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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1980-03-13 - Orange Coast Pilot. -~- -ms l .John Wayne's Newport Estate $5 Million Buy THURSDAY AFTERNbON, MARCH 13, 1980 VOL. n . HO 11, 4 SIECTIONS, ..... oas r:~C!Calii:::a=----------------.... Not Playing • mto Man Swept ., To Sea Near Huntington Pier II Pinto Maker Acquitted Interest Increase BlaRJed .Jim Wolford. an ardent roller skater. holds the ticket he received from a Seattle po liceman for "playing in the street." Wolford who says he skates "sometimes 100 miles a week.·· will fight the c1tallon DB Pier lneident Man Swept to Sea Feared Drowned A 2 1 -yea r -old man i s presumed dead today after he was swept out to sea Wednesday a fternoon near the Huntington Bea ch city pier, lifeguards said. Six lileguards equipped with scuba tanks spent nearly an hour s earc hing for the unidentified Huntington Park man, but gave up because or poor visibility in the murky water. Life guard Lt. William Richardson said several bathers obaerved the fully-clothed man strunllng about 1:30 p.m. id COUN'IrS JOB MARKET YIEJJ'ED Today's Daily Pilot covera Oranse County's employment market in "Jobi,'' a special maaasine sectloc. Firms Meking worken, tips on aeWne Jobs and news of the eount)''I employment altuation hlthUght the 16 paee aecUon. Don't miss "Joba," In today's Dail>: J>Uot. ·waist-deep wate r before vanishing. Richardson s aid a pair or female tourists from Kansas at first assumed the man was splashing in the water to draw their attention. He said the women notified lifeguards when the man seemed to be pulled underwater. Lifeguards later summoned a Spaniah-apeaklna employee to talk wtt.h two Huntington Beach Park meu who said they'd come to the beach wttb their friend to bunt for &bells. Lorenzo Heredia 22, and Jose Barbosa, 82, told ilreeuardl that the lut Ume they aaw their companion he wu 11tandln1 near the water'• ecflre. 'fito UnehM18ed BELGRAl>E, YUIOllavta (AP) -Yugo.lav Pnaldtnt Jotlp Bro1 Tito, atrtcken wtth a relapse of pneumonia on top of ..tailed kldne:ya and a WHkened belrt, today showed no eaaenUal cban•e ln hit overall condition, hla docton repoNd. Jury Exonerates Ford Company WINAMAC, Ind. <AP) -A jury acquitted the Ford Motor Co. today on three counts of reckless bomiclde in the fiery deaths of three teen-agers killed when their Pinto s edan exploded in flames when hit from behind. Prosecutor Michael Cosent.ino and defense attorney James F. Neal sat expressionless as the Judge read the conlen_ts_ of the three envelopes contaming the jury verdicts in the landmark c a se. th e fir s t c rimina l prosecution of a corporation for an alleged products defect. Minutes later. Cosentino said the verdict "vindicates Ford Motor Co." lie said there was a "strong possibility" of an appeal of t he judge's rulings in the case Of the verdi ct, the t'h1ef prosecutor said: "It means to m e that m anufacturers can ma ke any kmd of car they want to and it's up to the public to de>clde 1r they want lo buy it or not I do not personally believe that corporations are doing what they can to help the people or this country. but the jury apparently does." Defense attorney Neal said the verdict which was read before a packed' courtroom that included m or e than 150 towns people, reporters and lawyers, showed "you can be a big corporation and the jury will acquit you, if you have a fair story." He adde d : "I'm grateful. r e lieved and proud of the verdict. The Pinto bas been maligned for years, but we were tried by a jury of 12 people in the heartland of America and all 12 found us not guilty. That says something." The panel's decision came in its fourth day of deliberation.a. Cosentino kept his eyes downcast as the jury of aeven men and five women walked by him. He shook the hands of Birdnapping Investigated LOS ANG~ES (AP)-"Hello mom. I love you mom," wen U. flrat worda June Routb of Chatsworth beard In montha from the macaw aM t.b1nb waa Huda4XI, her milllnC pet btrd. They alto may be t.b• tut. Hudlon apparehtly WU It.Olen from the Ea.It van., AD.lmaJ Shelter lut week a ,.,, m~UW. alter Ml. Routh ttted to claim him. _ ..- nlor Animal Control uu1ce:r Gary Fel•n said Wedneaclay It'• polllble the bird WU hen, but be'• notaure. fellow proeeeutora aDd uid to one. "We 1ave It all we ba" • 'Tbe jury bu spoken and that 's our ayatem . I 'm disappointed of course, but that 'a the way the s ystem works.•· Cosentino said The automaker was charged with three counts or reckles!> hom1c1de m the 1978 deaths of three teen-age wome n who!><' J..t73 Pllllo Ulllo"led ... stnaek from behind bJ a •an. Prosecutors argued Ford knew the Plnto's fue l system was likely to leak in rear-end collisions but sold the car s anyway ~ Ford argued durmg the tnal the Pinto was ac; safe ac, other SUbCo mpa('tS or the t tmt' ISff PINTO. Page A21 Brief lnspeetion Engineers Enter 3-mile Airlock MIDDLETOWN . Pa <AP> T wo engineers ventured brien } inside the Three M 1le Island reactor buildjng a irlock today after two health technic1a nc; checked for radiation and said 1t was safe The teams were the first inside the area sin ce 1t wal. sealed off a year ago afte r the nation 's wo r st commerc i al nuclear accident Donning cloth suits, boots and gloves. the engmeers entered the airlock to take radiation samples and make tests. The airlock opened at 9· 19 a m and was sealed again at 10 43, plant officials said. No other entries are planned today, according to Sandy Polon. spokesman for the nuclear power plant. The encineera, a man and a woman, went inside th e 9-by-12-foot airlock after two health technicians lert the area following a 10-minute teat. ·'They found no airborne particulates that require respirators. so the engineers won't be wearing respirators. They aho won't have to put on any extra gear because of radiation.'' Polon said. Aa a precaution, the two-man health team wore breathing sear. The entry followed three days of almolpbertc ventiq of wh•t Polon called "a very minuscule" amount of radioactive krypton 1aa from the crippled nuclear plant. The entry ta a preliminary to the lint human entry of the hu1e reactor containment buUdinf lince the accident. •'They wtl1 leak teat the seals and the door•t. take surface contamlnaUon 1udea and make readlnp of the door. Tbey wtU take exten1lv• radiation monltGnns. ''.PvloD ta.ld. Tbe1nidloadi¥e Pl had bMcJ trapped in th<' a1rlot'k of thf' plant. t'nppled m the Mart'h 28, 1979. act'1dent T h e a1rlot'k leads to the nuclear power plant s St>\erely t'ontam1nated reat'tor t'ontamment bwldm~ T he Nuclear Regula tory Comm1ss1on sta fr 1n Washington propose d Wedne<;d ay t hat add1t1onal rad1oat't1vc gas in the t'ontamment buildm~ b<' vented !>Oon. desµ1te oppos1t1on from t'Om muruty groupl> The comm1ss1on said 1t woul d det'tde whether to vent gas from the bwldmg by April 8. after the s t a ff 's e n v i ro nm e nt al a ssessment was aired in a 15-day public comment period When purging of a trat'e of (Stt NUCLEAR, P11e AZ> Wayne Estate Selling for $5 Million An otrer of nearly $S million has been a c ce pted fo r the Newport Beach home of the late actor John Wayne. Papers filed in Orange County Superior Court Wednesday identified the buyer only u Mrs. Burton G. Dettingen, "a married woman." Mn. Bettin1en's cash offer of 13.47 million for the house. with a •100,000 deposit, was accepted by executors of tbe estate. MlcbaeJ Anthony Wayne, Louis Johnson and John S. Warren. An additional •t.48 mUUon would be paJcl lrvtno Company to buy the waterfront land on which the houae alts. Wayne leaaed th• land in the Bay Sbote1 HCtlon of Newport Beach for M.000 a year. From AP. Staff Dlsp•ldaes The bottom ltterally fell Out of th e sill.er market toda} a'> prtt'es m '\ev. York dropped t1· $24 60 ... dt-C'lln~ or S4 70 pN ounce In Jdd1t1nn i::ot d v. ,., 'Jn<k• hr-J V\ '>f'l hnt.! tiff'!>'Urt' f<lllll'C $47 to "'t'w \or!.. to S5:11' Jn oun1·1· Jnd to $5.'>i 1n I .on11fln Both mt'•,1 1 c am1 ~nrtr•r hPaV\ -,t•llm~ pn·-,-ur" l11·c~11\ •. of a '>lron~l·r l ' '> rlnll.rr ht.!" 1n1 er t"• t r. 1 ' 1 r t t-• I n" 1• 1• .., I a l , • .., 1 h •• ' a I I I J (' I ' ,. 1n\'(·~lmt•nt. .ind thl' f~wt th;11 !!Old .rnd 'llH·r <k not prndu1 • tnlumt :\I onl'\ 1n '\, v. port Bt·ac·h qunll'd a l:Jtt• m11rnin~· pr•c1 111 $535 for gold Jnd s2:i 'ur ..,,l\l·r v. h1ch JI om· t1m1· dropl)t·d a' low J~ S23 i5 Tht> dollar gatned ';tiu1· 11n v.nrld P\chan.:e markl'l" toda' and d l' a I 11 r' ;1 lt n h u It d t ht' m ovem<'nt 10 h1J.(h Amt-ric-ari mtere!lt rate., Gold at one point 1n Januar" was .,elhng for $875 an ount'c and sil ver bnen y topped $.SO Cocaine Tarp;~ted LIMA. Peru 1A P 1 A !-.tatt'of emergcnt'y wa~ det'larc·d 1n ~ wide area or P<'ru " Amazoni an region Wedne-.day to make 11 easier for police lo control tht• cocaine trade Orange Coa"it Weather Low clouds tomght and Friday with only partial clearing Fnday afternoon Lows toni ght 48 at the beaches and SS inland Highs Friday 62 to 67 INSIDE TODA '1 Dunng World War II . n M arine Corp! Germ an !Mphnd narMd Oka sa~d the U~• o/ 1~ nvn. TM dog du~d in 1958 and wa.s burwd with mfl1ta'11 honors m a Co11a Me1a ~ «metnit But lhe war dog hjJ.t not been forgotten bv MarlrM! fnnd.I. See Pagf' CI •••ex Al Ye.tr lervlCe Al Allft La-., a ..... ~ .. CJ Me•i.. L. M ... ~ A4 Me'9•1 ,_ ......... , ......... ._._._ CMHenlle AJ ON ... ~ c._.. (4 '""''' ~ .. CteulffM CJ.12 Sytwla "9fW C-1C1 ... I. c... .... (l'M._., ••• ~ Cl 111-11 " A4 All CM •1t CA ., .. Outll NMlcft Col .... .,..,..... •••ten.ti .... , , ... ...... .... •u •....n.1""'"" II Mt ,........ ....... CN""*' ~ ... aw.,.. .... IMlnlt..... ltt .,. ... /44 r - I I 1 !~ ~ OM.YN.OT • ucted· Tot af e Gunman HOii Change of Mind ... LAS V GAS t AP > -A lO·mooth-old boy abchacted from e. b l& Laa Veau home b1 a t m11ked l\Ulm•n wa1 nco-9•..S t. unharmed In 8.n Bemanlloo leaa than ~ boura later. 'l1M kidnapper apparently "bad a chance ol mJnd," the FBI uya .. , The lnfant, Steven llute.r Jr., waa •bduct.cl Tu 1da1 nl&ht, then Id\ at a bolpt\al lD tM South m Califomla cl\1 about four houn later by an unknown peraon who' n a not• ••1ln8 ho or ah~ wu a drua addict and wu unable lo t'are for th tot. Jos~ph Ya blonally, Lhe bead ot the Lu Ve1a1 FBI omce, aa1d Wednesday About 12 h our~ later . Ya blon11ky &aid . a 1>ecur1ty guard al lhe hospital receaved an HOQYIDOUI eall HYlna the child had been abducted in ~ Ve1as the ni&ht before "It JUll MetnJ that 1omebody bad a chana ot mlnd on lhll thlq," Yablclcalb 11Jd. Th• dlild'• parenll, eve and Roxana• lllller, ••re on vacation in HawaU when the abduction occurred. They ~turned home Wedn day. Cmdr. Eric Cooper, head of lb• Laa VttH police d t.cUve dl•lakln. aald the kidnapper left a mote 41emalldlna aoo.ooo .from the llUJera. who own a small conatruction company The child'• l(roodfathur, Sherman Mlllt-r. I• pr .. td nt and chairman of the board of Nevada Savtn11 and Loan AllOcl.aUoo Then1 wu no lnatruclioo oa how the ransom wu lo be paid, Cooper a~ud, 1tllhou1h lhe family sot the ransom toaeth., wltbln a few hours Cooper satd the kadnapper, Two-fared Hippo? f la nsel. a 5.000 pound Nik h1ppopotamu:, m fl'!:.1dcncc <.al ('h1tago s Brookfield Zoo. doesn't posse:-.s four l')t•s. :J ncl four t'i.ll''>, but ts m<.·rely <.'nJoymg i.l -.w1m tn the> mos in door pool Bay Bridge Work Should Start Soon · .. Construc taon on th<• n<·v. l'at•1f1c Coast l11 ghway bndl(t' m t•r Upper Newport Bay could ht•j.(1n by /\pr1l, accord1n1< to an offtciol with Kaslt·r Corp , low hadderon tht• projt·ct Nack Soffa, spokesman for the !'.an tiemardmo-bas ed firm, ~aid the contract has yt•t to be• awarded to the company. pcndmg routine review by the s tall' Attorney General 's office He said the award s houjld be made within the next two weeks and construction will bel(in 1 m mcdJatcly after that The company, which built thl' E'ro91 P~ Al PINTO .•• Although al faced a maximum penally or $30,000 1f convicted. Ford reportedly spent $1 million to mount its defe nse "If you s hould fail lo reach a decision , the case is left open and unresolved," Pulaski Ci rcuit Judge Harold Staffeldt told the panel earlier. when they asked for further inst ruction. "Another trial would be a heavy burden for each party. There is no reason to believe that the case can be tried a~ain any bdter than il has been. ' DAILY PILO ,,_Ot .... C...UO.ty ............ wfllte9'•\(~ Ol'*9t ........... P1f-9'\ , • .,...,t.l'W>Offt .. Orlf'IO" fN'\filllvbf~(~y S.~ .. •tOJl*'°'M~ ' 1¥t>4t~ ~ tfiW'euqft "" ... " fO' c ... ,. ,.._., "'"""°" 8Nc.ft """".....,. ... " P:CIUP' ,,..,. V•tt., tntfW l~ &..c~ SOwtft Cont • 'Jftfil••~...,.'°"''~•""s.t""dit"_,., ~-' , .... "',,..._.._.~itlltft9pi..nef\eill0 W~\t fM• ~,..... (0'-1• ~ ( ettferN• .,.,. ·-·-........ ~·---J•O ll~ V1t • Pllf'M~f\t .noGetw-.•MtMO"" ~ ........... ton .. ,_ .... -....... JMl\otqi,.. ldllor CMtttt M lMt -,. .... .... 1 ..... 1 JM .... 1 ... 11 .. ler• Telephone (7141142~ Cl11elf1M A4¥ertllfng 142·M11 .. ,., __ a._ ......, I I Corona del Mar Freeway and ha.-. v.orked on the Costa Mesa and Ornngefreewa~s.submatted a bid of t.H !j m11l1cin for th<' J>rOJcct . lht• low1•!:>lOb1x submalh:d T he ne w bradgl' cvc·ntualh wall replace th<• four·lane structure that is nearly 50 years old and th11t representi; on l' of the city's bag~est tra ffl(: bottlenecks Tht· new s lructurl' wall have threl· lanes of trafftt• in each d 1rect1on with an extra westbound lant' for cars heading northbound on Dover Dnvc. T h P p r oJec t includes im provements and expansion of tht· highway intersections at Bayside and Dover drives as well a::. construction of the bndge Estimate d l e ngth o f construction 1s 18 m onths Soffa explained that the contract calls for the existing bndge to remain open to traffic during construct.Jon of the new s tructure which is to be buHttothe north. The old bridge will be demolished when the new one ai. finished. he said Navy Dancer Stripped of Rank Again MOFFETT NAVAL AIR STATION <AP> -A Navy enlisted man demoted to airman last week was reduced In rank again -this time to airman's apprentice -after admittlna he brought "discredit to the Navy" by dancing as a male stripper. Jeffrey Bandy II I pleaded guilty Wednesday to violating u n i r o r1ffl. r e g u l a t I o n s . discrediting the Navy and taking two days of unauthorized leave in a hearing before Capt. R.F. Marryott, commandtn1 officer al Moffett. Bandy wu fined $100 a month for two months and reatrlcted to the bue for 30 days. The bale la located about 35 mllea eouth of San Franci1co. The five.year Navy veteran, who moonlighted at a Fremont ni1htclub aa a male dancer, was demoted from petty officer third clan last week after Navy ottlclala ordered him not to ltrlp out of hi.a uniform, Bandy w11 one of 12 ma1e dancers featured at the Fremont club which la frequent.cl mo1t1,y by women. He would 1tnp, to bla ahorll to the dlaco tune •1n the Nav)','' while di1playln1 a Good Conduct Medal pinned to bit aborts. •tarlnl a full·face Hallo~"" rnuk llDd carrylna a revolver. fl\ered Ult MUler home tbrouCh ID walotked door and acCOli.d an eldlrl7 babysitter carint for Steven and bw 4·year-old 1bt.u. The 1unman demanded to lcoow whent the Uttle boy wu 1leepln1. Cooper 1ald, and •cooped the cbUd from bla crib. Cooper •aid the man then forced the babyalt .. r to lay on the noor next t.o the Uttle 1irl, who slept throuah the Incident. Aa be left. Cooper uld. the kidnapper toHed a ranaom note at tbe kidnapper Yablonsky said the FBI had "aome poulble ampecll" in the abduction but added there was "nothing concrete " ··we are pursuing this inves tigation very vigorously." he said ,.,...... P.,,e AJ NUCLEAR. • radioactive 1u began Monday, the airloclt contained an estimated 47 mllllcurlea of krypton. The containment building has more than a million Umea that amount. The NRC ataff said it would try to penuade residents near tbe plant that venting more gas into the atmosphere poses no health threat. "I knew It was going to happen, but I don 'l Uke It . . There are a lot of people upset with it," aald Middletown Mayor Robert Reid. whose community hes next to the stricken plant. People living near Three Mile Island have opposed venting gas. and NRC assurances that any r e leases would be well within federal radit~ safety limits have been m\t with dlstrwit. "Venting is just the cheapest and easiest way of removing the ~us." Read said. In c hoos ing venting :.is th(' rc•m oval mt'thod. the NRC staff rt'Jl'l'tcd plans to absorb the gas with charcoal or compress and boltlt• at Roth methods Wt're <·onsadt•rC'd too time consuming a nd technolog1cally diffic ult. the '>taff said in 1L' report · I rc·gret to report that the tec hnology for cleaning up a mass concentration of krypton .:as is not as advanced as I had on ce hoped,·· said Harold Denton. NRC dirttt.or of nuclear react.or regulation. T he staff report noted that '-Orne psychological stress ti. lik e ly in s urro und i n g com munitaes during ve nting, but th(• staff added, If tht' ~a ' remains in the containml'nt '\tructure. "It is likely that future accidental releases . will occur" causing even greater psychological s tress. Offic ials s ay rad1oac trve releases during last year ':-. accident posed no health threat The overheated reactor camt· wathm 30 to 60 minutes of a meltdown or its radioactive fuel. which could have caused major contamination of the a rea <Arter Wins In Dela'Ware DOVER . Del. CAP > - President Carter has swept Delaware's first De mocratic cau cus, winning roughly 60 percent of the delegates to the upcoming st.ate convention. or the 172 delegates chosen to go to the state con venUon May 24, 104 went to Carter and 40 to Sen. Edward M . Kennedy . Twenty-ei&ht were uncommitted. Wednesday's caucus was the first at.ep in the delegate-selection procedure, which will give Delaware 14 voles at the Democratic National Convention. However, neither Carter nor Kennedy officially won any nation.al deleaata aince t hose goin1 to tbe atate convention do not have to continue with the candidate they supportedW~ay. Showdown Slated On Baby Seale ST. ANTHONY, Newfoundland (A p) -Hunters •hiPI are ln poalllon and la1t minute preparaUona are belD• made for the annual seal bunt off St. Ant.bon1, u female .barp Hall contlnue to live birth to pupe. Tbe Greenpeace FoundaUGn, which •lalea protata eaeb 1Ur a1alnat tbe baby 1eal tlll, anno\19Ced It would make public ltl protestplana today, OAKLAND <AP> -&dear Ka!Hr Jr., chairman ot U.. • Kaher Steel Corp. a•d a resident of Vancounr 1l11ee lt70, bu '*°"'9 a Caudla cltlun, a San rrancluo newapeper ....,ort.t Wedntlday¥ I •PWtnpfoetO Blasting flae Barnarles Dwarfed b) a g1gant1c propeller and rud- der. workers at a drydock in Portland. Ore .. clean the hull or the Stuvyes ant. a I.09R-foot-long 011 tanktor The ~hip will sail tor Va ldt•z. Al ask:1 "li<•n the rcpu1 r~ arc c·om pff'ted Prayer in School Unconstitutional BOSI'ON (AP I Tht> 'tat•· Supreme Court ruled lod.J\ lhJL thl' ne-. Mat.-..H·hui.1·11 · IJ"' reintroducing prnver 1n 11•1hlw :-.c h ools v1 ol.111•<, th1 · I 1r"1 Amt'ndnwnt • u.1r<11111•c• 1.r .. 't•p.iratt• < hur('h .11111 t.ih.• T h 1· c o u r t 1 n j o 1 n • ii t•nrorc<'ment of t he ... tatut• v.. hich called ror t<'.1C'ht•r to a•~ 1f any ~tudent w1st.1·d 1 .. lt>ad J prayer and for the ::.tudl•nt Uwn to lead the prayer It prnv1d1'<I for s tudent:-. not w1 • t.in~ 111 pa rtic1 patt• to bt· ;1 llo"" ed t 11 leave th<· room · · T h •· p 1 1. ·• 1 .1 rr1 ,, ('ont1·mplalP1l I" th•• •,1,011111· .111d ..... ,1('t11.i11. t,1•1 11tl ,,, Ill II• '(.' h Oil I \\ . , I I 1 , .. ... I fl ch.Jr.11·111. '•• p1.1v1•r 1. 111 1 n v ci n1 t wn 11 I t 111' ti 1 t \ ti l'OUrl <.,atd Ill •• '" \' p.1~· 111 d1·1 (lt•r t• fh•• I \\O' f11'd rl'llJ(tou::. pro •r.1 11 ""h11•h • ,, i1ponsored ;ind put ant11 1•1l.-1·r 1,, stall' ;inct h11•,il n'fw1.iJ, 111 11li•r ,fl•j.pi, or t ,tl<• 1 IUI• \\,1 conducted from d.iv to dJ:> h) teachers t•mplOYl d J'> publa1 Buildin~ Hit t·roployeo m publtt· ~chool'> <JOd v. J ., 1· a r ra "'d 11 u t 11 n p u ti I 11 propcrt.> dunng !-.<:hool llmt . ;ind ;ic; part of the c;chool PJtnl't'I•' " t h1· l uurt "au1 Thi· -.tJlt· ar~u1·rl lhJI I h1• 1,, ... .11 n1mmodatt:' religion hu1 1J11t.·'> 11111 'IJOn-.Or 1t an thl' school Thi' ... tatut1· tonk """'I 111 l-1·bruar.> "Accord.ing to lhc pr t-n-dt•nt' the statute could not lw .... n 1-cl from unconst1tut1onalaty b\ th1 fact that the pr a~cr' ""'rt .,pokcn by voluntct·r 11up1b 111 that pupils could choo.,1· 111 '" 1·xcus<"d from the l·.1tNc-1w 1 tw 1 uurl said an tc><la\ 'orrJ• r Thi· ,.,,ut· "J., brou,.:til IJ< 1111 • 1tw 1·0W1 an J 'Ult f1kd ti. ,, ;.! I 0 U p of p U p I h .1111\ t h" I 1•.1 I t•lll' I h1· l'UUrt :-.aid J mor• 1l1•t.11lt·1I 11p1naon v.ould ht-1~-.ucd IJt•·r \ s1 rrular swt hlll> bt>t·n fa l<'<l 111 rt'deral coun. but no action hd ' been taken on at S1·H·ral l·ommun1lU''-nut,tt1l Brookhnt: and :'\l'v.ton ri Cu.,• II lo carry out the pril} t·r la"' Driver Flees Car After Collisions Costa ttks.i poll!, .. ,,,,d l•xJ,., 1h1•\ "ere tr) 111g Lo 11knllh Lil•· ramp:.igang drivL•r v..ho trll'<I tn pu~h anothe1 c·•ir through .1 n ·d I 1 g h t . t h t· n a ' 1 l' I l· 1 J I c d backward.'> and < r,1 ,h1·d 1nt11 .1 building. Jncl r1nJll\ ,1h.Jnd11nul has c·ar The} saul tht• ov. 111·r of th<' <"' reported h" kt')' lo\1•r1• m1~'1nJ.! and WllOl.'SSl'' IH ri unJhll' 111 1d ent1f\. t•1th1•r him or h1 ' room mate H' tht• Clrl\ 1•r Ill th1 • 10 20 p m anC'aclcnt 1 tll',da)' c1n Indus trial Wa\ nl'ar :'\<·1Aport Boulevard Pol H'l' '11 1d Julu· Ann <;a llagher. ~. and ht>r broth1•1 Wilham. 28. both of Ccr..ta Ml''" v.erc swppcd at a red light on Industrial Wa' "hen unothn c.ir drov1' up tx•htnd Jnd tnr-d 111 push their <.Jr 1n t11 "'<'"'Port Boulevard When thl• {;allagh«r 1 .1r' brakes held. the other drl\l'r .1ccelerated back"a rd., Jnd -.mashed into the building ur llt·nder .. on ' \utn Hnd' r 11• Industrial Wa\. dama~ani.: 111-. , a r and caus ing manor harm 111 thl• ~truC'tUr<•. pohct· !'aid The driver wa' bt•hcvt·d 111 h.1 \ t• nro on foot. the\ -;aid Ailing Shah Sees Surgeon I' /\ ..... /\ '\1 \ C' I T 'r' 1•.1n;.H11.1 1 \I'• I-;1m1·d \ m 1· r 11· a n • u r g 1• on '.111t,.1,.l IJ1B.1k"' \\ill fl \. tu J•an.un.1 t11 c·xamanc ~·1 ,1, \l.,I .>1•1111 1ol It• ta 1•,1•111 1 \' II r1 • • ,, ha!> !11·1 11lo -. 11 • \llli<ll• II tip• 'hJh' p1•1 ""'·" 1•h\ "1.111 'lJ1d 111•• "l"'r .111.,11 \A,,, ... n1·f·dt·d. II• 1\.1~ 1' '>1111k1 'm.111 ' .1 1 If \\ • •f I • d ,1 \ In II•·•· 1,.,. I l"I l 1llt' " • , , n r 1 1 ' r • t •, 11 r ~· 1 r 1 l 11 .. " "' ii I h I\,. '() t \ ,111 I > 0 t :J ti ...._ ll(>Us~· 0 K!-j Oil Profits '"f a.x Measure \ ' If ' \I' '111• I I• II r 11 V t• ti I tr I I r ... t•rOJl'"''" r f ' 1. , ..if It • I'• m11I h ~ • I h• 11 \ I If t t1 ,. ,, .,,., 1 rti. l .... lo\h1·1· , •• , .... 1111 th1 • '111 c·11-<l t1 t I \ • .\ t ·t h_ \I l'o t'1Ulf;.thl1 111111111 111 ,, "I' d1H1cul1 p1 ,,it. 111 11td 11111· th:it ., ~ood 1111 \1111 11• ,, lli•p \I P llman fl I lro t tl,11ffll,lfl of lht• Wa\-. .111d \11•,1r.., I .. 111m1ttl'(', to.Id 1•11111 ·' 1;1.1 111•1• .1111111 I 11 , •• 111t H Calif ·'~'·'"' I th• I.di·•" .1 major la"t Ill.ii "'ill •'IHI up on th1· h.11·~, 111 c on .. 11nt1•r Yo u can I -.c11 i. 11 II• th" 111~· utl romparue::. I ht•\ II 111· 1 1·.1:.' 1 t a lon,g to I h1• <'t in-.ur111 r I' 111 ii p.1 1" • .111 • 1ftrr th1· II "u !>I', 11\ I .: .: i I 8 .1 .. 0 I •. Tl'jt'l h'tl .111 • rr11rl lc-d o" Ht,. 11111 .\n t1• r. I ·r c·~·'"· to -.end tlw 11111 h.1d; 111 ,, ~1·11Jt1.· llou ,,. r11nf1•n•rH •• < "mm1tt1·r· J OftANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA1 I THURSDAY, MARCH 13, 1990 N FIFT§EN CENTS ~ i Die 'Big A' Gets Bigger For those who haven't visited since the last Angels gam e, here is what Anaheim Stadium looks like these days as a .$26 million expan,.sion project continues. When completed, in time for the Rams' arrival next fall, the ball park will have more than 70,000 seats. House OKs Oil Profil8 Tax MeasUre . W ASIUNGTON <AP> -The House today apJto••d President Cartn's ttroposett "wlndfalJ profits" tax after • de feating a flnal attempt by Republicans to maktr the leyX more acceptable to the 01\ industry The vote of 302-107 sent the meaaure to the Senate, where congressional action on the $227.7 billion tax is expected to be completed next week. "This is a very equitable solution to a very difficult problem -and one that is good for America." Rep. Al Ullman, D-Ore., chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, told colleagues. Rep John Rousselot, R·Calif., assailed the bill as "a maJor tax that will end up on the backs or consumers You can't sock 1l to the big oil companies they'll 1ust pa!.!. 1t along to the consumers ' Final pasc;age ce:1me after the Hou!.e, b\ ;i 227 185 \Ote. reJeCtf'<i au effort led by Rep Bill Archer. T·Tcxas, to send the bill back to a Senate-House conference committee. Navy Dancer Stripped of Rank Again MOFFETT NAVAL AIR STATION (AP> -A Navy enlisted man demoted to airman last week was reduced in rank again -um time to airman's apprentice -after admiltin& be brought "discredit to the Navy" by danclne as a male stripper. John Wayne Estate A $5 Million Buy? An offer or nearly ts million tl•• been aeeepted ror the Newport Beaeh 1lll1llle ol U.. late actor Jobn Wayne. Papers filed in Orange County Superior Court Wednesday , identified the buyer only as M rs Burton G. Bettingen. "a married woman." Mrs. Bettingen's cash offer or $3.47 million for the house. with a $100,000 deposit. was accepted by executors of the estate , Michael Anthony Wayne, Lows Johnson and John S. Warren. An additional $1.48 million would be paid Irvine Company to buy the waterfront land on which the house sits. Wayne leased the land in the Bay Shores section of Newport Beach for $6,000 a year. An April 1 beann1 date bas been Mt.. befon a auperior' court Judp wbo will appt'Oft or dilo1 the sale, which ia fuldecl by the probate proceedings under which Wayne's estate will be settled. Dunng the April 1 hearing the court could sell the six-bedroom home al 2686 Bayshore Drive lo a higher bidd e r , court documents said. Dul a second potential buyer would have to come up with at least $175,000 more than Mrs. Bettingen's $3.47 million offer. said Marion Buie, president of MacNab-Jrvine, the r ealty company handling the sale. The home's asking price was $4.5 million. Banks Hike Rate To ATWther Record N EW YORK (AP J Chase Manhattan bank, c1tmg h1gher interest rates generally, today boosted its prime rate to a record 181/• percent. It was joined at that level by United California Bank and Wells Fargo Bank. The increase of half a percentage point came only six ' days after Chase and most other major American banks announced half-point boosts ln the prime rate to 17'4 percent. The nation's tbird-lar1est bank said: "Today's adjustment brings the prime to a level more reflective of the general increase in market rates, which bas continued over recent months." Banks have been paying higher interest rates on funds that they acqutre t.o make loans. PTime rates have been climbing steadily since Feb. 19, when most ma1or banks raised the1 r base lending rate for business loans from 15'4 percent to 15~ percent. The prime is the rate banks charge their most credit·worthY corporate borrowen and ta the base for setting interest rates on almost all commercial- Industrial loans . Other ~usinesses pay lbe prime plus several percentage points, depending on their credit standing. The prime rate does not directly affect rates on con s umer loa n s or home mortgages. but is an indicator of credit conditions generally Ford Motor Co. Fi.IJ.. Acm1ltted ' ~ I '1. ---...-. I) • m· Pinto Deaths WINAMAC, lnd. CAP> -A jury from the nation's heartland today found Ford Motor Co. innocent of reckless homicide cbar1es in the lint criminal prosecutklo ol a corporation in a products defects case -a verdict the prosecutor said .. vindicates .. the giant automaker. Defense attorney James F. Neal said the acquittals on cbaree• atemmiDI from the fiery bi,itway death.a of three teen-agen showed even a &iant corporation can win the day lf it has "a fair and reasonable story " The three teen-agers were burned to death when their 19'73 Pinto exploded in flames after being hit from behiod by a van on an Indiana highway in August. 1978 The s tate contended defects 1n the subcompact's fuel system made it likely to lea.It fuel in rear end crashes at low to moderate speeda. Ford attorneys said the force of the impact, rather than any alle&ed defect, caused the gasoline tank to explode. The verdict came in the fourth day of the jury's deliberaUons . including a marathon session that went into the early morning todav <See PINTO, Page AZ) Silver Hits Brown Reappoints Low of $24 ; Goldstein Judge Gold Falls 11, F•EDE••CK scnoEMEIU. From AP, Staff Olapakbell The bottom literally Cell Out of the silver market today as prices in New York dropped to $24.60, a decline or $4. 70 per ounce, before recovering to clo,,e at $25.50. In addition. gold was under heavy selUnJt press ure,, falhn;; $46 in New York to close at $531 an ounce and to $557 in London. Both metals came under heavy selling pressure because or a stronger U.S. dollar. high interest rates io the United States that attracted invest.ment, and the fact that gold and sll...-do not produce income. . Monex In Newport Beach quoted an afternoon price of $S26 ror 10Jd and $24.71 for ail.er, whlcb at _. ttlD8 dJ'OPl*I u low u $ZS. 75. The dollar eained value on world exchange markets today and dealers attributed the movement to high Ameru:an interest rates. Gold at one point in January was sellmg for $875 an ounce and silver bnefly topped $50 A sudden, massive and totally unexpected demand for dollars today pushed the value of the U.S. currency to a s ix·month high and sent the price of gold to ita lowest level this year. Foreign exchange dealers in Frankfurt reported "massive demand .. for the dollar They did not !'\ay where the demand was coming from The dollar closed at 1 8211 West German marks. als highest Frankfurt close since I 8238 marks Sept 4 Wednesday at closed at 1 8052 mark'i One Frankfurt dcalN -.au1 a round S 160 m ii hon ~ ac; an <frnand at one pomt an trad1ni:? Markets wNe S\\-t'Pl h} :all; CJI a hig shorta;:c oi dollar'> 111 :--.e~ York anrl b} !>pcculataon that prime lending rate:., lho:.e charged for loans to top·credJt corporations. may be pushed up OOUNTY'S JOB ·M.4RKET YIEWED Today's Daily Pilot covers Orange County's employment market In "Jobs," a special magarlne section. Firm.a seelrlnit workers. taps on ~ethn~ Jobs and news of the county's employment situation haghh~ht the Hi-pa~e section Don't MISS · Jnh.;, · an lotl.n "' Daily Pilot BACK ON THE BENCH Judge Leonerd Goldstem Of U. o.11, ~Su.ff Leonard Goldstein of Newport ~ach. who was defeated by a deputy d..lstnct attorney in a t978 Supenor Court judgeship el~­ tlon . was reappointed to the Supenor Court bench toda· by Gov F.dmund G Brown Jr Goldstein now 1s sitting 01 .... 1e ;'l;orth Orange County Municipal Court bench as a result of a Rrown appomtmeni made short· ly a(ter he was defeated m the Supenor Court contest by Oretta Ferri Sears The Goldste in -Sears showdown was among three races in OW 1978 elections in which deputy distrlct attome)'fi unsealed incumbent judges. Goldst.rin will fill one of lwo newl~ creatC'd pos itions in Supenor Court ffl1 term will run for six ,,..,,... North O range County Mumci~I Court Judge Louis A fStt JUDGE. Page AZ} Mesa and Newport Differ on Airport By JERRY CLAUSEN Ol-~,,~,..s~ Costa Mesa City Council member,_· support or Orange County's plan to acquire land in their cit~ tu expand John Warne Airport coc'd become a hack ·scratchmf? matter an th€ coastal area The council ai-to con-.1der the I.ind acqm.;;1t1on dt ti!-F-3l' p ni mt•1't10J:! '·lnnda~ an l'1t~ Hall I r• .1 -t I.! d \ , l .. '-• n r I .• ' ! \1 on d .1;. r o u n c •' ml m b ~ r' rC'pnrt1'd tht;. prohahl~ ~on 1 oppo!'c' thc· purchao;c of three· parcf•I., 00 thC' We!.l Side or th(' airport planned for relocallon 01 generaJ av1at1on fac11itJes . But Newport Beach Mayor Paul RyckoH indicated the same day that he wants it understood that Newport's support of Co6t.a Mesa Freeway completion and construction of a marina on the Santa Ana River would be jeopardized by the airport plan. Newport Beach City Council members. who discussed the upcoming public hearing at their own Monday session. indicated th e .. ~111 shn"' up in Costa :'desa to prnte!'-1 thr airport p!C1n 1 hc;. 5a1d the effort to move ~crw ral a\'1at1on f::iciht1es v.111 JUSt make room for expansion or the airport terminal serving no1s} commerC'1al Je t traffic N ewporl Counc il man Paul Hummel. who ::.a rcast1cally call ed the plan a neighborly ~ec;tur e. n oted that 1t -. •mple mentation ~o uld g1vr Coi.ta Me-.a 1n comt> from ~eneral a\ 1at1on operations ~ hile ~t1ckm~ "=E>~ port with jet nn1~r and ... lreet traffic from lh1 tom merC'IC.ll 01X•rat1nn ... ·\ 'thnu~h tlw t:'\pan!-•on plan I' If' 1 ht prt hm1n:in -.t J f!t' 1t h;i-. !wt n -.ubm1tted to Cn'>ta :vle-,a t" dl'tt rmme 1r ll '" compe:1t1blt' v. 1th city plann111~ .\ lthou~h Me::. a councilmen indicated they wouldn 't oppose the plan. they told Raul Re~alado . airport manager. Monday that they would object to any proposal routing commercial air passenger trarric through Costa Mesa streel'I. Or:n:ai -~oasl \\eatht"r Jeffrey Bandy 111 pleaded guilty Wednelday to violatlnc uniform re1ulatlon1 , cli9uediUba U. Nuy dd tMint two dQI ol ubautborbed leave in a 1lllNrlal before Capt. a.P. •~ eomm..U.• omeer· at KoCllllU. Carter Plai18 ~getTa•li1 IUD Lawsuits Mounting Low C'louds tonight and Friday with only partial clearing Friday afternoon. Lows tonight 48 at the beaches and SS inland. Highs Friday 62 to 67 INSIDE TODA~ Dunng World War II. o Alo rin• Cdrp• Gf!rmon ~named Old Javed tM lh'H of 150 """· Tlw dog died m 19-W and ~ buNcf with mtma,., ~a m o Co.to Mno pet ~tery. But tM war dog '1cu not been /oroottni ~,., Morr,. fr: 11ds Su Page (1 ...., .. ftM4 '180 a ..... ,., tw .......... rMt.rided to ........... daya. TIM bel8 18 located about as JDllet IOUtb ol San Franciaco. Tbe ftv•year Navy veteran, 1'bo mooolllhted at a Fremoat Dlibt.club u a male dancer, wu ct.mo1ed rrom petty omcer .t.hlnl clau lut week .Jfter Navy oftldall ordered blm not to ltrtp oat of 1IAa unlfonn. Bandy wu OCll of 12 male c1ue1n r.atunid 9\ the rremom cllllt ...... tnq....W moltlJ r.-~ ••. He would ltriP. ...... .. tlli 4Meo tme 'ID tM . .,,. ............. =a OoM i •C...i..-. ... C'let ..... .. Ma ....._ I W AIBJNGTbN (AP) -PNI~ Caner wlll \illvetl bl.I )onc·awalt•d antl·lnflatlon proaram ln a White 'louse speech Friday, then dl1cbq tt further at a news conference. Th• apeeeb, to an audience of Con1re11 members, federal oft'lclala and npl"IMDtaUY .. of tbt prlyate Hctol' ~lll be dellvendatl:~p.m., nJ"1·, tnt.be Eut Room. ·carter'• ntw• eon.ftnnet will bie beld ln the aamt MUiial •. • p.m., PST. Bodi .,..... 1'tll be naQabl• for llvt t.elerillon tad ractto broatre.ta. I I .,J ~ BJ taDDKS 8CllHMD*· Ot•IMll! ..... ~ __ ~...._ .. Slsty women rrom __ .,........_ the Umt.d states med lawauita· W ednesda~ln Ora nae County Superior urt c1a1minl they 1uffere severe pe1vlc inflammation after u1ln1 an intrauterine 'device 1old by the A. 11. Robl111 pbannaceutlcal firm .. The latest court nUna 1Jrlftl to 121 tbe numt..r of la.,._.tl DOW pendtDC iD Ona1e and Loi A111elH eountlt1 a1aln1t Roblnl, ~IMS a1&an11 JohnV• .... ...., . llon IUD toO ...,r IUMI .,. ,. • c Diltkli.... . .. r .. Tbe lat.ell lrotlP 'l~ pl&lntlffs contead ln the •ction1 that a 1trtn1 attached t.o the Dalton Shield tUD caused bact.erla to enter the uterus and lead to infections Moat of the women identified in the lat.eat actions, Van Dyke said, are from Oranie County and Southern California. Otben are from New York Texu, Utah, Florida. Wa1bin1ton. Orecm ud Co&oredo1 ~ uld. Tile women, be adaea, lumed that tbe UU> may bave caUMd their •Ueced lnf.cUou throuCb new• "po~ atM>.,.i prHlou1 lawsuit.I .. ~ UM Richmond . Va., pharmaceutical firm. Each of the plaintiffs Is seeking $5 mtlllon In exemplary damages, and other compensation lncludintt reimbursemPnt of medlc8l and legal fees The Dalkon Shield w&11 taken off the market in 1974, but lt la e1Umat.ed that about oae mllllon of tbe IUD'• are still In un. Laat August, a Denver woman won a S8.2 million judament ttaainst Robin• after ab~ testified sbe suffered a milcarrt.,. and wu forced to under10 an emer1ency hy1t4tft'Ct.Om1 aftg beltlt fitted wttb a Da1.kon Sb.Mld. \ led<·~' Al ...... , s.n-lc.e Al At1t1 Ut*n ....... -..-.Clo c. IM•i., L.M...,.. At MlltMI~ ·~ ....... " ......... C.....,_. t.S Or•• c:..ey C-1 t• l'dlk~ 0.W..._ Cf 11 Sfl¥1e ~ C-let A\t i. Cel ,,_.. Crwt.._ Alt ,,,_,,, ou.-..... Ct'*" ........ . ••lhrlel ..... , , ....... ... •• ,.....,,.... ••Ml T ... ten ......... Cl.J WM4llw ... ,,., C1 ~-- ..... 191...... tit a ..... , .. .... AU CM .,. C4 .... • •• .., alMJ A• .. u ' 4 ' ' J .. : WAllUNGTON CAP} -n. C.... el•'evvaUoa rUMd itl vol~waae .Watiw Lida.,...