1f cont. 1'vl. eltt. Sl650.f1S.31Wl pnw. ~ ..... ••· tH•r d71 4H ·UU, afl.7 JC.lri:;d.$175~ C.E.SURPLUSISl·Z777 =n!s.;,~1• :-~~:"'w.$2600 ,l a.evy Sld>urt>.n, all --5~ .. .._ ....o:aaa cover, H.D. trailer. . power. air, 15K mil~. l.WI....... edl -..HOMI \Mia 1011 Lov9Mt Ill, culr aio. T z L f! p H o N E atru. 11100. 542·7004 'T1 Prowler: Sleepe T, fUll a'IOD/otferf'tU338. tve . .... IL&. s~11s --•••••••-••••••• refn1 '60, a 111 bed1 AN 8 W I'! R I N 0 Tam·Spm, SU·tHJ bMb la -=:-on Lot.a ol "1411'ord VM ' Slanda.rd e ,.... HeHt••rH ;,:;;:..=;;;;..;;,;,:;;; _____ 1 ..__ -compl. w 1;r:.uct1 6 II ACRI N & II a Jo r 7.tpm. f:"'*'Ullee ~J :::~ tuRomi.aed •. Great cooc1'. a..a -.,,..._. PU&IC~& ........... ublaet brmdl1 llrl• d»eowlta, 'T1 Bit' Sant.oca.. , •. t>Nke. E·Z Uf\ D,IOO/Offer CIM-ml Iv. ~ ~· 9. Ul\.t Topu, Bal lei. _.. • Ml'Vt~. PboD· tn. oew. ltqlllPDed. bl ch. Seldom uatd. n 1 .,. ....... M. ...... ....,..,.. Troelc•.t_ llOtl a .. cb 'U DorHt H', 1' bp -.-eft.16wk.nd.I. "'12 Dodp VI aut.o pwr .._..IWIA...,_ YT:•Pll =.. 1011 Blvd. w11tmlnt1ter. Jobalon \ralW. a.1 or , 18.000ml'onnew -'• ... ,· lma8 .....,,.. II • W'-1...-1 IM.orlO .1.11-... boet 'T1 A1ntnam 13 • Twin, ~ ..._, • -...... ..... fl ---................ ni:ndp1P., •. 11\lli ', io.led w/fact«Y ealru, .. _ .... Ta ,... lllPORTDCLVT8 111 frind baa loat tO ~wltb11Ua oan WLe new cond. J•0.'100. um fl'ord window van, ==T1TIOMl01111 ......, • ••ve lolt over Lceolllf. tbl., hide cbn, motor. 4 hp Jobneon. :::.,• ce ll ltt.e r alnt ~. sasoo. Call aft to.w ·,...wa1atlolour ~datll.X1Atcond. LIM aw uMd 4 Ume1. --· • wkDdl 4N-1J03, 5.-1782 ~ 1iae clotbtna + i nM.1900. m.5111 --•---------.,,........_-..CM 6 .... If 10U Ila· -....... IOl7 . '(fl Dodie Wtndow Vao, 8 --...-.,,.•t1o1tyourN1bt1tt rWl9 '9 Ou1.t zs• w/trlr alftt Want to,...., for ~eek or trKk am/fm, P•neled, 6 wur 1&111 11 6 11, ........... ,........... Cland .. ntrll, tuOO. Aft :J!I~. ]!~'IA' trlr. caa-peU, ~. --af\ co•• 1rab up a n llull..UlllMt.aryMataw 'Ul-Onl --.-.··-·-5 • ...... Olbana1Dlht. Dlldr trllalal, bit tuh ho ~ .. , .... ~ -------•Im 81 .-rt l»MeO de ofr onr ti IO. Call IZ' Bertram, off • re Js•lll _._ "'12 Ood,. window wan. V.., lntM . ...,.., or •-••1111. raee boll, tcaverted Lo . -···--,._ v.a, e11to, valve Job, .... ..... A~ • lltt ....tender. World re· -•••••••••~•••• AlllJ'll c .... -/bit ..;.;;;...;.;.;;...._____ 1-ten ...... (11 .. GIJM). All/'Plll.,.....,.. but· 4*.411 .. 11, • __ ;;; _____ .....,...., - --a. , ...... --"' =;;••n• ••II ._ rodlo, ..., -· lllN ........ "·· ............ ..._ , Pit.. ..... .._ ...... •/bit 'Tl VW Vu. Hae Md. w-re' ., ..... , 6 .. .-...... -.,..... ,,.. •. ...-.... : ............. ,..... M. _.. ..._ N....-U. Wt:_.._,., ..,..-·•••· iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii=a.i~~-===-=ii.L:= . . . .. • • . -... . • ii ... tl7 ......... ,....... ......1......... ..... ..... rM ...... 1., • ..w ..................................................................... ···••·················· ....................... ········•·••••·•······· lln Dodie Tradeacnu W 9712 .._. '111 '-drt t7IO y.,_ 9712 a..,... ttJO ....._ UtH van. va, 28.000 ml ........................ ····-.. ••••••••••••••• .............................................. -··················· ············--····· c-.om IMlde. 1rwo 2 '74 am· -_m/fm caaaette ~Civic Hatchback One ·• tlJ: ~•pd Xlnt cond. VOi.YO "7t Et Camino S8tM xlnt .... ff tone apeclal A .. ';;.t fwl)t • • ~ ..... _ .Jf ll)OO Ot bnl Prv o.~ ....._.. v.. lo ml 0A/C •••••••••••••-•••••••• ..__.,__ ---.. --c.a.•11.c•YICI PB PS.AM1FMatrk ln .... .,new • aaa. _ __.._. • ~ ................. &..; ---~ • ..._.-:-.=..."" w -• • .-V • \<Vnu, -.?')' ' 'Tl '..-r. -:Ii &. lr tide, port olea. al 4N.-i.t -".:"'.\_" Cltm......, •-1.at. Make()(fer.ADpowel'. Vtftll .... roof blah -..w IMI 1971 "1$ am 3 dr I OWDI' .... 9n1 AM> LIAll... ~ ot ~. H l1b ____ MU19 ____ _ back 1wlv.l c~aln , .... ;.i xi.' c09d Nu --••••••--••• OY'ERSEAS DELIVft\' ... ._ •.Pan u ... rack, wi ~-· to11.a~n •. !.~ •. ,_ P IP. __ ,,_t ..l'r mTDllYIOUI CXPERTS perf . ._peealoo. lha1t IWIUveb' cu Mil your ~ I AM/PM --· -~ ---.,.., eee to '""9Ciate. CaJI ~-vu at DO co.i ta ~.:'!:ffe UOO wmdowt. '•t~teo 11pt. 1144 8455 d)'ll, 1140-tHU 'UCAI u-•.. •2'78S,_... to)'GU.M'MOll n.r..uhlk'rton> lmmac. SJ).800 or aa t'8 Of THI YIAI.. -:=-YO Wnt' ~U<' of $.120 f' mo flood lnvnilC>rY In •tock. •-"I'S .._,, oew Urea at "JOQlltom JOO. Wht, 4 cir, ..._Wt:As~ 95'0 0.11 T14 ~5m M or ,_,... tn o llureywhll•tlW1y lull 11•cos~All.!!~d. ~o~r~!·1:~:~ -~:'.ms ··---::·.··,·u·~····· n•~12 PM ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..-.uca.t 64'-9JOJ '*9467 _eo._97_______ ..... ml --... ·n UMW SJO•. AC '64 Jaguar 3 IS, r111b l MAD•/llltlAUl.T "11 i;&u waa. 55,0llO . YOUaDATSUM AM,PM tape>, srnlblk hand dnvt, 4-do .:d•n. u ~C!Ollarbot' Blvd. ...._ S.ll...,_ •• Concoura Sta W1n. New Urea. to.ded XlDt PAIDf'OROK NOT Int,• •pd. 1mmtH' \"{1nd, l'('alb\Ayl ~.637·T29Z CC~"TA M ~A OFNEW'71 ;';~~.~~:.~: eaad.SllDO.,.... toltDOUAI Sl0.500 Tll 1'102, 12131 '96 01t1mlt>r h1tli 38 Jt1fC 641-5700 VOLYOS ICIOd cond. ori& owner. "18 LTD 4 dr. ll,OllO ml. flOaTOP CAIS 31S-9510 body Rl~t lt•nd drlvt• IN ~'TOCK &M-4041 or aft epm, $5400. Immaculate. f.nl(h•h pl11l 16,00Q ... a.,c. '75' lm__,,,·6•4 "--Uvery• 541-7llOOPvtpty. IM&-186lafl.I. ~ B AI-°""'"-" 0.t.T~U M Il l I' ', 4'#1 Jj,'•, #I .. 0..-. C...ty azsflal'bor Bh•d . COSTA MESA ·~t-2500 WE BUY CUANCARS &TIUCKS COHMEU CHEVROLET ...._,. H 1 t .. ~r fL,,t "' : \ " ~ _:-, \ S4~ 1200 WE BUY USED CARS CALL Used Car Mgr 540-5630 1011\~0\ & ~O\ • l INlOL N MERCURY CREVIER *Z's * DISCOUMTID • BARWICK DA HUN l 1 I ~ ' 831-1375493 337S •DATSUNS• ..... SellcffOll OfAIModets SALES-LEASING PARTS-SERVICE ., 1725 ••• • •• •• •• • • •• • • • • • • • • • ..~~ LrlC' "1 DEA UR IN U.S.A. MAllqUt$ MOTORS 'Cl Corvair Lakewood ata. "1Z BlndMl'o. new encine. --~i:~~~Y· ~~orbestolfer. ~Jn ~:t~rn:t; a1.aao 49s.1210 __ _,,;.._ ____ lbor:b. nu tires, iz:iO. ~vel.Y can sell )'OW' ~eves. "1Z .. E. auto, air, power, car-t.Nck-van at no cost Ford ro W Xln AM/FM, It.hr int, $1900. toyou.547-7018 "10 L ag,oo. t p p CU! ... "' cood. 90.000 DlJ. $1000 . . ,.,_...,..., '71 WAGOM 96:M663. ClOSlO SUNDAYS ''12 .,._.:_ W 4 ---------~ qoa. new 1st class coodilioo. Air. 8• Gall Ca 11 '!i6S1lver Cloud 1 radiala, lo mi, Xlnt cood. luggage rack, radials. axy mper, se $19 000 rmo new battery. See to ap-cootained. $800/ bst orr. 985-4144 642-7080 predate. $1450. 979-2873/ _~ ___ J_IU_. ___ _ • ••••• ••• •• ... • • • • • •• • • Alllol. U1.4 962.001 after 5. ~ ..... _. ..•• !.?!~ :_•::;:-•••••••••=: 1 • 2·1~4~M~o~n~te~C~a::_r_lo-.-.-,r-•. l•.•77-G•r•an•a•d•a•.-v•.8•.•4•d•r l~!l-ljtlJi•l'10SubSooett m .14.000 -'nv AM /Fii. new tires, Ghia. A/C, stereo 8 trk. ~ mit ex ens/t rans. cd ........... -.......... $1400. Dys 536·8877, Cnise Control, All ex- raaials. $1000. Eileen "16 Pacer. •&dot Xlnt. new ~-9327 evea tras. Xlnt cood. Lo mi. 21 ... __.,,, -"""'" ._ tire5. twled.11mpg. 673-Ul95. ~ ·-(n4)751M>067. '74 Moote Carlo, PIS. eott.W...645-5700 To,ota 9765 ~ 9910 PIB. A/C. P.OP. $2400.I~~~~~~!! --------•••••••H••••-•••u•• -~1031 Early 1'77 Cobra : a uto IUUEDIATE .oltEYOU _._ ............ * .78 z28 Camaro. 302, factory loaded . DBJ-y SIU. YOUR 'Tl Electra. all extrH, Blk/Blk. Super clean. mags.new radials, 48000 "''"" ~.clean cond. $5.9951 ~; ~.,...,'"Cl\ Hom" AND TOY OT A, 6"""' Call Art custom ordered. UK mi. .19;~· ................ ~ I Yecr FUE SEE us• 675-'nm 673·9187 _&17_-68_Ll ____ _ SERVICE • '78 Re'g al. V-6 Turbo. '75 Monte Carlo 50,000 mi. ''12 Ford lhT OPU. AT .. or 12,000 miles in add• MAlqUIS TOYOTA lo9ded. 5 yr wmty. Lo air, am/fm stereo w/ 8 air, P,S.·P.B .• 360 V8. tion to warranty on a ny MISSION vtEJO . $7500 ~2795 track. p IS. p/8. crwse outstanding condition. new • 131..Jll049S-1210 rm. · · control. $3295. Days $2650.631-2744. 1979 MAZDA GLC, , "16Skybawk. loaded, xtra 6J::l.3157. EvesSSl-1641 U..C. 626 &TRUCIC 67Qirona,AM/FM\aulo, dean. lo ml, new tires. ,69 C...._•...._W_ -·••-••••••••••••• ALSO xlnt cond. New pamt, lo 644-7321/559-5478 ... ..._. 7· '6& Continental 4 d Ith __ &uJCMR-..n-mi,$750/ofr.8'2-837. 2 3SO b! comp. engine, $1200/bstoffe~. · r. r. ~-, ..... -'78 R egal. lOK mi. 350H.P. Recent trans . ., ... """ with the purchase oC a ny '78 Corolla SR5 Lift.back. A II/ F II • • i r . wire '100/0r besl otter. Dave ____ -._ . ......, ___ _ newimGLCand Perf. cond. lluy mas. wbeela.$5400.963-'1z:M 556.eA3 days, 545-7884 Mwcsy 9950 '731 Atll&AS MustaeU. 141-8190 C p c H 15 ewes. -·-.. -........... .. 2.845HARBOR BLVD.·. fillupilyoucanbealour 'Tl Celica GT liftback. ••••••••••••••••••••••• '72 Chevy Caprice. 1 OllANGECOUNTY'S COSTA MESA DATSUN 2621 HARBOR BLVD. 540.6 10 540.0213 ortruckm st.ock. Silver. Must Sacrifice power, A /C, $1350. LINCOLN-MERCURY 4 deafon~y new GLC,626 Auto, AM /FM cass. -owner. Gd cond, all MEWEST COSTA MESA SEE US FIRST! $C900.S59-0197. • ~ DEALERSHIP WI .Uy LI'--" '76 Corolla SR5: S33001 r .. •o..tTcas RAY FLADHOI --~ FirmMualseet.oapprec. IV"'uo 1JNCOLN-M£RCURY llSmCARS! Maldll~ Many xtras. Call aft. • 68 Chevy Wagon, p /s, l~l8AutoCentttDr. We're the new Chevrole 2150.Harbor Blvd. :ie>mS36-6241 n..-~ p/b, air. luggage rack. SDFwy·Lake Forest exit dealership in the lrvtn OOSTA llESA ._.._,. ~.'i:te, am/fm. New IRVlNE AUIO Cent.er. We n '45-5700 Toyota Cell ca '77. a..ii•a C ., .. ~"--:.blenew~~ Aboc~. 130.7000 yourmedcar! liftback, S-spd. A/C, • .... n~ uaa •"" JOE Mwa•s._ 9740 AM/FM slereo, copper. PURCHASE ~,!.1rm9'19-2S73. aft.5: '720ol. Park 9 pass. wag. ~ --·-·••••••••• 19,000 mi's. xlnt cond ~& White . fully loaded! MAC r"5ftSOM I~~~~~~~~ "T7~L. 21.000 mi. 1m. $5200. Days; 752·8530, OI LEASE "59 Olev. l·T ntbed, dual Xlm! S?.000. 67S-Clll ~OLET ··we need to buy clean owe. company cared fo r. Eves496-l030. YOUI MEW whls, stl ~&'rack. Rblt 74 Mercury Villager Mon· 21AuloCenterDrive Datsunused cars" mustsell$24,000.752-1510 '76 Toyota Celica GT, 5 1979 327, nu t~res. ~2000. tego, 9 pass. A/C. P/S, IRVINE $Will Pay Top Dollars dys675-549l eves spd, AM/FM stereo. New CADILLAC 642·0687. <It s a swal) P/8 , reg gas. Bef9AM or 761-7222 'Tl 450 SL. Spectacular ! tires.Good cond 846-2638 '73 Monte Carlo. Swivel M5pm675-l883 W . ,._~ED.I Red w/blk ml. COl9TQT>. 'Tl Corolla SW. Xlnt cond. NOW! bucket seats, air. stereo. ~ ""1 714/847·9941. $3200/bstofr. • • new tires. $1,995. After ••••••••••••••••••••••• Late model Toyotas 2MSHARBOR BLVD. '78 :mo. Metallc green. 645-0528PM'a 6::.>,00--0602 '6SMUST CONV. Volvos. Pickups & Vans 540-6410540.0~13 Mint cond. Under 20.000 1,.._.. 9767 NABERS EICaminoWANTED V·8,auto, Callmtoday! ---1 '78 280Z. AC . 4 s pd. mi. f\lU warranty. Pvt .;;HT.·~·•••••••••!!••.• '65-'7L Good condition. restored. $4.150. AM /FM stereo cass. Pty. MustSell. Bestoffer '18TR-7 Coco bm . Man.y ~ Smal1V.Sor6.547-3182 640-2522 f/!1116/olr. 838-2'30. over-$17,000. 714~75-7861. extras. $7,000. or beet ol· • OWl•W.. '79 300SD turbo diesel, ~-~· 839-0916. Ill. 5· ~.e __ .. !!!.~ ...................... . 1--~------..i 1!:,_10 r':~A,:/fu:'x'::t s~. maple yellow, lo '""'"""' UJOO H.Wor BMl l2Townltentry Wen. fuJ -'73 Cutlass Supreme cp. mecb.&body,newUres, mi, SPM.897·4500 VolD•illlJl'I 9770 CoscaMesa.540-9t00 ly equip., ori~ ownr, Auto, &Jr. new tires & $2300/080.640-1785 _...5..... ....................... ~.e..8297 aftSP M batt. tOO'i'o mecb. Super . ""~ -VW -Having trouble sell· ~ cln. Must sell. $1695. CAR STOLEN. Nee "13 Dllblun 510 wagon, oo· tiaCIDlS ing your car? Try us Top '68 Cad de Ville, Clean. Co11t1M.eal 9930 642·4.'iCM. deeD A--A car. truck lY $1275. must sacrifice. '72 280 SE -dark blue dollar · Pald for or Not! Wifes car. whlte/ltbr int. •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• ---------""'.--Wkdya N 5-S181, evea. m leather interior _: Brin(t your car to J im $'12S.DM489 umc.oot.t.owncar.Areal New 1979 Cutlass etc. Have c aab. (213 497..uBL ,900. 532-4091 or Marino Volkswalfen. ...:a---ar n •• _ "'-Su~reme Broughams 9'l&OJ& 1B11J Be ..._Bl d ' 9 •td d ~ c . ........, uae I 8 a uto PS/PB 830-6686. a",, v .. unt· 7 a:. . ora o. 3-tone aew. Loaded. $2950. w · · • • $CASHFORCARS '73atOZS.WOO/mkoCr. Dys --------ingloo Beach -Ask for Blue/Silver. Loaded.SQ ._..or15&-0'1G6. A/C, AM/FM radio & Top ..._., __ 1or c•---ca 630-2630, eves/wknds '76450SL Aildnf'rank. Marino or Tom root. $19,000. 640-179'. much more. Choice or ..,.... ~ 59-3321. Georcia brillant red with parch· , Cor""9 t9l2 colors. $8933. 759-9023. &trucb,paidforornot! ment lntr. New brakes, -... -VW--B-U-G--v-, .... -_--1 .. • a...lc, loolrin good.-•••••••••••••••• _ar __ . -------HOWAID Clta.rold 'Tl Datsun F·lO, S spd, ti.De p· lli tires •v AYR..,,.,.... S?alO DoveltQuaUSts. 40mpg, ~t cond. l(ust 75f.r,;:w ll'e • New brakes. Death · $4M213. ·~-=':~CS°~ ,... 9957 (Near MacArthur, sac. buying house. Call ---------forces aale. $1800. , oC 71, · ---·-.. •-•• .. • Bristol at Jamboree) 731.J762. '72 2Si)E 4.5, mint c:ond, 8C7..a.l6 88 Old CDV, 1 owuer. in r. 7 741·~;~_9AMft-'75 Pialo Wagon v.a, auto ~RT BEACH sunrf lo mi ,.,,._r cpM --.JOd--aballe, all extru, • ... ...,.._ a • --J11mN low -11 -~""'•" .-v '76 Silver 280-Z Lo/mi: ~ · "'"" " • n VW 4U Square back. fine inl. suoo. Co1ta IPM. imo toff~r . (71,:) WANTED: Dune Buggy, Perfect cond. Must Sell! ---------Runs great, Loolta peaL -..546-0529 '78 &llftivenary spec., 548-8625 Iller 5 p.m. & Street legal, cheap. Call SS,800. 64&-6489/833-1361, '7 6 4 SOS L M e r . $l8150.S62-3565 'Tl Seville, It blue/blue io.dfld. car cover, 13K weekends . or (714 > Kil't63l-'253 _Dorothy __ "-------~=~~;.fy·C:n~'. '61 vw, aood paint. new tat, li,000 m l, all xlras. ml, $14,500/bs t ofr. 4111HOOO.ext.307 wkdays . ....._ .... arted '72 240-Z Gd. Mecb.& Private. 602/837-t4l9 tirell, Poncbe rim1 • PP. $10,000. 751·4344. GJ-t044 'Tl Amo Wagon. Looks & body. Ma ny extras. bubcaps,goodcood .. 1"11 •862111 r-9933 r"'"' good. Must ~ell. ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• .,. Al:.ft c:c:7 ...,.,0 t "~"" '""" _..,E M t d ..,.,,_..,. 831 1a125 __,_ ~... "' .aa.a...•--9705 -.-. ., ....,. ex ......,, •v"""" . us see con . """'""'• .,, 'Tl Cad cpe ltbr, all fac--·••••••••••••••••••• $2000. 644-0781 --DougM2-SS87eve. slvr classic cpc, snrf, ••••••••••••••••••••••• -~-------reblt eng, auto, air, blk '66 VW Squareback. Runs t.ory equip. Lo mi, wires. '70 Cougar, good condi· '72 Pinto. Well m ain· '74 Alfa Romeo Spyder. '70 SI O WAGOM ltbr, $11,500. PP. 640-9260 good & good cond. Sl .000. $7250. 642-450t. lion. 351 eng, $1500. talned Good bod S800 blk/ivory, El Monte top, Good e ngine &: great dys.644-1795eves. orbeetolfer. 71411163-5006 '72 EL DORADO Con-. 548-68Q2eves. 646-Waft.5. weJ·days.' xlntcood. $4700. 494·8896 body New tires. Have "19 vw Sdtl J 'SJ a V lean ALL receipts. $lOOO/ or '76 280: Xlnl cood. elec. AM/_. cco ... 7.000m , vertlble, auaaet ext ,,.:/'8. •-ery ~-· ~ 9'60 JJ,,.IJ 9707 b t ff 0 sWU'OOf, white with blue rm caa. -any n -w /bone leather int. na , .. ack•~-· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ··-••••••••••••••••••• .!11,,,,....o d er. ave, int.. Loaded . Call tras. Mu s t Sell! Every opt. Xlnt cond. $1295."93-7032aft8. '72"'· Ill x1n d I '75FOX2dr,4spd,sunrl. ~· ys,or S45-7844' ~71~. $7,400/best.offer.491·2097 SS.000.64S-l289eves. ·ZS: Wreck. Good V-302 mi~f~loadedt con ' 0 a le, AM /FM/Cass, mag --------FUEi.ECONOMY '73VWVan. Foldout bed. New l t71 Cadilla c eag. A/Cat other parts. 536-7268 wbls.55i2-1163,98o.e'795. '74 280 2+2Z. AJl/FM, 4-eyl 1975 230 scln, wbt Stl Bild radial1. Xlat Sevillel. Your choice of <Miadriveable.$250/bst t.IJe, wheels, alr, clean, cond. 714 -840-5568 / colon. $13,821. New 1979 ctr.8GS20'7. '70 Ply. Wan. Good transpori.atiol. $ll85/ofr. 515-5840 ·~~'.~:ft';:~· !z~1_aut;....;._move;,___· 75IMJIM _ _.;..;.__ =~!'~::i· 21J.._7841. Berol 1!'.ldoracloe available at -~------9-9-3-5 ~. 751·9629 Q-asb "12 Pick Up. U.S. comparable savln1s. __,,.. 11.ap Sa I ea '15 ao, camel color in " '88VWSquareback Mech. Call now ror appt. -··-·-•••••••••••• '13 alr cood, power steer- DCW 97~ atereO,~ Nette out. 4 dr. 1unroof. U.. Stereo CUI player. 59023.Bkr. '14 POL.ARA 4-dr. Good inl~lnkes. New paint. ••-• .. •••••••••••••••• ---------alr cond. stereo, a ll Sl,250.-.o228 eolid car. PS/ PB, AC. -.,...,., '18 8210GX Hatchback, ---1 7c.o .....,.,. '72 ,..._ Lo mi '78 CdV. Wblte/wbt leatb, Steal at $675. 631-5823 ---· .,.,.,.,. · _..__. --· ooneweo1. red trim. Uke new, ai11..;:,=;.;;;.;..:..;_,;._;,_;_..;.... __ 1 Pwllllec ft65 =~:,~~~~pa, ... 9742 New clutch, br ka ~ estr'as.Loml.811.0.0 Allltivel.Y can aeU your ..................... .. ----•••••••••• more. Runs xlnt, all car.uucll-van at DO cost ,,,.,_Am: T Top. 3M "19 210ZX, 2+2. 5 •rn· 900 ._ MGC GT: Verv clean.. mlint reeds avail. $2600. "16 Seville, It blue, blue toyw. 547·7018 _.. •---... M t II mi • -•.1 ,,__all2pm ,_. .,.. 3SOOO I .... ....-u .. us se . . power stee ng needltransrepair. $1600. _,_ · u-. .... e new. • m • '65 Cornet. AC. Good 2131986-9046213/332-8026 cniM.0Lpck.ID-7SIT accept trade·ln M.C, "70 VW Bui· Xlat cond. tll200.75-lt18 ~ui/°°· 11111 & D 1 A .• T '78al.rt. All~!!'oo·•tereofi , ::~·646-2379 Newor~~r ~~'-116450 ~~de v11'Uet~~ ___ .,_;._·----1-i=.~~1~: DELIVERY! r, elec. -· rm. ._"' . ·-· .... -exce en .. vuu.1-C f.ow mllea":b_· ........ 5/or Pam.IJl.G7• 971t• • Uoa • own o wner • "160olt. Very lo mi. 5 s . ....,., ~llLICTK)M '-1"' -•Bue m -23111 evenlncs and Diteond. llust.aeU, t bait offer. 832-4715 C.MIW 1979 M 9725 -··-••••• .. ••••••••• $ISO weekends ctr. 556-0571 days Tom, _Lea __ ve_mea_•_l.le.=....·---nm•s --••••-••••••• Per. '76T... 173-ltoo . -..c1175evet. '78 Tran1-Am Macho 1211. D '-ml Uiftt--A -Dr' ._., • ._ lo "16Serille. By Owner. lite 5K I DK.. .. • c b 0 bl g h • n ,,..'fl -. .. ...,._. -s WI e s '' pop. l>J> blue, power seats. lape, .. V.f Coronet. 7 m • ... .. AL801.13csi's .. j Wi ,... 70 ti IS y_... camper, Hke new, A/C, cniJe control lthr int c lean , re I I a b le performance pkg. 1198 ._STOCa! F....UCCloeeout ~.low ml. Mintcond. AM/FM,radlo.645-7675 vnyl top. ii5o0 Firm: trana,ortation. rblt :S.°'i:!!fe:»· a~rr;~:: call klM1 -We may ai:.!!'11~ CQNPw.''3JNC,.. "I'S Vm t ..-bua, AT, ml358 u.., 75.548-08!2. a /c . Me talli c bro. have tlle pre -owned -·• -Overseaslmports AO, PorKM ens, 8 trk C 0 9tt7 '75 STATION WAGON, w/beige velour. Gold BllW JOG are aookin nowarrtainl ..._, M2.oee6 tape, aakl~ $1300 ........................ power•~bc'akes. mags • trim. Charlie for! mY.hu TJ0.1811alUP · '717aSUver Beauty Lo _air_..;..,~...;...;..._..;;.. ... .;,.._;...;.;.. ___ 1,....;51!1..;;..;._ml;;;...;.....;..W..;.;..;.M_-S..;;... __ _ Ul.JMI 4'Mt4t Mal'OBS ~-:.. =··=): ~vwvan. pc,ld tramp, ~t. T top, AM/JM c·a... .... '940 "78 4 cir. Grand Le Mans. Ol.M•ICOUMTY"I JIDW.Warw,S.A otlc Auto '1mport1 • W/coulder trade mu under wmty, fnto. -:---•--• .. •• .. , ..... PS, PB, AC. Good shape. ..-T 8T-llll ..... ..;: Bue « Volvo, -..is. ~-PHIL · !~~::n.,:.~.;.ea or . ~ ~nat.!'j'i:'°8~ ~IM~ n a.... ae~ •••t ~':·W:u~ LONG ~"G!!Ca~:!!taliaa!!!:.!,xlnt~~cooct!:.... __ ln-- W *-All _.., 5 a.. Lo ml. C.U Mr. =r-..:--• ...... ""Cllf•.•llli. side ltout,new_,_ _ sdr .... Le=te1 ~ ... ~ ..... &Int ~It, ... 1111 ..,... WVW __.. __.., _._. .. ¥'!~ = v,:1.o.•T orbellt.567·$514 C '.__ ---. -. -. aft ~•••I '78 Tran• Am. f•llJ ....a ••'Biiw 'TUJI....., '1111l T, I• r•....,.. ......... -. ,;,.t,,• af ordalt •· elPIJl)ed; lOK ml, a.ra l•'•.. .:·AltlllrKllt • rt. -. ....... ... ~~. pim&rip. NsapdltMlt ....... .,. m ,... ..,,,-=. :.M.~ ii• t 1 ' 1.vw ... ...._ a.a. '::rl ~T.,"%1:;~ .,. nw All, new eaa .. • -;;;:c;;~ ~ ....,~111~ ---.,lllwwb1911D .... ~-=== .... = -.aoomLJOOmJ.onnew IOlthlY•r1 --IN u . ..... m~ :r.:::.ID~::':p~~ ........ ..., ..... -~ .... 111111111111111111••... ...a 1mfllll9 11 2 lllnl ff71 G Ntleda ...... a•lf• Ollt•ICOUMn ,... 11 -"JICl•D -··-••••••••••••• ...._am...,••• ,,.All.,0 -sci.a. .... _ ... --.... T-.... .,,_,__.. ,..1 '1'911'1'-·: -·.::!!:..·vvOLVO •••"••••••••••••-•••• :-., ... ,•tt•le•'ria•llr cood., i; ~ ~.: ..... •;:t: ___.,,... It ' 'gwr. wttb wblle vnyl t ... can...:..... Lm"llllt Volvo Dt•• ra k.. • ra i 0 • m.aa ar79M3M la~Cowat7! (lCJOWGI). (ltk.Plfm'). IUYorl..SAI& 14171 .... "74 DIJtllCI' _ .. _ .......... . 'M v ....... "*' llloell *=-":=nl -..-...... ... . ._.-. ..... . ..... 04Y PtlOT CJJ Earle Ice TOYOTA-VOLVO 1975TOYOTA COllOUA SP09T COUft 5 speed. vinyl roof. mag wheel• & air conditioning Little yellow car with Iota of eY9 ai>C)eall (894MPI). 53199 1977 DATSUN J DOCX SIDAM 4 speed, AM/FM with tape. custom paint & low mileage. One of the nicest. prettiest tittle cars we have! (593T Jf) · 53299 1974TOYOTA CIUCACOUN 4 speed. air oondrtt0ning & stereo 8 track. Black. blaok. black beauty! (837KHN) 1975 VOLVO S9AM Air cond1t1oning. power brakes. Power steering, stereo cassette. sun roof. leather & automatic transm1ss1on. Fantastic condition - super buy! (960NONI. 54299 COllOUA l DOOtl SID~ Automatic trans .. radio and radial tires. Bnght red wi nch black interior Neat little carr (304'913). 1977TOYOTA COltOUA 1.nrraAC« 5 speed. stereo & low. low miles. Beautiful silver metallic with blaci< interior. High. high gas mileage! (On8XR). 1976 TOYOTA C8JCA ., UfTIACI& Copper metallic with saddle interior. AutomatlC transmission. stereo with tape & mags.1(4'90RLV). Outstanding value at 54599 1975 VOLVO WAGOH Automatic transmission. air conditioning, power steenng & rack. Pale blue with dn blue interior. Economy. class. safety, 1ongev1ly! (074NCT) 54999 WA.c>M 4 speed with over-drtve. air condit1on1ng. stereo. rac:k I Pirelli radial tires. For• Of'Nn. Good value for yoor money! (062589). 55899 1975 DATSUN JIO% Automatic transmission. air conditioning. c:uetom wheefs I AM/FM stereo radk>. 0..0 metallic blue. Clean & sharp! ( 120NOQ). 1976 VOLVO 4900IS9AM Autometic transmission. air condltlon1ng, power ....nng. AM/FM radio & 21.800 l'ftll-. MetlOw t1a1ae with cWk brOWT'I interior. A 1'911 bargain! (840NYG). s5999 CJ' CWLY PILOT 1979· PO Equlp,..cl With: •V-6 Engille •AutonKMc Trans. •Power SteerlftCJ •Power Brakes •W /S/W Tires •AM Rocio •Dellae Wheel C~ers •Body Side Moldings •Accellf Stripes Example· 2J37 A9P6&4892 00 Plus Tax & Lie. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY - Price Good Unifi 3-28-79 only 1979 PO TIAC SU BIRD E•ippecl with: •4 cyL &.gine •4 Speed :t"nms. •AM-Radio •Custom. Wheel Co•ers •W /S/W Tires •locly Side MolcllftCJS •Tinted Glass •Sport Mirrors •Vinyl Trim ''" , ..... Celle• " 5 s-..1 5 speed, t.::to{y eir oond1hon1ng, AM/Fl4 -atereo. reltye whMte. (929Sf'T) Only 00 Plus Tax & Lie IMMEDIAR DELIVERY 1t111111c111•c... lt74Da•11c.s...._w..-v-e. euto. trans.. fec:tOfY elr c:ondttlonlng. CJOWer 4 cyl., auto. trans.. AM radlO. (863MIL) steering. AM radio. whitewall tlret. Landau top Lie. J701MIE. 5M95 56195 52195 lf71YolMW~241 4 cyt., auto. tr~ .• factOfY .,, COndftton1ng, POWet steering. AMIFM stereo. roof r~ 1703MPTJ. 55395 20 MILES PER I ALLON ,That's 18°/o beHer mileage Th•'Toyota Corona And I I 0/o leffer Mileage Than Dahm 810. Comparison based o n 4 speed. 4 cylinder -EPA estimate. MiJeage may vary on driving speed. road conditions and your driving habits. I 976 Cllewolet '12 T• Pfcl 1 V-8. auto Iran$.. AM-fM St8f80 Tai>e. Rallye Wheels. UC. 11C18776 54795 lf7JFwdPWolu•amt 4 cyt .. euto. lrMa.. AM radlO. (328HT J). .. H11ntington Beach Fo11ntain Valley OITI O N Your Hometown Dally Newspaper I ;, ~ t ' i c ~ I f t 1 t . VOL. 72, NO. 81, 3 SECTIONS, .0 PAGES • • nt1s --- ~ti~e Makes Perfect Weight lifting off duty pays off for firefighter Rick Lund- quist as he extricates 11-year-old Shawn Robertson from ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA -· APWI ...... waist-deep mud. The boy was visiting Bristol, Conn .. from his home in Littleton. Colo. Gunmen Also Kill His__Valet THE HAGUE. Netherlands <AP > -Two mys terious gunmen !lhol the British am- bassador lo the Netherlands and bis valet today outside the en· voy's home "and then escaped in morning rush-hour traffic. The two died a short time later al a hospital. Authorities could not im- mediately explain the motive for the assassiJ\ation of Sir Richard Sykes. 58, a security expert for the British diplomatic corps. Police said Sykes and the 20- y e ar-old Dutch valet. Karel Struub. were shot at a bout 9 a.m. outside the ambassador's residence as the envoy was about to enter his Rolls-Royce for the 10-minute drive to the British Embassy. It was reported as many as six s hots wer e fired. The am - bassador was bit at least once. and one bullet struck the valet, who was holding the car door. police said. Pickets Draw Police • Oiicago Ups I. Drinking Age Eyewitnesses said the gunmen ned through a nearby alley and disappeared into tramc. police reported. T he killers were between 35 and 40 years old and were dressed in dark s uits, the witnesses said. Sykes' chauffeur . unharmed in the attack, drove him to the hospital while an ambulance picked up the youth. l 1 l I ; • ~ ' . t t ( CHICAGO CAP>-The legal drinking age in Chicago has re- turned lo 21. City officials cast McDonnell Doug~ Workers Protest Firing The ambassador's residence, a historic mansion. is in an al· fluent residential area of the Dutch capital. aaade last summer's ruling that allowed people 19 and 20 lo drink beer and wine in taverns without being able lo purchase it for orr- premises consumption. Alderman John Madzyk, chief sponsor or the new law, said after Wednesday's 43·1 vote that be was motivated when the Il- linois General Aseembly this month moved toward passage of a ball raising the drinking age to 21 , but allowing communities the optional 19-vear-old age All in Huntington Beach police were calJed lo the McDonnell Douglas plant today when about 30 mem- bers of the National United Workers Organization set up a picket line at the facility. No arrests were made during the one-hour demonstration that began at 7 a.m., police said. A spokesman for the group said it was protesting the dismissal Wednesday by a McDonnell Douglas employee, identified as Scott Mcintyre. Police were called to the scene Mind Memory Expert Telh Secret By ROBERT BAllKER OfttlltC)eltJ .......... When Jim Gerspach goes lo the grocery st.ore, It is with visions of loaves of bread dancing on shelves and an- gry cows stomping on dozens of eggs. GEllSPACH, A memory expert who also is a division chief in the Huntington Beach Fire Department, conjures up these It.ind.a of i01ages instead of carrying shopping lista. "I remember to buy bread by imaginging that it is dancinl on the shelves. "U I a1ao need milk I think of the loaves or bread get- linl out~ control and ban.on. up against a cow's udder." . · If be a1ao needs eggs, it ls easy lo remember them, too. .. TllE LOAVES of the bread bang into the cow's udder, 1be get.a angry and kicks her feet and stomps dosena of e111. "I really ima1ine beariq those ea11 bunt open. Tbe trick is to vis- ualize tbele tbinp and make them do IOmetbinl funny.'' •lllNCll Genpacb said the fint time he tried tllU teelmique witbout a shopping list be remembered 20 or •au-perfectly. "I •• really proud of mnelf. Tben I 1ot up lo the cbeckoat llMd ud reallaed I didn't bave any money. • '1'be ftnt tbiDI I remember now is my wallet." by McDonnell Douglas security personnel who complained that pickets obstructed trafftc as it entered the facility off Bolsa Chica Avenue. However, when police arrived they found a ''peaceful dem- onstration" t hat violated no laws, said Lt. James Walker. A spokesman for the workers group, who identified himself as Bob Maybee, described the morning activity as a "militant picket line." Motorcyclist Hit by Auto In Costa Mesa A Huntington Beach man was injured Wednesday when he fell Crom hls motorcycle and was run over by an approaching car on Placentia A venue near 20th Street in Costa Mesa, police said. Taken to Hoag Memorial Hospital with chest injuries was Douglas Allenthorpe of 16222 Monterey Lane. Allenthorpe was reported in good condltion this morning. Police said Allentborpe told them he had left a driveway lo go south on Placentia and noticed a car coming toward blm from a drivewa)' . He Mid be tried lo avoid a eellialm, but lost bis balance and fell over. Tbe right front wheel ~ tbe car went over his chest, police laid. The driver of the car , Carole Evonne Wilkinson, 28222 Via Ro- ble, Mission Viejo. told officers 1be was making a left turn from a private driveway to go north on Pl~tia when the acciflent occuned at aboul4:40 p.m. /uryPonden I . Seaman's Fate He said secW"Jty personnel at McDonnell Douglas dragged Mcintyre "kicking and scream· ing" from the facility Wednes- day and that he was suspended from his job. Maybee claimed Mcintyre was removed because he is part or a "growing move ment or political unrest" at the facility. · Mcintyre could not be reached for comment. Douglas s pokes man Don Hanson said that Mcintyre was suspended after an incident in the company's cafeteria Tues· day night. Hanson said that Mcintyre, a milling machine operator, made a speech in the cafeteria for a certain cause and disturbed other employees. Hanson sa.id be did not know what cause Mcln- ·tyre was espousing. HaDIOO laid the National Unit- ed Workers Organization is ool a contract bargaining unit at the aerospace facility. He said police were calleb because this group put up °'"" picket line. Hanson said ~e pickets were not Douglas employees. Police said the protest ended shortly before 8 a.m. today. The protest group spokesman bad no comment when asked if the picketers planned to return to the aerospace firm for another demon.atratlon. "We have not received any threats, and there have been no claims since the shooting," a spokesman at the British Em· bassy said. In London, the British Foreign Office said it knew no reason for the attack. The flag on the Foreign Ministry buiJding in London wa~ lowered to half-staff after new~ or the ambassador's killing, and Queen Eli zabe t h II sent 3 message of sympathy to Lad) Sykes. Newton Jury Weighs Fate OAKLAND CAP) -A jury, unable t.o reach a verdict in the first two hours or deliberations in the Huey Newton murder trial, spent the oigbt locked in an Oakland hotel and was or- dered to resume today their con· siderations or the fate of the Black Panther leader. The jury of 11 whites and one black recommenced delibera- tion today at 9 a.m. <PST>. The nine women and three men got the case late Wednesday after- noon but were sequestered for the night when they did not agree on a verdict. Huntington Police HUnt Kidnap Suspect Huntineton Beach police re- leased a composite drawin& lo· day of a man wanted in connec· tion witb tbe Monday kidnapping aod sexual uuult of a 18-year· old lirl· Tbe alle1ed a bductor is described as about six feet two inches tall, medium bulld and In "lloppJ t out ~shape condition, .. invntlpton Nkl. He la between 21 and S2 years old witb bl'own reeedina balr, a ma1tacbe and 1Ulbtly l ellowed teetb. Niee said be ba llftWal claJI " ...... ll'OWlb .... tbe ktdu ...... oecured Monday al· terDOm about I p.m. Tbe 10UDI riet.lm reportedly was foreed into bis car near Beach 8CMll••ard aad Taylor DrtH alld 4rtven to Coroaa ..,,.... .......... .............. dlaerlbed .... earl11'1modll...U.W81Dft, off Die wttlt wMte elod9 ln-tertor, pallce ..W. T•• •htlm wa1 aot ............. --:--".... --- TEN CENTS • am ; - . ............. SLAIN IN HOLLAND AmbaHador Sykes Huntington Scramble Expected The resignation of Mayor Pro Tempore Richard Siebert is ex- pected lo touch off a nother scramble by the Huntington Beach City Council to fill a vacancy in its ranks. Council mem bers struggled fo r two months previousJy before they could muster enough votes to name a successor to former Mayor Ron Shenkman. Shenkman resigned in December and it was not until Feb. 13 that Clancy Yoder was app0in1ed lo take bis place. ·Mayor Ron Pattinson said he favors filling the vacancy by ap- pointment rather than by an election and he wants to make the appointment a s soon as possible. Pattinson said he would prefer lo have a full council vole on a new mayor when reorganization of the council is scheduled next month. Pattinson. who is serving hi s second stint as mayor. said he is not "particularly" in favor of accepting another term. Pattin.son also said an appoint- ment should be made in order lo s pare the city the cost of a s pecial election. The cost is estimated at $30,000. Siebert 's term expires in a year. Councilwoman Ruth Bailey has indicated she favors an elec- tion to fill Siebert 's post. She said she is concerned that the public is in danger of not be- ing adequate ly represented because councilmen are bemg appointed rather than elected. Councilman Bob Mandie said today be doesn't know which is the best way to go. "I have mixed emotions. I have concerns about representa- tion and with the costs of the special election. "Maybe it would be best just to keep the seat open ror the rest of Siebert's term." he added. Coast Weather Cloudy night and early mornlQI hours and partly c loudy Friday. Lows tonight 44 lo 50. Highs Fri- day 58to64. IN81DE TOD.4 W Soft fi"rallcilco'•. ,,..,. 31, Oft U1 10Q11 to becom•ng II•~ MCOlld mod popWor touriat attracffM in U.. c:owdrw, ta "'°"' .,. .,....,,,..,,.. Coo. Sn P.Oflt •. . .. . .. r:i·.-r .. ., .......... Cl • a-.. L. ....... =---· ~ -..: ...... -= •]~i .. ~ ... CM..... M 1--M ; I ;.U DAil V PILOT HIF fflurtd•y, Ma«:h 22, 1919 Waddill Trial · , Patlioloiist- Back on Stand Dr S hHlt>y Drlacoll , a llurvard nivt-r,.tty pnhologl t , w a11 back on Che w 1ln<"!'i r.tan<t torlay. fM('tnR cro. l'Umln•tmn in the murJt>r trual of Dr W 1 Ill ut Waddill el tl..tJQlllOn Hut.Ir Tt'l!llllfymc for t.k ~'·-.n Wt•dJ>elltd.ay. Dr DrUaolJ IAW tltt- Orange ( ounty Supt•rlor Court Jury thut s ht> fouud no t'vldt'nC\' ot l'~hne dun111~\· to the buby tbl w Mdd.l1J au.a libor~ TM pnlWC'UUon rlauDI Wad dJ II botcbt-d Uk· a bort.lOa and Few Crops Suffered lnStol7n$ •r ro• BARLEY Of .. hlty ,._ ...... Recent heavy rarrui have de layed one or two crops aod for~ed (M'U'ers lo hold back oo some IP"1AltJme cbores but the o utlook tor Orange Co uJ1lY a graculture lookfi ver y good, agricuJtural analysts commeDt.· ed todlty. "The only people realJy affect- e d by the rain we r e the str awberry growers." said Our Thetford of tbe Orange County Farm Bureau. "The berrie& ~ot wet and there was some s poilage. And . of course. they don't Last as long in t h e market o n ce the y -re pe1cked. .. But the strawberry growers I koow aren·t com plaining even though the) were b1l by t.be frcKt earlier this year. It won't be a record crop by any means but it will be a good one and some de- hc11l1JS fruit wtll tJe bjUing the markets within the next week " J 1 m Harnett of the Orange County Division ol Agriculture said the nature or reeent rainfall pr~vente d a ny s i g nifica nt damage in the county's faelds and o rchards. "We had plenty of intervals between showers." he said. "Tbat allowed the rain to soak into the ground and 1t gave rarmers a chance to mop up between showers." • Hamett said his s urvey ol the county's agrwuJtural acreaae jp. d icates good c r o p s with aspa ragus and celery expected ~o hit the markets in the next few days. "Many farmers arc plant.io.g now and we expttt good crops of Bell peppers and tomatoes," be said. "And. of course, the rain has been a bJe~sing for the prange, lemon and avocatdo or- • cha rds. They love that salt free waler ." Larry Tyler ol tbe lrviDe Com- pany sa.id he expecJ.a an unwwal· ly high Cl"Of) of ilVOCadoes this year. "Our cit.rus crops are JOOCi • ;m4 !be rain will beDefit them." he said. "But we don't expect fi ny rec.o rd cropa t.bi.6 year liace fr~L killed iOIDe ol our frwl. ·'Tile one Lb ing we c a.> guaraniee is ~ ~sol much of our pro4uce, partic ul~rly strawberries. are eoinl to be Maher:· Tyler said. "The ~ lo frost made that inevitable." Tbelford. Hanaetl aod Tyler t:1ereed tba1 wb•t Oraoce Cou.o· ty's rarmera oeed richl now is a spell of w~m. dry weather. "We've had all a.be raia we oeed rieht now." Tyler i&id "We've sot cboret and Plantin& to do a.ad we'd like Lo be able Lo Itel OD wilb il. •• Backing Alleged PCEW YORK <AP) -A former official ot tile s..tb Alric. fa. formation Ministry tau aaid So.di Africa prorilled _, to hett-defeat former 6-. Didc Clark ol Iowa, n.e New Yortt Times reported loday. DAILY PILOT '"° Ot_(_ O.• .....,_ ..,lt"l•teo!\ ~" .. ~""~"--••twOt­, ... ,~~---,-·,. ............ _., .............. ..., ... c.,,. ~~. N_, ................. .._l\if-le•~Yfll"'·'"'"·'--IM<ll~C-41\ ....... _...... ..... "......,.....,._ ..,...,,.._,....._.-........... ,,......, .. no .,,., ... _ ....... c--...~-"-··--~-......... -· °"""' .., ... -·--~ ....... ,_ ........ ..... n:-.·:=- a.n-11..... ~ ...... ................. Mw\ -==---~a.. _,.,..,._.., . .,o...,,,... .. '--.. e(.~-C..le_ .... ~ ,,,,, .... .,.. ... a11••• .... ••1111J•• .. ,,,..._. ....... •CD•:uw• .... lattr :itntnl(ll"d th~ infant to death Dr Drucoll told lh(' <'OUrt 11ht• ~•dw-d her t'onrlu1tlon on no tim._ br lhc ~ullnc-...iutlon wie4 .. • Uw a ooruea .-Cr ltle .a.dlf'd ll,!IU~· samplea fro• ti\ infant known m. Ha.~ 0 r1 Wra .. u Ht>r Poi>ltlun wl•N t·ont radickd b t'Ltrl l 1•r lc.,t1mony by • another putholoji(lll. Dr Robert H1 rhis~ II«" ~hf:'vt-d tht•rl' Wilb liuiine da.ol"'c Lo the Ull¥.lll Waddill, u . i~ accutod of 11lr1angtlng the Infant on March z. 1977 Has f1r1>t murder trial endNt iD a hUlll Jury. rt.