__ 80 UM uU.'1 WO..... ""6ft w ........... fl. te a.t ,_.. tadl rear NIMID &a e ..,.,.,. wM ....,..... a.n.taoe· nouaa .aorta. Tbt .tdmlnlatnaUon, ae~ a laW·bacUd reeommwta· Uon, Mt. l\ddllln• ~ ol 7.1-pettent to I .I Pitt-mt for pay and frtqe benet\t incre.... lQ> h'om lut year'• 7 pereent autcteUne. 1"' IWdel.i.oe 11 t.be UmJt tbal the adminiatraUon would like to •M for w.,. lnere .... thll yeu . Since It la vohmtaf'1, however, t.tMt I 0"'1UDeat can't,... eona.itaee. ,,...., •eec• Pa ....... , l'arter WASHlNOTON CAP> -Gerald R. Ford called on Pre9ident Carter today Just U boun after dfflartq CIJ"Wr la dotna an abysmal job and abcMald be YOted out ol the~ HOUH. There wu no lmmedlaw lDdieaUoe •hat Carter &Dd tJae former presldm\ d1lcaMd .... ID ...._ ln die Oval Oftlce Ja their t.blrd loch • ....._ me. C....W dtfeated ~for c.M presidency In 11'79. The Whit. Hotaae termed it a routine vi.lit. Ford la an Wubin~ for two days of pollUckin1 and speednn•lr'•• in eclvaoee ol a c1&rh1ino wbether to enter UM Republican ~Ual ~· 81# &'Iller .. ,..,,,. l•J•Pefl .. •Iese LOS ANGELES CAP> -A fire in a home for the a1ect injured at least six of the 119 residents today, fiNfi&bten aaid. "We have ab: confirmed injuries, but it'• probably IOinf to be more than that because It's a home for the a1ed," Hid tre spokesman Ned Chatllelci. An emergency medical station was set up at the scene to treat the residents of Mount Zion Towers on South Central Avenue Ftt /fl~ te C'•i l"eUr•I ,_,,• W ASIDNGTON <AP) -The Federal Election Qimmisalon moved t.oday t.o cut off federal fWlds for four presidential candidates who have faltered in the early primaries. The commission voted to terminate eli&ibllity for matclline funds for Democrat Edmund G. Brown Jr., the Californ.t. governor, and Republicans Howard H. Bater, PbJUp Crane and Bob Dole, because they did not meet minimum vote·getting standards in the primaries. Federal Jaw says matching funds muat be cut off 30 daya after a candidate faJls to set at leut 10 pen:ent of the-vote ln two consecutive primaries an which be P&l'tlcipates. ,, ...... _ .... ) PINTO ACQUITTAL. • • Chief Prosecutor Michael Cosentino said after the verdict Lha t there was a "strong possibility" he would appeal. apparently does." After the verdict, he shook the hands of fellow prosecutors, saying U> one, "We gave it all we had." Defense attorney Neal, whose fee in the case has been reported at Sl million, said of a possible appeal: "l don't care about the appeal. They can appeal all the points of law they want. I'm through wttb the cue." He said later· "I'm awfully pleased. It u the most difficult case I've ever tried. 'lbe at.ate ·bad an eu1 •IDOUGllal c.ae. but we bad a less emotional cue becaUN we were defendln1 a big corporation." Cosentino. who led a spartan s tate e ffort that included funding of about $20,000 and the use of volunteer help, said the verdict ''vindicates" Ford He said: "It means t.o me that manufacturers can make any kind of car they want to and it's up to the public t.o decide if they want t.o buy it or not. I do not p e r so nally believe that corporations are doing what they can to help the people of tbla country, but the Jury ·'The jury has spoken a nd t hat's our syst e m . J 'm disappointed of course, but t bat'a the way the ayatem worb," CoeenUDoaaid. Earl Ulrich of Osceola, Ind., r atber of two al the three victima 1n the 1978 cruh oo U.S. 33 near Gosbm, Ind., uld ol &be •91'diet: ·•rm .,..,. cU•11t:'" ..... Bat thla m0r.tMn1to wtt1a •·,.... was the state ot lnd.lana against Ford Motor Co." . Killed in the crash were Judy Ulrich. 18, the driver , her sister. Lyn Uln ch, 16, and their cousin. Donna Ulrich. 18. Because a corporation cannot be imprlaoned. a conviction in the Ca5e could have carried a maximum penalty of a $10.000 fine on each of the three counta. But the case waa considered a landmark battle because of ill possible effect in other such cases and on pending civil suits concerning the Pinto. Slayer's Alcohol ·Consumption Told Thomas Andrew Barley consumed enouab alcohol to cause brain damaae before he stabbed bia wife t.o death at a Santa Ana s boppin1 center in M ay, a cou rt-appointed paycbialriat testified t.oday. The testimony of Dr . Seawri1bt Anders on came • durina the opening or le1al . proceedinaa to determine if : Barley was sane at the time he : stabbed hil wife, Catherine, 48. ' Barley was convicted of second degree murder by a ' Superior Court jury tut week. , He bad pleaded innocent by : reason of insanity. Under questJonin1 by defense DAILY PILOT ......,.,_ .... ,..._. .. ......... Mii ..... ..... C!Wttelt.a-........... -ANl•M«MI ....... .._. T•h•t 1100 ('N4)..._, a111M1• a.tt .. ..,. '°"" attorney Geo rae Chula, Anderson said Barley suffered from mental disease "of such severity" be lacked the capacity to understand the criminality of his acts. The peychiatriat eald Barley used alcohol to 1uch a depee It caused certain brain dama1e • affecting b1I tbtnttng proceaMI . Andel'IOD said tbe former Daily Pilot new1man suffered from episodes of paranoia u a r.ult of what be termed "alcobollc psycholta." Andel'IOD Hid he saw Barley in the Orange County Jail on Aug. •· He interviewed Barley fJ)t 42 JDinutes He aaid bl• dia1no1is was baaed on that rnterview. If the jury finds Barley was ins ane at the time of the s tabbing of Mrs. Barley, he would be committed to a state mental hospital for treatment until physicians determined him t.o be recovered. If the jury makes a sanity finding, Barley would then face a state prison sentence of bettreen 15 yean and life. He •ould beeolDe eli.Sble for parole after 10 y-.n. · Durtna the aeven·weell:: trial the deftDM attempted to portray Barley u an 1nHcnare Individual who wu ln Uae mldlt ol an alcoholic blackout when be stabbed Mn. Barley 11 t1m11 with a letter opener u bon1lled wltneuea watched. Prosecutor Cliff Harrl1, a deputy diltrtd attorney, aald lt WAI the., ... burden to prove that BN'leJ wu wane at the time ol ta. atabbln1. Banta uJd met.nee will tbow ot.benriM. At tbe Um• of the lluardlr Barley WM m probetloD tor a pl'ffloul bile au.ck m Mn. Barlei. Tbe mew.& ocomnd ID December of im. •121!"- .. ~Q:adl~ &wo ,, ....... ::c ..... '= .... "to ..... eancbdet9. OH sroup -&.bl Voun ID· form.U. ..,_., -...... OI'-:= _. tw Ute e..-.nt ~ :=-~•-"1 c.m. muaicdoal CoordlDatiaD Com· mil= OJ' Four ea. bu beal aro for about ftve yean. a.& Cba1r11U Tom HoY.ltoa taya ~ Ja .. Int COUDCU ta .. alp ....... tbe a.-p Ml been banlv.d. Tom Rocen. a West Newport Beacb commercial property owner wbo tPC*e for ta..---. ......... ~.,......Ut.I& n~~-P-"P plw to ..sane a c~n'l bave aay ax to eriAd," Nkl Bole,., ma po.rp sent a J.0.queatiao survey to e.cb of tbe nine council candidates and be uld they will ells· semlnate the results to all ol Newport's 4.2,000 voters either by nyen or ln newspaper ads. Houston's group is a loose col· lection of representatives of the city's homeowner usodatioa.s. He said they bave held ID· di vi dual intervtews wttb the can· didates and each of the asaocia- tioo repreeentatives present wu expected to return t.o b.1a or her usodation and verbally report on the interviews. The makeup ol Roten' UoUP rem a1Jll unbown. Be dedlDed to identify Its memben other than to explain there are about 100 Newport Beach business peo. pie and reaidenta. The questionnaire sent t.o can· dldates was siped by Roten. Jeweler Jack Vick, Newport Crest resident Wayne Blessman and Louise Higgins. M ra. Higglns could not be located for comment. Biesaman could not be reached. Vick. whose bminesa ia k>cat· ed in Rosen' shopping center at Wes t Coast Hiabway and Balboa Boulevard. said the point of the qutttionnalre wu t.o find out if the candidates are "pro or coo Newport Beach. '·People ouabt to know whether a candidate ls ,.U, to keep Newport Beach as Newport Beach or tum it C lrviM," be said. He mo -d to ideatifJ otherWl'M9...._.. HOUICoD aald tbe "-r Ca sat into the c.ampalp u an out- growth of the sroup's hrterest in citywide problems such as the airport, police protttUon and trash pickup. Associations represented in· elude Houston'• Balboa Island Improvement Association, the Little laland AsaoclaUon, the· Penio:aula Point uaociaUon, the Weal Newport Beach Improve· ment Aaaociation, Newport Cre1t Homeownen Aaodatioo, the Corona del Mar Ch1c Aa- s6ciatioo, Martnen AHOdatioD, Newport Hell)lts Aa~ladon and tbe Harbor View Hilla Homeowners. Aasoelatlon, be said. He said efforts are made periodically to lrm>lve all al the clty'a auociattom. "Oar meet· ings are by DO means closed. Our only restriction la ~." be added. Tbe group Q)eets tbe fint Saturday of each month ln the police chief's cooference room. In addition to the homeowners association representatives, a meeting held March 1 abo at· tracted Jean Watt, president ol Stop Pollutins Our Newport <SPON) and campaltn chairman for Mayor Paul Ryckofl. Also attendlae as a 8PON representative wu Su.ay Flcbr, alon1 with SPON members Aneela Flcter White and Debra Allen, who I.a al.lo a member of the ctty's plann.lna commlaaion. ....... _.4J JUDGE ••• Cardenas of Huntlnitoo Beach recently wu named by Brown to \he other position. Goldat.eln, 48, bad ta.ken out papen t.o nm for reeMetkln to the North Court bench. He WU fac1.q oppoeltioo from Anaheim Cit7 Attorney William P . "°'tins. Tbe IU!ha ol ~ elleUCID ... to the appointment, wu not lm· mediately ll::nown today. . OolcllMtn .. a f01"1Di81" ... deputy utonae1 •-•ral llDd r.riYateaUGID«t.Jlenoeiftflldl awdetP'MfnmUC....._. ID another •DDO!Dtment AD• nounced al mtcJaay, OoHC'Dor Brown named Joanae Harrold, M, of Newport lleachii to tile Wat 01uae County UDlclpal Courtbmdi. Sb• II now a clllNt7 public de- ,...,. .. ~· COuntJ. In Ull Jiit, llN bu le"'4 u a Juftllll9 «*ft,..,.,.., a JGdle pro wn cm dlill maaletpel eourt and • law lilltNc.1ur at w.-... ltlttt1al•••· a1a. wm ...... • ..... , cnat.d~. Bay Bridge Work Should Start Soon Legion Hall Ai Newport Eyes Opening Coo1tructaoo on the new Pad.fie Cout ~way bridee over Upper Newport Bay could buin by April, •ccordina to an offlclal with lCuler Corp., low bidder on the project. Nick Softa, spokesman for the 8an ~baaed firm, said the contract baa yet to be awardedtothecompan7, pencttn1 routine review by tbe state Attorney General '1 office. Re aa1d the award sboujJd be 145 Teachers lnN-MUSD Face Layoffs Layorr notices hav(.! gone out to 14S teache r s 1n th e Newport·Mesa Unified School D1str1ct. school ortrc1als said today . The notices of intent to dismlM, wtucb by law mmt be sent by March 15, resulted Crom declining enrollment and from program cut.a as trustees try to ahave = mlll1on from next year's The 1ay0fta wm save about S2. 6 mllllon next year. oftlcl als said. Jn addition. about 60 teachers wo rking under o n e -year tempor ary contra c t s will receive letter s after spring vacation, which ends Apnl 6. sayine. in essence, that their contracts won't be renewed. Regular t.eachers, but not the temporaries, are e ntitled to beariap before a state hearing officer, o fliclals said. The district baa been informed the bearings will be acbeduled in late April t.o determine exactly bow many teacherB can be cut. Teachers are laid off in reverse order of seniortty. Actual dismissal notices must be sent prior t.o May ts. Tbe number or teachers receiving them will probably be somewhat lower due to reslpatJona and retirements received In the interim, said Kevin Wheeler. district assistant s upenntendent for penonnel. Last year. he said 2S to JO r esignation a nd retirement notices were received by the diatrtct. , made with.in the oext two weetts and cooa,truction will began immediately aft.ertbat. Tbe company. which built the Corona deJ Mar Freeway and bu worked cm the Costa Mesa and Oran1e freewa.JS, submitted a bid of $8.9 miWoD for ~roject, the lowestot aix aubmi • The new bridce neatvally will replaee the four-lane nn.ctme that LI nearty 50 Jean old and that represents one of tbe city's biggest traffic bottlenecks The new structure will have lhree lanes or traffic in each direction With an extra westbound lane foe can heading northbound on Dover Dn ve Th e prop~ct i nclud e!> improvements and expansion of the highway mterse<:t1on'> at Bayside and Dover drive!> it\ '4 l'll it!> construct.ionofthe brid ge E stimated length of construct.Jon 1s 18 month'> SoH J explained that the contract calb for the ntstang brid1e ID remain open to traffi c durin g corutruction of the new structure which is to be bwlt lo the north. The old bridle wilt be demolilbed wtMn the new one ls finis bed, be said. Barnoi "rain or any other pltfall"-Newport Beach's American LeC)on Hall, 1utted by fire in November, should be back in busioeaa tbi.a summer. Don Dooaldsoo, president of the post's board of direct.on, said refurbtahlng moat of the building at 215 lSlb St. bas be1un. "We-hope to open with a big Fourtb al July party," be said. The fire on Nov. 13 apparently was tnggered by a floor beater ld t on o vernight. A piano standing too close to 1t caught flrf' Since the fire. me mbers or po.,t 291 havt-been meeting in the former post building. ;i 50 year-0ld shack on 9th Street. "We've got 700 members and '4 t• \ t· be-en meeting in the old huild1nJ! to kct•p the group l•11?1·th<>r, Donald.-.on said or rourse we don't get all 700 1n1n 1t Jt one t1mt-·he added The post plan5 to refurbish the .. hack ~ ror aquatics classes taught by the city Parks, St-aches a nd Recrea tion Depar1ment, oace the wort: on the hall LS completed .. We t.houahl tl would be Dice. ·to a•v• it a pa.int )ob and a race Utt. too." Dooalcbon aaid of the 9t.h Street building ·Nftl'Jl'Ort StllClent Charges Dropped In Cocaine Arrest Cbaraes of conspiracy to sell c oc aine have been dropped against Newport Harbor Hl&h School student Bruce Lester Caldwell. a~ to police. Caldwell, 18. of 1208 Pembroke Lane, was among seven people arrested March 5 by Newport Beach narcotics ortirers and a1eats from the stew Bureau of Narcotica Enforcement. Sgt. Darryl Youle s aid no char1es were filed on Caldwell due t.o a lack of evidence. His record was altered to lndkat.e he was ,detained for quesllorung. not arrested, Youle added Still factni char1es in a March 24 preliminary bearin1 In the Harbor Judicaal D1.Stnct Court waU be Kyle David Slaughter. 18. 900 W. Ocean Fro nt. Newport Beach. Fernando Casteneda, 31. or Loa Angeles . Leonides Diaz. 37, of Santa Ana ; Connie Birdwell Smith, 29, of Santa Ana, Ruben L. Jimenez. 39, of Santa Ana. and Danilo Ruil, 33, or G lend.ale ' The co nspirac y c harges resulted from an alleged sale of 20 o un ces or coca ine t o underrover investigators. Polace 1denlifled Slaughter as a Newport Harbor High School student. l ·------....... _.........._ .. "-'" . . .w .... '"" .... ' jolltleal a •••& "It la ft&t I WCMIW call a ... • • ...... u. .. ,......, ~IQL ••t •rte•ao• aow fl•d• btm ... a emral n,ve 1a a ............... Aad Ulere appHr1 to be ............ 9'.t m1lht ..... to Illa ••••••••J for -uae a., MH• 11 •aau. la tllil • * * Fund-raising Probe ~ught SAN FRANCJSCO <AP)-Tbe ebalrman of lb• California Coutal Comm1uSoD bu ubd for a probe brto aUeaaUoda that three ftOonal memben used An lee Day For Streak TORONTO <AP ) - Wearing only socks and skates, a ~year-old man s treaked onto tbe rink during a National Hockey League game, surprising som e players but drawing applauae from the crowd. "It's a bit of a sbocker to be on the ice, look up and see a guy, stark naked, running around the ice," said Ed Kea, center for the St. Louis Blues, who beat the host Toronto Maple Leafs 3·1 in the game Wednesday night. After a 30-second chase, police arrested th e streaker. 1bomas Joseph Enright of Burlington, Ontario, and charged him with indecent exposure. Television broadcasts showed abots only of the streaker beinc led from tbe riot. Seven hopefuls wlll vie for an Orange County Central Municipal Court Judaeabip as a result of a decision by Judge Robert Law, of Newport Beach, not to seek re-election. Entering the race in advance of a 5 p.m. Wednesday deadline were: -P. Lee Johnson_i a Santa Ana attorney. -Jack Ryan, chief of the Orange County District Attorney's o(fice major fraud and consumer protection division. -Marjorie Edwards, a Newport Beach attorney. -Vilma Aarons, a Costa Mesa attorney. -Bob Harden, an Anaheim attorney. -Robert Fraser, a Santa Ana attorney. Cliff Hanis, an Orange County deputy district attorney. previously entered the race. The filing period was extended because Judge Law declined to submit nomination papers. Law recently bad been criticlnd by deputy di.strict attorneya for hi.I alleted actioo.s en several drunken driving cues. Tbe deputies voiced their complaints to tbe State Commlulon on Judicial Perfonnmee. tMl.r laftUltDCe to ...... lundl for their owa pollUcal amblUcm from people wbo came before tbe eoinmlulOD. "We don't know wbetber the alle1atlons made aaainst several ol the commiuioaen on the South Coast Re1ional Commission are accurate," Chairman Lenard Grote said w ed.nesday. "However. whether accurate or not, these alleeaUons are extremely serious and warrant immediate action." The Loa Angeles Times reported Wednesday that Los Angeles City Councilman Arthur K. Snyder, Ga.rd.en Grove Mayor Elertb S. Erickson and Torrance City Councilman Donald E . Wilson, Nho also serves as chairman of the South Coast Regional Coastal Commission, solicited nearly $200,000 lo funds either directly or through representatives from people who sought approval for their project.a before the commmion. All three denied knowingly accepting money from donors with appllcatioos pending before the commiaaion. Grote, a Pleasant Hill city councilmao and chairman of the statewide commiuloo, nld be is asking tbe 1tate Attorney General'• -Offlee. the d1strtct •tt.oneT• eiftk9 JD L08 .U.•• aad Orwe cowd ... and .... Fair PollUeal Practices Commlaioe to .. Immediately reTiew statements of lmproorlety raiaed lD tbla article.11 Accordhr"I:: to tbe Times article, poflUcal donatlons randn« from $100 to tJM>«aanda of dollars •ere solicited by Jetter or telephone from small property owners u well as big developen wiUa bualoeu before the eommiaaklll. The three commissioners sit on the 12·member regional panel which controls construction permits for valuable coastline property lo Loa Angeles and Orange counties. Decisions by the regional panel can be appealed to the full state commission. Sony, Wrong Designation ABILENE, Texas CAP) -U your fingers do the wallting, you '11 Clod the Elliott-Hamil Funeral Home in the frozen food section in the Abilene phone book. The Yellow Pages people are red in the face and the undertakers are bot under the collar. Instead of being grouped with other funeral homei in tbe '10,112 new phone boob d.l.stributed t.b1a week, Elliott-Hamil is liated under the classiflcatioa "Froleo Food· Wholesale." Peony Young, a spokeswoman for Southwestern Bell Telephone Co., blamed the mix up on a co~~uteT error. fl.I& Ar •blr Dlltrtft. -•~ult II toJiD1 wltb tM a.a ......... tut be wtewn,.,.... ... , .. ,,..... -Ttat elaairm•• of tilt comb'I ..... cu Put.J add •It• la aaa&oua to talll to &l'leU-abMt ~· appa.rnt preicllolcH AM._ cMlnNa ol U. ..._ Coutal Q>m•tekMa bM caUed •Po• 1tate aad loeal l•• 11ferc••••t •••••••• to filaost ol l.,efllsi.t•re commtukm to build on couta1 Wadi ID IM Aqeles and Oranae couatl11. be dtalu dolnt aoytblq wrooc . l!ric:U. sald Wecm.daJ that neither be nor hll ascnt bad 1olldted contrlbuU001 from applicants before the comm111lon •oted oa tbelr request.a. He aho claimed that developen wbo pve him money do 10 becaUle theJ a&J'ee with .. ,. .. ,_.,.... Like a silent sentinel, the image of a n apparition-like face looks out from the grain pattern of the wood paneling outside the empty Florida H ouse o f Representatives chamber m Tallahas~ee A Baby Nobody Wanted No Leath to Parents of Abandoned Infant She's a bouncy, 14-pound baby believed to be about 18, a woman girl, that. apparently, no one udtbebaby. wanted. He deKribed tbe woman u a Sbe ... found a week aao lD a female Cauc•'•n, ai.o about 18, 1arap In Santa Ana, alttmc In an wbo wore beevy makeup and bad lnfantsell&. .ner• waadroslped -~~blowllhalr. olf b1 two .... ad • ..nan ·1.a .. WOtDM .. back lat.o tbe rldlna ID apkkvptruck. tnaell:, the wbaeU beard ber aay. concerned about the baby's welfare than pursuing a cbdd abandonment prosecution. He aaid be hopes that news c:overqe ol tbe cue will help locatetbebabf 'smother. ·' lf lbe wants to sip a release and pm tbe eblld up for adoption sbe can do that." Reid said If tbe ~r 1a not focal.. be .. id. Jl could ... up &o J.I ........ befON die ~ C .. be plaeed with • pennaneat foster famJJy • hll pblJoaophy wblcb •• de1crlbed H pro•1rowtb dd pro-development. : ··1 wouldn't lmowtqlJ .. fJW accept money If I kae•.e appUcatloo • .., pndint1" d~larecl ... U It happened 1t wit.bout my knowledce. : ..I would be opea to 1u11estbl bow to ralM CAIGpaip modly without Hll:lnu.:::le wltb money for coatrt . • •• And ~ ... mott llke1y to uk are tbOM wbo have ~ft exPOMCI to my pbllollopby." · !rlcbon confirmed that lie accepted a number of dooatiom lo t.be Sl.000 ranae, but added th.at be WU not asked to v()Ce favorably on a project lD retura for a contribuUoo. ••u that would have happentd, I would turn it over -fo the attorney general immediately," he said. His opponent in the AuemDly primary election, Doris Allei, charged tbat the tactics smacked of Watergate. Mrs. Allen said today she is thinkl.ng about demanding that Erickson quit the race. She said the charges make Erickson vulnerable and •re harmful to the party. Mrs. Allen is president of the Huntin~ Beach Union High School District Board of Trustees. Lois Lundberg, cheirman of the Republican Party io Orange County. said she wants to talk to Erickson, but was unable to reach rum Wednesday She said, 1f the campaign fund·raising practice s hould prove to be questionable. the party could withhold support from Erickson after a bearina by the ethit's committee She said that s uch an at't.Jon might not carry much force because the party normally doesn't support candidates in contested pnmary races. Hiker's Skull Identified PALM SPRINGS <AP> -A skull found in December by bikers in the San Jacinto Mountains above this desert resort has been identified as that of • Lona Beach man lost while b.iklng in 1117. Rlverslde County Deputy Coroner Pat Choate aald WednedaJ tbe lba1l la that. of Steven D. Galla~r. wbo wu 23 when he disappeared. A few months after be tbe skeleton waa •.arall••m en found It lD T= Canyon. Today, the baby girl. estimated .. I don't want to Jene her," to to be betwemfow andatx mmtbs w~ om ol tM men replied. old. ta belU cared ftw bJ ,__.. :~.~= -.,.1c aDd ,..._ p......atn~lt1 .. ach-ane --of ........i wMoperat19 an Reid l aid p0Uce are more Emergency · lter Care home =:=:=:=:=::::::=::==::=:::=::::=::::::::::=:=::=:=:=:=::::::::::::::::==::==:=:=:=::::=::::=:;-throush tbe county Department of Soclaf Servlces. Asked lfthere were any leads as to who the baby's parents are, Santa Ana Police Deltttive Ron Reid replied. "We haven't the foggiest." Reid aaid it is not the typical abandonment case ln whlch the unwanted child i.s left with a friend or relative or at a location traceabletotbeparents. According to a witness. Reid sajd, an Orange pickup truck with a white and brown camper shell pulled up to an Adams Street address carrying two men. Teen-ager Killed :fa County Crash Nineteen-year-old James V. Osterberg of Midway City was killed Wednesday when bis car hit a tree in Westminster, according to police. Lt. Joe Woods said Osterberg, the only occupant ln the car, was dead at the scene of the era.sh at Newland Street, north of Huard Avenue. Diven Find Body LOS BANOS (AP) -Diven have recovend tbe bod1 ot a SS.year.act San Joee man whole 12·foot boat was found cape.Ued on O'Neill Reservoir near here, Department of Parks and Recreation officials repo~. 1 FLOOR CLEARANCE ON (!/{~ SOFA BEDS SAYE UP TO 40o/c Regular Price $699. to S999 Sale Price --.. $399. To $599. epuial appeal to IMUJ vita app~iale l>eauliful ••11""6 alttll '"61t quality . Que_en and full ai:se Co-.e 1,. Early For Beta S.iftli.o11 In olber judidal eontesta In which the filinl deadline was estended, four persona added their names to the list of bope(uls who will nm for the Superior Court position of Judge Lester Van Taten.bove of Irvine. They are North Oran1e Comity Municipal Court Jud.ee J ames Cook, of Fullerton; G. Godfny Sancleen1 a Cotta Meea attorne1; Spencer R. Alt.er. Robert ll. Ball. and JOMPh L Bart.Ua. a Loa Ancelet County East Bombarded By Heavy Snows •Theee .. WI'/ comfoneble 90fa bedl for titting 8nd -.ping. ~bte b9cb mnd •at cu.hlons. 4tputJ dlstriet attorney. Alnady la the race was &ae-. Cmrle Lewil, a Loi . Aaaelll Couat7 de&Mlt1 dlltrtet litter"'7 wbo relidel In MlplM . Vlejca. , ID U.. nc. for tbe polltian : •• held by Superior Court ludp R. Walter ste1Der who ~··· ••• aQDOUDced bl• retirement, Yorba Linda ' tdn91dl)'. a std Radoa returud bdm lD tbt CCllltelt are Nortll Oran1• County . IJM\PPP c.t l .... lloben ~ " a..a del Mar; ~'aa•a•~·.~ ( Ce•rt ..-au1hller from IE -2, .. -...rtD. -~~ 1. •hlllt .... .., ,.. - 1 •-a • ---'=--"':'' -,. ~,vi'· ' Your F•vonte ~ Wit B• Heppy To AUISt You. H.J.GARRETT fU~NllU~E 2211 H•llOl IL YD. COST• MllA 64Ml71 .. I --~ f • LagtattJ'1S-,,,,HoUot.oAreolk/oNeoo.IHtglhoovadllwRkh You'vegottbeticb,sUdinalntotheaea. It may be difficult to set us worti.Da 1Wf1 all a teamed up over the perils that befall tbe affluent. The guy who wrote the piece about only tbe wealthy belnl able to afford living in Laguna la GU Ferguson of Newport Beach. NEWPORT, OF COURSE, is the place where property values have suffered so heavily that all the blue collar people from Costa Mesa are moving there. Anyway, for us nativesofthecoastline, lt'seasytopulthe knock on Laguna If you don't have anything else to do. Just consider the way the place can confuse you with its streets and roads. Downtown, you can find Second Street and Third Street but no First. For First, you have to try First Avenue lo South Laguna. BENT STREET IS the straightest road in town. Through Street is always blocked by a construction project. Cypress Lane sounds tree·lined but that's an alley. Center Street isn't near the center of anything. El Paseo used to go through but it doesn't any more. You do know the rich live here because they've got streets with names like King Charles III Lane and Bounty Way. And as for Frurywood and Lavender lanes, I'm not going to even touch those lines . IF LAGUNA'S STREETS haven't contused you by now, JUSt try the names they attach to some of the neighborl:M>oda. Arch Beach Heights is nowhere near the beach. Canyon Acres no tonier bu ~b. open land. And as for Sleepy Hollow, you'd be..._.,,_. there becauae it la.al the mea..ttn.tneonod;ten&ldeo·tt!ine. So tt'• easy to put the lmoc* an Lapna. ADYbodJ can do it. But just re member, a place that won't go for curbs, gutters or sidewalks can't be all bad :f'oviet Ships Seen Pl/ Japanese Coast •• t:i:OKYO (AP) -A landing ship were spotted by a J apanese patrol lno destroyer of the Pacific neet plane and that their destination were reported today cl"UStng otl waa unknown. theJapaneselslandofTusuahima at the gateway to the East China Sea. · A spokesman for the Japanese Defense Agency said the ships A total of 20 Soviet wanbips have been spotted heading south off Japan this year, the spokesman said. TBSla l'ACSS US•ltD ''wuhed ol any emotioa, •• and there wu .. an aura otdeDreMion. otaadneu," betoldNBCllfewa. · ll:xcerpta ot tbe ftlm were broadeut Wednesday on tbe "NBC Nl8bt1,y News" and a full veralon with 11 boeta1ea was abown laterln tbeneniq. Tbe ftlm lhowed tbe ll'lll1an doctor talktn1 witb some boatqee, puWna • •tetbosc..we to their cbelta and takiq tbeir bk>Od preuure. Tbe doctor de9cribed their condition as "satlsfaetory taking into account tb~ psychological state of tboae detained for almost five months." Paczenik described tbe Overpa~nt Of Welfare $700 Million W ASRINGTON (AP) -The government says overpayments in two of its largest welfare programs amounted to almot5t $700 million during the latest six·moot.bpertodcbecked. The Social Security Admlniatration said Wednesday 1533 million tn Aid to Families with Depen6eot Cblldren went to famfllea "bo either were IDelilible for~ or tot more money than they were entitled to durtq the alx·mooth period ending lut March 30. That was up from $479 million during the previous six months. The agency announced last m onth that overpayments in Supplemental Security income were $166 million in the same period. The total misspent in AFDC and SSI from October 1978 to March 1979 was just under $700 million . The payment error rate tn A FDC-t.he percentage of total funds that went to ineligibles or those overpaid-jumped from 9.4 percent to 10.4 percent . Tbe error rate for sm rose from 4.6 percent to 5 percent. Rains Inundate Georgia Fl,ood Waming• l••ued; School• Cw•e Ml Le "" Albany 75 6 AlbU'QIH' st ,,, Atl•nle .,, lS 2.1' Balllmore 39 :It 81sm•rck 31 s ·°' BolH 4S 37 8MIOi' 3J " 8uff•lo 27 17 ci.eyenn. 3' 21 .10 Cllkete> :JO ,. .OS CltKlflNll 37 29 c~ 31 ,. D•l P't.Wtll 71 ... 0.,,..., 50 23 0.1 ll'olllel lO 1S .11 Dullllll 22 19 .JS H•rtford :JO 13 HeleM '° 2> Honolulu ,, 11 H--IS "' .C» Ind' etlOflS 3J 27 '° J.c:lla'wH .. 71 .. • 04 St I.Alvis " 31 .St IC•n'aOtr lS JO S.11 Lei<• " " LHV ... .0 41 San 01._o .. s. Little Aock SI 4S 01 S4"1,.r.,, S7 SI L~A....-n" SNtll• 4S .0 .1' Lovls'lille JI 3l .OS St Ste INri. 17 11 Mempf>ls )4 ... .01 TulU 47 42 Ml.,,,I 71 7S WHlll"91on 42 " .en MlhHUk• ZI 2S .en CAll l"OttN I A Mc>ls-St.P. 32 71 • " Bff•f'lf i.ld 62 45 ........ 111. .. ... ·" ""'°" 5' m NewO...... ,, tO 81'(Ule 73 51 ""'y°"' • 2'J k'eMIO ~ ., 0tt1e. Cltt ... ,. Lenc•"91' SI a4 Omefle J2 2' • '4 Monterty J1 44 PflltecrplM . . ...... ... :: :· '"'-tl!IC 10 n 0.1.ncl PllUClut'gll 32 2S '°' f'etoRotllft 61 ,. P'tlend,#M. u 12 Seu_.. J6 ,, P'tlend, 0rw ... .., . .a S.nle IMrtl«• 6l '° AttlO SJ JO • ModlOll 62 • l'Mrm.tl n ., I eentow •2 44 h':f:: °:".':'' 81f8Hr ... 22 c .. enn.1 ,, 50 ~ ll-d0 no4 '-II Centro n " YGllf -llJllXl~M Clll ""°'9 r ·~hedl .. 50 ,. ~.,, -.,o.tCOO'I ............... Ml u-S<I JO ~-~If~·-"""""'-" .. la Ofttilfle .. '° ,_...r:: &111..Cllll ....... ~ 1$ ... llelort t I"' ..,_ .... ---_ ......... .. 's .... ,,... .. . Q 'A T,-=-: IMl•AM 71 " .... °"""~ ...... leftte Cr"1 .. 41 ....................... .......... ., . ewt-ias I 11 .... .:=-T .... V....., • "' f::.'¥F!~ ..... PMAMe•ICAJt == ·•n I la n ' ...... ,, -cw.c. • ,, - l'rMpOrt Gu.Ul•J.r• GuMleio1419 ......... ICl"9UOft Mont-008•Y Mareti.n Merida Me•k.oClty Moftl""9Y 11.& 89-•UJ•••• ... T __ .._.. W1MN 11W -left •erty...., r......,"""' 3 -,_ In Me-. N.Y .• lo n"' Key W.W, Fl•. Wl .... ..,.elftO uplOJSmllft per flour dutl"9 .. ""' ..... ~ .,.. •l(Jleelect to IMIP 5cMMm c.I~ dry 0111 lnMn•"'°""'°'-·,,_.IOH_ lloodlnt. IM H•llon•I W••tlle• S.tvla~ Molt ......... Git......._ ,_ bt9•-Wier t#MllOI....,, M e MW storm tt'tftt _... on IM wey llOf1fl .,.,_,,,...... ..... But t.1w.i c!HM .... offkl.t1 told L.-e IEI"--,..,ldltftt1 .,..Yd bettff nol re l•• ~<•111e ,,,. I••• I• c ontln111111 lo rlH •ftCI IP•••d. ·~ ...... ..,.,,., .... ~ Low <-toftltM ..,. l'•klev. Coole• ....... y Co.Si.I Nv11.i. IOw SS. lnl-llltfl "·--.-·" IEIM'#Mf9, ...wny '*'"" e+9M to 14 ·-· wttll ___,., ,_, two '° 111rn IHI. Moatly l•I• tll••uoll _..,,,, .., ... ..,n-. ,...., t:'1111<"'-.. 7:'9 ""'" •.J PlttOAY 111,.e.m. 1.2 ,, .... "" S.t t :SI 111-M. ·It S.C4'M Niii t :M """· U SW! r• t :OS e.lft., ...,,,. p.111. ,___,...test a.m... '-t1t:.s111o111 • s...,mep.rc Surf: Awr ... ll•ltllt '" ffft, -·-....... '" ..... period '" 19C°'*· 2 • ,. 1 J tO ' 4 11 l • " Swell. A,,., ... lleleflt In ffft. m4llllmum MltM lfl leet, dlnctleft. w IW w w plly1loal txam 11 th• •tmoat ouuory" of tHta, "• ~ulck toacldlllotthitlt.etboleope .• JUC MID TRS oocroa met wtt.b tbl a.a.tac• .. now tn tbetr m.t day ot eQiti.tt1, to ebeclt them ••• rew day• atO" befon • PGNlble Nlt. l&WI' cancelled. by • Uni**9Natlom commillkm. RoHa. •· U. embuay lll'9S 1tt1qbe, told tbe d~tor, ,"In • f ....... NATION /WEATHER Jao"91')f, I bed wtwl :t=J• a convullkm. llJ M.vt .. beat:a; aacl IDY ..... aod ••• Roeen • e Barbara lll4 ID Brookl)'n, N.Y ., "We .,. "" concerned atiout bll bealt.b. But I ,..u, don't waat to.., D.Ytldai more tban that." 8be told NBC abe would Ilk• to appeal fw ber husband'• releue on medical erou.oda, but doesn't aow who to contact. Dick Olllep, of Pueb&o, Colo •. said b.ls 21·year-old son .. looted good. ae·s obviously ta.kiq care of bilDldf and doiD& &Yerjtblne be can to &et out of UM" bl one p leee ... Under the clrcumatances, be look.a great.•• NBC identified three ot.ber hostages ill the mm aa Bnaee W. German. a, a state Department bud1et olftcer from Kenablltoo. Md.; Je'f'r/ Plotkin, a Callfomia buslneuman visiting the embusy when lt waa oven'Ull; aQd JobD Limbert, a poUtical offtcerfrom Wuhinatoo. TWO OTHER R08TAGl!S were bellned lo be Michael Moeller. a Marine staff sergeant from Candhenvtlle, Mo., and Duane GllleUe, 23, in Navy co mmuntcatlona , from Columbia, Pa. HOSTAGE WALK -Tom Flynn of Chicago and Georse Bigler of Sharon. Pa .. one shift of grouo of six people march along a Pen.oaylvania highway with American and Cana~an flags in support of hostages in Iran. The 300·mlle trek Wlll take 16 days. In Loup City, Neb., Doris Moellor. mother of botta1e M icUel Moeller, said she could not poe.ttiftly ldeatily any cl the men ID tbe ftlm u her aon ... Mike doesn't ba" that much bairoa bis chest," abe ui4. .. lltchael bas two eowtieb, be h.u a double crown, and the men we aaw didn't appea.rto.'' Three other bolta1ea ln the tum had not been identified. Gacy Verdicts Bring Tears lS·year-old RobertPiest. CHICAGO <AP) -The clerk read the roll or the dead -the names of 22 youths and numbers for 11 others. "Guilty.'' was the verdict each lime. ·'Guilty .. guilty . . . guilty . . . said Kenneth Pleat. b1"0the'r of Gacy's laat victim " I '11 go down and pul I the 1 witch 1r I have to." added Harold Piest. the boy'sfather. Relatives of the young men and boys whose bodies were found under Gacy's home and in area rivers wept when the verdict was read 'Ille jury deliberated le&6 than two hours Wednesday before rt>Jecting defense argument.a tbat Gacy was ln.oocent by re.on ot lnaanity. ··NOTHING LESS TRAN the e lectric chair will satisfy some of the relatives." said the boy's brother. When the clerk nn1shed, John W. Gacy Jr. stood convicted of more murders than anyone ln the nation's history. All but one of h.Lc. victims we re strangled The first was stabbed ··we paid with our sons' lives - not ju.st me -all of W5," u.id t: u g e o I a G o d z i k • w hose 17-ye ar -old s on Gregor y disappeared in Dettmber 1976. "I don't t.tunk we should give bim a chance to appeal." Today , the jurors wbo coovicted Gacy oo 33 counts of murder were to retum to the court for a bearing on whether tbedeath penalty would be imposed a.s pnnlabment fort.be sex murden. .. NONE 01' tJ8 WILL be utiafted until be ta pUt to death." Tbe 37·year-old remodelln1 contractor, who celebrates a birthday oo Konday, a1ao 1'U coo vlcted or takibg lndeeent libertiies with a mlDor and clni.ate sexual auault l.n cocmttUan with Tbe proaecut.100 ia demanding that Gaeyd.ie in the electric chair. OefeDM attorneya bave the option ot asking the Pf'flSent jary to decide Gacy's rate, Sttkinl a MW JU1'7« alDna Juqe Loala B. Gartppo 1& decide on the death peoalty. II things the moclern woman can clo lo fight inflation with Iha D•lly Piiot I Shop the money savmg values advertised in the Daily Pilot. 2 Save valuable gasoline by plan· ning shopping traps to local store~ ad· vertising m the Daily P ilot. S Read how other Orange Coast re· ~idents use. make and s pend their money in the Featuring pages. 4 CLip dollar·savmg coupons I Organize your coupon savings with . The Supermarket Shopper. ap- peanng Wednesday and Sunday in the Daily Pilot. . 6 Fmd money.saving yet tasty re· cipes in Wednesday's food pages. 7 Sell idle household items in Dall\' Pilot classified ads. · 8 Get good deals on used items. find reliable service people and other time and money -sa,•ing values In the classified pages. • Save time Wlth the Daily Pilot Ad Sitte r service. ~·h1ch takes calls from t hose answenng your classified ads when you aren't home. 10 Addres~ consumer problems con· rronlin~ you aqd other Orange Coast residents in the At Your Service col· umn. II Rely on financial advice by Sylvia Porter -one or the world's most read financial ad visers -who reveals un· derstandable. timely . interesting and to·the-point information. To take advantage or all the ways the Daily Pilot helps fight inflation. call 64.24321 or mail the coupon to Dai· ly Pilot. 330 W. Bay St.. P .O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626 ------------------., ~~~~~~d-.~/6s."'---~ Help me fight inflation better . ' , ' Send m y Daily Pilot s ubscription today. I for a, month's subscription. send S3.7S and coupon to I Daily Pilot. 330 W. Bay St., Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626 I I I I I I I I ..... ~.