•por1.ediy 7 to ~in fnor of a cqlllttal. PrO&ttUtor Robert Ch-attenon contends Waddill w 1u1 deeply in dt>bl at lbe time of the ttbortioft. lacked U...ra.ce and r~ • law•uit ba.edon br:un damale to the mfant Defe nse attorney Charles Weedman detues t.be t0deb&ed neu da1m 1as11un.g tbat bu. chen.t was hnaDCially aecw-e . Ue a lso coot.ends the baby Wil beyond reYJval when Waddill eK· am 1oed ber tn U.e a.o.pllJIJ. Today Or. OriseolJ. aJso Cluef ol Patbt>k>gy at BoU.on Holpiu.J for Wom en. s tood by her naedical findiAp und~r t.be ques· tloniog ol Weedman. Weedmao quesUooed lbe ac- ca:raey ol Dr. Driaooll's finding& becaUM Bab)' GirJ Weaver's re- maiH w~re not immediately refneeratect after she wu pro- nouneed dead. He a.aid dd.erioratioo Lo the re- mains because of t.be lack ol a cold temperature ioterfered with accurate ualylia of cause of death. Jn r~. Dr. DrucoU said that while refrigeraUoa iA de· s1rabte and ii practiced at her hospital it would not have made tbal much difference iD -B-&by Girl Weaver 's case. The Jack of the coJd lem· perature was oompeou.t.ed for by placement of the baby's re· mains in chemical fi xative jm- mediately in a labor-atory eo - viroommt after her dulh. NolobbyUt Approved for Cnunty -Yet County eoveromeot's OD· again, CJIJ.agaiD pJan t.o hire a Washington, D.C .. lobbyist is oft ~in. Tbia time, the Oraoae c.o.nty Board of Supervisors voled Wed· aeaday to s et a&ide the U00,800-a-year lobb)'ial plaa lba.l w• approved two 8MM11h• aao OD a 4-1 wo&e. Tl9e t abllac m.o•e wa.s tbe third time lo tae PHL six years county supervisors abaodoaed plans lo establish an outpost in thelnation's capital alter a8fee· ing to !Ure a JobOyiat. As before. the retreat came after candidates for the lobbyjst job bad ~ iaterviewed a.d the -choitt narTO•ed down to just a few. Wedaesday Supervkor Har· riett W\ecler•s fellow aupervieon rirtaalty elbowed one an<Jther aside kt tbeif-rush to join Mrs. Weider's OllfOlliUoe to the lob- byist plaa. Supenitor Ralph Diedrich, for examP'e, came lo the board meellng c.arrytQg his own writ- teta cal for retreat. Oieclnch Hid, ''The d~ of grantsmanship bringlng h0t0e federal doelars are apparently a.er aDd I t.llint we rn.t ree- opiadt. '• Diedrida•• call to abudon tile lobbyist plan was edtoed hi • written statement signed jointly by Supervisor• Tbomu &iley andR..,..CJark. "Allhlaall .ct. ol U.. taleD~ individuals who were in- terviewed 'demonstrated ex· ' ,.ertiae in many areu. perhaps .., 09e eoaWI ..ea c.r' ex,eda- Uons. •• the C1artt-1t11e1 memo said. The memo noted "it appea.ra that a Nil and embuttuttc com· mttmes to open a W•stUnston otnce la atlleat." UalilU Ute Clar'k·lli1eJ eaft for retl"fft, tbe Dledrteh position paper called for an effort to n - .-d °"--C09b''• l&fl--1. W ....... D.C., ...,,,.,. *--· One~~.., die ruu.n. ,. ... ,. ed• 1 • .. ttae "lldDali All· IOdatkle~ °"""'" (JtM:JO) . •• , ...... w be .... , •• NAC0-• 1Mp ..... _ ..., rr sh'' ... , ... .. c::.~" ......... ·~ .. .. More than 100 auditioned for lead role in a pla nned $10 mUlion fllm biography of Elvis Presley. Among tboM were, from left, Bob Guelfi of Petaluma. Calif.; Perry White from Boaz. Ala.; !'mm WUson from Houston. Tex.: Ron King from Alt.a Loma. Calif.; and Ron Furr f ro.m St. Louis. Mo. Tbe auditions were held Wednesday in Los Angeles. A previous auctjtinn held in New York attracted 230 men hoping to land the lead in "The King of Rock ·n' Roll." State, U.S. Funds Sought for Project 87 JDaY CIAV8EN Ot•OtllfY .......... A proposal lo comlTuct a $27 miWon water reclamation proJ· ect to irrtcate part& of five Orange County commWuties ls going to st.ate and federal ageo· cies for pouible funding. The lO-man Orange County Wat.er District board of dire<:· t or s author ized tbe move Wesnesday night in EDUrtt.arn Valley Insurance Bill Sought for Health Care W ASHJNGTON iAP) -The Carter a dminis tra tio n a n- oounc,ed today it will ask Congress in the next few months to lake a limited first step toward national health in· surance, at a cost $10 bllUoo lo $15 billlon more than pr~t government spending on health care. The proposal, an e11viron- meaul bDp9ct report aod public eommeat recardillC the project wiU 10 to the state R.ef)on.al Waur QuaUty Control Board ud the federal 'EnvirOllmenta.I Protection Agency. Approval by lh06e agencies would supply 87.S percent ol t.M money required Lo eonstruct the Fountain Valley plant and ir- tlgation .s.ys1e m to convert sewage lo irrigation water Called the Green Acres ProJ· eel. the system would treat 15 rnilJjoo galloos of water daily for irrigaUoD of cemeteries. patks. school UQUPds, iOlf courses and freeway l a ndsca ping . a s pokesman said. Officials from two cities have questioMd the project's value. SpoUsmeo from Orange an.d Anaheim admit the water would cost users Jess if only OCWD coostn&cdon eo&Lt are conatdered. However. they contend that similar water might be supplied at less costs from a nothe r source when the total outlay of f~eral and state funds is con- sidered when pricing water. U Civen final approval. the project is expeeled lo be operat- mg in tm. ll would serve parts of Costa Mesa. Huntington Beach, f'ountaio Valley • Westminster and Santa Ana. Valley Burglar Persistent, Loots Home A dayUgbt burglar worked his way i.aLo the bome or a Fountain Valley teacbef''s aide tbe hard way Wednesday monililc while his victim worted acrosg the street at Monroe Scboo1. Police said the burglar bypassed a bolted front door by stripping molding from a garage window and removing a glass pane. He r r.awled 1ntn_1be garage. jimmied the door leadmg LO the house with a butter knife and found himself thwarted by a second deadbolt, this one on tbe m ast8 bedroom door. Police said be k.1cktod tbe door frame loose lo remove t hat door a nd the n ra nsac k e d the bedroom, taking $200 in cash and S500 in jewelry. Resideot Ro9alie Illiano re- turned to her hom e at 11400 Primra.e Ave. at 11.30 •.m . t.o findlhemMS. 3 Hold Hostages MANAGUA. Nicaragua lAPl -Thre e robbe r s he ld 15 hostages inside a lluagua bank today and demaaded political aay lum afte r an abortive holdup. Police and troops ringed th e tfank · a nd rerused to negoti.ate u.aleu tbe robbers ~ave up tbeir weapons. Lagrman Accuses Surgeon By &DECCA HEUI __ ..._ ...... ~ .... A woman who alletes Ille IUf- fere<J serious infection and ex- tensive scarring following thi&h· lift ..,.gery by Santa Ana dMtic s u rieon Dr. Ralph l;mall testified at a at.ate medical board beariaC Wedaelday. Marcia Weed, Al. or lA&Wta Beac:ta. said * Sutre red illness and pa.in for several moaths fo llo wing the June 29. 1978, operation. She was bed.ridden a~ home with a high fever for several days. she sa.Jd. •rs. Weed'• testimony came dul"iq a StMe Board of Medical Quality Aasurance license re- vocat.ioo bearing wrucb ls now underway in Sabta Ana. Tbe 29-year-old physician races allesations of •·g~s negl.iaence and ineompet.eoce'' in coaaectioa wit.b the Nov. Z'l, 1978, death ot Kim Plock, 33. of Sant.a Ana. and in lbe cue ol Mn. Weed. Mn. Plodr, a mother or three, died-live days after she went in· lo cardiac arrest while undergo- ing breaatAmplanl surgery at Small's Santa Ana office. ac- cording to the aJ~atioos. An Orange County Superior Court temporanly barred Small frQm practicing medicine until the medical board reaches its decision. Wednesday. Slat.e Deputy Al· torney General David Chandler, representing lbe medkal board. u ked Mrs. Weed why despite her ordeal, she continued treat- ment with Or. S mall and refused lo consult another doctor UDti1 October. "I didn't consult with anyone e lse because I trul>led him,·· Mrs. Weed replied. "I had to trust him. J would have lost my reason if I hadn 'l." Called to offer supporting le$limony for Mrs. Weed Wed- nesday was Jane A~St.evc.ns_ Mrs. Stevens said she is a dose friend and stayed an Mrs. Weed's Laguna Beach home to care for her following the Jun(> surgery. During the fi ve days she stayed with S m a ll 's patient. Mrs . Stevens said er friend ran a fever up lo 104 at times and passed skin tissue into a bedpan Mrs. Stevens aJso claimed she repeatedly cal.led Sm .ti's office. The doctor d!d not come lo Mrs. Weed 's aid unlll July 5, however, she said, when he sent a medical t~hn.iciao to his pa- tient's house to bring her baclt lo his Santa Ana office. In c~ euminatioo, Small's defe nse attorney Terry Giles questioned tile recall of eveats by both women. He claimed bis client did try to return Mrs. Stevens' and Mrs. Weed 's calls on several OC· casions. But even the preliminary, » called Phase One plan "would have no significant budgetary impact until Fiscal 1983" and wouJd be cbntingent on con· gressionaJ approval of effective legislation lo curb hospit•I cost increases, said HEW Secttatary JosepbA.CallfanoJr. Tbe barest detaib of President Carter's proposal were spelled out by Califano in a s~b J)l'e· pared for delivery \n New Vortl. SE•R anz• SALE The .secr etary of health, education and welfare htsilted that "the president remains committed lo the goal ol Pl'(Md- ing every American with COV· erase for bask health services." Calllano said Carter wtll out· line in a message to Congress h\s plan for a universal and comprehensive health insurance plan, which he promised during hi.I 1'7e election c.mpalgn. But for now, Califano said, congre8skma1 leaders agl"ee that Congress "cannot aJMI will not diges t a comple t e national health plan in one bite.•• The Phase One proposal will offer protecUon against the hieh cost ot major illness -eo-celled catastrophic coverase -and t.tn· specified .,signifieant improve· menl in health care benefits for the Hed. the poor, for employed people -.cl for others do do aot _. hne 8dewa&e he.atll care coverase." Calffano said. Tlae prei ident "s 'd e ci.JJoa "rec~jDlzH, In a ~r&H of bud~ ..-r.u.t e9d wttll • pro1ram that involvea sllni.fi cant changes in the natlon'a Wrd larlM hld•try. a ....,, ... .., ... ant *P . . ... all tMt weea~1alkdae_. Coasr... to t.ake, •• Cattf ano Wd. Spring Day fa•ap Planned Pu t•Vdtr'tlecr'Mdoll o.,.d•• wUI ........ _.. :t':l:Z.:~:. ... TM,.... .,_ ... ,_.. .... , .. 12 ........... . ..... cnfta .... ..,. .... ..... ,., ... . ,,..~ .............. ., &M11;Ttw...,,.. ..... .. 4 •·•· A ~-.!.!Alll 11• =r.::.::=. irt• .. Clll 11 ......... Tiie --·--..-.E9G ........ " ....... ... lafona--. .......... ett1 ........................ I OO't to dloose from! • Many fabrics. M•y styles OVER 100 Recliner Rockers and Wall Rec Ii ners IN STOCK lm•eclate FIEE DELIYERY SALE ENDS MARCH 31 Showcase ... _.,. Vll.IO lllHM•1111Ale\ ..... (eoo.ol--... and Wm .... , ....llDI Mlr\-M.ICM -MICM Cllllilfl ... I CALIFORNIA Thurtd9y, Merch 22. 197'9 DAiLYPILOT A S . Anti ~ bus Plan Advances ~ Measure Tivo Steps From State Ballot SACRAMENTO 1 A f' l 1\ auc. ~UtutJOnlll amendment re1tTlella1 maodlltory bu tDJ? lot l....,ation, almt'd al etop aMal LM Lo. Anaeles busina pro ,:ram. wu only two steps atwa from &be atate ballot today WlUa approval In today's nlaed"*i As1cmbly vote, tht• mea1ure would need only rouUue concurrencf' by thl· Seoate to qualify for the balJot. TBE MEASUaE, SC A 2 by Sen. Alan Robbins, 0 -Van Nuy' is • product or trong oppos1 lion, particularly in buburbun areas, to the Loi Angele busm.: pro1ram that started last rau "The Los Angeles compulsory busing program ls a disaster dl~ruptm~ tht> fiC'hool ltvc>N of thouund3 of )OUnptera, forclnw famlllca to Ot t.J1u dh1t.rlcl to uvold forced bwi~ng, and cosUn.: IAitr.ayera 00«.llesa mllUona of dol ars," lbe floor aponisor. Ab u mblyman Druce Youn". 0 C rrltos. said ln a 1tatement on lhf' eve of the vole. The meaa ure aurvlvl'd u trutlnl t t last week when lb~ As enlbly JudJctary Commllt~·. normally the graveyard for anll busing propo8a.b, pustd It 10-2 SC 2 would require stah• courts to follow federal stand ~rds to desegregoUon orders So far. federal courts have re <1u1red busing only 1n case:. or 1lt•hberale !.egregatton by school districts. KOB81N S 5ays hi s mcHuru, &.I upproved by voters. would stop Los Angeles busln~ 1mmed.lately and wouJd prevent almllar orders ln other citJes wber" so -called d e facto -teairegation • a product of hous· Ing patterns rather than de- liberate acts by school boards - wail f oo.nd. Oppooeots have questioned that prediction on two grounds: at leut one judge tou.od that Los Angeles seeregation was de· liberately caused, and SCA 2 itself may cons titute a de · liberate act of segregatlqn. Another goal of the measure 1s to prevent th e so-c alled Pipeline Pennits Asked April Ruling ForeC<Ut o n Sohio Issue LOS ANGELES CAP> -The South Coast Air Quality Manage ment Dastrict's chairman sayio. the board could rule on Standard • Oil Co. of Ohio's request for en- vironmental permits for its oil pipeline project by April 15. But lbe chairman of the state Air Resources Board said Wed- nesday be is not sure Sohio will ever go a.bead with the pipeline whose lntitial cost and 20-year operating expense is estimated by Sobio to be $1 billion. The propoeed line would transport Alaska crude oil from California to Texas The Cleveland-based oil 'firm resubmitted an application to the AQMD on Wednesdny seek- ing the n~essary permits for the pipeline operation. The AQMD and the ARB must both evaluata the plan Sohio abandoned last week because of delays in obtaining approvals. OCAdmerHI~ SACRAMENTO <AP> The University of California has hired a $210-a-day cons ultant lo adviae its president on dealing with the news media University s pokes woman Sarah Molla s aid Wednesday tbal Murray Fromson. a former CBS television correspondent ( SI ATE J who was a deputy campaign manager and media adviser for Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. last year, is being paid mostly from state funds. l'o .. ger B~ Bit LOS ANGELES CAP> -The home of former California At· torney General Evelle Younger has been ransacked by one or more intruders, police report. --Younger' s garden e r dis- covered a broken side window and notified police Wednesday afternoon. Lt. Warren Larson said. Younger, in private law practice in Las Angeles, was out of town at the time. ~ lln c o vered BERKELEY <AP> -Police say there may be more arrests in the case of a University of California senior who was ar- rested and booked for investiga- tion of attempting to sell copies of final examinations. Police said 21-year-old Quincy Fassette was arrested Tuesday after six copies of final examina- tions were found in his Oakland apartment. ~Defeated SACRAMENTO CAP) Should bottled water be taxed? Should diabetics have to pay tax on their needles and syringes? The state Senate Revenue and Taxation Committee says no in both cases. It voted 6-0 Wednesday on bills sending tbe proposals to the Senate Finance Committee. The committee also voted 4·2 on SB !i6 by Sen. David Roberti, D-Los Angeles, to increase the deduction for transportation ex· penses as part of a charitable contribution Crom 7 cents to 17 cents a mile. It needed fi ve votes for passage. l.AlndMarJe Burn• LOS ANGELES CAP) -A ma· jor tire at the former Wallach's Music City, a Holly wood . landmark for two decades, caused an estimated $250,000 d~mage early today, fire of· ficials said. Spokesman Marlin Gana said 19 fire companies battled the blaze al Spelvin's Musical Instrument Co. at the corner of Sunset and Vine. He said the fire apparently broke out in a crawl s pace between the first and second stories, but the flames burned a large section of both noors. Naturally the real thing looks good. But it's cold. hard. noisy. expensive ... and a chore to maintain. Why not go NATURAL the easy way with NEW natural bnck or slate realtsm found in a no-wax Solarian floor from Armstrong! These incredibly natural-looking NEW Solarian floors stay looking like new with Just regular washings. thanks to Armstrong's exclusive Mlrabond• no-wax surface. It protects the rich natural colors underneath . . colors that are built up of thousands of varicolored viny1 ·granules for unusual depth. richness of color. and design realism. Natural- looking Solarlan floors realty are easier .•. easier to live with .. walk on ... maintain. See how easy it is to GO NATURAL with no-wax Solanan floors from Armstrong .... starting as low as *216 ... ....,. .. -..J.. ....,...,..._ .... naturally lt'I from @ matrong (Waps-rGo. metropolitan plan , r ecom · mended to a Los Angeles judge by a group of experts, because or the declining number of while students in the district. The plan would extend man· datory busing beyond the city limits to a number or largely wblte suburban areas ln Los Angeles County and possibly Orange County. Slaughter Of Goats Scheduled SAN DIEGO CAP) -A repeat of the 1.976 wild goat slaughter on San Clemente Island that killed s 000 or the animals and enr aged the public is being planned for this summer , ac· cording to the Navy. Some 3,000 goats must be eradicated by Navy sharpshooters to thin an over· populated herd that threatens the island's ecology. The San Diego Union reported today. ''WE ABE under federal man- date to maintain the ecology of the island." s aid a Navy spokesman who asked not to be identified. The mass shooli.ng program will begin around June 1 and will utlLize Marine marksmen firing from helicopters as well as on the ground. The Andalusian goats, native to Spain, are believed to be an· cestors of a small herd brought) to San Clemente by Spaniards over 200 years ago to provide food for future explorers. AT ONE tim e, the goa t population was estimated at 10,000 before depopulation er· forts were launched wben the lsland was denuded of foliage. Deer have been exterminated from lbe island. ~ Used as a Navy gunnery range since 1936, the island. located 55 miles northwest of San Diego, is 20 miles long and ranges from two to six miles wide. It's Mi ne Alvilla holds her newborn baby gorilla at R-Oeding Park Zoo in Fresno. The female inf ant is the first gorilla born at the zoo. Alvilla is on a breeding loan from San Diego Zoo which will get the baby gorilla . The mother was transferred to Fresno after failing to mate with male gorillas al San Diego Zoo. Airliner Slates Low Fare Plans OAK.LAND <AP> -World Airways announced plans for scheduled daily mghts across country for S99.99 beginning April 12. "It's the average person's tum to nx on a budget without fight-ing red tape. fine prmtand other hassles, 'Edward J . Daly, pre.sldent of the Oakland-based airline said Wednesday. The only other $99 transcontinental fli ghts are operated on a once-a-week charter basis between New York and Los Angeles by the Oak.Jand-based Trans International Airlines. The Trans International flights are offered through the Council, of International Education Exchange, an educational travel service. THE WORLD AI RWA¥S eastbound nights are scheduJed to depart al 7:20 a.m .. slop in Los Angeles and arrive in Newark at 5 : 20 p.m. The night schedule calls for mgbts leaving Los Angeles at 10: IS p.m .. stopping in Newark and arriving in Baltimore at 8:45 a.m . The westbound travel scheduJe calls for a Newark departure al 7 p.m .. a stop in Los Angeles and arrival in Oakland at 11 :45 p.m . 1\nother mght schedule calls for departures from Baltimore at 10:30 a.m .. a stop at Newark and a destination io Los Angeles at 3 : 10 p.m. SPRI POWER TOOL SALE 19.99 Rockwell • Develops 10.000 opm Flush i.ands on J sides. along 11en1· cal 1urlece1 Ind 1n corners Front and rear handles tor pos11111e control. Double 1nsul11ed for clec1rtca1 safety. 4401 '/•-In. POWER DR Ill For lighl·duty work. Orllla ComplC'I and llghtwe1ghtl Y.·•n 11ee1. llrln. herdwood . 2-SPEEO JIG SAW Bue l•lls 45 1n either d1rec:· 1ton 10 cul wood. ltghl or heavy me1al, comP01111on. ple,•glass. plas11c. Finger t•P SPt'l'd selector. t1nl1·spltt base insert. 431 O 13--Pc. Drill Bit Set I 3 h1gh·SPffd bll1 from 1116 lhrough • 114 1n. For wood. metal, plattic. With l111ed indexed case. 513 1-HP DELUXE ROunR He111v·du1yl Preco11on cah· breled on 1 64 in. vertical <1ep1h od1ustmenis. 22.000 rpm 7616 Wrep-eround tho•: double 7004 Hll 9.0 emp motor, 1V. H.P. Te6eeooping blede ~ Blade inct. 4611 Insulated. W11h comt>on1110n •••••••••I blllde. 7300 .................... 11111111111 ................. . : 19.95 VISE Ami end lodl.9Wfwl .,... ·~· jtwl for metal Ind plp9,4-ln.~ .... I-Pc. SCREWDRIVER SET Squire bled .. for mre "'"" l"g power. Slotted llpa. Ctwome \lll'ledlum. TSISQ j HOMELITE' 11MN. GAi SNlt With S.f.T·Tip•. f.-turM 1111>011· tlon oarDl.tmor, eutom1llc ch1ln oiling. 111-wMlher Ignition. XL STOllHOUU 'Ml&lnM M W.N.1-.IM ' ., .. T hur•day, March 22. t979 RObert N Wted/Publl1her The>rMI Kttvll/EdltOt Orango C.Oa:.t Oa11y Pilot Editorial Page ........................................................ Barbara t<relblcht Edltorl•I PA94t Editor Policy Fails to • i Reassure Public J i Fountaln Valley polite often eo out of lhelr way (() ·keep th public lnlormed But they have adopted a puu lina attrt'Cy poUcy over the death of a houa wtr murdered early March a ln her hom alona a qui t Fountain Valley tttklt11nllal at.reel Uttle Information was forthcoming, pollcl' ~aid, becauee it cou_ld hamper lhe lnv stJgaUon and sub~ quent conviction of the kUler. Nel&hbors who tumbled upon the death ccne were caut•oned not to dl cuu what they had n The t()unty coroner' olf ce wu ord4?red not to reveal f 1ndinas and the mortuary wh.lcb handled the ubsequent funeral was told not lo r veal the body's condltion. Only fragme ntary obitua r y information w a6 releaS<>d. The victim had been brutally bludgeoned to death In a bedroom probably as her children slept. The W'lusual se er cy focused more than normal uttcntion on the tragedy, Jeavlng the public to wonder why this death ~hould be treated with untoward's llence. Neighbort> became especially concern~d. hesitant In opening doors to visitors. The unasked 9uestion hovered: "Was this a ra ndom kllling? ls my famlly ln danger?" ft'ountain Valley poUce profess that an aware and informed public is a c rime deterre nt. Their support or the Neighborhood Watch P rogram is an example.· Their unusually uncommunicative posture in this case breedt; rumors and fear in the community, and may well deprive the police or volunteered information from the public thal could aid in the solution of the grisly crime. Pay Plea Reasonable Huntington Beach Union High School ~rustees have put a raise requested by district substitute teachers on a back burner. Trustee Stephen Smith, a swing vote, went against the raise because, he said , the full board.should consider the issue. Two or the five trustees were absent, and three votes were required for approval. The substitutes e arn about $38 a day and must be ready to work On an on-call basis every day, leaving little opportunity for other part·time work. The district's full ·time teachers make an average of $114 daily. One substitute told trustees she worked almost every day last year a nd earned "near poverty'' wages or $4,000. She supported Supt. Frank J . Abbott's proposal call· in" for a 7 percent pay hike which would boost subi, · sal aries to about $41 a day. The '$38·a·day suj>stitutes suffered some verbal abuse in January when they crossed picket lines set up by full· lime teachers who vacated classrooms to their students . Substitutes get no benefits other than pay, the sub· s tilute told trustees, and are at the mercy or trustees who set their salaries without worrying about a bargaining ta- ble. Proposition 13 was a mandate t.o cut back on govern· ment spending. But trustees should give the raise. request some serious thought, especially after giving a 7 percent hik e to teachers who struck. A Real Service Each month scores of local residents learn something they may never have known before -how to save someone's life. The rrce classes In cardio·pulmonary resuscitation arc a joint project of the Huntington Beach Rotary Club and the Huntington lnlercommunity Hospital. Rotarians raised the money for the purchase of a $1,000 computerized maMequin that tells students by printouts how they are mastering techniques. The Hotary (;Jub also pays for some or the five in· structors. The hospital picks up the rest or the tab and provides f acillties. Officials say up to SO persons attend classes that are offered each first and third Tuesday or the month. They say they'll keep the cl88ses going as long as there is an inter~l. The classes fill an important need in the community. The Rotarians and the hospital deserve applause for making this worthwhile project possible. • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Piiot. Other VteWS expreseed on thl• P8G9 are thoee of their autf.Ors and artists. Reader comment 11 Invited. Addreaa The Daily Pilot, po. Sox 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92826. Phone (714) &42·4321. .Boyd/Husbantb By L.M. BOYD Averaie But1ar6an man speuda f6ve hours a week • • ltitlpinc out around the houH. Dta1uaUnc. Wait, that'• UD• caUed for. Merely commtDt preliminary to Uae report tbat no other ma.le naUonal u1wbere devotel to mueb ume dotQI houeebold ebonl. TIMre la a acbool of tbou&bt. • 10U know, wbleb bolda that bllfbe• who dive into tbe bomemalda1 Jobi tend tO tlanatea tbelr wtvea lndlrect- ' 11. Not all l..U.. appnelate ! tbe aompeUUon. You know wbat old A•4re llaaroi1 Nkl: 0 1b11•11,1q ID com· moa II for ... tbe add I' Yet." l\'1 lmowa, lDeidentaJ• IJ. that tbe baaband leut Gloomy Gu. :..s-c-.=: 1::.rlen •••Pl•• T ............... ...... ~ ... llkely to tackle household ta1k1 la t.be Engllabman. Ever bear of a predatory tree? Nett.her had I. But a client reporta that such there be. The atran1ler ft1. It kUla other treet ln ita stru11le to reach for Ulbt. Credit tbe waap. none otber. wtt.b the lnvnUoa of paper. Albert Einateln d1dn 't like to •• .,. a bat. But ODH when it wa1 ratntn,, bil wile lnala~ eel be do eo. A 1enue tort, Etutela. He wore the th1na balfwQ to bll Princeton of. nee and earned It the rest of tbe way. He tben carefully noted exactly bow loa1 tt took for botb bl.I bat and balr to 4rJ. ftM eH 9 I be told .... ..,. ............ Hllbalr dried mon ~ t.baa ea. bat, wlllel9 111 llft OD U.. rack U..c,.1wanl. PolllWI .... • ....... .... of lllllllrall ......... u.. .......... ~ Hiil .... ,.. ,,. ..... ..... ._ ........ . ....... ... ,.,, ......... . ... ...,.,... ........ .... Jack Andenon t Pilot Fatigue Problem Evaded w ASIONGTON -The "cenc w .. all too riam1l11ar that dlty Ill l he air11ort 'f h c Wt'l.lry c rr w mem ber11 of a U S. air rr"lShler lookccJ boo~ tlrt>d u nd apok•· ul most Incoherently wh~n ~y ur r ived lilt the fi e l d And with t(ood reuson They had only tbr e hourti' sleep after nine hours In night und a total of 23 hour11 on d uty T he i r Boeing 707 rre1a bter took the nltlre runway to get orr the ground. M il tinalJy llrted orr. the plane veered s harply lo the right, ttM:n left, before collid· Ing witJl a tree and a utility pole Careening out of control, the giant craft ripped through trees. poles and roortops and bega n disintegrating before It c:rashed upside down on a pla ying field. THE CREW was killed, and 77 pe r sons on the ground were crushed by debris or ... 'burned to dea th in t he n aming inferno In vestlgators on the scene round thal the plane's control~ had been improperly set, dcpriv· Ing. 1t of critical powe r needed for s urficle nt takeorr thrus t . They blamed the mistake on the exhausted condition or the crew. The tragedy occurred on Oct. 13, 1976, at Santa Crut, Bolivia Yet il could have occurred to a U.S. c rew virtually any time and anywhere. It could have oc curred to a crew transporting passengers, instead of freight. F'or the shocking fact about the Santa Crui disaster is that the cr ew of the a ircraft was operal· ing within Federal Aviation Ad· mln isti:;ltion safety regulaUons The rules regarding fatigue arc alarmingly lax and have not been significantly mod1f1cd since 1931 While pilot fatigue 1s a recur rent theme ln loreltn accident rep<>m, Ame-rlcan Investigators have cll«I fatl(Ue as a factor In only c>ne commer cial airline cru h between 1973 and 1977 "Jfuman error " ls cited as Lhl· cause of most accidents. AN OFl''ICIAL for the Na· tlonal Tra n"portatio n Safety noard, which Investigates air t rH hes. told our rcporten5 Tom Rosenstlel and Moira Forhe11. "We s tay away from it Cfatlgue> In official board reports, unless we have hard evidence" thal the pilots stretched their night re· gulallooa or s pent lhelr rest time carousln" inatead of sleeping. Hut pUoti; themselves told us 11hocklng s tories or falling asleep at the controls, or of drinking to over come the Insomnia induced by their long and Irregular hours . ''1'•1e been a bas ket case from fl ying so many weird hours," said Harris Dexter , a pilot for a m ajor airline. Another pilot, who asked to ... / have hJs name withheld. Wld us he used to drink a pitcher or t.vo of beer to combat sleepleaanees, a chronic problem for pilots wtM> must try to sleep during normal w<tk ing hours. Sleeping pill• are a common remedy, he added. The crew or one plane report· ed that its pilot re1l asleep on a la nding approach jus t half a mile rrom the runway. A co-pilot told us he saw his captain fall a~leep at 2,000 feet moment.a after takeoff. NIGHT FLIGHTS, chan(lng time tones, erratic schedules and brief layovers all contribute to an impairment or the human bo d y kno wn t o mos t air travele rs as "Jct lag." This familiar condition is an tnconve · n ience to a businessman or vacationer; It can be a tr1tgedy whe n it occurs to an airline pilot with hundreds of lives in his care A. UniverHity of California study concurs . "When humans ar~ etsked to perform at a time in their f24 ·hourJ cycle when they are usually asleep, their performance 1s impaired." Yet the FAA discounts surh wa rnings. "We do not perceive any threat to '>arcty" in the FAA 's current regulat ions gov. ernrng fa tigue, said Dr. H.L. Reighard. the FA A 's a ir sur· geon. F'atiguc. he• told us, is "a l\Ubjecttve raclor Onl y the pilot knows Ir he is syfrering from 1l." The FAA does not plan to allocate more money to do re- search on fatigue Footnote: The FAA.'s disturb· 1ng orrlc1a l attitude is con· trad1cted by other federal ex· perts Gerntt J Walhout. the N al1onal T rans·port:.itton Safely Board 's hum an f C1clor~ ~pt.'c1ahst, ~aid thl.lt more re· ~earch would lcc.d t o s uch dram atic changes a~ ''dlfrert-nl wor king hours. dirfcrent night legs and darrerent home bases ror pilots .. Jet Noise Victims Find Complaints Futile To the F.d.ltor: Re : Letler of 3/lS/79 tilled "Noise Complaints": With such an impressive title ol .. Executive Director, Com· munity Airport Council", Mr. Joseph E. Irvine should be a s hamed to pres ent s uch ridiculous airport "statistics" on the numbers or pe rsons who have regis tered complaints about airport noise. It Is ludicrous to compare the numbers of complaints med. against the total population of Orange County . How can the roar of the jets taking off from the Orange County Airport in any way disturb the reside nt.a of Fountain Valley. Huntington Bea ch or any other location ex· cept In the immedlute vicinity of the airport? MOREOVER , s in c e no punitive action is taken against planes that violate the pre· scribed take orr pattern and/or exceed the allowable noise, the frustrated residents of Newport Beach are JusUfled In condud· Ing that their calla of protest are futile and therefore other acUon must be taken to preserve our rights a1alnat th6s noiae pollu· lion. Mr. Irvine's conclusions prove that 11tartlng from an Invalid preml1e, ataUstlca can be made to Justify any point of view. H.K. LEVINSON £ecfll c_,,.., To tbe F.dltor: Tueldey, March S bad COD· slderable meaalq for the voten realdlnc ln the varioua cltlet and townahl111 Uaet make up Cout Community Colle1e Dlatrlct. Tuetday wu a "non .. leeUon" day in which voter• did not IO to tbe polll to eleel their school board membtn. Beceu1e ot a l•w pUMd In Saeremento lut year, school boerd electlone for moet d1tlr1cta beve.bffn moved abe9d to November. Altbotllb UM wt1c1om of um cteclaion 1a ... batable, It la a fait aeoa..,.. The period between llatth llld Nowember can bt UMd to...,... .. ~tbemanyiu._lllld proW.• tbat blMt our lloa1 edueatlonal sr1tem. A1 ............. ._ ...... : -Review and cfiin1e. as neee1Hry. tbe preHnl pro· ... ..... wldeb ,..at tM -.rd ••blr Oaeum•o to n••ID •• om .. Id lnftnltum. .... eo•••U. b•H re•tl11ted 1 .. au, •a..ted offtcla?I lo a U.u.d ...... al term1. TIMI CM1& -.... avertJ•• otd to Mer • ,.._,. In omn or U.. ......... of.._ ....... . -...... of .. ~ ... . lrol" HI belt be ....... bJ • elected officials who know their constituencies and are able to meet their needs. The election of board members at-large in a col· lege district that spans over 80· s quare miles, 11 cities and towns. and 600,000 people does not serve the interests of local control. The time may be ripe in this Proposition 13 era to man· date election by district. There is an urgent need for valid information and data which the interested citizen can use lo appraise the things that are going on in education. The practice or spoonfeeding the public limited doses of data should be replaced by a more adequale information progra m which deals with failures as well as accomplishments. Recent al· legations by a leachers ' group that the district has misused public funds c o n cerns the average citizen who has re· celved no or very little informs · lion from his elected officials. There are other issues, I'm s ure. The months ahead shouJd see them dlscu11sed and debated with greater pul>llc Interest and active participation. LEFTERIS LAVRAKAS, PhD P.Uee._,.,. To the Editor: Several point11 In a recent let· ter from a Huntington Beach Police Department CHBPD> or. fleer deserve comment. lie docs a disservice to the fine officer~ of other cities by not naming the city he used lo work ror that Is "unprotected" because the or· flcert are "foul·UP and tenerally IOW·callber ... HBPD does have a repuUltlon within the law enforcement com· munlty. It la noted for the hlah benellta and excellent equip· menl, including It '1 own air force. 11Ua Is due to the 11upport o f lhe city and the 1rantsman1hlp ability or the chief of poUce. The r.putallon of the work product wu no better or wane than that el other of· ncert ln IWTOUDdlq ....... I SAY WM, betalaM HBPO otne.n are now v6ewed u mill· tant. The rec.al Job aetioal rt· duced tbe crtdfblllty of any ar1umeat that HBPD l~':t ftu6onal. ,.... plalloeoplly l11ulD1 tl'llfle d&aUonl la to ct. ter arid .Umlutt tratftc acd· dent.I and lnjurlt1. ,.,_ .,. llMnded lO ~ Uat1 and med lO nnanee &Mee enforC!MIMll& and prevenUve tlf· forta . a.tualftl to write trallle tlt11Uona ll aa abuae ot .... fHl&onal .....,..._.ry '°""" and eneouraJ•• veblcl• ooie · vlolatloa1 tiH enda11erla1 clU.. ol U.. e1t1. bUIAltlle"m1boft"illlol· I ---- ricers of that other "unprot.ect· ed " city" l won't cvc.n go into the ramifications of the "Blue Flu" in terms.of cost, image and the disciplinary precedent set by supervisors who participated or condoned it. The fact of the m atter 1s that ofrtcers in other cities are 1ust as qualified to carry out the responsibilities of a pohce of· fleer. State certifk ation and the increasing quality or pubhc ad· minis trators insure this Pride in one's organitat1on 1s com· mendable. The merits of th11l pride, if justified, will stand alone and do not require an attack on some unknown department. The Issue of educational lncen· t1ve is and always has ~n an utra "goodie." The frde ral law enforcement education progra m (LEEP> provides rinanc1al as· sistance so that any orfirer can go to college. College education is beneficial Lo a police offu.·cr but not critical. If it were. the e ntrance re· quiremen\3 would mandate 1t. If HBPD officers equate high· c aliber to college education. they s houJd work to Increase the entrance req uire ments rather than force the citize ns to pick up the $300,000 annual tab. True professionals would educate themselves because they want to be high·callber, not for money bul pride. Many officers In other agencies do. To argue that the city is not concerned about the quality of its poUce officers Is ridiculous. The city bean the civil liability for lhe omctals' action.a. The lma•e of the city 1ovem· ment Is tamJshed and the ac· lions of ltunUnaton Beach of. flcers certainly did nothln1 to enhance It. Citizens want to and do support. the pollce. Job ac· t1on11 erode that 1upport. , , HARRY L. BUDDS r~. • twee .,..,, To the Ed6tor: Ocean View teachert are not. u Ins inuated In a recent editorial, In teaeb6n1 for the lt'fe!lcs ' _.~--- m o n ey . The Ocean Vie w Teachers As:,ociat1on, on behalf of its teachers, simply seeks to regain some of the s a me buytnJ: power teachers had when first hired by the district. I a m a teacher who holds a mas ters d egree plus 47 pro- fessional growth units. <Our dis· trict reqwres additional units in o rde r to be paid lo ngevity stepsl. I have U.ught in Ocean View School District for IJ years and have struggled to stay in Ocean View wh1l t.' my buying power plunged at least 25 percent in the last lO years. My s tory 1s typical : Most Ocean Vww teachers do not earn e nough money to qualify to purchase a hom<· in the com. munity where lhl'Y leach Tench ~rs are not gettini:: "fat" from public dole~. Tht'Y arc dt'· d1 cated , s killed profess1onalb who deserve sala ries com· me nsurate with their value to society. I felt your editorial misleading and inflammatory. SUZANNE BYRNS President Ocean View Teachers Association E•leree lite L•., To the Editor: It is unfortunatt~ that your editorial writer chose not to pre- sent both sides of the Issue re- garding Orange County Transit District vs. transportation for the disabled thousands living and visiting In Orange County. In thls age of space travel it's an lnsuJt to one's intelligence to state '"thet'e's Just not a reHable llrt avaUable ." What's beln1 used by other trans it district& which are complyinlC with state 11nd federal laws? What does OCTD u.se on dial·a-Un.? · VOV CITE cost as a major factor In the board1s dcclto1lon not to comply w1th the law, yet YOU ne1tlect to mention the identical cotl of alr condJUonln• wbk:b 11 provided on each bua. No law re· quires thla; to aay nodlln1 ot Id· dltlonal ,_, required to QPel'Me it. Acet11lbWty modlfteatlon ii a one-Ume ..,. ... wbicb wo.td obvlowly lnerMM revenue of OCTD -bardty a total loA. Sympatby la not needed or welcome. Rather, tmple ...... tlon and enfe>ttemeat of c••• law la expected I Now la tbe U.. becaUM the law NJI '°· YVONNE BAOSl'AD, ......... oca.• . cam. Aaaoc. of the Pbnle.U, llaJMUc...-• .... 1e1. ·-,...., ... ~. , .. ·=· ,....._"'"'" .. Ill .... ., .......... .. ,_ ... , """" .. ---........ .. t l Wtll IH"•l.,tll<t All lelt.,...._.. .. .... ....._ ............................... .. .. .................... ....-... ........ . ............................... - ' ·r I , • t ' I I l • rvme COITION Vour Hometown Daily Newspape~ VOL. 72, NO. 81, 3 SECTIONS, ~O PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MARCH 22, 1979 TEN CENTS • Lee Marvi~'s Bar Eq11oits Detailed.; LOS ANGELES IAPl A wallrdS teatirlt'd today thul l~t· Marvin lt>ft a lrtul or drunkt'n In cident1 through the bars and restaurants ol Malibu. and when he would appear the e mployees would say. "Oh. oh, here come~ trouble.'' Peggy LeMoine. who said she has been a waitress m tht• bea<'h community 17 years . said sht• saw Marvm evicted or .. eighty 1x •d " from 1wveral bar anti restauranlli bt•cauM: hl' bt:t'unw drunk and bo1sterouis Another w1tne11s said MurVLn would "wavt• his arms like it gonlla" when he got drunk at the club where M1ch~lle Tr1ol1£ Marvin sang in 1965 and finally COil Marvin's g1rlfr1end her JOb Palu Casey, former wife of tht• owner of the club. s aid the <tl'Lor attended MIS!> Marvin's show11 und alway~ caused pro- bll'm11. ·"rht'rc had tcJ be an empty s tool on either side of him." she sa id. "because you'd get whacked m the face if you were s1U1ng there " She said Marvin's "loud and bois terous" behavior ruined Mi ss Ma r vin's performances and cost her the JOb. ·'She couldn't concentrate. She UCI Loses Profs Low Pay, Costly Housing _ Cited By PIDUP ROSMARIN OI 1119 o.llJ l'IMIC ll•H l!> the past 18 months. UC Jrvme has failed to attract pro· fessors to fill 30 open faculty positions because of low pay and the high cost of local housing ils chancellor said today. · Chancellor Daniel Aldrich Jr. said professors listed those rea· sons for deciding to teach at alternate institutions rathe .. than at UCI. . Al~r_ich said competing , llll· 1vers1taes. such as use. tNve grabbed up prospective UCI pro- ressors because they offe r salaries 15 percent to 50 percent higher than the best UCI bid. Sickness, Pain Told By Patient By REBECCA HELM Of .. 0.0.r ...... SIMf A woman who alleges she suf fered serious infection and ex tensive scarring fo11owing thigh· lift surgery by Santa Ana plastic s urgeon Dr Ra lph Smalt tes tified at a sl ate m edical board bearing Wednesday. Marcia Weed, 41. of Laguna Beach, said she suffered illness and pain for several months following the June 29, 1978, operation. She was bedridden al home with a high fever for several days. she said. Mrs. Weed's testimony came during a State Board of Medical Quality Assurance license re· vocation hearing which is now underway in Santa Ana. The 29-year-old physician races allegations or "gross negligence and incompetence" '" connection with the Nov. 27, 1978, death or Kim Plock, 33, of Santa Ana, and in the case or Mrs. Weed. Mrs. Plock. a mother of three, died five days alter she went in· to cardiac arrest while unde rgo- ing breast implant s urge ry al Small's Santa Ana office, ac- cording to the allegations. An Orange County Superior Court temporarily barred Small from practicing medicine until the medical board reaches its decision. Wednesday, State Deputy At· torney General David Chandler, f'epr~•q the medical board, uked Mrs. Weed why despite her ordeal, •be continued treat· ment with Dr. Small and refused to comult anotber doctor until October. "I didn't consult with anyone else because I trusted him." lln. Weed replied. "I had to trUlt him. I would have lost my reuon if I hadn't." Called to offer s upporting teethnaay for Mn. Weed Wed· Deida)' w• Jue A. Steveu. In many or the cases. he said, professors chose l o teach in other par ts of the country because they couldn't afford to buy h ouses in So uth e rn California. .. They round it too expensive to live here," Aldrich s aid. "They simply said. 'No thank you.'" Aldrich said that in the same 18·month period. UCI has been able to fill only half a dozen faculty vacancies on more than a temporary basis "The cost of living here, and at UCLA. 1s higher than any other of the campuses of the un- A,.WI,..,.... SLAIN IN HOLLAND AmbeMedor Sykes Newport Man, 65,Drowns In Boat Fall Police said today that Douglas James Macintyre. 65, died Wed- nesday when he apparently fell from bis boat into the waters of ~ewport Harbor. M aclntyre's body was re- covered about 2 p.m. Wednesday near bis overturned dinghy in the channel between the moored boat that was his home and lbe 300 block of Edgewater Avenue on the Balboa Peninsula. According to Newport Beach police reports, Macintyre was seen an bour earlier by several witnesses, all of whom told in· ve1t111tina officeB that he ap- peared to be intoxicated. Police believe Maclntyre's death wu accidental and plan no further l.nvesti1ation pending the outcome ol a coroner's autopsy report. iversity," Aldrich said. In one case of attempting to fill a vacancy. the chancellor reported. the university was un · able to persuade not only its first choice lo take the job. but its fifth. Another factor in lhe decision of some professors to turn down appointments at UC I, Aldrich said, is that other univers~ies can guarantee that new pro- fessors will gel summer 11ppoint· ments as well, which can add 20 percent to 30 percent to their salaries. Because of budget constraints. Aldrich said, UCI cannot . (See, UCI, Page AZ ) Pair Slay Ambassador In Holland • THt; HAGUE, Netherlands CAP > -Two my ste rious gunmen shot the British a m· bassador to the Netherlands and his valet today outside the en· voy's h6me and then escaped in morning rush-hour traffic. The two died a s hort time later at a hospital. Authorities could not im· mediately explain the motive for the assassination of Sir Richard Sykes. 58. a security expert for the British diplomatic corps. Police said Sykes and the 20- yea r ·old Dutc h valet, Karel Struub, were shot at about 9 a.m. outside the ambassador's residence as the e nvoy was about to enter his Rolls-Royce for the 10-minute drive to the British Embassy. It was reported as many as six shots were fired . The am- bassador was hit at least once. a nd one bullet struck the valet. who was holding the car door. police said. Eyewitnesses said the gunmen fled through a nearby •lley and disappeared into traffi c. poUce reported. The kille r s we r e between 35 and 40 years old and were dressed in dark suits, the witnesses said. Sykes· chauffeur. unharmed in the attack, drove him to the hos pital while a n ambulance picked up the youth. The ambassador 's residence. a historic mansion. is in an af· fluent residential a rea of the Dutch capital. "We have not received any threats. and there have been no claims since the shooting," a spokesman at the British Em- busy said. The flag on the Foreign Ministry building ln London wa~ lowered to half.staff arter new~ or the ambassador's killing. llDd Quee n Elizabeth 11 sent a meaaage or sympathy to Lad) Sykes. was s mging under a strain ... s he said. Miss LeMoine remembered Miss Marvin would telephone bars looking for the actor and later come to take him home when be was thrown out. She quoted many bartenders as telling Marvin : "Time lo go home now. No more to drink-... Miss LeMoine. recalling the name of each bartender who cut off Marvin's drinks. said the ac- tor would becom~ "very loud. very boisterous, argumentative. When they wouJdn'l serve him. he was very unhappy.'' Several times. she said. he would weave into a bar already inebriated. "They wouldn't serve him." she said. At the restaurant where she 1s employed. the Sea Lion, she said Marv in w~s p e rmanent y banned. . "We were to ld by tbe manager, if he ever comes in here again. no food. no drink," she said. recalling: "I just know we'd see him and say, ·Oh, oh. here comes trouble.· " At that point the courtroom burst into laughter. and Marvin threw back his head and laughed (See MARVlN. Page A2l A Cuddle for Kirby Blind .J R .. 14 .... couldn't see Kirby the hon cub when he and other members of the De Bolt family toured Lion Country Safari W ednesday. but attend an t Linda Brockhocft made s ure the crippled youngster got the chance to fondle the af. fectionatc cub. <Related story and pie· lures on Page A3. I Health Insurance Eyed Outer Announces 'Limited SteR' Toward Care WASHINGTON <API -The Ca rter administration a n - nounced tod ay it will as k Congress in the next few months to take a limited firs t-step toward n ational health in - s urance.atacost $10billionto$15 billion more tha n present govem - mentspendinit on health care. But even the preliminary, so- called Phase One plan "would have no significant budgetary impact until Fiscal 1983" and would be contingent on con· gressional approval of effective legislation lo curb hospital cost increases, said HEW Secretary Joseph A. Califano Jr. The barest details of President Carter 's proposal were spelled out by Califano in a speech pre· UCLA Coach Quiu Post LOS ANGELES IAPJ Gary Cunning ham an- nounced today he is re· signing as the basketball coach of UCLA because he wants to spend more time with his family. No successor was an- nounced. "During the last year. I had five weeke nds al home out1 of 52." Cun· ningbam told a news con· rerence at the school. cSee story. Page Bl. l pared for delivery m New York Sen. Edward M Kennedy, D· Mass .. who discussed the plan wi th Carter and Califano at the Wfi1 e House on Wednesday. told reporters today he was .. serious- ly disappointed" in the program. which he described as wasteful "I couldn't support this pro· gram ... he said. Ke nnedy. cha irman of the Senate health subcommittee and a longtime proponent of com· pre hensive health ins urance. said the plan fails to deal effec- tively with rising health care costs. "l think it would be a maJOr mistake to pour billions of dollars into a health system without cost controls ... he said. "You add to the fires of inflation in health care and bankrupt Middle Ame rica.·· The s ecretary of health. educahon and welfare insisted that "the president remaini- committed to the goal of provid mg every American with cov er age for basic health services." Califano said Carter will out· li ne in a message to Congress his plan for a un1 versul and comprehensive health ins urance plan. which he promised during his 1976 election campaign. -Bul for now. Califano said. congressional leaders agree that Congress "cannot and will not digest a complete n ational health plan in one bate ... <See HEALTH. Page A2> Aggressive Energy Plan 'Top Priority' By JOANNE &EYNOLDS OlllleO.llyl'l ... Slaff The United States needs an aggressive pl an to develop domestic e nergy resources in light of disruption of crude oil suppUes from Iran. a n oil com· pany official said in a speech in Irvine. ulatory, economic and environ· mental barriers which a re now blocking urgently needed proJ· ~els in alqaost every a rea oi energy development.·' He cited what he considers ma ior obstacles to domestic <See ENERGY, Page AZ> Coast Mn. Stevens said she is a elole friend and llayed in Mrs. Weed's Lacuna Bffch home to care for her followln1 the June .. ..., Durlq the five day• she 1ta1 .. _. Small"• patlnt. Mission History Given John R. Grey. president or Standard Oil Company o f California said. "We can no longer indulge ourselves in the luxury of debating endlessly which of th.ls nation's energy re· source we should develop and how and where energy should be produced." He s poke Tuesday al the Registry Hotel lo a m eeting or the Petroleum Equipment Sup pliers AaaociatJon. Weather Cloudy night and early morning hours and partly c lo udy Friday. Lo ws tonight 44 to SO. Highs Fri· day 58 to64. Mn ... ._ aaid w frteDd ran a ,..,.. .... to lCM at tlm• and ............. lido a bedpan, lln . ..._ allO claimed abe ................ ......... lln. 1 aid uatll .lalJ I,· '* ...................... be .. .......... ,ht ...... .... ~~~------· ..... ~ ... Somethin1 more than tbe famom 1wallow1 retumed to Capistrano today 11 Onnge Count1 Bl1bop Wiiiiam R. Jobmon ---ed UM a~ulli· u.a1 ............... ... 11111.-GI wll Callfcnla ....... 1'i9 .._. -za•11•• al *•1i'Z-WMliadelllll ••r• •I at a I•• .laaa C...,.w cC enf•r•ee ...... . ... • ... wlll ... ........... I 1'•'••elllte1. 1 •• _'I .. •••• P•••t••· • =-for &a• Ora•1• . ... ........ • ... fw&M ... ..... 111 ....... day for tll,000 at a San Fran· riaco sale for the estate of Jen. nle Crocker Henderson. grand. daupter ol California pioneer Cbarlel Crocker . ..,,. tlemeat of tlme at the ml11ton1 bad a void In It," P'Ueatel Mid. ''Tbi1 acqulatHoa provklm a sreat record ror wMt wa1 mh•I•• from tlle arclll ... " He 1111i11 11M1D1 of t.be rec:Gldl an repcall dleetHn1 CWUHI ol lndlam, ......._ of llveetoek and .._,,._. produn and-. tnbutiw from ........ fundl at tM v .... Cdlanla ml181om. Some record• Hat tbe dll· '--................ Md note missionaries by age, name and years or service in California . The documenu. deta.iUq the epirttual and matert .. 1rowth of t.be m•••· will be stored in t.be arebi"8 ol the MluioD San Juan Capbtrano, where Fat.her Jul,_,, Sen'a be1an bJa work .,........,. Tbe reeordl were purchased bJ ,....._ Wllliam Krekelbert arcblvl1t for the Catholic Dioceee ID OrU1e. Tiie Sll,000 was ..-available "l'OUlll a 1raat from J . Robes'l Ff uor. cllalrllam 8Dd ddel nwudve ol· fteel' al tM lniae·bued .,uor Corpontlaa. "We must develop all feasible ener1y resources. conventional and alternate, if we expect to head off the severe economic consequences that will result from a chronic and prolonged 1bortqe of energy," be added . Wblle tbe curtailment of Iran'• oU exports hat bad only a moderate lmpact on the U.S., Orey Mid. "Iran la 1nother grim 1t1nal that empba1l1ea a blunt truth : Time h runnlna dan1erou1ly abort for the United Statet to improve lt• ener1y Hlf ·luft'lcieMJ. '' He Nici aeldevemeal ol telf· 1umc1eacy C!OUld only eom• wtth eltmluUoa of "tbe un.reuona· ble and c:ounter.producuve ret· ' . INSIDE TODA l' Son Frolldlco •· ~ 39, on its wow ro becoming tile ttcond mote popeilor touritt attraction m tr. eotmt~. u ot00t'1IOMA~too.See P.oflf 81 . •••• At •-a.me. AIP --~ Cl .,_._. a.... .. L.M ..... -----........ ..., ........ . ~ Al ......... .. """ ........ _ .. = =.:.-· AU ..... Cl.... .t ....... .._,,., .......... ., ~---I .. ,...,... • ......... ca """""' ., ....... c. ...... "4 ._,Ill ......... "4 i \ ""· 1 , • l l I AZ DAILY PILOT ......... rrlal Mother Shot Boy rfo D ath?, Pathologist~ BaelC on Stand Next Time, Pay the $2 PHOENIX, Arl:i.. CAPJ -8rl•• Hu'!lc:."Jord didn't ""'* he tel a ticket for parkMlg In the deHrt. M> he loMed It on u.e &round He thell f ol M ticket for littering. GARDEN ~1n . Kun cAP) " w()m•n lllormfd out or m•r r11.1.it• l'OUOb•'llllt( PO''"""" hn<'tl up b.r folll t•tulctr.o al home• 1u\CJ then Maul ••ld killed her unly 1100 tu>f \lrt• her hl.\.'lblnct t'Ould '" h •r vo1w. tual.hMlll ald \~ Tht• hw.bJod I.lo) ti l..orklt>u r :JI told ,1 h11•n1l •lftt'r lh«" 111(·1 dent Wt'(l114'•d1t\ lh•t hll wife• In tt•nd,•d to kill Jll four r htldrM ~:ll11tbelh Ju l..i1<•kh•1tr !H "'J' •. h II r J( .. ti "' Ith , Ir• l d •• KI ti,. murdt•r ""d t k1•n 'o I e rtl41<1 ~h•lt* t1u:;v11al wht•n • IM1>(l h1eln1· lt•P>h• 11\t'rt' ordt<r d , I' Inn.-, <'ounl)' \llornu~ Don V1 tt..-kd i.01d Humt wu., 11 Ml SUM> 000 l,loyd Lo\.klt'111 II U v. .._ "hot with • nn1· en ltw h•f\ .. hould • l ht• buU"t >.llt:d h•~ bJ •k undt•r th1• rtJ:hl "h1111 hl• 1 v .. t•h'r k u ... 1111 llw IJt•) "'"' p r11n111111r1•d dt•1.1d ut 11 ho:onh1I M fl~ w ·klcur VdU~ urr-'Olt.11 wh n lw urrwt.od ut th•• hObptt•I u hort llmt• lull'r. s;ohcl' &al.Id V11t"teck11 :o•ld ht> t'Ould d1 c~r11 no mm•vt• fur thv 11laym.i ··Tt11.11 '11 why I rc.~~u 'bled the m11nlul '•vuluu\.1011." ht• b&Ud "Wc"rc tcUll tr)'IOtl t o 1torl al out .. Anot.tw1 fanul.) fn •nd. Hhondu ~uulh . who ho" workt.td with 1..twkh•ur. t1t11d 11tw hcord Mr1t Lo<'kh•1u lh11•ull'n lo kill th e d11 ld1 co Sundu.> 111ght f 'rom r ..,e .4 I ENERGY ••• petroleum dt'vtilopment SLOWN£ '8 I N Lt:A81NG promising offahon· a rc1111 ror 011 und IC8JHlXPlorataon. -f'EDEa AL IP a ICE CON· TROL8 wtuch he 111ud cocounagc cont1umptJon of J)tllrolcum while d15courul(mg udd1t1onul dcvulop mcol ·ru t: "COMPl.J:;X . CON· t• l i S I N G a n c.J c· o u n t t· r proflut·t1 vt· · (•nv1ronmt•ntul n·d t a pl' 1 hut l'ldgut·i, :.ill typ1·i. ur 111 du:.lreul dt•vt•lnprrwnt . l"t:DE&AL PllOl'OSALS to cks1gnatc a,:rt>Ul purls Of AJw;k:.i and tht• we11t as wilderness · · 11 would ~ a lrugc·dy for our nat1on'11 econo mic future 1r these Ya s t 1.trc·as an: :.cl a :.tde a1t w1ldt'rnl'ss bt•f<>rf' we conduct the tox plorulJoo nccctu1ary lo jie· tcrmlnir lbc1r encrgy potenUaJ." he> s11irt · II :rnch u 1>0hcy hud been in l'ffrt·t in I.he curly 100011, our na· lion m1gh1. neve r h ave d111 c•ovt•rc:d PrudtHH' nay the I a r g n > t '"I f 1 c Id 1 n Nu rl h Amt·ncu .. ,.,..in-... Mu r&arct Trudt'\HJ . ••:slruugcd w1!t: of the Canudiun prime rnm1ster. und her :>ons Jul'ltrn. 7, Heft> und Sacha. 5. hold hund1-i Uh Uat·Y wulk <.town Murn Strcot USA dur· mg u vai.ol to Wull 1.>umt•y World 111 f''loridu Nixon G a t Crash Wjp c t Face8 Court LOS ANGELES I AP 1 A man accusud of a:.baullang u Secret Serv1ct> ugunt after rum ming h1s cur through u gulc ut the eat.ate of form •r President Richard Nixon ha11 been ur ra lg n e d bdorc u fedcrul magistrate A U S u t t o r 11 t· .> · :. 11pokeiiwumuo Mud Oun J (;oil 1ngc. 33, of Lugunu Hcu1·h -. a~. formally churg~·d Wudoc1><h1 y • before a fcderul rnat~11.truh· w1lh ont' count of ai-.:-.aull 1111 a rt·lll'r;d oHiCt·r Collini<<.> wai, thc·n 11·h •1tM0d m to the custody or Ill!> rnottu•r C)ll th e cood111;1n lhul h•· :.cc•k ps ych1at.r1t· t·art> pcndtnJ.( his trial The charge contend:. <.;othngc cr ashed h1s l'IJr throu..:h the g11t1• of Nixon's San C"lc.•m(·nh.' •·~lall' Monday und told a guurd hl' w ati "G~'s dJsc.aplf and hed com~ to p ick up Nixon " llt· Lht•n ra mmed ha:. l'ur 11110 u v1'11wlc· driven by a S1•1·11·L St·r v1t•1• dg~nt, Ult· ct1ur>tc C'lu1m•·d T he Nixon f&wllly w u» 11111 ho mt· a t lhc tum·. l he ~ a l t.orney'b office ti utd 1·,..,.r~A J UCI ... Aldrich 1uud thl' uvera~c :1\urt 111~ i,uJury of u11 t1s1m;tu11\ pro ft•11bo r at UCI 1s Sl!>,000 to $16,000 t:ompe•Ung mst1tulloru1. ht• 11a1d. ure uble to offer the l)Ome pool for 18,000 to $20,000 Thi.' ehuncellor 1uud. however. thul UCI h1i1:i s uffered no muJur QUr1t1on because of 1111lury or hou111ng cond1t1un11 Only one profe11sor who left dad bO for ti more ultr11ct1 Vl' sulary. he i;wd. Aldrich hailed u umvcnnty re· 1wnt:. 11hm to finance low clown 1wynwnl und low·ml1•rc11t hou:i 1ntt loani; for yo ung fnt u ll y n11·mbl'rt1. 1.111d :w1d 1t would hu v1• ..:r•·Hl 1m111wl 111 utl ructani.: m•w f<ll'llllY Tht' UOI Vt•i !;ll) :o.yhll'lllWidl' progr .in1 \\<CHiid make.· a ppro" 1mutl·ly $2!, n1llhl•ll ;1va1lultll' for \ht-lcUIOH Rl·llldl•s n~w faculty. I he louns wo uld bt· uv:.ululth· lo Junior faculty. rt•s1dcnl ut lhe uoiv1·r:-.1 ty for up lo :.t·v~n y~urs who 11:.i vt• nol attu11wd tcnun· Ht·gunl:. vut1.•d pn•l1m111ury a~ 11mval uf lht! "l;.111 110 Mun:h lh l"ao ul apvrovid I:. t!xpoct<·d 111 Mu)' Till' rer11t louub could lw 1: rn ott·il t h1:. .. 1ir111111·1 'l'h1•11• r>t o li.ehl y w1111lcl ht· fu111..h1 uvualuhlt• for ;at;out l~.IC> hun11· lultlll>. 111111 .. r ttw 1)1'11JJ!1'i•·ll ho11tl lh'tll\' t l1t1l wciulll fln1.1111·c· llw µn1•1ram l.oun~ urt< cxµc ·c·t cd t 11 u vun•ll•' $81),000 lo) lO ,000 l>r Hharley 1>r 13~0 11 , u Jf urvurd Un iv\•Nllty putholOMlt1l, was buck oo the wllnci111 slund toduy . tMClf\& crou cxum•nMHon ID the murde r lriul or Dr Wllliam WuddUI of llunUncton lh1rbour T1•!4llfyi111: for tlu• proM•cullun W edntwduy . L>r Oruu!oll told ttw Orun,.:t County Suµcrior Court Jury that l hl' round rio evldcnn· of isulln<' damutce to tho bully Ullil WaddJJI h1td aoortcd T he prw •cutton claim• Wud dill oote h•·d t ht.> 111.H>rtlon and lutur strunglt!d the rnfunt lo death • Dr Ur\acbll lold the cou_rt aht• rcudwcl hur eonclusaon un no duniugc by tht· 11aU1w 1iOlul111n Few Crops Suffered l11 Storms By TOM Ri\ALY.V Ol IM O•llt l'I ... It.II H••t'l•nt hl'avy rums huv•· de la 1·11 one or two trov:. and for cud Carml•rs to hold back 11n 1to mc Kpringi1rnc chore" I.wt the outlook ror Oran~e Cuunly .i~racullUrt' looks ver y JjOOd , o~nl·ultural uoalysls comm,!nl cd today · "flw only µ<.•uplc really affect cd by l..he r ain w e re lbc strawberry grower:.," i.ald Dur Thetford of the Orange County Jo'arm Bureau · 'Tbc bcrnus uot wet a nd lt\On· was ::.omc spc11lugt·. Aud. or course. they don't htbl Ub lonK in t h t ' m a r k l'l IHH' c th c Y n packed. "nut the i;truwbcrry grower:. I kno w aren't rornpluintnK 1·vt·n I liough tllf'y Wl'rt' 1111 hy Lill' fro:-.1 t•u rlil•r l111i. y1·ur It wcin 't lw .1 n •c•ord crop hy any mcun:. but 1l will I><· t1 uood onc and i.omc d•· ll<'IOUS fruit will ht• hitting tht· markt.'ts within the nt·xl wt•l'k .. J 1 m llarnt'll of thc OrllllJ(l' County 0 1v1s1on of Agriculture ::.aid lhl· nat urt• or rct·cnl n1inf;Jll IHl'Vcnlcd any :;1gn 1f11•ant <la magt' an lhe county':. fwld~ and orchurds ,..,.... P09#A I MARVIN .•. With l'Vt•ry1111t• d 11t• used to "tnte ttte a1>0r\Jon after she t1lud1cd lhu1ue samples from lhe illUnl known as Baby GtrJ Weatv«. Her poettloo wa1 cootl'adi<i.ied by earl ier te1h moay b)' another puthologiHt, Dr. Robert H1chards. lie believed there wui. 11uhne damage w UlC wraot. Waddill. 48. 111 aceuHd of strangling the an(aot. oa lllareh 2. li77 H11 hrat mur•er triul coded tn a hunt( Jurr, rcpor\edly 7 lo !> in favor or aequlll..aJ PrOMCutor Robert Chatl.et1on corrt.endAI WMddill W H deeply rn debt a t the time or lbt abort.ion. lacked 1uuranc~ and fe111~.'d u lnwaw t b11lled on brain da ma.ce tu the anC.nt Uefcnsl' attorney Charle:-. W<'cdman dcniei-. th<' indebted nc::.i-. claim 1ns1st1ng thl:tt h11. f'11e11t..w<.1i. financially secure. llt< a lso cont..endi; lb(' baby wus bt•yond rev1vaJ when Wudclill t!x a mined her 10 the hospital. Toduy Or. Orisroll, &lllO Chief of Pathology at Hm1ton llos p1tul (or Women. *ilood h y her medical f111d111ait1 under the ques- tlonin& of Wcudman. More Cover age Add1t1nnul i.oulh Orange <.:uun ly cov .. rugt• av1~urb l'x.lay on l'u.:t· /\!J He appealed the $2 par k · ing ticket and $23 dumping tint! from city co•rt to Superior Court.. Juw A . Melvin McDooaW reatlced lhe fine to flt, but nried thut the luw 11galnsl dump- 1 n g ap pli es t o llun~erford 's act The lttw WU detilgned t.o "pun11h thole ~NIOns who ute the public hipwayll a& ga rbage dum pa," the judge said. addiag that the lower oourl should have reduced the fine F ...... repAI HEALTH ••• The Phase One proposal will offer pnllk::oct1on -aaana.t the k1gh cost or major illne&i> -so-caJlcd catai1trophic ecwerage -and un 1otpec1!1ed "'l\igniricanl improv(• mc>nl tn ~h l'Urc bcncflllO for the aeed. the poor, for employed people and ror othen who do not now have ud1•quale hl'allh can · l"Ovcrugc." Calif:.tno said I le s aid Carter's initial plan would e11t.ablush .. a i;ouod struc Lun• for future> phu:.es" und would 1£0 int.o c rcccl JO lhl' re:.cal yt>ar lx:gennu\g Ot·l 1. 1982 Dayan Visits U.S. For Treaty Annex W ASHINGTON <AP J l:.raeh l-'ore1gn M 1mslt'r Mosh1· Ouyan was fl ying to Wa:.b1ngtun toduy to work out det<Jil:. ur th<• m ilitary u.nnt·x to the Egypt l i-.ruel pc·an• t rt•at y and a · mcfllorandum uf Ubl>Ur ant":." bt.'twcc.>n the Jew111h 11tute l:ttlll the United Slatt'1> The last unrcsolved detail un the military a nnex as the d<1w or the Israeli milita ry witbdrawul from th<' Sinai 011 fields lsrat>I w11nts it lo be nine months from the signing of the treaty. wh.dt· .Eeypt ts i;eekang to make 1t two or three months sooner The annex mu~t bt' completed before Ow lre11ty ti. s1gnud al Uw Wh•Le House on Mood uy by Pre1ndcnl Carter. Jsn1eU Pnnw M an1ster Mcnachem Beem and Egypl.1an Prc11 1denl Aowar Sadat lfowt-ve r . the re " no deadhnt' Cor the mcmoraocklm or aHsurunces. U S offl c1aluwd Tbe U S off1 c 1a b. who dechnt.-d to be u1cnt1flcd . 11...id they expl'Cl Dayan to i.sk Sccretury of Stutc Cyrui. tt Vanc·t· for a :.:-.urant'l'h tunld 111nunt lo a military sct:uril} ln·ul y but hopt• Uay <LO can bt.· ;>••r:.uad<.-d Lo sdtlc for lei.11 blnd mi.: assurances of political suµ p1.1rt The Nt-w York T1meit reportt.'<1 today I.hut the memorandum will 1nC'lude the:.c two pran t·1plci-. If f4ypl violates aJJ y part of tht' tre•lY. the United Stat~s would cons ult with Is rael on what to du next. And lf ~ Unit ed NaljOWI Security Council Uik ets acuoo a galflfil the treat:r. tbc United Sta~ wooki Wilt' llb veto power or ot.herwi.ae take oeces~ary stept, $10 Million Suit Fded in 'Attack' Down 1J¥)'rnc11l11 could ~ u:. low ui. O ~·1 ct•nt. (•om v11r~d with tht• 11tundart.I 00 11t·r1·1.iot d<)WO J ot\Jri•ttt rut ti:> u c tinvuuonud &it 8''" i.i1•rc••ml raLht1r thuri thu coo vtnlaoruil 10·~" ~rooot. Cmu Cb3an Up in Fraud Pn·a11t'f1 II)' M1.1rv1n':. ullorney .. 110 c·r<ui!4 t•x11m 1nul111n to n · 1111•11llll'r mon· clc•t:111b of tht• 1m•1 tfrnlt1 und who accompun11•cl M arvin, tthc r.-luctuntly 111J1d Hhc hud H<'tn Mur vrn with uctor1t Cc11 ur Homcro u 11d Nevill e Urund S-anz• Tht> memorundum wouJd set out 1n writing Ame rican as :i urance:s or pol1t1cal a nd uconomic si.-pport for l•rael in the event thal lhe peact> process colla&>kS T he m emorandum of as i.urance:. u1 slmilur to a Sttr"el :.t•ries d a~reemenl.8 the Uruted State& and l"rael signed in 1975 afte r l~ Sinai disengagement 1i1grecment But this time. tbe Stak Department has said ~ document wJIJ be made public. SALE I\ promol.1on11 cons ult.ant who 111leges he wa11 forct-d at gun· puant to pay ta~.ooo to :some of th(' Stephen John Boven murder dt•fendanls end their ussochrtes filed suit Wedne11duy St..'Oklng SI0.2 million. 8 yron •~•ode allegc11 1n the Ornn&l' Count)' Superior Court 'compl1unt he wH tossed agaanbt '11 wall wh11t· at.wnd1ng u JuJy IU77 me •t.1ng at Pro11udam Dis- tr1hut1ng lntcrnut1unul Joe in Nt•wport. 8e111c.h. /\nd, wlUI ., .tun at hl11 head, w BK rorred "' 1iuy the c11sh or fear hur m to h1m11elf aCMI ah1 fumUy. Uon4k .tll!fltM.I. N•·wPQrl Bud> PoliC41 have 1dcntilkd Linde 1u1 u consuJt.ant hlrnd by Prurwdum budlne1JHmW1 •IA help prww>OtA! "Klonlc: BltJ," a c-ookle l*ng merketed by UM busloutMHWHrft and •ndor!HKI by 'the ·116• MUllon DQU•r Man.'' , f>nu1.-dum will • Newport .._.., invu t ,,...i ftrm onco eo.Krotted by fCM!lr telt·proe'laiMff Krithn• devotAMt. 01'1Lf PlLOl ~~~"'.;ce.­ ~·==~l'I~-· HWflCINI .... lll<KR t1tlt•.C"'~·· Defendants an ttw HUil include rave swspccta in tbc murd ·r of Fountain Volley c.Jrug dculer 8ovan, /\I •,.,u nd er Kulik , Raymond Resco. Joseph Vuv\11 , Josevh Pedcrowsk1 und /\ntbony Marone Jr . a lu ng with th•· Bovan tntuwrm11n. conv1<:trd rourd~rcr Jerry Peter f1or1 Other defendont:i In t h.: c•lva l suit are the former hcud of the Laguna Beach Knshou Tcmvlt·. Roy Chnst.opher Jl1 churd. A11 t.hon)'. throne Sr ~nd f"ra&0k Rossi, who ull have been culled to teKtlly In th• lengthy cr1mu111l procccdlOIUI stcrnrn ing from IJ'ovto'8 October l9'77 1h1ylrlA PoUcr h11ve uUeg d t heir an vestigallon Into the Bovun !iluy Ing uneovercd un lntcrn1.1t101111I dru1-sm ufUl lJ"* r\ng ht•ud quarte re d alun.i th'' Orungc Coul a.nd Ol)4tr.-lt:d unc:k-r lhc IWH at 1t-gH.im11t4!! hu•ln 1ui l.I~. In Ms civil 4:hmplmnt, aaid ""' throat.. ••de 11culn»t him forctMI him to aell rettl fftate bekM k.• vahM to come UJ> with the $3.'l,000 cu11h. 11• •• '""1nf! ••e .. 1mon ln punlU~• da•at(H eaalnat tM defe ... •11•, alOD& wttai 1*1080 In gener•I d•ma1 • an~ r~ CMeriDC fll lilM tllJ,OIO. D ANO. Vu 1/\Vl f''1gw-m~ h11d llU.h• t.o l<>tic , uboul JOO ak11 at Ow Bli.nd Correc llonitJ O!ntt'r l11unchod u pbony er djt l'&tfd 1>ctwmc that l1111tctl mor" I.bun a ycar. uuUwr.tUes 'iUY Tht· 11t•hcmt• rwlt(.-d $GO,OOO In Ht 1• rN1:), td1>v11>111ni. und cxoUc f oo\!N. aor I u<Un!t " l>0x of frot<'t1 quail. The :st•be mc apparently workt.'<I for flwhile because the 1nm 11tt•s oftt>n diaii<uisod thclr ~•d· <lressl'll, maldna tl •PJleilf' they were attcntflnf( u community collcgt• by Jhltl~ their 1.1ddrnu11 <ui HCC. Hl nnd, Va., or lived al o 1•o unlry esh1te cit lle d 81und Farm. Ninew•m lnmateti were ind1cl· 1•d tor t'rt!dlt <'Ord fruut.I NoD~Found 1.iOS A.NO.ELI!:$ 11\P) Coun ly be ullb 4>ffich-'I• h•v• fouod no cl11naicrou11 k:veb oJ radioactive mutcr!aJ at •Ix 11Jt.e11 pJ~lotcd 011 po¥11lble trouble iJlOU b)' lh • Envlronmonul Prot ection M tcn <'y Density Issue Eyed In.Aliso Viejo Plan H the Mo"'t.on Ranch. lfowcvcr, Supervhaor TtM>fnH 8Jley w.-t.he 1WOjfld. ~ed dow• to Jt • bowlWC _.... After the publk .,......, elGMd at •: 11 ,.,.., taoMIAt. Nl•1'• ltJlow M~rvJtor• ta•leat.d tlMtr ..... M M -r• ..... tc toward the <'Ompaar'• ,._ •to RJler'• acaled dowll vtrtlon. Therefore, It l• coneetvabLe Ute rOJDPAO>' 1te1t wen will win tbe 11111r•I 11••0 cb101,. &l wult ~ •ll•.Y'• vo4.e. Al f• • the audience wbo p•rUctpatecl In We da11d11'• Dulllic btartaa ta CODCVMCI, at. bnt tlley want land 111 cm IM rancb bead 1t Lhe 1t.tua quo. I OO't to choose frolll! .... . ... s1 t I • • \ oonAMllA Mt I. 1"'-IT. ............... ,_.to ...... C*E **> ..... Mon.·M ~ tll1o.I a.cl---- Many fabrics, Mmry styles OVER 100 Rec1iner Rockers and w.all Recliners IN STOCK # 1.-ecliate FREE DELIVERY SALE ENOS MARCH 31 a Showcase llllWVll• HIHM• .. •lle Plcwr. (Comer of Mlf0U9rlte and Via llDalar) , .. Ital *"·MMM .... MN C-..•FCR ) l I CALIFORNIA T'hurldey, Meteh 22, 1979 DAIL y ptLOT AS Anti-bus Plan Advances Measure Two Steps From State Ballot SA CRAM 1-:NTO ti\ I' 1 I\ st.ale cor11Ulutlo1MI umt•mlment r.,tricllo& m andatory bu!'!ln.c ror intearattoo. aamed ot 'ltop PUat tbe Los Anaelcs bu. .. ma Pr\l (CJ'aO'. wu only l wu •h'P-' ~woiy from I.he st.ate ballot h>d1ty With approval tn tod y ·~ scbeduled Au~mbly volt>. tbt• meaaure would nt·ed onh· routine concurrenr.-by the• Seute to qualify for the b llot TBE MEA8Ultt;, SCA :? b\• Sen. Al an Robbins, 0 -Van Nuy~. is a product of strong OPJ>t>s1 lion. particularly 1n !)Uburban areu, to the Los An geles bW>1ng program that started last fall. "The Los Angeles compulsor) busing program is a disaster dlt.ruphna the !le-hoot lives or thouu ocb of younaat4'ra, forcmu ' mill l-0 n. the dlalttcl l(> avo'd roret'd bwlina. and C09Ung l •xr.aye"' needlf'fia milUooa or dol ars." UW' noor •Pon.or. A~ •tn1blyman Bruce Youn&. 0 Cerrrtoa, uld In a statement on the eve of Uw vote. The m ehure s urvived a cruc-ull test lust week when the Auembly Judiciary Comuuttct:, normally the 1raveyard ror 1nt1- buslng proposal8, pH&ed it 10-2 SC' A 2 would require state eourls to follow federal st.Md· ards 1n desegregation orders. So far, federal courts have re- quired bwung only m cases of deliberate seKrcgation by school districts. 'ROBBINS s ay s h is measure, ll approved by voters, would stop Lo& Angeles bwling lmmedlat.ely and would prevent similar orders ln other cities whe re IO•Called d e f acto s.,1re11aUon -a product of boos· Ing patterns rather than de· hberate actB by school boards WH found. Opponents bave questioned that predict.Ion on two grounds at least one Judie found lhat Los Angeles segregation was de· llberalely caused. and SCA 2 itself may cons titute a de liberate act of segregatlQn. Another goal of the measure is t o prevent the so-ca lled Pipeline Pe~ts Asked April Ruling F orectUJt on Sohio Issue LOS ANGELES <AP) -The South Coast Air Quality Manage- ment District's chairman says the board could rule on Standard Oil Co. of Ohio's request for en- viron mental permits for its 011 pipeline project by April JS. But the chairman of the stale Air Resources Board said Wed- nesday he is not sure Sobfo will ever go ahead with the pipeline whose intitial cost and 20-year oper ating expense is estimated by Sohlo to be $1 billion. The proposed line would transport Alaska crude oil from California to Texas · -The Cleveland-based oil £irm resubmitted ao application to the AQMD on Wednesday seek· ing the necessary permits ror the pipeline operation. The AQMD and the ARB must both evaluate the plan Sohio abandoned last week because of delays in obtaining approvals. U Admer Hir~d SACRAMENTO (AP > The University of California has hired a $210-a-day cons ultant to a dvise its president on dealing with lbe news media U nive r s ity s pokeswoman Sarah Molla said Wednesday that Murray Fromson. a former CBS television correspondent (_sr._~_TE_J who was a deputy campa ign manager and media adviser for Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. last year, is being paid mostly from state funds. l'Ollllger B~ Bit LOS ANGELES (AP) -The home of former California At· torney General Evelle Younger has been ransacked by one or more intruders, PoUce report. Younger's gardener dis- covered a broken side window and notified police Wednesday afternoon, Lt. Warren Larson said. Younger, in private law practice in Los Angeles, was out or town at the lime. Sdte..e Vncoeered BERKELEY <AP> -Pollce say there may be more arrests in the case of a University of California senior who was ar- rested and booked ror investiga- tion of attempting to sell copies or final examinations. Police said 21-year-old Quincy Fassette was arrested Tuesday a fter six copies of final examina· lions were found in bis Oakland a partment Meal• es Ddftlted SACRAMENTO <AP> Should bottled water be taxed? Should diabetics have to pay tax on their needles and syringes? The state Senate Revenue and Taxation Committee says no in both cases. It voted 6-0 Wednesday on bills sending the proposals to the Senate Finance Committee. The committee also voled 4-2 on SB 56 by Sen. David Roberti, D-Los Angeles, to lncrease the deductioo for transportation ex- penses u part of a charitable contribution from 7 cents to 17 cents a mile. Jl needed five voles for passage. LcaullRark B11rn• LOS ANGELES <AP) -A ma· jor fire at the former Wallach's Music City , a Hollywood landmark for two decades, caused an estimated $250,000 damage early today. fire of- ficials said. Spokesman Martin Garza said 19 fire companies battled the blaze at Spelvin's Musical Instrument Co. at the comer of Sunset and Vine. He said the fire apparently broke out In a crawl space between the first and second stories, but the names burned a large section of both Ooors. eee Naturally the real thing looks good. But Ifs cold. hard. noisy, expensive ... and a chore to maintain. Why not go NATURAL the easy way with NEW natural brick or slate realism found in a no-wax Solarian floor from Armstrong! These incredibly natural-looking NEW Solarian floors stay looking like new with Just regular washings. thanks to Armstrong's exclusive Mlrabond • no-wax surface. It protects the rich natural colors underneath .. colors that are built up of thousands of varicolored viny1 granules for unusual depth, richness of color. and design realism. Natural- looklng Solarian floors really are easier ... easier to live with .. walk on ... maintain. See how easy it is to GO NATURAL with no-wax Solarian floors from Armstrong .. ·. starting as low as *216 Plr•~W-.... .... ,_ .... naturally tt·a trom @matrong GABPnGo. m e tropolitan plan, r ecom· mended to a Los Angeles judge by a group of etperts because of the decllnJng number or white students in the dislrlct. The plan would extend man· datory busing beyond the city llmits to a number of largely white suburban areas in Los Angeles County and possibly Orange County~ Slaughter Of Goats Scheduled SAN DIEGO <AP) -A repeat of the 1976 wtld goat slaughter on San Clemente Island that killed 5,000 of the animals and enraged the public is being· planned for this .summer, ac- cording to the Navy. Some 3,000 goats must be e radi cated by Na vy sharpsboolers to thin an over- populated herd that threatens the island's ecology, The Sao Diego Union reported today. .. WE ARE under federal man· date to maintain the ecology of the island ," s aid a Navy spokesman wbo asked not to be identified. The mass shooting program will begin around June 1 and will utilize Marine marksmen firing Crom helicopters as well as on the ground. The Andalusian goats, native to Spain, are believed to be an- cestors of a s mall herd brought to San Clemente by SpanJards over 200 years ago lo provide food for future explorers. AT ONE t ime. the goat population was estimated at 10,000 before dep(>pulalion er- rorls were launched when the island was denuded of foliage. Deer have been exterminated from the island. Used as a Navy gunnery range since 1936. the island, localed 55 miles northwest of San Diego, is 20 miles long and ranges from two to six miles wide. It's Mine Alvilla holds her ne wborn baby gorilla at Roeding Park Zoo in Fresno. The remaJe inf ant is the first gorilla born al the zoo. Alvilla is on a breeding loan from San Diego Zoo which will get the baby gorilla. The mother was tra nsferred to Fresno after failing to mate with male gorillas at San Diego Zoo. Airliner Slates I.nw Fare Plans OAKLAND <AP > -World Airways announced plans for scheduled daily rughts across country for $99.99 beginning April 12. "It's the average person's turn to nx on a budget without fight· mg red tape, hne print and other hassles, · Edward J . Daly. president oft he Oakland-based airline said Wednesday. The onJy other $99 transcontinental fli ghts are operated on a oncc·a·week charter basis between New York and Los Angeles by the Oakland-based Trans International Airlines. The TI-ans International nights are offered through the Council o ( International Education Exchange , an educational travel service. THE WORLD AIRWAYS eastbound nights are scheduled to depart at 7:20 a .m., stop in Los Angeles and arrive in Newl!rk at 5:20 p.m. The night schedule calls for flights leaving Lo6 Angeles al 10: 15 p.m .. stopping in Newark and arriving in Baltimore at 8:45 a.m. The westbound travel schedule calls for a Newark departure at 7 p.m., a stop in Los Angeles and arrival in Oakland at 11:45 p.m. Another flight schedule calls for departures from Baltimore at 10 :30 a .m .. a stop at Newark and a destination in Los Angeles al. 3:10 p.m. SPRI POWER TOOL SALE 19.99 Rockwell • Develops 10,000 opm.Flulh sendt on 3 sides. along V1lnl· c.I surfaces and tn comers. Front •nd rear h<tndles lor pasitive control. Double insurated for elcclltC<tl ufetv. 