· I ------- DAILY PILOT I J t SAN LU1S OBISPO (AP> -A Blasll.._ .. ._, ... = 1l'H ,. • a.on.--. lb 1t rH•mbl•d tit• ··a. a lrll ...... ol la Frwteeo. ... .. parole. .. n. 1tate Board of P"- Ter011 aavt a Jaau~r1 1•1 releueclat.W-....,to~ ft. ma. ._ .. "' tlatM 1098 Blatt MUlllJDI C9~dM .. · tM Aprtl It, lfr4, lhotaun 1lutlll ol Jo .. pb P'. Belmore.ls. u hitNlat a picture window of hla Nc:.t.b Hl*1t11Dcta home ............... LOS At-lGELES <AP> - DeN,....atloa ol up to 7! pereeat ot Loe AQlelea public ld9oola could be canted out •ilal "a m u.ltl«hnic'' plan, •eeordiDlto a witneu at tbe 1chool 1yatem's SUperiorCourtmtegraUoo trial. Jobn=y, •retired UCLA biatory esaor, wu called to .. eter'• 0. Bu lt'•9 Still Rising Federal diauter offtelall have told Lake ElalDore reatdeota they'd ' better DOt relax becauae tlae Lake LI coatlD\1.1.DC to rile and apread. l endaaceriDI u mUl1 u 121 bomel. "II re1ldeatl of Lake ElllDore feel tbe wont LI behind us . Tb~t·:'!tz:pty not true,'' ukt Blll Mayer, federal coordinaUnl olticer for tbe Federal Emer1ency Maoqement A1ency. ••Vf e ur1e you to leave Offtdala aakl the am0tmt of • lmmedlatdy," said an oftldal water pouring lnto Lake , statement aimed at resideoU Elllnore from the San Jacinto wboee boma remaio below the River decreased slightly J 1,298 foot level. Tuesday while the amount of . THE AallY coaPS of En1ineera said tbeir computations ahow the lake will continue to riae from its Wednesday reading of l .21SS.25 feel above sea level to "at lea.st 1.267 feet by April 4 ... water flowing out of the-. newly-cleared drainage canal • lncreaaed . THE COaPS of Ensi.neers. t which continues to widen the channel, estimated Wednesday that the channel flow waa about 670 cubic feel per aec:ond. But the Corps pegged tbe water : flowing into the lake at a rate of 900 cubic feet per second, more than five times the outflow rate. { __ ~_if_TE_) testify Wednesday by the Integration Project, one of the plalntlfts seeking a wider program of mandatory desegregation in the M0,000 pupiJ district. Flying over San Diego is new $300,000 medical bellcopter of UC San Diego Medical Center. When Project "Life Flight" begins Monday, it will be the first in Callf omia and third in the nation with a doctor in the flight crew. The mercy copter carries complete life support systems and monitoring devices. can take to the air in five minutes and land in an area only 60 feet in diameter. The lake is expected to remain at lb.at peak for more than two weeu before slowly start.inc to recede. But it will remain above l ,265 feet -the level at wbicb damage is done to the city - until mid-May. Laite El&tnore has riaeo more than 20 feet since the OoodiD& began. which translates to a growth tn surface area from 2. 700 acres to 6.200 aCTeS -all in leas than a month. The coming two-foot rise will Increase that to 6,500 acres. sald Maury Peerenboom, Corps spokesman. Llke Lake Elsinore, normally tiny Baldwin Lake. near Big Bear Lake in the San • Benuardlno Mountains. hu been ruing with runoff from recent storms. Jlm Dotson, an engineer for the Big Bear C ity Community Services Dlstrict.1 said be believed three buildings were at.anding in several inches of water. Describing a multi-ethnic system, Caughey sald there would be three or more races l'epresented al many schools wblch had white enrollment bet ween 25 and 40 percent. Draft Ford Effort Set Committee Organized to Urge Entry in Race · AS 11IE FEMA officials spoke a t a Wedne s day news conference, more of the Lake Point Mobile Home Park disappeared under water. AJl but two of the park's mobile homes have been evacuated. BALDWIN LA.KE bad risen one foot ln 1S days to 6.705.7 feet\ above sea level, be said. "Lake Baldwin doesn't have anything like the watershed that Elsinore does," Dotson said "The lake would fill at 6,746 feet." DoUon said. "but only Noah's ever seen It that high •· .......... ~ SACRAMENTO CAP > -Sao Diego builder Harvey Furgatch, who as · sociated with Gov . Edmund Brown Jr. du ring the anti-Vietnam War cam- paign, is the new chairman of .VlleATCH B r o w n · s prealdeDUalcampatan. · F~-.U, wbo aald be baa beadea varioaa Sao Dieeo County camp~ten1. was named to succeed Tom Quinn, a Jong-time .Brown confidant. · The campaian'a announcement WeclDe.day aald Brown IMllDed Fur1at.cb late Tue&day before leavin& for a seven-day campaign tour of Wisconsin. PlelUaAppreN!ft SACRAMENTO <AP) -The state Energy Commission bas given final approval to the construction of a geothermal power plant in Sonoma County. The commission also reported Wednesday that it gave first-step " approval lo two other plants. including an oil burner that could become the nation's first to be converted lo methanol. GaaNen ~ear SACRAMENTO <AP> - Southern California will gel Canadian natural gas by next year, thanks to a new agreement between the federal land agency and a California pipeline firm. James Ruch of the U.S. Bureau of Land Management and Harry Prudhomme or Pacific Gas Trans mission Co. s igned a document Wednesday giving the firm permission to expand pipeline capacity over fedt!ral land ln Idaho and Washington. SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -A coalition of Republicans bas organized a Draft Ford Committee in Califorota to urge former President Gerald Ford to jump into the race for the GOP nomination. "He won't nm for the fun or it," Wllllam T. Bailey, a San Francisco attorney and spokesman for the group said Wednesday. ·'He wants to know if there's an outpouring of public sentiment." Bagley and Los Angeles attorney Charles G. Bakaly held news conferencen in their respective dUes to a.mounce the draft e«ort: THE COJllllTl'EE includes Callfomla Republicans who bad backed George Bush, John Conn~ly and Howard Baler, said BaaleY. ~ wu served a Ford appolDUDellt to the federal Commodity Futures Trading Commlasloo. "l have felt ... that President Ford ia the st.roo est can didat e that the Republican Party can put up in the November election ," said Bakaly. who was a member of Ford's 1976 c a m p a i g n l'LUOtt steering committee. Among the 70 Ford supporters listed by the committee were former Casablanca Records chief Nell Bogart. s inger Tony Orlando and industrialis t Leonard Firestone and J . Robert Fluor, longtime GOP money men. THE COMMITJ'EE said in a prepared statement that Ford had proven he "is a stable experienc ed, s trong leader. whose ability to reason, sort out options and make clear thoughtful dec i s ions is desperately needed once again to get us out or this mess." Ford, who was scheduJed to consult W1th President Carter Sex Education llll Buried By Opponents SACRAMENTO (AP) -The religion-based movement a1ain1t sex education baa returned to the Capitol and buried a bill to allow televised sex education in the Los Angeles schools . After bearine from a parade of sex education oppooeota, the Senate Education Committee voted 10-1 Wednesday to till a bill. ABM2 by Assemblyman Herschel Rosenthal , D-Los Angeles. THE ASSEMBLY had already passed it wt th little opposition. One foe, John Banducci of a group called Lifeline in the San Francisco area, said a vote for the bill is ··a vote ro r pornography and perversion." The measure would have allowed Los Angeles schools to show sex education programs offered by a local instructional television station. ROSENTHAL SAID the programs covered such topics as pregnancy, childbirth , parenthood and rape prevention. Current law allows parents to see all books, films and other materials to be offere<! in sex education classes and then decide whether their children can attend. School officials say few parents keep their children out of class and even fewer review the materials . GOURMET MARKET ST. PATRICKS DAY! DON'T FORGET MARCH 17, ~ -DELANEY~~ ~ MORNING FRESH PRODUCE BROS. SEAFOOD Lg. SoUd Head Green Cabbage ...... ltc lb. Rasset Baking Potatoea .......... , . lie lb. Loeal Le. Sweet Strawberries .... ate bUt. Wbtte °CJ OBioea (new crop>i Iba for 2k La. Sbe RomatDe ............ 3lo ea. So. Amerkan lluaau ..........•... 2k lb. • ' I PRIME Ii TOP CHOICE MEATS •led at least 30 day1 Ao die pealt of pe~ . . . Wllea Y• Udllk of St. Patrteb Db ,_ · t•lak of coned beef Is ea1»1ta1,, ••• Dehuaey's lllH tltem botll. 09.-ifed•I llO•e-cuW eomed beef wlll N ~--for 1MI' apedal St. Patrkb 0.1 f~ ,. Deluey'1 apedaJ eared u4 trbiline.l 1 cen~beef brlakete •.......•....... I.ff lb. Leila II • Beef lnMllMI ..... )' . . 1.41 llt. ' I I' I I ftliM....,. WM., l/U/11""' t.. """' , I Frelb Swordfllb .................... S.98 lb. c1re•t to Bar·b-Q or broil. especlaily when basted wltb lemon butter> DELI DEPARTMENT l lb. eelo-pak Ratla .Bacona Bacon .. lie lb. DetaileJ'• owa creamed aplaacb .... ne p&. LIQUOR DEPAJlTMENT QelUey'1 Private Label Claampa .... btra 1117 •.••••••••• <nt.U>z.214 CcuoZT.• St. Patrkk'• Soedal Oki B•ltmllh ll'lldl Wlll*ey (qt) . . . . 1'.00 Deluey'1 Private Label (718 mil) Via._ or Qaablll . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.• Kalila cnm-..> re1. t.n ................ 8.80 Grand Munier <21112.qt.) rec. a.tt ........ 7.H CLlqMOt PJ1ee1 Do Not ladllde TH) I ' today in Washington. has said he would beeome a candidate ll he receives broad-based support from Republicans, Democrats and independents. ing values. 1 () 0 c " 0 z I • 5111111 , _, Good for two p1ec" of fl'le eoton.ra OrlQlnaf Recipe cntcken or Exira C'11H>Y cnicken. i>+v• a s•nole seM~ or maahed potatoea and 'Jf..,., <tnd a roll Ltmtt two oflers pet eO\IOOfl Clef cuatomef Cvllome< pays all <tppltcat>le sales lu . Oood tor~ "°" d the Cdonel'a Ortglnaf A9clpe ctMcilen ex Eirtra Crispy ohicken. four rOllL A ctlCltce of eitnef a latge oole alaw or it 1..-ge ~ potalOM and llNtlf 'Jlfl!f'f. u mu two of'-t per oouoon per~-Cuatomef peys all Oller e•plres March 22 1980 1 Pf1ce1 may •dfY •I PlllltC•pattno rocauons Good I only rn Sou1he<n Calltorn•e wnere you see 1he I Co~ts fa<;e app41cabfe ...... . Ofter 811P't'IHI M;a•Cfl n . 1990 Pnces may \'8ty al oer!IC1pa1tt>g localtons Oooo ooly tn Soulhem ca111orn.e wllefe you see the Cotonel"s fa~ w1n00w Denner -, WlndOw Denne< ---·-----· The WestcJi[f Plaza Cllallenge We invite you to find the store or seruice establishment that does not off er prompt, courteous service- and tell us/ - • z ~ :::> 0 (.) - ·i h dOrana CO.u pertor eo.t Juctae award WalUn > a lo C'Onalw twe lmpottaftt demoeraUc prtac laal -we k when he rul on the dispute over th wport Beach ordinance to UmJt contributions to campatgna for ballot pn>poelUom. -on one hand. ontlnance \q)pe)rt.era aald the meuure w11 neeeuary to ln ur th1t elec-tlona couldn't be •• 'bouaht" by larae contrib\ltio111 to ballot meaaure cumpa.lgn Th oth r side held the Umlt.a wore a dlrect violation o( freo ~h riahta. Juda Wallin ••reed with the oppcn n\I of the Umll.i He said the ordinance, In it iea.l to protect voten from the undue lnrtuence of urrlu nee, trampled on the r• constltutlonnlly ttuaranteed ri1hts to aupport or oppose '' ('6USe8. t~ In overtumtns the ordlnuncl'. Walhn ob erved that u •.. would be ''too much If the court.a wer~ in a PoSltion or finding l'r1mina l penalttes af(alnst •omeone who l'Ontnbuted too much to free speech ·· In un afterthou.iht, Uw Judae added. "I don 't think lht.>re cun be loo much free speech In a pohhcal campatgn " There l'itn bt> no argwng with that view. but the Judge's ruhng leuves unaddressed the relationship between dollars spent and votes cast and its effect on the !.· democratic procesi, '· I i I• Appeal Poorly TiIDed N<'wport Beach City Council m embers found • themselves m an awkward spot this week when whale •. .-• watchers s howed up al the council meeting to ask the city to halt &tturday's offshore PQwer boat race. The Orange County Chapter of the American ·: ' Ceti:ICei:l·n Society representative told council members the 195-mile race comes at the peak of the whale migration along the coast. He also setid the race needed r an e nvironmental impact report and a coastal com nussion permit f Council me mbers all were sympathetic to the plea that the race be held at a time of year when the gray .-whales aren't on the move. but they acted properly in agreeing to let it go on as scheduled. Council m embers. and o fficia ls of the race oq~anizat ion. said they'd be wi lling to consider ' n ··sC'hl'dulmg the next race lo avoid problcmi, with tht' ~ '\\hale~ ' ~ The 1~~UC' ra1!-icd by the !->Oc1ety ll> ont:-of concern Thl' ~ problem 1s that this is the fourth March that the race has S bl•t•n run and yet Monday night was the first time the society chose to speak up on the subject. ~ , SociNy representatives said thev monitored last ~ .\'C•<.ir·~ r;1c·1· \ t'l tht·v made no C'ffort to appn s1· ran· ~ off1<·1aJ<., 01 ttw t'll,\' ol lhl·1r findings l Th 1 ~ k 1 n <I 11 f "It•\ l' nth hour .1 pp l' .i I. 111 th l' -t c·1rc·11m~t;mc·t ·~ d111 ·-.n 't c·as t the· so<·u•t ,. in J f<Jvor<.shll' ~ ltght . ~ . . .. ' . .. . ' ' . . t . ,, i ,. , " =· ~ ., .. • .. . .. . .. .. . . • • .. ( . • • . • ,. • .., .. WeJco~e Opport11nity The first in a special series of four "informal .. Nc•wport Mt'1-><J school trustees meetings was successful l.1 .... 1 "t•t•k 1n stimul(;jlJnJ,? much necdl'd public p.1rt 1<:11wt1on I lt>ld 111 ttw {'omfortabl<> surro11n<lings of thl· Rl'iJ :\lul<ll<• S<·hool llbrar~ 1n Costa Ml's1:1. thl• mecttn~ had no lorn1.il agl·ncl<t It ";1.., attC'nded by dbout fi5 pcoph· mam ol whom a~kl'd the tru:-.ll'l'~ qul·sllons on 1ssUl'S ranging from tht· J<.1n 1s II tax rl'durt1on measure to th(' ,I\ .itlah1ltt~ of c:rossmg guards The special series of meetings is designed to foster increased communication between the trustees and the public. In this regard the first meeting was a success. The remaining meetings, which all begin at 7 :30, are: On April 15 at Lincoln Middle School, 3101 Pacific View Drive. Corona del Mar. On May 6 at Davis Middle.School. 1050 Arlington Drive. Costa Mesa. On June 3 at Kaiser Middle School. 2130 Santa Ana Ave .. Costa Mesa. , If you arc as 'i nterested in local school affairs as those who showed up for the first session. there'll be something in 1t for you if you attend one of them and ask questions • Optmons expressed in the space above are th.IM of the Oa1ty Pilot Other views expresMd on this page are those of their authora '9ftd artists Reader comment Is invited. Addreu The Dally Pilot. P 0. Sox 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321 . Boyd/British Driving By L.11. BOYD "How come the British drive on the left alde of the road?" inquires a client. Because the highwaymen • centuries ago habitually at- lack ed coaches from the : right, according to the hls- toriam. Supposedly. left-aide driving therefore gave the potentiaJ victims a slightly better chance of spotting the robbers in advance. Why the robbers didn't switch to hit from the left 1s not explained by said histonans lh-ar Gloomy Gus Q. Are there any other heavenly bodies, besides earth. in the solar system that are known to have ac· Uve volcanoes? A. Only one. lo. one of Jupiter's moons. Vice presidents tend to be rond of those wall plaques that read: "There is very ht tie future i9 being right when the boss is wrong." Presi· dents are more inclined to like William Wri1Ley's ob· servaUon: "When two men in a business always agree, one of them is W10ecessary." Q. Who's the mos t suc- cessful music composer of all lime? . .. A. Credit Paul McCartney with that distinction In the matter of money. With 43 songs between 1962 and 1978 that each has sold more tflan Good lor the Newport council majority's effort to block low-coet housing. Next thJng you kn6w there'll be a movement to sell diamond& at lower coet to low-income people. Some thlnR• must be kept aacred1 and Newport II one OJ them. L.T.Z. ~ "'l million copies. He's also said to be the world's m0&l successful recording artist wltb 100 million singles and lOO million albums. How would you like a brt1ht red typewriter? That's tbe color the· majority of ~1.5 00 1ecretarle1 told polllters they would ~er. A red maddne mtpi te> couw-balaac. tbe ci:•1 ..... ..., Mid,; ...... that.~ I Riehard Re vee Nixon Pardon Still HUrts Ford PORT WORTH. Tu.u -Tbt ftl'll ud lut. que1Uoaa J WU ukecl d~ a vWt to ?nu Cbrtatlan UdJverslty weTt t1M 11me: Why dJd Pard pardon NlaonT Wu thin a deal• That qua. tlo.n. 1U1bU1 different, wat aakecl a halt do11n Umta ID ·b•tween. Gerald Ford II Vtf'Y m~ on people'• mind• tbeae d1y1. wbicb i1 where he wanted to be wh n be to1d the New York • Times the obvious truth tbat Ronald R .. 1an would be a pret- ty sure Icier ln November. "I votod aeainst Ford in 1978 because of the pardon." the first queatJooer_ said. "Do you think there was a deal with Nixon. or • Mailbox do )'OU thJ.n.k Ford dld It becauae h thftwrht lt WU lood for tbt country~ 1 lhlnk botb IN WSIT1NG a book about Ford ltve yean a10, I condueled that a deal wu mad during bourt fA convtrtaUon between &bt thtn·vt~e prHldtnt and Prntdent Rte.bard NI iron'• cbJef of staff, Alexander Hali. l don't know whet.her the word.a -"If Nlico.n ~l1n1, I'll grant the pardon' -••re act~lly apokeo. But I do know that Hali came beet to the White Houle amld private talk of a pardoo - and Nlxoo tbeo stepped down. makln& Ford presJdent. That don not mearr that Ford dldn 't 1loeerely believe the pa rd on -folt the c rl mes of W at.ercate -was belt for the country .. Put Una Water1at.e behind WI," wu hia phrase at the time I allo thlDk. after be&rtDf the queaUon qatn and 111ln ln Fort Worth, ~ th& pardon l1 P'onh ChappiiQulddlek. If' HE BECOMU a candidate to •top lleapn, the fcmner sns· &dent .nu want to talk about tbe fact that the nation'• lnllaUon rat~ wu 4.8 percent when tMt left office In 19'1'7 -compred with almost 20 percent alter three yeara of Jimmy Carter. But first. I 1t.11pect. he wUI have to an1wer more quntlons about tbe pardon than J did. Tbo6e questions could cripple his .,.rly campaitnlng in the aame way t.hal penonaJ ques1iou bobbled Ed want fCennedy. By the time Ford really cot soi.De. lt would probably be too late. Under tbe suffocating new rules ~ presldential politics. tus late-st.artin1 cand.lduy would be tricky at belt. Defndlna lhe pardon for a couple of well publlctM weeu coaJd till Wm off befGft he h...t a Nal eUoee. The arithmetic of the rulea Ja tenibJe for Ford. U he enters the race on tbe day aft.er the Mueh 11 llllnot1 prtmary. he wlll be eompetln1 for a run lmum fA 1,300 ol tM 1,99' del· e11tea to the Republlcu N• tional Convention. Only 8J.5 of thou 1,300 delegatff wUI be selected ln stat.ea where Ford's name can legally appear on prtmary and caucua ballots. Tbe other 415 would be uncommitted deleaata or deieaates won by other candidate• like Geor1e Buah. Howard Baker or J ohn Anderson. Too many deadlines tncludJng the filing datea in New York. Pennsylvania and Texas -will be pasaf'd by March 19 So 1t would be very tough Ford might be wise to consider staymg in retirement and bask ine an his new glow as tht:' stat.etman above the slings, ar rows and stumbles or cam paagns. Maybe he could defeat Carter ID November -wh~h I'm 11ure he would dearly love to do but, the truth is. he may not have as good a chance. now . to defeat Rea~an a~ Bush or Anderwn ha:. IN FACT. A Ford candidacy might ensure Rea~an's nomina uon and destroy Republican chances in l':ovember Jerry Ford in 1980 1!> v<'ry ~imilar to llube rt Hum ph r ey o n the Democrat.at.· :.ide in 1972. When Edmund Musk ie a nd Henn Jack~ faltered a bit againsl George McGovern eight yeari- ago. Humphrey rushed into the Florida primary des troym~ McGovern':. more moderate op po!'l1t1on and guaranteeing the nominatlOn or a leftish candidatt- wno appeared as extreme to mos• or t he country as tht· n~ht1:.h Reagan fo·nrrt s trnw I'm afraid, mJ' h.t \ t• JH•i-~ffi He and the re ... t 1Jr u... m1~ht bt-a lot ht>tter off 1f ht' :.ta}cd at his home 1n Rancho Mtra~e High Rentals Not All Landlords' Fault To the Edltor Mrs. Richard Arevalos 10 lhe March 6 PUot, blames greedy apartment owners and greedy homeowners for the decline in '>Chool enrollments 1n add1t1on to all the other sms for which°"''' .ire blamed Since my v.1re and I retll 111111 both catt·~ones a~ homt·ownt•r ... .rnd :io<tr1 mt'nl 1.Jutld1111.( ov.·ner., \\ (' rt• t• I I ha t IJ(" ("a ., I,, n a 11 \ -.omeonc• '>hould print a r<'w fa ct.., about us "greedy" people We have a s ubstantial portion of our ure savings tied up m the property -it was only by saving what we could out of two.joint incomes, after taxes. that we were able to purchase our first home. TheBe savings did not come as a result of rent controls. s ubsidized hous ing allowances or lood atampa. THE RENTAL property was acquired with the hope or being able to support ourselves in our declining yean without having to depend oa 1ovemment akt. Is that wrong? Exorbitant rent fees are caused by bureaucratically created shortqes of rental prop· erties amon1 other factors such as mortca1e money costs . inflation. popu.!aUon shlfls, fear of imposition of rent controls. The niure of $1,000 in advance ror accommodations for a fami· ly of flve is not, in my opinion, axorbttant cooaidering that the owner normally wants first and last month'etrent plus a security deposit. 'The landlord l"flUSl have some protection too. since without payment of last month's rent many tenants have been known to vacate overniaht. behind In their rent. or without the 30 days notice to the landlord normally agreed to That the security deposit is a necessity l can vouch for, since one tenant moved out taking the sliding bedroom closet doors with him as well as leaving damaged paint. plaster and general dis· aster behind. Did Mrs. Arevalos ever try to repair a bedroom wall which had been used u a dart board? In spite of Proposition 13 tax savings other c06ts continue to escalate and the mortgage must be paid. Utllitles, lnaurance, trash collection, repairs and maintenance costs rise each month and someone has to pay for all thla. DALE JOHNSON a..ra.•r.._ To the Editor: ll 1eem1 we help every fONJp country and their peo))),9 and nellect our own. We are olt, so wtfUn1 to help all boat people wtth wellare and cara. But our ..... dU ....... ridlal ..... and eaUn1 wabalanced ....a. ................... ,......,.~·-Ulla • rreP C'011n1 r' ror '" <1 n<1 t hi · young people of lhlf> world Th~·' made H pou1ble for Social Security to he lp tM disabled and widows Ir II hadn t been rur them ~ome of ui-. m1~ht he ,.,lanin~ loo ~1' I hanki-.i.:11 lo C\ en •o1•111or 1"11111'11 or 1111°' ('O UOt P ( 'h1•11c.h 11111 olcl1•r p1·11pl1 1h1 \ nel•d lo\I• .1n1t c-art" (i LOH I A J O~ \\ 1\ I.I > rr,.•lons Mea~r To thl' Editor In reading )our Ma rrh i <'d 1 tori a I, "Public Pe nsion~ Mortgage Future." I was struck by the fact that it contained statements that might be m1s· lead mg. I speak as M classified school employee who has worked in one positioo for 26 years. WouJd you believe that after 26 years of service my monthly pension will be approximately $400 a month with a 2 percent cost-of-llvtng in· crease each year <hardly an ex orbllanl sum>" ALSO, I might call your au.en· lion to the fact that school employees are 9art ol t.he stale retirement syatem and con- tribute the same amount into the fund as the atate employees . However. school employees' benefita are lower than Lboee of the atateemplovees Tbe state Legislature has re· fused to correct this inequity. If you care to investigate, you will lind that many school c lassified employees wlll not receive a pension or more than S300 a month. It seems to me that when your paper prints an editorial of this type. many citizens b<'li<'vc this 1s true ol all public employees I should think you would print the other side showing the meager pensions rece1 v<'d by most clas11fied employees NAME WITHHELD Peflll•• lperftl To the Editor: On March 4 I read your editorial concerning George Osborne, dlreetor or the COWJty Environmental Maoa1ement A1ency. You stated, "Be has served the county well. u far we as we can determine." He may have done, but not ao ln Santa Ana Heiabta . J bad a dilcusalon with him on behalf of the concerned penons for the pretH1rvatJon of Acacia Street on Jan. 29, concemlu the abandonment or u small atnp of Acacia. I ~ HIM It was vital for ~ rttldentl and our cbtldftft to keep our road and not han1 it 1lven away \o private lntereata, that OUT Wet:J WU at •take. To Inf dllma1 I wu told, ll Yota daD't liU it~ JDOV•· I ubd where to. ffl'J 1n1wer. ·~.·· Wt ll•d 'a Mbllo tiurla1 bt'fnrl' th1• Hoard n( "u~·rv1'°r' on Uus matter on I-eb 6. Our petit1on1 wllh 180 s11natures were com~y tlnof'e<I 1 f~I 1t 1s very sad not to c-a r<' and we the taxpayer<> ha\t' lo p.n their retirement '\Blan It ... in nl\ opinmn lud1t rou., \\1· 1h1• pet1plr ha\f• nJ:ht' llC'"<'or<iini: t11 our ('on.<>l1lut1on I H \t .\ \ H \ rt 11\ '1 Barfl •• 8rHrrr To the Editor As an act.I' 1• alumnw. or L'S« and a gradu:Ht· or lhl' School of Bus iness. I <·ij n't believe thl' school <Graduate School of Bu..,1 nesa) would be awarding Or Armand Hammer the En trepreneur of the Year Award Ur. Hammer 1s ceruunly no ··rree-enterpraser." Ile jwst last week announced that he would be msl•i•ting bu S20 billion deal watb the Soviets. Tttis. m 1pt~ Of their l0Va$100 Of Af&banist.an Hud to believe Wasn't 1t Khrus h c he\ •·ho said ~Y would hang us and that the businela~n would bad for the~· RAY N. GIBBS Sw-Ge•,__., To the Edit.or: WeU here it romes right orr the bade burner wher@ il has been simmerin~ and back on to the .front. 1 t · s the same old goulash and they haven't even bothered to add seasoning to it. I am referring to Wilson Riles' talks in Huntillgton Bea~h and Santa Ana where he says if J arvis II passes the schools will a utomatically go out ol business. R1lt•s states that immediately w(' "ill witness the dlsmanWng or all public schools . lie also states he managed to keep the <1c hool doors open after Propos1· lion 13. but don't let anybody tell vou it wu bwllness as usual. · What Mr. Wilson Rilt"S forgot to mentioo in his bleeding heart speeches Is that tbe cost or cross-town busing has tripled since Proposition 13 passed. Mr. Riles says no more schools can be bu.lit: but do we lleed more? So maQY parents are pulling their children out of public schools and ecroUlftC them ln private isc.bools to keep them from a two-to th""·hour bus rt de each day, many 1choola ail hall empty now. YES, Mr. WUaon Riles la ask· lnlt .... to give, iive, atve. for l-8XH so we wUI only have our SoelaJ Security at the end fA our wortdna days while be will re- Quotes "We are opl)Olt'd to the lo· fuaion ol poUt.lct, national or m. temational. ln1o the woatdwlde Ol1mpic movemeot.'' -9M ..... =-............. . Statea o+e ..... . . . t1rt· \\Ith 11\t•r S.50.000 t'ach year mo~l of 11 <:omang from ui. O\et - burdeoed Lnpaye~. l wash Mr. Riles would e~ain tbe lax security at the Los Angelei. and Orange Co-unty "<'h1)(1ls lhJt 1.,. costing taxpa)er-. n\ .. r S2 m1lhon C'ttc•h \l'ar r111 \ Jnrtah~m t v.ould like to hC'.•r hi' .iO-.'A l'I l•I .,., h\ i>O m .111\ p.1n·11h Jfl· ... u1 n).': b;·1 au-.l th• 11 < htl<.I ~.1 gr .1du.otl'c1 v.1thout ht· 111.: t Ju.,:h1 111 n ·.1d T ht>"<' J udJ.! rrwnt.'> .ire hJ\ 1n~ to be· pa1d 1,, tht• taxpayNs . not Mr Riles If Mr. Rile!) \\Ill show that h1 · I.') "ork~g for US taxpayers h1• may be sure our PQcketbook., will agam be.> open to him GEORGE WILSON . ...... ~~ To lht' EctJtor I am deeply concerned at thl· b11'hly orchestrated and heavily financed campaign to defe<it Paul Rycko(f and Ray WiWam:. First. the Irvine Company ·~ glosay magazine ls belnJ used not just to get new votes but to (Onvince us all that erecting more buildings and put~ more people mto more cars will not affect current traffic problems: in fact, it will d.imini.sb t.bem ! Would it not benefit our city more to use that mo1'ey to eeoerate job·shifting or. at least, carpooUng at Newport Center?· <At 7:45 to 8:45 a.m .. more than 95 percent of t.he cars 1<>ing lnto Newport Center have single OC· cupanta.) Then I read the Don Koll letter urging friends and contractors to give the maximum amou.nt I S800 per couple > to defeat Ryckoff and Williams. And now we have the big de· vclopers putting In the lawsuit- of-the·week, plus daily accusa· tlons That ls Big Money. MEANWHILE, the hucksters are busy with Cox's name rec- ognition problem. He is so new- ly Interested in local govern- ment t.hat they do have a prob- 1 em! The first mailer we received must have cost over S8,000; Md bil early ads ln the Dally Pilat are not free either. And what will Maurer do? Perhaps computerised "penional.. letters at SlS.000 to $20,000! While I do not agree with all that Paul Ryckoff and Ray WUUama have attempt.eel to do. I certainly pref er their rea.li.slic approaches to the city'a prob- lems to the developer.fl.Danced Cox and Maurer who seem tA> be tryina to buy their we)' to our ci· ty hall. JANEP. MOSMANN • neo.itJ .... .--.c-.. ... ~ ... ........................... ,...... lel ............ ~ ...... a. ...... CA -. L.-. I .. W -··.._ ..... ...................... . ~ ............. .._ ... .. ;;;;•-.·~·--·"'"""' f / t --------~- •• .. ... .,._...,,_-( Bot DidD.'t 'Mellow OU.t' These ·Irate ReadePS kb,..._ 1 ''°''"' 11ao.a14 et • .-toe dfaUl. Wbm rou die, people will ••U~ ........ Uiat all of read tbe obUuarlu and Alk, ,ti•• readtra art • arlJuai'a •WIN>? ... taH", J•at tbat Uat1 ••ft .. dn .. to .... by • colam P&Oll Mii ZVSCR -''After erttlcWM .UU-.ua. re~rour column, I WU J'l"'9 ..,.. -11. w ..... -.. ? your 1t volewc uh. You ••• ~lJ 4la1uted b art ormed, borlD,1, ucl )'Oat ..sell ·~ •UUuua· ft p a bunat-out alcoboUc TIUlllAlltr.1,1wUIM9 II a yaute.al "•~-mplt of P.trpe~rat1a1 your alck B.~. ~ .._ ..,.._, I M'9 w11•11bet~m. "-. ~ tbe medla. lt 11 a IOOd ~ .ia:= :flwrt-:! Ult looD if JOw NtlcJt. 1f wW ~ tW DO OM ls !ore.cl to a = ... -·-:n•t m--• --...1 YOU .., ablNt. marUuana 11 tnae, rea YQUI' wrttiq. Thank God - -... ._ -you an addicted." tbat for molt people your drivel 1ocla laUll lb• day, but From Linda S. Woods -i..a used to wrap flab or beeomes make "-of tl*r dn11 babttl "Your article about pot waa like the repoeitory for bird feces. &Del 1'0U can't keep them awa)' a at.a.le taste ot borseradiab in Ten years from now there will from tb• mailbox. ft'• •UJI my mouth." be aome other back to tab your comlq lll. From Llaa Givin -"Your place -and DO cme wW 8"D Tbe namea oo Lbe letllfn ,_. eoltama ii like what 1'CMI ,., remember aoe.Onene.". ' •re about to reed a.re l"Ml: nu a~ • ln "'* I& band me to From T. Burte -••1 b 't .... ~ .................................. .-........................... _. th.ln.ka.a,ooe will..,_ wrttaa CL f _a__ more..; moronic column. What ....-.at MeCahe you, lo 1our lnflnltealmal Psyclwthempy and Faith Recently eome f>O specialists ln :_:rcbQtberapy from all aro tbe worid met tn Oxford, Enetand, to devote tbelr enerliea to the question of wbet&er what they do for a living works in terms o( 1etting salubrious results from their patients tbrou1b their particular form <A therapy. They were all there: The behaviorists, the copltive, the question of whether shrtokery does more aood Ua.an harm, it ia far from elimtnated from the boob. that H you aren't so sick emoUoaally, you're likely to 1et better more quickly. stupidity, fail to~ LI tbat there are DOW mllllom of P90Dle iD thJ.a COUD1rJ wbo are '..elal smokers.' We can't all jet oat to L.A. to 'prewent' murden and tbeD milk Wt llGD-eVent for two weeb of columm. My Ume is too valuabletowuteon )'1>U.' • From 'nm Brtcter -"U you want to talk about wblmpy people, talk about yourself, beca\119 when you talk about pot smokers you're talking about some good people. succeaaful people, people wbo toke cm a pipe or a joint to relieve tenak>na and to &et away from it all." "You are Ule.duli.t penan. You 1tinls. 1" Japanete .,.,. didn't oe9d to put budcuffa oa Paul llcCartaer ... From llaraha Callaban - "What bu dulled YOUR mind? What baa brouCbt all IOrtl <A 1ic,k ..... data to 10UT'' From Jim Berbmtactt -''I could only laup at your •Peril of Pot' article. M ueuaJ, you try and 1park controveny while offerla1 few solutiona. Your 'addlctlaaa' and 'need' to coatrol tbe media gets IDOl'e outlandiab everyday. Typical of your media·s.rabtna wrttlna at1le II your recent sertee Hrlnl m from sQ me new1paper- eonce1 ved · L .A .-would be murderer. We can't wait for your accompanytnc paperback novel. film. and soundtrack. II a 1. be yo u n e e d 1 om e marijuana to slow down tbe pace ol your self conawniq e10." From S. Jllcbardaon -"You really are so opinionated and totally ill-Informed! Your column is insecure, non · confident. and frustrated." From Robert G. Schulz - "Your column on marijuana is the biuest collecUoo of infantile 1ourn&II.sm. Your ability to write js that ot a thlrd·arader. Grow up. It ls you who have loet your talent. af you ever bad any. I'd like to see you and your chubby face produce better albums than Paul McCartney! .. Judlcrou1ly narro~·mlndtd Dlece <A Joumallltte (oblcdy). Your 1tatemant1 art ao odllplttql7 1lmple-m.lDded tbat I feel formalldq thll note '1 tntnc. tt aa a belDOUI waste o1 m, effort.I. Your column reapa of eondnee.ndln,, torpid joumallstic myopia.' From R. JohDIOD -"I tldl* yovr brain baa evape>l'aa.d and that you are a bitter and eynleaJ back wbo wu probably ooce refu.led an interview wltb the Beatles. Your teeb= is deplorable. You are 'm to mildew.'" From Delores J. Ott -"Your column on pot was the most dnpicable plece of truh I ban ever read. I can't understand how someone with a semblanee of intelllaenee could write ·~ drivel. I now see you for tbe senaelea cretin you really are.·· From BUI Kopta -"Your alcoboUc babita bave turned you into a disgusting. mlndlesa, ienorant slob." From Sbannoo Scott -"You are lDlane and out of touch. I will never read another ooe oC your colwnm. I do not see bow a reepectable newspaper could hire such a pompous ass like you! ! ! You definitely belong in a home for the insane and mentally disabled!" bamanistic, the abrlnldng breed of '-' It alwaya wi8" be, until human beings figure out bow and why humans do what they do, and that will never be fieured out, in my view, so lon1 aa human belnp remain human bel.nas. The humans who come nearest to tbe heart of our m:yatery are the great poeta. SbakHpun 's batting-averqe puts Freud 1D the Orapefndt Leape. Psycbatherapy. It baa often been said, does not lend itself easily to scientific investigation. It is oot so often aaid that the reason for this la tha t p1ycbotberapy la DOt a 4deoce because human emotions are not things that can be mea1ured. Who knows what "mental sickness" is? Wbo knowa what "improvement'' ls? Who knows bow much a tick societ7 produce• emotionally slek people? From Rieb Behrens -"May you aome day mature as a writer." Fao• G. HOLllES -"Your A FIN.AL NOTE: Most of the t'orrespondents who defended marijuana said that ooe of its main beoeflta ls that it "mellows a peraoo out," and removes that pe~·· bolltiliti~. Freudians, .;;;: tb e cli- and the eclectic. Jt is not surprising that they cable to what was called a "cooaensus" that they were doing some good. As uaual in such seminars, the evidence was rather tbtn. You bad to take the word of the practitioner, who bad a considerable emotional and ftnanciaJ stake in the legitimacy of what be is dolna. "There just doesn't seem to be a question anymore tbat psychotherapy doe• genen.Uy work.•• seemed to be the molt fortbrllbt of tbe placatory utaeraea. • eame from Dr. Allen E. Bermaa, prot...,.. ol P!Vcboloo at Brtabam Youq University. EVEN THAT atatement wu tataUve, as YoQ call tee by the word "generally." Al for the The mere fact that 200 of the brigbtHt and beat found lt neceuary or desirable to moot the question at all indleates the insecurity that surrowuls the practice of more or leas legitimate psychiatry these days. The chief flndia11 of tbe conference, according to one observer, was evidence that shows that "the form of treatment . . • seema to matter less than the experience, skill and warmth <A the tberaplst. "THE QUALITIES of tbe therapist, ln turn , are apparently less important than those of the patient. Tbe IOU:Dder tbe emotional health of tbe patients to .beliD wttb, the more tbey aeem fo btneflt from tre•t.mlllit. •• . TbeM are feeble "od"S, It aeeiu to me.~ sq, til ~ that faltb-healinJ, at tbe bands of a cbariamaue faitb·bealer Ute Werner l:rhanS or· tbe late Frits Perla, wan. quite -well u any form of ahrinkery, and THE BB8'1'·KNOWN •= the good or harm abrinke ls the oae made by the £.t psychologist H.J. Eysenck ln the early •eo.. He compared treated with untreated neurotics (and who tbe hell knows what a neurotic is?> wltb results damaging to sbrtnkery as a ..medical procedure. Eysenck reported that two-thirds of both groups improved after two yeara. "Whatever effeeta paycbotberapy may have are likely to be extremely small," be concluded. Nott!i1 shrtnb, aa might be expected. bave been backln1 away at tbe:9e uaertiona slnce tbat time. I aay foqet abou& science wben lhlDklnl about paycbotberapy. Work out equations between tbe common sense of the doctor, or COAfeuor. and the cUent. or alnner. It may all be a maU#offai~ whlcb i. detperately umdentific. New from China. Natural rice mats in 10 imaginative designs. Villagers of IClfangtung province hmdcraf t these mats from wild fiber, working the intricate patterna into 36" diameter rounds. By cart and truck they're carried to the Canton Fair, were hard bargaining earns re- spect--and direct im• port savings for you! Shop Pier 1 and see how easily you ~an add natural beauty to your val la & noors . 