4401 2-SPEED JIG SAW Bas<> Hits 45• on enher d11oc tton 10 cut wood. light or hc<ivy metal. compo511,on. pl1111gt11s. plastic. Finger l•P speed HhlCIOf. ant•·•Phl bate onaen. ~10 1-HP DEWXE ROUTl:R Heavy dutyl Prec-s1on c.ah brated 1n 1f64·•n • vnr1'cal depth adrustments. 2:l.OOO rpm, 7616 'l•·ln. POWER 13-Pc. Drill Bit Set DRILL 13 high·speed 1>111 from f'or Hght·duty w ork. Orllls 11111 lhrough 114 in. For Compect and llghtwa1ghtl :t.·•n. ateet. Y.·•n. herdWOOd. wood, me1al.pl11tlc. W<lh Hla 9,0 amp motor. 1\4 Wrap·around shoe; double 7004 fitted lndeJCa<I cHe. S13 H.P. Telelcooing blede iNVlaced. W•th comblnetlon ••••••••Ill guwd. IMade lnci. 4511 ~. 1300 ................................ . : 19.95 VIH A/Ml Ind lodl•IWMI bMe "In. ._. '°' IMtal Ind ........ CIPl"iftt. .. . 1 ~c. SCREWDRIVER SET SQu.re blades for 11rt11 tvm. Ing l>OWlf. SIOtlld lipa. Clwolne vlNdlum. T11SQ 1CMN. GAi SAW Wlm Sef.T·TIP"'. feltvret efl'POll· 11011 CMburetOf, eutomallc cheln oiling, Ill 'welttllf lgMjon. XL Iii STOllHOUIS ................. W.N.1111.IM .. • J f i .. .. .. • .... I E.-it~~ I .. Robert N. Wetd/Pubh$her Thomes KMvll/E dltor Orongo Coast Oa11v Pilot ~-U-r•O ..-=!!fJ..e•••••••••T•h•u•r-4••·Y· .... • •• ch•22•.•'•979••••••••••~•'•bcl•ra•K•re•1•b•1c•h•'E••dl•tor•1a•1•P•aoe••E•d•lt•or•••-.. · • ' • ' • ' . ' • j ' ·: ' ' Gap Still Wide On Teacher Pay : Tht.•r" cxlsls on unusually wide gap bctwc n what : leach •rs in the t rvin Unified School Di trict appanmUy : ~ want in the way of new workmg contract. and what the • s chool bo•rd apparently want.\ to l'iv th m. Tuachcrs usk a total or 17 perc nt in new puy increa.llt.'S, ~yond automauc tep incr a~ or up to S.5 Jlerccnt u ycHr for 1.•xper1encc und education built into ex1stin~ contracts. The board mudc no offor (or a ulary m er ase for th rarsl year of whnt il hof)('s Wlll be It tWO·Y(IOr contract, und offered only 2 percent for the econd year. Wid e dis paraty b e tween initial t.•ontract counter·proposalf as expected in thes matter:., but the ch asm here is, at least superficiully, starthng. Further. tht-bourd has propos ed other unubual contruct cla uses : It wants t achcn. to work harder. put In lon~cr hou~ und asroo not to stop t •aching because of disputes. Those proposals ull stem from the board's absolute uncertainty about where the money to pay for public t..'ducallon is going to c om • from next year and the year f..lftc r . The board docs n 't want to contract lo bpend m oney it isn 't sure it will have. Examined from that pers pective, the difference is more understandable , but ~ti ll formidable. Practical Education Industry is trying actively lo involve itself in educa· lion. and vice vers a, in the Irvine area, through develop· m ent of a ne w program of vocational education, called The Irvine Enterprise in Education. T IE is a product of cooperation between the Greater Irvine Industrial League and the Irvine Unified School District, which have recognized a need Cot students to gain first·hand education about the American economic s yste m . A textbook simply cannot give a student more than a limited understanding of the way business works. The TIE program moves the student Crom the classroom into the business community through field trips, inte rnships and other on·site expe riences, a nd he gains real.world in· ~ights. Students are able to talk with leaders of business and industry, and a sk questions directly of the m, privileges no te xtbook can include. This program -completely voluntary on the part of the dozens of businesses that have donated their time, re· s ources a nd energies to make it succeed -deserves the encouragement o f the whole community. Mayor's Responsibility In Irvine, the mayor's post is cer emonial; he or s he is picked· more or less good·naturedly by fell ow councilmen. H e presides over ribbon·cuttings, a wards presentations, and the m eetings of the city council. If he is an a ble m a yor, his council m eetings proceed :;moothly , without much ruffle , yet with full debate of city ISSUeS. His effectiveness is m easured not in what is noticed about him, but in what is not noticed; the mayor, if he is a good one, tries for s mooth resolution of the ~ues. People have been noticing Bill Vardoulis a lot, lately. He is a hard·working mayor who of late has exercised a hard·working h a bit of being rude to people who disagree with him. Too often. Vardoulis a t public m eetings rolls his eyes at adversaries , c uts the m short, lectures them and occasionalJy misleads them about the facts to make their arguments appear weak, or simply lo confuse them. Though he is not selected directly by the people of his community, the mayor has a responsibility to treat the people with respect, despite their possible diverge nce from his own views. Vardoulis repeatedly has said he does not like being mayor. Perhaps he is s imply responding lo hjs increasing frus trations with the job, and st)ould pass the chore to his vice·mayor or another m ember of the council, for his own peace of mind and for more effective functioning of the council. • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is Invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321 . Boyd/Hiubaru/A By L.M. BOYD Average Bulgarian man · spends five hours a week helping out around the house. Diatustlng. Wait, that's un· called for. Merely comment preliminary to the r eport that no ·other male national anywhere devotes so mucb time doing household chorea. Tbere i• a school of thoulbt, you know, wblcb holda that butbands who dive into the homemaking jobs tend to threaten their wives indlred· ly. Not all ladies appreciate tbe competition. You know wbat old Andre Maurois Nld: ''Houlekeepiq in com· , mon ii f« women the acld tat." It'• lmowa, Incidental· Dear Gloomy GU8 c.v. •aa' 1y, that the husband least likely to tackle household tasks is the EngUsbmaf'!. EveT bear or a predatory tree? Neither had I. But a client reports that such there be. The strangler rig. It kills other trees in its struggle to reach for light. More Greeks Jive In Melbourne. Australia, than in any otber city, except for Athena. Credit the wasp, none other, with the lnvenUon of paper. Albert Ei,...ln d~D 't like to wear a bat. But once wheo It WH rainlna, hl• wlfe lnalat· ed be do IO. A 1eat1e IOl't, Elnaleln. He wore tbe t.blna hallway to bis Prloceton of. nee and carried It tbe rest of tbe WAJ. He tben carefully noted nact11 bow loq It took for bolb Ida bat ud llalr to *'· Tb8t .......... told bla Wife die nAlta. Hll balr drted .... Cllddb tllu .... Ut., wllNla be left oa Ule nck tbeafflarward. ..,...,... 8*ed a ........ .... GI llad11a1 ......... tMJ -.s ..... .!... ... ~~ na&llld,...Tm ....... .. .. -.......... . ...... ...., ...... . ... ..., ... 1 ...... ,.. ............ .... .... -•1••fhd 2 .. . 1. Jack And rson Pilot Fatigue Problem Evaded WASIONGTON -The 8cenc was II Loo fumlllar lh•t day <&l th" airport The wt•iar y t' rcw mem· hers o( a US u Ir fre1J(ht t-r looked bonl• tar e d and s poki: nlm~I incoherently when th(•y ar raved at the f ie ld . And with good reason· They had only thr~c hours' slee p after nine hours in n1,;bt and a total of 23 hours on duty. Their Boeing 707 freighter took the entire runway to get off the ground. As it finally Ufted off, th-0 plane veered sharply to the right. then left, before collid· ing with a tree and a utility pole. Careening out of control. the giant craft ripped through trees. poles and rooftops and began disintegrating before IL crashed upside down on a playing field. THE CREW was-killed. and 77 perso ns on the ground were crushed by debris or burned to death in the naming inferno. Investigators on the scene found that the plane's "controls had been improperly set, depriv· ing it of critical power needed for sufficient takeoff thrust. They blamed the mistake on the exhausted condition or the crew. The tragedy occurred on Oct. 13, 1976, at Santa Cruz, Boli via. Yet it could have occurred lo a U.S. crew virtually any time and anywhere. It could have OC · curred to a crew transporting pass~ngers, instead of freight. For the shocking fact about the Santa Cruz disaster is that the crew of the aircraft was operat· ing within Federal Aviation Ad· ministration safely regulations . The rules regarding fatigue arc alarmingly lax and have not been signifi cantly-modified since 1934. While pilot fatigue is a recur· rent theme In foreign accident repo~. American investigators have cited fatigue as a factor in only one commer c ial airline cras h between 1973 and 1977. "Human error " Is cited as the cause of most accidents. AN OFFICIAL for the Na· tlonal Transportation Safety Board. which Investigates air crashes. told our reporters Tom Rosensllel and Moira Forbes. "We stay away from it <fatigue> in official board reports, unless we have hard evidence" that the pilots stretched their rnght re· gulatlons or spent their rest time carousing Instead of sleeping. But pilots themselves told us shocking stories of falling asleep at the controls, or of drinking lo overcome the insomnia induc(.'<i by their long and irregular hours. "I've been a basket case from fl ying so many weird hours." said Harris Dexter. a pilot for a major airline Another pilot. who asked to have his name withheld. told us he used to tlrink a pitcher or two or beer to combat sl~plesanes8, a chronic problem for pilots who must try to sleep during normal waking hours. Sleeping pills are a common remedy, he added. The crew or one plane report· ed that its pilot fell asleep on a landing approach just half a mile from the runway. A CO·pilot told us he saw his captain fall asleep at 2,000 feet moments after takeoff. · NIGHT FLIGHTS, c hanging time zones, erratic schedules and brief layovers all contribute to an impairment of the human body known t o most air travelers as "jet lag." This familiar condition is an mconve· nie nce to a businessman or vacationer; it can be a trag(.>dy when it occurs lo an airline pilot with hundreds of lives in his care. A Univer sity of California study concurs : .. When humans arc 3skcd to perform at a time in their <24·hour> cycle when they arc usually asleep, their performance 1::. 1mpa1red." Yet the 1''AA discounts such warnings ... We do not perceive any threat to sa fety" in the FAA 's current regulations gov· ernmg fatigue, s aid Dr. 11.L. Reighard, the FAA 's air sur· geon. Fatigue. he told us. is .... s ubjecti ve factor only the pilot knows if he is suffering from 1t." The f~AA does not plan to allocate more money lo do re· search on fatigu e. Footootc: The F'AA's disturb- ing official attitude is con. trad1cted by other federal CK· perts. Gerritl J . Walhout. the N at1onal Transportation Safely B o a rd 's hu m an f ac t or:. specialist. s aid that more re· ::.earch would lead to such dramatic changes as "different working hours. differe nt night legs and different home base::. for pilots ... Jet Noise Victims Find Complaints Futile To the F.ditor: Re: Letter or 3/15/79 titled "Noise Complaints": With such an impressive title or "Executive Director, Com· munity Airport Council", Mr. Joseph E . Irvine should be ashamed to present such ridiculous airport "statistics" on the numbers or pe rsons who h ave regist ered complaints about airport noise. It is ludicrous to compare the numbers or complaints filed , against the total population or Orange County. How can the roar or the jets taking otr from the Orange County Airport in any way disturb the residents or Founta in Valley, Huntington Beach or any other location ex· cept in the immediate vicinity or the airport? MOREOVER, si n ce no punitive action is taken against planes that violate the pre· scribed take off pattern and/or exceed the allowable noise, the frustrated residents of Ne wport Beach are justified in conclud· ing that their calla of protest are futile and therefore other action must be taken to preserve our rights against this noise poUu· lion. Mr. Irvine's conclusions prove that starting from an invalid premise, statJsUcs can be made lO juatiry any point or view. H.K. LEVINSON Sllellc Sere•m• To the F.dltor: Re: March 15, 1979 editorial ''Airport Noise.'' The 1tatlltie1 ratlonaU1ed by the bl.red hack Jo.epb Irvine are deliberately distorted. For every complalnlng call, there are a thousand silent screae;n1 aa the thunderous aircraft Invade our homes and batter our aenaltlvlUes. Became the majority or ws suf • fertn1 residenta no longer com· plain does not mean we do not care about this encroachment. It means we are desperately try. lq to do our jobl and live our llvn in spite of tho Jet nolle ltrell. 0tMr IDNDI wUI be found to curb tltl1 trauma H we no lonaer bave lite time nor the pa· ' tieDc!e to rlDI tbat. number to no nail. WINIFRltD VOll:GSUN should be in Sacramento full time, working for us, since that's what he is being paid for. As you may now have noted from the lack or public response . to your editorial. the public is satisfied. Wise up. The public knows when its well off and so should you. Leave well enough alone. BEVERLY EVANS N•t-lsi.•fl To the Editor: The status quo, no growth. no highway improvement majority on the present Newport Beach City Council should be a bk! to learn a lesson from the traffic problems Laguna Beach is suf· fering with as a result of years or neglect and procrastination in making much needed highway improvements. Laguna Beach tried to stand still while the world around them was progressively growing and now you can see the ditrlcull and tragic end results. Trame congestion, a mounting number or d eaths a nd injuries on bithways that should have been improved years ago. You can'l stop progress; ir you try you are only kidding yourselr. you either grow. improve and up grade or you vegetate. Unless the present City Coun· cil majority has some legal way of renclng off and monitoring the incoming out.aide tramc. there is no way that anll·hlghway im· provement thinking will work to the advantage of the people or Newport Beach. IN VIEW of the galloping in· fl ation and the pending Gann taxing limitation initiative, Newport Beach city operations are going to be in dire straits un· less it increases its tax base. This does not seem possible un· der the anti.growth policy that now exists, which is threatening the welfare a nd continued pro· gress of our fair city. There is no way the city can afford to make the essential im· provemenls i n our highway system unless the City Council can encourage some outside financial assis ta nee as they have done in the City of Irvine. You can't look to CalTrans for this kind of help, because it is common knowledge t h at Newport Beach is not on their list or favored cities. We believe in sensible and practical controls, but you can't operate and rule Newport Beach as an island by itself. with no re· gard for what is happening and going on around you. It is hoped that some improve· ment in the wisdom or the City Council majority will soon sur·. face. E.P. BENSON T ... lerA ..... 1 To the Editor We hear a lot about how im· • ,. possible it is to prevent illegals from infiltrating the border. And 1t is, for the Border Patrol, but what about the Army and the National Guard? We have hundr e d s of thousands of troops, drawing their pay a nd eating three squares a day. They are in bar· racks, on war games. in train· ing. Why could they not get their training along our borders? Why couldn't part of their war games be to prevent the illegals from infiltrating their lines·! They could use barbed wire entanglements in certain areas. artillery spotters, men patroling in jeeps or just on foot. They could be spread in a thin hne along both borders. They could either chase the illegals across the border. or apprehend them a nd turn them over to the Border Patrol. Perhaps if the Army thought they were doing a useful job, more people wou ld enhst. The soldi e r s have to be somewhere, why not along the border? JIM BOLDING E•leree •lie I.•., To the Editor: It is unfortunate that your editorial writer chose not to pre. sent both sides or the issue re· gardlng Orange County Transit District vs. transportation for the disabled thousands living and visiting in Orange County. In this age of space travel it's an insult to one's intelligence to state "there's just not a reliable lift available." What's being used by other transit districts which are complying with state and federal laws? What does OCTD use on dial-a ·lirt? YOU CITE cost as a major ractor in Lhe board's decision not 1 to compfy with the law, yet you neglect to mention the Identical cost or alr conditioning which is provided on each bus. No law re. quires this; to say noth1ng of ad· ditional fuel required to opera~ ll. AccesaiblUty modification la a one·Ume e~ which would obvloualy lnereue revenue of OCTD -hardly a total tou. S1mpaU\y i1 not needed or welcome. Rather, lmplemea1a. Uon and enforcemeat or caneet law 11 expected I Now i1 the tilM became the law IQI so. YVONNE BAGSTAD, Pretideat oc ~ . caur. A.Moc. of the Phy ... ly Handlt'apped • ~ """',...... -.. ~. ,,. """ .. ~ ....... .....,, .. •11 ... ., .. ~ ..... 1 • ~ wt-.n"•--w .._ .... " tiff!! ., ... ~ •• All l•tt•n-.t •1-. ..................... _!Mf .. ....... ......... __ ._~ .... ....... ...... -........ 1•1• ............. t • !\ t ; • ' 1 ii Laguna/South Coast Your Hometow• Dally. ~ewspaper 1 VOL. 72, NO. 81 , 3 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COU NTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MARCH 22, 1979 TEN CENTS Den~ity Del.ays • so Viejo Pla:q OeMente SpHts Hamm Elected After Tussle ELECTED MAYOR Roy Hamm Pair Kill British Anibassador THE HAGUE. Netherlands 1 AP > Two m ysterious gunmen shot the British am- bassador to the Netherlands and bis valet today outside the en· voy's home and then escaped in morning rush-hour traffic. The two died a short time later at a hospitaJ Authorities could not im· mediately explain the motive for the assassination of Sir Richard Sykes. 58, a security expert for the ·British diplomatic corps. Police said Sykes and the 20- year-old Dutch valet, Karel Struub, were shot at about 9 a .m outside the amba,sador's residence as the envoy was about to enter bis Rolls-Royce for lbe 10-minute drive lo lhf' British Embassy It was reported as many as six shots were. fired . The am bauador was hit at least once. and one bullet struck lhe valet, who wu holding the car door, police sa.id. · Eyewitnesses said the gunmen fied through a nearby alley and disappeared into traffic, police reported. The killers were l)etween 35 and 40 years old and were dressed in dark suita, the witnesses said. Sykes' chauffeur, unbanned ln the au.ck, drove him to the bospital wblle an ambulance picked up the youth. The ambassador's residence, 1 historic mansk>D. is in an aJ. nuent residential area of the Dutch capital. . Coa8t By STEVE MITCHELL Ol t• Dally ~, ... ii.If Roy Hamm was e lect e d mayor of San Clemente Wednes· day night following a rash of ac- cusations, a round of bickering. and the now-traditional 3·2 split vote that once again -found the council m a jority lined up against the council mavericks. The normally routine chang- ing or the gavel ceremonies were complicated in San Clemente. where three of the five council me mbers wiU be leaving office next month. Forme r Mayor William Walker and council members Donna Wilkinson and Howard Mushett, were recalled from of fice in January. Thtee new coun- cil members will be elected ,, A Cuddle for Kfrl...• Apr il 24. "':I But the second council meet- ing in March has traditionally been the time to elect a mayor, and City Clerk Max Berg-wbo has the chore or chairing the ac· tivities -did not appear to be looking forward to the task Wed- nesday everung. Sitting in the mayor 's chair. Berg asked for nominations from the council. Howard Mushett nominated Myrtis Wagner. Donna Wilkinson nominated Roy Hamm. Berg nodded, then passed out scrap paper to the five council members. He displayed a little green box, turning it upside down to show it was empty, then asked the council members to writ.e the laat name of the can· dldate of their choice. The paper scraps were placed in the green box, handed to Berg's secretary, and read out loud. Hamm, Wagner, Hamm, Wagner, Hamm. Hamm took the mayor's seat · and it appeared e verything was running smoothly. Even the city clerk looked relieved. <See MAYOR, Page AZ> Blind J .R .. 14. couldn't see Kirby the lion c ub when he a nd other memhers of the De Bolt family toured Lion Country Safari W e dnesda y, but attendant Linda Broc khoeft made s ure the cr1 ppled youngster got the_ c hance to fondle the ar f ectionate c ub. (Related story a nd pic- tures on Page A3 . > UCI Can't Pay Enough? <hancellor Blames Wages for Open Posts BJ PIDUP ROSMAJUN °' tt1e oau, Pliet Staff In the past 18 months. UC Irvine has failed to attract pro· fessors to fill 30 open faculty positions because of low pay and the high cost of local housing, Its chancellor said today. Chancellor Daniel Aldrich Jr. said professors listed those rea· sons for deeiding to teach at alternate institutions rather than al UCI. Aldrich said competing un- iversities. such as use. have grabbed up prospective UC1 pro- fessors because they offer salaries 15 percent to 50 percent higher than the best UCI bid. In many of the cases. he said. professor s chose to teach in othe r parts or the country because they couldn 'l afford to buy house s in Southern California. "They found it too expensive to Jive here." Aldric h said. "They simply said. 'No thank you."' Aldrich said that in the same 18-monl.b period, UCI has been able to fill only half a dozen faculty vacancies on more than a temporary basis. "The cost of living here. and al UCLA, is higher than any other of the campuses of the un- iversily." Aldrich said. In one case of attempting to fill a vacancy. the chancellor reported, the university was un· able to persuade not only its flrst choice. to lake the job. but its fifth. "nother factor in the decision of some professors to turn down appointments at UCI. Aldrich said, is that other universities can guacantee that new ftrb· fessors wi\1 get summer appoint· ments as well. which can add 20 percent to 30 percent to their salllries. Because or budget constraints. Aldrich said. UCI cannot (i-bne Rate lnereasing Development Of Forster RanchOK'd Laguna Eyes More Cops By WILLIAM RODGE Of._ Dall,~ ... Staff Citing increasing crime prob- blems and police calls in Laguna Beach, acting Police Chief Neil Purcell said Wednesday bis de· partment will seek five new of- ficers in next year's budget. "We need that many to put an extra officer on the street seven days a week, 24 hours a day,'' Purcell said. The captain rt0led that calls officers must respond to had in· creased proportionally with population growth in areas sur- rounding the Art Colony. And, be said, Laguna crime bas continued to increase despite a smaller increase in local population. Puieell areuect that the addi· tlonal otftcen were necessary to auure police vlslbillty in the community. "In 1970, 31.5 percent of our of- ficers' Ume was spent patroUnc, where they're blghly visible and acted as 1 crime· deterrent," Purcell said. "8.2 percent of tbelr time ls spent patroling now.'' He said the price tac f« the additional personnel would be $97 ,300. That breaks down to $71,280 for salaries and the rest for fringe benefits such as re· tirement and medical plans and overtime costs. There may be some support for the additional manpower. Following a presentation Tues· day by Chief Joo Sparks, on crlme in the Art Colony al least two councilmen indicated a de· sire lo do what was necessary to reduce the problem. "We're going to have to answer our problems with law enforcement here. not by 1ranta," Mayor Jack McDowell said, notlnl that a grant ~hich provides addlllonal personnel expires Sept. 30. "We should give paramount importance to funds for the police department," Councilman Wayne Baglin agreed. More Coverage Additional south Orange Coun· ty coverage appears today on Pa1e A9. But Laguna slacks up well when compared with othe r Orange Coast communities on a police manpower basis. San Clemente. for example. has only 1.42 sworn officers per 1,000 residents while the Art Colony carries 2.4 sworn officers per 1,000 residents. Police officials, however . point to an increasing popuJalion on warm weekends and during summer months that lowers the officer per resident ratio. And they argue lbal Laguna's actual population is somewhere near 28,000 based on calculations done by measuring sewage. Purcell said bis department also will press for city takeover of a grant program that runs out in September. That program formed a tralfic safely section in the department that be said bas signllicanUy reduced tramc col· lisions in several city areas, most notably Laguna Canyon Road. • 'ln 1978, uuury accldenta on the canyon road were reduced 42.8 percent," Purcell asserted. San Clemente council mem· bers approved the development of more than 700 units in the rolling hills of Forster Ranch Wednes· day night after hearing support for the massive project by mem- bers of the L;i Christianita Pageant Association. The 445 acre tract , the last of four ranch areas to receive council approval, will see the de· velopmenl of 440 single family homes. 21 country estates, 158 townhouses and possibly 120 moderate-cost townhouses. Approval Wednesday night completes development plans for the entire 1,770 acre Forster Ranch by Estrella Properties, Inc. But approval of a use permit. and approval of a variance to ai· low development on portions of tbe property with more than a 30 percent grade, did oot come easily. Objections to the final project came from council members Myrtis Wagner and Howard Mushett. who opposed grading of steep slopes on the land for (See llANCll, P11e AZ) . Cutback Proposed By Riley By GARV GRANVILLE OI IM Dally Pl ... Staff Orange County s~pervisors stopped just short of endorsing development of a 20,000-home com muruty in the coastal hills east of Laguna Beach Wednes- day. But by the time an animated six-hour public hearing in Santa Ana ended. there appeared to be only one obstacle standing in the way of Board or Supervisors a~ proval of the '6,623-acre Aliso VteJo project That one obstacle was density. Aliso Viejo Company wants to build 20,000 residences that will house roughly 53,000 people on the spread that was once known as the Moult.on Ranch. However. Supervisor Thomas Riley wants the project whittled down to 16.000 housing units. After the public hearing closed at 4 : 15 p.m . though, Riley's fe llow s uper visors indicated they might be as sympatheU. toward the company's plan as to Riley's scaled down version. Therefore. it is conceivable the company next week will win the general plan changes it wants wtthout Riley's vote. As far as the audience who participated 10 Wednesday's public hearing is concerned. at best they want land use oo the ranch held at the status quo. In this case status quo is a limit or roughly 10.000 homes on the s lopes s urrounded by Laguna Beach. South Laguna. Laguna Hills and La~una Niguel. Among those opposing board approval for the project was ~aguna Greenbelt President Tom Alexander. R e ferring to Aliso Viejo parent company Phillip Morris Alexander charged the company with being "an out of state billionaire cigarette ma nufac- turer who has come to Califon\ia to try to c ram 20,000 more houses and 60,000 more people mto this part of the county ... Riley was more conciliatory, however He came to the meet- ing carrying a list of 12 condi· lions he wanted attached to ap- proval of the huge project. Foremost among those condi· lions was limiting the number or hous ing units allowed on the former ranch site to 16.000. Other conditions Riley sought included: -The company's agreement to a bide by the boa rd or supervisors policy on the build- ing of affordable housing. Subjecting what is ex~led to be the 20-year development of the projec t to the county's growth development monitoring review. -Planning for the diversion of "urban runoff water" to areas other than those deemed to be environmentally sensitive. -Irrevocably dedicating all open space lands in the project's greenbelt area to a public agen· cy and agreeing to maintain the greenbelt lands for al least 15 years. -Holding off of any plans to drain water into the Laguna Can· yon watershed area "unW the Laguna Canyon flooding prob- lem is resolved." Aliso Viejo President Van Stevens quickly agreed in spirit al least to all RUey proposaJs ex- cept the reduction from 20,000 to 16,000 housing units. Stevens told supervisors the company could meet lts alforda· ble housing commitment as well as the development of the sup- (See VIEJO. P1•e AZ> Sa~ CleineDte's Growth Sparks Debate lb• Wednelda1 forum before about 1• ..mor cltileDI. Twelve ol tbe ao candidae. repreMDted WedDHdly Hid aaotber bJ a.ue ID the dty II tbe ~ of wbetber to proy6cle .... aftontable haul- ... for cwaeut and future •-defttl. 1101& caadldat,1 tald tlley fHond "caatrolled" 1rowtb in tlM fttr but opakJM Ylried M lo wbat daat pbr ... meant. ........... ~ ... ............. •1 nei1hbor's yard to Pl"'OI""' into my yard," said P1tricla Com1toek, U, a homemaker wbo said abe w11 concerned about tbe cl&J'• bll1aide fall ....... ReUnd rl&J plaanlnl cllreetor Richard AN•ID, 51, laid· M op- POfed "a...ave bUllide srecl· Ina" m faYONCI "low-demity" denla~IDllll of Su Clemen&e's rancla mdl. ReUNd lMuruee exftutlve Edward la•MW. •. said the couaeU 111toulcl ·•reduce the blunt ..,.....1 of develop. "ment in tbe back bills" area of lbe cltv and "prevent HeelMI in blllakle sradinl-· • ll ltcbell H1dd1d, zt, an Oranp County deputy district attoraeJ, aa.ld city officials blve "~llowed emoUon rather than law'' &o IOY•rn tbelr actlone ID re11rd to plaaninc ln the eom· muai&J. A Hnn-1ear city resident who lau band.Jed rea~ est1te fraud llld IMd ute caaea for t.be Olltrtet Attomey'a Offiee. Had· dad l8kl he f 1¥0red • ttroftl, controlled 1rowtb plan .. like San Jua.n Capistrano's" with the council "acting as a watchclol" CJG It. karollne Koeeter, 52, a aell- proelaimecl "C!OUDcll wateber. Hid, "Tbe preaent city tax· payer• aubtldlae the future 1rowth •.• tbll lbould not be al· IOwecl." Ronmoor Corp. vice pntl· dent Robert Llmber1. 5T, as· tertecl •• .,,.. ........ of the el· ht1n1 ·ruldenh (ln Sa• (SM a.&mSNTS. .... Al) .. t I March 22, 11179 Pa111, f Ullfta r Lagunan Raps · Monster B11nt DtXphbu Trained lo Search Slwoting Defeme Offered UNOER ARE Myrtia Wagner I MAYOR •.• Tht•n c anw non1111.1\1u~ ror t11Jyor pro t ... m .• 11111 l ht• h 1 t•wurk• t>t-1un Howard Mul'lh-=tt nominulcd Myrt11; Wagn1•r Oonnu W1lk1n~on lou11cht-d 1n to 1trl atluc·k on Mrs W ljl(n~r, sny111g th .. <'11un(•1lwuman "d<>N• not work Wf•ll with staff · · Sht• ulhtl "oad Mt!. Wa>l1Wr "1~ ro<Je to persons (·om ing hcfc>ri· lh(' rounc1I with whom she db agret>s." and docs not have a grusp of thl' opt•rntion or city hUSlnl'l'lh .. Noor of these trait~ bt.'hoove a mayor pro tc•m ." s he 11ald, "so r move we don't elect a mayor pro-tern " Her remarks irked Wagner al ly Mushett. who termed her comments "out of order " ··1 trunk Mrs. Wagner has ded· 1cated h.-rs elf more than anybody on this council ··Mrs Wilkinson's commenu were certainly out of order and that 0!'! one of the reasons she'i. bt>en rC<'alled " Tha t r<'mark drew applause from the packed council cham- ·bNl'I M r!'I Wa.l'nt'r mlcr1ect(•d, say 1nJ? 11he wantt•d to withdraw her 'Kl'l'.ond to the nomination. "I'd like to wait until after the •n.,w council 111 seated and ch.-ct :1 nf'w muyor a nd mayor pro •tt•m ." she sotd The rufflf'c1 c•ount'1l let tht' mattc•r 11tanc1 . and e lected no mayor 1>ro·k m County Doctor By .. $a t: A IU!UI OI .. 0.11• f't ... "-" A '•Hl11'hll'\ -.ho ulll'KC• 11hl' t Uf lt>rt'd M"rlOU'> 1nfrr uon 111\d f.ll lt'IHll\ 1· 'IC'arnng followln11 thlah hft ~urjcry by Santu Ami pliu1tk s u reenn Ur 'R1dvh S mu ll teat Hwd 11 t u '" •• h' nwctfr jil ho1Jrd heanng W1•drw .. duv M urr1.i Wel'd 41 nl l.aiiunu Ht•.ic·h ,,,.d 'he· '>Ufft-rt•d 1lhw•,, und 1>a1n (m '\t'\l'I .d 11111nth' follo~IOll lh1• .Ju1H :!9 19711 nJ)t•r"llon Sh wH bt"f'.fridl'kn <1t ·horn• ~Ith .i lugh ft·Hr for 11cH•rul day .• ~u1d Mn Wt'i"d ~ It• llmcmy utml' during a St.Ilk Boud of hh'dlt'ul Quality A1u1ura.nt't' llccn~t' rt- vocauoo hcanng which 111 now undt>rway In Sunt.A Arua The 29 yt-ar old ¢\Y'ICHW face:. allegat1on11 or "groi.t> negllgen~ and lfl <.'Ompctc nc;:" 10 COMeetlon ""1th lhc Nov 27, 1978. death of Kim PIO<'k 33 of Santa Ana. and tn the t::.:.t.' (1( Mr1 Weed Mrs Plock. a motht•r of lhrt!('. died rive duys lifter she wcnl 1n to cardiac arreAt while undcr~v Ing breast implunt s urgery &t Small '~ Santa Ana vHicc. uc cording to the allegations An Orange County Superior Court temporarily barred Small from practicing m edicine until the medical board reachei> its decision. Wednesday. State Deputy Al torney Gene ra l David Chandler. representing the m edical board. asked Mrs. Weed why despite her ordeal. -she continued treat· ment with Dr. Small and refused to consult another doctor until October "I didn't coni.ult with anyone t•he because I tru:.tcd him." Mrs Weed replied · 'l had to trui.t hJm I would havl' lost 1t1 y reason if 1 hudn 't .. C<i lled to offer s upporting tesJ.llnony for M rl'I Weed Wed· nes.dity was Jant: /\. Sll'Vl'nl>. Mrs. Stevens said l'he 1:, a <'lose fn end and stayt.'d in Mrs Weed's Lag una RN1rh home to rare for hl·r following the June surgery C>urtng th · f1v~ d111ys ahu 11 ldYl'~I "Ith Smu ll '~ path.•nt, Mr• st1•vt•11:, i.u1d er friend r!tn u f1•vN up tu 11>1 at times and fhl11twd Hkln Cl!~au • Into a ~t>•n. M rtt st{•vt>llti uhm claimed 11h1· r •'Jl\'lilkdly culle'I Smull'11 ofll«'t' 'l'h1· t1odor did not c·ome to Mrs Wl'l'd " u1d unlll July 5, ho w1· "er . 'lht• •1111d, when hf' 1wnt ..i llll't.IJ1..·al h!chn1riun to hh; pit lit•11l :.. lwu·H· to brrn~ hn back lo h111 Sanl.1 /\Jiu offlct> Jn <'t'Od11 t•X»mmution, Small's dd~n•~ atto rn-:y Terry C1 lc1> <1unt1~-d the recall of cvenll'I by tx>th women lie chUmcd h11> l'h ent did try to rt!tun1 Mrt1 Stcvcn1> · and Mrs Wcod '1> rails on M!vcral oc- cia111oru M-issions' Hi.story Acquired Something more than t he famous 1>wallows returned to Capis trano today as Orange Co unty Bishop William R . Johnson announ ced the acquisi- tion of 66 documents detailing the histories of each California mission. The formal announcem ent or the acquis1t1on was m ade this m o r n I n g a t a Sa n J u.a n Capistrano press confe rence where the documents will be 1>lor!'d at the mi1>s1on 's archives. Thoma !> Fu e nte s. a s pokes m an for I hl' Orang<.· Diocese , i>iud the documcnt.s cover e ach mission for the ~rlod or 1779 to t827 They were obtained Wedncs· day for $19.000 at a Sa n f''tan cisl'o sale for the estate of Jen· nie Crocker Henderson. grand daughter or California pioneer Charles Crocker. "The eleme nt of ti me at the missions had a void 1n 1l " ~'uentes said "This arq uisita~n provides a greut record for what wa s mi ssi n g f r o m the archives." ,.,.._,.~ AJ lie srud many of the records are reports detailing censuses of Indians. inventorres of livestock a nd h arvested produce and con· trtbuUons from pious funds at the vanous <.:ahforn1a missions. )lANCH PROJECT. • • .construction of homes ~ Hut supPort for t he project J'Jm t• from m•a rly a dozen La ~rlsllamt(J Pul(e1mt AssoclatJon .m embers. who have received :promlsei. from lhe de veloper (hat UJ> to 60 ocrcs of canyon 1and wtll be set asid<' for use by t he pageant for its annual sum· 'Mer production T he develo~r has set aside an .;.rc•a currently used · by the pageunt group in the north end of th(· property where the can: JOn walls p rov 1de na t ura l .. cousllcs for the outdoor play. ' F:i.trella s pokc·sman Leo Ji'ltuimon Raid his firm will df' ·d. or lease the land lo the pogeant assoclat1on but would Jiot <'ommlt lhc farm to either a deed or leaBc agreement Wed twsdoy rught. saying compa ny attorneys a rt' looking into the bl'St method of turning bwnerstup over w the assoda· t1on But San <.:lcm entean Dan Oubel 11a1d that whale lbc com· p~ny offer to the pageant 1.1 com mendable. he had concerns over a proposed variance that would a llow d e v.-lopmc ni o n steep ti lopes "T he city code says t hat l1od js to rem au n ope n and un· SSevcloped," ~ eaid, su11esting that the council 10 ahe•d and approve the use permit, bul hold up on the vari1nce request unUI the city retalrw • 1eoloci11t "to nrnke sure 10 years down tM llnc we don't h ave 11Upp1gc problems." Another spoakcr , G.P. Wllaon, DAILY PILOT riw0r-c-10.11r1>1jfl .............. <..,. ... ...,. ............... " ... ,,.,...._., ... °'_ ,...,,, ....... _ .. (_ ~ ...... , __ , ••bl"'"'' -........... , ,.,., ... , .... -.. ~-· -........ -.. ,_ ,_,, .... , IMN ~9Hlll•-C*!'I A ,,_,...._ ... ,..,.,,....,,.,...W_n_ .......... ""~----l-.. .......... ,,. ........ ,"_ , ......... ~ ........... .,. .. _, .. , _ __ ,_,.,._..,., JH• II CMtt0T VtC• ,._.,._.ftt aNl°"""1fttlAM~" ,_ ...... .. f"clll .. '=:...--::-........ ~ "-·-.......... -.......... L.NVll•hHftOMce n .. c; ....... ,,",..., said the city should add a cond.I· tlon to the variance that would require the developer to provide a 20· year performance bond on properties developed on i.t(..-.:p s lopes. But dly officials said the city wou ld h ave trouble finding takers for such a bond. Estre lla ::.pokes m an Fili: 111mon said tht:! constraint of I.he land r reatc a hurdsh lp for the company, adding much of the l:ind wa11 formerly mined by Cn•sllit Company for aggregate, <1nd is heavily graded in parts. He said allowing fewer units on t he steep h.lllside property "would mean we could not ar. ford lo donate the 60 acre parcel to the pageant association " The council ma1o rity while sym pathetic to the developers' picas, reminded t he council au dience that the firm has txcoen before variou.s city panels 11mcc 1973 on the massive pro1ect. Some records list t he dis· lances between missions and note m1ss1onaries by age. name and years of i>c rvi ce in California. The docume nts. detailing the s pir itual and material growth of the m issions. wlll be stored in the arch1ves of the Mission San Jua n Capistrano. where Father Junipcro S<.