4ss Reg.9.99 temporarily Pricu good tb.rouah Mefch 20 • I From Sherri HiHman -column ii an ignorant, AT KERM RIMA 1911 PORTABLE COLOR TV , • Sp lngtime Sayings • Save On TV's, Stet eo, Radios and Home Video Systems • The Best In Home Entertainmettt SAU PlhQS eooD THIU MAIO. ,_, I tto flrlat ~t Te,._. 0. "911 • 19 · ~· Measure Picture •Prec19k>n lrK.lne Picture Tube •Aute>mlftc Fine Tuning • 100% S04jd-Sfate DECORATOR CONSOLE STEREO COMSOLE 2111 COLOR TV • VkleO Mttle • 100% Soeld ltate • 100° tn'U,_e Pie Tube .... Uff, '519" ... "" 1311 PORTAILE COLOR TV •Auto Fine Tunlno ·1~ aa.td a. .. •In Line Pklt1.n Tube 8Y9fem \ Model 4~ . .-.~-·-.~···· ...... .,.. I DEAR PATI la oHer, '° ........ ......, ''1t'llPIAOICI la lll1 Wahbam wNt ...... I Mft co tt to Waltham '1 ,..ar eem. ia &Illa, IU. I Uy malled It oal.Y to 1.t ID1· ~ amt ek pampect, "Moved -Not ~." I'll j ...0.&e ~ Mlp 10U UD lift .. tD a.cet'al • cwnnt MrVlce add,... : N.J.c •• rma. · Y•••u.-w • &11" ,,___.., • .... U..!..,. ...... 1ee ............ •ftnl l!l•n ..... aar..w.-.-Wlilll 0-,.Q'• ............ a.a. ........ ,.., ...... ... 1'H.tacQlnr'1 .................. a& ... 8. lel• ,.,..., Okqo, or....,, ~r-....... £1eew ae. .. PfNI l DEAR PAT: I've been aboppi.na for IOIDe ~ '*t.nc room fUmlture and baft ootfoed liceuea 1n } me of the atom I've viaU.ed. Do all retail . llure aeUen have to be Uceoaed! •• --(.0 .. Costa .... • r EftrJ ~OT......., l'eUlier, •anfH· mer, .. lhuler, ft'llOYI .... , C ..... ..inh•ner and 1appl)' dealer la ,_.ldnld by l&a&e law &e be Uceuecl -"' die Bueaa of ••• .........._,.. ~ Ueew mat '9 poe&ed .. a ou1,lc•• pla~. (~ •••• /£ ... ,. ,, •• ,, • ,. DEAR PAT: We need aome tnlormaUon on ·~·lllillll•r energy for home water and/or pool beatlne. !iioJ!.4111.-.'ve bad aome estimates on solar panels and ti we could lutall them ourselves. We t lmow bow t.o a quallly for the federal tax re- and would like t.o f1nd out if approval ls re. from the city to lmtall solar equipmenL • I J .)(., Hunt.mat.on Beach A peirmlt aad •beeq..t laspectlea la re· bf die d&J el ff..,._ Beada. Clleck Jlle ........ departma& for cletalla. Solar e.ac water ieatlal 1ys&em1 qullfy for be&ll nl ... state &.u b~ab. For -.iw laformaU. oa Mlar 11a&em1, .:. bow &My worll, and bow to qullfy for &lie ata&e tax : • erecltt. wrt&e to: Sta&e Eeero CommluioD., 1111 :·t"'Howe Ave., Sacramnto 158'1, or p-.e &oll-lree ::: (8") 852-7511. CoDtact die FraDdllle Tax Board ;:: for ·~ lafermaUoa. ::: 'be JD&eraal lleveaae Service bu a number of :~ -,...., and pabllca&loaa which are not part of yoar : • for lndlvklaala." Yoa will flDd the ad· · • =· booklet, lnclDdlng P1ablluUoa Ml, "Energy :. • •HS of IRS form dblribatioa cea&en oa page 43 :~: el you tax booklet. lnclllded ID yoar tax packet ls :.: J'enn 585. .. E8ergy Credits," wtalcll mast be med ·:; to flgare yoar resldeltdal eoergy Cftdl& for al.Iowa· :>-!'"ble energy 1avtnp. ·• Cean .. .......-r t 0 ••....,.1Mat-.... , ....... ,cr Mi._ .... ,,....,,.._ &•• Seier 1 ... l•CI•• 11•1~. De•an. .. t •f C..1-r Aftaln. 112t N M., .... AM'J·F', '! 8acn...,.158lf. .. ~ Information aboat balldlng you owa solar :·: wa&erbeat beatlng system la lneladed la a free ••• brocbare from &be Naltoaa.I Solar Heating and . ·' Cooling lnformaUoa Cen&er. Recaaest .. Solar Hot :·. Water and Your Home," from Hot Water, P.O. • Box IW7, ~kvlUe, Md. Z0851. A book called •• "Build Your Own Solar Wa&er Heater,'' by Stu ~: c,mpbell, la available· ID bookatol'ff, or by maU ! from Garden Way Publishing. Dept. l7ZZ, : CllarloUe, Vt. ffUS. e.~ ~j aula P•.-e-t Oline ~••t :.! DEAR PAT: My daupter bought a magazine ..., aubeeripUoo from someone who appr,>acbed her on be1' school campus. She paid $7 in cUb t.o the seller and malled the rel!laininl f1 (a.lib 1n cub> to Worldwide Circulation Co. Inc. in Fort Worth, Tex· : 8" Thia was on Dec. 12, and now she's aettin& wor· ~ ~ that she may never receive the magazine she ordered. l M.G., Costa Mesa , ijWorldwlde Clrealatie• reports &llat 1oar ~·order wH placed WW. &Jae pabllAer J . 4. 8be •boald be'1& to receive ber mapsbae 121 day• of di.at date. ,~ Adaally, lbe la tacky. Paytag cub or wrttha' j: a~lledl payable &o a aales represee&a&lve of a Hb-~: fO'lptloll eompaay la very awbe, a1 la paying ,• ctall for &be remalader of &be order. There la no p.-oof di.at the order was ever received by &lte sab- ~ "'1J>doe company, •vea &boaP &be receipt can be ~' p110vicled. A YS ltu seea muy cues where &be or· ~ dft' was aever tamed Ill wltm thll wH doae. Aho, ~ die lnlUaJ paymeat la tbe uJes repreMDta&lve•a ~ eemmlalloa, and &be couwner always pays more ~ fdr IJlll &n>e of 1&bsertptloa tbaa for oae placed ~ cllrec&IJ wltb &be pabllaber. ~ £nee ... Ca11tt T•re.,• O•t ~ DEAR READERS: lleta&en take notice! Ac· ~ ~ to a aew retalla~~~tioll law, ren&en ~ e.-be evic&ed for g &o a &enanu• ~ gl'Oap. Tiiey also canno& be evicted wttbln 180 days ~ after eurdllng certain &mull' rigb&a, anless tli\lr rat paJme&&a are put due. Tbe old law set tllje e~ da&e a& It days. 'lbe new version allO 1.ena oat and revises certain &enut rtgbts, 1acb a• fUl&I complalaLI wltb appropriate apndell, fil. hq ceart actions or mall!Dg u onl complalat &o tlle ludlord. ID addJtloa. &be new law makes I& poNlble for a &eou& to reeever pal&lve dama'" aad •Uor'MJ'• feet la a retaliatory acUoe. "A WOMAN'S GUIDE TO FINANCIAL PLANNING" - BRAND NAMES ON SALE! Sale prica good""" Sand.u 3116180, "' wltlJe _,,,,.. mt . WMMYHOODED MEXICAN SWEATSHIRT (A) This handsome pullowr ~tshh1 Is woven of 100% coftOO In assorted colors. Men's sizes XS-S-M·l. Regularly S16.50 1 NOW$11.99 OCEAN PACIFIC GALS' TEE SHIRTS (C) Choose from a selection of adorable screen pOnted king sk!ieYe tee shirts from OP. Assor1ed colors, regular~ S13 NOW$9.99 A.SMLE GALS' BEACH PANTS (0) Save on California's falionte beedl pants from A.. SMR.£. h's the popular Nstic 14015' 51\)e lo assorted colors. . Regularly S t9 NOW$15.99 LEFT BANK KNIT SHIRTS (E) Choose from a \AAde se4ed\on of popular terry and Inter~ knit ~ Sizes S-M-L·Xl.; regular~ $16-18 NOW $10.99-12.99 LEVI'S MOVIN' ON JEANS (F) Her•'s big saWlgl on 1..-1'• POIMar b&eached denim ..., ""4f1 the rtbbon trtm poc:Mt. Alt CXJlton; WIMsas 28-38. Reg $23 NOW$16.99 OFFStlQf~ OFFSHORE HUARAOIE SAN>ALS Sir.e 25% on No<>~ of thts dMlk . huarache sendll. All leelher upsMr; slzft 7·12. ~ S)0-35 NOW $22.49-25.99 .. BOW OCEAN PADFIC HOODED SWEATSHIRt Ht1 ""fW OP scnat Pfw.d •· zellhlrt. ~ m• .,_In ~or tp/ln ~ oaloiv'~ Sim 5-M-l·XL; Reg $16 MlW$11.99 ~ SUNWEAR IC•aaaaa•1 IR8~~: le '""'=•• lnill.... • 111111 ..... -.......... ~(t ..... ~ .... . ... :-e~,,....~• MalthJ -&.aft part ot da• problem, ;;::==P'9d=Po1=m=ca1=M==,...== .. =====:; aeeordi., to .. aeetmaa Norman ~ + ·> ,,.,,.. DAN MAHAFFEY t: ''People all arouacl Western ._. lla1Helluetta bave a.NJ'd about ?i' b~u.ty brtna ~•tr dop to HUNTINGTON IEACH :..-=Uaem ~.=°:..U.:·~ ~Ctn COUNCIL ~ -~ ICllNKIDU DOD NOi' cbar1e for t.aklq lD or ba.odina oui animala, aJtboulh be accepts donatlcm.a. ST. PATRICK'S PARn!! :;t. I - Selected ao-1 Now $36.50 regularly $45.50 On .. thru 3119 while they i.t. ICHN&ID&& BAS as&N aearelWlf for a loeaUoa for bia Hilltown A.nlmal Sbelter for almost two ,eara. But Mfttal poutbWUea dried up when nel1bbon learned about h1I bobby. Meanwhile, Sdmelder bu placed his ebar1es in cases lD his house and 1ara1e, a 1ltuatlon which he ~scribed aa "horrible." ··Donations from around the country have kept me going." he said. "I don't 1et enough from around here." He estimated that be has boarded ll,000 animals, as many as 90 at a time, including cats. You will see a apectacular display surrounded by the eaaence of the Far East. , "I'm usually aJoae here after 7 p .m." said Schnelder, whose wife died five Yftl'I a10. "I'm working until midnilht putti.n1 them out and cleani.na cages ... lt's a hell of a way to five." "We're as interested in helping cata as we are dogs," he saJd. NEXT WEEK, SCHNEIDER leaves his yellow, eight-room wood frame house and moves to nearby Greenfield -the largest nearby town -where be has promised neighbors be will keep only two dogs. He said be wouJd place his strays in various shelters while continuing 'New' Waterfall In Argentina POSADAS, Argentina <AP> - Workers clearing the jungle in northeast Argentina discovered a 340-foot waterfall beside a smaJI lballow river, newspapers repoi:ted. Tbe waterfall does not appear on ailtiq JDaP9 of lliulooes Province ....... ~ unbown to ..... · mta ot DMtb:J Saa Vleeate. tbe re-~rta said. It ..... ldCbett la Arsen· .. and ...,. tbe • hllbelt la tbe world. .. Tbe hlabest waterfall in tbe world .b the Ansel Falla la VanaeJa. trhleh bu a total drop ol 1,ZD felt. We'll Light Up \bur Life We have a very large collection ::>f high-quality lamps at extraordinary prices. EVERY LAMP IN STOCK I 5°/o-65°/o OFF Priced from s50 to s595 A diversified line of America's most distinctive lamps from such notable manufacturers as Marbro. Frederick Cooper. 15% OFF ON SPECIAL ORDER LAMPS Dinkelspiel. Tyndale & Edwards. Wall lamps. table lamps floor lamp all kinds! A. GREENBRIAR 10' x 9' Reg. 149.99 129.88 6' x 5' Reg. 109.99 88.88 Extra ''mU9Cle'' for big Job9 That's what Ihle power-actuated tool is all about. Can be used in attaching furring s111ps, 2 x 4'110 concrete. mall boxes. electrlcal boxes, awnings, shutters and Iota more. U L listed. For use W!lh 1 lb hammer Model#476. REMINOTON POWER HAMMER, Reg. 34.99 28.88 FULLIRTON 301 So. State College 8ro;oQ60 Open Mon. thru Fri. 9 to 9 Sat. 8 to 6 &Mi f'trl 6 B. CAMBRIDGE 10' x 9' Reg. 179.99 158.88 Cower ..... with beauty PrePasUld wall covortngs are just the thing for kltchena and baths. Washable and tear-rnlatant. Pre-cut. too No special tools are needed and they re euy to appty In difficult areas even cefhngs. 12" x 12". 1 s per pkg. FLAIR SQUARES. Reg. 4 99 3.88 ....... --··---·-· ...... C. TUDOR BARN 10' x 9' Reg. 209.95 188.88 ANCHOR KIT Model .:tAK-4. Reg. 19.99 14.88 .. " .. '• -----------.. 30°/o off Selected Men's Suits and Sportcoats Limited quantities orig. $100-$150 reg. 9.50-$25 Men'• Unp•ck•ged Underweer Small Decorative Tins · Special 1.99 US Navy 9'9eetahlrt With collar Special 6.99 J. C. Penney Steel Belted Rad la I Save '76 to 1144 on four steel belted radials. Tire size ·Plus Fed Tax DRAPERY DEPT. 20°/o off Lined Sebring Regent and Jewel Tex Draperies reg. $20-$1 06 Now 7.60-s20 Now 12.80-84.80 FASHION ISLAND STORE ONLY ' Men's Dacron II Vetlts Special 14.99 Natural Ladder- back Chair with woven rope seat Special 39.95 MEN'S Golf Shirts Limited quantities Special 3.99 25°/o off Entire Line of Flatware reg. 21 .50-$60 Now 16.12-'45 Friday, March 14t .................. Little Girls' Velour Tops Size 4x-6x orig. $9 Now 5.99 - FURNITURE Save 594 5 pc. Dinette Set (1 only) orig. $359 Now '265 APPLIANCE Two speed heavy duty, large capacity Washer. Gold #1925. (1 only) Orig. 369.95 Now 319.95 FURNITURE Save s140 Triple Dresser and Mirror ( 1 only) Scratched ong.$289 Now 1.49 AUTO CENTER Mlleagemaker Belted Save s2e to 548 on four Mlleagemaker belted tires. F78-14 G78-14 H78·14 G7H-IS H78-15 L78-15 "Plus Fed Tu LUGGAGE 50°/o off Luggage closeout Sonora Serls, Soft Side Lugg~ge Asst. pktceJ In brown and blue orl . $45- S•lad Spinner reg. 1.99 Now 8.99 APPLIANCE SaveS60 Gas Dryer Two cycle. copper color. #5730. (1 O!'IY) ortg. 309.~ Now 249.95 25°/o off Entire Line of Tents Various sizes and colors FURNITURE Save 139.50 Brown Plaid Chair (1 only) orig. $279 Now 139.50 GIRLS' Girls Velour Tops Sofid and Striped orig. $11-$12 Now 7.99 . HARDWARE 2 Drawer Bay Tables For the garage or storage. 3>" wide x 60" long and 12" high. $5 each Winter Colors of Ditto" Jeans orig. $18-$23 Now 9 .99 50°10 off Selected Jewelry Jr. •nd Mlaaea Dlacontlnued Velours. V-neck and round collar ortg. 7.99 NOW·4.99 Canvas B~gs orig. $6·$16 Now 4.99 Starts 6 P .M. SHOES Girl's Canvas Athletic Shoes Broken sizes orig. 6.99 Now 1.99 Girls' Closeout Super Cord Jeans orig. S9 Now 3.99 FINE JEWELRY 75°10 off Men's Fashion Rings Limited Selection INFANTS' Toddlers Check Western Shirt Size 2-4 orig. 5.50 Now 2.99 Glrls' Selected Skirts Vartaus fabrics S1Ze7·14 orig. 9.50-$10 Now4.99 30% off Print Blouses Misses SiZes orig. $11 ·$24 Now 7.70-16.80 Ladies' Sleepwear and Loungewear orig. $14-$20 Now 6.99-10.99 FINE JEWELRY 50°10 off Cronus LED Stopwatches orig. 29.95 Now 14.98 FINE JEWELRY 50°/o off 14K Ladies Earrings Opals. Jade. Catseye. Onyx and T1gereye orig. $10-$45 Women's Casuals and Sandals 6.99 GIRLS' Girls' Suede- Like Sweater Coat orig. $27 Now 8.99 Long sleeve, pieced styles. orig..$7 Now2.99 Ladies Sleeveless Cotton Duster Asst. pnnt. zip front Special 6.44 50°10 off Colibri Lighters orig. 19.95-$45 30o/o off Jr. Red and Blue Terry Coordinates orig. $9-$16 Now 6.30-11.20 30°10 to 50°/o off Asst. Fashion Shawls FASHION ISLAND STORE ONLY SHOES Sesame Street Canvas Tennis Shoes GIRLS' Girls' Coat Closeout Vanous styles and·cok>rs orig. $26-$40 Now9.9S FINE JEWELRY Gold Filled Initial Bracelets Selected letters ong 10.88 Now 8.88 Girls Terry Tops Bright colors orig. 4.99 Now 3.33 Boys' Flannel Shirt 100% cotton, size 16-20 Orig. $7 Now 2.99 Hurry I · Quantities Are Limited • • • • • . , . -. . . • • • .. \ . • -. . . .. ___ ... , , I I ' . I I 1 : .; I : I I . I New and exoltJnO PenWeetem for Spring '80 by PerlWest. Tht• authentlcally Western pophn jacket accented with corduroy completes the look when worn· over Western pants and snap front shirts. : ~~~------~­. .. • .. ,. " ,. ,. ., .. . , .. .. •' .. .. ,. ,• C•ll Mt• Ml'I • Put .......... to...tttot 1.Wle,...19Preii. Rebecca Viasman, an aviation boatawaina mate airman apprentice at Lakebunt Naval Air Station, N .J ., ls shown in her Navy uniform and as she appeared in Playboy magazine this month. A Navy spokesman said he doesn't expect she will be punished. noting that what people do after hours is their own business. Five Sentenced In Cat Torture ANN ARBOR, Mich. <AP> -"Burn Frats. Not Cats," read the signs dotting the campus as a Judae sentenced five members of a University of Michigan fraternity !Qr torturing and klUlng a house cat. M .. rM11,_.. •ir W ...... SlllrtlA• ..... ,..,... .... to 'JO- LOMJ S&NYn md a.rt M•tor Cr.cttt C•rda D&PARTIU!N'J STORE 1116 MEWPOIT IOUUV AID •I Hours .,..., I t:JCM:OO ,, CloMd '' lundltya ••• Drop by our Home Energy Efficiency Center and catch our act. You11 learn how to save energy and get a free Energy Planning Guide. If you can't make it. caJl us toll free at 1-800-252-9090 a nd well mail you one. Either way. you11 save The rive. former members of Alpha Delta Phi, had pleaded no contest to ch<Jrges of chopping off the cat's paws. hanging 1t from u tree and then f "J selling 1t on fire Dec 6 ?~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;:;;;=:;=:;;::~ COSTAMUA Fiftttnth 01stnct Judge S J Elden ordered BURKE'S Al.PPLI the five to pay $360 in C'ourt CO!)tS and perform 200 ft AN CE. ft hours or community service work. :'"'1 a Jot of gas. March 3-28 Brentwood Savin9s & Loan Association 1640 Adams COltltllt..t GYailable Monday, Friday I I :00 a.m.-4:00 p.m. Vlsff the Mini EnerCJY SavlftCJS Show Trick Nets $900,600 LONDON <AP > -Four thieves with a hoax story about a child kidnap tncked three s~unty guards into handing over $900,600. police said Detectives gave the following account EaC'h guard found a letter awa1tmi: ham <Jt work in Mitcham. south London. saying that a colleague's children had been k1dnapJ>('CI and "ould be harmed unless the men kept quiet lind dropped at a specified sate the cash they were to colleC't from a bank The th1evC's were thought to have tailed the guards' truck as 1t drove into woods on the border or Berkshire and Surrey counties. The thieves dis· abled the truck and drove off without flri.q a abot and the guards walked five miles before reachlnl a phone, detectives said. Paid Political Advertisement GOVERNMENT BY THE RICH LANDOWNERS? BE ON YOUR GUARD!! •We're being had by people who are trying to buy what they want Not what we want or need. but what they want. • Who are "they"? The Newport Beach Chamber of Commerce. and the big land developers. They've already spent $14.000 to get Measu re Don the April 8th ballot. And last week a spokesman for the Chamber said they "plan to spend thousands more on Measure D" to convince you to vote the way they want. Ask yourself. WHY? WHAT'S IN IT FOR THE IRVINE co ? THE CHAMBER? THE KOLL CO.? They've already spent more money on this measure than the total amount a city council candidate usually spends on his whole campaign WHY? Does it raise questions 1n your mind? Make you uneasy? • If you're too wise to be taken in by their folksy. honeyed words. then compare me Measure, and vote for MEASURE A on April 8th MEASURE D National and State issues would swaRow up important local issues. VS. LonCJ ballot. Introduces party polltlcs to historically Non-Partisan elections Saves S by ellmlnatinq a separate elecffon. Increases number of voters, but their attention would be focused on 11atlonal and statewide candidates and Issues. vs. vs. vs. MEASURE A Permits local voters to concentrate on local issues. Short ballot. Keeps local elections Non-Partisan Saves S by .ellmlnaffnCJ a separate elecffon. lnc..._1 number of voters wllo will .be well-Informed on local c anclclates and issues. HOW WILL MEASURE • WORK? Measure A wll shift city elections to coincide with School Board Elections la Nove•er of odd ....tsered yecrs. Unlike the wealthy landowners. we do need money. If you can help, please send your check to the address listed below. r 1 SA Yl•S OF THE ·i IREE• SALEI 1 • ,..,ill>'....._. pt~ tft ~ ........ . [,.., ......... . c----·~----• GMtl&. _____ .... _ .. _ ·-• .......... .,,. <"""'°"' "'Vf'I • .,..,,_ lf'S MAYT.AG'S rtJftH ro oo Y()Ult OISHfS ' • E,,.'9'1' S.-CltYlll9 c.,ele Oft •II lllOdllll CU'Culll•JMI ~ .......... -C-.ll"l.il Mic"'""'"" ,...., • ~ ...... .... ..,.... BIJRKE'S APPLIANCE • SALIS • SBYICI • PARTS • • WI SB.I. THI llST & SBYICI TMI I I 145 BAKER, COST A MESA · PH. 546·8672, 9J.9-47J4 U.. Ow W•111 I ..... ., ......_.ai..t/Yhe ' 1 .. . . . . . . . . • . I . . . . . • . • , o.c. llUlllNOA ...... liiiiiiii- A oommllt.M ~ wW tl7 to _... tf Oran1e ~llQ lbauld adapt a cUrter fwe ot l"ernment ... flnt ...0... w. .... ¥OWbal to be ln· •dtt1,•211111tu11at• 1Dd eeenalble totM)IUblie. I ........ aa mdepeodent bodr· We aren•t aotn1 to \Oa4y up to a1a1oae for uy reuoa," aald ~Court .JGdle 8nace Su"'M', chairman or '--eMrt. atucly eommJUee recently formed by county~. SUJINSa AND OTBD committee memben expressed the view that t.be committee abouJd attempt to aet ltaelf apart from ewtlnc county 1ovemment agencies wbicb mleht lnflueoce the· ch art.er isaues. The committee's ftnt meettna was held in the jury room adjKeDt to ludp SUmner'a courtroom, THE NINE PANEL memben -seven men and two women-agreed to bold ruture meetings in a Hall of Administration conference room wblcb, they said, would be more accessible to the public. · Meetings will be held from S to 7 p.m. on the · second and fourth Thursdays of each month. n. catmtlca mvol"' &alit _..., o1 penouel •ssllldtowtM~ftre•etlf'!' ,,,. .... ~aUl tM ~·· l.Dereulq P•Het load and air t.r~ '"ilnl more ftreft to• at Mad m c ... Ol emerpocy . ........ .. I09Dill wUl ...... llvtl .. ved m CaM Of a malor a1rp&ue erub at or oear tbe alrp:wt. -..... Flre a\ltbotUMI aald alM llrlftpten ptr wortlal lllAft are HS W la eaat ~ dlluter. Bu{ CCMmty olJlclala. bolateNd by P9denl Avlatkm Adm•wavaUon,.,....... 1tanclarda, •"8· 1•t tUt lb ft.rem• per altJft would be enoqb. &AT••• T8AN asco •••NDING a number ol penoaMI Meded for alrport (!re pro-te~. UM atatt report Hid count;, .aupentlon 1bould llmpl.Y Mrmark -.-. for tbe airport flre force tn ftlcal lllO. Tb• tire department '1 current bud1et of f1U 000 l\q)Pl>rta Dine ftnG&bten per lhlft. ,,.-; ..,,000 reeonamendation wu part of a re. port oo Mfmlntatrative matten before the county tan• over tire servtce in unincorporated areas · from the state. THE 18-PAGE report prepared by the County Administrative office, suggested there will be few m BJOr changes when the COWlly assumes fire figbt- mg responsibtlity 10 June 1.980. However. the new department will count more heavily than in the past on volunteer fu-eflgbters banking up a shrinking full-time pa.id fire force, county officials aaid. The state Forestry Department cancelled its fire contract with the county alter 48 years of dual service. eating Proposition 13 money restraints. 11le charter study committee wl\sJmed at the urging of Ralph Clark. chairman of e county Board of Supervisors. • UNDER A CHARTER, the count would Program Eyes Handicapped ~ operate under the terms of·a mini-eonatit on. ~ The county presently is governed by the j . general laws of the state. • The last California county to switch to a ; . charter form of government was Santa Clara ! -O>llnty wbJcb did so in 19SO. Orange County Supervoors are forming a task force to identify and coordinate programs for han· dicapped persons. • Known as the Action Committee Concerned with Equal Services <ACCF.s>. the task force will attempt to educate the public "about the abilities, capabilities and needs of persons with dis· abilities," said Jrd District Supervisor Edison Miller. "This task force will not attempt to duplicate previous work, but will strive to promote a greater awareness of how people with disabilities can participate in the public and private sectors," Miller said. Tbe task force will won under the direction of the Orange County Human Relations Commiaaion. Justice CoUTreil Seeks Members Tbe <>nmae County Crlminal .Justice Council le now aec ;••• appUee*ionl for three public member podkww. Publle memben are requlred to be members of netchborboOd. eommun.lty·based or profesalooal organiutiona, and should be nominated by members ol tbe orpnizatioo they represent. '°°" do I get to be a tovatM ex-pro, ~ on TV game shows eeMlng after shave?' Applications may be sent to lrwtn M. Fried, P .O. Box 1405, Santa Ana, before April 3. ....... ... ·.. . ... -- ~ 1lf/IOJ C«Qmon0 1 pJCll GI I f'Cl'oOIA ""9t) GI Qil"""V ~ C. ..... ~~ ..... -- .(714) 964--5204 20937 ~SI ~ Blilch nro1-1trRLl Elect Incumbent Donn Hall Two of your favorite seafoods in one special meal. SHRI P &FISH SPECIAL s3.29 THRU APR IL 6, 1980 Crispy Fish, Tasty Shrimp, Fresti Cole Slaw, · Crunchy Hushpupples, Golden Fryes Cfiiig710Jiii8ikBr~. SEAFOOD SHOPPES Good only at: 30ll H•rbor BIYd. COSTA M!U ("'* .... ., .... Oleao ,.,., AINM ,._ ,._, DlllV&-THRU llRva AVAIL.Alta • I ' . .•• ~ t. • ,. ' . . . I ' I r-•I • •TIRE ST • suns. ~ . SPORT JACKETS PAllTS ••• s•a1s ••• SHIES and ACCESSORIES .o OFF 0 Regular price Shop Early for •st Selections SALE STARTS MAR. 14 Men•s Store 65 Fashion Island 644-6500 "chino" . e, Women's Store 33 Fashion Island 644-2400 "pirx::on:f ' . . . . . . . . .. . . . . -. ---....--~~ ---.. . . -----· -·-.-. WBAT BAPPSNSD TO Brown?._. .. dllie• called.,....,.t The IDOlll •=t fMtlr, Brewa...... ..., " U..ttMI ....... •·"•• .. a 'm1 "1.tl I Ill Mi owaper11. Tltat la cllff .. t ,..._ .,. wbea BrowD •• tM .. AIC _. clidate" -Aa7'od1 Bat Cartlr -tbe lat bope for bacten ol otbeT Democrata to atop U.. ''outsider• Carter and ct.aclloc* the coa'WeDtioo. But instead of belq the ODb' viable alternative to Prelldmt Carter today. Brown la odd man out in a three-•~ race ap••t Carter and Sm. Bdwarcl II. ~ nedy of Muaacbuseu.. And In bis second presidential cam· paign, Brown. now '1. la no lonaer a new face. FINALLY• TREaE IS the new ingredient in 1980 that Brown's New Hampshire camp~: coordinator, Mike Gqe. "the Gotemor Moonbeam" fac- tor, an emphasla by cartooallta. comedians and columnists on Brown's Zen Buddhist com· ments, bis talk of "spaceship Earth" and bis romance with rock star Linda Ronstadt. "You have a perception, at least on the part of some car- toonists and others, that Jerry Brown ls this welrd Governor Moonbeam from California. So to some extent, he bas to over- come a negative image that be didn't have four years ago," Gage said. ··Jerry is no longer as fresh a face as he was in 1976," adds campaign manager Tom Quinn. who plans to resi1n soon • CIU'lLml• e;,,,Se---... ...., .... bee•~ be IQS be cannot af. ford to cmtiBue wit.bout pq. CIVll'Qf 8A YI T•a jokes abollt -.U in comic ltrtpl Md ~ comedy rouUMI burl the campa:; but aot as much as the bac for Carter from tbe crh•• ID Iran and Af11twt•u or tbe shlftina of the ~tical 1potllgbt to Ken- nedy 1 entry in tbe race. "I don•t belleYe that DooDelburJ or JobDDJ Canon did ID ~ Brown. but I think they were part ol a mix ol fee· ton that \mderm1Ded b1a can-clidaey ••• QuiDD aaid. Brown•• two pwldlndal cam· palpa are a IQadJ ID coatruta. In ltTI. Brown 1tarted hll campalin in an off-the-cuff an· nouncement to four reporters over coffee in bia office. THEN CA•E VICTORIES over Carter lo Maryland, Nevada and California, a auc- cesaful Ore100 write-lo cam- paign. and victories by uncom- mitted a1atas endorsed by Brown in Rhode· Island and New Jeney. Brown bad 302 delegates for a dl1tant second -but second nonetbeleu. Thia time Brown started with great fanfare: Nearly 200 re- porters and pbotovaphera at- tended bia 1tDDOUDCement in the •cc••lf•Y SAID •& .. U... .... IDQUft.._ but .... bj .... l'ft'el"lal -C.lll .... '1m.-.. Pn911t. =~=-.::.a:':~ •Pam>Yal. ''Tbe Jflrf"1 Browa that .,. Wore tbe .atera WI year la mucb dllferent17 pereelYed." McCarthy aald. "Tbere'a an awarenea ol tbe cbaqes oa lm· partut 1-. fte abWtJ to make JIO _.. tarns baa bad U llllJlftU!OG OD ftiters." ' Fund-raising Dinner Set A fand-ralsiJla dinner for Laiuna Beach COUDcll incum· bent Sally Bel1erue will be llleld at the old Laguna Playbome Saturday, ber=!_ 7 R·m. Tbe .. Play 8a11J" dln- ner ia belDI boated by tbe owners ol tbe old playboae, now located at m Graceland Drift. Cost is $18 per penon and rea· ervaUoos may be obtained by calling 49'· 7643or 494-8326. Students Protest SAN FRANCISCO (AP> About 40 elementary school stu- dents have delivered hundreds of letters protesting the killinC of baby seals to the Canadian Consulate in San Francisco. The letters were placed at the feet of Vice Consul Michael Finn MOD· day to demon s trate tbe cbUdren'a dislike for the unaal six-week seal bunt. "Bengaleaae". A stretch fabrtc specially developed by Southwick that responds to your actMt busl· ness fife by maintaining an afl .. c:tay alt•llll'Oft crtepnw and comfort. Now available In tollds, stripes and plaids. "Bengalease", the cloth with a memory for a suit that's unforgettable. Only from South· wick. Only at Garys. [&J, 1 Ii is I ( • I I iJ I 11 ,:I 1', 1 Fahlon telanct. Newport Belch (71•) 759-1822 • Manna del Rey (213) 823-7955 Arco Plaza. Loa Angette (213)--2997 ' I Wardrobe Speciar Have Silverwoods quality and save 70.10. Our exciting new Spring C.ollectlOOS of suits, sport coats and sJack.s have arrived. In one convenient trip to Sitverwoods. you can select an all- occasion wardrobe from among our most prestigious labels. Here's an example of how it works: Any Sult (2·piece or vested) at Plus any Sport Coat at And any pair of Slacks at 175.00 or more . 110.00 or more 35.00 or more 320.00 or morn Then deduct 70.10 off the total cost silverwoods 41MMIOM111 *Mt• MIWfOIT IMCM ( . t I l· i t I - I• .. . . ~ . . ' . ' : • . . l ~ • • J • 1 ' aut 'l11~r«!ffa Bliflflie.' Jn this multiple exposure photo, Allx Westburg ol New York bubbles up aa she tries her first package of "lncreda Bub ble'' IUJD, a product recently introduced b.> General Foods. It creates a crackling senst:ttaon on the tongue before it softens to chewing consistancy. Drug's Danger Lingers 'DES Daughten' Faee Pregnancy Risks, Too BOSTON <APJ Women whose mothers took the drug DES in hopes of preventing mis· carriage face an unusually high ris k of losing their own babies lo miscarriage, stillbirth or other complications, a study indicates. The study of 1,236 women con- dudes that the risk of failing lo carry a child to a full-term birth is 69 percent higher than normal among th e so-c alled DES daughters. 0 ES. form a lly knowq as diethylstilbestrol, Is a synthetic form of the hormone estrogen. It was widely prescribed to preg· nant women for about 20 years 1n hopes of preventing miscar- rl ages. Studies in the early 1950s showed it to be ineffective. THE DRUG WAS banned by the Food and Drug Admininra - t ion 1n 1971 afte r a Massachusetts General team found that daughters of women B UT EVEN THOUGH the who look the drug were more risks are higher, the study 811· likely to have a rare form of sured these women that most of vagin a l cunce r t han the them will stHI be able to have daughters of women who never children. look the drug compares with a 95 percent rate among women of similar back· ground who bad not been ex- posed to DES while in their mothers' wombs Or. Barnes srud this stat.iatic s hould b e reassu r ing to daughters of women who took the drug . .. TllEllE HAS BEEN a lot of very depressing news commg out.·· she said In an interview . ·'That's why we felt it was Im· portant lo show that 80 percent of the people aren 'l having any trouble." The report, written by Dr. Ann T he new study emphasized j 8 . Barnes al Massachwtett.s thal among the DES daughters General Hospital. was publiabed who became pregnant, 81 per- in today's New England Journal cen t were able to have at least of Medicine one ruU-term Uve birth. Thia To reach their conclusions, the researchers studied 618 women who bad been exposed before birth to DES and compared them with 818 women whose mothers had not taken the medicine. opens this Saturday at FASHION ISLAND in Newport Beach \Ve opened our downrown Los Angeles store many years ago, and have gready appreciated the warm welcome we have received from Southern California. \\C are delighted that we can now brin~ Brooks Brothers co Fashion Island, the shoppi_(lg center which is in a class by itself. \\e cordially invite you to visit our handsome new store, and inspect the merchandise that has won Brooks Brothers its reputation for quality, workmanship and good caste . Brooks Brothers is the most famous lahcl in America , for tm_dicional, well-made appard for me n. women and boys; mu ch of our merchandise we make in our own workrooms. \i\c wa nt you to feel at home at Brooks Brothers, and we hope we may have the pleasure of welcoming you on oJ)ening day. Athletes in Action Sports Day Saturday, March IS -11:00 AM-2:00 PM Demonstrations by the o uutanding AIA gymna'>lic center. bas~ciba ll and soccer teams as well as women's basketball and \-Olk:> ball team~ Featuring potential Olympic competitor'> fmluon Mand wrl<'Omn 6'oob /kollwn oporbrz M•clt H "To mob and dml ()11/y in mtrrltamlia of th IJtSt 1pH1lity. to sdl it at a fair profit only. aftd /rJ dml t>n~•· D!it/J ptopk W>fo std allll an rupalM of appnriatinK SIJdl 111errlto11dise. •• Hmry Santis Brool:s, 1818 I f • . STORE HOURS: Sundny 12 noon to 5 p.m. Monday, Thursday, Friday 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Tueeday, Wednesday, Saturday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. '• ·----....... I SOME COLORED REDEVELOPMENT still f aees hurdles. Tbe Florida Suprtme Court ii eonaklertna a request to block S380 mJlUon In tu·increment bonds -bonds repaid throuP bJf.ber tax• eoUed.ed because redevelopment lnereues ~ erty values. And !J>p~neata aay they're not throutb n,btJ.DI. ·K•B ME•'S & BOY'S WEAR FASHION CLOTHING FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY QUALITY AT DISCOUNT PRICES 2300 HARBOR IL YD. COSTA MESA IN HARBOR CENTER IH.-bor at Wilsonl 545-8203 MEN'S SHIRTS O.P., Golden Wave, Lightning Bolt I Kennington and other famous brands. MEN'S UP TO 50% OFF DRESS PANTS SALE STARTS FRIDAY MARCH. 14, 1980 10 A.M. BE TI&f WHEN DOORS OPfN SOME ITEMS RfOOCEO TO BOOTS LEVI'S • $ • 501 'S BIG BELL REGULAR AND BOOT CUT JEANS • FAMOUS CORDS AND NUVO FLARES 511 88 NAME BRANDS Reg . $23.98 WAY ~BELOW COST! MOVIN ' ON LEVI'S • JACKETS 5 1488 .to STUDENT LEVI'S 50% 5 108' LADllS OFF PA•TS BOYS' LEVI JEANS AS LOW AS sa• I I -~- • t \ . . • . . , -. , f , • ' I I ..... -.l•p ka QI••• \l'Oten wW be Mktcl Junt a wbettMr UM elty'a uu of cS.fti.w:'• ,.n fen lbould be brMdlHd. CH.7 0 di memben ban a~nd a ballot meuun tbat uu 'IOUnl II tM ~rll tMI. uauallJ .,.scs lo IMu at lud doaaUciu. abould be ..S • ••.._uet eoltl for recnatkmal anu. IN 'IB •A.fl' U. d9"loDln meaaun ealla for addint the pakl 1911 tMt ....., UMd oalJ for pbrue ·•or malntalniq" to the IN1tftl _. oaaat.ructJnt new cl· current city ordlnuce that al· ~ pub. lowa fell to bt charted for park n. Jme ballot meuun wt11 acqvilldan ud Improvement. alto Mk voten lf \he park feet TIM IDMIW"J would a1ao .U0W can be llled anywhere ln San devek>pen' ~ feee to be UMd Clemente. anywben ln San Clemeote IO Curnint ctty oJ'dJaa.Dffl re· Iona u the)' wen aimed at lll'O- qwre park feel to be uaed near vldlnl more recreational the neiPborboodl from which faclUUee. the reftl)Ut was derived. ----------City Attorney Mlcbael Bartlett sald the ballot measure would "provide more flexibility" 1f puaed by voters. BAR'ILE'IT SAU> the ballot an 'Optimist DETROIT <AP ) -Against a backdrop of an nomy on the brink of recession, racing inflation interest ratea nestled in the clouds, there ts rlie Cabana, a car dealer and an eternal op- ist. Cabana and his partners opened not one -but --Chrysler Corp. dealenhips lut year even the automaker was poslln& the laraest cct'· ate 1088 in U.S. history. HIS FRIENDS SAY HE•s crazy; he says he's rewd. "The time to buy dealerships is when business bad. When business Is good, nobody wants to l," says the JS.year-old Cabana. Buaioess was n 't simply bad for Chrysler last ar. Tl was awesome. Chrysler lost Sl.097 billion, and 521 of Its dealerships closed while just 149 opened. Still Cabana conte nds "there's no way Chrysler can go out ol buaineu." "The government can't let It tail," he says. "It is too im- portant to the economy.•• THE PEDEaAL , CAMU •overnment baa •1r.eed to -su.rantee $1.$ billion ln loeM to ~-. ~ell the No. I automaker hopes to l)J dle end of the moath. • : Cabana apent seven years aa a aaleaman at ~ Ford ~Westland and another )ears a 'used car am ... t. . partners in the Chrysler dealenhlps are ,No..U. and Walt Norris, who have run North then tor 20 yea.rs. "I bad been a Ford man. I considered aler a No. 3 product. But now I know they d flne cars and they don't have to take a back t to anyone." says Cabana. SOLARIAN® FLOOR TILE • SELF-sTICtl! •RESISTS DIRT. S.11 or tr~ your .otd skis fHt with • riew Skiing clauffled ad In the Dally PUot. '42·5671 DURABLE FLOOR TILE • TOUGH -GREAT • ·,011 HEAVY • CABANA DOES NOT WANT TO discuss his ln- tment, but be notes that It takes at least ,000 to open a dealership and a Sl million line credit to finance the can. Cabana and his partners opened Livonia ler-Plymouth in April -Just about the time SPILU -EVEN . HHLMARKS! TRAmC AREAS! • POPULAR DESIGN! ryalar was announcing a $S3 million first- r lou. • They opened Century Dodge in Taylor in Oc r. after Chrysler applied for government help d just about the time Chrysler said its third- rter loss was $721 mlllion. SO FAR, SAYS CABANA, THE two deal- hipe have been "a break-even deal , nothin& to ashamed about." "The car business is going to get better. If it sn't get better, nothing else will get better," he ds. HISTORIC NEW HIGH : ·PASSBO.OK y2 " Interest Paid Day-in-Day-Out Compounded & Paid Monthly 11 you hal/9 S1 .ooo. to $5.000 In 1ny bank « Savings I Loan passbcJOlll 1cc;dunt. we can In most ca1es. Increase your ,, .. trom 6Y." °' 6Yt'\ to R Of '"'"'· JUST QIVE US A CAlJ.. WE CAN MAKE AU. THE ARRANGEMENTS ev~t. ~. OW' hlghef yielding~ c.1111Dl!llt. ~te fOf common sense lnya.ir Ctty Council. ~for John Cox April 8 Paid lor bY TN Cos tor Counclt Comm111 .. Roy H .. ,. Trw""9f. I 0 •IO«IS IDOu1r._r ,..._,_.,e .. ,., • USE ANYWHERE! • FIRED-ON GLAZE RESISTS ST AJNS • CHIPS & MARS! .......... ............. ..:2!~ .... ti.ti ...... .... .::.!~ .... f .H . ........ .. ... 11.H T1111rC1ielce '6" PRE-PASTED WALLPAPER 11 DECORATOR QUARRY TILE • SUPERB DESIGNS! • FIRED-ON GLAZE -WIPES CLEAN! • RESISTS ST AJNS! 10 GO\ BEAUTIFUL MOSAIC TILE • MESH-BACKED! • RESISTS STAINS & SCRATCHES! LATEX SEMI-GLOSS • TOUGH FINISH! • FAST DRYING! • SCRUBIAILE! ='fl11' • Westminster Santa Ana Costa Mesa * ps191 Beach 322 w. 17th 222~~r Bl. 2 898-3388 547-na1 645-1126 I Dally 9.9 -Sat. 8·6 -Sun. 9·5:30 P.M. "· .. .. I . . • . • . I ' ----w. • ,.. ___ --' . SHOE MOON MULLINS j,A)(f, MISTER? OUR ~,ATES H,l'JE~tr G-ONf up! J ,, , .. -~ ............ ·"""""""'-~-- MISS PEACH /J ::: THE FAMILY CIRCUS -.. .. "': ·~ ... ·=· .•. ·~ : :: =~ .. ·:· . . .·. .... .• . . :. ... . •• r rl'A, r CAN'T 1~1Ne WJ.N WU. DON'T L.ll(e MA~C.IA ... ~ c.otALO CC A I.OT WOftf• ... ' by Bil Keane GORDO "They left too much space between the raisins." ' . . - ·, .. ·: '• ~ DENN IS THE MENACE 11..-----------------------------..... : • 1 C>MT w.RllY fiAR VA .•. MY ~ AAf ~ snu AIHGIH' fRQ\\ M.q.\VllSOH! . -, ., by Jeff MacNttty by Mell Lazarius CHOO CHOO CHOO ' .. DRABBLE FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE DR. SMOCK SO NOW we KNOW WHY He SPeN-r AU.- MORN IN ' "T'UNIN6 PL...ASMA -.JAAS by Gus Arrio&a COMICS-, CROSSWORD 'l'ltbet 1t tastes like old rags." by K.vln Fagan I ~Y'S CROSSWORD PUULE -l ACA06S I EMe 6~ 10aaae.ce t41M 15~ Ml Sir:9ml dt'I 17 Unai9d 11~ erilrWC 2.,,. 20 -fnOllr 21a.poy Z2 Girt'. ,..,. nA1p 2S AOCltYdll 27Concut_ 30 8lr1llfl ,,,.... 32~ 33 Blalfl 34 Aoytll Of ~ 37 Slor'llgl9 '** sea....., 39~ 40....,..... ~- 41 ..,.SGOla c..,. 42 -Sund., .... Girdle 45er. 47 .... ...,.. tHTED Fe9ftft 9yndl1•• .. Sflor1 Llllt w.o .... Pmll 8lllllilecS 49 CM> 50CocU 54Holl*lf ....... 57~ 5"Col*ts ........ IOAolwit 61 ()per*'O 62Seclnl 830900 DOWN 1 DIA IOland 2Wel*nctty 3~Pr9ftll 4~ • l •• ... • • .~ '~ " . •• " . I l c 0 w • I I •• ..... "' . • •• •···· i •• • l • • • 01111 I •• 8 I •• • .... 1 I ... . ' I I •1•11 ... • I I I ·-I a l Ulll • • .... • ••-L •• I I I I P ~ . ·-·"' I I I I I I I ' l ·-· I II: ' -111111•11 • I I• • c • I • ··-· I G l • L A If l a • l • •• l I I I •• 0 I • ' ' .. 0 0 I 0 I 7~! I I U I ...... l ' l l • I I I C t • I I •-•II I I t .,.,. 2 wordl • 5 TMC:MIQ 2S GrMd -~ f dig. Nattonll Pw1I 41 9urt>ot I I EMW 281m11.-43 Beer..._ 7 ... Prllx 27 SYnm1t '4 TW11Wt I COllUNd 28 u.Mr, --0. Abbr. I ·~ 29C-.-...... l 10 Men c:Nf· city: t WOfdl .. ~ ..,.. 30 ~ 47 Scier'I , I 11 ao. 32 Bllltop't ~ 49 DINlt 12 In ,. 34 Snout 51 Uk river 13 HoullflOld 35 ~ 52 Shift VI* 37 GM 53 lAI it ttend 19 Mltttc unltt 31 Clneda'• -55 Urnb 21 Houee pet Provinca 56 Wreth 24 °""' suffi• .0 CMmcal 57 01b ....... ._4_._ .. __ ...... ·•)·,,..·--- . ' I J I } . . .. .. ,. CWLYN.QT AJ• ·'Scouts Go Stylish £U:r YOlJA 0£ADLINE APRIL 15 FOR 1979 IRA BENEFITS ~-+r-~----··~ .,. . .,..,.... <;VB SCOUTS GO MODERN TOO Colors Same, Pocketa, Cap• New WHITE'S I LA-z-ao.v ~ i WE 'NEED ROOM sso OFF If it'sgot wheels, you'll move It faster In a Dally Piiot ·11 IVllY LA·z.IOY~ IH STOCK tS ON SALE THltU MA.ICM s.. ..._ LH lier co11ct1o11 ......... ..., . \ Uniforme to Coat More 1avmo, ,.. .. <AP> -ne 1oy lco•t• of Amerlca, ••••r M1111b.. .,. ....... &Mo ba•eoutvelliOrta. a•l :tt•• ll•• lcoutl · Oftt'U'llld tlMM' tmllorm l\Ylls. La ·-a fellow ~ -u. .... work• for au. ScouU., olftelall • Wtd•t1da1 unveUt4 1 Uat of unlfonM ......... by a.ear • la lhnta tbat wl II co1t In t~e n lahbofbood ol ~. aw coat. OS LA aSNTA, OM of the nation'• f o,..mc»t f ubion doalp ers, kept the baalc klok ot the tracUUonal uniform but did away with 1arter Labl on the abort.a and idded a ltw pocket&. ··we ftlt tbl ""1form aboWd meet Hvtral criteria," laid de la Reola, wbo .,.. ... bJ.a aen1CM. "It abiould be al.lit.able f~ atnmuous adi.tty, it abould be made from an euy care fabric and at the same time the wearerUould 1til1 look like a Scout." Tbe &mllonu won't be 1n me for America •a 4 mUUon CUbs and Scouts until AUIUlt. 11ae old-atyle shorts and alacks will still be consider ed reaulatioo, officials aald. BOY SCOUT omcials say the changes were made "ln response to reque sts r e c eived f r om the m embership." "It was j ust a question of updaUna." said marketing director Matt Dorfman. "Members said they never had enough pockets. so we ~dded patch pockets to the pants. We're· also uslng a heavier weight or fabric for durabWty." The fabric weave also is tighter, "so a Cub Scout in Minnesota is oot going to be atancting out.side wlt.b the cold wind blowing throuib bis trousers," said J. Jay Caaaen, bead of the Boy Scouts supply divtaloo. .. WE RA VE TF.Bl'ED hundreds of pairs across the country, rathe r quieUy. rather secretly." he said. "We've bad a lot o r positive fffdbadl." Little old ladies who need help crossing the street will still recognize a Scout since the most noticeable change is that the once all-tan uniforms will have dark olive-green slacks and tan shirt. The unllorm also sports new headgear, 1ncludin1 a cap t.bat looks like a baseball cap. Ct18 ec::ovra. troop leaders and den JDOthen also 1et a new loot, alt.bouP tbe unlfonns are aUll navy blue with ,.now trim. • TIM DeW8lt feMUl'e CID CUI> outfit.I .,. reventble aldrtl with coUan that can be tucked in when a neck ICarf ii worn. Leader uniforms will be available In • wider aelectlon ot •tra.. Th• 1couun1 m ovement w aa founded In Enitand by Lord Badta-PoweU and made lta WI)' to Am..tea Just after the tum ot the ceatu17. American Scout.a celebrated tbelr TOtb btrtbday Feb. 8, tbe aaalverNrY ot t.be tncorporatloo of tbt Boy Seouts of America. Coupo,..saver Reaps $163 in Free Groceries MIDLAND. Mich. (AP) -The ringln1 of a grocery stor e cash register ia music to Suaan Miller -It coven the sound of other shoppers 1roanlng. The Midland wo m a n rece ived $181.38 in free groceries, plus a $2.37 refund, on a shopping day with coupons and refund slips. "f S11LL CAN'T believe it," she said. '"Ibey actually paid me to cart the g roceries ou t or the store. Savings like that don't happen every week." Mrs. Miller said she normally saves a bout 50 percent on ber grocery bill. but the store where she set her record featured double coupon savings. "I didn't know what lo expect until tbe groceries were checked out when the final coupon was subtracted t.be store actually owed me money. The cashier even autographed my sales slip." SHE SAID HER husband Bruce thought she was "totally nuts" when she started clipping coupons "Now he always ash 1f I want a wrapper before be throws 1t away .. Her next goal -a S2!iO fr~b1e Streetwalker Solmion Found ROTrERDAM. Netherlands c AP 1 -The city government has given <t ereen ll&bt to a plan to moor "sex barges" Oil the waterways or Uus Dutch port city in an effort to control Not ,ust for this year. bot for years to come. If you·re not covered by a pension or profit~anng plan a t wort<. a Unive rsal Sa vings Individ- ual Retirement Account (IRA) can be your personal income tax shelter. Even if you leave an employer wTth a retire~ plan, you can "rofl-over" fund proceeds you receive and open your own IRA pfan. Sett· employed persons can choose between IRA and Keogh plan accounts. If you quality, you can have a Universal Savings retirement account and deduct that port;on (up to 15% of income ... $7,500 Keogh or $1,500 IRA allowed each year). for income tax purposes until you retire. Deductible amounts and contnt>unon deadlines vary between plans Ask a Universal Savings counselor for details today. Find out how your retirement account can earn at our highest long-term certllicate rate Remember. Universal offers a wide range of other high-yield · ce rt1f1cate accounts as well as convement passbook accounts ASK ABOUT OUR 26-WEEK MONEY MARKET CERTIRCATES! RATES ARE QUOTED WEEKLY. Bnng your passbook 0< maturing certificates from any other flnancaal 1nstrtution to a Unrversat SaVTngs office today. ""311 transfer your funds to the account of your chotoe at no cost to you. UNIVERSAL SAVl#GS 8 : IFSl.K I 4590 MacARTHUR BOULEVARD • NEWPORT BEACH Monday thru Thursday 9-4 Friday 10-6 • 955-0536 Free Partiq (Enter frOll Bircb Sl) a lrowini prostitution problem. -===========================-The b&rae aebeme would replace a pl&D to cTeate a ~a!led Eroscenter [,.---------) on :=:ebeotthe city. That ideahwas L. M. BOYD INFORMS in the ~rap cau.se of neiehbor ood '-----------DAILY PILOT LIMITED TIME ONLYI ND PAYMENTS TILL MAY ~ ....... few of .... ~ ........................ , .. ..... .... ..... .. • • • ...... '""' """*-d• of 1u .......... .,.. ................. . AMO .......... tNs ....,._.Nie, we wlft Pf'Ovlde nonnat ...................... .., Fllll .,..... you Dorin; c.,et Town·s ~ Annuail __.,. S. ... • We wtll prowl .. llOmlll lnitalllllon ......... FR& ..... ,.. l*Cbtt ~IM packlill .. rtnt !Ms U lt . • And ..• d11rt11t tllll "*411 sate. on Ill Of'dtft"" uaa ... ~ dOWft It time Of onltr Of' IMtlllatioft. _, '"'llM crdtt -0. YEAR INTIRHT FREE CMDIT ... SA• AS CASH ... WITH NO PAYMENTS TILL MAY! ~ 01 Purl1-.. $400 ~,..... • ... d 0. or .,.......,,, $100 $300 A.M Allit & FNnCt C19gin 4 TOlll OI P~ $300 t2 .... ...,.,.Ol 12S eCI F"' ...,.,_,. nol ~ .. May• purChllN carpet eftCI pd•lfttll Sorry, thla special oHef' -.. not 8PPtY to ,....ems. dON out., cle•r•nc• Item• ot foem Mok c.tpet. IN COMPLIANCE WITH SECTION HI Of Tifl! TRUTl4 IN lENOtNO ACT OF NOV .. 1174, Tifl! FOllOWINO STATEMENT NO PAVMBfTS .Tl.L MAY MUST 81! INCWOEDINOURAD:MCOITOfCMDfTIS INCLUDED IN PRIC!S QUOTED FOROOOOSAND USE Y,,.., lllNW.: TAX a~llln SERVICES" ••. HOWEVER. FOR THIS SPECIAL SALE ABSOlUT£l Y NO I NTERE ST OR OTHER CREDIT uun '""""II; ~! CHARGES Wil l BE PAID BY THE CUSTOMER FOR ONE YEAR. THIS IS AN HONEST FREE CREDIT PROMOTION LIVILLOOP MUHi-tweed cotofa· tlon• tn a contlnw- ou• fll•ment nylon pHe. .--~~~~~~~~~~~--, NYLON HI-LO A tcvtptured pattern of contlnu· ou• filament nyton pile In ea tweed coion. SAXOllY""'91 ·--.. se• =.::-= tcL~ In ...... eold colDra. ma Loe» mu Cftoo• from nine s11n ~ooeon of nyton pfle pro- ~with a ... ,.., wear guarantM. I CUT PILI PLUSH ........... nylon pile $ 7,99 In a •hort plu•h etyle. 9etect from $0 VO ai• tone ~tone cotors. SWllLMTTllN o • ..,_ s9111 pattern nflon carpet enhMced so YO bJ MUltf.tone colotatioM. SAXDMYQITNI ..... -m.... s11 • ltar polyester plle ptu•h In a wide .. IO "O, MlecUon of 20 aolld cotort. HI-LO LOOP Beautiful multi-se• tone color11ion1 in so vo a eculptured pattern of 100% ny1on pile. NYLON PLUSH Mlat·Mt nyloft pUe S9!@ Mlonyptuanal .. al>telnflftMn lftUlt'-toM c:okM'J- MnalaDIUSH Acvtlftdloopatyfe s1399 of continuou. tll• ,,,."' nyton •v•ll· IO YO al>te In nine cotoratlona. 2911 SO. BRISTOL 1 ml. North of lo. CoMI ,.._ et legernom ....... ,. .............. 11 .. W(Pl)oWI flU. • • IAf TIU. I • IUMM'f 11 , • fllU U 1 ltUo Ri "' --MQlllC IM'f CMDlf TIMll • ~•MMTHQWIOC '*-"~ -.JIMl,U .. .. Ill 1217 .1 ' I SluMnlA Back Headmistress GREENWAY, Va. (AP> -Jean St.rQYeD Harrta bead.nmtreu at tbe exclualve Madeira School, uaed to lecture assembled student• frequently about lbe need for integrity. •'Sbe ha N.ld that word 'lntelJ'ity' ao many times that some of lbe student.a call her 'lnteanty Harri.a,"' aald Sonya Knl&ht, president of the boardin& atudenta at the school. NOW MRS. HARRIS IS ACCUSED or murdering Dr. Herman Tamower, a wealthy New York heart specialist who wrote the best-selling "Scarsdale Dtet" book. The 400-acre campus on the banks of the Potomac River -complete with riding stables. tennis courts and swimming pool -was quiet. The 325 female high school students began a three-week spring vacation at the end of school Friday. But the headmistress was not forgotten. "Mrs. Harris is a fine woman and a fine headmlslress and no matter what happens I will always believe in her," said Laura Gill, president of the day-school students. "I HA VE NO IDEA WHAT happened in New York and I'm shocked by it all," said a faculty member who asked not to be named. "J ean Harris always seemed to know exacUy what she was doing and she was a good headmistress. I just hope this doesn't hurt the school." Mrs. Harris, a divorced mother of two grown sons and headmistress at Madeira since 1977, had known Tarnowe r for some timl' and was said to be a frequent guc'st ut his hou.<;c· lier nam(• was first amonJ? the at·knowlNt~ments in his book "Thl' Compl~lt• Scttr~d :.il1• Ml'd1c<.tl Di<'t · Plus Dr Tarnower·., L1frt1mt• Kt•ep·Shm Program ... lk credited h1·r with h('lp1ng research and write 1t "On behalf of e veryone al the school. I can only say that we are most distressed to learn or unfortunate e vents affecting Mn. Harns. the headmistress," said school president Alice W Fa a.Ikner. THE OFFICIAL R EACl'ION 8EE•ED • perfect complement to the school's motto: •'Festina Lente," or "Make Haste Slowly." Two-thirds of the Madeira students live on campus and pay $6,130 a year for tuition, room and board. FOWlded an 1906, the school boasts many notable alumnae, including Washington Post Co board chainnan Katharine Graham. Name Game Winning Hantlle Sought TULSA. Okla. (AP> -Accountability Burns. a perennial candidate who changed bis name from George C. Burns in 1974, bas filed a petition seeking to change his name again. He wants to be Accountability Einstein Belcber-Bul'M "to honor Einstein and the ERA and the New Poll tics," as well as former U.S. Rep. Pace Belcher. R-Olda.," be said in the petition filed la Tulsa County District Court. Burna la nmning fOT' the Democratic mayoral nomination. He bas run for the School Board and baa made unsuccessful attempts to run for county sheriff and governor Medicine Topic Of Mesa Panel The bu1lne11 of medicine -industrial medicine, fee-for-service medicme and health maintenance or1aniiaUom -will be the topic of a panel dlacuaaton Friday sponsored by the Costa lleaa Q\amher of Commerce. PaneltstA wlll be A11emblyman Dennll Man&en, D-Hunttncton Beach; Tom MacCahe, administrator of Unified Medical Group; health and safety adminialrator Fred Gillett; Tom Monji of CAL OSHA, and consumer Jane Anlel. Co-cbalring the panel will be Jack Hammett, administrator of Bristol Park Medical Group and Ruth Zamora, administrator or Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital. The lunch will begin at noon at the Costa Mesa Goll & Country Club, 1701 Golf Course Drive. Reservations at $7 .50 each are available from the chamber, 2980 Harbor Blvd., Suite D, Costa Mesa 828216. Ice Cream Tax Helps LONDON (AP) -The Britilll love for lee · eream bmefttted the tnalur7 bJ • mllUon in . tun IMt year, • treuury mlniater told the Houe of Common. Brttaln lmPoHI a tu oa .. 1UXW7,. fooda. .. •&&,800 cl• ..... • •lDor aUdel ... floo•l•I ••d ~aadhs1 out ••efts• '° ,....... ......... .,... ... l•r•ler noted tbat laat Tb~'• ltorm, wbleb lated ~t aa bou~1 .••• u 81 allolUMRonlJ.t In l'e..,..,,, Helllllid.._t.-erepa1r....- h1d ..... OD Back &., DriM ud l~ '"-at .. Cu~ ud the 1'bundiy at.onn wiped OUl th• ... paa,. ud eauaoa more dam ... to the bddce. --~ fentasllcally ........... Exw lof apred i.tex g1ou novae & trim paint from Glidden. Goel on wtth MM Wide range of colors Reg. 19.59 12'! stuco roller set Stuco roller. rolle< frame. and a"· loot WOOder\ 9Ktena;on handle alot for pots 4 quarts of VlgOfo Potting MIK, pertect plantlng medium fOf hOuMP!ents and ftowerl. Reg. 99" protection from deltnlCtlOll VJgoro'• 50% Malathion Spray gtwe generll prot9Ctk>n from In· aect• for lawna. flowers, and ~-, .,.. ~· 4..89 SANTA ANA .. ...... ............ Fluffy, dutt-attreotlng feettMr ....,. • ..-..,.y Inch of yow hOme "*"''"' dem\. ~ "' • true ......... a.g.nt ---beek ... .,. dov· bte -~ doChea '*"'*'· toope ...... *·Sm ... Alg. 2 79 1•• ...................... ..I.II ........ Uf ............ I.II , ~up you lr"GUllles • . . 8'ld 'f04lll teevea • .._, debrlS, trilSh and more• Good hea~tot ~.__an.,.. .. Aig. a1 a . 32~ etn ........ lo-by 4' lof'G ~ fluoreeoent tube fur. ture tot your~ or garege. c..np.tie""" '*lQlne c:Nlna Ind cord. Twea not -..lded Aee-24.15 1411 • 1· I I r---... K 59ttL ... old ...... , an1 ... . .., ....... Time lof a new one Dependable. energy Hvlng. Glu•·llned taneia. t8S*I hot .mer rec:cwery eyatem1, high tampeietuni shut-offs 3Q.oeAOn. Allg. ttt.M 108'' ........... tS •••••••••• ta. ...................... 1 .. , I\.. rt JI• 1·' ''· •• .._,.,. ..... __ ~ ......... -___ ::"' __ ..,. ... ---·-·-- ( 's Mr. Desire 8J JoaN ISVANO ........... Re'• U. ldDd of Pl rou'ct tov. to bave on your aide tn a ftOt. lie'• ._,..., banl·llClled, MraPPJ. cocky, ,Wy. and cloaa't bow .... to ,ult. M a matter of act, ror Sladda.back CoUese'• Ed Patrick, tbat'I the only way be knows how to play. When you talk about desJre and lntent, Patrick hu the market. cornered. A.ND, WHEN mt: GAUOIOS bqin thelr quest for the state chamsriombip ton11bt (8) qainat Alameda Colleie at Cal Poly <Pomona) it wlll be Patrick leading the way. "I think buaUe and dlvtn1 la run ... says the 5·10 point 1uard about bis style of play. ''I feel a ruy my siie hu to play that way. If I was 6-4 I'd probably be the same .. altbouah with someone that sl.ze it's not as necessary.·· Watching Patrick play is a delight for those who enjoy underdogs. Hidden amid the giants in junior college basketball, the Katella High graduate does everything within his power to assert himself. "I have to play at 100 percent or I'm not effective ... admits Patrick. "Winning is the only thing for me " THE FEISTY GUARD IS QUITE a show on the floor It's almost as if he's possessed. He flies through the air with reckless abandon, gets upset with himself when he I ,....,, •-ire •lld df1'1•9 b 1-. . .I llmee t• ,. ... •• JN ~~nat •r ,,_ ••• elfer•I~ misses a shot or pass. and sometimes even beromes disturbed when taken out of a contest. "I've worked really hard on my game the past five years. I used to wear a small bunting vest during the off season that had lead weights in it to help my jumping ability. I knew with my size I'd better be able to jump some, so I worked on that more than anything. "I'm really not aware of what I do on the court I JUSt try to play hard. I think it's exciting to dive for a ball but r don 't want to go crazy. That's not good." · PATRICK IS AWARE of the "tough guy" image he carries with him. "I know I can't be too overconfident with the people I play against, but I have to have confidence in myself to play. It helps me out to be that way. I've harassed some of the guys I've played against. I want them to know I'm around. "I like the thought of being the tough guy. I think the smallest b-5 to be the touabest. I don't want the bigger guys to take advantaae." Patrick's biggest concern now is that Saddleback (33.0) doesn't set beat during wbat he hopes is the team's final three pmea ol tbe aeuon . . .. l'lmNS 'l'BallB•s a fur upeet motivating ua. I think •ri..,._ • tlllla tum bu ~ about the proepect of losing after getting this far. I remember we beat Cypress last year • tbe at.ate aemla when it bad a 33-eame winrung atnat. We know lf we don't play rtsbt that can happen to u,loo. "It's because of tbU that I tbink we'll play our best three games of the year." ED PATRICK GOES AIRBORNE FOR THE GAUCHOS. Patrick doesn't pull any punches concerning himself <See PATRICK, Page 85> -~•WI.In-• KAREEM ABDUL..JABBAR HOOKS OVER TOM OWENS. 40 Powerboats Race Ippolito, Others Challenge Cook Saturday By ALMON LOCKABEY ewty ,.. .. -... wm ... About 40 offshore racing r powerboats will churn the ocean l waters between Dana Point and , Alamitos Bay Saturday in the 1 first running of the R. P. Wa rming t o n Grand Prix <formerly Bushmills Grand Prix). Race chairman Dan Baker said about 18 drivers are entered in the open class which features boa ts from 36 to 39 feet competing ID the first race of the 1980 national championship campaign. HEADING THE LIST 1s Betty Cook of Newport Beach, the current nallonal and world champion ID the rugged sport. The race starts one mile off the Newport Pier at 10 a .m. Saturday after a parade through the harbor of the race boats beginning at 9 a .m . from the Newport Bay View Yacht Club between Newport a nd Dana Point, and between Newport and Huntington Beach. The course will be closely guarded by the U.S. Coast Guard, Coast Guard Auxiliary and other official boats to prevent spectator boats from crossing the course during the race. Another Mileste•e For Abdul-Jabbar, The Beat Goes On INGLEWOOD 1A P1 -·It was another m1l<''>lom.· for Karei!m Abdul.Jabbar. the pre mier center for the Los Angeles Lakers. and 1t came. httmgly, on a night that hi~ team vanquished a sea~on-long nemesis top s pot will draw a b, l' ror tht' first round. THE LAKERS led all lite wav in improving their ov1.:rall re(: ord to 52-21. which IDt'ludes J 32·4 mark al home. Portland dropped to 10-2.5 on the road and leads 5'1n Diego by only one·half ga mt> in the battle for tht- playoff berth Tanana Looks Jmpressive BOATING Out to defeat Cook will be such big name drivers a nd contenders for nationa l points as Joey Ippolito, a former winner or the Bushmills; Joel Halpern, always a contender for national honors, and Bob Nordskog, the Van Nuys granddaddy of the sport on the Coast. BETTY COOK Whal Abdul Jabbar did was Hor<.' h1-, 24,000th Na t1 onal Basketball Association carN'r potnt early m the third quarter Wednesday night at the Forum And what the Lakers did was drop Portland 102-94 for only thl'ir second wm m four meet mgs with the Trail Blazers this l!eason. T h i:' Lakers led 59 .49 at halftime and assumed an 85·61 lead after lhrel:' qu::irlers . Portland could never get closer than six points in the final period In Workout PALM SPRINGS CAP> Left-bander Frank Tanana, attempting to come back from a shoulder injury which sidelined him for three months last season, threw 15 minutes of batting practice for the Angels Wednesday. .. He's really throwing &ood and eHy," said outfielder Merv Rettenmund, who hit against Tanana. "His fast ball ls moving well, and he's always got good' locationoo bis other pitches." An1ela Manager Jim Fregosi, •boae team begins playing tntra-squad games today, also •as enthused. "He )09ks strong and has much, better arm speed wlth his bre~ ball,•' said Freaosi. TM J$-year-oJd Tanana, once Ge-toatDatay of the An1els' «artlltl nutloo, wu 7·5 last ,.ear, with a 3.89 earned run .-v•r.,e -the highest in bl1 teveu.-yur ~league career. .. l~ at tbe polnt where it (the ..,.>comes hack the way it once wul" Mid Tanana, "ol' I become • cWl'wlat ltY .. pitcher. 1trtcUy rm.... . . . 6r I have very little Umelefttatbepma." Tuuatl llD • four·way battle *ltb Jim Barr, Doe Aue and llrla &aapp· for t9tree opeD ~. Daft J'rott ud baft already bMtl ~;c;•~tpota ln tile fl ve-man near the Arches Marina In addition to the open class there are e ntries in the production and performance classes. plus a rookie class, Baker said. The open class will run a 172 nautical mile course. the performance and production boats will race 88.6 miles, and the novice class will race a shorter course from the start to Dana Point and back. THE COURSE for the open boats st.arts with a run to Dana Point, back thr oug h the start·finish line to a buoy off the Alamitos Bay entrance and thence zig-zagaing around the offshore oil Islands, Esther, Emmy and Eva. ALSO BACK AFTER several years absence will be Peter Rothschild of Newport Beach in his famed Thunderballs. Ippolito will be seeking his second win in one of two new boats named Mlchelob Light -a 38·fool Scarab V-hull and a new tunnel (catamaran hull>. Cook will also choose between h er fam ed V ·hull a nd catamaran-depending on the condiUon of the water. Nordskog has disdained the tunnel bull -at least for Uus year -and will be driving his f a med 39·foot Powerboat M agazloe Special In which he has set several speed records. ABDlJL.JABBAR finished the night with JO points and 24.004 points in his career. He has been outscored only by Wilt Cham- berlain. 31.,.19 : O s car Robertson . 26.710: John Havlicek, 26.395 . and Jerry West 25.192. AH four look al least 14 years to accumulate their totals, while Abdul·Jabbar is in his 11th NBA season. Meantime. Portland is the on· ly NBA team that holds a series edge on the Lakers and could wind up playing Los Angeles In a best-Of·three series to open the playoffs. The home crowd gave Abdul-1 Jabbar an ovation when his ac- complishment was announced. Later. he said the fan reaction 1 "was nice, very nice. It's always nice t o know you're ap prec1ated." HIS 3t POINTS LED a' ba lanced Laker attack that included six players in double figures. Magic Johnson and Mike Cooper had 14 each. Jamaal Wilkes and Jim Chooes h a d 13 a nd 12 points, respect.iveJy, and Norm Nixon added 10. A large s pectator fleet is expected to line the course Rerlstralion of drivers and boats started today at the Newport Bay View Yacht Club a nd wilJ continue through Friday. 808 NOADSKOG However, the Blazers are bat· tling with San Diego for the final Western Division ptayoff slot. The Lakers lead the Pacific Division and if they finish in the The Laker center also had 11 rebounds. fi ve assists and five blocked s hots. However. rookie guard Magic Johnson was the game's leading rebQunder with 16. · TUCSON (AP) -The real problem in analysln1 the four colle•e balketball teams competing in the NCAA West Reitonal tonlabt la determlntna wblcb should be con.aidered the Cinderella team. Of ~ four -21·7 Ohio State, 19-9 UCLA, 22.a ClemlOD and 22·10 Lamar Unlverslty -only tbe 10th-rated Buc'keyea can be quickly exempted rroni OCIDll•raUoa. LA~ 1.11UANKSD and witb 10 lotl!!,. . would seem to =z• rime cancuaaw tot Clndertlla, lt ls ... ..., ... ,........,......, row. \ The Beaumont, ,Texu team toot the Southland Conference tlU• for the third stralaht year, but doubters ask ' 0.1'1'1'•• .... O.•••el5.CW rbetortcalJy, ''The Southland Conlerence?" Lamar'• opponent In tonight '•. C>Penina 1ame. Clemson, mana,ed Just fourth pl.ace ln tbe toucher AUanUc Cout Coaference and la also unranked. Rowe.er, ol the Tiaen' elabt losses this Nason, seven wen decided in the final miDut.e ol play. AND THEN IA&&Y B&OWN, rootje. coact\ ol the unranked Bndna, aaya lte canndt quarrel with UCLA betq called a Cinderella team this year, alt.bou&b he defended the 1N Bruins' Mlectlon for ttie et.um NCAA tou.nwnent. "I don't think there were 48 teams better than us," Brown said. Ranktnp and records aside, all four West contenders defeated reput1ble comt»etltioo in movl.ng to the reatonal level. Lamar , small \n slae but bit tn quickne11 and e nthualaam, upset fifth;rated and taller Oreaoa State 81-7'1 to reacb ~t'• coetat. l THE UCLA-ORIO STATE conteitl features "as fine a talent as we've seen," aaid UCLA's Brown. Directinl Ohio Stat.e's attack is senior Kelvin Ramey. who holds the school record ln assists and is withln a few 1amea of Jerry Lucas' career scorin1 total. lnaide, the Buckeyes have 6-10 center Herb WIWams, 6-9 Jim Smith and 8-8 freshman Clark Kello11. "Kelloa Is as good a rebounder as · any of our starters," said Brown. . But DO one la feeling sorry for the· t Bruins, led by 8 ·8 senior Klkl V1nderwe1he and 8·1 freshman Rod roster. I l .. . .. . ,...-----fl-i~ •I tlw D .. ----- "'n2e fact that an atblete ean filter all the way through our education system without havlnl to obt.aln the most basic of readina lld1la could be an indicator of what baa happened ln the whole of academic aoelety the paat decade. "-D••ld •ee.U•m, Sport• Editor, Arkamaa Democrat. • •.a ,,,,.rlde9 W'k• S..t, A_..a tlMb7 Rall scored eartJ in tbe UUrd period Eil and set up the tytna goal by Lan7 Gl..-x with Juat , 3: 02 to play as Hartford battled back to deaciloek Detroit. 4-4 Wednesday llight in National Hockey League acUoo . . . Goal.a by a.d LaacwAJ and •uto TremMay in the fiDaJ three minutes rallied Montreal to a 4--3 victory over Minnesota. The victory was the ninth with one tie In the last 10 games for Montreal . . . DUll1 Gare'• second goal of the game lifted Buffalo into a 3-3 Ue with Winnipeg. U.S. Olympian Rob MeClanahaa scored his rarst NHL goal for Buffalo . . . Phil Espoelto reached the 3Q-goal plateau for the 13th conaecutive season and Jolla Davidson recorded his second shutout as the New York Rangers defeated Colorado, 6·0 . . . Dave Rater had two goals and two assists. and Wa,.e Gretzky scored his 40th and 4bt goals of the season to lead Edmonton to a 6-3 win over Quebec . . . Blda Presioa'a second MULL goal of the game wltb less than five minutes to play pulled Chicago into a 6-6 tie with PbilMelpbia. The Hawk.a ext.ended their unbeaten sue.t to six 1ame. .•• Wape Babda aeored hla 2IOtb and 21.lt fOala of the ....,.. to lead St. Lou1a put Toronto. 3-Z . • • ., .. WaMer scored one goal and aaalated on two others to lead Washington to a M victory over Boston. The Capita.la beat ftoston (or the rirat time in 26 games. ... '• ~ ........... CONCINTRATION -New York Mets Manager Joe Torre baa the batter's look, uslq a f\IDIO bat for inflelden practice at spring training camp in St. Petersburg. Fla. Q..._.Nr .. Plelu l/p t'le,. .. Costa Mesa Hi&h and Oraaa• Coast Colleee Ill product Du QalselllaierrJ forced a pair of double plays, lneludlnc one in a bases-loaded Jam l.n the seventh lnnin& to pick up the victory Wednesday as Kansas City defeated the Chlcaeo White Sox, 12·11, in 10 lnninp of exhibition baseball. II• Ga ... & stroked a bases·loaded sfnlle to five Qu.isenbef'T)' the winnln8 marlin .... Dan IDqmu'a foo.rth·lnninl homer off loser Gn1 Mlatoa paced the Chicago CUbs t4 a S-3 victory over San Francisco ... Pinch-hitter Kea Smltlt ripped a tWO-Out llth-lnning single to snap a tie aod ~r AUanta to a 2·1 win over Texu •.. leny WltUe and Daffy Dyer eacb bit solo bomen to lead Mont.real to a 7"" win over Detroit ... &lek DempaeJ hlt a tie-breaking home run and lee &enUu and Tippy Mutlaea pitched acorelesa 6an I the fin&f six lnnlnp to lead Baltimore pa.st ou11H .. uv the New York Yankeea, 4.3 ... Bo Dlu drove in five runs with a three-run homer and a pair of singles and Gary Alexander added a pair of t~nm doubles to power Cleveland to a 18-Z rout over Milwaukee ... Voe Joau and Jerry Taner had three hits apiece in San Diego's 13·2 win over the Yucatan Uons ... J11aa Beaiqan collected a double and al.n1le for two of Seattle's aix bit.s as the Taiyo Whales absorbed a 4-.3 Sosa. Pre GrW4ft-o~·Att~ C'•rtll~ Arrat KANSAS CITY, Mo. -Mel Johnson, a wide receiver signed by the Kansas City Chiefs, died [i] Wednesday rugbt after suffering cardiac arrest • t during wrist surgery last week to correct an old football injury. Tom Peck. a spokesman for Research Hospital, said Johnsoo, 25, bad been on a respirator ln the hospital's critical care unit since aufferin& heart failure durin& the operation tut week. Peck said docton said JohDloo's famlly dedded to remove him from the respirator and be was pronounced dead late Wednesday ni&ht. Jobmoa bad never played a same for tbe CblefJ, but club spokesman Doug Kelly said today the Chiefs "bad hilh bopes- for him." He was signed as a free a1eot by the Chiefs la.st summer but missed the sea.son with a apUt flnaer. Laguna's Schwarzstein Captures Surfing Tiile Alisa Schwarzstein of Laguna Bea ch captured first place in the amateur junior division of the recent Women's San Diego Surf· ing Challenge at Cardiff. Tricia Gill and Hele n Vanhorn, both from Newport Beach, finis hed second . a nd fourth, respectively, in the same division. Scbwarzatein also picked up third place in the amateur open division. Schwarzstein and Jennifer 1980 TENNIS SHOES I .. nee •feflttrtl• r1awen •a..t.Ntl F1ft llldll•an University football players •• lncludbal ftnt,.;,= quarterback B.I. Dlekey, bave beeD dis from the squad by football eOada ...... ......_ becauae of drua use ••• 1:1omtaD Oller defensive back l.C. WU-hu been "'1eued UDCler.., bt.ad after bet.DI arrested on charses of can,tna a weapon ad 4>e1nl dnmk in an auto~ ..• lndi•ne Uat~b' bubtball coach Belab7 Kal&M'• wUe, NWJ, la ID a factory condition after under10IDC a pin al dlae IUl'lftY .•. o-11 11 ..... aeored 21 points to help Central Wuldaltoa eliminate Blola, es.et. from the NAIA buketball tounaameat ..• Defending champion ...... Frau.a-of the United Slates la lD fowtb place aft.er compulaory action In the world~ skatint champk>nahips in West Germany. Eut German A.-u ~ leads . . . A tentative acreement wu reached between at.rWq racetrack technlclana and the American Total.Laator Co •... Villanova Ulliventty baa decided to wltbdraw from the Eastern Eiat't and bu applied to join the Big Eut Conference ... Top-seeded Trae1 A..-eued to a 6-1, M victory over ......,.. POUer in a women's temlla taurnameot l.n Boston. Alto a second· round winner WU Vb'Olla w.-... Gme MaJtt brushed aside Auatrall.an PeCet •ei.....,..e.o. 6-1. ln Just 40 minutes on the tb1rd day of a men'• teml1I toanwnent in Rotterdam. Teleelde~ au&e Following are the top sports e-vents on TV tonloht. Ratings ue: .t .t .t .t excellent; .t 1 .t worth watchlno; .t .t fair; .t forget It. • I=*» p.m., Channe& 5 ./ ./ ./ ./ NCAA BASKIET8ALL: UCLA vs. Ohio State. A11 .. :cen: steve Shannon and Lynn Shackleford. Ohio State hH a front line ot Herb Wiiiiams (6-10), Jim Smith (6-8) and Oartt Kel~ (6-7) and UCLA Coach Larry Brown c.elts them awesome. •They have a power offense and like to get the ball lnsl<W," Brown says. The Bruins will counter with MlChaet Sanders !6-6), JamH Wiikes !6-7) and Klkl Van- dew99he (6-8) on tMlr front line. Wiiiiams had 25 points and 10 rebounds to ~P the Buckeyes win ewer Arizona State. 89-7S. Ohio State Is ranked ninth nationally and the Bruins are un- r anked and a fourth-place finisher in the Pac·lO. The winner ad- vances to Saturday's quarterfinals. OTHER TELEVISION Horse Racinv -Today at Santa Anita, 7:30 p.m ., Channel S2. ~II -NIT quarterllNI oa~. 11 :30 p.m ., Channel 13 <taped>. AAOlO Hockey -Kinos at Atlanta, S:SOp.m .• KllS (11501. FRIDAY'S RADIO Baseball -Texas vs. Dodgen at Vero ~ach, 10:2S a.m., KABC (7'0). MICHlllN XWW MICHD.IN XD-ZX --"""'~ SMf Belted Rltdl&fs ........ .., OolN\llC c- SUGG ()Utt &a.ctiw•lls For Foreign Can 51ft l[)l;(MAJo<a ~a sin EJICHANG£ P•IC'E 165-ll 70.56 53.50 155-12 St.60 41.SO 17S-13 70• 56.50 1'5·13 •.62 35.SO 175-14 79.11 59.50 155-13 ssn ~.50 11S-l• IS.AO 62.50 165-13 6G.65 a .so lfS.1• 90.54 66.SO 17S-13 64.29 so.so 2115-U 91.00 71.50 165-14 64.18 51.50 215-1• 104 00 79.SO 17S-14ZX 61.09 51.SO lfS.IS "·'° 72.50 11S-14 7lM 58.50 2QS.15 104.11 76.SO 165-lS 6U2 s..so 115-15 110.0S 81.SO 11:511t-1JZX 74.o. 58.50 225-15 11U9 as.so Wl1'0-IWC 71.00 62.SO 230-15 U0.16 97.SO DS-15 137.39 99.SO MICHEUN XVI 8R71-13 11.SO 61.50 All Court/ Ladles All Court Racquette II Racquette Wimbledon ~71-1' 1361 DR71-14 IS.AO 82.SO 62.50 115(70-H 104.07 65.50 1'5/10-14 109.70 87.SO 93.SO $19.99 Great canvas shoe for any racquet sport. $18.99 Ladles' classic all-white court shoe. $31.99 Ladles' white leather with light blue swoosh . $34.99 Men's leather with light blue swoosh . 1000 Bristol Street North #5 (at Jamboree) Plaza Newport • Newport Beach Mon.-Frl. 10 a.m. to 9 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., Sun. 12 p.m. to 5 p.m. Res0Hng Available Ph~ne 955·0165 • + . . ER7t-1' 90.54 66.SO 20sf10.14 117 ·°' FR71-14 91.00 72.SO GR7'-15 104.11 80.SO MICHEUN XWX HR7'-15 110.0S 82.50 JR7t-1S "'·" 89.50 18~1S 161.50 128.j MICHELIN XCA 205(1'0-lS 114.n 1'7 79)(16 llo.74 91.50 21~15 19U9 152.50 IOOtb16.S 1J2.M 109.50 MICHEUN XAI 11Sb16.S 10.75 115.50 Mb16.S 164.05 121.50 165-13 7UO H ••16.S no." '134.50 ...S-15 1'.19 ..,. 11111 llOf u.e.I Ml. "' ........... NICUeGOetlaUW1 .. c...-t TmMS AYA.IU&I ~-mz MOMlllL 7110.lclO ........... 711 ..... IAT. SAT, 1:10.J:tt ?&It.Mt 0 ,i§!!\> TIRES 1[¢)j _.!!!'~"-~ .. 515W.1""*0>ST~ 5415511 •m.: . ..... -·----_,.._ --.... . . PITl'SBUROH (AP>-PeulM...UU•NWi . Rl~cl, two ol tbe _youqtat pn __, ...,.,. ta : '"'•· MJped UM Pllbbi&rall Psy 'w to e +a wtn · onrlbeLoeAn&ele1klaa1lr•1dayaJOL : • •• ''Any IQaJ n1bt now ls. 9'>ed. bit a IUH-.-...,, l : u t.bal au~b l>e&W," aalcf ~ lt, no pa I : Plttabutah ahead to atay °" a ,hot wtt.b l !• I ~rem~. more at hocne Lonltbt." 111d luoct. a I . »-year-old who poated bl.a ft.rat Natioeal lfotte1 Lea1uewin ln hla third alral&)\Uta.rtaltoalle. j PENGlllNSCOACH IOHNNY WIL&ON aald I.be two YoUDPtera save their team a mucb-neect.d boost. I "I thousht Ricci handled hlmHll ,.al well " ~ Wilson said. "Thts wa1 the blaae1t wi.o we'vobad~• while." It ended P1tt.sburich's two-game losine streak and sent the Kin11 to thelr seventh defeat in the Jut nine games. "Thia is getting to be old hat," complained Loa Angeles Coach Bob Berry. "We give 'em a1oalatthe end or the second period; we rrtttered away a point. It seemallkelt'aoneortwomlatakeaeverynlght." MARSHALL BROKE A Z·Z TIE In the third period wtth bis seventh c oal of the season. He took a pass from Orest Klndracbuk and snapped a shot past Kings goalie Doug Keans. Ricci, who was recalled from the minor leagues over the weekend, allowed goal.a by Marcel Dionne and Charlie Simmer, the two top goal-scorers in the NHL. "You see a player like Dionne. and you almost want to stand there in awe," Ricci said. "Bul ii you do that. the puck· s going to be by you.·· AfTE& PITl'SBURGH TOOK a 1-0 lead on a rtrst·period goal by Rick Kehoe, Los Angeles tied'it early in the second period on Dionne's 50th season goal. The PenguJns went ahead on a disputed goal by Peter Lee with one second left in the second period The Kings argued that time had expired before Lee's shot. went in the net, bul referee non Fournier allowed tbescore. Simmer tied the score in the third period with bis 49th season goal. but the Pens won the game in the final two minutes on Marshall's goal and an empty net shot by Randy Carlyle. Dodgers' Smith Sizzles (3 Hits) DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP> -Los Angeles' Reggie Smith would prefer to forget the 1979 season, when be aulfered an ankle iJUury just aft•r the All-star break and played ln only three Dodier pmes the rest of the campaign. If the first 1ame of tlPdng ls any lndicaUon, the Dodier outftelder ta 1olnc to like 1980 better. Smith collected three bit.a, lncludina a triple a nd a double, and drove in two runs Wednesday to lead Los Anaelea to an exhibition aeasoa.opening 5-4 victory over the Minnesota Twins at Vero Beach, Fla. "I'm very happy about my progress," Smith --4 said afterward, "but l wu a Utile worried about :) my ankle. I ran bard , gave it a good teat under il game conditions. But I sUU am a UtUe fearful ·' about sliding. I'm going to have to take a day and ., • work on nothing but sliding." .