-rra began his wor k 200 years ugo The rccordli were purchased by Father William Krekclberg, a r c h ivist for the C «tl ho l ic Diocese in Or ange. The $19,000 was made available through a g rant from J . Robert F luor l'hairman and chief executive of fice r of the Irvine-bused Fluor Corporation. F,.._PapAI Councilman William Walker said the city approved ai plan for » Portion of the land batck in 197•. "and •t was ri ve yeari. VIEJO before the first st.ck of wood • • • went up on the CDaon> project," he said. But Councilwoman Wagne r was d.iacouraged with the final approval of the project a nd the variance. following a three-hour hearinc on the development. port sy11tems needed in the com munity only through M ing al· lowed to build 20.000 units. Amona Ul0$e who spoke at the pubUc beartne In opposition to ap· proval o f th e pl a n were Laguna Beach C ity Coun· cilwo m a n Sal ly Be lle rue . Lea,ue ol Women Voter s itludy chairman Ruth Sadl and veteran ··v ou can tell the City Council candidat.as to save their breuth tr they're runninc on a plalform of controlled growth In thi• town," she s aid durlna 8 break. La1una . G reenb.:lt champion "They can chanee their tune. J a mee Dilley. Ther e's not goina to be •n)1.1Ung AJao opposin1 the AJ1ao Viejo left to develop the way thtnas -plan waa a committee o( live are eolnc " ahe said. former Lacu.n• Beach muyors ' tt.aded by Jon Brand. 'Man Suffers Ann Cuts Fleeing Fire A San Cleme nte man s uffered cut.i on b11 arm while esceplng throueh 1 broke n window from a fl,.. tW bn>ke out in bia bom~ earl1 Loday aod caUHd 12,IOO ln damaae. JamH P atrick l,eoQard, 28, IH WH t E acalo n u. wu aw19'.-aed 8l3:90 a .m. by •mMe from tbe blue UaaL waa toucbed Off b1 • •moldertnt ct11nue tn a a&utted ~balr In llt1 Uvtn• room,n.....1Ud. ~-::' man'a onl7 -.ea,. •• &Ill • Ndno• wtJldDw 11••• "' ltvtar room w11 .............................. arrived after U. b:ue ••wt. . ., ..... ~ ~ attM-fwMl ......... 111 wuW.\NMedWre..._. ,... .. ._a • ..-. o ....... Ill ;1'1'. . , Brand 11ld the 20,000-unlt cornmuni&y 11 "too much" and cb1lleftled 11upen1eora tu fulfill lbeir "reaponaibiU1.y to keep this area a nice a rea." Major objections raised by tbe lon1 lllrl"I of ape.ken aupport. ln1 t.be Laguna Beach pcM1iUon were the project's potential im· pacu on the now or tratrlt In the a rea u well as lta potential ton· trlbutlon to nood conditions In U..ar•. Alao cited as rea.ont for ob· Jee&tn1 to the pn>Ject w.re the call for added pubflc se rvices H well u what were termed "un. avoldab141 lmpecrta" ol water and air quality In the a rea. TliloM wttb envtronllMftt.a.I con· ceru ~plained th•t Ute pro- toeed projett would cut off o lttlnl wtlcf Uf9 from tta IOUl"ee ol ........ well .. tDtnllkle into aNU fll--11 ~Uon . .,. ........ d .... , wU1 Mt NOPlll u. ~ ....,.., nm ... k --u.. • .,,,,.. •• vae. la n...-.. n., ~ .. , reef. "Hilu wbo m11M want to bl .... ,. .............. .... to~u..trom.. . Nt:W YORK <AP) -Two dolphins are Lein~ trained ln Flondu to aid t!xplortr~ in their search lbls summer ror the: Loch Ness monster in the Scot lish htke Ness. The New York T1mt!s reported today Or. Robt:rt II Hi nes. who has It'd a Loch Ness expedition each summer th.-past decade. saad the uni moJs will carr y cameras and i,trobe lights to s ur vey tht.• d • p wutcrs . according to the ne ws paper Thi' equipment will be attuched to harnesses or vests. Hines said. In training sessions the dolphins h<Avc found. lr:.1cked . and photogruphc.-d underwater creatures su<·h U!> sett turtles. the Time~ quoted kine::. as bay 111g This summt>r's t cum will be sponsored by the Academy of Applied Science of Boston Experti, from the US Navy 's San Diego Research Cf'nler have bt.'en consulted on the care and training of the dolphins. Accordjng to legtmd, the Loch Ne1:>!> mon~t~r tn· habit.s a lake in Scotland Scientists have unsuc·· c~ssfully t ried to locale the monster although v11lagers have re ported occal)iona l sightings \. r ..... rageAl OEMENTE GROWTH. • • Clemente I are not being con· sider ed adequately The current co u nci l 1s s pecial interest oriented ... L i mber g said "a ffordable housinrC should bt: included In the l'ity's master plan San Cle mente 1•1ann1ng Com missioner Carol Carlson. 39, also a candidutc noted that the city is now involved with u lawsuit aimed at the mclus ion of more a/fordable hou:.ing an the c ity's master plan. "We will lose local control 1r the city loses that lawsuit." M rs . Car lson as1>erted. The Orange County Legal Aid Socie- ty filed the s u it lai.t year challenging the "adequ11cy" of the city's intent to include uf fordable housing 1n its general plan School tea c her Wdl1 Jm Mecham. n . :.n1 d the city should address the uffordubh: hous ing isl.Uc "1mmcdwtcly " H e su1d lht· <'tly 's ovnall growth s hould not '"outslnp services .. Candidate Wll m t·r Wood, 64, 11 retired busrnt>ssman, said gov crnment ht-Ip 1s th<' "only way to provide low -co:,l hous1 nit rn San Clemente due Lo the rost of lots where s uch s lrurlun·s might be built Hopeful Wilma Bloom . 5Jn who te rmed herself a citizen voluntt.-er. s<Jid she has tx•cn an advocate for a ffordable housing Cor retired senior c1t1zens and young families in t h ' city "We don't want un clitcst ghetto in the city ... s he said Mecharucul cnginc.-er Charle~ Brent. 61. 1>a11J he c·xpected more growth in the city but said .. it m ust be controlled" hy adherence lo zoning and build IO~ codes. Br ent also said he favored construction or .. ut least ont.' mon· golf course" in the r1ty and another "cxct'ut1 vc Kolf course .. Jack Brown. 67. who ran an unsuccessful c:ounr1l cumpa1gn last year . said the city 1s "w<is t mg time hy considcrin~ putt1n~ an industrial 'park" in the un. ctc•veloped hJll area "It wouJd be helter 1Hhcy con s1de red a senfor citizen housing development there .·· Drown said Retired sch ool t e acher D o r ot h y H e nr i ck s. 70 , believes city residents are con cerned that the council ha!. ta ken no action on the housmK issue. Christopher flovt. 31. a rea l estate agent. said he agreed I "Hol}Sing 1s thr num~r on•· 1ssut· The city bas not met th<• de mand An aru-.wcr 1:. needed today." Hoyt said 111• !.uggclttl'd 11 voluntury n·c onc tlrntion board bt· formt•c1 that would "fa irly C1rb1tr11tl· n:nt ct1sputt>s" without 1m1>0s1n~ nml rontrols Other rssucs r arscd by can d1dates We dnesday in<'ludNi mending political wounds in th~· city , refurbishing the mun1e1pal pier and surroundin~ a rea and the downtown parking problem Retired broadca:.ting engineer Edgar D1eden. 57. said. "Lct'i. get rid or useless Cit)' politics" and deal with issues like clean· mg streets and alleys. 1mprov ing paramedic service. 1mprov 1ng roadways. "We should bring good gov e rnmcnt bark to San Clemeok and not be here to c rit1c1ze, uc ruse and disrupt," saic1 food tn· dustry execut1v_, Roy llurlbul. M . Orange County Deputy Dis · trlct Attom f!y Mel Jnk1n1 Ulid today a San Clemente s~ teacher acted In iitlf defense by shooting a burglar in llt& home during a March 12 bre a-·ln. San Clemente police Lt. 0-ai8 Steckler 11ald Dana Hiiis ffiah Sch ool teac h e r A rtttur T . Jenkins fainted niter he fired two roU11di. from a .38 caliber handgun at a mun who had broken into his hom e. J enkins told pollct:> he was awakened al about l0.30 p.m when he heurd someone rorcing o pe n his rront door Jenkins picked up a gun be kept ln hts bedroom and wwked down the ball. J enk:in11 entered a room . police ~aid. where he heard somoone going through has desk. When Jenkins turned on the light. tht: bur glar was startled a nd ran toward JenJnns. police said . Jcnluns a11ked the man ... Who a rt> you'•" and fired. hitting the burgla r once an the arm with a second gunshot s triking the noor P oli<'c s aid Jenkins. home alone ut the time, hyperventJlat· 1.:d tH)d passed out . Th(• burglar wa1> wounded twice when the bullet that struck has left urm fragme nted and e n- te red his side. lie ncd on root. Pol ice ar r ested Dona ld Roheru. 29. or Ohio. who en- tered a liquor s tore with wounds s hortly after the burglary at- tempt was reported at Jenkins' home. Roberts told police be was shot by a pa~mg motorist whUe h1tchh1klng ne ar the San Diego Freeway Roberts was released from UC I rvine Medical Center a nd booked mto Orange County J ail on burglary c harges where he remained today pending his ar· ra1g nment this week. J t•nktnl'I, who res igned a ., Dana ll1 lb ll1 gh School head bas kl·lhall roach the week bdon• the shooting, told police l ht• burs.tlar ht· 1·onfronted in h1l'I hom t• matched Hobc·rt!)' de~cra o t1011 JwyPonders Seaman's Fate SAN DEJGO IAP1 /\ San Diego County jury entered ill> :.ccond day of dcltber al1ons to duy in a trial of a merchant '.'>t>uman charged with the rape mutilation of a 15 year ·old girl whose arms were chopped off with an ax The nine-man. thrce·woman Jury spe nt more than three hours Wcdn<.'Sday studying the tes timo ny against Lawre nce S 1n~l eton before be ing sent home. SENIOR GTIZEll SALE I 0011 to choose from! PllCD FIOM ·s1 COSTA MllA Mt I . 11th IT. (~~lalph;, Milt to Marte OCllel IOOI\) M2·0617 Man. • flrt. 1CM sat. 1()..6 (bed lanlov MClftY fabrics, Many styles OVER 100 Recliner Rockers and Wall Recliners IN STOCK Immediate FREE DELIVERY SALE ENOS MARCH 31 Showcase • MllllON YllJO . 21892 MClfgUOt'tt9 Pkwy • <Comer of Mwvuerite and "'° iloalar) 4ff.l902 Moft..Jft. 104 lot.'°" oa.ct~ LINING UP AT LION COUNTRY -Dorothy De Bolt hugs Twe, 17, while she assembles some or the 22 members of her family. From left , Karen , 12, J .R., 14. Doni. 18, Reynaldo. 13, and Ly , 18. De Bolts Live It Up Family of 22 Visits Lion Cormtry Safari By TOM BARLEY Ol ltle O.•IV "llel Si.ti Bob De Bolt recalled with a g rin Wednesday that when he and Dorothy marned nine years ago he was wamed that be was lak· ing on quite an undertaking. His widowed bride brought seven children to the marriage. Bob bad a daughter by a pre· vious marriage a nd so there were 10 De Bolts at the wedding. "Guess I just wasn't listen- ing," be laughed as the De Bolts led a family parade through the gates of Lion Country Safari in Laguna Hills. "Today there are 22 of us and J 've a feel.ing that we aren't through yet." Nine of those children are han· dicapped youngsters, several or whom come from South Viet-nam. But, physically ailing or physically able, the De Bolt children comprise a unique team who rigidly adhe re to the family watchword -''don't help yourself until you've helped somebody else." "It's the only possible way we can operate and maintain our lifestyle," Dorothy said. "Bob' and I are often away on public speaking engagements and so the older kids pitch in and do our family thing while we're away." The De Bolt children range in age from Mike, 31, to Wendy, 10. And most of them were with their p~rents Wednesday when Lion Country attendants in- troduced the De Bolt clan to the Irvine animal park. • 'lt would be easy to especially cater to the most severely han- dicapped members of our fa mi- ly." De Bolt said. "But we don't do that; pity is simply a four- letter word and it has no place in the 0e Bolt S<'heme Of things. "We don't want any thanks from the kids or any sense or m a rtyrdom when they make their own way in the world," be explained. "Our joy comes from the fact that they made it with our help and beca me happy, r esponsible members of our society." He pointed out Ka ren, 12, an American orphan who was born without arms and legs. Karen, sporting a yellow T- shirt with the legend "I 'm A De Bolt," used her artificial limbs skillfully as she reached down to pet a curious raccoon. Then she flashed her father a big grin. "Hey, he's neat." she laughed while the r accoon romped around her. Close by was "J .R.,'1 14, who was blind and paralyzed when be came to the De Bolt home. But he kept up a constant chat- ter from his wheelchair while members of the family took turns in propelling him around Lion Country . .. Handicapped or not, these kids work their way through col- lege and into the mainstream of American life,'' De Bolt said. "CertainJy, we help, just u all parents help their children. But the emphasis in our home at Piedmont, Calllomi~ ls on self help, and these kids, whatever their problems, eooa forset tbeir troubles and pitch in like the rest ol the clan." The revenue needed to support thole ol the Z2 De Bolla wbo a.re sWI at home comes from the many public speaJdnc eagqe- mentl botb pareata undertake tbroubout the United States. A.ad bDtb .... "'8&efW far tbe many llftl that eome their way after Midi appearaneee. Tbey are SJ• beUm' olf toda.1 u a reault ol doaaUom from <>ranee CoaDlJ nsldenta who wuted to ddp mtodle De Bolt bucket. De Bolt wu uted what bla -~ would be for aarcme wbo ......... ~·--ddldar . wwer WU ftrm aad Im· • ••4 It •••• from _.._. "DD It,•• lbe aaid ....... lllr .._ ... ..,, re1e1Md for lier ...... ............ , .. r1111.1 ...... ~ .... • _. 111X• ••DI .. ,_.Did ''D Mii Y-, " . . . o.lty Pl ... Pll9tM lty 111c11an1 !(Miii« RASCAL THE RACCOON MAKES A BLIND CHtLD'S DAY Dorothy De Bott And Twe, 17, Fondle Pet "We had eight reasons ror thanking God on that ha ppy day,•· he said. "Now there are 20 reasons wby we thank him for these many blessings and the privilege of giVing all these beautiful De Bolts a happy and productive lile. "We come from all kinds of backgrounds, Hindu, Buddhist, Catholic, Protestant, you name it," De Boll said. "But we know where our strength comes from a nd you can put what name you like to it -God, a supre me be- ing, a higher power, or whatever you will. Bob De Bolt put a hand on the shoulder of a reporter who had leaned over to kiss the smiling Karen. "Yes, tell her you love her •· he said. "And tell her how gl~d you a re that she made it here to· d ay. "But don't ever tell her or any other De Bolt that you're sorry for them," he said. "We don't-al· low that. We're never sorry for ourselves and that's one reason why we've been a ble lo do what we do." A blind and .. paralyzed De Bolt went by ln bis wheelchair, happily relying on a limping De Bolt to ex- plain the magic of a Lion Country hecouldn'tsee. "He's having a great day," his father said. ''.But then every day Is a great day. You see, he's a De Bolt." County Employment Hit,s Record High Oran1e County's une mploy- ment rate dropped to 4.2 percent In February .. tbe number or emplOJed people reached a rec- ord bilbl!N, '100. Accordla1 to the monthly labor report from tbe State Employment Development Department (EDD>. Febnlary's uaem=:-rate wu oae per-ffllt the same month a yearqo. Aacl • Oraqe County's total employment fipre laclles up toward the one mlllion mark, EDD labor =st Alta Yetter pndicUd a ued •wtac up. ...... ... uudaeturtn1 employment wtD ....aw a ltrOnl boOlt over tJM eoadAI tbree months as new ,, .... Mila ooeratlon• and wonen an reeilled after tem-porarr l1,olf1," llra. Yetter ~ ... , ............ COD• ltrUtUla Wiii apnd •uonally d~ tM MeODd .-rter <ol .............. And to cooclude her optimistic analysis, Mrs. Ye Uer said, "Unemployment <in Orange County> is expected to remain at a low level relative to neighbor- ing countries, the state and the nation." Lut month, seasonal hiring in aenice Industries -especially It amuaement parks and in reere•Uon areas -paced the climb in employment and lbe accompm1)'1na downward move la uneaaplorment. Aceordtq to EDD's report, employment tn tbe conatrucUon industry wu slowed by raiaa during February . But tbere wu a 700-Job a gain in govemtneat employment and a pickup ol 400 Jobs ln manufac. luring. However, it was In non- manufacturtni employment of all kind where the February lllD WU ltroqest, 3,• new Jobs, Including those at tile amuemeQt para •ad recrea-Uaa ....,.. Thur!d!y, March 22, 1979 S DAILY PILOT !\:f Cella Aftermnth . Recovery Sought Of Hospital Funds Owners of a second Orange County 00.pit.a.l once conlrolled by convicted embezzler Dr. Gilmore Ward, lmnber Firm FOW1der, Dies F une r a l se rvices are scheduled Friday in Fullerton for C. Gilmore Wa rd, the co- fouoder and former president or Orange County 's Ward and Har- rington Lumber Co. Mr. Ward died Tuesday in St. Jude Hospital. Fullerton. He was 85. Mr. Ward was president or Ward and Harrington from 1943 until the business was sold in 1973. He was a me mber or the Fullerton Elks Lodge and was active in the alfairs of the Morn- ingside Presbyterian Church in that city. He is survived by his wife. Mildred E. Ward or Fullerton; a daughter. Mildred A. Kiernan of Laguna Beach; three sisters, Violet Case of Laguna Beach. Vera Boutelle of Florida and Meree Sadle r of Spo kane. Wash., and three grandsons and a granddaughter . The services are scheduled for 2 p.m . Friday at McAulay and Wa llace Mortuary, Fullerton. The family has s uggeste d me morial contributions to the charity of the donor's choice. Louis Cella filed suit Wednesday to recover hospital funds al- legedly fwmeled by Cella into political campaigns. Officials of Mlssion Communi- ty Hospital Inc. in Mission Viejo fil e d the Orange County Superior Court suit against 50 unnamed politica l campaign committees and 50 unnamed in- dividuals. A similar suit was filed March 9 by operators of Mercy General Hospital in Santa Ana, which a lso once was controlled by the former political k.ingmaker. Filing the two suits and leav- ing lbe defendants unnamed is at apparent effort to prCS(U'Ve hospital officials' prerogatives to eventually collect some of the money channeled into political campaign coffers by Cella. However, years of investiga- tion and criminal legal proceed- ings that began ln 1975 have failed to indicate that any of the recipients of Cella 's political generosity knew that his dooa- ti on s were. in fact . othe r people's property. Cella, once one or California's top campaign donors is now serving a federal prison term for embezzlement or hospital funds. Tbe Mission hospital suit, like the one filed on behalf of Mercy. a lleges that between 1969 and 1975 Cella turned a l least $150.000 ln hospital funds and as- sets over to the 100 unna med de- fendants. His actions, the suits asserted, made the 100 defendants "in· voluntary trustees" of the botpilal funds. The suit seeks an accounting of tbe funds purportedly COD· verted from the hospital to cam- p a I g n committees and lo- dividuals alon& with recovery of the money. Mercy officials earlier filed suit to collect $50,000 each from two Insurance firms that had bonded one-time Mercy hospital administrator and Cella a lly Stephen R. Evans. . Evans served a federal prison term for his role in the large- scale embeulement. Interstate 5 Improvement FUDds Asked SACRAMENTO <AP > Adriana Giaoturco, the Brown administration's highway chief, will ask the state Transportation Commission to approve $30.9 million for construction work on Interstate 5 in Orange a nd San Diego counties. U the commission approves tbe request at its Friday meet- ing in San Francisco, the project will expand 6.4 miles or the six· lane freeway to eight lanes rrom Sao Mateo Creek to north of Camino Estrella near San Clemente. The project will also involve some other work. including COO· struction or soundwalls and re- tainio~ walls. Save on magnificently carved, richly covered accent chairs • lntroductorv savings for a Hmited time! • Choice of custom designs! ScH! '619. eacll • ..,snotostto s.1•1n_. ........... 11. Tomqrrow·sanuques' Thev may wen be. yet mcsnyor th...w chairs aw ch,, verv nc1A.t?~t in our lit'ntage• acccmr chair collecuon They ''' yours dunng th1., stnctly hm1tcd ('Vent. upholslered In your chotCI! or more rhan 600 H~ntt'lg(! fa9ncc; at one sale pnce1 Ar rlwse e"<traordm.irv ~v1og ... th1~ ht1c; robe the mo'r important chem value l'Ver from famous Ht>ntag<•1 You "ill find ch<Jiro; in rubbed. gl01A~nq fruirwOO<t lm1~h~·~ bid• I.. l • .1tqu._.r ,;ind d.:!]<inl I rl'nch 1vor1,1. both wuh chmotsene Bock rreatmenrs art-beauuful throughout c;ome wuh cl.1ubk• wl!ltl'd tu1loring t'Vcn new cushion-on cu~h1on con!tlruchon. The wood frames arl.' carvt•d .rnd finished w11h unernnq .irMlry -and therv are literally ..cores of lu"<unou!> fabncs ar your cornm<1nd' We lnvrte you ro make your selec;nons th1., week. A H.-n1.1ge chit1r s.1lc or such special narure may not b,· olf\.'r ... d ~non .igoin' S.'459Hdl .... t570te'615 ~·419Hdl -...1111 .. u11 Your F•vonte o.Jgnw WIH ,.. H•PPY To AHllt You. 1211HAllOl11.YO. COST A MUA 64MZ1S ' ' A4 DAii. v PILOT Q ... , •• ~I; Tom~~' Marplal•e Putt ring Alo ng ON 1111; •OAO DEPT. Twtce Ht'h w k , r h lVt' lht• ml•ed n~n•nce ot I 1vin4 m1 b•PPJ omre in the Harbor Aru and i:notortn• up \b 5-n Dl.-10 f'~ay dunna rUAh hour \o \C!ach a nl,ahl <'la • •t the univ ,..1ty ln t.on1 B~ach T•ac-bint It Prttty much okay It 'a lht-motorln1 that <'MD «iet to YOU Tilt' San 01••<> Fr f'w•'J dur1na rus h hour la a d bllltaUnc eitert'l•e Vr-l, ••a twk a w ek ~nly commutt'r, l am a~ by th\l (ar t that Pf'Of)lt from our coa tal re11un uffu Uua a,hauly aaony every day, t•vt d•Y• per wrt'k Tfft:N, ON WEEKEND8, r.omc of Uwm llt't out on th fre~waya j~t for lht' fun of 1t Some llm" bat·k, I uat'd to annd up llarbor Boulf'vard In l'o.ta M~ • In ord<>r to ronncct with Uit San OlctJo f.'reewlly and its .. vtr pr 'bent afternoon traffic s narl My ~. finally c.phunt.-d to me I wa• dolnic 1t tht• dumb way Avoid Harbor Boulevard Go out Nl'wport New·JOllflted Vehlc~ for Slow Rae~• on I~ Soll Diego Freeu>Gfl Boulevard, theo catch that funny Utlle section of freeway that mtercept.s the San Diego roule. JJe was right That odd little stretch ls vlrtuaJly vacant of commuters You roar r ight along. Tlll8 GETS YOU into the San Diego 1-~reeway traffic Jam a whole Jot faster . As far as I can tcU, no highway savant really un- derstands why Interstate 5 clogs to a three·mile ·per·hour grind betw<.-en Harbor Boulevard and 6rookhurst Street up in 1-·ountrun Valley. fJut 1t does. ALMOST ANY UTTLE 1nc1dent can bnng upcousl tram c t.o a complete hall. Yesterday af ternoon. a Jogger clad In brl.ghl yellow panl<> jogged across one freeway overpass t:vcrythsng on the fn>eway stopped., When he vanished, traffic started up again The a mazing purt was that this guy wasn't even a very good Jol(gcr After some months on our freeways, pooping along ul two milcR per hour reading int.er<.>sUng liconsc plutes, you know how we might be able to get some freeway Improve ments In our region. Make CalTruns officia)s drive both ways on J.5 every day at rush hour. That ought t.o do il. AS AN UPCOAST MOTORIST, you might think you've got 1t tough until you lake a Seventh Street offramp over the freeway and aet a look at the hapless southbound crowd. They're Just parked-as far as the eye can see. Back when L was a youngster, we had a game we played on our bicycles. We called it a Slow Race. The ldea was lo b«trely pedal your bike-11nd keep It batlanced without t.ouctdng your feel. La.st bike over the finish line was the winner. YOV GOT SO you could really crawl along, wagl(ling the• front wheel for balance and hardly moving al all. I thought this was enormous fun. Little did I know that I was actually training ror slow races an later years on the San Diego Freeway. Repayment Ordered for Wall Work LOS ANGELES IAI') Tho County official s s uid they ,. U.S. Labor Department ha11 or· believe action to recover about dered Los Angeles Counly t.o re· J>ay all the federal jobs program $70,000 Is the first time u c:ouoty funds spent Lo repair a crumbl· C ETA program has been ing walJ for some of Supervisor torpedoed after the spending OC· Pete Schabarum 'a cons Utuents. curred . Iran Reports Uneasy Truce SANANVAJ, Iran (AP) -An uneasy truce prevailed In S81landaJ today ., 1 clOH a11oclate of AyatoUah RuhoUah Khomeini neaoUat· ed wllh K~rdbh rebel• 1tlll ln control or the capital of the Kurdlatan r.-alon alt.er four days of nahUnte. khomelnl, the ShUte M01lem leader of the lranJan revo~uUon, sent AyaloUah Mahmottd Teleghanl to trr to ch«k tM local uprl1ing about 200 troops alnce Sunday by thtt aut.onomy-aceklng Sunni died down around m idnight Mo1lem Kurd& bcfor" It 11pread Wednesday, and the clty wu to th real of \ht! Lrabe lo west.crn calm today. Iron TELEGHANI, THE Shiite re II& uus ~ader ln Tehran, met with leadln1 Joe.I tribesmen m '"" 1econd s tory cafeteria at Sunandaj Unlvenlly. lie sug· gealed that they isubmil • lisl or their demand!J so he could us· HCliS them · Teleghanl was accompanied by thti interior minister in Prime Mtnlller Mehdi Baiargan's pro- visional government, Seyyed Javadl Heavy firing around the army barra<'k!l. where the Kurds had besh:ged the local gJurlson or Speculation linked to Board Exec T H E GOV£1lNllENT said more than 100 people were kllled, but Independent sources in Sanandaj said at least 200 were dead and there were hun· dreds ol wounded, most of them Kurda. The caauallies Included many women and children cut down by mortar barrage fro m t h e troopa inside the barracks and firing by heJlcopter gunshJps on heavily Populated areas or the town. The Kurdtl were armed with light autom atic weapons a nd rifles. some or World War I vin· tage. Their weap()ns were not powerful enough to penetrate the thick cement wall around the a rmy barracks. wh ich 1s strategically located atop a rase with a 500-yard no man's land around it . The Kurdish outbreak was the most serious threat to Kho- melnl 's revolution since It swept the country five weeks ago. WORLD I NATION ¥mmger T laan S pring Sus.an Randall, IO, 1:&nd her two week-o ld la mb know it's spring. They live on a larrn near Mount Nebo, Pa., and Susan has been bottlt.• recdin~ the lamb since its birth. And no, Sus<tn s;.iy~. •l's not Just puppy love. WAS HIN GTON <A P > FederaJ olficlals have idenU/ied th e vice ch airm a n or the Chicago Board of Tr ade as one o f the professional gr ain speculators involved io an al- leged attempt to corner the wheat market, the Wash.ington Post said today RIP: Rall Era to Ead The new11paper reported that Leslie Rosenthal also sat in on Board of Ttudc talks that barred feder al authoMlles from taking a ction against fear ed future mal'ket manlpulations. Rose nthal could n ot be reached immediately ror com· ment. THE COMMODITY Futures Trading CoQlmlsslon sus pended trading In wheal futures for Marc h delive r y las t week because ol an alleged squeeze in s hort·lerm wheat s upplies. The board sued the commission and won in federal court. The em barao wu Hfted Monday. Futures trading is the con· tracting tor the future sale and delivery of commodities ranging from com and oats to orange juice and gold. Rosenthal was elected vice chairman of the board last yeatr. lie also sits on the board ot directors, which oversees the world's largest commodity ex- change. T HE POST QVOT£D ex- change ofrlcials as saying that in his posiUon, he attended meet· lngs In which the appare nt wheat Irregularities were dis· CUHed. But board president Hobert Wilmouth was quoted as saying Rosenthal "disqua lified himself a bsolutely" from the discussions and did not vote on a resolution concerning the crisis. Pldlman to Stop Mak ing Pmsenger Cars CHICAGO IAP) Pullman Inc .. is ending productson or r ailroad paMengcr cars, lnclud· ing the sleepers associated for more than a century wllh long. range rail travel. T he firm's passe nger car divis ion wlll close a fter 1980 because of foreign competition and the fact that the division has turned a profit in only four of 1ls la s t 25 years, vice presldenl John S. Burr said. T he decision was made Wc;dnesday by the company's board of direct.ors . "WHAT WE CAN'T fi gure out is how these foreign compamcs can produce the cars, have them shipped here and pay duties on the m and still have prices 25 to 30 percent lower Lhun our~." Burr said. The passcnRe r d1 v1~1on wi ll close after two maJor contrach orders for 60 cars from Boston and 284 c<lrs from Am trak are completed 1n 19fl0, Durr said. lie said the division lost $23 million after taxes dur ing the last four years . The decision to d ost• th<· passenger division docs not af feet the profitable frf'l ghl and truck trailer divisions, ht• ~aid The firm's e ngineering und con struction operation al:.o will con tinue PULLMAN IS THE lulcst cor poratc casuulty 1n the ru1lroad pa ssenger car manuf:tclurinK husint'Ss fieMf!cs Ccneral Elec- tric, Uurr said the only other major manufacturer in the Unit· t•d Stalt.'S 1s Budd Corp .. ownt.>d by a German steel company. P ullman officials say they are uncertain what will happen to 2,000 employee!\ at the Chicago a nd Hammond, Ind., plants whose JObs will be affected . The company said It would like to find JObs for them in the 12 othe r Pullman planL'l around the country that produce freight cars und truck trailers. The company nurtured it.self on the v1s1on of George M. Pull m a n . a n in ventor and b us i n essman who began manufacturing sleeping cars an 1858 Denver Loses Power I" . . .. • ' Eklerly Couple Killed in Tex a8 Flood .• A mzra'. use the Daily Pilot to Kevin Bar_nes and 0 naL Stngtng Teleg rams T~•~r•l•r•• ""····· (JDJJ . .. ~ .. ~~ ··-~ If••-•• O•dw4•4 .. llllllD ---==· AllNnr HI U Ptf ~ " Albu'..,_ '° ... • 01 All..,le eo ., •·111-· ., a4 ..... Mn 116tl0f' Sl 40 lllfl••• MU ""~ ... 42 JI CIMl~I 71 u c1e .... 14IM •• a4 U.1 Pl, Wiii '* '° ·" 0.11'1•• .io n .t• 0.lroll •l » "••tf4"4 U H ........ u~ "-"'"' " Hw\lell ., .. ·" '"'' ... II\ ., '° J.c:u•,,111e Q $1 lleft't(llf u 41 l.iHV= ,. ., Of I.Jiil• ~· ,. Q .04 LotA,.._ .. N l.N••lllt ,. .. .......... ., .. Ml-• ., .. Mii• ..... .. J1 .......... .. .. ............ >• ,, ..... °""' . ., ....,..,._ ..... ca ... cw, ., ,, '·" OMMe .... ·'• ~ H JI ~ ..... ., . ~· ., .. ... ~ ...... .. ,, " ......... .,. . ::-0re .... '' n .. ~. .. .. .......... .... IMO..., .. . "' ' . . c ........ e .. ..... ,..,,.,,,..........,...,... ,., ... ,, ...... ,,., ...... .,,.. "'"" Md ....,.... ...... " ... ,,, ....... CMtle4 -...r-., .. Wiii 'Mitt ...... " it ..... '"' ...... ,., .., ......... ,.... ........... .,... U. Tlle.....,~ ....... 111 .. M. •-.11 .. a.TI•• , ......... . ~-' ... .._. ) .. --1t ti•"'• t I NtMY "Int !lltll ••• "'· jt ,,.,.. ... u .. ...... .. .• ......... . ....... ,, ...... II fl!ll..... I • :;:••·Ne,"', IMU:•• 111, ,. ..• ·-· ....... ..... . ., ....... help their bus1ness -ngi -----i ORIGINAL SINGING TELEGRAMS Dear Daily Pilot, really care a bout m y I feel your people bus \ness. h f' ·t things 1 did when I opened my One o( t ~ irs ams business in Newport Original Singing 'f~leg~ . nd advertise with the Beach was subscrlbe o a Daily Pilot. has been a great help to m y Your pape r . thank you . company, an~ I'd hke to :at~ complime nt Arleen I espe.c1a\~y wanadvcrtising, who calls me Lindstedt in displ ay b t business and offe r regularly to .a s k a ou advertising advice . LOVIN' section for Valentine's My ad in your ss and needless to say, I in· Day was a gre.at su~t~e the D~ily Pilot on a regular tend to advertise w1 basis. Thanks. r Kevin Barnes and the staff o Original Singing Telegrams. Put an ad to work for you In the DAILY .PILOT ===~::::.::.:~:= -----:-----------...;.o;.........,_ _________________ ~----=C~A:..:.:L=L:..:14..::2~-4..:.:3:2:1:._ __ .....:J t f .I J l • , t ! I CALIFOR~IA 1hndlly, Merch 22. 1979 OM. y PILOT AS Anti-bus Plan Advances Measure Two Steps From State . Ballot SACRAMENTO CAP I A atate COQjUtuUonul unwodmcnt reatrlcllq mandatory buslni: for lntflJ'allon, almtXI at stoJl Plat tbe Loi An1tlt•s bu111.,, pro 1ra111. wu only t"o 1'll'O:; a"u' fro• the ttate baUot today With approval tn todny·~ scbeduled Assc-mbly vote. th1· meaaure would ntt•d onl \ routine concurrt'ncf' by thl· Seaate to qu.alify ror the ballot TBE •EASva E. seA 2 by Sen. AJa.n Robbin~. 0 \' n Nu ~. Is a product of i.tron)I OPf>Obl lion, particularly m uhur b.111 a reas, to the Los Afl.: •lt>s bu. .. 111~ program that started lut fall •'The Los Angeles compulsolY' bualag progrum ls a dlsai.tt•r dl11rupUn& the srhool v of thow.ands or younsstcrs. ford nK famll1 lo net> the dJ1lrid lo uvold fort-ed bu111to1. and COIUn.: t >-P•Yl'rt neOOJcss mllllons of dollars," the Ooor spon'°r· At. tmblymun Bruce Young. 0 ('l'rritos, aa d In o statement on Lhe f'v•· of th<' VOL('. The mc.-o irnre urvl ved • uur1nl t~t last we-cit when Ult4 A&.'lembly Judk 1nr1 Commit~. norm lly lbt' 1raveyurd lor antJ bu. Ing proposals. p84sed It 10·2 SC' A 2 would require i.lat .. rourl! to follO"V reder•I stand ,1rds Ln dest'gregatton orders So far. federal rourts have re- quired busing only in cases of dd1bt•ratt> segrcgat1on by school llli1ll 11.·t.:; &0881NS says his meaaur~. If approved by voters, would atop Lo& An1elea buslng immediately and would prevent aimllar ordera in other ciUes whe re 30·t'&lJed de h c t o 1e1re1•tk>o a product of hous· tna patterns rnther than de· llber11le ucts by school boards - WUS fOw>d. Opp0nents have questioned that prediction on two amu.ncts: at least one judge round that Los Angeles aegregalion was de· Jlberately cutUed, and SCA 2 Itself may cons titute a de · liberate act of segregatl~n. AnOlber goal of the measure 1s t o ,) rev en t .th c so· c a 11 e d Pipeline Permits Asked April Ruling Forecast on Sohio Issue LOS ANGELES (AP> -The Soulb Coast Air Quality Manage. ment Da.slrict's chairman says the board could ruJe on Standard Oil Co. of Ohio's request for en vironmeatal permits for its 011 pipeline project by April 15. But the chairman of the state Air Resources Board said Wed· nesday he is not sure Sohlo will ever go ahead with the pipeline whose intitial cost and 20-year oper ating expense is estimated by Sohio to be $1 billion. The proposed line would transport Alaska crude oil from Califorrua to Texas Tbe Cleveland-based oil firm resubmitted an application to the AQMD on Wednesday seek· ing the necessary permits for the pipeline operation. The AQMD and the ARB must both evaluate the plan Sohio abandoned last week because of delays in obtaining approvals. 1£ AchUer Hired SACRAMENTO <AP> The Un iversity of California has hired a $210..a-day consultant to advise its president on dealing wllb the news media University s pokeswoma n Sarah Molla said Wednesday that Murray Fromson, a former CBS television correspondent Go ( STATE ) who was a deputy campaign manager and media adviser for Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. last year, is being paid mostly from state funds. ¥°""9ft" Ha.e Hit LOS ANGELES (AP> -The home of former California Al· torney General Evelle Younger has been ransacked by one or more intruders. police report. Younger's garde ner dis· covered a broken side window and notified police Wednesday afternoon. Lt. Warren Larson said. Younger, in private law practice in Los Angeles, was out of town at the time. SdtettW lln~o~red BERKELEY <AP) -Police say there may be more arrests m the case of a University of California senior who was ar- r ested and booked for investiga. lion or attemptin~ sell copies or final examinations. Police said 21-year-old Quincy Fassette was arrested Tuesday after six copies of final examina· lions were found in his Oakland apartment. Meanlra Ddeatftf SACRAMENTO <AP ) Should bottled water be taxed? Should diabetics have to pay tax on their needles and syringes? The state Senate Revenue and Taxation Committee says no in both cases. It voted 6-0 Wednesday on bills · sending the proposals to the Senate Finance Committee. The committee also voted 4·2 on SB 56 by Sen. David Roberti, D·Los Angeles, to increase the deduction for transportation ex- penses as part or a charitable contribution from 7 cents to 17 cents a mile. It needed five votes for passage. IAmd.ark Bawn• LOS ANGELES (AP> -A ma· jor fire al the former Wallach's Music City. a Hollywood landmark for two decades. caused an estimated $250,000 damage early today, fire of. ficials said. Spokesman Martin Garza said 19 fire companies battled the blaze at Spel vin 's Musical Instrument Co. at the corner of Sunset and Vme. He said the fire apparenUy broke out lo a crawl space between the first and second stories. but the names burned a large section of both fl oors. eee easy -. Naturally the real thing looks good. But it's cold. hard. noisy. expensive ... and a chore to maintain. Why not go NATURAL the easy way with NEW • natural bnck or slate realism found in a no-wax Solarian floor from Armstrong! These incredibly natural·looking NEW Solanan floors stir)Alooking like new with just regular washings, thanks to Armstroog·s exclusive Mirabond• no-wax surface. It protects the rich natural colors underneath . . colors that are built up of ttiousa~ of varicolored vinyl granules for unusual depth. richness of color. and design realism. Natural- looking Solarian floors really are easier ... easier to live with .. walk on ... maintain. See how easy it is to GO NATURAL with no-wax Solarian floors from Armstrong .... starting as low as *216 'F«•MM!Lf'lltl'W .... ................ naturally It's from @mstrong <1A.BPB'1Go. ·-~....-; •,.,,./ •ilw -11119-" ...,.~ ....... ..,. IUUllTON !!!! • ooml.,...R:::Mr-__ "*~ ···.&:s:;..