~ The Dodgers were scheduled to meet the ;i f Montreal Expos in Daytona Beach today, with q t Rick Sutcliffe, the National League Rookie of the tJ Ye ar in 1979, starting for Los Angeles. Charlie ; • Hough was a lso s lated lo pitch for the Dodgers. :] · while BiU Lee1 David Palmer and Dale Murray • were scheduleo to pitch Montreal. In Wednesday's victory, the Dodgers jumped on Minnesota loser Paul Hartzell for three runs In the fourth inning after the Twins built a 3·2 lead. Smith doubled home one rWl and Steve Garvey sin&led home two more. Bobby Cast11lo, the second of four Los Angeles pitchers. got the win Saddleback 3-0 In Mission Play 1}..-Saddleback College's baseball team bas ob· viously been watching the Gauchos' basketball team lately -at least they appear to be tryt.o1 to emulate tbe unbeaten basketball team. ... .. . . . . . ' >'• i := Jn a 1ame played at Rlvenlde City Colle1e, the Gauchos raised their Mlaalon Conference record to 8-0 with a 13· 1 paatina of tbe ntft:1;• led by the pltcbln1 of Mike Breslln and tbe hi of Pete Cb an gala and Steve Knettlee. Elsewhere, elao ln a rain-makeup contest. Golden West College absorbed a 10.9 Ion u Los Angeles City College r allied with rive runs in the bottom of the ninth inning to capture the Southern CaUforn.la Conference contest. Breslin, a freshman, allowed Rivenide three hill in goina the distance, wblle his teammates backed him up with a 12·hit attack. Changala stroked a three.~ homer ln the aJxtb inning to pad an already commaacllnC 4-o le.d and Knettlea slammed a two-run four-ba1pr an innlnl later to put the 1ame completely out of hand. . . . UCI Streak Ends at· ':1 I • Cal Poly <Pomona> exploded tor three ram ln the top of~ ninth to defeat host UC Irvine, 7 ·5, and snap the_.aten• aeven·1ame baseball win atreak Wedneeda1. ~ hitter Mlb Ashman of Pomona cODeetecf three bib tnc:1udbul a key double 1n tbe nllth, ~ Bl'oaebe' Brian Zell picked up tll1" ll81 lldcMcl a DIOtb·lnnbaa triple. Pomou'• ""11m1 tpoUect • itnai reUet oui-101 bJ va·1 Deni P.-<N>. Palal entend UM IUD• ta Ile tomtll, ... at-J)Cllat, r"9Nd 10 ~t· ten la a NW. • fte Aaeenal" DOW lM-~ ~ Ultii C1lltonale .... ball Auoelatloa roucl· ......... tOdn •••lDlt Limlk.ll Lcill.t • •ralr~'P!•'ct.-~n. Anteatera mMf~C"a ate hDllUii,f'l14u at 1: JO, alto * llalr. • 9 \ J I I .. ~ I t . -, PRICES Eff'ECTIVITHAOUOH WEDNESDAY, MAACH 19, 1t80 ......-s~o 1-WAMA#n ..................... ................ _._. .......... ,.. ............ ...... ... -.. .. ........... --.. .. ............ ,.. .. ............... = ..... ··~--·=·= ..... , ..... .. .. ....... _ .. ........... ------ • TllADl-IN REQUIRED ------CARPETED AR llATSD ::aca=--Jr:~"= l":~· ,,-n MATS. ':r PAIR n.fftm ,...,, ,_,....,.MelMllt_, CAllll'I,.. un ., ,All •-------111 -·•sai.11.11 •••ai •-------· _l_M_8 ia•• .... ------POWER BOOSTER ALTUS (AR). 40 ntt llllplllr. E:.uly lnltllld. lllnldl• dlltlar- tlon ..... 111-ftdllty. COUI* .. :!.ncseidldno 34•1 lysllm •3732 • ------MINI Jl!T SPRAY WASHER llGHLAND. Uohtw1lght •pray ...... 12" .... tor clfftcutt. .,.,. ... Diii controt b' .... ,.. & nf · oft. Amlncan made. 2•• For cata, lr&Nlr, •wi• IMlf. lfc. '2000 A_llMOR-ALL CLIAllllt a.na & concltlolll. I ' 7 '30180 18 oz. JENSEN SPIAllERS 09 90 DA ft MMI Al CA1M .. J MGNM 'I ,PAY.-.n wmt JUJI0"'9 CWT tuM ..... , 09 ~'°"'\'QUI IUDQlf. .------.. 1tn TON FLOOR JACK Back 'lb The Road! 19'-9 39~,. DORMAN'S ~Q?rfU•~ RADIAL RRRIADS PRJCE 20.75 22.00 23.80 U.90 23.80 . .... U.00 21.95 26.60 u.eo - F.E.T. .33 .38 .38 .45 $i' .38 .38 .50 .38 C011ft-TS771 STEIL llL Tll IAllAL Thi a-.. ....... ,...., ... ...... CollUnMtall win .... """' .. ... -== .......... -& ":J wNdl .......... ...., _Ill lie...,.. """'"" ll"llWlll v--· try. c... Ill .,., -wlly -.......... """" In to COWll' • ..,..., .. ... ... ,..,. °' Ylftl ........ SIZE PRICE F.E. T. S&ZE PtlCE F ,l. T. =~~ === a~ ·:;1:'.r,,. 3866 166SRxl3 ..... 1.&4 •7501.. 49•• 1e6SRx15 SIM 1.79 IP1yT•Trt11 185/70x13 ..... 1.83 185/70xM ff.M 1.95 ••a/-11..5. 58H 1t5/70xM ..... 224 lptyT._ 2.M :~: :1:11 ~:~ .. ~L 64" 195Sftx14• = 2.55 ~ =~: ..... ~:~ ·-=~ 71• 235SRx1s· •a.• s.19 • -..11111 ........ UI • l~Sf ALlATIOt4,& RQT~JION e BRAKE·&· AUGNMENT CHECK ·~ ..... Ttte Buck Slretcflers! •••• llULTIOA.W ;,·.:::-•o-.•-... ....... ................. 0.. .. ... • P• O&OllUlll 1.utii•S· ............ ._._._OI .... a.a...~ ..... , ...... ... ftiilll..~1.0..°'" .... .. o..an....._ ................ ,...... end 8el'Vtce Only Attht• looelton: C·186 ' •891~1W1 So...... ..JM: wU1 .., bJ wtt.bMI _, ;'.T"·-........ $ Mlqlmut1 ··~.-.... But CJace 1a • .... w•u .._a ..... la Wlddll MW ..... -11111 ......... badaaduait~·_;,;~ . 'l'llll ... ,,... '° .... of &MM •uw. 1-,_.. I 11 IM .. ._ illlJ lanondaa.,. 1al1 U•'I m Nnl .. wlth tbe'""' .... q u a BUT IN .. ftlS llAlll(ft Ml beet\ 1lutted wU~ lmpto•M booll, re· de1l1oed .. ! ~ ... Rita I and an auacluD•.t wlalM d.tlDa IO l 80lve "the aae-old pJ'Oblem f~ bJ all 1 I Ulen -waWn1 ln Mi boota." The akt boot attaelam•ta. called "Rockies," .are clip.on treada which ~ve the bodOm of yOW' akl boot.a a more walk·able coollauratloll. Priced at about 115, Rockies are made to flt all name·bl'aad boota and protect acatnst •• ., • ...... nlcka and sarapes, ln addltJoo IO lraoalonnini a ( ski boot into a walkiq boot. THE 11081' &ADICAL laoovation of tbe season la probably tbe Scorplan Ski, 1 a ~ut-dowa, re-abaped ski tbat claims to I ·•carve by itaeU and make every sluer a t better skier, equally at home in powder, slush, tee or crud." ~ The most dramatic feature, at first glance, la that lbe Scorpian bu its bind- ' in gs mounted at the extreme rear of the f js.ki, rat.her than the cent.er. I ' SKIING a • PGaltln arc, wblch the deai1ner clalru II re1po111lble for Ill unique tarvlfta ability. Tbe atil retail fol' 1139, but can be 'rented 1n Coall Mesa from OLM Skt Rentall on Harbor Boulevard for those wbowouldllkeatrtalrun. THE DESIGN WAS CONCEIVED by 24-year-old Jim Miller, former member of lbe Alpine aid team at Fort Lewis Colle1e in Colorado. He and Jim Salomon, also 2', pioneered the com- pany which now markets the Scorpian. Salomon ls oo relaUon to and hu no connection with Salomon-North America, Inc., a company which manufactures some of the most wide.ly- uaed blodlnas. The Salomon of Scorpian skis bas based his operaUon in San Die«o, while • • •• S.kl DXl·Noral Amwtea 11 lotat.tid M11aacb\IHU.I. The at1 blndin1 folks, 'WboM m WU Ut• moet popular new product last aeaaoa. bav• veotured lnto the boot buatn.a tor UIO. MLOllON Cl.Ams TO RAYE an ln· temal boot 1yatem "provlcllna ablolute bHI bold-down." Skl•r• ud boot. Hlffmen wtll attest that bavtq the heel ftrmJy planted la eaaeatial to control andcomlort. The Salomon SX 90 boot bu been flve yeara in reaearch. It wu lntroduced in France thla winter and exceeded the company's sales projectlom by 30 per· cent. All Salomon products are teat· marketed ln ald-eruy France before ~In& placed on internat.iooaJ abelves. IN THE WAY ot parapbemalla, Ulla year's latest addlUons are the Space Saver Filmpak and the Sporta Pouch ln· natable carry-all. The film packs are waterproof tubes for carrying print or allde rum. The lnflatable pouch ls designed to keep cameras, lenses, binoculars, radios or other delicate equipment sate from bumps, falls, knocks and the winter climate. Maybe it was the coming of lbe Olym- pic• that 1ot all those ski industry minds tblnking of new tricks, but wheat.ever the reason. it bas been an ln-terestlng winter. :A RREMA• ,......, COSTA MESA MOM";: .. c__._..._.. ... .._ 7:JOAMT06PM ..... .._.....,. •• cs• cc...r IAT 7iJIAMTOJPM PHONE 631-0712 FREE TIRE ROT A TIOll IP1111 ;u Can o.tJt Please Call for Appointment - Good Thru Sat. March 15/80 Enet CJJ scnlnCJ ... Hip "7 MOST 4 CYL. ..._.;a 6CT\.S41 Dcmslm rJFRoMRODLAVER This Weekend 'l,ilU.USTRA~O 8Y JIM~ ROBERTC. KAZ ER ATTORNEY AT LAW ...._ ........ ............ ICYLIH We ·11 Install new resistor plugs Ignition point1 llld condena.r: .cs1ust carburetor; Mt Poltlt dwell and timing; test beUery and chargmo ayatema. Some .,r condruoned cwa extra. EJectronlc ~ltlon systems eyen ... I 1 • I . FOR CO!lf/STEKT (J)HlftJL ON All 511(J15- THIS ~NIO<le" Pl/!'$ )talf~ ~ 111~E" t:un£1.t 1AI ~~ IV/711 'flf~ rlKMff "'me I/AU., At.uw/JA' '/(JP Tl) CtJNSISTENTZ.t &Jr 71/e 8'fU. tJN me ~ 5Ptf'T- Warmington Warming Up By ALMON LOCKABEY o.11.,~ ........... 401 CMoc...tDr .... ~ 1030, a.ma An• Tel:IQ-4AI Specializing In crlmlnal law, drunk driving and personal Injury. Free consula· tlon. lnt.erest of boating and yachting rans will be ========~:JI spread thin this weekend with two major events .--'"'!!"" ... ml!"""'!!"~~-. s cheduled off the Southern Callromia coast. ~ LOW COST- On the local front, thousands of spectator CAREFREE SAIUNQ boats are expected to line the shore between Dana :v1MMACOLAT'I! ar.acr _,.,., Point and Huntington Beach to watch offshore s-a1 ~ -- powerboat drivers in the R. P. Warmington Grand "'"'•'• TOll9l Prix whkh gets under way ore the Newport Jetty ,_..,,UUYEOUl ..... 0; at 10 a m. Saturday \ ~....__ ~ R"°'° °"9<1"'" '"""" THOSE WHO COULD CARE LESS a!M>ut the y~;~~ roar of engines will focus their attention on Long aM""' "'- Beach where 10 of the w"'rld's top match racing BOADNG _, .... .._.. --. ...,.._,. ,..._,,__. __ .. .., • ~ TRANSMISSION TUNE UP AUTOMATIC 52695 We r('()lacP the Pan G ll'31'Pt C•"'cl" ~ tnsoec t the Oil R f'SPrvf'tr A 'J 1 Transm1$SI0'1 Fluid & Road T P'>I Ye Jr Car Automaflc T ransm1SSl()(I Ontv Front Disc brake o•erhaul UMll"ID W ARIA"1Y 2 Vr -24 000 mile'> Pans ano labor Pro-rated an~ exoora11t>n ol 90 day 3 000 mile warranty s71 ~ lttl• """ .... ..,.,, Cl•A o-M _... '*V' ..... 1 ..-1 IJJ•• ....,...,__.. ~ ~ ~· f~ .,.., .... _..,.,. ......... ~ "'O'li ...... ~, .... (~ W"7 ~ ... .,.,.-. ~ ~ ~ .,., ... """" "*" '~'"'""-t'r• ,..I" I INST ANT CREDIT 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH. Up To $500 • M1m1mum Monthly Psymenc Reouired •All F1nanoe Charoes Refunded When No w . you c.an ooen e Firestone P11d As Agreed Revolll'lng Charge 8CCOunt tor up to -·We Als.om;HQllQr l~-J arc ~~~~~ $500 by presenting •ny of your n.-sailboat akippen will engage in 45 two-boat match ~ •ctlve m8IOf' national credit cards races in quest of Long Beach Yacht Club's ~;;tj~-~ wtucn are hollOled by us Posftrve C · al C 1dentll1c•tlon and other bas•c ........ c.-'--•-.. -...., "'-• ongress1on up. c.' ~. ,_s.:..-_ -~"" .. , , -· o... 1or _ ,.,_ T~~n~"1MalCupdart~t~ayand~ll!~~~~~~~~~~·~~~o~r~~t~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·~-~~~~~-~-~~~~~~~~· continue through Saturday. . I • ' ' CdM, Trojans, Mesa Tune Up l University. Corona del Mar and Costa Mesa ~ high schools recorded non-league baseball vie- ; tories Wednesday afternoon in their final tune-ups before Sea View League action Friday. < CdM's Sea Kings travel to El Toro, University ~ hosts Costa Mesa and Irvine is at Estancia in this •' week'sopeners. '~ Here'salookatWednesday'sactlon: ' ' ! Corona del Mar 10, Tustin 7 1 • Dave Hess CTacked a pinch-bit single with the , t bases loaded in the fifth to drive in two runs and i lead the host Sea Kings. I The Sea Kings' Clay Miller was two-ror-rour I I in;; a •::;::;~;II~~ ,,_ --~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- 1 five hits in his last seven at-bats. ( Sophomore rlgbthander Chris White recorded ! the victory. I University ?, Paramount 4 •'.t· The Trojans erupted for seven runs in the first t :..:Jwo innings, and pitcher Nick Orlandos carried a o-hitt.er into the sixth before tiring. ~ Orlandos surrendered thnle hits and two walks J ~bicb Paramount cubed In for four runs in the f ;;rP of the seventh. <I.• Shortstop Randy Connors bad two bits and two Bl to lead the Trojans. The victory improved ::tJniversity's record to 2-4. . "' ~ Com Meaa e, Rancho Alamttoa 3 ,~ Rod Humphrey had a perfect day at the plate ~four-for-four) and John Stevens and Brian ,ilhodus combined to pitch a rour-bltter aa the -'Jtustangs picked up their second victory in seven utings. The Muat.angs went wild on the bases, stealin1 o. They were led in that department by speedy eeoocl bueman Joe Crm who stole four times ltUe IOinl tbree·for-four at tbe plate. Center fielder Bill Lux collected two hits and ' wo RBI for Colla Meu. OCC Oarsmen Vie And then there are those who are not particularly interested in big time competition but would rather be doing a llttle competing of their own. Orange County yacht clubs have sometlung for them. For instance : Newport Harbor Yacht Club bas scheduled a Lehman-12 regaua Saturday for lbe hotrods who like their dinghy sailing wide the bay . BAHIA CORINTHIAN YACHT CLUB will also cater to small boat sailors who will be sailing in· side courses in the club's annual St. Patrick's Day Regatta Sunday. South Shore Yacht Club will stage the fourth race of its Winter Hibachi Series Sunday for all classes of sailboats. Performance Handicap Racing Fleet skippers and crews will have two days of action Saturday and Sunday when Capistrano Bay Yacht Club con- ducts the third race of its San Juan Series Satur· day and the fourth race Sunday. In other areas of lbe Southern CalifornJa Yachting Association: ·Loe All&eles-Lcmc Beae• Buccaneer Yacht Club -Inverted Start race CPHRF) Saturday. Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club -Sprint Series No. 2, Sunday. Santa Monica Bay King Harbor Yacht Club -Spring Regatta <a ll classes) Saturday. Del Rey-California Yacht Clubs -Prince of Wales Bowl eliminations Saturday, Sunday Del Rey Yacht Club -Ladies Windy Regatta (Sabot) Wednesday, March 19. San Diego San Diego Yacht Club -Sugar Loaf Series No. 2 <IOR, SDHF> Saturday. Southwestern Yacht Club -Sugar Loaf Series CPHRF> Saturday. Mission Bay Yacht Club -Lldo-14 lnvita· tional, Saturday, Sunday. Coronado Yacht Club -Spring Regatta Call classes) Saturday, Sunday. Coronado Cays Yacht Club -Southern Belle Series, Saturday . Oceanside Yacht Club -St. Patrick's Day Regatta, Saturday, Sunday. North ud IDJand Anacapa Yacht Club -Spring Series, Satur· day. Santa Barbara Sailing Club -Sprina Series, Sunday. Westlake Yacht Club -Coronado-JS Invila· tional, Sunday. Fixx to Speak to Irvine Group Jim Flu, autbot of a bbc>k on nmn.lll( and spokeeman for a natural cereal company, will be the auett 1peaker at the mootbly lnine Sports Club meetma nut Tbunday morninl at 7: 15 at tbli Baxter Street Restaurant. Flu will be Joi.ned by Jeff But~U. CID tbl podium. Tbe reataurant la loeated at •&n MacArthur Blvd. F4)r reservatlona, call M1.ot10. Non-memben are cbar1ed $8 and membera $UO for the bruktlli mMtln1. . .... --.,... Grand Opening Sale $498 . . This weekend is the time to buy hot tubs and spas directly from Callfomla Cooperage. Prices are slashed on a huge selection of tubs and spas to celebrate the grand opening of our Orange County factory outlet Prices are unbelievably lowt We've got complete hot tubs for only $498. Complete hot tub system packages start at only $1, 185. We'vo got tradi· tlonal fiberglass spas for $7 45. And a spa equipment package of pump, filter and heater starts at only $775. Plus fantastic savings on accessories, like our energy-saving Insulated RolHop .. and our easy-to-Install decking kits -plus much more. Look In tomorrow's paper for sale details. I I J 1 l ...... fllll ... ll!Nof .... v~ w-.111.._. ~·"-• ...... , ''" 11111 ....... Dt"••t c111ceo- U1•11 ., JO ·~ ,, 11 O ,, ., >I 11 l'e<IH< OIOi•"- LM!t" U JI s...... ~ IJ Pftwllh .. h "°'ti-J) ,.. s... 019911 JJ oO GoW..n~1e n u ..__,.,~w .. Lellent ... ~ .. 8o$11WI 121, Houllofl IOS PllH-pNe 105, WtsftlftQlon .. Hew Jeney tJ7. Detroit I It MllW-M II!, -tit IOJ Pllo.111• 127 Gol°"'151•1•11) ,..,...,04_, tno••~ •t N•w "°"~ O..nver ft S.n D•P9U \ft H' 1 )f) ,,, ,., " JOI ll 111 .., J .. , J ." ,, l •U it ,.., •'' Lekera 102, Blai.era lM l'Oa Tl.AND "lall ll, W••hlnQIOn ti Ow~n\ J) A 8'ewff 14 h•erd11~ 9 GrO\\ \ Dunn 0 PU$0n •• J Br.-• 1 AOO..I Jttl.on1 • BalO'\ 1 TOC.OI\ Tl It l ... LOS ANGEL.ES cnone~ u, Wil~n I J Abdu•·J•~' JO Jonn~n u ,._.••on 10 Cooot-r u L•OO\befQf'r i , H•ywood 4 Holl•no O Total\ l6 J0.)6 101 kl-tty O...rter• Port••nd 13 16 LO• A,_1~ JO 1• Tnttt QCMnt ~·' Tw•rd11k Portl-)1 LOS A~•o •• A Junior College -EN fl ,, ~ ,. If 107 Total •ou•~ I• l•I °"*" Wtil IU, H•rbor U HAAaott Clark ,, TllomA\ I). w-. Wll~n 7J, w .... 111"910" t3 GOLDEN WEST """° • Krino J E\ qu•r •. c..go. 1• Scn1 .... 1., 14. A~~ 1• P111•• U Malt I Etvnnar1 •• H tlttimP Gof~n Wf'"'t .c• J1 Total tout\ V olot-n ~<1 10 Hrtrhor 10 f. oult'd out £1~""'"' (Nl()(·nW,...t' Wddt' 1t1,..•t>orl SO-~• M, Oran .. c. .. 1 H OAAHGE COAST Aow•ll q Dd•I\ I Foit,.,. 1, OtArakat • l a,...,.n 18 r onei 6 Oavoe-n u SO MIESA 8r-..01> 1 c.tolt ~ Ch1IPS • All•l"'i 11 s.,,11,.,.,, 11 Ttll & Pari<a 1 Lono 11 t'*il II""° ~0 M•._-' 11• TQIM IOUI\ SD""""' 71 Q(( " Foo If" ')UI None Women's Top 20 I 0 1f1 l)'O(nrn10<1 fJV1 J3 1 r .. nnt-,..,.t' lO 4 l15tep"'9f'\ r Au\l1n 7i S 4 LOYISl.,,a Ttcn 111 )l.J S Tua• J'l·J •· Soulll C....011na 11r\ 7 long S.«11 SI 1'·S 8. RulOf'" 2•• 9. Maryl-10 .. 10. H. C.rollne SI 11·1 11. CllaYlltY 54 lW 12. Ken... 3-7 13. ICtlllUCk y JU 11, ICeM~\ Cil~I• 7s.8 1\ s .. n Ft.tn1 16• 1~ Notth~\t•'n 2• • 11 SOulnern C.t 1111 11, c~nt M t\\Oul"I ,._. 1' 0.ll"O•I 15'1 70. lltel 0r._. 1~• ~rcor H-S COLLEGE SCORES NAIA Tournament --11-l•Moyl'W" ~n. T~.,,.. ... Abilene Own. ... ,_ )\ Ctontr ~t w~""°'noton Mt. 8101• 64 Al•Mm• St 103 Sou1n C•rolin• Atk~n 18 c. .. mMon, 0>1a llO St Auou•t•N s N c II& Huron \ 0 1J Frdnti111i lnO 71 Ct-ntr,,1 ._,."•ns.\ S4 Roornur\t. Mo ~l Wt\ (Au C1a1rtt-S6 Miry mount. K•n ~ C••·-51 Pe 1'1, l..Or•-. I-•" Gymnaatlcs WOMEN l'o""l.tlll Vallty 1M.J, SotH>r• 0 1 v~ull 1 lam (Fl 8 S Uno en b.I•• -I r.m fr l •• BHm -I HollmAn IF )• 1 FlllOr t·.&ft"CI\~ 1 l•m fF > ~ 4 All •rouf'ld 1T.tm 1F"•lSt HMrth ....... _. ... US' La Wll-ttl,J Vaull I Moch6•1• CHI I 1 Unov•n l»t\ I (C)l'way IHI • • llHm I CMwav f H1 811 Floor t llerc1w t M1ct1•Pl(j (Ml ~o All .. rovnd I M•Ch6•1\(HIJ4 4 D•M Hiil• 117. £sl.,,C1• tJJ l Floor I ,..,_ IOHI . 6 ftfoam I ... ._ IOHI 1 1 BM\ I A~ IOHI 11> V•ull 11\Q I Be«« 1E I 11 All •rOYnd I A.- 31 J 1217 nt111•11 .. _ ......... ..... , ............. . .. ,...... ---,, . ' °"""" Pit w llttv<fl m • ..._ ~:..u:-r .. , Inti. P'IMlt CUI _. ...... 1111 , .... ,.,.._ co . •·~• o l. llM•-tttl .... ..._......, ~t 161 .,._,,....__. L-a..uc...-....... --. . , ......... ..... Ml....... 011 ... ., '4 • 0 LM .,..._ IOI -00. ) t 0 Irle•-. HerHell 141, (erlMtt Ill. """--1111...-~ .. _ c .. 111 .. m. ~ m. 1,...1 111 -"H'91111M 0.t• t.i W-<al~ .. l HM(Mll A, .......... , S,,11 ,,_loco -OOI tl)J J I e Cll~ ... (HI a l1l 001! I t 0 K-. Mintoll l•l. Melflll Ill, -Hiii ••t11<lltl, Man 10 , <>•IHI Ill, •no fll•ck-11 W lilt<~ L Mllllon Ha ~I(.__ Al,_ (lty, Aflt Clt'WI-U t Ut ~ .. ti J Mll•-M 000 tll OllO-J t t S.rhr. tit-ISi, "-Ill, Cn.1 ftl, ancl 01.,, Prulll 161 SIMOI\ Mc:CI..,.. 14), Holcb-(41. Mwll., C•I, LtPolnt m •1141 ,..,_, LMI• (I I, w l!lerhr L Slaton Hlh-CleV91Md, O..u. Ofl• Atl•--.l'l• MontrN I 111 011 000 , II I 0,.1<001 100 100 X10 4 IJ • k~"· !:nQ<• u I•'"'°' 171 eftd Ont l•rn•roo Ill l<•IWIQll•m. Chrt• Ill, Pelrv '*''• Hiii~ ,., MO Putm•n. W AOQtr\ l 1-l1111nqn""' HI/> Monlr•ol, Oyer, Whll• Al "'Ort MY"'" Fie (hl<•QO Oil •M lh) 0 ti 14 I 1< •· '''"' C••• •W 111>1 101 t 11 10 1 C..uu u'' HOlfmtton U I Hoyt IS H1c•e_. •1 al\4 6or'Qm611n P•\111•• 1101 5'>1H10<11 £ a1c." 141 Ma<•ty 1•1. Outwni»rry Ill - W•trwn, G<>udl'I 161 w Ou1s.111>erry L HtOey. Hlh ..Cnlc•oo, Borom•""· Woll Klln•ll• C•IV, G•u<Jet. coneoe c:..1...,,1,..,_1,,uc 1rv1,.. s Cal Poly IF'omonel 101 000 Oil I u ' UC lrvo,,. 110 010 100 ) t 1 F1l1m6UflU, $<Muer 1)1. Fowlk~ ISi ,.,.., V•"9AI" -Hern.1Nte1, J•rrell, Pat"" 10 , Co"'"" ") &lld Elliott and Wtlr w f owlkn . L-P•I"* Junior College MISSION CONl'EAEHCE ~-IJ, alwrSl41• I ~aOdlPb60 007 10J 10-I) 11 I P1vPn1dt-100 OCO 000 I J 1 8rt-\t1n ttnd J!m1tir1t .no Ad4m\ Mc C.r•th Port&r 11,,,. df'd Hi4rrt""ll W Or.-.\Un l IAC(Jrbth HR' f"n~nQdld fStlddlt OACkl "n•IUf\ (Sdd<ll••b.f<kf SOUTHERN CALCONflolll:HCE LA Coty 10, Go._ W•tl t C,111~3 ... ri 'tV<'t 100 40J (.(1 ~ I I l A "# I U) 700 10s to 10 • I ur• • ""W f6 1 Ot\.Oft Kr•"""'.,·• .. df"'1 r ,111 M'f1IOthtn, Sf.Pt.1IY'"d.\ .... ·~ R rlcHh .tnll Ht•ndtH\Dn W ~f"outvt>d, l Kr•wcyt~ fHh Gill IGold"n W~\11 Hend••-11..A C1lyl High School Ulllwwott11, ,.__u P•r•mownc 000 000 • ~ J • u111.,.'""' ;wo ooo •-7 r • Merri----·on~ Y-C1l 6nCI F.-Y, w-<>n-. l-Allff'r1- c;.,_ ... MIW 11,.,..... 1 TU.tlltt 111 001 0-7 I j Coron•dtl-,. OIO a-tO I o Mllll"lllOfl, IMl:rer Ill. ~ltcftetl C.I -P1~r'IOn Wlllt. R~lla 161, Pr~ 111 ..,., C:ol• w-Wll•I• L 8Alrer. HA -Beyl91\ t Tu\t1nl C..U -t. 11..,c.,. Al-ltff J Co"• ~ I 11 110 J-4 It I A•n<llo Alem001 001 000 1-1 4 • !>tev•nt, RhDClu• C•I -1111111; oer-. Stewart 10 , Klmon t•l -Mal>I• W Ahoclu• l-Oer- Hlgh School Schedule $EA VIEW LEAGUE IP'riOo, JUI Corot\• ~I Mar 111t E:I fl')ro CO\ta AV-u .t• Un1Y'f'r'(1ty I riw1M at E1tM<1• SOUTH COAST LEAGUE S.tn Ct~mt-·nt .. a1 D•n'9 Hills. l dQUfW ~«n 4lt1 M 1S..'t0n \11..,10 l 4'0\il,... Hill\ •I C,.C,1'\tr~ V•Ur v SUIOCSIT LEAGUE M.tr1n• ~ F-ount••n V•Ht"t •t M•f~ SQu•rit Par• 111 ($.ttur~JI SUNSET LEAGUE HvnhnqtOt\ 9'-a<:h at Wf'\tmtn\tlflr (noon> f dlo.on al N~wp0<1 ,...,,Dor,,,_,, ANGELUS LEAGUE M•lflr 0-1 v\ SI P•ul dt >1dt1 P•H r' um Angeli' Promotions f 0Uo-i-1nq ''-a lt\f Oi ~ A~~\· Of"Of't"I() l1or'MI Gl't~ 11\lf'O on thP1r tqe() S<MOVlf' Aorol 11 ICl~W"lllnlll -"°''"' n1ont, Aor•I I) l(ltvtl"'1dlum~r1tdaV•ndlamllYdaY MllV J 151'al11•1 '"0 n19M , May II •OP1ro1ll -Mol,...r '0..y '""'"''for mom M•v 1i I Ttu\I • ...,, .. , ""' Jul* 8 fQaAhmorPI 01\IW'yl•nG flJ"I Od'V IUr\+'" I\ (00\~I fAttwr \ o .. v d!Oult tMI lonQ QIOVe\, J-l l IMolwaull .. ) AllQlel' T Y\trt nuJflt July 11 IOaltlandl J<11>an n•Qf>l July " •Cla~landl '"'"''' n•\)111 Julv 19 ITorontol h .. lmf't l'llQP'lt Auq "f'*.itllp) f,.m1fv n1QPU, t'~ Vhtdt• '·•P' for JdoO•,. Auo q fM1ttnPw>taJ Hollywood SIM\ 1119'11 Al>Q 10 fS.llomo<~• lamil•ntQM !.t!ol U (T~U\I ~11 00 ~pt 1' •Ch«-l f.,,_..,,_dey Raiders Get Help $667,000 Tab OK'd LOS ANGELES CAP) Two county supervisors had wanted assurances that they weren't sticking their necks out to help bring the Oakland Raiders to Los Angeles, and that is what they got from the executive boa rd of the L os Angeles Olympic Organizing Committee. The board voted Wednesday evening to pay the first $667,000 o f the SS million it has com mltted to the Coliseum Commission in the Raiders deal. Committee chairman Paul Ziffrfn said t he acUon i$ conUneent on completion of a concliticn ln a rental agreement and that be expects that to take place witbl.n several days. Tbe 22·member executive board committee agreed to the tnttlal payment after heanna pleas from William Robertaon ·and Stephen Reinhardt. two memberl wbO alto I.It on the Col1Hum Commlulon and have plated u, ro1e1 1n ~uac UM ...... clMJ. On Tues day, two county supervisors bad said they didn't want the county to assume the sole risk of making initial payments to facilitate a Raider d eal which is under legal challenge. Wednesday's action by the Olympic committee board was apparently taken in response to the supervisors' stand. The Olympic co.mmlttee and the county and city govemmenls each have pledged financial support for the move, but it was the coimty wblcb bad been asked to act first. Robertson and Reinhardt told the board that prompt action was neceuary to keep the deal on track and to prove to Supenbon Yvoane Brathwai&e Burke and Ed Edelman that others behind the COUQty were wllll.ne to eommlt immediate cash to ftnane. tt. ·•our anawer wa1 , 'Of course'.•• Z!ffnn Hid. •'1 . , "' NHL ~c:a:•ltfO• ... ' ...... ... ........ NYa-..n NYC.I~ .. ....... .,,......._ ., , ...... ... u ... ,, "' U1 » • t n tU UI • U II 11 t» tu UJ)ltJ6ttAH2 _,...DI..._ {Ill(... • ti 1' ,, '" 107 " le111• ,. 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GI-CM) f:JO.I, Mlle -I, McCMtf>v !Ml S. I SrU.0; T-mllt -I. Oull6<11 ILi ll 40.0; 110 LH -WOOd ILi 16.t. MO rwlev -1 L0«6 5'>.2; Mlle relrt I ""-<IM •·3' • SP -t 0.1 .. IU 33.o, OT I Cil'ett IMI ~ W 1 W~I IMI ••·I ... J I -•rd IMI 04 . . ' l •• Thia Week'• Trout Plant• LOS ANOl!LES C•lleic LO t •nd Oown~t,,_., Pool. E 111•1»111 Laot. Lr>W L•ko, Poo RO<ICI P.trl< Lak•, Pudd1nQ\ll>'I>' l •!Jt! Pyraf'n1d L•kt U~r P1ru Cn·~· J: r•n(.h~n \ Ft•U SAN llEANAAOINO ""'1•-. Narrow\ P•rk LMe S.lvt-r-WOOO q,,..,rvou OllANGE ~.,,,.NI-IP••~ L••• VI. NTUIU. C:<l\11•\ L•-•, \dnt.o Pa<JI• Creek, ~-'""~ llow•r !.<><t•onl. Vpn fur& RI-tNOrln Forl<I SANTA 8AllllAllA 0-••v Brown Crtttl, MM'IJMM Cr~ti S..ntct Yf"lt.I A 1vtr SAN LUIS 0815PO Al.t«.toero L•., L•ovn.a Ut<• KEAN .-4Mt p_,,.k l•'f' K~'"" Rt¥t'r 18ot•ll ~lo O.mocr•t O•m, l<P) Pow•rhOIJ<.a to Lall• 1.-11al TULAlllE Kf!rn AtVfllf fr •trVlf' .. O~m lo K IH PoworllovM!, Joll"'ond•I• Br!~ 10 F'elrvlew O.m). INYO Diet LM•. ln0.09-nct Cr- LOM p,,. "-· OwtM Riv .. •lo ... p,.,. Pond S 8<1~\ -n•lr••m 10 St.,..ort l •""t , Pt••1o•nt V•1'fY Rttf'rvo1r !ol>e~rd\ Cr.,..., Tvtti. Crttk ,.,,....p~·· PATRICK. • • or bis teammates. He's honest and straight-forward. "We think about the Orange Coast game la11t year and we could kick ourselves for lo6lng that one," he says candidly. "I think we all felt Orange Coast was the easiest or the three teams <Oxnard and Cypress being the others) we faced. We might have t.alten them ligbUy We knew we could beat them." PA TRICK SAYS THAT won't happen again this year. The Gauchos aren't about to take anyone lighUy. They want this championship too badly. "He's a touah guy who bu improved so much tJ1lJ season it's unbelievable," compliments bis coach, Bill Mulllaan-"U there was a fiibt, be'd be tbe first one bl there-Mott HU.le auya are like that. .. Patrttk JO&y be llttle1 ~ be abo ltuda bead and 1nowaen a'bov• aome ot t1M otber Junior coll~e playen arourid. 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MOOH'TAIN -Tr..:H Of new"'°"' on a bAM llO •l'IClw• pc>wder •nd p«kod _.,." 1ow1ttt~-.i1no HEAVt:HlV VALLEY 10 1n<ho ll<'w ~ Of'I • b9"W 171l)A1ncnt\. t\ <h•ir-. •niO , • .., wf"i•~ ~OIM'f'••no SOUAW VAU.t:Y -W •n<l•H MW •now -•-*'''°'"'""' •11 llfl\-r•""O AlPINI MaAOOWS ~••e IMN\ - '\now ~• Od,_. t».180 •twhr\ 10 <"•''' M"d Of'lt \\oir1"9C"fl tow ocwr 11U1n9 NO•THITAA ) 0 men--\,,.,,.,,, \no.-w "" d b4...,. ,, t6t ,,,,._,.., r1QM hth 00f''tt'•(\() ~UGAR liOWl '>t--.~n .n~ hf" ""w ,,._,w Gn•b4V 1 .. l40•nt ""' •1• 11fl\Opt't1H1nq MT ft( IA fwl"t •·nt ,... .. ,,.._.., ,,....,.,. c,.. ... 0..\# l"i8 • ., """" \u fltJ\O°"t d f1r.q MOltllEW()()O ff\,.,.. 1rttnt'\ n.,.,. \AOW ,.,n .., O•' .-°"'...,. &M 11)4 ,n1 """' ,,..,..... P,.111 •"0 t~ut oU~ftf• hJ"" GPf"l"Jl1nq , ~ • • • • Women·• Sot1ball JU,.IOA COLl fGC ~r-J, 0.--99 c.. .. I 0< •"'1t CAM \I OIY I 00 00 I I f r t' 10" 100 ()')I) 01 J fl. H ,_., ..,_, P,,M(M \t,.ri.\.04"'! •nd (Of~ N ,t,.o ~I ..,_,.._. HIGH SC HOOL \•"' Ctf'm.ftLt tO U"'nt•'''tv t '.M' ( ''""""'"""" i•• ,~, J 'IJ j • l '"' ,., l" ~ • N t t tot" A1Jf"9 '"'t'W1I,..• I 0 1.1' •"r btM'W',.n o ..,..._r; ~f\·J t 4', •' N ~ .1' ,. "'" ,, "'1U' u,.,,,,, •,,•" f' t-""r,,tr ... ~·· ' . -· NASCAA PG4M Stllndlf19• ,,..,......-. .. o ... r •"'""'_.", o.o ~ "'• 0 ...• ,. 8eOt1t' ., ''"""' 4 0........-..... ) ,., ...... ~ .. • o.w"""~" 1 li:t1(M,.O (Pwldr"' " ,.,....... Hyltat' • ( .. tYM'OOrOolO" •o .... ,~~· Money Leader• 13:.IOO'I ~··· &oco." ,,.... ' 0 ... 1.( ,,,,,,,,...,.,.,, • o ....... itw .... ,, u """ l"l.-rOt> .. 1·. Misc. t t04 .... '" 4IJ") '•no ,., ~,,. Ill 1'" Wednesday s Transactions aASEaALl "'""'" .o .. t 11 ., oi '•c E .,A..,..., ..,. 1•"" ~.,._.,. .tO"' ,, t r•I• t ll•SK£TllALL fr>if•ttOMt a.Ka•fbatl A~.M<1•hon t £ """'-f<# fl..IJ •l f l 'l \1o n,it1 &r..,nt • ._,....,.,., IOf"Wllt(J f ~ l\J d"'• (W'llf + t FOOTBALL ,..,,41W, iJ...U....11 l•~l# ,, ATT ( \f AMAl\ltlf•"' c Qf"f"'O f" 11 f ,.,, Ofl~1W CA ...... Ir.--.#'' • OI t~ ,,_.. •f\,-~fN""'I/..._..,. • .,,. ~-.. F-N ll lU4~ Y. '"'"'"Wf At A •')\ ( t Tf .,, r-..i1mr~ ''•'"[JI\ J-'A'-i( _.,t .t fnl'll o.-.. t• '>OCC.£11 Hor1'-A'"""'lc•rt Socc•r LtMIW>f" C'"A\.ll " "0CNA00 \·Q~~ Ill-'°'"' Tn11 On..:> •H tor"" .. '" •'""""•(4 ft \oct•f' l.•..Mt ... ·0 .;I .. "I f (,Al f~ ~·Cl-..... r.och,. t~ ••fO (Ol'l'\1•"1•,..,. (Of"\t•n mtd t "'O•r ..-'id fe'f"'r' t1~\.t' °""''°"°"' 12th annual WESTERN NATIONAL SM the latest HIGH PERFORMANCE FISHING BOATS Accessories ,AMILY BOATS M__.__= .-T SKI BOA TS .. ",. ne• INFLATAllLD ::::" Tr.u.n mMJ olhen M8rine Radioa end~ TUnntl~ .,,..,.,. w ..... -.. ....... SPECIAL FEATURES HOURS PRICES • Meet ALAN HALE e WMtcdaya, • Adult•, S2. 75 Wed. etwu ~n.. l:JCM:to S-10:30 p.m. e Children, 1-15. tat.. ':acr~::o3M:JO • Frtday, $1.25 • w:=r~1m FMtMll 1-11 p.m. e Under 8, ,,.. • SeH Wmr F18hlng Cllnica • ~· 12 "°°"'" CALL (71•) l\.~.!!: .. 01-:.~ ·~2~ 11a.Meo ~~i:=~: 7p.m. • Boattng/W•ter a.ftty 1--~-r.r.-~,... bw Coast Ouercl Aux.; bellJ ... (PO. .... ·~ .... . ' A '-Y t.a.. MPllH•d Uda ..-•,... r lel •oll•~..)el( ,POWUbOUHI La1u•• .... ~ •IMI NeWpkt H.alW GD t.bltr RT ID '1NIJ•1 M8· lea,_ eoGfl'ootaUoe.,..., ................ TM Art!stl .,.... UM a... team to be -.. fa1Un1 to vt.lllna l:a&.encla Wednelday atab~ t-is. 15-11, 15-1, 15-11. ----IL&CI I DICID 'AD Newport Harbor, wbJcb le>1t it. opeoer to -~~-. Pal11edea, rebounded Wedwday with a .. U. lM, lS.8, 15-1 vlnory over S&n Cl•ipent.. IN ont.aa ACl"ION, La Qula&.a defeated HWS· tlnaton Beecb lo atrallbt Mtl, lW, 15-11, 11-10; Mer Ina went Uve 1am1a before 1topplo1 Caplltrano Valley, •·15, 1-15, l5-'1, 15-ll, 15-11: and M luloe Vl•Jo fou1bt off a atubbom Founteln Valley aquad, lJ·lS, 15-1, 3-15, 15-8. 15-U. Despt~ Wednelday'1 lou to Eatancla, Laiuna Beach coach BW Alben bu an opUmllUc outlook for bil team. ••we may have 1 k>t ol roulb ed1n ~OUTD 17'r! Double U\wlatecl ~tly lubricated ball beui.no• and l I 64th;' depth edjuetment. Good Ruter tool · wmun1t01 IAT.-IVI. I fO I ADIOOITDV JIAICI II Tl-3 AUTO CLEAIEI I POLUI 2 47 18~0Z. Oh u.e tt, the old car nner m PREP VOLLEYIWL 12 looked 80 good. Now you can keep it another year 8-PC.EUYDllVD BOB A AUTO TOOL llT 7 7 !.x.a but I'm quite pleased with the progress these 1uys have made so far," Ashen said. Estancia coach Mike Pomeroy agreed. "Lagtma Beach i! a great team. They could be one of the top three teams in CIF .. " He also lauded his own team. "I was surprised we could play this weU this early in the seuon." NEWPORT HARBOR COACH Charlie Brande was pleased with bis team's victory over San Clemente. "It's nJce to beat a team like San Clemente because day-in and day-out, they're always tough," be said. VOLT and .... a few buck.a. 20 FT. TIOUILE LIGHT 333 Thia one you clip to the battery. (Can you ... me doin9 th.attn the dead of night? rv. Men cra.at.r thinga.) SHELL FllE I ICE ALL SEASOI MOTOR OIL Doubl.e the power of • regulu 8CleWclriftr and all the nice ..ua hlta. ~.C&8e,and monster d.riftll'. In l ~" or 1 ~ .. nu. ia • nail prlc., right. Hey, you d.a.l.en, don't conw in with t.he truck, the arpecial ia for the retail c:u.sto~. ' iiili DUIACELL BATTEllES YOUR CHOICE: 9 VOLT SINGLE PAK. AAA PAK OF 2. CEDAR ROOFING HEAVY SHAKE SHINGLES l67!ROX 20 SO. M'. BDL. . . . The Sailors got some strong efforts from mid· dle blocker Dave Devick and setter Tom Bunnell. Brande will be counting on the duo Friday night when the Sailors travel to Laguna (or a key pre- league contest. Huntington Beach suffered its third loss of the season but middle blocker Kelth Salaya had a con· sistently strong night. 69C OT. 10~ Thouaand. ch&ng• their oil (why not? Who can STAILEY 26" 8 PT. BAND SAW 7~?.ua AAPAKOF 2. C PAK OF 2, D PAK OF 2 · 97c # 1 CEDAR SHINGLES ~ ~ l97!ROX. Setter Rob Von Hatten and blocker Scott Southwick turned in solid efforts for Fountain Valley an a losing cause. Marina's Andy Klufsman and Craig Fisher helped their team improve its record to 3·1 with the victory over Capistrano Valley. RadinB ... ers Pirates Lose; Tritons Sail Cerritos College scored two runs in the bottom of the seventh inning to band Orange Coast a 3·1 setback and create a logjam in the South Coast Conference women's softball race Wednesday. And in prep action, San Clemente withstood a six-r un seventh inning by University to take a 10-8 non-league victory. AT CEBRITOS, Pirate pitcher Laura Hines, coming off a one-bitter in her last outing, gave up six hits and three runs to suffer the loss. The Pirates' lone run came in the fourth in· GIRLS' SOITBALL nine on an erTOr, sacrifice, single and another base bit by Michelle Zamora to Ret lJ:'e run bOme. The Pirates return to action Friday at Sant.a Ana (3 p.m .). OCCS LOSS COUPLED with Cerritos' victory leaves the two teams Ued with Fullerton (2·1) in first place. At University High, San Clemente jumped out to a S-0 lead and then carried a 10.2 advantage into the final frame before the Trojans ex1>loded for six runs. Triton pitcher Lisa BucdnJ, who started the game, came back ln wlth one out lo the ninth to get the final two outs. San Clement.e's Rhonda Radin laced a home run over the center fielder's bead in the second in· Ding. Hustlers Extend Streak, 135-62 ... Five players scored in double fisures as the Golden West Colle1e women'• basketball team routed LA Harbor, 135-C, Wednesday nl&bt for the Ru.lien' •1st straight victory. Tbe RuaUers' Chria Gaae took top scorin& bonon with U POlnts while teammates Teresa Rea (16), Debbie Schlueter CH > end Kim EiHnbert m GIRLS' B.4SDT&4lL (H) coGtrtbuted to a Meood half blitz. But the big gun was Rea who scored all 18 polnta ID the HCOOcl half to ::g her team pull awar froal • 12-polnt balftlme . The Ruatlen' win streak dates beet to the final pane ot the U'78 aeaaoo wben Golden West IOlttoCJ'Dftll. Tbe -flUlltlen wW, no doubt. be reminded of tllat -. when U..y tanS)e with the 1nved.ln1 Cbarlll'I Friday Dlabt at 7:IO. · Pertle'1S lost ln ell the ult of Golden Weet'a 1truk II tbe fact tb1t thia •• the ftnt 8otltbena Cal CoalereDce Yictor1 for the RUltl•~ .,._ Dtck SUtekUD ... bit Y·t.cMMd =lltlmt Cypnu, be'll apbl OD Lila rt wbo brtaO a 30.1 ICOl'ble ........ into tbeeaatMt • • ~ SCHAUER find a station open when BATTERY CHARGERS you n..d on•. Sorehead). IO AMP AUTOMATIC CHARGER IC'R612 6 or 12 VOLT. 2797 10/SO AMP STARTER/.3497 CHARGER "7412 .... Title said for "farm and home" and where have the farrn.8 9one? I a.ak you. BEA ft .Dun OUTDOOR EXTENSION TIE GRIPPO SUPER GLUE CORDS 44c 16-3 Sc1T .OTUBE7 OZ. sorr .. 577 •llililill 911 Worlu on metal, rubber, 100 FT. . . . . . . . . . . . vi.-. pla.ntc., o.razntc., and eomething et. I can't spell. The 1'U9gecl onee you can c:1o the toola with. Heavily tn.ulatecl to t&U thoee stomph\9 boot.a without (.top, I just heard a car door slam). Jl ( ) FLAT Fii PUICTUIE SEAL YOUR CHOICE: 57~o~ Boy, if it woru it auN beat.a a Nnioe call OJ' J>Ullil\41 the tu.. Sure hope it doe.. DUii AUCDS 2'· ~".a· I a• '4 "z28" ~".18' I" 3 FOOT CLOSET AUOER 2" W.U. one of tJw.e ooWd ..... $25.00 root. call. (How cloee he )mowf He pUd for one, that'• how he knows.) IOOLTOIE 26~ w. h.aYen't 9ot .. m.any .. _..'d l1&. to h.aYe, but on the other h.and, betur to ..U out than stare at th.en\. Outlast NqU.l.ar c:&rbon battart.. by • good country yard, m.ybe a lot more. ( And your pnce i.8 80 c.h.ap.) 25 SO. FT. BDL. e..utilul looking roof. and t~• yea.n treat it lilile a b.aut1£ul woman. it d~n't get older, it get.a better. GENIE ELECTRIC GARAGE DOOR OPENERS 1 t Jn> CHAIN DRIVE 89!! :J~ =·131•• DRIVE IG.9459 NORMAL INSTALLATION OF OUR UNIT ..... 55°0 Geni• have been so reliable, so perfect. I can't tout thexn enough. My unit i.a over 17 years old, works perfect. Pushbutton convenience and security.· IOUSEBOLD CIEllOCALS ALLIED llACBllIST VISES PllE POWER 3 INCH ......... I 7•7 67C S INCH ....•.... 29" 28 Okay, we can ... what the oz. AW. ha"~ Now let'• cNck out th.e lbd8. (The FAITASTll aa: oz. Clean la good. (YOU OU\ tiell I wu a Hawaau bl a ~ lnounation.) who? We old dntla know, don't ..... ) DUPOIT BIGI ,._QP='i PllFOIJIAICE • IUIERUID ~· I ~2?z. For drum or dlac brak.M. ml-. with all --Ouida. (I~ JOU ooWd oall It • good an'-, peat ,_ ) ACTION LEATBDCIAFT FIOIT CLOSllG IUCILE LEATHER APRON ··~-m ... INSTALLED LIN. FT. 100 FT. MINIMUM 99 FT. OR LESS 1.67 LIN. M'. 5'' SEAMLESS ALUMINUM GUTTERING Made right at your doorstep, talk about no waste! Measure around your eaves to get a rough idea of cost. Seamless means less chipping, no cracks, no leaking (and the price, oh sweet). In Brown or White Enaineled finish. 