------•M =•c:=1 m•>.,..12 = ·&.Olmu... . metropolitan plan, recom· mended to a Los Angeles judge by a group of experts because of the declining number of white students in lhe district. The plan would extend man· datory busing beyond the city limits to a number of largely white suburban areas in Los Angeles County and possibly Orange County. Sbiughter Of Goats Schednled SAN DIEGO <AP> -A repeal or the 1976 wild goal s laughter oo Sao Clemente Is land tbat killed 5,000 of the animals and enraged the public is being planned for this summer, ac- cording to the Navy. Some 3,000 goats must be e radicated by Nav y sharpshooters to lhlo an over· populated herd that threatens the island's ecology, The San Diego Union reported today. .. W E ARE under rederal man· date to maintain the ecology of the island." s aid a Navy spokesman who asked not to be identified. The mass shooting program will begin around June l and will utilize Marine marksmen firing from helicopters as well as on the ground. The Andalusian goals. native to Spain, are believed to be an- cestors or a small herd brought to San Clemente by Spaniards over 200 years ago to provide food for future explorers. AT .ONE tim e . the goat population was estimated at 10,000 before depopulation er. forts were launched when the island was denuded of foliage. Deer have been exterminated from the island. Used as a Navy gunnery range since 1936, the island. located SS miles northwest of San Diego. is 20 miles long and ranges from two to six miles wide. It's Mine "'' ......... Alvilla holds her newHorn baby gorilla at Roeding Park Zoo in Fresno. The female infant is the first gorilla born at the zoo. Alvilla is on a breeding loan from San Diego Zoo which will get the baby gorilla. The mother was transferred to Fresno after failing to mate with male gorillas al San Diego Zoo. Airliner Slates low Fare Plans OAKLAND CAP > World Airways announced plans for scheduled daily fli ghts across country for $99.99 beginning April 12. "It·s the average person's tum to Oy on a budget without fight· ing red tape. fine prant and other hassles." Edward J . Daly, president of the Oakland-based airline said Wednesday. The only other $99 transcontinental flights are operated on a once-a-week charter basis between New York and Los Angeles by the Oakland-based Trans lnternallonal Airlines. The Trans International fli ghts are offered through the Council, of lnternauonal Education Exchange, an educational travel • I s~rv1ce. • THE WORLD AIRWAYS eastbound nights are scheduled to depart al 7:20 a .m ., stop an Los An~eles and arrive in Newark at 5.20 p.m. The night schedule calls for flights leaving Los Angeles at 10 : 15 p.m., stopping in Newark and arriving in Baltimore at 8:45 a.m . The westbound travel schedule calls for a Newark departure at 7 p.m., a stop m Los Angeles and arrival in Oakland at 11:45 p.m . Another flight schedule calls for departures from Baltimore at 10 :30 a.m .• a stop at Newark and a destination in Los Angeles at 3:10 p.m. SPRIN POWER TOOL SALE 19.99 Rockwell • Develops 10,000 opm. Flush sands on 3 s100,, along Vt'nt c.I surfaces and '" corners Front and rear handle~ lor pos111ve control Double insulated for c1e<.1r1ca1 ~•lery 4401 v.-1n. POWER DRILL For ltghl·duty work. Dulls Compact •"d ltghtweoghtl Y.·•n. steel. \11·in. h1rdwood . 2-SPEED J1G SAW Base llils 45• in e•ll'lllr d1rec· 11on to cut wood. l1gl'lt or heavy me1ar, comp0s1t1on, ple•1glus. plasttc. Fonger 11p ~Pcf!d ~elector. ant1·sph1 base 1n1en. 4310 · 13-¥c. Drill Bit Set 13 high·•Pttod bits from 1/16 through 114 1n. For wood. metal, plasttc. Woth fitted lnde.ed CHO. S13 1-HP DELUXE ROUTl:R Hea11Y·dutyl Prec1s1on cah· bratod 1n 1164·•" • ver11col depth ad1us1men1s, 22,000 rpm 7616 Wrop-around $hoo; double 7004 insulated. Wllh combtn1tt0n ·-------·· ~•de. 7300 ........................ . Has 9.0 amp mot0<. 1v. H.P. T~ng blade ou-ci. Blade incl. 4511 • : 19.95 VISE Anvil and lodl·IWlwl bete 4·1n, Jews tor me1e1 and pipe,"""· ~ !iM I-Pc. SCREWDRIVER SET Squ1re bladft for elClra turn· Ing power. Slotted tips. Cflfome van1<111.1m. TS8SO HOMEUTr 11MN. GAS SAW With S•f·T·Tip•. fHfUtH •ll·post. uon c•rburetor, 1utom1tic chain oiHng, lll<WNthet Ignition. XL STOllHOUIS .Maa. .. Mt·t s.t.N.S... IM .. ThomH Keevll/Edltor ,. ngo COu•l Oo•ly Pilot .Editorial Pflfl.e .................................................... • u c Thuraday. M1reh 22. 1919 llarb8r11 Kr•-Jblch/Edltorlel P~ Editor -..--.--Pay Raise T-iming I ~~r. ~"~~!~~~~~!!: lod tht· r m•w tlty muna1t-r to IOOk Into c1,1ttina th • city pi.yroll by 10 per(•cnt Rf'C.'t.-nt budi t ht-rlna al c ty haJI have prompu'(t c•oncern from munlrlpal mploy who r ar many Ion~ I tame city workl\ri, wtll oo t •rm nated In th bud&d cul llng~tJ Unfortunately. ull of thli. hullaballoo cu mt• at u l•mt.· wh n the •1t y <.:ounrll d ldt'd lo award u nei.rly 10 per cent iMre111s•• In uh.try for City Mana•cr P'red Solomon Thal announ mt.•nt, modt• earU~r lhl month, did not bll Wt"ll wllh rcprl' c•ntaUvt-!l of th munl lpMI employc.'t'i. o S<X'laUon. That group re ponded by turnlng down u S percent t'OHt of Uv1nA hike off('red by the city Tht•n, ofter bt-1ng told it WWt u Lake It or lt•uvc lt propo'l1t1on . the t'mploye ·21 ~otcd to &U'l't-'Pl lh~ off er Uut employ • ~pokel'lm n \LI)' thl' $1~.000 unnuul cost for th· l'O t of llvrnl( hlk • t•ould huv(• ~nnl' u lonf( way toward rl'tu1nmJ{ mun1(·1pal workel1i ~lull-d for the ax t·om« bucJJ,tct hm And wh1J ... City M un gcr Solomon' wc·ll d ·bcrn>d 1n t'rl'UbC umounb to h:hb thun $4.000 a year (C'Ountmg car ullowanct• I 1t r ould not have come at a wonic time Split Rejection Wi e Orun1ow County School D1&tracl Oq(untl ulion Commit· t l'I.! ml·mbcr~ wnl! c·orn: ·t in reJcctang thl' pro~~cd San (;lemt•nl.4: arcu :ipl1t f rum the Cap1strono Unaf1t d School JJu,tru·t. Whil • J>ruJ)(}O(•nls of the div1s1on muy have had J(o<>d inlt·nt1on:. wh ·n they gulhcrc<I JOO pclition s1~natures to hrinu up the matter, tht.·y picked the wron~ lime for :iuch u t•os lly move.· SC'tlool off1c1uls :.tatcw1dc im> t~mph ui-.izmg consoUda· lion of t-.chool di:;trlct:::. not r rcallor'I <>f new one:>. There h, llltl•• talk of t•r ·a tin~ mon· or thc:.c cducc.ttional gov· ('I'll rYH'nla l UJil!OCIC8 . Thie" c·osl of bringing li n ·w school district into ex lstc·net.' would for outweigh the udvuntagcs that propcJ· nt·ntl'I of the split claim would res ult. l'ropon •nts believe l.ldministrutors would be more rc~p<)nhivc und there would be ant·rca:i •d efficiency if a n •w cJ1strkt was st!t up alon~ the attendance boundc.iric8 of Sc.tn Clcrnc ntc I ltgh School. But Jr lhciw res ident:; fct•I the cur rent crop of ad mrn1~trulor~ urc nol rc~pom11vc enough or 1ncrricicnt. tht•y ~hould note that a muJor1ty of the Capistrano Unified Sc·hool Hourd is up for r••·cl •ctson in November. ftl'1;1dent:. who want to bring. more rc~pon1>1 vcness, grNtt.cr locul control und perhaps hluhcr c((iclency to S{'hool dis tract opc:rullon can start by voting for the cun d1ttutc or their choice at the polls in Novcmbt!r. This m ·thod tR more rcusonablc a nd c.i lot lc~s ex JX!llSIVt• Straighten out ROP Cap1blruno und Laguna Ucach unified ~chool distract t ruslt.-'(.'t\ uppt!ar rC'ady to continue the local Hcgionul Oc cupalional Program despite some issues that remain lo he solved. Continuing the program that ofrcrs on-the.job voca tlonal experience und clatsseti to high school students is a ~ood thing for lh •community. But the confuRcd state of uffairs over ROP ud mini!)lrul1on 1s an issue thut calls for immc.-diate uttcn t1on . It's t.omclhinu that could ca11ily undermine the quuhty of tht! progrum ll'ielf. Prc:;ently Jt()P Dir •ctor Jerry ~1mons haR resigned, dfrcllvt· .lune 20. JI • 1s silting at home collecting his salary hut htt8 not worked since being placed on leave by ROP direct.ors. And ;mothe r top ofrlclal hus been on paid 1 •ave t>lncc he went to Sht•riff's Dcpurtmcnt Investigator:; in October with uccusations about Slmomf action:, as d irector. While on Orange County Grund Jury lnvcstil(ataon could fmd no evidence or wrongdoing, m •mbcrs noted that the st ate or affoir:; In the HOP'i, udmlntstrullon was poor. It's som<!thtnJ( ROP directors should beuin to deal With Whil • lrustCCN Of the two partlclpaling d h1trlcls re· NOlvc romuininR problcmi; with th• ROP u"reement. Those i:;sucs, such as the f>OKl\iblllty of a five-rothcr than four·m •mbcr ROP board, should ul!m be cleared up as Hoon al> possible. • Oplnion1 oxprossoo In lho ap1co 1bovo art thooo of tho 0111y Piiot. Other v1owa uxprostod on thlt page t r• lhote of their IUlhors and anlsta. Roeder commont 1s tnvltod. Addreit• Tho Daily Piiot. P o. Oox 1560, Cosaa Mell. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321 . Boyd/HusbandiJ 8yLM.80YD Avereae 8ul1arlan min 1pends tlvo hours a week belplni out •round the houae. Dl11uat1nc. Walt, that'• un· called ror. Merely comment prellmlnary to th• report lbal no other malo national anywhere .devota so much lime dolna bou1ehold choreft. Tbere IJ • tebool of lbou1ht, JOU know, which hold• that Jluabandl who dive Into the homem1ltln1 Jobi tend to U.reat.n tbelr wlv" Indirect· IJ. Not all l8dMt 1ppreclat.e UM compettUon. You know Dear Gloomy Gwt That m11aalne ad lbo•lal a be·man type Hlbtilll z.a ci .. ...U. bllbll~--lla wl ldeHHI ··~:: ....... ,. .. '"' tM UMpoUed air ............... , Ollt ol pl1H. c.v. ~a;e.-­•. , ~ what old Andre Maurol1 Hid: "Jloulekeepln1 In COM• mon 11 ror women the acid lest" It'• known, Incidental· I)', that the huab1nd leaal lllte,ly to tickle hou1ehold t111ta 11 the En1ll1hmlan. Ever hear or a predatory tree? Netther had I Rut a client repor1.t that such there be. The atran1ler t11. ll 111111 other treeta In ltt •tru11lo to reach for Upt. Albert EiftlWln didn't like to wear • hat. But one• wa..n It w1a rlln1nt, hll wife lnalat- ed h• do ao. A 1ent1e IOrt, Eln•teln. He wore the lhlnt halfway to hl1 Princeton of. nee and c1rrlecl lt tbe real ol tb• way. ... t.ben c1refuUy noted exactly how lon1 lt took few both b1a hat 1nd halr to dry. That evenlnc he told Ida wVe U. neulla. HAI llalr drted ..... qlltdJJ ......... hat, wlllell be left on tlle reek llM'llnbwud. w .. uUd ......... ... ,..., ..... .,. ....... ...., ......... ..&...._~~,.,. ...... ,..TM,..... "" ...... ...-co. ll.U. olllff/lteHMn, ... .., ........ Mid,.. ·:a-...... .. ... .......... . J ark Ande:non ' Pilot Fa.tigue Problem Evaded WASJONCTON The 11ccnt• WH all l.OC> f•mlllur LIHaL duy •l t b«i ¥I rport The w •111 y t'f~W nH'lll · b«'ra of u U S o Ir frf'IKhl<-r lookc•d burw t l rt•d un d fj pokt• lllfllO'll 1ncoht>rc ntl y wht-o lhl'y ur rived at the flt•ld And with "ood r •MOn Tht·y hud only three houn1 ' itlf'ep uft ·r nrnt· hour,_ In nl~ht 1.1nd u totul of 23 houra on duly Th<-lr Uoe111g 707 frt•1ghtcr l()(Jk Lh•· cmUrll runwuy to get orr the 1<round A It rtnully lifted o f(, lht• JJlanc v1•cr d Khllrf)ly to th.-right. th •n lt•O , befor~ eoU1d lntt with u trc<· und a utility v<>I • Ca recnln1< out of c·ontrol. the glunt cran r1pl)l•d throulo(h trct.>s, ''°lclt und rooftopK u11d begun d11untcl(rltlln(( oofore It cru11h..-<J uv11ht\· down on o playmu rlcld. THE CRF.W Wllli klllc>d , und T1 pcrson:J on tht• ground were crus hed by d<.'l>rls or burned to dl•Jtth rn lht• n umlnu inferno. In vcstlf(atorK 011 tht• ~c:cne found thut U1t• pl un "s control!. had bc..>t.·n improperly 11ct, depriv 1ng it of cr1t1cul J)Ower net.'<h.'<l for 11urflclcnt t11 kcorr thruRt They l>lamcd th'· m11stuk · on the cxhauHh.'<.I condition or tht• rrcw The tr.:1.c<-dy occurred on Q('l 1:1. 1976. ut Sunta Cruz. Hohv1a Yt•t It could have occurred lo u U S. crnw virtually any t1m1· and unywhere. ll could have oc c·urrcd to a cn·w trunsvortinl( PUKSCn~ers, in11tcad Of frci"hl l"or the shocking fllct about the· Suntu Cn11. d11st1Htcr IR thal th1· crew of the alrcrort wuK opcrut m.i wtlhm fo'c-<lcral A vwtlon Ad m1nlRlrut1on safety rcgulatlon:i 'f hc rulc:i rei;ca rdin~ rat11(uc urt: nlarmln1<l y lax und have not been si1o1111fica ntly m odified aancc 1934. Whale pilot fatigue is a recur· Mailbox renL theme In forciicn accldenl report1. Amnlcan lnveatl8atorR have d Led ralllUC H a f iftor in only one eommcrclnl ulrllnc craah between 1973 a nd 1977. "tluman error" l11 cited as the ('UUl e of most llCCidcnl:s AN O•'f'ICIAL for the No Uona I Trum1porlU t1on Siaft•t y Board. which lnvc11t1uate11 a ir crashes, told our reporters Tom llosenJSllel and Molru l''orbt.:11 . "We slay away from 1t CfallJ(Ut'I In oftlcial bourd rtiports. unlcs11 we have hard evidence " lhut tho pilot. stretched their niteht rc l(ulotlorui or spent tMlr re11t lime carousing Instead of 11leeplng. Dul pllot11 themselve s told '"' 11hocklng storlc11 of falling asleep at the <.-ontrol1, or of drlnklnf( to overcome the lnJSOmnlu Induced by their lonte a nd Irregular hours. "I've bt.-en a buskt•t case from nymj( :fO muoy weird hours." s aid tlurri11 l>cxtcr. a pa lot for a maJor alrllrw Another pilot, who a:skc.-d to have hJ11 name withheld. told ui. he used to drink • plt.cher or two Of beer t.o t'Ombat 81eeplH9netS8, a <'hronlc problem for pllote who must try to 11leep durtn1 normal wuklnJ( hours. stcepin,,. plllA arc a <'O m m<>n r rmedy, he added. · The crew or one plane report- ed thut i~ pilot fell u11leep on ., landln« approat'h just half u mlh· from the runway./\ e<>·pllot. lold us he suw h111 captain full usl1:cp ut 2.000 h.-cl momunlh after takeorr NIGtrr t 'l_.IGllTS, l'hanKln.i t1mfl zones. crrutu: schedulc11 and brt('f layovt•rs a ll contrlhutc to ~n impatrmc>nt or lhf' human h ody known to mo i;t ulr lravt•lcrs as "Jt'l lu.c " This familiar cond1tt0n 11. an lnconve· nlPncc to a bus lncsR man or vacat1ont:r, 1t can he 11 tragedy wh1•n it '><'curs to un ulrhne pilot with hundrc·tb of hvc~ rn hl:i /\ Un1Hr:uly or Ca llforniu i;tudy e·oncurN . "Wh•:n humun11 an · askl'tl to rx.•rrorm at u llm1: in their <2it hour> c·yclc when thc•y an• usually uslc1•1•. their perrormu11et· 1:-. 1m1mir t.-d " Yt·t th1• t"/\/\ d1seounts such warn1n~s "We· 11o not l)(:rc.-clvc any lhri·ul lo :.uf•·ly" an the· to'/\ A 'i. t•urr1•nl n·i.tulations gov •rntn~ rataj.!UC . ),a td Or. II I. Hl'tUhard. lhl' l"A/\ ·:. atr sur lll'On. l''altHUl', he: tJ1ld Ull, I!) .... i;ub1c1·l1v1· ftH'l11r only lh•• pilot knowi. 1r h1· 1:. :-.uHcrinM from 11 " Thi.' fo'AA doc:c not plan to a llocal • more mon\'Y lo do re· Sl·arch oo fat1j.!ue l''ootnut.c · The l"/\A's disturb· 1nit 0H1c1al atl1ludt• 1s ron tr:11l1clt'(I hy other (1•dt•ral Clt 1~1t-.. G<'rrill J Walhoul. tht• N11t1onal Transportation Safety Uourtl 's hum un factor :. "lll'c·1ah11t . 111t1d thut more rt• i.l•arc·h would lead lo Huch drn mullr 1·hanuc~ ai. "d1U.•rcnl workinu hours. d1frcr •nt flo(hl lci.111 und different hom e ballt•:. for pilots " Jet Noise Victims Find Complaints Futile To the Editor: ftu : Letltir of 3/ 15179 titled "Nolac ComploJnts": With Huch an impr<.>t111lve title or "ExecuUve Director. Com· munlty Airport Council", Mr. Jo11cph F,. Irvine should be a s h Dmed to prc:st'nl 11u c h rldlculou11 ulrport "11tutl1>licn" on th numb..rK o r 1wrRonli who have rcgl11t c rcd complaint» about airport noise. It 11' ludicrouK to <-omparc the numbers or complalnlH filed, aicalnst the total f)Opulutlon or Orange County . flow t'un the roar or the jets tukln.c orr from the Oran~c County Airport In 11ny way dll\lUrb the re11idtnl11 or fo'ountuln Valley. llunllngton Buuch or any other location CJX· ccpl In the immcd1ule vlcan1ty of the airport? MOR•:ov•;a, Hin c e no punitive ucllon lt1 taken ugaln11l pl11nc11 thot vlololc thu pre· scribed tukc off putlcrn ond/or exceed the 11lowablc noise. the frustrated rcsldcnt-11 of Newport Beach uro Justified In conClud· Ing Lhat thefr calls or protc11t arc futile nnd therufore othur acUon must be takun to preserve our right. ogainat lhlH noise pollu- U~ Mr. frvlne'11 conclu11lonn prove that 8lartlng from un lnvi.lld premlite, shat111tlcs cun be made lo Juatlry HY point of view. 11.K. J,.F.VINSON ' PT.4 .4 ... 8•••rC To the ltdltor: Th• La1un1 Beach Unified PTA Council unanlmou1ly pa .. ed a retlOlutlon In support of the DUla Bill <88 23-t). We ur1e your 1upport to enact this vlUll . piece ol tehool rtnance •~clll•· lion. The Dllll Blll 11 lon1·ranse and provides multi-year fund· lni. which wUI en•ble achool di.I· trlcta to plan for u,. ruture. Slnee lt'72, La1una Beach Sdlool Dl1trkt hat loet revenue• due to lnrtatlon. The bud1•t •H 1lreldy 1queeaed, whtn Propoll· tlon l3 dealt Ill dev11tatln1 blow. The Dtll1 8111 aUempg to re.tore 10m• or the lo1t rev· enu ... offaet1 lnrtatlon, ind prov6det a contlnulna baala for llnandnl ~hool dlatricu. A Nrioua problem for our tebool diltrtct .,., been lhat ot deferNd mallMllAUlf• of build· = ............. Al thtM rt• .,. -~ the .,,.. .,. ..... pouftdld. T•ANIPO•TATION ID Llpaa ..... II Yitai. Our n · lrnleb ....., terraln, eoupled wt&ll tie fMt. tlaa& &wo ot our ....,..:'7i..-...anoa•• ,......, l .. " ........ to ............ 111&ofour el1me1t1r1 and Junior 1t61~ • school students. The wcur ond tear on our bull t'b 1s ex traordinarlly eot1tly bef'1.11u1c of our topography. State·mandult!d :wcclal..cdu~ lion progrums und driver educo· lion arc now lnudcqualely funded and r<'venucH must be d I v I' rt NI fro m o t h ,. r p ro .cram11 within our di11tract. H these pro.crum11 "re to be rC'· quired of the 8latc, tho 11lute Hhould be flnun1·1ally rcsporusiblc ror them. School systems urc a11kc..-d lo leach everything from valumJ( to driver training, In addition to ucadcmrt>11 . They. allm, muM meet lht• :Jf)Cf'lill n('f!dll or ttw gifted, hnnd1c up1H.·d, und lhc poorly motavull'd. UaHIC 1•(hu•u. lion 111 heanu threatened because 11Ch()()I district" urc ham11trun.i by th~ cul.o(( of rundi.. We urge your s upport of the 01111 Biii, which addrus1uis ltiuilf to C8Ch of the uforcmcntioncd concerrus. TALUF. PARRISll Leglshation Chalrmun. •~aguna Bcuch Unified PT/\ Council •••rtll TrtMllC ... To the Editor · Co un cj lw oman Solly Bellcruc'8 action In allcmpUni;c to prevent J11ck M cOowcll'11 election to a second onu-yci.r term Oil moyor al the March 6 Lu1una neach Ci ty Coun cil meeting waH 11hcer hyPocrl11y. Al10, while I rcal11e Mn . Relleriw 11 not M lon1 time resl· de nt or Laguna R ea ch , ht1 r Political advl10r1 ahould have told her that lt I• tradltlonul tor mayort1 to 1erve more than onu te rm. Here nrc tho mayors who have hpt the tradition alive durlna the p.,t 28 years: Jeue RJddlo, $ termB <JOSI to 1182) Wiiliam Martin, e terms <l9G2 to 1•> Glenn Vedder, 2 term1 ClMI to 1170) Richard OoldNr1, 2 terms (lt70to 1'72> Roy Holm, 3 terms <July lt73 to M1rch lt78> I would 1u.,e1t Mrs. Bellerue re1Hrch and prepare h., own 1peech m1 .. r11I or find a new 1roup ol ldvlllOf'I. DORIS YANC&Y " __ ,.,_. To tbe'Sdttor: - Tb• MatUI quo. bO 1rowlJI, ao hlllt•aJ l•Jl'CW•ment m1Jorttr on lite ,..._..t Newport ...... City eomeu lbould bt able eo ... rn • llMon from Ute t.rallle probletna La1un• Beach la •uf· rert111 wtlla u a rt1ult of ,e•n or .. lleft md proC!r..UnaUan l11 mak&ill wll llMd4MI hllhWIY ......... .,., Lagunu fktich lnt.'<I to stand s till while the world around them wu8 prog rcsiuvcly J(rowang ;.met now you can iwt• the dtffl<'ult and traaic..cnd rcKu lts. Traffk conRe11Uon. a mountjng numbn or df'ath11 a nd l nj urrc s on hl"hway1 that should have bt,-.•rl lmprovc•d yt•rtrl'I UKO You cun't 11tul) pro.ercs11: 1f you try you arc only kiddinl( yourself, you (•1thcr $;row. 1mprovt1 :ind u1l grade or you veg<•tute. Unle11K the prc11cnt City Coun · d i muJorlty haK 11omc lcl(11I way of fonc1n.i off and monitoring the incoming out11ldc trufral'. thert! 18 no way that nnll·h1ghway Im fH'Ovf'mcnt lhinkanl( will work to the advuntaJ(t' o( lhl' 1wopl • of Ncw1)Qrt Beuch IN vu;w of th(· galloplns.t In flallo n anti thll pending Gunn taxi ng limitation 1nlt1 allv<'. Newport &uch city Of>t1ratloM Mt> goln.r to I><• ln·d1rc straits un· les11 It ln<'rf•1111tis Its tux buse. This doe!\ not 11ecm pol'ls1l>ll· un- der the anlH(rowt.h policy thut now cxlst1, which IK thrcotenan.c the wc ltur.-nnd <'Ontlnucd i>ro gress o( our rulr <'lly. Tht•rc IK no way the city cun offord to make the u111c nti1fl 1m· prnvement11 In our hlfChway Kystem unlc."'' the City Council con encourage some out1lde financial aulKtunc • u they hav" done In the City or Irvine. You can't look to Cal1'ruruJ ror thill kind or help, because It Is t'ommon knowlod.re that Newport Be1ch 11 not on their list of ravored cities. Wti believe In aenslblu und practlt'al control11, but you can 't operate and rule Newport Reach 11 an l1J1nd by Itself, with no re · gard for what 11 haepJH'nlntc and aiolnfl on around you. ft Is hoped th•t t0mt Improve· i ment In the wlldom or the City Council majority will IK>On aur· fl.ICC. E.P. BENSON T ... lerA ... 1 To the F.dltor We bear a lot about how Im- p<1ss1blc 11 Is to prevent lllegaJs from 1nf1ltratmg th • hord••r And 1t 111. for the Bordt·r 1'11lrol. hut whal about ttu· Army :ind th1• Nu1toaial Guard'' W e h a v 1• h u n cl r c• d "> o ( thou11und11 of lroOJ)S, tlrtiwinJ,l their IHI Y and 1•ut1nJ: three.• squart'~ a d11y Th1·y ar1• rn bar rack11, on war i.currll'~. rn l rain mg Why •·ould they not J(t't lh1•lr I rnrnrnl( :iloni: our tx1rdt•r:.? Why rouldn't purt of lheir war g11mcs bl• to pn·vt•nl lht' 1111•.:ul:. from mfillrat1ni:i the ir hrn·:. ., They l'•1uld UM ' h1Jrlwd ware entun.clt•mt•nl'i tn fc•rtam arcns, urt1tl('ry Sf)Otln:., mt•n palmhn.: m J''''flS or JU:.l 1111 fool 11\cy 1·1>11ld Ix· -.11n·utl 111 11 tl1111 ltn•• alonl( bulh h11111tor:. Th1•y ('Ould c1thc•r 1·h111w 1 h1.· 1 ll1•1(a b m·ru:1~ tht• oorder. or umm•h<.·nd l h••m <•nil turn them 11v1•r tu the Hordt:r l'utrol f'crhupi. 1f th•• Army thouuht thl'Y wtn· d111nr: a usdul Job. morf' peopl<• woul1l 1•nlli.l. Thi• iwldit•r!i huv1• to h e 11omcwh..rc, why not :ilonH the bordt•r'' JIM UOLOING E•lerre Cite£•.., To thl' l':ditor: It Iii unfortunutt· thut your cd1lor111I writer l'ho:w not to prt.' MC'nt both l'!ldCll of lhl' lllllUC rt· ~urdinl( Oran.:c.• <..:ounty 1'r:ins1t District v:s. trnm1portut1on for the dl11obl ·d thouilunds living und vls1Untc in Orun.rc County In th114 8f(C or 11p1tcc-tr11vcl il'K an ln11ull to orw'ti inll'lligcncc lo 11t11\t• "th11r1"K JU11t not u rcllabl • lift avull:ihlt•" Whul'il btllng u11cd by other trsns1l dl11trictt1 which am t>omplylntt with Klatu and f(>(ferol lawK? What doet1 OCTO uHe on dllll·a·llrt ., YOU CITE COlll 111 11 maJor factor In the board's decl1don not to comply with the law. )'et you ne1lttt to mention the Identical coat of air condlllonln1 which Is provided on each bus. No law nt· qulrn Lhls: to HY nothlntJ Of ad· dlllonal ruel requlrf'd lo operau,, It. ACCC!lllbUlty modirlCltlon la a one·tlmc cxpenae whlch would obviously Increase re venue or OCTD hardly a total I011. Sympath1 I• not needed or welrome. Rather. tmplemenC.1· lion and 41\1orcemerit or current law 11 expocted I Now 11 the linM beCIUM the law 1111 ao. YVONNI: BAG8TAD, Preetdent oc c...,... . caur. Aaoc. of the Phyalcally lfandlcapped • L.ftttl, ·-~ ----,,. , .... .. ,._..."'9 .....,, .. "' ....... "' ...... , .... .. , ... Nd, ....... " .... --........... . t lwtll e••f•leflU Alt lellett"'Vll 1114.1 ... •ttMtwn .. Metlll'f ..,_ llMI _ _,lit ""'~ ... "' ,....... If ................ . "'"'....,,., ..... ,..... ..... . , t . . • • .. .. I I LOCAL I CALIFORNIA UC Irvine abide .-at.all are tu._ a day fl• Moeday. Tbe •~nt ia occ~ by a brler •priac breek between cla~. whlcb ruume Tue i:. .... Arel., ...... sr....i elll HW~r chvJllts plAnn d for Beac h Hlk>r .. tt.161s lnclud hullh "-"d ..._.. ln lat ye... euttenl boob 1urvey • ....._ creallve. wlag, free l~aJ aJd and in ... &u uaiatance. dandna. physical ntness and 'f8atlleomNng. • J_,,,. la .-k>n lher~ will be several trips, a piC'nlc .,... ,.... lllDviet. ·f'urtber lnformallon may be obtaiM-d from lhe dub beadquarters at Sl5 t'ore:;t Ave. or by C'alhng 4'7·M4L .... -. . . •..ttlp r.,,.·,f'~,_. sa.ca1 · A ee>mn:>wdty bridge tournament is scheduled at 1 o'clock Mll'C'h·'18 at Uae San Clemente Com· munity Club House, 100 Calle Seville Refteshmeats will be served. The event 1s open tot.be public and s ponsored by a local savings and loan office. nree~ Elereftt Three Lagun' area residents were elected to tbe board of di~tora:oflbe Alcoholism Council of •· Seliool·.Bedefit . - Laguna Sets Vegas Night Residents with a passion for roulette, craps. blackjack and bingo can satisfy their gaming urge a.Dd have dinner too Saturday in Laguna ,Beach. The Laguna Beach Boosters Club will conduct its fourth annual Las Vegas Night party from 7 UO· Ul midnight in the lower level garage oC the Vtnage Fair e s hopping mall, 1100 South Coast IDsbway. TICKETS WILL BE AV A.ILABLE AT tbe ~.Admission is $10, wtucb includes diruier • Proceeds suppor t lbe Laguna Beach High ~bool band, pep squad and athletk de pa rtment. A boosters club spokesman said lhe pi'ogiams are more dependent on contributions s ince passage of Proposition 13. ' I Saturday's Vegas Night will fe~ture' local celebrities running the roulette, craps and black· jack tables. I' • BINGO. STRICTLY Ff& Ci\SH, WILL be Qf· feted at the s ame hme./~•sb prius will range from. szs to $250. . ' . ' Orana• County at U.. or1anbaUoa'a annual meet- •01 · El~ for lhrH·year lennt were the Rev. Robert Comellaon Dr Ruth Starrord and Mrs. Jame• Lynwood Wildt•r Jr ••ti~ arna1c1 .. c rta.llftl Thti Auxiliary of the ~uth Coast Medical Ct nltir la planrung a buffet t>reakfasl bo1'0rin1 all volunt ,.. for the Meals on Wlteels pro1raru at 8 30 a.m. Aprll 2 in the hoapitaJ auditorium . Punch I . "I 11UppoecJ t'1 a lip of old qe, bat all lhe crimiDall look eo mudl yoaqer nowacla.yl." FOR THE PROFESSIOHAL TOUCH: DECO INTERIORS INTERIOR PLANNING AND CONSULTING c-..... Mtecffoa of -~ ......... c.,,.., flooriMJ, .. hhhrf, fwwltwe, ......... 9ld KCHIOriet, Visit Our Design Studio 21192 M...,...te Ptrwy .. Mluloa Viejo IS-D*Jo Fwy. to Anry Plrwy. Mt SOllHt of Toyota.._.J 4'5-0202 ' DANA POINT CLEANERS I O~inq Thun .. March 2 2 . . • Lrr*Y It Altuull•• •JO y.., ..,....••c• • · 2 Hr. Service on Dry Cleanlng 5100 $5 00worltl 0' OFF ON c 1~on1r>q ForEioos LONG BEACH <AP > -There's been good news for ewes in the San Gabriel Mountains this year· a greater percen· ta&e of their lambs are survi ving, a nd t h e Nelson bighorn sheep count bas risen to 4.20, tbe most ever seen in these ll)OUDtains. stale om1ia1t repQtt. . CUisiiiiifl Sl N a tb e n s on .. spokesman for the state De.-rtmeot of Fish and Game. said. Wectnesd.a>' tbe ratio ot .71 -survivtnr 10HI lambs .to· 188 ft-es i8 &be bllile'st recorded llace tbe aeency began ma~t_.1 s uch surveys foW' ~ ~ ·He al· tributed' the increase to" mC)fe water and forage ' lies. 1~e've always s us· peded there were at leut 500 in that herd, but we'd Just nev~r teen tbat ..., belare. Tbis . ii die ..... ,.. I couni,,. Mid Netblalob. ··nese ulmala lie full.J :pro-1 , teet.ed b7.-w. -..a may aol be· ~bot, hunted, ~atasled Qr anything •~•:. llD . theJ, · Ila•• ' • Dance for sur- Yl••I. '' L•i 1ea.r. the total ...... population WU IN. 'l'lteae were 374 ~ ill am and 224 • ne• eounted on the ~• l'W'YeJ llarcb lO · 11 aceouata for ..... pen:ent of the ~..r:.latlon, tbe MODEL CFP·9 good as it was, it's better now ~·:'I PIOFESSIOIALLY l DEMOISTUnD r SATUDAY . 11Ul·1M llUCll 2•, 1 t7t Deluxe Cuisinart Model NOLC·7 '247" A BLOOMING EXPERIENCE • Fresh Cut flowers • Uniaue and custom ll0<al designs • Plant rental • Complete wire service • Daily dehvenes M-. Mini s.t. t AM t. 6 rM 7 l 4/SSJ.l600 COMING SOON TO EL CAMINO PLAZA +· ~<·.Tu Goldsmitl1 L.5i Al.SO 1M MACAKTHUR $9UAU ~ 4ZH scon HIYI NIWPOtn' Ill.CH ~ 17141.fJ).lMI A880CL\110N I ' HATUl.IM&------------- 1cELAND1C COO. SHRIMP. SCALLOPS. DEEP FRIED OR BROILED. Of'IH 1 M MOH-SAT. I I.a SUNDAY 559-9111 SJ?Rf.\VfilJ COUf1SJ?R'I c:t rIZvff18 --: A WORLD •'· ONLY MINUTES AWAY 5394 Walnu\ Avenue. (714) 551-2929 . . (551-BYBY) TH E G U ILD D R UG. PRESCRIPTIONS . 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Caught in Sludge Flap LOS ANOSU:S <AP> -A rtdttral :Jud•• ha ruled U.. l:nvlrcmmeatal l>rolediaa ~J w-k>IM.ed tbe En· danaerect Spet-k!I Act by onleril:ll the city to ac,. ctumpl.., 1lud1t lla Santa Monica 8ay1 u tchinl ndanttffd butterfly ano peUuo •PMI ln a n ltt\Vlroeinentalfal ('f"OU flrtt. lJ S. Di1lrlt'l Jud•e /\ Andrew Hauk rul 4 that tht' ,PA ('ln't <'hanie the dty'a aludgt> dl11)()1lal pro A,...__ l't'dure without contldt'rln1 the ph.Chl ...,._ &S.4 · ur thr F.l S<-,-undo blue bull<'rflY and • thf' brown pt'llc n, both on tht-J ay Sol omon H' fNJt>raJt•nc.Songut'd .pecacalb~. signed Wednebday ils tert11•1 tole brHdlna around.I In E l ~1uado. BUT &MPILUIZl'D lhal the rul· tn1 bu not eetUed lhe dumpina dla· pule. •. ,,.. Jud« dld not rule U..t tbey had to continue dumping 1hwt1e ln lh ocean," he said. "Ile Just ruled that they mutl conalc;ter lhf Impact on cndanaer«t apeelea before 1top- v1nii n " UHt uddl.'<f · "We bel eve from the loformatioo we huve n.-<:clved thal the !ihld.it< Ill probably doing roore Hood Uurn hurm an the ocean . • . . that lht• cnvlronmcntal Impacts will be w11rt1c tf th • :iludge is moved to land rathl•r than dumped in the ocean." administrator of lht.• TIU! a UNC. AMt. In a luw&uil s c a n d a l · pl a au e d fUed by P•c1f1c lA'•t•I Foun<11.tUun, " General Services Ad· S1cramento·bastd public intercat ministration, effec law fmn r tivc March 31. Prciil Robert Beat. attorney with th dent Cart{'r acce*"c.'<I foundation. t'xplaln d tho pelican t"' feeds on a nchovlj . wblcb In turo ltvtt l · 'l h c reg I l rut lo n orr oraanlc muterial In the eludgt' Gr~fiti Organized IMPt;ltJA , Ital y I AP > - Authontwt1 111 this Riviera l'llY hnve 1n11talled blunk punel:t on public walls 111 the ho11c that f.(ruf1tt1 art.Jst3 will c•onrcntratl' efrort.a •'en an orderly wuy," Jnd keep public places t lca nl•r . . walh regret." The El Segundo Blue butterfly wa • involved because the t'll)'''> DAILY PILOT n ltern1ttve dasposal vlan ancluded CL.ASSIF1ED ADS drying and trucking sludge to dump 642-5e78 ~•les, onl' or wtuch was at the but SUPERB AUDIO SYSTEM WITH DOLBY * FM s799 Reg. Separate Items 110910 SAVE 31080 • RHlitficfl', STA-20000 AM/FM St1110 R•c.inr w;11t Doi,,, FM (76 w«ts 1nin.. RMS per cit•"'' •t I oltms. 20·10.000 Hi. 0.111' t.tal 1'.-ic Mlort•J • Two M•c" o,,,~ Wlllflllt V1n11r Floor Sp1ak1rs wnll 15 .. AcHstic..Snp•nsiOll Woolm -"-:l-::::-:-7'-:---~-...:.J • RHHstic lA8·2Dfl B•h.lJrw• C,,_,., rnth B•n. 129. 16·VlllH R•Mltic/$1#1,., M.,,,,.,lc C•rtrit/f• ~l lH<_ .. ~ ~ p,,_. CHARGE IT (MOST STORES) ENJOY REALISTIC SOUND FOR LESS ! Reg. Separate s259 s•'•E Items 30175 MW 4275 2·WAY FLOOR/SHELF SPEAKERS Mlnlmut·9 by Ae•H1tlc 49 !! R99. 59" Pair SAVE'10 Buy the pair for under $501 22"- hlgh air-suspen- sion speakers with 8" woofer. 3" tweet- er. 40-114 • R1alistic STA-41 AM/FM Stlf6o R1e1w1r (10 w1tts mm. RMS p•r cltann1I •I 8 ohms. 10-10,000 HT. 0.9% totlll h1rmonic distortion) • Two Minimus?ri.9 Sp11hr S11t1ms • R1•listic lAB·63 Clf""I" Srst1m • Nnafll.JO St1r10 H11dpbon1s . Includes Dust Cover 1nd Mlgnetlc Cartridge SILENT BELT·DRIVE CHANCER LAB-65 by Reallatlc SAVE s30 14995 Reg. 179u Our finest auto- m at lc changer! Adjustable anti- s k ate , c .u e/ pause. 42·2951 AM/hi STEREO l·TRACK SYSTEM OUR FINEST CARTRIDGE Modulette•-8 by R .. 111t1c SAVE 120/o SSS Reg. 99" , Lets you play 3995 . your car tape1 "'9· SAVE at home! Enjoy 49'• FM s t e reo or Upgrades most 110 AM. too. Match-turntables! Integral Ing speakers. head ~hell for fine perform· 12-1402 ance. 42·2'45 •• ECOLOGY starts Friday· at 9:·30 a.m. many limited quantities ... not all sizes may be available in each grouping ... colors and styles limited to stock on hand, so shop early for best selectionl these items available in our Huntington Beach Store women's sportswear 48PANTTOPS 59 JUNIOR PANT TOPS 62 JUNIOR BODYSUITS 47 JUNIOR SKIRTS 61 FAMOUS MAKER TOPS 47 JUNIOR PANTS 96 COORDINATES n COORDINATES 54 JUNIOR CARDIGANS 58 JUNIOR TEE SHIRTS 67 FULL AGURE PANT TOPS 112 MISSY TURTLENECKS 179 MISSY TEE SHIRTS dresses, pant suits NOW 7.98 2.98 1.98 1.98 1.98 7.98 7.98 5.98 4.98 4.98 3.98 2.98 1.98 NOW 30 JUNIOR DA ESSES 9.98 30MISSES'DRESSES 9.98 12 JUNIOR PANTSUITS 14.98 12 BASEBAU OR PVC JACKETS 14.98 lingerie, loungewear NOW 7SHALFSUPS . . 1.98 147 NYLON OR COTION PANTIES 88c 49 FLEECE ROBES 9.98 50 JUNIOR FLEECE ROBES 4.98 55 TERRY LOUNGERS . . 6.98 30LONOGOWNS 4.98 women's accessories 12 CURLEY TOP DRYERS 392 PIECES COSTUME JEWELRY 92DlsC09AGS 67 SILK FLOWERS 43 OBLONG SCARVES 26HATS . 112SUNKYSHAWLS 46SCARVES 59LEOTARDS 1188ELTS 49 VINYL HANDBAGS savings for infants 20BLANKETSLEEPERS 60 DIAPER BAGS 35KIMONOS . 45 PILLOW CASES 25 DIAPER SETS . 55 SWEATER KNIT PANTSUITS savings for toddlers 30 SCREEN PAINT TEE SHIRTS 45 BOYS KNITSHIATS 50 BOYS PAJAMAS 35 GIRLS KNIT SHIRTS 70 GIRLS GOWNS 35 GIRLS PANTS 23 CARDtGAN SWEATERS savings for girls 67PURS£S 280 BIKINI OA BRIEF UHDE RWE AR 48 DRESSES 4·6• 30PANTS4·14 54DRESSES7·14 52 BLOUSES 4-6i 1208LOUSES7·14 189 MICKEY MOUSE SCREEN TEES 70 SWEATER VESTS 4· 14 25 PULLOVER SWEATERS 7·14 20 CARDtGAN SWEA TEAS 4-14 120 SLEEPWEAR . 10 SCREEN ,,..T TEE SHtRTS savlnge for boys NOW 11.98 48c 2.98 28c 1.98 1.98 2.98 98c 3.98 1.98 3.98 NOW 2.98 3.98 98c 48c 1.98 1.98 '= 98c 2.98 98c 2.98 2'.98 2.98 NOW . 1.48 28c 4.18 2.98 5.98 1.98 2.98 98c Mc .2.91 2.98 2.98 Mc savihgs for boys 75 LONG SLEEVE KNITS 99 STUDENT JEANS 100 STUDENT BIG BOYS PANTS 75 SPORT SHORTS 125 BIG BOYS SWIMWEAR savings for men 65 VINYL JACKETS 99 S. Sl:V. SPORT SHIRTS 110 FAMOUS.MAKER KNIT SHIRT 50 THERMAL UNDERWEAR 208 SPORT SOCKS 99 FAMOUS MAKER WHITE SLACKS 35 YOUNG MEN'S JEANS 41WINOBREAKERJACKETS 45 DRESS SHIRTS 105 L. SLV. KNIT TEE SHIRTS 31 FAMOUS MAKER conoN JEANS 15SPORTCOATS 82 L Sl V. LEISURE SHIRTS 60 POL VESTER VESTS 37 LEISURE JACKETS 46 HAWAIIAN PRINT SPORT SHIRT 206 NOVEL TY PRINT TEE SHIRTS 50FOOTBALLJERSEYS 40 STRIPED KNIT SHIRTS 33 SHIRT /SWEATER SETS 45LSLV. WESTERN SHIRTS 103 KNIT TEE SHIRTS NOW 3.98 6.98 4.98 2.98 2.98 NOW 9.98 3.98 9.98 2.48 98c 7.98 5.98 . 3.98 . 4.98 3.98 9.98 19.98 5.98 2.98 3.98 3.98 2.98 2.98 2.98 6.98 5.98 1.98 savings on shoes 400 WOMEN'S SANDAL S 250 WOMEN'S FLAT SANDALS 100CHILDREN'S SANDALS NOW 7.97 3.97 5.97 yardage, notions 1nYDSPOLYESTERINTERLOCKS 99YOSQIANA 78 VOS POLY /COTION DENIM 278 VOS. KETILECLOTH PRINTS 74 VOS CHALLIS SOLIDS 241 VOS BEDFORD CORDUROY 899 VOS BROADCLOTH PRINTS 59 VOS SUPER SUEDE 72 VOS INTERFACING 81 VOS CORDUROY PRINTS 233 RUG AND CRAFT YARN 501 PERSIAN CREWEL YARN 112 MACRAME BEADS 35 MACRAME COAD 49 POP.OUT ANIMAL STITCHERY 51 smCHEfWORWEAVING KITS HOW 98c 1.98 98c 98c 1.48 1.48 98c 1.98 48c 1.48 28c 15c 18c 1.98 3.98 1.98 savings for the home NOW 203KfTCHENCURTAINS 98c 174HANDTOWELS 9lc 32QIKF1TI'EDSHEETS . 1.98 21FURNITURETHROWS .. 1.98 91 PAINT BLANKETS . 3.18 25 SHEER PANELS. . . 4.98 23SHEERPANELS 7.98 11 QUEEN WATERBED SHEETS 4.91 190TWINPERCALESHEETS 2.91 120FULLPERCALESHEETS 3.M 180 QUEEN PERCALE SHEETS . 4.98 10tKINOPERCALESHEETS . 4.91 1IOSTANOAROPILLOWCASES .. 1.98 110KINGPILLOWCASES 2.98 savings ·on fine jewelry 14M£N'SWATCHES . 11MEN'SWATCHIS . savings on toys 40GAMES . NOW ... 11.• .. 12.18 NOW .. ..• NOW 35 STA ETCH DOLLS . . .... 5.91 20I LfTTU IOYI' L.8. KNITS 10l I.ONO SlEEVI SHIRTS 3.48 20 CHARLIE'S ANGEL DOLLS 1.98 11mMTUAEM!TALMEN •... 9811 ADAMS AVENUE, HUNTINGTON BEACH-96l9731 ' .: ... 1.M ..... lie , l VOL. 72, NO. 81, 3 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ~our Hometown Dally Newspaper THURSDAY, MARCH 22, 1979 c TEN CENT,S Lee ltfarrin's Bar EqlOits Detailed .~ ' . t { ' LOS ANGELES 1Ar> A waltrl*SS testified today that LA>e Marvin left a trail or drunk,•n IO cidenls throu~b the bar~ and restaurants or Mahbu, •nd wtwn be would appear the employt."t's would say, "'Oh, ob, her.i com i. trouble." Peggy LeMoine, who s aid she has been a waitress in the beach community 17 years, ·aid she saw Marvin evicted or "eighty- shtl'd" from sev.,ral ban; and rtat•uranls bci:ause ht' bccum.- drunk and boi8terowi Anoth<>r w1tnes11 siud Marvin would "wove hJ8 arm like ;a gorilla" when he got drunk at the club where Michelle Tnola Marvm sang 1n 1965 and finally cost Marvin's girlfriend her JOb Patti Casey. former wife of the owner of the club, sajd the actor attended Ml!.::. Marvtn'l) ishowt1 and 1Jlw1.1y!i caused pro- blt>ms "Th ·re hKd to be an empty !>tool on either side or him, .. she 11t11d , "beca u se yo u 'd get whackl.'d In the face af you were sitting there." Sbe said Marvin's "loud and bois terous" behavior ruined Miss Marvin's performances and cost her the job. "She co~d.n't concentrate. She UCI Loses Profs Low Pay, Costly Housing Cited By PIOUP ROS MARIN 0t -o.llr ~ii.t Slaff Io the past 18 months , UC arvine has failed to attract pro· fes~o.rs to fill 30 open facu,lty positions because or low pay and the high cost of local housing, its chanceUor said today. Chancellor Uaniel Aldrich Jr. said professors listed those rea· sons for deciding to teach at altPrnate institutions rather than at UCI. Aldrich said competing un- iversities, such as use. have grabbed up prospective UCI pro- f essors beca us~ they offe r salaries 15 perctfnt to SO percent higher than the best UC I bid. In many of the cases, he said, professors chose to teach in othe r parts of the country because they couldn't afford to buy h ouses in Sout hern California. "They·rouod it too expensive to live he re," Aldrich said . "They simply said, 'No thank you.'" Aldrich said that in the same l8·month period, UCI has been able to till only half a dozen faculty vacancies on more than a temporary basis. "The cost or living here, and a t UCLA, is hig~er than any other of the campuses of the un· 1versity," Aldrich said. In one case of attempting to fill a vacancy. the chancellor reported. the university was un· able to persuade not only its fi rst choice to take the job. but its fi fth. . Another factor in the decisron or some professors to turn down appointments at UCI, Aldrich said, is that other universities can guarantee that new pro· fessors will get summer appoint· ments as well. which can add 20.. percent to 30 percent to their salaries. Because or budget constraints, Aldrich said, UCI cannot. (See, UCI, Page AZ) was singing under a strain," she said. Miss LeMoine re membered Miss Marvin would telephone bars looking for the actor and later come to take him home when be was thrown out. She quoted many bartenders as telling Marvin: "Time to go horpe now. No more to drink ... Miss LeMoine, recalling the name of each bartender who cut orr Marvin's drinks. said the ac tor would become "very loud. very boisterous. argumentative . When they wouldn't serve hlm, he was very unhappy ... Several times, she said, he would weave into a bar already inebriated. "They wouldn't serve hlm," she said. Al the restaurant where she is employed, the Sea Lion, she said M a r vi n was p e rm a n en t fv banned. l' · · We we r e to I d by l h) manager. if he ever comes m here again, no food , no drink.'' she said, recalling: "I just know we 'd see hlm and say, 'Oh, oh, here comes trouble,' " At that point the courtroom burst into laughter, and Marvin threw back his head and laughed (See MARVIN, Page AZ > O.•I' l'ileil .._ .. Lee ~.,.,. Sickness, Pain Told I By Patient Next Time, Pay the $2 'Limited' EDISON COMPANY WORKER SURVEYS A LONG DAY'S WORK AFTER COSTA MESA CRASH Anaheim Motorist Glances at Speedometer. Shears Power Pole in HaH i By, ~~£~!.~!~M A woman who a lleget> she suf- fered serious infection and ex· tensive scaJTing following thigh· lift surgery by Santa Ana plastic s urgeon Dr. Ralph Small 11 7 1 testified at a state m edical board bearing Wednesday. Marcia Weed, 41, of Laguna Beach, said she suffered illness and pain for several months following the June 29, 1978, operation. She was bedridden at borne with a high fever for several days, she said. Mrs. Weed's testimony came during a Slate Board of Medical • Quality Assurance license re- ~ vocation hearing which is now f underway in Santa Ana. The 29·year-old physician \ faces allegations of "gross negligence and incompetence " in connection with the Nov. 27, 1978, death of Kim Plock, 33, of Santa Ana, and in the case of Mrs. Weed. Mrs. Plock. a mother of three, died five days after she went in· to canliac arrest while undergo- ing breast implant surgery at • Small'" Santa Ana office, ac· cording to the allegations. An Orange County Superior Court temporarily barred Small from practicing medicine until the medical board reaches its decision. Wednesday, State Deputy.At- t.oney General Davld Chandler, re~ tbe medical board, , aaked Mn. Weed wby despite ber ordeal, she continued treat- ment witb Dr. Small and refused to consult another doctor unW Oc~ber. PHOENIX, Ariz. <AP> Brian Hunge rford didn't think he should get a ticket for parking in the desert, so be tossed it on the ground. He then got a ticket for littering. He appealed the S2 park· ing ticket and $23 dumping fine from city court to Superior Court. Judge A. Melvin McDonald reduced the fine to $10, but ruled that the law against dump· ing applies to Hungerlord's act. The law was designed to "punish those penons who use the public highways as garbage dumps," the judge said. adding that the lower court should have reduced the fine. Newport Man, 65, Drowns In Boat Fall Police said today that Douglas James Macintyre, 65, died Wed· nesday when he apparently fell from bis boat into the waters or Newport Harbor. Ma clntyre's body was re- covered about 2 p.m. Wednesday near bis overturned dinghy in the channel between the moored boat that was bis home and the 300 block o( Edgewater Avenue OD tbe Balboa PenlnauJa Aceording to Newport Beach poUce reports, Macintyre was seen an hour earlier by several wltneuea, all of whom told in- veaU1atlal otncen that be ap· peared to be intoxicated Police believe Maclntyre's dHtb wu accidental and plan no further tnvest11ation pendlnc the outcome ol a coroner's autopsy report. Health Care State, U .S~ Funds Plan Bared So h f p . c:;~~!?~,s~~f;0-; ~~ ug l Or . rOJeCt no unced today it will ask Congress in the next few months to take a limited first step toward national health in- surance, at a cost $10 billion to $15 billion more than present govern· mentspeoding on health care. But even the preliminary. so- called Phase One plan "would have no significant budgetary impact until Fiscal 1983" and would be contingent on con- gressional approval of effective legislation to curb hospital cost increases, said HEW Secretary Joseob A. Califano Jr. The barest details of President Carter's proposal were spelled out by Califano in a speech pre- pared for delivery in New York. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D- Mass., who discussed the plan with Carter and Califano at the White House on Wednesday, told reporters today be was "serious· ly disappointed" in the program, which he described as wasteful. "I couldn't support this pro· gram ," be said. Kennedy, chairman of the Senate health subcommittee and a longtime proponent of com· pr ebensive health insurance, said the plan fails to deal effec· lively with rising health care costs. "l think it would be a major mistake to pour billions or dollars into a health system without coet controls," he said. ·•vou add to the fires or inflation In bealtb care and bankrupt lllddle America." The secretar y or health, education and welfare insisted that "the president remains committed to the goal or provid· lng every American with cov- erage for baalc health services." By JERKY CLAUSEN 0t .. o.itr ...... Staff A proponl to..construct a $27 million water reclamation proj· eel to irrigate parts of five Orange County communities is going to state and federal agen· cies ror possible rundini. The 10-man Orange COOnty Water Di strict board of •·dir~c· tor s authorize d the· m ove Wesnesday night in Fountain Valley. The proposal. an environ· UCUCoach Quiu Post LOS ANGELES !AP > - Gary Cunningham an· nounced today he is re· signing as the basketball coach oC UCLA because he wants to spend more time with his family. No successor was an. nounced. ·'During the last year. I h ad five weekends at home out of 52, •· Cun. ningham told a news con· rerence at the school. <See story. Page Bl.> BuBing Fought r SACRAMENTO <AP> -Anti· busing forces. denouncing bus- ing as ·'the most socially destructive and indefe nsible government policy of our time,·' won Assembly approval today on a 62· 17 vote for an anti· busing constitutional amend· ment. <Earlier story. AS>. mental impact report a nd public comment regarding the project will go to the state Regional Wate r Quality Control Board and the federal Environmental Protection Agency. Approval by those agencies would supply 87.S percent or the money required to construct the Fountain Valley plant and ir- rigation s yste m to con ver t sewage to irrigation water . Called the Green Acres ProJ· ect. the system would treat IS million gallons of water d aily for irrigation of cemeteries. parks, school grounds. golf courses and fre e way l andscapi ng, a spokesman said. Officials from two cities have questioned the project ·s value. Spokesmen from Orange and Anaheim admit the waler would cost users less 1f only OCW D construction costs a re considere4. However. they contend that similar water might be supplied at less costs from a nother source when the total outlay of federal and state funds is con· sidered when pricing water. Ir given final approval. the project is expected to be operat· ing in 1983. It wouJd serve parts or Costa Mesa. Huntington Beach , Fountai n Valley, Westminster and Santa Ana. Motorcyclist Hit by Auto In Costa Mesa MUsio,n HUtory Given A Huntington Beach man was injured Wednesday when be fell from bis motorcycle and was run over by an approaching car on Placentia Avenue near 20th Street In Costa Mesa, police said. Taken to Hoag Memorial Hospital with chest injuries was Douglu Alleatborpe of 18222 Monterey Lane. Allentborpe WU reported 1n good condition lbia monlnf. ..... daJ far '11,000 at a San Fran- elleO .... for the estate ol Jen. Die Crocker Henderson, snnd· dau11der ol California pioneer Cbar• crocur. • .,,. ........ ol ti•• at the •IHtem bad a •old ln lt," ......_ Mid. "Tbll a~qule"iolt proYldll a sn•t rftOrd ror wbat ••• •la1ta1 from ti•• ~ldv.e." . Helatd1UD1oltM~ ... ,.....dlta•Un1c••••ol IMIW. lnillll•--ol UYeltOell .................... ---lrl ..... froai ..... fundl • llte Yartoul ~· ml"6anl. lome retorda U1t the dll· , .............. __ •• note mbaioaaries by age. name and 1eara or service i n Callfonda. Tbe doeumenta. detailtnc the •lrirltual a material 1NWt11 ol the ......... will be ltond In UM areld.-ol tlae .. ..._ San Juu CQiltnao, wllere Fatlaer JUDIPll'O Serra be1u 1111 wort .,..,. •. Ta. ru11• were purcbued bJ hllalr WlWam K..-etbera. arelal•l•t for tbe Catlaollc Dtoceee la Or ..... ~­........ -...... I 1raat fnMa I . a.Mrt uor, ellalrmaa llld dllet---. ol· nc.r ol Ill lnllle-bUed '1uor Corpar ..... ' ' Police s~d Allentborpe toJd tbem be luld left a driveway to 10 1outb oa Placentia and noticed a car comln1 toward blm from 1 drtyeway. H• Mid be tried to 'avoid a eolllelon. but Iott his balance and fell over. Tiie rt,bt t'ronl. wbeel ol tbe car went over his Cbeat, poUce Nici. TM driver ol the car, Carole Evonne WlWllloa, 3a22 Via Ro- ble, .. ...._ VteJo, told oftleen abe wu maklnl a left turn ftom a pri•ate driveway to 10 north oa PtMenlla whea the aceldeat occurred at 1bo4at t :40 p.m. Mesa Suffers Poirer Outage In Car Crash Electrical power to homes and busines ses n e ar Ha rbor Boulevard and Adams Avenue was knoc ked out for a brier period Wednesday when a car smashed into a power pole on Deod ar Avenue. Cost a Mesa police said. The driver or the vehicle, iden- tiried as Edward Dale Scott II of Anaheim, was taken to Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital for treatment or minor injuries, ac· cording to police. Scott told officers he was headed north on Deodar when he sa w another car approaching him near the Baker Street in- tersection. He said he acceleral· ed to avoid the o the r car. glanced at his speedometer a moment, then looked up to see the power pole in front of him. Althoug h he attempted to brake, Scott could not avoid the pole, shearing it off at the base. O ther po les a lso were dam.aged, caus ing a loss or power for an estimated 1,400 custome r s in the area. a Southe rn California Edison Company spokesman said. Blacked out were homes and businesses in the area bounded by Gisler A venue lo the north, Adams to the south, Fairview Road to the east and Jaca randa A venue on the west. Some businesses along Harbor Boulevard a lso were without power. The spokesman said it took on- ly about 15 minutes for Edison crews to restore power to the ar ea. The accident occurred al about noon and power was on again al 12: IS, he said. Coast Weather Cloudy rught and early moming hours and partly cloudy F riday. Lows tonight 44 to 50. Highs Fri- day 58to64. IN81DETOD~Y Soft ~··· PWf' 31, Oft '" IOOW to bfcomi•fJ th~ NCOftd "'°" poptllof' towrf.lt altnlcffon jn ,,.. counl'll. .. GtiPCUlt ~ ~ !"°· Sff P.ogc •. ..... .. ,_ ........ .,-~ .,....._.a ..... ..... ..,. .. ....... ....... ..., ...... .._ ~ .......... ..... =-"'" =.::-·· =...:... §=: ...... ....,_._.,.,T ........ =~ # I ... T1IMllrt a.a....., """"" Cl ......... ...."', ..... Cl M .... .. ... All ., ·~ • ... ... M ,.t.2 DAILY PILOT c ~in .Delllt1• Craps But County Outlook 'Looking Good' By TOM BAaLF.Y 0t""o.i1~ ...... ,u .. Ht'rtot brav)" rama ha t• d lpyed on~ or l wo r rOP• and fnrred farmer-. to hold back on NC>Ml' 11pnngt1ml' chorea but lht> outlook for OranHt' Ctiunl y a1raculture look ''er)' 1ood. •(l{r1cwlural 1nabsu commC'nl t'(t today "The uni> pt'\1plt· rt•oll) .-fh'l'I t'd by lite rain wen tb• strawberry 1rowt!r1'. ·• u1d Our Tbelford. ot lM Or nar Cowtl)' t 'arm Bureau · Tht> bt'rrie t:ot wt•t und Ul(lrf' "lU ~Otnl' apo1l8 t(t' A11d . of COUl"H, tN)' don't lul\l •• l()(ij( tn the markd o n <·t• tht>y re• parked "But lht> ~t rnwlk•rry l(rOWl'P• I know ttrt•n t 1·omplu111111.: 1•vt·n County Jobless -· Rate Reduced Oran.:t· Count) :. unl·mploy m ent rate dropped to ~ 2 pt,-r('t'nl in i"l'bruurv J ., tht• number of '-'mployed ptc'Oplt• rt••H·hed a rt•c Ord high994 ,700 A ccording to tht• m <1nthl)' l<ebor rl'port from th(• Statt• Employ m l'nl Oc vl'lo pmcnt Oepartmt•nt c EDDi. f't·bruary's unemploymt•nt rate was ont per· l'enl below the same month a year a~o And ai. Oran~e County 's totaJ e mployment fi gure inch es up to.Ward the one million mark, EDD labor analy1st Alta Yetter -':tites Friday !for Mesa Man J~Marlow pred1C'tt'd d ront1nucJ i.wmg up ~ard · M anulac.·tunnJt emplo) mt•n l will receive a slron& boo:.t ovl'r the conung thretc" monthi. U:> new pl a nts begin Op t>rat1on11 a nd workers arc recullt·d a rtl'r tt'm pora ry layom •. · M ri. Y1•tkr said "Tra d e. St.'rv H'('S :.. nd l'on stru('tion will expand l>l'asunullv during the second quarll'r !of 1979)." she added_ And to rondude her o pllm1 sllc aoalys 1s, Mr s. Yetter s aid . "Unemploy m e nt l in O rangl' County ) is expected to remain ut a low level relative to ne ighbor· mg counties, the .state a nd the n ation." Last month, seasonal hiring m service industries -especially at amusement parks a nd in recreation areas -paced the climb in employment and the accompanying downwa rd move in unemployment. According to EDD's report, employment in the construction industry was slowed by rains during February. t.bou1h the)' were hit by tbe fro.t <'arllfr thi11 yeiu Jt wo n't be a rf'cord <'r<>p by ~ means but It will tw • teood on.-a nd some de- lk1ou'I fruit wrll b(-hrtllnt( th . 1111.rkclM Wlthm the n1•xt week " JI m Harnt•tl or lh(• Orange County l>IV\slon of Agrfcw.lturc 1a1d I ~ nature of recent raWall prt'vc•nt.-ct a n y ~•1<n i (1 cu nt dumitl(t' an thl· county 'lS fielc.Js um.I orchurdi. 'W 1• hod plt•11ty of •nkrvulb b~t wt·.-n bhow~r11." h t: uid ''l'hat JllOwl'd th.,. nun to soak aoto lh\! ttruund and al gave f¥rmt>r• u (.'h¥ncc Lo mop up tw l wcl·n showen · · Uariwlt stud h111 burvey of the l"OUDty':. uancuJtur<aJ dCreage in· dtcat~s good c r o p s wi th Japuagus and celery expected to hit the markets 1n the neict ff'w days ' MJny rdrmers ar l' planting now aod we 1.>xpect good crops of Ht•ll JX'ppcr:. and tomatoes," he :.aid "And, of rouri.t:, the rain hai. been a blelS~ang ror the or:.ingt', lemon and avocado or· t•hardi. They love that !>all free wal t'r .. Larry Tylc•r of lht• lrvinf' Com- pany s aid ht• t>-xpt•1·ts an unus uaJ. ly b1g h l'rop of uvocadoes Uus year "Our citrus crops arc good a nd tht> ram will bcnerit them, .. he saacl,. ··But we don 'l expect ;in,x .. r.ecord crops this year since frost killed som e of our fruit. "Thl' o n e thing we ca n guarantee is that prices of much of our produce, particularly strawberries, are going to be higher." Tyler said. "The losses to frost made that ine vitable." Thetford. Harnett and Tyler agreed that what Orange Coun- ty's farmers need right now is a spell of warm. dry weather. "We 've h ad all the rain we need right now." Tyler said. "We 've got chores and planting to d o and we 'd like to be able to get on with it .. \ . . I • • I ' / Candidates for Elvis Biograpla!I More than 100 aud1t1one<i ror lead role ln a planned $10 million fil m biog raphy of E lvis Presley. Am ong thos~ were. fro m left. Bob Guclft of Petaluma. Calt[ . P e rry· Whttl' from Boaz. Alt.1 . Ennt~ Wilson from I Jouston. Tex . H.on King from Alta Loma. Caltr.: and Ron P"urr from SL Loui~ Mo. The auditions were held Wednesda>: in Los Angeles. A previous auditio_n held m N~w York attracted 230 ml'n hoping to land the lectd 111 "The King of R.ock ·n' Roll. .. Pathologist Testifies Retwns to Stand in Waddill Murder Trial Or . S harley Dris coll . ci H-arvard University pathologist. was back on the witness stand today. racmg cross-examination in t he murder trral of Dr William Wadd.Jll or Huntuigt.on II arbour Testify111g for the prosecution Wednesday. Dr. Dnscoll told th<' Ora nge County Super ior Court Jury that she found no evidence of s aline dama1:te to the batn that Waddill had aborted. The prost"<:ut1on claims Wad diJI botched the abortion and later s trangled the infant to death Dr Dnsroll told the court ~he reached her conclusion on no damage by the saline M>l uUon used lo cause the ab0rt1on alkr she i.tud.led llssuc sa mpl~ from thl· 11Janl known ai. liaby Gari Weaver tionang of Weedman. Weedman questioned tbe a-c- curacy of Dr. DTiscoll 's f10din1;s because Baby Girl Weaver 's re · mains were not immediately refrigerated after she was pro- nounced dead. He said deterior ation to the re- mains beeaUSt: of the lack of a cold tempe rature interfered with accurate analysis of caus<' o f death. J'~neral services for Mr. John R. Marlow. 94, of CosLa Mesa. will t>e at 11 a. m. Friday at the Harbor Lawn Memorial Chapel. Burial wlll be al Karbor Lawn Memorial P~rk. Marlow died Friday i\mong bis almost 90 survivors ate 25 grandchildren. 44 great· gcandchHdren. and nine great· gi:eat·grandchildren. .A 23-year resident of Costa Mesa. he was born In Tennessee aiad moved west at the turn or ttic century. homesteading in Montana. From the early 1900s uotil 1941. he worked as a coal miner and the n beca m e a br akeman and s witchman for tt1e railroad But there was a 700 job a gain in government employment isnd a pickup of 400 jobs in manufac- turing. However . it was in non· m a nufacturing employment of all kind where the l''ebruary gain was strongest. J ,600 new jobs . including those at the amusement parks and rccrea· t ion centers. Density Issue Eyed lnAliso Viejo Plan lier po:-.1t1on ~a~ conlr<tdk ll·d b y l ' a r 1 1 t' r I l· ::. t 1 m o n y b y another patholog1sl. Dr Robert Richards He believed there wa!'> saline damage lo the infant Waddill. 43. 1:-accused or strangling the infant on Marc.11 2. l97i . His r1 r~l murder t rral ende d tn a hung 1ury. reported!) i to 5 in favor or acquittal In responst'. Dr Driscoll sa id that wlull· rcfragerat1on is dc- !'>&rabll• and 1s pracli~d at her ho:-patal it would nol have made that much difrcr cncc in Baby Girl Weaver's case. The la ck o f the colct lem· prrature was compebsated for hy p laccmt:nl or lhc· baby's re- m ain:-m chemical fi xative 1m- med1alely m a laboratory en· v1ronment after her death. lie moved to Costa Mesa in 1956 to retire. He was the p~rtarl'b of a large family that 1 'ludes nearly 90 survivors. as immediate survivors in· cJUde sons Walter Marlow or Mo ntana. Monroe Marlow of S a nta Ana. Conley Marlow of Costa Mesa. William Marlow o( Fbntana and John Marlow Jr. of \Y)?st Virginia : daughters Lela W)litfield of Billings. Mont .. Mae Jqhnson of Santa Ana. Pearl Sto n er o f Costa Mesa. Betty· Buss ie or Santa Ana a nd Donna Hole of Sant.a Ana. • • . (o,,s Clean (Ip in Fraud . BLAND. Va. <AP > -Figuring t~ey had little to lose. about 100 ••mat.es at the Bland CorTec· tW>nal Center launched a phony credit card sche me that lasted more than a year. authorities say. • The scheme netted $60.000 in s~ereos. televisions and exotic r~s. including a box or frozen quail. 'The sche me apparently worked for awhile because the iDmatea oft.en diagulsed their ad· dresses, ma.king it appear they wer e attending a commuo.ity c:i>llege by UsUng their address as BCC. Bland. Va .. or lived at a country estate called Bland farm. '. Ni.aet.een inmates were indict- ed for cnidit card fraud. DAILY PILOl fM Or•"Olt(M\I 0.•tY ....... •l•wfh("t\(Of" ....... , ...... .,. ...... ~·•-by, ... °'_ c .... , Pvot•-c-.. ...... ..,., __ ........ -_,,,, ~ ,.,...., -.<:Ml• _ .. H"'1>0'1 lloM<.,. -1"'91°" ...... ,_ f4'1f'Y•llf"I tf't,,..~~..._..,._.(N\t A lll'Q .. ro9--l-l\pullll-~WO.O- -¥\ , ... ..,_ ..... "'*'--.... JJt ....... , "'""c.w-. c..r ........ .__ .._ .. _ ---~---•c.tn Vl(A lll'°'•Ott•l-0.--- 1-11-..... ,-. ............ ......,... .. _ °""''• '--..._r .... ·-----~ , f'f"OlllPageAJ UCI ••. Aldrich said the average st.a.rt· ing salary of an assistant pro- f essor at UCI is $15,000 t o $16,000. Competing institutions. he said. are able to offer the same post-for $18,000 to $20.000. The chancellor said, however , that UCI has suffered no major a llriUoo because of salary or housing conditions. Only one proressor who left did so for a more attractive salary. he said. Aldrich hailed a university re - gents plan to finance low-down payment and low-interest hous- ing loans for young faculty me mbers. and s aid it would have great impact in attracting new faculty. The university s yste mw1de program would make approx· imately $25 mimon available for the loans. Besides new faculty. the loans would be available lo junior faculty, resident at the universi- ty for up to seven years who have not attained tenure. Regents voted preliminary ap- proval of lhe plan on March 16. Final approval is expected in May. Tbe firat loans could be granted lhis tllmmer . There probably would be funds available for about 250 home loans, under the propo&ed bond issue that would finance the program. Loans are expect- ed to average 186,000 tO'SI0,000. Down payments could be as low as 5 percent, compared wtth the standard 20 percent down. Interest rates are envisioned at 8V. percent rather than the con- ventional I~ percent. ~~on Jury Weigh@ Fate OAK.LA.ND CAP> -A jury, unable to re8dl a verdict ln the ftnt two bourl of deUberaUonl in the Huey Newton murder trial,= the nl1ht locked In an 0 and botel and wu or- dered to ..-ame today thetr tee· 1\def'.UO. of the fate o1 tbe Bladr Padler leader. Tbe jury of 11 wMta and OM blac• reeom ... ne•d dettber•· Uoa todaJ at t a.•· (PST>. ,,_ nme ..... anc1cu.. ... .,. tlle , .. late ......... , after. DOOll bat .......... ,., ,... atjltt ..,..... .... , ... "°' ........... ct. Ora nge County supervisors stopped just short of endorsing development of a 20,000·home community in the coastal hills east of Laguna Beach Wedncs· day . But by the time an animated six·bour public hearing in Santa Ana ended, there appeared to be only one o~t.acle standing in the way of Board of Supervisors ap· proval of the 6;623-a cre Aliso Viejo project. Thal one obstacle was density. Aliso Viejo Company wa nts to build 20,000 resid ences that will house roughly Sl,000 people on the spread that was on ce known as the Moulton Ranch. However . Supervisor Thomas Riley wants the project whittled down lo 16.000 housing units . After tht' public hearing closed at 4: l.S p.m ., though, Riley 's iellow super visor s indicated they might be as sympathetic toward the company's plan as to Riley's scaled down version. Therefore, it is conceivabk the company next week will win the general plan ch anges it wants without Riley's vote. As far as the audience who participated in We dnesday's public hearing is concerned. at best they want land use on the ranch held at the status quo . In this case status quo is a limit o( roughly 10.000 homes on Lh e s lopes sur r o unded b y Laguna Beach , South ~guna . Lagun a Hills and Laguna Niguel. Among those opposing board approval for the project was Laguna Greenbelt President Tom Alexander. 2 Gwunen Kill Britain En~oy To Netherlands THt: HAvUE. Netherlands <AP l -Two my s t e rious gunmen shot the British am· bassador to the Netherlands and hls valet today out.skle the en· vo)"a home ·and then escaped in morning rush-hour traffic. The two died a short time later at a hoepltal. Autborlties could not im- mediately explain t he motive for tbe u1111iutlon of Sir Richard Syket, ii. a Meurity expert fOf' tbe Brililb dJplomaUc corps. PoUce aald S1kee and the » year-old Dutch valet, K•rel Stru .. b, were •hot at about t a.m. outside the ambluador's residence as the envoy was a bout to •&er Illa Rolla-Royce (or tbe 10.mtnute drive &o tbe Brttlall Emb.Ny. It•• reported u mur aa lix 1ttot1 were fired. Tbe am· bHHdor wu blt at leut once, and oae bullet •truck tbe val&. who .,., holdlftl the car door, poUuaakl . • I ' R e fc rrrng to Alrso VteJo pare nt company Phillip Morn11 Alexander charged the company with being "an out of ::.tall' billionaire c igarette manufac lurer who has come to California to try lo cram 20,000 more houses and 60,000 more people into th.is part or the county ... Riley was more conciliatory. however. He came lO the meet· ing carrying a list of L2 condJ- t1ons he wanted attached lo ap. provaJ of the huge prOJCCt. Foremost among those condJ. lions was limiting the number of housing uni~ a llowed 6n the former ranch s1t.e to 16.000 Prosecutor Robert Chatterton contends Waddill was deeply m debt at the time of the abortion. lacked insurance and feun:d <i lawsuit based on brain damaJ{c to the infant. Defense attor n e y Charll'!'- Weedman derues the indebted ness claim ins1st1ng t hat h1:- clienl was financially secure He a lso contends the baby wal. beyond revival when WaddilJ ex ammed her tn the hospital Today Dr Driscoll. also Chief of Pathology al Boston Hospital for Women . s t ood by h t'r med ical findings under the ques f'rot11PageAf MARVIN ••• with everyone else Pressed by Marvin's attorneys on c ross-examination to r e- member more details of the inci· dents and who accompanied Marvin. she reluctantly said she bad seeo Marvin with actors Crsa r Romero and Neville Brund SENIOR~­ GTIZEll SALE I 001s to choose from! PIKED FROM s1 COITAMllA Ht I. mtt IT. (Acfoll "°"' ..... '*' to Malte CGleldUll) 642 .... 7 Mor\-P'tl 1().6 laL 1().6 aa.d .... ) Many fabrics, Many styles OVER 100 Recti ner Rockers and Wall Reel i ners IN STOCK Immediate FREE DELIVERY SALE ENOS MARCH 31 • Slta'Ncase a • MllllON Vll.IO 21192 ......... lllcwy. (Comer of Marguerite and Via Elcaor) 4ta-1902 Mon.. M 10-6 tat. 1().6 OCll9d .... CALIFORNIA Thuridllv. Mwch 22. 1979 C>Ail Y P9LOT .45 Anti-bus Plan Advances Measure Two. Steps From State Ballot SACRAM F.NTO t r l A ti.ate toatLUullonal amendm ut r .. lrll'Uq ma ndatory busi ng fcw ia&eoat.ion, aimed t a.top-Plaa ta. Lo. Ansel • b~lna pro-f:· wu only two slf'J>5 away tbe 1tate ballot lod11)' WUb approval in today's 1cbeduJed /Usembly volt>, tlw measure would nt•t•d onh· routine concurrt>nre by the Senate lo qwilily for the bl\llot THE MEA.'tlJR£. ~C'J\ 2 by Sen. Alan Robbin .• 0 Vun Nuys, 1s a produl.'t uf i;trong oppos1 lion, part1cuhtrly m :.uburbun areas, lo the Lo~ Angelc·s bwting program that started la l faJI. "Tbe Los Angelt!S compulsory bualog program 1s a dtsaster - disrupting thf' •<'hOOI llvts or tboue.ands of youn.-cat rs. forclnj lamlUts lo Ott the dlatrict to avoid r~ bullol(, and coet.lnc tupayl"l"S needleH mllUona of dollars." the noor aponaor, A11 eemblyman Bruce Youn11. D· Cerritos, sald ln a •tatemeot on the eve of Ow vol«>. 1~b e meas ure s urvived a "ruclt\I Leist l1:st wt-ek when Lbe Asi.embly Ju<hcaary CommlUe.·. normllllY Lbe graveyard for anti businfl proposals. pass~ IL 10 2 SCA 2 would require !llitl~ courts lo follow federal :.Land ards tn d~grcguUon orders So lar, federal courts bave re· quired busing only 1n ca~ of dehberate segregat.Jon by school dastrlc~ aoaaaN say:; h is mtaaurc, ti approved ·by voters, would atop Los Angeles busing lmmedialely and would prevent almllar orders ln otber cities where eo·called d e racto ae1regatlon a product or bous· lou putlern11 rather than de· llbnal.t' acts by school boards - was round. Opponents have questioned that predict.ion on two grouods: a t least ooe judgt? found that Los Angeles aeeregaUon was de· Hberately caused, aod SCA 2 itself may constitute a de- Uberate act of segregati~n . Another goal or tbe measure is to prevent the so-called Pipeline Permits Asked April Ruling Forecmt on Sohio Issue LOS ANGELES <AP> -The SouUI Coast Air Quallly Manage- ment Durtrict's chairman says the board could rule on Standard Oil Co. o( Ohio's request for en- vironmental permits for its oil pipeline project by April 15. But the chairman or the state Air Resources Board said Wed- nesday be is not sure Sohio will ever go ahead with lbe pipeline whose inUtial cost and 20-year operating expense is estimated by Sabio to be $1 billion. The proposed line would transport Alaska crude oil from Califorrua to Texas The Cleveland-based 011 firm resubmitted an application to the AQMD on Wednesday seek- ing the necessary permits (or the plpelloe operation. The AQMD and the ARB must both evaluate the plao Sohio abandoned last week because of delays in obtaining approvals. OC Admne Hired SACRAMENTO (AP> The University of California has hired a $210.a-day consultant to advise its president on dealing with lbe news media Universit y s pokeswoman Sarah Molla said Wednesday that Murray Fromson, a former CBS television correspondent GO (.____sr,_~_TE_J who was a deputy cam_palgn manager and media adviser for Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. last · year, is being paid mostly from state funds. LOS ANGELES <AP > -The home of former California Al· lorney General Evelle Younger has beeo ransacked by one or more intruders, police report. Younger's gardener dis- covered a broken side window and notified police Wednesday afternoon, Lt. Warren Larson said. Younger, in private law practice in Los Angeles, was out or town at the time. Sdtettte 1Jnco11ered BERKELEY (AP) -PoUce say there may be more arrests in the case of a University of California senior who was ar- rested and booked for investiga. lion or atlempUng to sell copies of final examinations . Police said 21-year-old Quincy Fassett~ was arrested Tuesday a fter six copies of final examina· lions were found in bis Oakland apartment. easy /tlemurn Del~ated SACRAMENTO <AP) Should bottled water be taxed? Should diabetics have to pay tax on their needles and syringes? The stale Senate Revenue and TaxaUoo Committee says no in both cues. It voted 6-0 Wednesday on bills sending the proposals to the Senate Finance Committee. The committee also voted 4·2 OD SB 56 by Seo. David Roberti. D·Los Angeles, lo increase the deduction for transportation ex- penses as part of a charitable contribution from 7 cents lo 17 cents a mile. Jt needed five votes for passage. .......... r1c ........ LOS ANGELES <AP> -A ma- jor fire at the former Wallach's Music City, a Holly wood landmark for two d ecades, caused an estimated $250,000 damage early today, fire or. ficials said. Spokesman Martin Garza said 19 fire companies battled the blaze ..at Spelvin's Musical Instrument Co. at the corner or Sunaet and Vine. He said the ftre apparently broke out in a crawl space between the first and second stories, but lbe flames burned a Jaree secUoo of both noon. eee ~,,,,,_......_Mother Nature never thought of! J Naturally the real thing looks good. But it's cold. hard. noisy, expensive ... and a chOfe to maintain. Why not go NATURAL the easy way With NEW natural bnck or slate realism found in a no-wax Solanan floor from Armstrong! These incredibly natural-looking NEW Solanan floors stay looking like new with Just regular washings. thank& to Armstrong·s exclusive Mlrabond • no-wax surface. It protects the rich natural colors underneath .. colors that are built up of thousands of varicolored vinyl granules fOf unusual depth. richness of colOf. and design realism. Natural· looking Solarian floors really are easier ... easier to live with .• walk on ... maintain. See how easy It Is to GO NATURAL with no-wax Solarian floors from Armstrong .••. starting as low as *216 ...................... .... ....-~ naturally lt'I trom @matrong GaBPnGd. .. ,..,,,.,..,,., ...... ~·, ....... __,,,...... I~ m •oomv.:e::g.~- ==. ''·~ -·~-.n:...---. cw:::.IA ·. li.111\111 9 ..... (714tmNltl =·"'11.'H!S' ... CJM)J11481 ... . m e tropolitan plan, recom- mended to a Los Angeles judge by a group of experts because or the decllnlng number or white students in Lbe district. The plan would extend man· datory busing beyond lbe city limits to a number of largely white suburban areas lo Los Angeles County and possibly Orange County. Slaughter Of Goats Schednled SAN DIEGO <AP> -A repeat or the 1976 wild goat slaughter on San Clemente Island that killed S,000 of lbe animals and enraged the public is being planned ror th.is summer, ac- cording to the Navy. Some 3,000 goats must be eradicated b y Navy sharpshooters to thin an over· populated herd that threatens the island's ecology. The San Diego Union reported today. .. WE A.RE under federal man· date to maintain Lhe ecology or the is land ,·' said a Navy spokesman who asked not to be identified. The mass shooting program will begin around June 1 and will uWize Marine ma rksmen firing from helicopters as well as on the ground. The AndaJus1an goats, native to Spain, are believed to be an· cestors or a s maJI he rd brought to San Clemente by SpanJarc;f s over 200 years ago to provide food for future explorers. AT ONE time . the goat population was estimated at 10,000 before depopulation ef- forts were launched when the island was denuded or foliage. Deer have been exterminated from Lbe island. Used as a Navy gunnery range since 1936, the island. located 55 miles northwest of San Diego, is 20 miles long and ranges from two to six miles wide. It's Mine 4 ............. Alvilla holds her newborn baby gorilla at Roeding Park Zoo in Fresno. The female inf ant is the first gorilla born at the zoo. Alvilla is on a breeding loan from San Diego Zoo which will get the baby gorilla. The mother was transferred to Fresno after failin g to mate with male gorillas at San Diego Zoo. Airliner Slates LolV Fare Plans OAKLAND CAP > -World Airways announced plans lor scheduled dally flights across country for $99.99 beginning April 12. "It's the average person's turn to fly on a budget without fight· mg red tape. hne pnnt and other hassles." Edward S. Daly, president of the Oakland·based a1rlinesa1d Wednesday. The only other S99 transcontinental nights a re operated on a once-a-week charter basis between New York and Los Angeles by the Oak.Janet-based Trans lnternationaJ Airlines. The Trans lntemationaJ flights are offered through the Councii of International Education Exchange, an educational travel service. THE WORLD AIRWAYS eastbound nights are scheduled to depart at 7:20 a.m .. stop 10 Los Angeles and arrive in Newark at 5:20 p.m. The night schedule calls for nights leaving Los Angeles at 10:15 p.m ., stopping in Newark and arriving in Baltimore at8:4S a .m . The westbound travel schedule calls for a Newa rk departure at '7 p.m ., a stop in Los Angeles and arrival in Oakland at 11:45 p.m . Another flight schedule caJls for departures from BaJUmore at 10:30 a.m .. a stop at Newark and a des tination in Los Angeles at 3: JO p.m. SPRIN POWER TOOL SALE 19.99 Rockwell • Develc>ps 10.000 opm.Flush Hnd1 on J sides. along veni cal surfeces and 1n comers Front and rear handles for positive C01'11rol. Double 1nsul11ed for clcctncal safety 4401 I 2-SPEED JIG SAW Base lolls 45• in either dorec· 11on 10 cut wood. toghl or heavy metal. com1><>a111on. plex1glas10 plastic F1ngur top speed selector. anll·splot basernsen. 4310 1-HP DELUXE ROUTl:R He1rVv·du1v1 Prec•s•on cah· b1a1ed 1n H64 rn •• vurtical depth ad1us1men1s. 22.000 rpm 7616 Yc.fn. POWER 13-Pc. Drill Bit Set DRILL tJ high-speed bits from For ltghl·dutv work. Drills 1116 through 1/4 In. For Comp.cl •nd llghlwe1gh1I ~-•n. steel, Yron. h•rdwood, wood,me11l.p1t11lc.W1th His 9.0 amp motor, 1~ Wrap-•round shoe; double ~ 7004 fitted 1ndend caH. SIJ H.P. Teteecoplng blede ln&l.flated. W11h combin1llon •••••••••I glmd. Blade Incl. 4611 bhtde. 7300 .................... . 19.95 I , I-Pc. SCREWDRIVER SET ·Scluent bledea lot eictra tum. Int power. Slolltd tlpa. Ctnme Vin~ TllSQ 1~N.GASSNN Wrth S1f-T·Tlpo., Feetur .. 111-pott- tlon t41tt>utetor, autom•1ic ct11ln olllng. .. 1-wNCtl« ~. XL STOllHOUIS 'Ml& .. Mf.t S&N.1-. IM .. '· ( II 0 ... le ec· OI alt .n: ll i18 c ( oraoo•Coa•t oa•tv P1101 Editorial P!Hl_e ............................................................................ lhu,.dey, Merc h 22. f979 Robert N. WHd/Publlsher Thomes Keevll/Edltor Barbera l(relblCh/Edl torl•I Paoe Editor ity Rec~gnizes bild Care Need Thl' c l)' o( Co ta Mesa ha• shown comm ndabl to~~uvitv ror th conct"rns ol working parenui who mu t avt• thclr pre-cbool a1 chJldren in lb hand• or d y .,. ri nurs<•ry operators I n Uus o c of tangled <'<"onom1c uncertainty . It hos becom ever more frequent to Cind o mother nc !d1n.c l.O work tn help bal11nce the fomUy's book Al th1 week's City C-0unctl m<' hn~. council m ·m· tM.-rs exprc~ed the olmo.'l unanimous i-.enUmcnt th1at the ommcrrinl cure or children or working parc nb wH u prop4..•r ac·Uvsty m a re 1denlaal r a Several Collcg0 Park r u h meowner. had prot 5led &bot commercial of)<'ratlo~ in a home, especially those which use n garage, were improper and a v1olat1on or clty ~cs. Whtie t he N>uncsl dtd vote lo deny a family In the CoHeg" Park area the rtght to use their garage at. p1art of a day care nur 'ery . the l wmakers a ssuaged the rears or 90r kang parent~ tha t t heir children were not welromc In U.eir own neighborhood~. Counc ilwoma n Nor ma I lcrtwg hersl!lf a day c&re oen tcr operator wondered a loud at one point an the d1s- OUSbion tf sOmt! people would r~ther see the children tended for 10 an industrial area ('ouncllman Donn Hall srud day c a re hom es. which are h <'t!nsed by the ('ounty . are ~ppropri atc m r~~idcntlal area:-. so lung as they un: nol bunched The council"s action to dcv£•1op a policy tha t would permit day care operations w1lh up lo six childre n wo:, the proper ste p to take I .andmark Grows Costa Mesa's South Coast Plaza becomes more of a landmC1rJ< eve ry day. It was impressive when it opened 12 years ago· it has g r own and become m ore im pressive ever since. That's hardly the p lace lo s top, reckons th e Segerstrom family . More exciting things ar e in the air. Alongside the s piffy new South Coast Repertory theater is n s ing a massive, 350,000-square-foot office building, a lready 80 percent leased .. . Saks f"ifth Ave nue opens this fall .. . Twin office towe rs will rise ne arby between now a nd 1981. . The original portion of lhe mall will be re furbished to rbc tune of SI million ... South Coast Plaza Hotel (remem ber the conjecture a bout too many hotel rooms being b uilt in the area?) will add a ne w wing with 200 to 400 more room s ... We appla ud the vitality of this de velopment a nd cheer the vigorous contribution South Coast P laza brings to the comm unity's eco nomy. And we desperately hope th a t adeq uate traffic facJlitics will com e with these additional developments . Bris tol Street already is a nightmare and s urrounding s treets arc rapidly fo llowing su it. Three la rge offi ce buildings, along with the additional retail outlets and an enlarged hotel, can only add to the burden. Evaluation Ti01e \ The Newport-Mesa Unified School Oistr_i~t Board of Education hung out the help wanted s ign not too long a go to find a s uccessor for the departing Duke O 'Brien. He r e presented Ar ea 2. a section o( Costa Mesa. Ten applicants s howed up, with backgrounds as diverse as Ora nge County is large. And in an unus ual m ove to determine which of these aspirants would be best suited for the job, the board T uesday nigh t held a m ass intervie w, open to the public. With the 10 eager candida tes facing the m in the front row, the school board put a series of tough questions to t he m, listen ing in tently to each a ns wer. trying to de - lt:rmine who should sit in O'Brien's old seat until election lim e in Nove mber. This is not a particularly attractive time for citizens W covet a position o n a public policy makin g board, ~specially in education. · The problem s are complex and getting only more so with each passing day. Financing, binding arbitration, strikes by public e m ployees a re o nly a few o f the con- trovers ies that await a ny future trustee. And so these 10 Costa Mesa r esidents are to be com - fnended for their interest in public educa tion. • And the school board is to be equally comme nded for frying to evaluate a s best it can. with the public looking on, who would be a worthy successor. • ()pinions expressed In the space abo'(e are those of the Dally Pilot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and irt1sts. Reader comment is Invited. Address The Daily Piiot, P.O. Sox 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92826. Phone (714) 642-4321. Boyd/Husbands ByL.11. llOYD Average Bulgarian man •nda five hol.lra a week litlptq out around the bouae. Ol.apetiq. Walt, that's un· eaJJed for. Merely comment preliminary to the r e port taat no other male national •1•here devoc.et so much U.• dolnc boulebold chorea. 1'ere ll a tcbool of tboulbt, J011 know, wblcb bolds that ---who dive Into the .. memaldn1 Jobi tend to tanacea tbetr wtvee incllrect-i.. Not all ladMa appreciate die ~-You know Gloomy GU8 what old Andre Maurola aald: "HoUlekeeplng ln com· mon le for women the acid test." It's known, Incidental- ly, that the buaband leaat Hkely to tackle houaebold taab la the Ensliahman. E ver bear of a predatory tree? Neither had I. But a clie nt reporta tbat auch there be. Tbe atran,ier Ile. ll kllla other treet ln tta stru11le to reach for u~. Q . "Whlcb U.S. Pntldenta never beld an1 otber electl" office?" A. Gnat. Taft, Hoover ud &iHDhawer. TMMl'IMll,...portwMa rrtaela Cloeameat ealled •• ,...... .. piort" wbleb .... = ,. ..... t.o ....,. lo •'-"•barbor. llore Or•••• It•• la Mel..._, A•t.r.Ua, U.. .. .., ...... , ..... Alla• 4' ..... J acl< And rson Pilot Fatigue Problem Evaded W ASIONGTON -The scene wu all too familiar that day at tbe airport T h.-weary c rt-w rne m t>ers of A US ulr fr el((hlcr lookod bont' l lrt'd und spoke atmo:.t rncoh'crently when ttwy ur rl ved at thl' f te ld And with tiood r...asoo Thty had only three hour•' :ii~ ·p iafler nJnc hours m nJght and a total of 23 houn on duty Their UoeinJ! 707 frcll(hlcr tool( the entire runway to get off th" ttround As It rlnally lifted off. the plunc vt.~rt.-d 11harply to the right. then left , before colUd· mg with a tret.t und a utility pole Carecmn.: out or control, the giant craft rlp1led throu.ch trl'cs. poles and rooftop~ und bcl{an ditu nt~gratlng ~fore It crashed upside down on" pluyeng held. THE CREW wus klll('d, ~ind 77 persons on the .ground were .crushed by debris or burned to death in the n aming inferno. Investigators on the scene fQund that the pllrnc's controls had been Improperly set, depriv· ing it or critical power needed fo r sufficient takeoff thrust. They blamed the mistake on the exhatu1ted condition of the crew. The tragedy occurred on Oct. 13, 1976, at Santa Cr uz. Bolivia. Yet It could have occurred to a U.S. crew virtually any lime and anywhere. It could have OC· curred to a crew transporting passengers. instead or freight. For the shocking fact about the Santa Cruz disaster is that the crew of the aircraft was operat- ing wilhJn Federal Aviation Ad· m inistration safety regulations The ruJes regarding fatigue arc alar mingly lax and have not been s ignific a ntly modifie d since L934. While pilot fatigue Is a recur· Mailbox rent theme In foreign accident reporu, American ln vesligators have cilcd ratigue at a (act.or In '>nly one commer cial airline cra11h between 1973 and 1977. "Human error" Is cited as the cou11e o' mOtlt accidents. AN OFFICIAL for the Na· llonal Tnins porluUon Safety Board, which Investigate~ air criuhe.. told our reporters Tom Roeenallel and Moira Forbes, "We stay away from it (laUgue> In om ciaJ board report.a, unless we have hard evidence" that the pllot.s stretA:hed their flight re· gulations or spent their rest lime carousing Instead of sleeping. But pilots the mselves told us shocking stories of falling asleep at the controls, or or drinking t.o overcome the Insomnia induced by their long a nd ir regular hours. "I've been a basket case from Oying so many wei rd hours," said Harris Dexter, a pilot for a major airline. Another pilot, who asked to have his name withheld, tokJ ~ he used to drink a pitcher or two of beer to combat sleeples.sness. a chronic problem for pilols Vlho must try to sleep during normal waking hours. Sleeping pills are a common re medy, he added. The ere~ of one plane report- ed that its pilot fe ll asleep on a landing approach just half a mile from the runway. A co-pilol told us he saw his captain fall asleep at 2,000 feet moment& after taJceoff. NIGIJI' FLIGHTS, changing time w nes, er ratic schedules and brief layovers all contribute to an impairment of the human bo d y kno wn t o m ost air t r a velers as "Jet lag." This familiar condition is an inconve- nience to a businessman or vacationer: 1t can be a tragedy when it occurs to an aerhne pilot with hundreds of lives en his care A Univl'rs1ty of Cahrornia study concurs: "When humans are asked to perform at a time in their <24-hourl cycle when they are usually asleep, their performance is impaired.•· Yet the FAA discounts such warnings. "We do not perceive any t hreat to u fety" in the FAA-fs current regulations gov· erning fatigue , said Dr . 11.L. Reigha rd. the FAA 's air sur- geon. Fatigue. he told-us , is "a s ubjective factor -only the pilot knows if he is suffering from iL" The FAA does not plan to allocate more money to do re· search on fati~uc. Footnote: The FAA 's disturb· ing official attitud e is con· t radicted by other federal ex- perts. Gerrilt J . Walhout, the National Transportation Safety Board 's h uman fa c t o r s s pecialist , s aid that more re- s ear ch would lead to s uch dramatic changes as "different working t)ours, different flight leRS and different home bases for pilots." Jet Noise Victims Find Complaints Futile To the Edit.or : Re : Letter or 3/ 15179 titled ~oiae. Complain\&'': With such an impresaive tiUe of "Executive Director , Com- munity Airport Council'', Mr. J oseph E. Irvine s hould be ash a m ed to present s uc h ridiculous airport "statistics" on the numbers of pe rsons who have registe r ed complaints about airport noise. It is ludicrous to compa re the numbers or complaints filed, against the total population of Or ange County. How can t he roar of the jets taking orf from the Orange County Airport in any way disturb the residents or Fountain Valley, Huntington Beach or any other location ex- cept in the Im med iate vicinity or the airport? MOREOV E R, si nc e no punitive action is taken against planes that violate the pre · scribed take orr pattern and/or exceed the allowable nolse, the frustratt!d residents of Newport Be ach are juaUfled in conclud· ing that their caJls of protest are futile and therefore other action must be taken to preserve our rights against this noise pollu· lion. Mr. Irvine's conclusions prove that starting from an invalid premise, staUaUcs can be made to jusWy any polnt or vlew. H.K. LEVINSON •. To tbe ll:ditor: Tuaday, March 6 had con· alde rable meaning for the voters reticlinc in the various cities and townsbls>t that m ake up Cout Communit y College District. Tuesday wu a "non-election" day ln whJtb v~rs did not 10 to the polls to elect their school board membera. Because or • law puaed tn Sacramento lut year, tcbool board elections for mott dlltrictl bave been mowd · w.ct to November. Altboulb tbe wtedom fl tbil deelaloa ii .. batable, tt •• • f alt HeOIDllll· TM Plliod bet..-llal'd Md New..._ can be UMd lo NYiew ............ .., ......... pnblt• tb8t belet our loea1 edaeattonal 1y1tem. Al "•tal'Wl," I mlPf. 11111•: -antew aDd ela••t•· •• 11HHHrf, die PHHD PN· ........ wlUela ~ .... bOG'tl ...... Cllllmllblllt> lo nmalD •• .me. ........ ,... • .. elected officials who know their constituencies and· are able to meet their needs. The election or board members at-TargeTn a col- lege district that spans over 80· square miles, J 1 cities and towns. and 600,000 people does not serve the interests-or locaJ control. The time may be ripe 'in this ProposiUon 13 e ra to man· date election by district. There is an urgent need for v a lid inform ation and data which the interested citizen can use to appraise the things that are going on in education. The practice of s poonfeeding the public limited doses of data should be replaced by a more adequate information program which deals with failures as well as accomplishments. Recent a l- Jegalions by a teachers' group that the district has m isused public funds concerns the a verage citizen who has re- ceived no or very little Informa- tion from his elected orricials. There are other issues, I'm sure. The months ahead should see them discuased and debated with greater public interest and active partJd pation. LE Pf ERIS LA VRAKAS, PhD To the Editor: The statua quo, no growth, no highway Improvement majority on the present Newport Beach City Council ahould be able to learn a lesson from the traffi c problems Lacuna Beach ls su!- (erin1 with aa a result or years ol neglect and procrastination in making much n~ed highway Improvement.a. Laguna Be.ch tried to stand s till while t he wo rld a round them WH proiretslvely growing and now you can aee the dim cuJt and tragic end results. TraJnc concestfon, a mountinc number of death• and ipjurles on hiChways that should bave been lmprovtd years a10. You can't atop ~; If you ti'>' JOU are oal1 yourself, JOU either pow, improve and up .,.. or ,ouvtptete . . uaa.. u.e preeeat Ctt1 Coun· ell maJortt1 baa IOID• l .. al •aJ o1 ,_.. o11 and momtortaa tbe lncomblt outllde traffic, then ll no way tbat and·b11hwa1 tm· provellMll& Wnktnl will wort to tbe ......... ot tbe people of Newport Bean. •••-'UM •••• natrtn.& IN Vin of the t•Uoplaa la· == eleltM oftlelalt to a ftatioe _. tbe pendin1 Gana a tar ti ..... ftl t••••• Umltatloa latUatJve, c.... ..... ·~ otd .. """"' ..... cttJ operau.. ... •. ,.... .. --• .. .,.. ................ atralU .. ••rtMlflll• •••...... ....-:It --, .. ta ..... . ,,. .... _ ........... . -.. -"'.......... .. ............... ,.ae, tbat ...... .. .. • ••Id bJ ................ ~ I the welfare a nd continued pro· gress of our fair city. . There is no ·way the city can a fford to ma ke the essential im· pro vemenls in our highway system unless the City Councll can e ncourage some outside fina ntial assistance a s they have done in the City of Irvine. You can't look to CalTrallS for this kind or help, ~ause it is co mmo n kno wl e d ge tha t Newport Beach is not on their list or favored cities. We believe in sensible and practical controls, but you can't operate and rule Newport Beach as an island by itself, with no re- gard for what is happening and going on around you. It is hoped that some improve· ment in the wisdom of the City Council maj ority will soon sur· ~~. . E .P. BENSON sae.i Sere••• To the Edit.or: Re: March 15, 1979 edttorral "Airport Noise." The statistics rationalized by the hlrt!d hack Joseph Irvine are deliberately distorted. For every complainlng caJI, there are a thousand silent s c r eams as the thunderous aircraft invade our homes and batter our sensitivi ties. Because the majority of WI sul· fering resident.a no longer com- plain does not mean we do not care about this encroachment. It meana we are desperately try- ing to do our jobs and llve our lives In spite of the jet noise stress. Other means will be round to c urb this tra uma as we no loncer have the time nor the pa· tience to ring that number to no a vaU. WINIFRED VOEGELIN Se••lisStdlalles To tbe FAJtor: Sen. Jobn&bmlts bu aald be coulden btrmell a a .. eller tint aqd 10 hu det«mined to teeeb here ln Or...,_ County aad IO up to Saer&IDllllO and repretent UI WM and U oftea M ti ll eoDVe• nlent to do IO. 'J'lae Piiot, la ita editorial, seems to tblnk be abould be In Sacramento f\all Ume, workln1 for us, 1lnce tbat '• what be ta beiq paid lor. Aa ,.,.. may now bave noted from the ladr ot public rnpo111e to JGur editorial, the public l• aaU.n.d. MM up. TM public knows when Ill well off Uld so should you. Leave well eGOUah alone. BEV&llLY EVANS ..,.._ ...... To tbe t:dltor: It ii UDfortuaate &bet JOUr t ' editorial writer chose not to pre - sent both sides of the issue re· gardibg Orange County Transit District vs. transportation-for the disabled thousa nds living and visiting in Orange County. In this age or space travel it's an insult to one's intelligence to slate "there's just not a reliable lift availa ble." What's being used by other transit distncts which are complying with stale and feder al laws? What does OCTD use on djal-a-lift? YOU CIT E cost as a maJor factor in the board's decision not to comply with the law. yet you neglect to mention the identical cost or air conditioning which is provided on each bus. No law re- quires this; to say nothing or ad· ditionaJ fuel required to operate it. Accessibility modification is a one-lime expense which would obviously increase revenue or OCTD -hardly a total loss. Sympathy is not needed or welcome. Rather, implementa· lion and enforcement of current law is expected! Now is the time because the law says so. YVONNE BAGSI'AO, President OC Chapter, Calif. Assoc. of the Physically Handicapped r.-terA ..... 1 To the F.ditor We bear a lot about how im- possible it is to prevent illegals from lnflltratlng the border . And it is, for the Border Patrol, but what about the Army and the National Guard? W e h a v e hun d r e d s o f thousands or troops, d rawing the ir pay a nd ea.ting t hree Squares a day. They are in bar- racks, on war games. in train· ing. Why could they not 1et their training along our borders? Wily couldn't part of their war games be to prevent the Illegals from infUtraUnc tbelr lines? They could uae barbed wire entaqJements in ce rtain areas, artUJery •Pott.en, men pat.roUna In Jff119 or jual oo foot. They could be 1.,,..ad In a thin UDe aJoac both bordera. Tbey could eitber cbale UM We~ acl'Oll tbe border, or appre tMtn and turn tbem over to tbe Border Palrol. Perhape ti tbe Army thoutbt they were doing a useful Job, more people would enllst. Tbe aoldltrs have to be 10mewhere, why DOl aloq tlae bord«! JIM BOLDING • L.nen ....... ,....,, -..--. , ..... .. c...--....,. .. flt ~.,........_ .... .. ,~~--.......... . t l•elt _,.,._ •• All letten"'"' ._ .... ................................. ...,. ................ ....._ ... _ .... ............................ l. STOCKS I BUSINESS COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS Thur Jay's 2 p.1n. (Ef1') Pri e ' ~. Mwoh 22. 1m s DAl\.Y PtlOT 87' FoodPrlees Manufacturers Seek Alternates BJ ftLVIA POHIEK ~ ............ ~ When prices ot certain foods or lngredieolll soar. con· sumen are not alone ln trying to liod lower-priced alternatives. Food muufacturers do tbe same. Tbe latest enmple: vanilla. A vanllla :ibol'Uee ls expected Jate in 1979 or early in l980, and a vanilla crunch almost surely wUJ force the supermarket price or vanilla extract higher. MADAGASCAlt, AN ISLAND OFF THE east coast of Africa, grows most of the vanilla beans used by American Oavoring manufacturen and food producers. Its govern· meot bas fixed vanilla bean prices for years. raising them steady even during times of surplus. As a result ol poor weather and a sharp rise in demand from European users, a shortage of vanilla beans has de- veloped a.nd prices have jumped dramatlcally. A kilo of beans that sold in Madagascar for S23 a year ago costs S30 this y~ar. lo 1980, the price could jump to $45 or $50. It is futile to try to predict the impact of a vanilla squeeze on the contents or price of Ice cream, son drinks . candy, baked goods or other products that .use the Oa9or· ing. Although vanilla adds to the taste or many products, onJy a s mall amount i s needed. Also, some users have built up fair · Jy large inventories or have commitments for Money's Worth deliveries. But others may be forced lo substitute artificial vanHla. One firm that switched long ago to a vaniUa s ubstitute -called vanillin -is Hershey Food Corp.. tbe can- dymakeF. First, it had trouble obtaining a steady supply of good quality vanilla. Theo it found that consumers could not tell the difference between products flavored with vanillin and products flavored with vanilla. In blind taste tests, consumers often said lbey preferred products made with vanillin. At the other extreme is Kraft Inc .. which makes the "all-natural" Dreyers ice cream. It won't consider making a switch. "WE WOULD TAKE A PRODUCT OFF lhe market before we would compromise our formula," said Alao Geoffrey, marketing manager for the company's da.tr} group. "We've built up the Dreyers brand and customer satisfaction by mainta1ng all natural ingredients." Whether a food manufacturer should alter the ingre· dients in a product or introduce new ones that use cheape1· or nutritionaJly more valuable substitutes is not easy to rte cide. Food processors can, and do, guess wrong. Several years ago. ror instance, wh en beer price: climbed and consumers began to worry more about thei1 diets. General Mills brought out a variety of low·fat sub stitutes made from textured vegetable protein . The sub stitutes bombed. "CONSUMERS WANT FOODS WIDCH contain les: fat and fewer calories but not al the expense of g001 taste," says Caleb Blodgett, executive vice president fo consumer foods at General Mills. Will consumers switch for the sake of their pocket books? The answer, of course. depends oo consumers an• corporatk>o.s. Some consumers will never give up steak just as some companies will continue using reaJ vanilla. No one knows how bjgh prices must rise to compel con sumers to change buying habits. As one illustration. whe1 margarine prices began rising in the mid·l970s, butte sales picked up. even though margarine still was prioo about 32 cents Jess per pound and most consumers wer aware margarine is better for health. Next: ~y·made Foods Ross E. Watson recently joined Fred. S. James & Co of California, Irvine. as an account analyst and accoun executive. He is former manager of national accounts and $pecia lines for Farmers Insurance Group in Santa Ana . • Gloria Bandsma, Laguna Niguel, has been named of fice manager for How11rd Mark & Co .• Inc., Laguna Hills. In addition to office responsibilities. she coordinate construction or development projects between the corr pany and its subcontractors . • Jon ll. Appel has joined Eocom Corp .• Irvine. as dirct tor or customer engineering. A General Automation employee for nine years. h, spent lhe last four as director or customer engineering . • Sann Mcinerney, Costa Mesa. has been named ad ministrative coordinator at Toral-Vabey and AssodlteL Inc., Santa Ana. The company Is involved with group insurance con cepts, design, cost control and lmplimentatlon . ... Mlcrodala Corp., Irvine. has named Frank fl &obertllOll to be director of dealer operations. responslbl for nationwide dealer operations. Jim Davia bas been named national sales manager fo tbe dealer operation. He is responsible ror the acquisltlo of new dealers and the development or dealership throughout the network. Robertson is former direct.or or marketing. service and national sales manager at lbe Mlcrodata company . • lelm W. Scllloealag, San Juan Capistrano. has bee named Loft A.Dgeles ione manarer for the home product financing deparlqlent of Genera Electric Credit Corp. The sooe baa 11 offices in southern California. Ariion and Nevada providmg retaiJ credit and inventory financ in1 services to area appllonce, home furnishing~ televiaioo·stereo, floor covering and keyboard musl dealers. He ii form~r president of OECC de Puerto Rice responsJble for manactns the Orm's JO offl~s In the com monweallh. He Jolned the firm In um as area manager fo tbe revolvtna credit operation in Fullerton. ' * . ltlll BHa i.a. been named ~c?OW orncer for 11ow .... Mull Eeaew, 'Lacuna llllll, a atvlalon of the bulk lDl/cievelopmeat flrm of Howard Marts and Co .• Inc. Sbe al.a la lldmtailtratlft uailtant for the Lagua Nlcael dnelopment GOIDPQ1. Her back1round includt alDe JNn .la the ......... llekl • ... DAILY PILOT Television ' TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS Thu,.day, Mafch 22. IGN EVENING ..... ..we ~Y OH«l l n tO\llt to • flf•lllllt ' o.<eo. 111 lllw ·~~ Iii• IMO'"* ,,.,. ,,.,"'* ... .,. ~b.w1.....t *''. ,...., , ... -~ T...._ "'"' 1"41 ""'o-y tc.>fte lro<n ti.. 1tm1111 tMaulel• • THI MAOV~ r11e e,..,,, 1>1•~ ••"llflt'ln ,,,.... ... ~. '"'''" " ,._"' ..... '"'"' l/h(••• .,,., '"" ••uv•-· lfMl'l8 0# &AH fMNC*:O An th ~-"''"'''' tn hof tornw. ••Y ~·• t1f111 '" ,,..,,, Ml'• 111\4 0.,1 flowt 11>9 111'1f"9t"' of,.... ,,....., • OVUtl.Al't' t.w•I Uil'M>n I\-IHI el DQIO .. INO HOM IHHNOM Sl)M.e Pll l\lllfl\I Cl> oee NEwtt (\J AacMlWS t.30. I \.OW WCV lu<y Ill" IO r-1te • v-i1111• oondol« w•rh "-• bfOI,..,, wTio llllft Ill~­ IC;A E MICHAEL JAOKSOH GUllil Ull\Of Moll Aom811 m HOME OAADE>EA ·w a1.,11ig Hobin Wilh<HTHi rnubt I l'thariw his ex trall•rn1stial bi..1lt1•ru•:. on "Mork and l\IJ1ndy " tonight ut 8 (Ill AHC. Channel 7 CAOM-WfTS MUWOfWFIH CiUMll 81U ~by I 01.1 1 a111u1 Dlln,.y I 11,,10 Ba1ntl1Jbl6 Twin• 1:00 I) ces HEWS 0 N8CHEWS U ~YWEO GAME g A8C ..:::s WILD a; 8'X MILLIOH oou.AR MAH Stove s p111ns 10 bf1no a 5'16'111•1 Dnd 1116 young SOI\ out of Rut&ia are htncleted when the 00y retuwa to leave II) SAHfON> AHO BON Alltorf1te<111;t,.on~1 ~. 11•11 ~ u11 lruc" 119 df)l:•oes rn• 11> .. uttf>lll'lj ''°'" WhlPllllll &;) MACNEIL / LEHRER AEPORT C!) HUMANITIES THAOOOH THE ARTS Mu"' M"an1no fl'l•wqh !)truc.tvre T.30 0 t.25.000 PVRAMIO 0 IH SEARCH t;>F ... • Clonmg" T"6 <ilhtG.at and SCtenl•ltC dlmertStOOI OI Single parent llumans llfO e1amtne0 B OATIHOGAME THE OOHO SHOW Clta1t1tf>I Lf11lbtf1• 8 KNXT fCBSJ Los Angolu~ D KNBC (NBCJ Los Angtilus D Kl LA find l Los Angelus 8 KA8C TV fABCI Loi> Angeles (I) i<FMB !CBS) San Ooago D KHJ-TV (Ind I Loi. Anq>Jle,:, ®) KCS T (ABC) Sdn Diego m KTIV (Ind) Los Angul11'> Cl) l<COP· TV (Ind I Los Anqol1•'.J 8) KCET· TV (PBSI Los Angele'. m KOCE·TV tPBSI Hunltflqton Beach 0 TIC TAC OOUOH Cl) AOAM-1' 1)111< ,., ~ • ...., ~I• ntou<llutl ov .. tullow 01110" ru, h•• '·""'in man &;) 21 TOHIOHT '™" PollllC• AntJ r L( no m1c.• 01 Con~u,,uu (,1t'(JJI C!) NEW8CHECI( 18 ) I UI BEAUTY SHOW OOJ MATCHOAMEP.M. 8:00 I) (I) THE WAL TONS Oocum4)nt11uon c•edlllng '"" sernemonc of Watton ' Moonlatn to 1110 ances1or5 ol ll>e Bal<twln .ittl!t'a 8"1d I~ 0 Godsey 18 U()6311tlf.1d ourino a F ounoer s Day cetet>rallon 0 HAAAISANO COMPAHY A m1~1111nchno 11t>out .i school 11..s1gnMt"nt helps 1><1ng Ille Iiams l11m1ly even oio-together Q MOVIE •.• •1, "K ona Coui.t • f 1'968) R1Chilfd Boone. \lt11a M1let A young wom· .. n d-ol a drug OVO<dose .. no Ille man wno gav" toef th<:1 drugs must answer 10 ll'lf tough. sea-going Pre·paekaged Bit ... ,..,ta ht, I 8 Ill MOM & MtHOY ""'"' bout• u• num'*tod un..., l'le can ""' • '*-•ec:IMll~ lr()m 1111 •011 1nap•d' 0111111 IHllO!e 1111 blrthdlly fltllVIM G MOvit: • •"' T"" UnfOfQl~en" 11000) Audrrt H1190Ut11 • llv11 l!IN:atl• A ~ lumll't' IJiUQOllM tlQlllnll me llOllllO ICIOwe lndlane. who t:l•tlll 111a 1 tile 11•0<lffl • .Ooe>led daU(lll• 1er ,. u rnembor ol thtlf llltHf (2 hit I m OAlllOl tuAHCTT ANOFJKNOe l>u~"' Tim Ct>11w11y Kay11 IUflllt\I G) MOVIE • • * Tlt11 'ill\'#f Cllall<;.,. I I~&) Paul N ..... ma11 VII II'"'" M11y11 A youno O•t!elt dl')'ljll' lhll lHI Su~ • hOl"'4.1 fl lift I tD NOVA I~ lf'llM!(. I Alhtrna11vo • tic1un11111 de1poralaly •ourch tor tofYKI torm ot j)olSI COtllrOI 10 r8')1aoe Ghwnteal DCISIOC:tdes. H ~O'l\ 01 the world s crops .. ,. ~t 10 111soc;11 oac.tt ~' IRI m ANYONEFOR TafNYBON? Rabon And Etliabeth Browning" Several ol Robetl s extr11ordtnary dramaJoc: monologues and -.el8cll0nl hom (llUIDelh ~ popular ·sonnet• Fl'O'TI lhe Po11uge~t1 ..ire perlormed 9.30 0 QO) ANGIE Tltl! U™!l!peclad h!lppe<I" ..,,,flt'\ Ano1e s mom and Braq I dtld ~I aqain 0) THE 000 COUPU: Howard Coselt ond Oscar Mvo a d•lleflno 01 op1n10ns when they moot by chance 1n Feltll'S SIU<llO W T\JANABOUT ·Too Soon" Felicia Lowe exam•net whll hal>()ens to rne more than one mllllOn Ametoc:an loen·ager• who t>ec:ome prognant every year. 9:00 I) CJ) HAWAII FIVE-0 A writer's money-making IGtiOme lmpeclf!i Ille prog. •HS Of Mc0erra11'1 Ml8fCh '°' "ThO Skyline Killer .. O OUINCY ouincv 1>a111es government rnd 181>& ano fl corp0ra1e power 10 aave a small 1own trom 8 deutlly &PldemtC 0 ®) BARNEY MIL.l.E.R A voul'll woman woo l1fldli h~ lather tn 11 moo s l>alh- hou~i, allor n 28-year TUBE TOPPERS KCOPG)8:00 '1ThcSllver Chalice." Pnut Newman made his movie debut in t his story or a young sculptor who creates the cup u:;c.'(J al the Last Supper. KOCE Sf 8:30 -Turnabout. Teen- age pregnancy is the s ubject of this re. Port, hosted by Felicia Lowe. KCET.Ot 10:00.-Arthur Fielder. The vl'ncrablc conductor of the Boston Pops Orchestra is profiled in this biographical bludy. 9"8rch CtHIH 8 dlSfUf• WllC4 wltoc:h lttnd• them l>Olh If\ Jell IR) 8) MERV GRIFFIN GUMll 8'11 Cotby, LOia F•lana, Oanoy Teruo. Barnatal>le lwlnl, Gary l arr1rn0re ond Del,...are, Gfloro•• ht•. Ch,,. Chalen fD WOALO "The ClouOed Window" Ouest ~I Oen el Scllorr d•scunes 1n10tna11on111 news galhorlng \RI m TliE ASCENT OF MAH Tiie Starry MMaenger" Man s early a11emp11 to map ltte lorcet 11181 control the V!Wwttle become llnnly 11ed with hl1 lalth un111 1ne St111nlil1c Rev01u11on o l Galileo 11;30 0 ®> DELTA .. OOSE The Dellos take ~ emb31H$11'Q ph()IOS ol Dean Wormer 1n a 11gh1 omt>race w1111 a GO-ell 10:00 I) Cl) BARNABY JoHES Barnnl>y's continued 1nves1iga11on ot 1119 Adams cue leads him to a m1s1- tng ot'' and a aetl-appotnt- eel ' messiall " (Part 2 o4 2) 0 MRS. COUJM80 Mfl Columt>O .Uipec1a 111e d&11ll'I ol a chic &tvurty Hrlls caterer was oot 111 KCldental as II 8ppeareo IObe OU NEWS 0 ®.J FAMILY II) NIGHT GALLERY ·1~ Hoerl Thal Wouldn't Stay Burled'' A p5ych1c rnves11galor conducts on e•pettment to 1ece1ve v11>ratlOt'llS tr om a scalpel &;) AR™~ FlEOLER Just Call Me Maes1ro" A btOQfilpll>Cfll por1r&1t ot lhe Boston Poos' conductOf ~ NEWSCHECK 10-30-~ • I LoYe You Wl\erl You, • Good" A "*'led couple 11iee 10 oonVlnc. a woman 11'111 She lhoukln't ralM her elttld 1n or<*' to gain Ille ~8'1C4t of otnen 11:00 I"' u. (I) 9 HEWS MAKE we LAUGH MOVIE • • • "The Hight OigOef" 111171) P•t11ci1 Neal. Perno eie Brown A WOM•n heel Ille cMenes 01 hef tyrann•- cal mother by taktng a pay. CllOllC kllfet W<lh her to Seotr.nd t 1 Ill" • 58 IT!fn I m CAROL 9UAHETT AHOFRIEHOS Guests John Byner Fran. cine BM<s Q) THE GOODIES l1m and 0fHm4! try kunq tu While 8111 t>eGomes mas· tor ol 111e ••I OI ec1<y tl\ump fD DICK CAVETT Guesta: F111mar1 81SflOP OeYid l1raet, Morrl$ S19Q0t. ()lctl YQUtl9 (Par I 3 of 31 11:30 I) (I) M•A•S•H HllWlttiye NS trouble gel- ltng a meuaoe 10 hos father ma1 lie hll not ~ k1trad. despite Army '!P0".11 lo Ille OOOlf8f)' (RI U TONIGHT H0$1 Johnny C•rson GuMls· Jack Lemmon. ~yGr~ B SOUPY 8Al£8 ~ STAASKY~ HUTCH TM <Selocllves 1rollt14 10 a luxury hotel sralfod by 1>eaut1lul womun 10 1nvest1· gote a ~ries 01 mutders (Plfl 2 OI 2)fH) 0) THEOONOSHOW a) GET SMART Smart cans A me•1mum ~ al9r1 when lncltant lht .. I• en ..,., unlMa 1n.y get 11\eir GOUl\lfY bkll Cl~Aee ..w8 MOANING 12:00. TWIUOHT ZC>Ne "Wiii The Real M 1111111 PIM9e Stlf>O Up" An adYllOOe ICO\ll IOr a Mar· 11111 COlooy lllod• on MIVI • ALfMO Hrfc..coct< PM8IHT8 "a.la Delta Gemt'l\1" A lreternlty 1>111ch p111y lllCM on I grim MllOuS· nan wnen 11 practleal JOit• Q!I• °"' o4 ltancl .., OET&MAAT Smart 1ne. 10 ~ h11 occupatiOn from h ll •1111. ~, ... u ..... t2:0ll l'I (I) C88 LATE MOVIE • * Yr "MCCioud Sl'l<lw- dOWn At T.,,_ Squate'~ t t9751 O.nnl1 Weave< • Chief Dan Geo<oe A di .. pule over McClovd ' 1n..,..11oa1ion o1 1111 lf\dt8n thief 'I IOU lelldl tO Ille lawman's'~''°" 12:30 D MOVIE * • * "I Want You·· (1952) Dana .Mdrews. OOtothY McGulfe. OuOOg lhe Kore- an w ar. a young man• can 10 mllltaty duty P<OYOkes MWlou• antagonism 11mong htl IOveel onM f • n1 55 '"""I 4D MOVIE * • "Dev•t 1 CanyO<l · I 19S3) VlrQlnla Mayo Date RoDellsoW A lofmf!r mllfll\81, 1n pt1t0n tor hav- 1no comm1t16d mufdfJ< 1n \ftll·delen 5e. gP1 ~ ervnesr>fld '" hi\ tetlow prosone'' plari 10, a O<eakout (2 ,.,,. I a) MOVIE * •'~ "When Tomo<tO'W Cornes" f 1939) Cl!mleS Boyer. Ir-O\inne A manoe<I rnan 1110101es his wed<ltnQ YOWS wfWln Ile iltlom(ll• 10 061 • p<Olty young WIMlrMS 10 llC(;()m• Pllf'Y h•m to Pat11 (2 hrs I 11:37 8 ®) MANNIX A ""9111111y t>vllnel$iTICln WhO "attempts 10 "'" Man- ,,.. fefuses to dtllGIOMI WhO •• b41ttlllel the pie>! 12:518 LOV£ EXPERTS 1:00 TOMOAAOW Guests Marten and Rot>en Bailey. 0-S OI An1m.il BenaVIOt Enlerpnaes 1:21 0 WANTED: DEAD OR AUVE 1451 NEWS 1.56 .. ews 1·61 • MOVIE * •• • I Sou A Dark Love A•on9 Retarded Strang«" (llMT) Dabotall Kea, Trevor How•fd •--- ThrO<Jgh llet" heired of IN Br illtll, • YOUtlO .,..., Oit1 unwlttlngly 1>ecome1 • velu11>1e .... , to the Nula.121111 I 2:001 NIW9 2:26 MCM! • • "T8fgM Z.o" I tff51 Cttuc« c~. ~ Caalle. A lieute11an1 1111emp1• to lelld 1119 men 10 vtetory dllrlOQ tile Kore· 111 Wat.(lhr ,50mln I 2:30. = • • • "Goin' To Town" I t935) MM w .. t. PllUC Cavanaglt. Thll -lllhy wtelow OI a Clllle ru11ter lltef 10 t>raak tnto ttigh IOCM11y f1 hr .. 26 min ) Q) MOVIE • e "" "Bad Fot Each Other" ( 19541 Chertton Helton, IJubeth Scott. An Army tufgec>n mull dec*le whether 10 cater to a rlef\ ctlenlale °' • needy co.ti ml,,.,. I 1 11< •• 30 min I S'.661= 3:18 MOVE e * • "Kings Row" (UM I) Ronald Aei.gan. Anf\ Sftet· Iden, Afl« returning to 1141 llomeiown to pr~lce. e young dOCIOf ~ 111\IOIVed In the pet'l()na ...... o4 N9 plllen1' (2 llrll •:OO U MOVIE * * "BatUe Beyond TIO Sun" f 1963) Andy St-at. Cod Per•v. Too North«fn and Southern hem1splleei of Earth compete to reich Mata, bvl ltte1r acoceelips get dl'ffl'fed •nd t8"1<' on 1tn Otl>tltng Siii• ft llr. 30 mini 0) MOVIE • ', "Creatures 0 1 ~1r1JCOon" ( 1968 Lo:i Tremayne. Aron IC""81d. 4: 151) STEVE EOWAI08 f ,rfdat1'1 Da111 f ~ Mevle11 AFTERNOON 1~G **'"'"Sellelt..-, .. C 19' I)~ TMllWIV. Rati- Clolpti Sc.oil Q) • • • '"' "Mtlot19 Morningstar" (Plilrt 2) ( 19!>81 G°"" K''Y· Natalte Wood 3:00 Q0 • • .. rne ove God?" c 19691 Do• Kno111 •• Edmond 0 8""' 3·30 a •• "' .. r" s"'°'1" · p970) Oss;eOavos. Ruby OL-e 'Angie' Given Strong Support on ABC----------..4 TV Film Touches By J ERRY BUCK HOLLYWOOD <AP> It's funny the way people in television flnd new meanings for old words and phrases. A ·•rut" used to be a show that had earned acceptance from the au- dience. Now the networks advertise •hows as hits before they've even been on the air. Or take .. hammock," In which you lie during the summer. In TV, it's when one or those uns ung "hits" is positioned between two sohd suc· cesses. With a guaranteed tune·in like that, your Aunt Mart.ha could read her favorite recipes and get a Sood rating. POSmONED IN a .. hammock" is ABC's new "hit" serie:, .. Angie," a p e rky com e d y s tarring Donn a P esco w as a waitress who mar ries a doctor from a Philadelphl a Main Llne famUy. It airs tonight at 8: 30 on Channel 7. One rope of the hamm oc k i s bitched to " Mork an d M i ndy ," a mon g th e ipedium's top-rated shows. and the .Mber to "Barney MJIJer." ''Angie" 'ttas finished conslstenlly among the lO top.r.pt.ed shows. It doesn 't hurt, eithe r , that · ·Angie" was created by the same <fe<>ple who came up with the Man from Or~. Garry Mars hall and Dale McRaven. Mars hall also c reated "Happy Dan" and "Laverne & Sbirley." ITS FAVORED position In the rat· t..11 will glve "Angle" time to de- lXJIDIE Wini ABC 'HOLLYWOOD <AP> -Goldie ff awn has sighed a contract with •BC to star In her own specials and develop television end theatrical movies. Ml.at Hawn, currently starring ln • YFoul Play," wUI be exclusive lO A BC for televtak>n. ''"*Fashion lslanc\ Newport Beach velop and find an audience on its own, a luxury that's denied lo the ne w comedies on NBC and C BS. They don't have many posts to hitch the hammock to. During a break in rehearsal al Paramount Studios. where the show is filmed before an a udience, Mills Pescow said she was fi rst offered "Angie" about eight month!i ago, just a fter s he'd appeared as love·smitten Annette in the smash movie "Satur- day Night Fe ver ... "Garry Marshall called me about the show." s he recalled . "Surprising- ly, he had not seen m y work before ·Saturday Night Fever.' So even 1 though it was a dramatic role, Garry has an eye for people's work and can tell how you would do in other work. like comedy. "I HAD PRE'M'Y much stayed away from TV until ·Angle.' I wanted to really find something good for me as an actor. Not just be lherc every week." At the lime she was negotiating for a new picture and turned down the telt>vision offer. But when the picture By PETER J . BOYIR LOS ANG EL ES <AP> -I\ curious species. the TV network ~xeculivc. One moment he offers a pr~ram on- ly the most mindless v1der could a ppreciate. the ne xt monent he schedules a sensitive . warn drama attractive to the most crkical a u- ' dience. Consider CBS and some of its made-for·TV movies this )ear. The CBS movie man, Willia m Sdf. look a Hkiog lo trucks and the 1a•1es that drive them, offering two lad.' trucker movies (dumb ones. too) in a month. And yet, Self is the guy vho gave us "/\nd Your Name is J omh" and ' "Silent Victory. The Kitt~ O'Neil Story," two thou~htful. entertaining stories dealing with deafness A Dirtg Slaote SELF GOES ONE up Jn the plus M• wi,.~.. column Uus weekend with his choice Cheryl Ladd tussles with actors <Don Correia at left; others unidentified > in a mud pen dur· ing the taping of her ABC special, wt1ich will be ·aired April 9 in conjunction with the of "No Other Love" 'or the CBS Saturday Movie a l 9 on Charmcl 2. ft is the story oC 3 m arginally retarded (TV REVIEW) ernmenl grant expins, s he's back al home with .. I Love u cy" reruns. HEit FATHER (ROBERT Log- gia), a welf.t.o·do iuilder, wants to put Janet in a high~lass sanitarium; her mot.her wants ter at home. Enter brother Bruce <Scott Jacoby>. who becomes Janet's freedom fighter. He reaUzcs his sister s capable of life on her o wn. and brio.cs her to a pleasant ho~el for youni adults who, li ke Janet, are margh a lly retarded. fhc re s he fills in love with Richard Thomaf, the sp1riled. clever A,ndrcw Ma<tiso1. Andrew. too. is rc- t~rded. but ThQIXlas manages to pre· :,t·nt his character in a m anner that •irccts your attention past his hun- d 1 cop Academy A~ards. deal feU through, Marshall was back -------------------- couple who fall in love and try lO get. ANDREW AND JANET don't play married, a human co~icl yarn that games; they know they're retarded. m anages to be sentiment.al. and But they don't th.ink of themselves ets touching without gelling too gooey. / freaks, either. When they faU in love. The stars are CBS alumni. Juhc tht>y want to be married. But her Kavner, late of "Rhoda," and parents. normal adults that they are. Richard Thomas. who used to roam try to pyltbe ldboshon their plans. at her doorstep and signed her for "Angie." It's not really her first series. She spent four months on the ABC soap opera "One Life to Live ." All of her eitperlence had been on the stage, as In the national tour or ''Ah, Wilde rness" after graudation rrom the American Academy of Dramatic Arts. "I TOOK A COURSE ln camera and soap opera techniques,'' she said. •10oe of my teachers was the casting di.rector for ·one We to Uve' and she uked me to come ln. I didn't get tbe role, but. tbey siped me as the bat chetk girl. Every Ume they had a restaurant scene t got a few lines." She never got a contract f« lM woap opera, which was lucky. because it left her free to accept the part in "Saturday Nlsht rever." Miss Pescow spent two years of in- tense study lo lose her Brooklyn ac· cent -lben had to reacqul.re It tor "Fever.'' KOCE Gets Grant Walton's Mountain as John-Boy They underestimate the young lov- ers, as they've underesUmat~ their daughter all of her life. A grant tor $10,000 has been awarded by the Harry G. Steele Founda- tion of Newport Beach, lo KOCE-TV, Channe l SO, Orange Co unty public television, it was announced by the Board or Trustees. The grant will be used to s upport the public televitlon station's news program, "Newscheck." which appears at 7:30 p.m . 9n Tuesday and Tbu~ evenings, ac· cordlns to William A. Fumiat, Vice P~esident and Gesaeral Manager of the P~mtloo. "Newscheck" ts one of the local public artairs progratJJ on ChaMel 50, and fON5es on Orange • County news with its cur- r e nt twice-a ·w eek format. The broadcasts a r e repeated on Tuesdays and Thursdays at lO:JOp.m . They 're good. Miss Kavner plays Janet Michaels 22. retarded. addicted to televisio and living under the overprotecti blanket of her guilt-laden moth <Elizabeth Allen ). J anet is d t enough to hold a job. but when a g "No Other Love," Saturday on CBS. Cheers to Mr. Self Cor this one. I hope lh.Js doesn't mean we're due for another trucker nick. 91CIDBD awa• 1•111no• lllOOl(llUllSf A11an11m 1 '' bU6 et•MA COITlll C:(l\l~M~ 919 ••~· HU•Tl•TOlf l•unltl!Qlon llutll 8A& 03at OMMll MAll ouno• 631 03•0 llllA 'lAZA 8111 529·~339 SAOOllUCll fl IOto NI !)840 cr••••nr W•itmin,ret 89~·Uffl ., ....... .., ... Ot•not 6)9 1710 flfS fllllC ll 0 ~11_ ... ~ .. _. O' "41\jli CWe<Cl>MI NO OHC UNOLA " M>MI ff\ 0 ' '"" ''""' ,.., .. .., lftWt-••111