28LB. 4 97 BOLB. 9" BAIDINI VEGETABLE FOOD 4 77 12 rr. WID'nl LIN. M'. What do you think we UM .. a background for all our TV commercial.8? N ice 11tuff. For super thick growth for hybrid bermud.u and other gr ...... My kid ...an it filled in the bald spot., who know.. Nice, first the wgeta.hl .. .. t and then you eat the ftg9tablu. ( Vicioua circle.) I : SCOTTS I -----TURF ~ ofloL CONTACT ~ ' BUILDER ~ .......... 117 ~-----' i W.rr ... 4 97 . 3•7 ·===.:..-4()(X} 9 ,oi.L. · · · · · · · · --: so. rr ... 8 7 ,~ttkilla~but 1EBlifll6000 12•7 ... not i..,,. a re.ridue so. rr. idah is pobonoua to uuna or anim&la. I sethat. For all lawn.8, it feeds even when no one eJ..e i.a looking. GLIDDEN SPIED SATIN COLORS OR WHITE 77!. Great interior wall paint, in thousands of colon and shades. 100% latea, 8CrUhhahle, Buh. Say• you can UM thu inside and out.ide. ( I didn't know you ooulcl UM it out.ide. Well. I .. ,, Good!) RED DEVIL LATEX CAULK OK'SNeLL' • . 9='AML2CSS <iU°\0 rl!R . ~ ~TloNAL LUMBe~. STIOCTO GAS BAllECOES PORTABLE PROPANE GAS GRILL '1986 SINGLE BURllER "tJl'm~ GAS GRILL 19300 20 LB. LP Tank Included DOUBLE IUDER GAS GllLL 19810 20LB. LP Tank 4 lncluded LIBRARY WALL UNITS ~~ ...... 2s•' •1024 6SHELF 2797 WITH DOORS .. •1028 6 SHELF WITH 2997 DROP LID ..... •1026 Tell m.e where you c:&n get dec.nt looking •helf uni t. like thu for anywhere n.ar the price. Herit&tJ• Oak finiah, you .... mble. 1 3/4 II SOLID CORE MAHOGANY ENTRY DOORS Beautiiul doors can c ha.no• the look of a hou.... Mak.. you want to knock on one ( go ahead, do it, watch the quy yell). 36" doors only. NAPOLI 47aa mma No. 7985 h .. 260 8q. •r---m'l'I! !It: r!! inch" of cooking •pace, ,__.._._. .......... m"lrl:!il"mn• ~ IL:7 LP tank i.a eztra. No. I E :1 a 9300, you get the LP LI! ;! c:! tank, and No. 9510 i• 310 ~ ~ ~ 11777 11q. in ch .. with the tank. , £2 ::rt. ADISTIONG SOLAllAI 10-WAX FLOOR TILE 7 4 ~2"zl2" TILE Or...t patt.rna, H.aneft Home. Lockat.y Hall. £.... Fair, and More. PRESTIGELINE LIGBTllG HIGH INTENSITY TABLE LAMP 1 LIGHT "'UORESCENT DESK LAMP Cl= Cl MEDITERRANEAN SORRENTO MADRID 49aa ULTRA-AIRE WALL FUii ACES 35.000 BTU'S BUILT-IN THERMOSTAT 99•7 35,000 BTU·s WALL THERMOSTAT 10997 We got a •lug. but again. the •tocM is not unlimited. Come in early. TITAM PORTABLE ELECTRIC H~ TERS Really great tiJning here, but the worst part i9, we an runnin9 out I Yep, a Subject to Stock on Hand deal. Sorry. 1250 WATT 9'7 '1'-112 1400 WATT 12'7 •RT-10 1500 WATT 1697 •RT-26 1300 or 1500 ..-DUAL --v ~ WATTAPE l-' -~ 21'7 I -----::-:-. \J:=: • •RT-30 900. 1100. 1300 or 1500 WATTAGE 2597 6!!.2D TM Uel t.e 9ood but la 9Uhjeat to .tock on hand PONDEROSA PINE ( Mart7 "Umit.ecl hpply,"~). Mo ....t.n at thil price. BUNK BED 6997 Great th1naa to ha ... Tab cue of 8paoe ~ tAe ldd.e l°"9 tlwm. You put it~ ( Nlas. lt'• elmpl.). Matu11111 atN. , . OIDDIUll 3DIAWD 5997 CIDT . . . 4 .. . . . . .. ;~ n.ra....-~,.... .. ..,..... for tbe ftnt !urt.r .._. Ju. ll ti• t llUllkln, up llPll'Dllt, ~--~ol-.1 '· mUUGD far UM Mme ...W IMl ,.. • ......_. .per ..... allo ............... ter<• lo 11.lt .... abar9 tor ... ftnt ....... "' ....... compartd to M ceata tor .. -.... puto4 lut year. (ICanainp per....,..~ ren.et the purcb ... ol 1.a mUUon ot .,._ ~·•.,. t.y the COOl'*'1 ln ftacal ltft). Revenuee for the ftrat •uaftft' ct 19 W.. 11.0 bllllon, compared to S1M milloft tor lbt pnvioul year. New orden wtrt Sl.O b1Won1.~mpared to St.I bilUonlntm. 8acldotwaa811.1bhuoa,tompartdt.o. S 11 8 billion at the en·d of the ft rat quarter ln lt7t. J.W. "8111" H...,._rpr &I vtc. praldeot of Baak of Ne..,.n. Newport Beach He Una ln Irvine Mldaeel L. •uuu, lrviM Company Com· munl\1 RelalioDI manaaer. bu been elected t• pre1ldmt ol the On.nc• CcMm\1 Chapter ol tbe Public Relatlona Soeletyol America. J• •· S,..cer i~ com· merclal officer at A•erleaa S&a&e Ba... Newport Beach. Spencer lives ln Irvine A lhree·hour business seminar "Effective Bu1lnea1 MANAHAN 8pealdn1," is scheduled March 26 Crom 7·10 pm . in the Orange Coa1t Colle1e Fine Am Hall 119, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Admission is free. Heg1stratJon may be made al the door. Information 556.5880 MSI Data Corp. 'a board of directors bas declared quarterly cash dividend of 10 cents per share payable this week to shareholders of record Feb.25 loo • If ar•anged Tennis balls, wtth the exception of !oncer wear and chanaes in col- or, have remained much the same for decades. An empfoyee at a tennis ball manuf acturtna plant in Phoenix places ball halves in a mold, top and bottom, to be joined to1etber and internally pre- ssurized. Profit Quadruples Firm's Decade Success Hailed SAN FRANCISCO (AP l BankAmen ca Corp earnings have quadrupled ln the past 10 years. marking "one of the moet successful decades" in its 75 -year history. President A W Clausen said this As for 1979, be said the year marked the fifth consecutive year In wbicb the company bas improved its return on average total assets and the sixth straight year an wtuch re· tum on average equity capital has 26,500 SQUARE FEET OF NEW ENGLAND Voocon~an ~ '4ew. You can haw: the luxury d ample free poridng, lu5h atriums. w ~. free utilities, lpedalzed pbnbfng and decttlcal modlfk:adons. You can haw: an office )QJ'U be proud d dose to Court House, Holpltal. Freeway -and onty 20 minutes from the Airport. Yoo can haw: a lease l:lt a coet surprilingly affordable In a town that wants >"U there. Dana Point Professional Centre CALL FOR lLASING INFORAATION AND BROCH<JRE.. (714) 540-2988 ASK FOR ~ OLSON. PROPERTY ASSOOATES. INC. A TOl'fTI DEVEl.OFME1'fT <XWWCY PROJECT. DESIGNED BY AROil recrott For the fiscal year ended Jan. 31 The Fluorocarbon Co., Laguna Niguel, reported record net income of $3,830,000. up 41 percent. on record sales of$62,S65,000. up 30 percent. week. • In the corporation's 1979 annual re· port. earnings during the decade showed an increase from $154 m1ll.1on m 1969 to $600 million In 1979. exceeded15percent ~=::=::=::=::::=::=::=::=::=::=::=::=;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~==~====~ Income before securities transac· - t1ons climbed 16 7 percent to $600 r--------------~--~~-~--.,........----, This compares to earnings of $2, 713,000 on sales of $48,220,000 for the last fiscal year ended Jan. 31, 1979 Clausen. m a letter Introducing the annual report, s aid that a key factor rn BankAmerica 's progress has been its policy of planning and controlled expansion and ~rowth million or $4 10 per share in 1979 from $514 m1lllon or SJ SJ per ~hare m 1978. The corporation became the rl~t private finan<'1al mslltut1on in the L'n ited States to reach that level or (CHAS. McCABE ) PUTS tongue firmly 1n cheek Primary earnings per sh&re are at $1.62 com· pared to $1 15 lai.t year Fully diluted earnings pe r s hare for the ycnr were $1.52 -.. t•arnings, the report s lated L..:--------------------:..--...;___..11•• Net<' Beer DUR From Coors GOLOf:N l/\1'1 Coor~ off1cwls ~ay a new bf'1•r will be introduced rn May by Adolph Coors Co. 10 test markets in California. Texas and Arizona. The new beer . "H erman Jos eph 's 1Hll8 •• will also he snld 111 pa rt'i of Nev. M<'x1 co ,, ... v. t· I I . a <' 11 o r ~ '-p11k1·~m:in arlcl1•cl T ht· m·" hl·t·r will h1· th•· st•roncl ( ·oors has 1n t 111d urt•d ~inc·<.· mJrkel ing Coors Light, a low c alorte brew which came out m May 1978 The n ew beer 1s n amed a fter Coors' foun d er. Adolph Herman Joseph Coors. who e migrat e d to America from Germany m 1868. Hou.sing Down SAN FRANCISCO Bank of Amenca report ed this week new hous· ing starts m California in January were at a seasonally ~djusted an· nual rate or 141,000 units This figure was down 16 1 percent from the rate m December 1979 and 17.1 percent below January 1979 STOP ACCIDENT AL POISON~NG By Terry Grant. R. Ph. All you know, Murch ls Poison Prevention Month f'or the past fow '.weeks we ha\c been .ll 1 v 1 n i;1 y ou ., o m l' .i,uggeslloni. on thinJ!s you can do at horn<' The hst. contlnu('b • Give mlant" dnd younl( children drua11 only 11s direct e d b y vour physician • Read all d1rect1on~ and caution ~lalements on lhe dru1 label • Berore meaaur lna llqwd medicines always s hake the bottle • S.fe guard tablets and cap1ulea, by storlna them In sarety containers which children rind hard to open. YOUR DOCTOh ;Afir PHONE US when you need a medicine. Pick up your prbl!crtptlOll If shop. pln1 nearby, or we wUI deUver promptly without extra ch1r1e. A areat many people entruat ua with thclr prescrtptlona. Mty we compou nd )'0\U't7 I 'AM a.mo PMMMACY fltNOllNtr I • , H1191bl ....-I "',.,. ...... 9 Insured safety at San Diego Federal! High "Money Market" interest ... whether you're saving $10 or $10,000! CERTIRCATE 14.9560fo:~::ru noxt-noaday) B $10,000 minimum, 26-week term! B New Horizons Club benefits! B Insured safety! B No bank pays more ... or offers as much! Federal law requires substantiel lntereat penalty for early Withdrawal of cert11tc11e accounts and PfOh1b1ts compounding Interest on the T·PLUS certificate ••v1eld If principal and interest remain on c»poall for one year t Account batanc.a of less than 110 do not accrue tntere11 CERTIFICATE 12.00% peryear• 12.94% annual ylmd .. B No minimum balanceft B Rate guaranteed for 30 months to 10 years! B Insured safety! B Eam .25% more than at any bank! Open your T-PLUS or T-PLUSI 30 account at San Diego Federal today/ Get th• safety and 1ecurlty of Cal/tom/a'• oldeat led•r•I ••vlnga and loan ... with over SI bllllon In resources/ ~Ve!':,,.., -----~ T..._.:'""210 . ' Cll/lfontt.'I oldat ftdmll MIYl1tp tlltd IOOlt ••• IOft llntt /88$ . . FsTJc ..... ... ..__.., 1 ............. , .. 1 ----·----·---;:--,· ......................... ' . ' mntl to tbe tun S..t. tOr ao-much._ optJadttlc Utan I wu Uoo. two ,.-. _,.,. Af) U pel"M.Dt A ,.,Elton 14 eat ...... IOl'im• ....... ..-WU that ever taa revenue aad ral1• lb• donebeloret" poulbllb' tbat the ~st•ure he pndleted t.be atat.e 1urpl&11 would hH to make d"'9r· oa J ue 80 would exceed the n.1 dl•n·~tld au lt Pv'oplili· bW.s. Dndtded euller but aaSd UoD '· tM IO pel'C!at t\aw to. IM·cUcf net ~.,.., .. tbe claim u.t come tax cut apoatored by ._ __ .... --...t.. .. 8 bilUoa. Heward Jarvt.a, II approved by " .. -rwaaa- voten 1\M J. SIM aaSd •be d.td not have a ~ Aalted after tbe beartDt 11 lbe riaed tltimate ot what the 5Ul'· a1l'eed wtLb the NClllJOD pn~ plua would be OD Ju,ne 30, mt. diction, lb. Gra.-eaJd, "I am tbe end cl the nest flacal year. * * * * * * Little Aid to lnflatloa? ~ ' • t • • • • • • ... • • r • J'be ..Umet.e earlier this year ••• um It would drop to *51Z mlllloa..· "A lot depeoda on wllal hap- pena In WaabJ.qtoo," 1be aalct. referrtq to C~r admlnlatra· Uoo e«orts t.o curb lnllaUon. lh. Gravea said Mr staff la prepartu a rev!Md ecooom.ic Lorecut lor the state and could have a Jarvia U budget ready "ID a few days. But I would not be comfortable with tboee DWD• but ••• abe added. * * * BecaUJe of the prospect of Jarvi.. ll. Brown ordered at.at.I a1enclet to dreft new i..-.e1 budc~ that apelled out 30 per· cent worth ot cutt He aa.ld he would unveil that new spending plan th.la week. But Brown was campalplftl for president in Wlaconsin Wedoet· day and hla auociate preaa secretary, Steve Ouacbea, said oo new date had bHn set for the budget. * * * 'IWAT WM belON &.be prime leadiq rate et maJor baob belaD ·Dlllb.lu 11 percent and .a.. mel wttb a 1rour o1 private ecoaoml1t1, mos of them repNMDlinl major California ban.ka. ••Every atn1le one of lbem ob- jected to her analyals and said we would bave a recession ln six months:' 1be told the Senate Rulea Committee, which voted 3·1 to approve ber appointment as finance dlreclor. Balanced Budget .No Cure-all THE COMMJnEE uiso ap· proved several other Brown ap- pointees, including rice grower James Leathers a s an Air Resources Board member and Terry Trumbull as chairman of FINANCE DIREcTOR,..._ ~oear~lid Waste Management Mary Ann Grav•• The votes sent the appoint-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~- $50,000 to $500,000 INCOME PROPERTYSl:CONDS • lnlu-t Oftly p.ir--t. '• lnco•• • Co••~rdal •R..W-dal L•>nlMI our loan lnfor9Ultion -rvke t " ~·1ur hndnong n,•,.d\ WASHINGTON (AP) -Although President Carter intends to make a balanced 1981 budget the centerpiece of tus new anti- inflation atrategy, almost no one expects it will do much lo bring down the nation's lnflation rate. Theo why ls be bothering? For one thing, be bas to do something. For another, it's widely believed that government deficit spending is lnflationary. And those who accept that premise will be reassured that Carter bas done something. The president's anti-inflation program 1s expected to include a Floating Bank Rate Decision Rapped TORONTO (AP> -The Bank of Canada's decisioo to introduce a floating bank rate wtll hurt the stock market, devastate the bond market and do nothing to fight inflation, says a Toronto investment analyst. Kersi Doodha of Aideck Investments Ltd. ~aid a floating bank rate will "substantially add to uncer· tainty because businessmen won't know what the cost of money will be from day to day." will be fixed each Thursday at one.quarter of one per cent more than the rate established earlier that day for 9l·day treasury bills. balanced budget. selective credit controls and a new initiative lo conserve energy. Rep. Jim Wright, D-Tnas, the House majority leader, said earlier lb1s week that congressional leaders and administration of- ficials have tentatively agreed on almost SlS billion lo budget cuts for 1981, &it.hough there were reporus Tuesday the cuts would range from $12 billion to $15 billion. Wbate House official say revenues also may be Increased SS billion. CARTER ORIGIN ALL V PROPOSED a 1981 budget with a de f1 c1t of Sl5 8 billion. The government has not had a balanced budget since 1969. . Alan Greenspan. chief economic adviser to former President Gerald Ford. 1s among those who thmks tht! budget-balancing ex- ercise 1s import.ant. He says the hundreds of bilbons of dollars the government has borrowed tn recent years for its deficits are a ma- )Or cause of tn!lation. But Greenspan doesn't think a balanced budget will result in a ~ubatantially k>wer i.nflatioo rate LD the oear futurt!. ONE REASON A balanced budget won't help much in the abort term is that a major share of the nation's inflation is coming from high energy pnces and tugh interest rates, neither of wtucb would be dlrectly affected. Alice Rivhn. director of the Congressional Budget Offlce, said the reduction in inflation from a balanced budget could be measured m "tenths of a percent " That's not much from the re· cent annual rate of L8 percent. although that rate 1s expected to ease somewhat aa the year wears on. even if nothing is done. Critics of the balanced budget approach. and they are many. say that by bala.nctng the budget. the adm1rustrallon wtll be tr~d­ tDg uUle gain agamat inflauon for reduced economic output and m- rreued tmemploymeat. (714) 759·1515 ~-RICAN NOMI! MORTOAOe 230 Newpott Center Onve OeSIQft Aaz• Hewport 11Nch. Callfom<e 92ee0 However. while agreeing that a fluctuating bank rate will cause headaches for buai· nessmen. another Toronto ex· pert said the decision was possibly tbe most sensible action the bank could have taken. Over The Counter ORDER YOURS NOW • • 1000 BEAUTIFUL STICK-ON LABELS STYLISH TYPE ON GOOD QUALITY WHITE GUMMED PAPER • PERSONALIZED •EASY TO USE ~. • FOR YOU OR A FRIEND r--------------~------, I flt! ifl lflla~n. ch~ Md natl wlttl 11.7$ + .25 poMlige IO. I Atot Printing. Label Div. I AJat Oflk:e Box 1560 • 330 W. Bay St. 1 Costa Mesa. California 92628 I I I I I J I I I Be Sure •o Use Your Zlpccxte I I PllOl PRINTING Gerald Bouey, governor ot the Bault of Canada, aaaounced Mood.aJ nltht Lbat &.be bank rate Not So Much A Seminar ke A 4-Day lnvesb1111t TALK SHOW HatTJ Schultz and 12 Experts Flown in From Around the Wortd. He presents the Original Schultz Inte rnational Monetary Seminar in the Bahamas May 15-18. 1980. There will be a number of firsts: 1. The first seminar to be conducted In talk show format, informally. where speakers will chat in a dialogue to give investors what they want rather than a series of sleeirinducing formal speeches. 2. The world Is being taken over by the unholy trinity of inflation, taxation and Russian intervention. This will be the first seminar to cover all three. We'll diSC08S international military movements and what they will mean to your survival and investments. We'll discuss Investing in strategic metals. the exciting new area. And lots of vital subject matter. Harry Schultz created the first International monetary seminar in 1967 and set the format for 13 years of flattering imitation by others. Now he is back In the seminar business to create a totally new format for the 1980's. YOUVE BEEN TO THE REST. NOW COME TO THE BEST! Come to where history will be made. I wish to attend the Schulz Original International Monetary Seminar May 15-18 In Freeport, Bahamas. Enclosed Is my check or money order for: $650 single ........ $975 oouple This covers all seminar activities. lnctudl09 2 cocktail parties. 3 lunches. 2 dinners. but not the hotel. NAME .......... . ADDRESS ............................ . Pieise· make· aii C:t19Ck8'P8Y8b18· i<>: ·1niti1uie ·tor Freedom Thru Sound Money. Send to: C/O Xebex (QC), P.O. Box 1~. Princeton. New Jerl8Y 08540 USA. For llllo caJt: ceoo> 921..een. 'YjW YOttl( (AP! ~·----~ ll'M ........... d ~ s.cwm. ~~ '-~··-•• \100\. 0.weyE.1 AJL ''"" ~ = 8t!~H~ A A-AVM~ 1"-Mio Oocvtel ~::· , '"' Ooll•Gfl ,... 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' -·- BUSINESS I STOCKS . 81 SYLVIA POaTD If the dontarn ~~ ~ UM 1urae ta mWW,. 1pendiq, 101ne 8 to 1.1 mtmoD men Md wom• may be jobtesa wlte!I the U.S. IC* to tM pioUa Ul1I faU. u •· employment rate ot aroaad a~ 1plmt Ulli4tr e#Pif.r· ceat now. Who will tbele Joblaa be and •bat mlabt they meJD to t.be c~ for the prw~y! Mlnorft.les, partJcularlJ blKb and tbe YOUDI wW be bit the hardelt ... ln put downtuma. The unemployment ------------------· rate for blam, for tn. stance, now about 11 percent. may jump to 18 percent, up about five perceotase points. In cootrut, the jobless rate for white., now Money's Worth rouably 5 percent, may move to 1 percent, a smaller rile of two perttntqe point.a. BIAC'K8 WILL BE laid off becauae they frequewty lack lmlority or bold auembly llDe or other lea-11d and DOIHllMOtial jobs which employers eliminate l durt.na reee..iool. Black teen·aaen. wboH numbers bave been Increutn1 fut.er than other claues of workers, wtll suffer because ol the lack ol new job openinp. In addition, black.I, on averqe, are le11 well-educated. have la.I tra1nloi and oft.en are target.a of racial dls- crtmtnaUoo as well. And another reuoo black teen·a1ers 'bave b1ih jobleu rates in tood Umea u well u bad Is they have a much poorer "network" of Job contacta ~n wbllel. A recent IWdy by Boston Unlvenlty economics pro- feuor Paul Osterman of labor problema In two Boston communlU• -one m•tly white, the other black -dis· closed that white yout.b found jobl twice u often lb.rough friendl and relatives than did blacu. TBS SEASON: J>Ucrfmtnatlon, both put and preaeol, put black parents tn lees ol a poeitioo to help their off. sprtniset work than whim. As a result, black teens must depend to a much greater ext.eat than whit.es on such job placement institutions as schools, employment acendes a.nd manpower pro1rams. None ol tbeM bu bad notable succeu tn placing appli· can la ID eood Jobi. Rialnt joblemn.1 a1ao tends to undermine tbe prorrams that the federal government ha.s put in place to fight dis· c rimlut1on. AHlrmative action plans are undercut became the Jut hired are usually the nrst fired. JOB T&AINING PaOGaA•8, loo, become wtia t Osterman calla "empty promises." since there are jobs rtvallable for those who have ~n trained. Partly in anticipation of thlS problem, the Carter ad· ministration intend1' to reonent some Job training pro grams toward baste education and away from job skills. It is aaking Coneress ror an extra SZ billion to teach baa1c readlnc. wrttJn& and math stills to *n·acera and give them after-school Jot-that wo~ldbelJ)tbemln the open market. Market Drops Again As Prime. Heads Vp l':EW YORK <A Pl -The stock market lost ground in an erratic 'esMon today a~ some leading banks raised their pnme lendin~ rates to i::.ecord 18"4 percent. The Do-. J ones average of JO t.nd~lrials was down 9 9H pointJ; t.0809 56. stx points of the loss coming in the final h<>ur. Losers led gamers by about a 2·1 margin In the tally of New York Stock Exchange-ltsled issues. Oil and preciou:-. metals stocu fell sharply :"'; _ TONIGHT·$ LATEST LISTINGS .. '( " .. 'I ' .. ~ I ., TelueJl .. eat Judge Advocate William Sbalner (left) questions key witness Buddy Ebsen as defense counsel Jack CU8idy looks on in a scene from .. The Andel"SQnville Trial," airing tonight at 9:45 on KCET, Channel 28. n .. et• Wit-to • rot>-'*" end Ille enoottng OI a ~ offlcer ~.· IWld Stone quMtlonll Ille real lc*ltlty. • IMCH&.1 LaHMJll MPOfn' 1:IO THI GONO IHOW 1 .-.v~ INllAN::H~ ... .. Alir Oiual• Predlctlonl" I 'Aee THI MUIC MATCH~ TIC TAC OOUOH AU IH THE FAM!&. Y Following • robtl«y, • Cfooll bf'Mlla IMO the .,,.., ,_ to avoid oap. 9 by the OOllOll. MACNEIL·LEHRER REPORT !?~ 7:61 ti P\.IDGE ~ Aegulal1y ldledllled oro- grlll'MlinQ may be 6ele)'9d due lo pledge brMlca I~ 8 (I) THE WAL TOH8 Claa1111rf Ll•t Ing• 8 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles 8 KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles e KTLA (Ind ) Los Angeles 8 l<ABC-TV (ABC) Los Angeles (() KFM8 (CBS) San Diego D KHJ-TV (Ind) Los Angeles 41 KCST (ABC} San Diego I KTTV (Ind.) Los .Angeles t<COP·TV (Ind.) Los .Angeles KCET·TV(PBS)LosAngeles e KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beach Jim.Soll get• ~ tor hit ll1gh ecllool greou•llon wfllle trie otller wa11on men pr9')Are lo to•n flll Armed Forcet IJ IUCI< ROGIAS IN TH£ HTH CEHTURY e...ci< •nd Wiima team tllat a 1t•,...tre0ono eorc.er (J8Ck P.ianc:.) hN NI m ... ,,,. llMt rMdy 10 tlt8Ck Earth (Part 2}(R) •~oau 8&.0CKH An otflc:tel enquiry for Wentwonn .. announc:.ct. end Eric:a end Vere t>egon IO lllif'lll ol Ille MUN 8 Ill MOAK & ...av Mork 1111181• on melf'ltaif'l- '"9 Ills non-vk>lent wey. -wllen lie tMICOt'nel ,,.,. 111091 ol tlle town bully. (Al GMCMI * * * ,,., "To C•lch A 111 .. 1 • ( 1955) Cary Otani. GtM:e Kelly. A relorm9d iewef tlllef II euapected of tMurnlf'lg to • Ille of orlme •fl•\he , ... In low llrith • weelthy young -(2 ,,... , ·CAAC>l.~ ANOfMNDe a-ta: John Byner, I(.,,._ netll Mara. .MCMI •• ~ "Secret Of The lnc:M" (1ff41 CNttlon ~ Aollett v-. M ~ --lot th• prlcelua Inca .,. ...... ._ca , •Hll llrf a.. ..... 1.--fllSrMOOOll ,..... ""eu, PeAte Aft-~-· .. .__.._ .. n--... ;:.:r-:-. .,.., .... . ........ '° .... . .... ~ ..... -tJtllw'•.-..;c.-. •fttlcmDOIU\I Aa • .,,.... .. o... ,.... '""°'•'•• end ,..,,..,.. !tie apartmelll e-.a....awww JOUMl'-1. "Mow To 0. A Job" M ~ ,.,.,,. Oii • "'°" graf'I\ "' IM OillOO• C~· nle 1"41t llM Md ~ MIOOllll "' ~ , ... WI~ how 10 go ..,.,. gllttlnO. JOO .... ~ t:o0e&l~ JOND S.Cty ,,. '° communlc:9•• wrtll 4111 eutllltic; cMd In «Cler IO lotl4 lite murder otaeloM'"-'d. 8 CMNCY OulitcoJ INr'M IMl two .....,.. peoC)le whO died myat.,IO!ilty ri9d bolll ~lyvielMdttle­ -veon. • 0 tMleY ll&1a Ni un8lgned let1W trom -of tM P'°«*'CI'• offl. ce" dl•clo••• 1ome 111oc:tung per son.I 1n tor· m111on (RI G) MERV OAIFFIH 6!) TH£ PRIM£~ MISS JIAHeAODIE • RoM" Sandy ano .>.nny deClde to ll09f • tea tor • pa<llc:ulatty •tttllcil_,. gorl IWld ,.,., IOliow.t• to o•en ,_ lactl for ''*' j<>Utnal (A) HOe O 10AP Jeeelcla'• 6octor r-i1 1rie outcome Of ,.,., rnecl•· c.i .... s IWld MWty elected lherltl Burl Ir-lo get tr.. eiection lolet out ol Ille town 111m<><y 9:44 Sl HOU. YWOOO TELIWStOH THEATER "'The Anderson VIiie T roal ' Ricllerd a...tlart Jack CU9ldy ~ 11 (I) KNOTS LAHOINO Rlc:hafd and l.llut• I mer "• QOM on the 1111<11 Wiien fie ,,.... to p..., ott Oetlll by lllttlng 1111 lr'i.tldl end ln-lewt "" for $20 ,000 -~,._.. Jim'• H9wellan ~ •• lnl*""Pled by .,, oto trtend wtth a ~ for MIP' on .,, lntellgencl mi9alon.. (A) I ·= ~GAL.LBW "FlytftO 8epulefl~ Ot o.tt" A yourio ...... .. ... wllkllta ...... .... .... ¥!11n•....,.. . • TtJBE TOPPERS · .... KHJ 8 8:00 -11To Catch a Tbltf." · Cary Grant and Grace Kelly star in thll Alfred Hitchcock mystery movie. KOOP • 8:00 -.. Secret of the Incas." a.ailt.on Heaton leads a search tor prtceleu jewelry tn th.la early career ntck with Robert Young. KCET 9 9: 45 -• •ne Ander10nville Trial." An all·at.ar cut is featured in thl1 Civil War drama, inclu4iaa Willlam Sbatner, Richard Basebart, Buddy Ebsen and Jack Cassidy. <See photo at left). tO:IO ..... MAii CVllCI THIATRI '"The ~ Of OUk• Su.t tr' Thet9 II lftUClfl conjactt.re antOng the ...,, .... Loull9 and Ille.,..,,. retum kl Ille ..,..._ bringing young Lottte wlttl them (P_, 13 of tl)(R) 11::001••<1>0 Niwa MIWLYWB> G.All9 CMYIAUINAT L.ARM Dew II WI e.rrrty olftmr, POPe on we1er .-. and .... ,~ • AUIHT'HE'NAY Mill• end QQie 1eec:fl Edttll • method by ""*=" merrtecl people can "llgllt flll(ly .. • NIOHT GAUPY "6ometlllng In The WOOOw<>tti' An M:oflol;c .. cOfWlf'OeO ,,.., the gll09t or • c:orMc1 .._ 1n 111e arnc: 11:ao. (I) OC>U.111'*) Twin bro1r-. -IUlj)ec:l- ect of murd«lflO ,,.,.., WMltl'ly. olOlr uncle jUtt beCOt"• ,... ,,.,,.,,,. 10 • ~-0 THE.aTO# CAMON G.-11 Peggy LM . F.,. nando l.9IMI, G.illigllet (Al I DATlNG GAME 0THIMAN~ AMOICAHB.D H08TAOI I A lomt Ill the ..... OGO.lf· ,_.,..,__ ·--•• ......, 000 ....,,,..,, .. (1t1tl o.wa Hopper, !)Nd <Mpa. 'Ille lklry ot the~ ..... 000 ....,,,..,, dllr"'9 .. .....,.. ..,, OOld Nlh .. ~· ~2 !Ira.) .HOMN'a .... Ho09n ...,., .. -11.ldNp a Oermeft ~ IO lnde him lor 9n Amefloan ;~,- MIQTUU. "Natlof'lal ff'l¥ltat1onat T C>Ur'fWlnlef'lt" • FMMCJR N«J .IOtMl'f Tiiis 40tti ~ ttot>· U1e to IN flrlt Ameroc:en Dallel ~ .,, lntoarvlew wflh Aulll Page. IN orlgt- nal Frenk... end djpl of Ille 103' p<oouctoon (RI t 1l"6. III POLICE WOMAH Pepper and Ctowter •rt to pr~ect • ~ Qjtl '""° .• o.twmlned 10 find lier f•"* wftO II Ille Object of •-n>CIO-Cfl ~flmlflOtt'T- 1~1 =lAUCJH -..011 ILi The IMF must ,_ • Merel fall-aale o.ine. <leelglried to er;ploc)e If tampered.ri JOHN DARLING 1 1HOUGHT 11 WOULD 0€ A NICE. TOUCJ-1 ~ Ol,,q OPENING SEGMENT IF WE SHOWED 50f"\E.. WOMEN SPOTilNG YOU AND ASKING' ~! I'LL GO l6K TH06E. ~EN~ltERE IF THEY'D U~IO OOIT! . ~ .. GlmfOllllOOtO ._~MO .... ~ TOf!Y WW '° -a Jul*» nin .... ,,,.. ... .., .. .................. ................... ..... , ... .... TOl«#CIW ....,.. .......... Joftn 1.Aft19M. JOl'lftn1 ........ ,,.., ..... • MCWll • * * '"TMt ....,. ''°"' Alo" (1114) Jeen.Paul l•llft.,)lldo, ''•nool•• OOftaeo. A girt le llld- .....-.., a 91"9 Md ~ought to No, wltll '* eo6dlet-boyfriend llOI on !tie tr.ii. ( 1 "' • 55 lftln.) • LftlMIO ~cw _,.Ml na ChrlHy and "obbl• ~ cl!Md mod~••: ~ tlM Mr. My ~ on the rNllll'O .... ., ~ DotoNaMd~ ....... ...,,.. \4111«. 1':'11. Cl) MM'V HARTMAN. MM'VHNmMN Mr, I-Ille m-~. George ,,... a .... McS~­ hofM "-' • CS..-, •• MCMI ·~•·TM wi... ~" ( 1M31 Honl Ffarlll. Karlfl Dor. An unknown ,,_.., -..ui ---...... '° find .. Well atMlllal wtlO --..:ft °' .... 'ftctllM with • 11'1\.. and ,.,,,Ille _,,o (2tw•J • MOYIE • * * "A Song To Aatnember" (19451 Pevl "'uno, Cornet Wttcte Cl'WlQln I '-1 brMIC I ewet -io... '°' George !.and !NI ~oful nQYeltSt 12 ''" • 30 '"'" , • MOYIE * * * ''M1on1llce n1 ~· (1$351 .,_ eun.... Ao«>erl T eytor A ~ wt-. dr.-en entJCa ~ tlle 0..111 ol • -geotl and ,.,. ...i. ' ~. oedlcat .. l'oun· _.. 10 mecliclne. (2 rwa I t:GD8NIW6 ~-.... 2:259 Nl'Wa 1:168 ~ • *'~ Top Of Tiie WOtlCS f 19551 0... Aoberlson ::r...::-z~ ............ "'~ u .... 111...._,,. duty to !Mii an ~ loll poet. (I IWs.) • : ... 1: : * ~ ''NIOM Mir NlahlM ( ttU) Gllor'Ot Ml, .... W.. A ,,.,_,., _,., .... lnbl9 ......... (!_lw .. 21 lftlft.I ...,. MOv. • * * "Medorwa Of Tiie 8r1en Moot1a" (1140) Pflylllt CaMrt. ·~ °'llfl98'· Mier • Ol\ldtlOOd ~ wllt't • ITWllM- ~ fllP"I -•• WOlftal't ....... wltll a duel~ ar=·'2""·' de>. MOVll fl* "W.O Of Vlolllnu" ( 1Nt) 91'".C ......,, Argwet t.. 4:2111 NlW8 dl>ll MOVla * • .,.., ''&ny To Bed" ( 18381 CNtlM Ruggiel • M9'y Bolend . Frida•'• Da"f I~ fto.,le• -AFTERNOOH- 12::00 G • • • .., ''Thie 11 Not ,. T11t" C 1982) SHmOll GlalS Mary Mori.a lf'I llW rnldlt ot •tat>l..ning a o.egnat 10 trap 1 kHler, .i lllle trooper II W8<ned Of an 1mm1nen1 nucte11 •119Clt ( 1 hr 30 "''" I 8) * *.. A Oay At Tne Racoes ( 1937) Mant Btotll- .,, M8uf_., O'S<Jlh~an C~•ll"O 8nd ch•Sl"9 llOI hp~ lloghhghl I VIS.I 10 Ille tr Kk t>y ()f Haci<ent>ueh and olller ~ ( 1 hr , 50 """I 3:30 fJ * • Dead Man On Tiie Aun" ( 1975) Pet• G•-. Kii,.,.,_ Justa w,,.,, • ,.,.,. teic• Oll'8f for a mur defect teelef 81 ottlcial, ne ~· !NI Ille ci.tllll wu pert of a larger plot ll'VOMnQ ,,.,. _.,,.,l()n OI • pres.denllal cand>- d;lle (1 fir 00 ,,..,n I by Ann•trong ': Batiuk -----------------WELL , \H HY DON'T YOU .JUST ~TEND TlW YOU KNCN-J HIM. ··-c... ~·~--------------------.._ ________ ....,L __ ....;;.;. ______ -L, ________________ .:.:....~:::_..:.... __ __:~==-__:=-:::====~ ~IMtalS-aoo ,.....~ ......... , r .. PBS 'Festivals' Waiting With Open Palms By PETER J. BOYER . LOS ANGELES <AP > -Public TV stations • are out with the tin cups again, reminding us of the _ valuable truth In that. crude maxlm, "There's no such thing as a free lunch." "Festival '80," it is called. a panhandling extravaganza; begging, elevated to an art form and robed in elegant euphemisms: Viewers who pledge money to the local station aren't called "donors" or "benefactors." They're called ''subscribers," a term presumably meant to impart a sense of privilege to the act of forking out bucb. MORE OFFENSIVE, EVEN, is the use of the term "Festival '80" to describe the thrice annual money.raising periods. If this is a festival, so is a visit to the dentist. or a tax audit. What. "Festival '80" really means is a two or three·week period in which your local PBS station airs its most commercial stuff and beleaguers it with insistent pleas for money. Sometimes it is gentle supplication; more oft.en. 1t approaches brazeMess, even impropriety . In the last couple of weeks, barkers for KCET. the PBS station here, have resorted to asking children ·lo call in pledges on behalf of thetr parents. "You kids like 'Sesame Street.' don't you? Well, call in your pledge now ... THEN 111ERE WAS A plea to senior citizens on fixed incomes. "Wouldn't it be nlce if 10,000 retirees each donated $5?" Yes. why waste a Social Security check on food ? I know this has the sound of an ingrate's ranting; after all, some of the best television comes from public TV, and public TV, we're forever reminded, can't earn money by selling commercials. grants and donations KCET's working budget was Sl8 million, or which only Sl.5 million came from the federal Corporation for PubUc Broadcasting About Sl2 million came from foundation and corporate grants, but that money was earmarked strictly for production of specific national programs A BIG CORPORATION .. would much rather invest money in a program that carries lbe slug "This program was made possible by a grant from the Big Bucks Co." to a national audience than invest ln local operations So. to get the S6 million required to run the local station (paying engineers. buying programs. paying bills >. KCET has to beg viewers to supplement the money the government kicks in But I mean only to register complaint about the method. certainly not the end. It's sad that my ;;;;;::======:;;;::::;;~ .-g~~~--~--~ local public TV station, so constant a source of pleasure throughout the year, is for several weeks more shrill than the worst of commercial TV. Alas. there appears to be no better way. "WE DON'T LUCE IT, our viewers complain about it, it really Is a pain," says KCET station manager David Crippens of the begging. "But it provides the basic support of the station." Unlike the BBC. which is supported by mandatory fees. American public TV Is entirely dependent on "Gimmees'' from the govemmenl. FDRSagaDue Robards as Presitknt HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Jason Robards stars as President. Franklin Roosevelt and Eileen Heckart as Eleanor Roosevelt. in "FDR's Last Year," which will air on NBC on May 4. The thr~·bour play was videotaped by Titus Productions and is -currently in prdductlon in Toronto. It wu adapted from tM book by Jim Bishop and produced by Herbert Brodkin. "FOXES" CRJ ~uu· CIJ "SA'JUIHJ• CIJ .. AFOICE OFOMr CNI Deily 6.30 · \.:it Sun -12 )0 ~ • A Plrimount PictUYe .. ~~~~ ""-....,,~ It also stars Nehemiah Persoff as Stalin, Kim Hunter as Lucy Rutherferd and Kathryn Walker as Anna Roosevelt. ualliL Universal Coverage 11:..11 0ranoe 634-3911 NEW YORK (AP) -Tbe 2ltb annual Mlu UA C_... flay ldtelder All TitAT JAZZ (ft) ·-- Unlvene Paaeut 1cbeduled for July 1 ln South Wntmlnsltf 893-05-46 .. : .. '* st--• B~~ Korea II to be broadcut ll\t• by CBS via sa~te =-= :~~~ Clll11.I -r .::;;• ~ to more than 50 countries. ~ Gil Gerard takes aim against lnterpl•At.arv Harold L. Glueer. prelSdent ol lllla UnlftrM iff:':'.:ta<>•EH• . .-foea cm "Buck Roaen ln the 25th eenbiiYr' Inc., laid tbe'Uve telecut from Seoul would be ...._.IMl-tl -o tml~ at 8 on NBC, Cbannel 4. Aldinl hlm MeD ln °'9 Ulllted Statel at t p.m. BecaUH ol lite lklWM 521-2223 ·~. ate Erin Gray as Col. Wilma Deerlni and time ditterence, the beautiea &om • coutn11 ••lllllACCIPTll ·~· '1~1'*lki~~~tbe~ro~bo~t::_. ~wi~t~b~tb~e:_voice~~o~f~M~e~l~B~l~an~c::·_J~~:,~u~aJbt!a.~wW::b9~vytn=:'~i=or~tbe=~c~ro=wn::•:t:l<>~•=·=m~.~C!D:_;•~~--~~-~·~·~F1~11 ~' ===-r ~ s "' I.Ill• ·-_..~--0.C C.111'2•"11. , ............... towtftr through the CPB Viewers provided about $3 mtllton to KCET's c urrent budget, Cnppens says 1 "Publtc telev1s1on is the c raziest dam n business m the world." Crippen~ c;ays, and it 1-. going to i;:et crazier Juc;t al :J t1mt· when PH~ needs to cxpapd ti~ programming to meet thP challenge of Pay TV. a congressional freeze on th1· CPB allotment will reduce the amount of mont-\ given next year to the local stations Wluch means. heaven help us. that thes1· "festivals" will become more important <and more imtaling> than e .. ·t>r '"Coal Miner's Daughter' is a n achievement in American cinema.'' NOW PLAYING ........ ~ WUT mwun· ..aTOl CllKDOIH Wtstm111'9•r 191 ~ S¥1U AN 5"40-7444 O.~nge r.;µ 2~~ n_ .,.._.. Orange 639-8770 Darinal 'lb Do It! --~~-~~OUM) ...,1tDlllrtJ"1mWll.,.GINLD MU • -•OBWDMll .... .,NJllM \)'Ill ......... Gi(W;ll) ~ 1&1 .............. ~------·-.. ----~---· .... -..... ~ --2nd ll!NIATIONM. WllKl-- CIST"'1& .._ IUT9Sltl UA Cinema UA Cfty Cinema Hi·Way 39 Drfve·ln 5'0.0594 634·3911 891·3693 .. .. NO,..,_~DUIMNQ-~1 ...... -. ---... -·--.... ~ t ' HE&E CAaMlCHAU. CWllO ma, be 0annY but la aeklom lnvenUve> borrow S&m0e'1 .. Plua Salte" formal for a pair of -.act.a eel la aclJoln· lD1 rooN lo a Mu1can boCel. ID bada c ..... aeem· --~-Tiol Ml-=1 ..... •C.- 213/~ll ti.ao .....,._ . ._.....,...,.. ••ll'CJ'• eeecM.0• .................. -"'"··--· MllO AT ~ INI lbll•»a•-·-·-· - -.S CAAN t -llAIC* (Mil loCTIIUI -"°"' CMAmlTWOtNt ,,.., ...... ,,..,,_, ... St -. .._ "LE CAGE AUX FOLLIES·• 'llfl!DATa-Mtt .. .JI 494·1514 .,_ ·-<tM-1514 -·· ........ 496 1253 .. ,_,_ , .... _. CLOSED DUE TO FLOODING FAll'IL Y MIGHT TUESDAYS -ALL SU TS S 1.50 ---..--cwm.aw..-. "* ... IUl'llCI HMt Mlf!I) ......... MllOITU....- "°" ........ __ .._,,._._ - ==-1 A"*'.: GNllNt -U74ZD _ ~· • lntllnt l11lan 1bm .TltUs lUly ......._ accioD ln UM two "IOIDI eventualb lntertwtw. Tiie .,..... wtllch la mud\ t.11& better ol ~ two, II ttitiUelt '·Low 11 .... Nner Havtaa to&)' YOU'N For\Y," ud IU~ WU lntpind &y Noel Coward'• "Private Uvet. ' In th1a oae, an actor and a fesnale aereenwrtter settle lnto t.be •clJalnina di11 wtth t!Mtir ,...pecuve attain ol the moment. both on the lbrelbold of dlvottlDC their "borint" matn. How thelr atortea are connected ii a bit ob· vloua, bul blebly ~tertalnl.DI neverthelaa. And the ~all are marvelouaty interpreted by Clark 8ui1ion u lhe uncured bam and Lob Farah aa the almolt·t•Y divorcee. A aeament where both preen ln troat ol a commoo mlrr'Or ta a scream. AL80 QtJrrE EFFECl'IVE are Ron Duvall as Miu J'arab'a o&d-fubiooed k>ver whole Pf'OPl'iety proves lnfuriattna and Emmie Lee Stendatedt as th~ May BW'IOll's December, wbo impresses "MtXaD DOUkar T -1Ull'llMIK11V fl'9d ~. Clrect911 tlld • 11'1 "-FlllM, ptlldueecl 11-1 FIO IM«tmodl, ..._. ........., , IN'HMllecl Frio.to INld s.twdeys tt l:IO ""-" W..1m1M• Gom-IY 'TllMler. nn ~ sc .. Mloft6 .... U11. "LO"•--.... •v•• HAVING TO IAY vou·•· PO«TY" SIMl'-v.. . • . . • . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . ....•. Loi•,..,.,, Chrl•IOOIWr . • • • . . . • . • • . . • . • . . • . . • • . . . .... Cl-8urMll Howard • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . • . . • Ron Ouvau Jtekle • .• . . .. . • . . • . . . • . • • . . • . . • . . . . . . . Emmie Lee 51-Jtedl Wiima... .• . . . . • . . . . • . . . . . .........•..•• Slwlle Mec.nn. Liil • , •• , • • • • .. , • • . . • • . • . . • • _... 0...IM 81«k« Julio •• •.• •••••. .• •••••.•• w.,,.., 8hlmm<Q "L&ONA•D" OoftelO • • • • • • . • • • . • • • . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• WI! '"-"- Amy • • . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •••••••• Joe!WW Wolcoet MtJt .•••••.••••••••••••••••••.•••••••••••••••• N°""Cobb G.or99 • • • • •••••••••• , •••••••. , • • .. • . • • • • • • 8oo H ICh Rev. Sl,_Ouog ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• __ ••. 8111 Aebl Jullo . •• .. .. . . . . . . . .. • .. • . . . .• , . . • • • . • .••... -.,..., 91-.,. LUI ••••• ••·• •••··, .............................. DeftiM 8i«lle< Wltrne. •• . .. • • •• •. •.. . Sloelle MCC- despite the clicbe·slrewn dialogue she is called up- on to deliver .. Jn the night.cap, "Leonard," comedy gives way to farce as a trio or heroln smugglers au.empt to wangle an elderly couple lnto taking thetr booty through customs. It's warmed-over Damon Run· yan atull, but palatable as interpreted by the· Westminster cut. WU Thompson and Joanne Wolcott are highly engaging as the oldsters concocting a counter-plot in Rube Goldberg fashion . Norm Cobb Is sharply ominous as the leader of the hoods. wrule Aida Porras makes a strong "moll." Bob Hicks as the third baddie and Bill Aebi as a vacat10ning clergyman are less memorable. KEEPING THINGS RUNNING s moothly through both segments a re Sheila McCanna as the owner of the Inn, Warren Blumberg as a bellhop and young Denise Blacker, sparkling as the lazy leen·age maid. Ron Fllian dlrecu with a fme sense or timing, stressing character in the first play and frantic physical activity ln the second. Filian also de· siped the twin settioi with tta tricky connecting door, an amuatns effect wben it wort.a. '"Mixed Doubles" Is a twin scoop or laughter, nicely dispensed. which plays for three more weekends at the Westminster Community Theater, 7272 Maple St., Westminster. • BACKSTAGE -Opening night of "Dames at Sea" at the Harlequin Dinner Playhouse next Tuesday will be a benefit performance for the late Dave Rose, who was the restaurant columnist for the Santa Ana Re1tister ... a 1>0rt.loo of the pro- ceeds from Tuesday's performance will be donated to Rose's family ... Tonight's performance of "The Hot L Baltimore" at the Gem Theater ln Garden Grove will be Interpreted for the hearing· impaired ... curtain Is 8·30 and Information is available at 636-7213 ... "B.ICTalC 1 HQlf~H•' 1"11.ACIHOLE" IPGI I "STAR TREK" • • •• "IRA.MER YI IARMER" IRI ·c1u1s1MG .. 111 COMING HOME .,, ......... ..... ,. ... i., Kelly Collina, sister of actress Bo Derek, wut be dolng some stand-in scenes for her sister ln the movie "A Chanae of Season.•• Faye Cut HOLLYWOOD (AP) Academy Award-winner Faye Dunaway wW star with Frank Sinatra in '1'he First Deadly Sin." adapted fJ'OOl tbe book by Lawrence Sanders. I MleMJ ......., m Mil llllllitr. curreatlJ' eo·1&arrla1 ·la tbe 'BroadwaJ bit .. ...., BfbMI," wtU lb ·to HOla;;.ood fo .aps)eV 00 tbe aw .-ual awanll pN1aatat.tioD ol the A11•1m1 ol llodon PlctuN Artl aadldtDM!I. In ma _.ual move, tbe Pf'Odlar• ol tbe IDU9kal will CIOM die lbow llODclay. ADril 14, to allow Aooney and llill Killer to ma'ke a Joint preHntatlon of ooe of tbe awatda on the Oscar pro1ram. TBB PAia will fly to Hollywood on Sunday. April 13. followln1 the ... ., Saturday nlrht performance of "Sugar Babies .. and will return to New YorkooTuelday. No perfonna.nc:e of "Sugar Babies" was acbeduled for Sunday, but there was to be one on Monday until the producers decided to close the show and ••give everybody in the cue a 2 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS! -~­BatAda••• c.ncuc. Bergea- Bat Sapportlng Adlm SHOW TIMES TICKETS ON SALE AT C08TAMUA self'' a; r · .. L .JKHP.S. Ill •• ti ..... , • •. ,,, "JAWS I ... CNI "DIACULA• COSTAMUA Mar.14 ...... 800pm Mar 15 12:30.4·00.7·30 pm Mat. 16 12-00.3·30,7·00 pm HUNTINGTON BEACH Mar. 17 ....... 8-00pm Mar. 18 .•... 4:30. 8 00 pm. Wed . Mar. 19 ..•... 4-30. 8:00 pm. Thurs .. Mar. 20 . . . . . 4:30. 8:00 p m ITI: ...... ,.. .......... .,.. __ _ -·-· ..... ~124 HUNTINGTON HActt HU..TtNOTOH Cl!NTl!tlt lt1.-s7 cbaDee to wat~b tae Ac my Aw .... " It will mark lltu llJUei'.'1 ftn&. IPPtarance oa t:be Awards ~am, Md tbe flrst llnce UM for ROoeey. nomlMe tbla year In tbe catet'Or7 ol bat aetol' lo a 1upportl.u rolt fQf hiJ performance ln ••Tbe Black lta.W.." Tll& SZND AWAaD8 preMD&aUon will be televised live by ABC, Channel 7, ate p.m., ooe hour earUer than lo previous years. The program will ori1inate from the Dorothy Chandler Pavilioo of the Le» An1eles llualc Center. with Job.nay Canon preslcting aa muter of ceremonies. l6tcbcock Releued HOLLYWOOD <AP> -Sir Alfred Hitchcock, lhe 80-year-old muter of s uspense movies, went bome froQ) Cedars -Sinai Medical Center Wednesday after several ~ays or diagnostic teats, • hospital spokeswoman said. Hitcbeock, dittc· tor of aucb classics as .. Spellbound," ''Lifeboat," "'Shadow of a Doubt" and "Psycho, .. was admitted to the hospital Friday. ... ~ ...... \ ,, " BJ DKNNll •d·l"AN ............. Tbe Newport Harbor Animal Hospital. Ooata .._.., oldeet pet hospital, Itta cm an acre of land JUlt off buay Newport BoWevard on •••Drive. A tree-lbaded npuM ol lawn leada up to the~ boel)!tal, which wu c:onverled from anold bone at.a&le lD an. 1'be lawn b the alt• ol tbe county'• oJdeat 1tet cemetery, the flnal restin& place for approx- lmately 100 pet.a wboee tombstones are lined up tn neat rows near the driveway. Dr. Gary Burce. the latest in a succession • of vetert.nartana to occupy the hospital, initially queaticlDed whether having a pet cemetery out J ftont would be good publicity for hia medical practice. .. But that'• not the feeling anyone ctves it." aald B\a'se, strolllnl past marten bearing af. reeuonate names sach as Cupid, Jitterbug, lfeldi, Bambi, My Dukie and Our Ginger. "Peo· pie really seem to like this." atilt remember t.belr peta by occWooally brlnl· 101 no... tot.bl cr•vealt.et . But oone of the pell Neelve u much .tten· tlon .. ooe named Old, aaid Burte. ~in& in front ol a marker that readl almply, 'Okf, A M artne Veteran, Semper Fidelia." "We've always been interested lD lmowlnl who Old was," be said. What piques Burse'a curiosity eyen more than the undated tombstone ls the men who ap- pear each Memorial Day and place two small American fiags next lo the marker. · ''Ibey're always gone before I can aak them about it," said Burge, adding. "I haven't seen them in a couple or years. All I see is the flags. but the glrla (in the office) have seen them." BURGE SAID HIS WIFE bas called the El Toro Marine Corps Alr Station but basn 't been able to find out anytbin& aboUt either Oki or the uniformed men. AL'l1IOUGH THE LAST PET was laid to rest in the mid-'605 -city zoning laws now forbid the burial of animals -several owners "It is a mystery," Burge said, reading the marker: "'A Veteran.' Thal must mean be was in some sort of conflict. He bad to have done something special." * * * The gallant war dog. Oki, received a hero's funeral. Or. Paul Butcher, who started the Newport Harbor Animal Hospital ln 1.947 with Or. Horace Parker. was asked if be remembers the dog named Oki? "I do remember vaguely," said Butcher, who bas bad a veterinary practice in Hunt· ington Beach since 1956. "I think be went to Korea, but I'm not sure. If it's the dog I think it was , it was an English bulldog. I could be wrong." Why not, he suggested, call Bert Murdock. Murdock used to work al the hospital and was responsible for burying the animals. Murdock, now 81, lives with his wife Helen in a Costa Mesa trailer pa.rk. "Ob yes I remember," said Murdock. "It was a Germ'an shepherd. ll was ln Okinawa. Tbat'sbowitgolitsname. "TRIS DOG WAS RESPONSIBLE for car· rying a message that was responsible for saving 150 marines. 'lbe do& waa decorated by Presi· dent Truman." Murdock even remembers the day in 1158 wl·en Oki wu buried. It wun't the kind or pet funeral be would eaally foreet. Oki wu stven a full military funeral, be re- called. complete with honor guard and taps played by a buaier from El Toro lilarlne Corpe Air Station. Murdock said be even rememben Old's owner, Robert Harr or Santa Ana. Murdock recalled that Harr would vialt the gravesite nearty every week in the beginning. Marine plays taps for Oki, 1958 <See HERO, Pa1eCZ> Newpott Harbor Animal Hospital Pet Cemetery Seventeen and a ' half million harp seals have been killed since 1895. The babies are clubbed to death, the adults shot. Seal Slaughter Halt Demanded Last year hunters killed 158,000 baby harp seals, whose fur is used to make coats. Conservationists, outraged by the slaughter, are calling for a complete stop to the killing. BJ MICHAEL PASKEVICH CM•Dalll...._Malt On tbe barren ice floes or Newfoundland, the seuqaal 1lauabter of baby harp seals re· sumed this week. Tbe Mal pup1, three to four weeks old, still are too young to dive into chilly waters and swim -away from the men wbo stalk them. Tbe ebubby, white-furred creatures can barely move on tbe lee. It's really no contett. TW e.n oQJ.y stare with black, uncom- pnbeadln1.,.. al tile bunters who loom above tbem. .~ ~ by _ 1)ray of a ''Jlakall&k." a stMl-beldld CIUD Wielded 'like a bUeb&ll bet.. o.. arv blow ii mually eooqb to mllb a 11Ap'1 llwll md lr:Ul It. BMl DOt ahra11. et.aim fleld repneentatlves Ii Ute Aalmal Proted1oD IDltltut.e of America (~Pl) -4 tbe Greeapeate Foundltiooi.-t.-M .._.. wttwM1 ad would-be ,......,n to ==~=~:::=-8:.t': J!-P '* treiD dirollt to blDd fliPI*'. kil.15. The same figure la beinl used for this year's bunt that officially began on Monday. Mouras uses these numbers lo back bis atgument that the rup population la bein& diminiJbed because o "overbarvesUng." Cana· dian offidals refute thls, lislinl a harp seal count of 1.4 million, versus APf's estimate of 800:000: . • . Either way, the comervationiJts want tbe killing a~. comple~lJ. Mouras la outraeed by a statement attr1but· ed to a FlaberiM Qepartment 1pokeaman call· int the bunt "tbe most humane lD the world." '"lbat." IAYI llouru, "La like aaJ1DI the burnhla ol Joan of Arc made one of the nicest little bOnftrfll tbe town eYer bad. It a11o •bowl bow far Canadian Fllberiel bu depart.eel from any aense of reality.'' Indeed, worldwide pressure La mountinl to balt the 1lau1bter tbat keep• the f ubio.n- coudOUI dnlled to kW lD aeabldll eoatl, llOTet and e&rmuffl. Jett Utigard, a apok•man at GrMQPe1ce offlcet lD Bunttnston Beach, notes that ''baby aeal dolll" are an lronlc olfaboot produced from tbe ~ii?e, G.....,eaoe wtmteen btlu the ftnt CDW1W effort qalnlt tbe kDiln1 by 1pra1Jal a b.arml'91, orlulc dye •the baby Mrpitto ....... t.betr fUr Wortblela. TDY •.. _~G WIN m1a._. ol t1111 ... ~~~'fli~.,.~~'"'Oet...,.~. ba•• llnce taken to uatn: thtlr bodies to pbyalcally cover the pups from the hakapik death blows. Greenpeace hopes to save 100,000 seal pups thia year with a campalan that will cost $54,000. or just under 25 cents per pup. Donations are beinl solicited lo pay the. :oats for boats. bellcopten, supplies, com·· municatioosequipment and a lesal defense fund. API, which la mergln& with a newly.formed worldwide coalition known as the United Animal Nations also will have a donation· aupported team in the fteld beglnnln1 this week. lllouru La tu'linl penooa around the world to "TU. the Seal Pledse," whlcb lDcludea slpecl _..,. to Canadian ottldals and a boJcott #:I tNOe and tourlam unUl the clubblDI ii ablndmecl. He ~ tbe key to the erwnbllna ol the bunt iD the IOI rest.I with education of the Cana· cltan~le. "TllB\"llB AWAaE, as we're aware. that a resCQI ol the seala depends upon reachln1 thelr 1-rta.' • be said. '"J.M.r (Canadian offtclala> m~r tactic ll concealment.." addl Mouru. "Official Canada b.U booed to drive out of action, or lnto Jail, tboM <'anadlana who have led tbe 01bt for the ...... You can'" wbytbe lndlvldual Canad.lo mtabt bave eome dlfftculty in arrtvtna at a ...._ ................ . <leel&\U, .... CI> Donations Help Save Harp Seals Letters of protest and donations are the bot· tom line ln Greenpeace Foundation's and tbe Animal Protection Institute of America's (API> fagbt to save the baby harp seals. Greenpeace officials say each 25 cents in donations will save one baby harp seal from be- ing killed. Donations should be sent to Green-peace USA, 240 Fort Mason Bldg. E, San Fran· claco, Calif. 94123. "Seal Pledees," available from APJ will be delivered to Canadian officlala. To date, more tt,an one million persona have put their names on pledp forms. The pledges are available by wrltin1 to tbe Animal Pratection Institute ol America, SIM South Land Park Drive, P .0 . Box 225051 Sacramento, Calif. 95822. In addltloo. API members suggeat letters of protest be sent to President Carter and Canadian Prime M.l.nlster Pierre Trudeau (Office of the Prime Minlater, Ottawa, Canada KlA OA2.) Coplea ~ API material ahould also 10 to frlenda aad bustneu cont.acta lD Cuada and funber proteata to the Minister of Fisheries and Oceana. C&nadlan Department ol Ft.sherlea, MO Sparb a.. OUawa, Canada, Ku. OE6. \ ,. ................... ., ... ,-.......... ·~ .~ ............... ~··~~···"'-·· ..... . _........ ,. , .. ·-·· ,,..... • .,.a> 11He ..,._two MW. n... _.,_.._.ta. akleottM~. ••AND RD nl:Y GOI' too~ ud ,a.or-.we'd-...ro,U....ol~'' .. . . HarT IQfalMd that tM dot WU Ullned to WI ....-a. a.am, wMU woned btb!Ad ... _, ....... <mt ......... etUclr ............ t.o ~ =:·~~~ ....... •'Uillml a:... . .. . :::.r: ... , ........ IT WAI WlllL8 on Okinawa that Olli eanlld tM AIMrteu War Dot llMal that .,.,....... nn •• ~ a.o bfin IDd Harr ln t.M ._ l"'fe .,_UM war. Harr •• tuDODI UM iao men wbo tHteam• tra.-behind •n•m1 llDff wtthout eom· mun~. 'IWr only chance of .. tu.n.a word back t.o alle Ole WU by MDdlna ()kl. A Ill I N .. WU tied to the dot'1 collar and R1rr commaftded <>111 1lmply to ''ll.nd Robert." OM of tM dot'I other bandlen. Oki I.reveled HYeD and a baU mlles tn a Ut· tle men than three hours and deeplte belna •bot ln the DIS and weak from exbauallon complet· ed bl.I mluklo. Otd, who later 1urvtved ao.m, part of bl.a lower Jaw wben 1laahed by a Japanese machete. allo 11w aoUon on Guam, Salpan a'.nd lwoJtma. 8U"I' LIKE TRS OTHO military doll uaed la tbe South Pactflc. be wu ac:beduled to be destroyed at war's eoa because be WU COD· i ldered too danteroua. While Harr rec1.1perated from shrapnel and knlle wounds ln a South Paclftc boepltal. bl.a friend. a Marine Corps chapl&ln, interceded on the doe'• behaU. Knowina bow close the pair were, the chaplain arran1ed pa11a1e home for HAIT and Old on a car1<> ahip. Once back oo the West Coast, Harr shipped Old lo hla parents in New Jersey. Every weekend Harr would take the muu led dog for walu through New York's Chinatown lo get hlm used to being around Oriental people. "Froth would just come out of his mouth," recalled Harr, adding It took nine months to demllitarlze the dol· HAaa SAYS OKI understood German. • Japanese and En,U..b and 200 worda of com· mand. "It wu Ju.st like taJkina Lo • person, almost," he said. From then on Old went eveT)'Wbere with Harr: he even Uved with Harr in bl.a donnltorv at Baylor University. Harr wu Hvtni in Sunset Beach lo 1t58 when he came home one night and dilcovered Oki was sick. He took the 16-yea.r-old dog to NewPOrt Harbor Animal Hospital and said he'd caµ in the morning. That night the dol died of cancer. On Feb. 2S 1958 the third most decorated dog ln World War Ii' was given a full military fune ral. The ceremony was shown on the television news, and Harr has a pile or old newspaper clippings reporting the event. Since t hen Ha rr has returned every Memorial Day to the cemetery to pay his respects to his friend who saved hls life during lhe war But Harr Is not the only one who visits lhe grave. He says he usually meets other Marines there who remember Oki. °"" ...... ,.... .. flatrtdl O'.,_.. "WE ALWAYS TALK ABOUT the old daya.," he saJd. "They don't forget him. There's sentiment, you know. A lot of sentiment . . . It stays" AT OKl'S GRAVE Or. Gary Burge Vision Is Clouded DEAR /\NN LANDERS· May I respond to the letter from the bisexual woman whose husband left her? J have had some first-hand experience In this area Every bisexual woman I've known or heard of 1s interested in a male lover only as a cover for her lesbian relationship. Or, a man comes in handy if she wants to have a child. I dated a bisexual woman who told me she ripped off he r worklng-claaa husband for $20,000 1n four years. She stayed with him, she admitted, so he would put her through colleae. She also told me I shouldn't be jealous of other men because if she weren't dating me. she would be looklng for a woman lover, not a man. Ann, If you will cbec:k the "personals" column of the papen that cater to homosexuals, you'll find that 99 percent of the bisexual f e males a re e ither brain-damaged or masocbista. -LUCKY ESCAPEE IN CEDAR FALLS, IOWA DEAR C.F.: Obvloualy, you are ba1la1 your s tatement on tbe material yoa read In "bomoeellUl papen." Tbll doea aot retied the viewpoint or lUeatyle of all blsuual1. "Nlaety·alne percent brala·dama1ed or maaocllllts"?! ! ! I hardly think so. Pertaaps your personal experience ls clouding your vision. DEAR ANN LANDERS: A month ago I came home late, In a dnmken stupor, and beat up on my wife. She took our two.year-old daughter and went up to stay with her folks, who live tn northern Minnesou. Aaa La•de1s I have quit drinking and am recelvlne counseling from a m1nlater. Al.lo, I have belled my wife to come back ao we can rebuild our lives. She refuses bee•~ her pareota are encourqing her to atay aw~ from me for alx months to teach me a leuon. I love my wife and want to work et better communication between us. Her healtaocy. combined with her parents' Influence, i1 something I cannot understand. Can you help? -HEAltTBROKEN BUT HOPEFUL IN FAYE"ITEVILLE, N.C. DEAit H. BUT H.: Probably not. Ftnt, I don't kmw what yoe meu by "beat ... " OW you slap ber aroad a UUle, or dkt y .. erKk ber Jaw and rearraa1e Iller brld1ework! SeeoDd: Wu W. &Jae flnt time -or laave you puacbecl ber oat on other Ottulou! Tblnl: It would befp IO ll.Dow wttetber yoa are a llabltllal boozer -or were J::. celebnU.1 somdMll1 tbat llllCbtT la Lbe u ee of auwen to tJlese qaestloaa, mJ Mhtee la stlek wt&l9 die ••••r aad U JGa lane to aweat It • .._. for ab months. It mtiht help yoa appreciate Iler more wbeD lbe doea come bome. Oki wu mont Uke a brother than a dot to him, Harr 1ald. "ff• w•1 IOmebocly you could &alk WKb aDd trutt; eomebod1 wbo bad vei). ............ •bout Jcmn1 llOllMCIM ...... that ii • ..-a tribute .. a ma could atve Lo anottter man.'' Harr pauted, addJn1. "Anyway. we were v•ry tloM, '' ijarr Jald Ulat when bla wife told him a re- porter wanted to do • story about Okl, he Initial· \)' l•lt Wr. clecllnln1. "Let Old rest ln peace." he reaaooed. But cl)m be chanaed hll mind. ''I think to a 1reat extent the yoUn&sters of today should have a knowledee of the men who fou1ht in World War II -and Vietnam and Korea -but alao about the UWe fellas that helped. like anlmaia." When uked what the Latin aaytn. on Oki 's tombetone meana -"Semper Fidelia · -Harr admitted that be never knew. He broqht out a diciloa.ary and k>oked up the phrase. Reading the definiUon. Harr ex· pla!Dedlbatll means" always faithful." "'n\at's the motto of the Marine Corps," be read . adding, •'I never knew lbat.'' Harr smiled, "always faithful. Thal wu Oki; that's great." ( Boroseope FaIDA Y, MOCll 14 By SYDNEY Ollila ) ARJES <Mar. 21-Apr. 19>: You have more influence over eventa and people than ml&ht be Imagined. Know lt. defend principles, protect your lnteresta. Friendship is something more - and you wW learn all about it. TAURUS (A pr. 20·May 20>: S tress originality, independence, arUculaUq needa - room can be made for you at more elevated level. Know It, be confident and direct -deal wilh Leo. Aquarius individuals. Empbuia on career, occupation. GEMINI <Mar 21-June 20): Good Moon as p ec t coinc des with lon1 ·t e rm arrangeme nt s . a r eater sec ur i ty , communication from afar which could lead to an educational or publishing projed. Aquarius, Cancer, Leo persons fleure prominently. CANCEK \June 21 -July 22>: Be a comparison shopper -genuine baraaln Is available. but you must bob-and-weave in face of inflation Gemini. Sagittarius Individuals play significant roles Accent on lnvestment-6 . money as it affe{'t.s close associates. bwuness partner, mate LEO <July 23·Aug 221" Be av.are of legal 1mphcations, contracts. rights and pennlSSt'>n!> Aquanus, Scorpio persons figure 1n s~nano M a 1nta1n lo w pro fil e. avoid direct confrontation. permit those close to you to express views Plan ahead, check ~rvatJons VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22>: Open dialolue wllh co-workers. dependents. Be analytical - see places and people as they actually exist . Reject auperftdal explanatioos. Find reaaoos. piece ~r clues, hints and you will come up wtlh complete story. LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct 221 : Luxury Items. excitement of speculation, roman~. creat.Jve endeavors dominate lively &eenano. Member of opposite St>x does care and will show 1t Tauru' Scorpio pe rsons figure promine nt!) 8 1.· receptive to fresh concepts. chan~es SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov 21 > Spotlight on basic LSs ues. security, land values and ability to define terms. Be willing to revise, review and to tear down ror ultimate purpose of rebwldln1 oo a more aoUd structure. Aquarius. Puces, Vireo persons play dominant roles. SAGnTAarus <Nov. 22·Dec. 2u : Study Scorpio message for valid hint. Get off sidelines and into 1ame. Accent on reaponaiblllty. preaaure and • senu.lne c~ to increase earniq potential. Older relative could aid cause ll you 8"' flexible. CAPalCO&N (Dec. 22.Jan. 19): Get rtd of au-perfluous material. By '° ~. you lower expemes and lncftue tinandAl cipportunlUes. Emphaala on loc:atlna lost article., mattna neceuary paymenta and coUectiq dlvtdeods from put etrortl, investments. AQVAa1vs <.Ian. 20·Feb. 18>: Streaa independence, ortstnalit)', take lnWaUve, lead rather than follow, make new st.arta ln new directions. Another Aquartan and a Leo fi1ure In scenario. PISCES <Feb. 19·Mar. 20>: Oet second emotional wind : regain sense of direction. Answers are found by looting beblnd s~ne. Clandestine meeting la on a1enda. RUFml'S ..... '7141 536·4562 Pony Rldn T rMt your youngsters to a real oony ride 1n '"-Huntington Cente< mall. Fri. thru Sun . noon to & pm 135• doNlionl Beach BIYd and 408 F'#'/ Elect Incumbent Donn Hall H1Gor1rtr111 W.atclff Plaza 11th & lrvtne, NelfPO't ..... 142.otn Faahlon l ... ftd Newpott ..... MCM030 G4ve yow.....,.. a Ifft, sett yow lld ~ fa•t tn tile S ltn9 clautfled ads of th• Dalty Pilot. DONN HALL FOR COSTA MESA : ' . . . .. CITY COUN1a: Vote April 8, 1980 : •••11 Ch 00'4~ H ALL C •tn0••1" (..,......, .. ._.., Cwr c,, .... ,....,, t600~C-.-..CA / Tuo <aftc:n • ; .,,..4: fkWC\.1. UU( :K1km." and bl.am(" hch::nior on other r.u.111r. Rut hl.ila,ior l' yuu. \bu nm- '"" it and \'ou c tn chan~t: it' ln~t'~ "ti,· we lnH'ntt.:d tht.· Hrmult &•ht11 ·It1r 0Jt1nf.!.w. Ir\ fY.!n of a do u \our..t:IJ pro· Etram that help' monimr ~uur nl-g;tt1\c an<l pc>--it1\t.' ht.•hJ\ ior. l h tink"f chr Hr"11<ll llrit.11 ft•r < Jxmi:rr mNI l'nlJ!rtllll, ~a d1ni. cw mlflt'\ •~T llw W pll.t'> t I tu ;and ~--tuRNndl!Hlttt1"1rc.llll"1lf". ~~1114..,.LIJ 1W •JOO.~..-.pun hdl.b.<.AY266.~. • .• : !::~ Ft It mi 1n: • .,.-1rm.:116un 11h:a...· '-afl MI \"I fll · · • ·. ·. Orange County's only Major Tour Event Who c.in forget t~ f.,..,, 'l-w .1y sodden dt•.uh pl.1-.nlf 1n LPC <\ tw. l()f\ ol( l..t-.1 Vt'<ll ' \\I I flh''I , "'' '1111< I I II " "h' ll j11\1 n I '"'' I ·•PflJ'"'' ,,, pl.11 ,. l1\ tJ1·1t·,111ni.: "-'"'' I" Pt'/. IJn <..1t·ph1 n .• ,, I >111111.1 < ,,,,., , "'IOUn)( Jnd C h 11..1 1 111,.:w "' The Women's Kemper Open $150,000 Much 24-30 You don't hJ~ IU cJm1e J Wt'.11d"1.m11· It , see lhe Dtstdnl Dnvt-s ol th1.• l P<...A pm .. when lhey fry lo connect for .1 '>h.m· ol • one of the b1~ puf'ieS on the Tour Ma. Ver* Country CJub Tidcets .iv.i1l.ible JI the Toumdment ()1. (ice, partic1paring Chambers of Com- men:eclnd pro ~~-For woup d1o;coun1'> and package rJle<. wnte or c.ill WonleW1 ~Open 15.25 Mesa V1.,rd4.• Dnw [.1.,1 Suite 108 [··=g~ (~la Me<.<!. (.A 92fJ2(, :: KEW'2'R 540 -I 70A ··: ~ l[J•CK ANDUSON J REVEALS In the DAILY PILOT UPHOLSTllY ... ,.w .. ..... IWMlrtlerlt..&. c-. ..... - raincheck! perm special extended! THE ANATOMY OF THE SPORT B~-(P\NTE~~m~ 5moofh Inside finish pte\'enfl chafing. No lmrotiOn ro delloole skin. , 32-36 A ......... I •• 12.60 32·38.BIC .......... 12.50 32-38 0 ............ 13.~ Reg. 550.00 5Pec101 540 OTHER PERMS ~00 ~~ . 532 528 <;ompfete wtth Cut. ~&.~ .&t Moster Sfyitst l«Or ttfR>RESSEIS HUNTINGTON BEACH-10118 Adami Ave. -982·2444 NEWPORT BUCH -1120 l•n Miquel Ad. -144-1040 IRVINE -5315 Unlveralty Drive -582-3133 • I l ' I t l ' l .. .. .. ' ., :· " " , • :: . Greenpeace expedition leader, Dr. Patrick Moore, was arrested while trying to save a baby harp seal during last year's hunt. e ,-• ,.. • , • • • • • v • .. " • • ._,.,,.. • • .. • • • • er~.-• ....,.. • • ..... • ~ • • • ... " • • • .....-.......,....., ... • ..- • J . ' CA.HADIAN RV•ANI IOttety ~­tattve1 and veterinarla_.1 aecompany the hunter. to make au.re the kills are qwcll and eth· clent. ~·1 ... lt sound a~lu&eb' awful.·· lbe Hld of tbe bakaplk blud1eon.1nl met.bod. "But there i1 no way an animal can be killed that doeen't 1eem lnhwnan," J&ld Ma. Garneau. R91P""d•n1 to protests, the Canadian gov- emment experimented with other death tecb- nlquee 1.MJUdina electrocution, poabotl and other "more meebanlcal" waya,abeuld. ••Notbini was d.bcovered to be u effldent as th1t method," abe noted. "It looks a great deal wonethanltla. '' Film crews and report.en are problblted by Canadian law from wttne~ or pbOt.op'aphing the bunt. Those that venture loo close are subject lo arrest. Nine peraom. tncludlnl Callfornla-based reporter John Matthew Herron, were arreated last season, abe said. A1 for the rums that have been taken or the bunt, Ml. Garneau said they "are dated" and "may have been set up." She claimed lrQUps like Greenpeace and API abow the ausped foot.ace "whenever they want to ra1le emotlom and money." However, the work of tbe ecologists bu bad an Impact since the bunt came under scrutiny In 1976. The U.S. Senate and House of Represen- tatives have passed a joint resolution condemn- ing the hunt. The Government of Italy baa banned Im· portaUon of harp seal pelts. 1'he Frankfurt Fur Auction and French labor unions have refused to handle harp seal pelts. Public demand for harp seal goods, perhaps the most Import.ant aspect. bas decreased as have tbe prtce of the pelts, Greenpeace officials claim. But the clubblni and the cootroveny will continue, wt&b the Canadians sayina It's a humane bualnea; the ecolog1ats aaylq It's an abomination that wW lead to the eventual ex- tlncUoa ot defenaeleu baby animals MUST have ow~ an AQUAMARINE Guinevere's birthday was in March ... so legend has it. Her births1one, the light and lovely aquamarine. Perhaps it's your birthstone, too. • We offer a reasonably priced selection of aquamannes and aquamarine jewelry that w'oold light up even Guinevere·., blue eyes. Of <Oursc, you don't have to have a March birthday to own an aquam arine, or to give one as a gift. A f'MOITl()lt Of ™1)1 l ()l O\ltl, 60 Y(AM Jf:W~LS by JOSf:Pll PVBUC NOTICE PIC1'1TtOUI eln!NH• ~ ITATUll8NT PIC"OTIOUt 9Ul4•811 TM fel!owlne .,.,_ It Mint """° lllMM ITATtlMllNT l!fft •: T ............. _._,.,.HI Wl!$T COAST MA•ICllTINO & llutUlet&a. MAllUFACTUAIHO, 117 17tll llrwt, 14( v COtJltl•• .• ,. 0-. ltlw. NewpOrt llNc:ll, C.lllOnll• Clr<I•, F-•· V•ll•Y. C•lllOrlll Fre .. Norme11 Koelll. 111 2111'1 '29D1 Str .. 1, N•wPMt e .. c11, Celllor11t• C•tl'IPVl•rlt9d Trelllc $tr¥1<H n..J llC. c. .. IQt ow-.1 .... Clrclt, Tiii• bulilMU It '°"""'!ltd llY .n Ill· F-lft V.,le-t, c;.llfwlll• t1I01 Ol•IM I. Tltlt .,_.It~ 111' e <«· Fr91111 H. K0.-1 elloll. Tllll Ste~ ••• 1119d wllll ,,_. C.T.S.tllC. Covnty Cieri• of or..,.. C.U..ty on ....., ~ l't!M'verv It, 1•. ~ F1HS1t Tiii• ...__ •• 11'90 wltll lhe fl'ubtl...., Or..,.. C:O.tl O•lly fl'llol, ty Oen of Or....-C.0..111y .., l'tb JI, M. MM.•. t>, '"° 11S-C F_,..ry",,.._ ,.,,... fl'tlbl..,_, ar...., C-•I Delly Piiot, PUBLIC NOTICE FeC> ll. JI. -•.I). l1IO tl ... 1------------:: NOTICE OF DEATH OF LEAFY A. FINCH AND F PETITION TO AD· P\IBUC NOTICE Picnnou11u11NH$ MINISTER ESTATE .. 0 . MAN ITATHUINT A 103555 Tiit IOI_.,.. ,_._, I• ,,,,_ b<nl • • ....... T o a I I he I r s , "'TO'TAl. ltY T•H• HH•v•on . be neficiaries, cre ditors ''°'' 5-ro• "'"•""'· Fou111e111 nd contingent creclltors of Velley,c.l~t21m . 1..-ine 8tN>f1c11n. 100t1 Sper Le at y A . F I n c h an d ••• "'••""'· ,011111.111 V•llo .persons who may be c.111-iemoa therwise interested in thf' ~1!~.~""' 11 <Ollduc:lt<1 t1, •11 '" wil l and/or estate: E,,...,,. a.... • ..,., A pet1t1on has been filed T"" , .. ._, .... "'"' •11" 1ne by Security Pae1f1c Na· 111• Cl•0 of 0••1199 Cou•u, °" tional Bank and George Feb<V¥~" 1• F1n111 Battles Finch 1n t he Pu1111v.ci Or-,.,.,1 O••'• P1101 Superior Court of Orange "1~!!-Mer.•.u·~*-__ 11,.County reouesllng t hat, Security Pac1f1c Natlonat Bank and George Battles PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS•UMIHH Finch be appointed as NAMC nATu1111T personal representative to Ht 1000•1"9 per"°"'••• do•n admin1">ter the estate of o...w~-.._~. cuwFoAo " 1au Leafy A'. Finch of Laguna ""•<•n""' e1...,. !wlw Ms. 1r••111 Beach, California (under !1jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii::===~c.."'.:',;;;ni~,UP•isu 1.,c the Independen t Ad · • C•11 1orn•e corpo••tion, llH m1n1strat1 on_ of .Estates FLUOR'S A NICE PIACE TO TEST YOUR SKILLS. Our friendly faci lity in easy-to· reach Irvine offe rs you ju s t the right combination o f com fort and c hallenge. Our current ope nings fo r s k illed clerical person nel in· elude these spots: e SECRETARIES ""••A"'''" 91.11 . w•I• lAl, .,., .... A ct I . The petition is set lor Cahlo-no•'111S hearing in Dept. No. 3 at '"" "'"'" Moi .. u vian, uss 700 Civic Center Drive ~~.:;!..~w~'s""' · 5-1,._ lAs, 1'•1"'· west, In the City of Santa ""' -.~ •• <ondWled D• en •n Ana. California on March j••·0u•1 25, 1980 at 10 00 a.m. ::;!':Z.;:! rnc IF YOU OBJECT to the P..-,. granting of the petition, '"" ·~-1 .... '''"' •0111 1 you shoold either appear ~:":~~.: 0r....-eou"'" 0 at the ~aring and state F1 you r ob1ect1ons or fllP Pu1111.,,.., 0r.,. eoe .. 0.11., P11o1 written objections with the F" t•.a.-•. u.1-'" court Defore the hearing. PUBUC NOTICE Your •ppearance may be in p(!rson or by yoor at-1'-------------itorney. J• '"°'m" IF Y OU ARE A u:'.~~~. CREDITOR or a con- --tlnc;ient creditor of the de-.. ~~~~:'T ~~ L"(f:' cea.sec:t, you must file your Superwalk Is Coining Up We seek sharp individuals with a minimum of 3 years' experience and the ablllty to type 50 wpm and take s h orthand a t 80 worn. •STENOS Ideal positions fo r Individuals with 0·3 years' experience and e xcellent stenographic s kills. ssoc1AT1<* e1 "'"' _ .. 1 cl•1m with the court or T,,.~..,.---•o-. present It to the personal '""' ,...,,._DK"'-"· ,.,.. representative apPolnted '"''~11~1.;...:~ '1::,:= !': by the court within four ""'u "' u"' ..,,d ·"·"'' J u 111 months from the date ol --·••.>oo..c r-u first issuance or fetters as 11.:~·o.-":..-.C..:..~w• provided In Section 700 of u •toto-.o. Will nu AT PUeu the Probate Code of AUC TION TO HIGHEST 8r00EA California. The lime for Sunday. March 23, will be a "super" day in Orange County. The March of Dimes Birth Defects Founda- tion is sponsoring its 10th annual Superwalk to raise funds for its figbl against birth defects. The activities again will be centered al the Harbor Municipal Court, Jamboree and Bircb in Newport Beach. beginning at 7 a.m. This year there are two new attractions to the walk, including a 10.ltilometer run with Jim Fixx as honorary chairman. The run will begin at 7 e.m .. starting at the Harbour Court. Running with Fixx will be Pete and Sue Petersen of Newport Beech, who have complel· ed 47 marathons each, and Patti Wilson or La Palma, recently na med one of the "Top Five Women Athletes of the World." Tbe other new attraction is the Teamwallt portion of the Superwalk with Charles Stevena, manager of facility and maintenance for Rockwell International, as chairman. Civic, business and labor groups are being invited to walk together. So far, Stevena has recruited Wei1ht Watchers, Boys Clubs of Orange 'County, Pooderoaa Homes, ResldenUa• Escrow Corp .• Heritage Bank and Hunt-Wesson Fooda. amongothen. The Executive Walk again will be chaired by Supervisor Thomas F. Riley. The one·mlle course, called the Golden Mile, will be followed by a grand finale brunch at the Chantedalr. •EMPLOYEE RECORDS CLERK Sho uld ha ve 5 years' clerica l e x- pe rien ce inc lu d ing processing pe rsonnel records and documents. •TYPISTS Spe e d and accuracy are w hat coun t h e re. 50 wpm minimum Wil l a ls o be invo lved with fil ing . mail distribution and telephone c ontact. ~Oii CASH 11»1'-•I .............. ' 1·1 ' II , .... .,,........,. o1 uw u ... .., SU•tt• •• 1 1ng c. aims w1 not ex- !>out" ,,_ ... 1.-aince to ,,.. O•-pr re prior to tour months _,, '*' '-'-· Cilt ot S..111 from the date Of the hear· :;: .!'!'~~ ~=!, !::.,''::, ~ ing noticed above , ,1 .. -w.<1 °""' °' ,,.,., ,,, ,,,. YOU MAY EX AM INE .,,_,,, .,,_e.1 "' ._, c.-1, • the life kept by the court ~1•" *K'*':::.ietT 1 II you are interesled in the PAll CEl 1 Lot .. ,.. rreci No .,., estate you may Ille a re· .,,1,,.Coho1•nr,.. c-•·0•0<-Quest with thP court to re statt Of c..t·-•· ~ r»• m•o , .. ce1ve special notice of the orO.O "' -J:U, ~· 1 lo II In inventory Of estate aS5elS '':::-:;..°':=-;::..,~":~"~',... d of the pet1t1on, ac °""'" c o u n t s a n d r e P o r t < £•0111 .. 1 o11 "'1 '""" "''"''•1" described in Section 120< .,,~7;•!;:·~;:::~a~~~~'.i.:~~';': of the California Probate .,., •• ,_ 11-.1 me.~ w•tll•" or"" Code d•r , •• d ••"o tOQf't",,. •''" thf' PHC»l ... I rtQl!t oil °''"'f'Q ''""""ii •• F d & F d At ptorono --··••"O ,,..,~•o• a arran arran , . e WORD PROCESSING TECHNICIANS Directions Correetions ,1o""Q"'_'_'"OIM"'""'''o torneys at Law, Suite 501, w•o ••nc1 ... .,,..e>1~··...., "''"" 1200 Wilshire Boulevard, ,,... roQf!t lo """°'IOC'.,. O••P<hONll• Los Angel es California dttll •"" ,,...,_ trom I.,,.,• ottwr I~.,, '°° 17 ' fflilO\f Mor~ OH<rtbfiO °'' 0# 9• Puoe \f'WlilO <>~ (o.e\t 041tl1 P11ot -·!~,~,:;~'~'.::.""~~I:: land M•• ll 11 I~ IHJ t)4J l!O Every time I see a little box in a paper or magazine headlined "CORRECTION," I gel a knot in my stomach. I know that somewhere some poor sucker has followed directions to a "T " and ended up with the biggest mess he's ever seen. Sometimes I even try to imagine the human casua lties caus ed by these s crewed-up directions. For example, take this story. CORRECTION "In the diagrams for 'A Fold-Up Desk You Can Bui ld in a Day,' the dimenalons given for the top, the table and the nap piece were unfortunately reversed. "The nap should have been shown 30 inches HIGH and 23"'.? in ches WIDE. The table dimensions sbould have been 22o/• incbes wide and ~ inches deep, and the top wall piece 24 Inches wide and 31 V;i inches high. "The 30-inch piano hinges spect!led to join the folding pieces therefore should be cut to flt. We suggest about 23 to 23V;i inch widths." OH. SVBE, THOSE little three paragraphs get the publl.abers off tbe book, but wbat about poor Larry Buusaw, who married a nice prl, Doria, :l1 years ago and would be married today had it not been for that stupid UtUe desk be built that wu 23'h inches off the floor? Doris: "What do they call this t.bin1?" Larry: "Don't start in, Dorla. Tbe instructions are bad enough to follow. It's called a Fold-Up Dest You Can Build in a Day." Dori.a: "How long have you been ln here? You need a shave. When are you coi.nl to unfold thedesteowecanseewbatltlooklllke?". ~: "It la unfolded. Al. IOOll u I can 1et this ~e to nt, all I have to do la aan4 it. paint It ud it 1 Tead)' to uae." Doris: "By whom? A family ottrona!•• · Larry: ''Look, Dorla. I neecled tut l'dla.$ like Bon••d Reqan needl uotber bUtbdQ. FEAR OF FL YING? ~ Take The first Step To Tab-Off CAU. POil aaoatultl <7l'l ,....36.Jf • .-1. um.. The~e pos itions require mach ine· oriented individ uals w ho have at Nr•IN-~rlbo'd end 10 bOltO PUBLIC NOTlCE \UC" wPHe>ttOC1lf'O 0,. d ·tf cllon•llY 'tflf'CI .,..,,. h,,,..,,,.., •NS \"'-ft\ un end IMllN1fl o-lllY<l"d I ... ••tt•tO• •""'"' ~ .,_, tc ~ill rrtul"M"IPI least 1 year expe rience on Mag "°"~l~SALI! Card Ir. Off ice System 6. H 1gh ,P::p.t;:::··:uc~~~:"°:o--,;,:.,\ 0:T•::~v~~~~~~~v Speed Printe r o r s imilar high 11-1 -· l1w ·~1 lo 0 "" INTHl!Su~•A111'~""cou11TOF .,,, ltOt• ••Ptor• ano ooer1t r-~ " ... speed auto matic typewri te r. (Day 1trov911 -.Urf•o ... --· THIE STATIE OF CALll'O llNIA HI of .... -..nao ... Wd I-• '011 THIE COt.INTY Of' OltANGf a nd night Shift s a vaila ble ) In lht M•lt•• o• lht E•ldlt OI Otomo.<J. ,.,. PAN!>Y PAIH(f •ho -nown e• f I f d d d f PARCEL 7 An , • ...,._1 for '"9'_,' PANSY V PRINCE, Ofo<t•~ I yo u're qua I re a n re a y or a .,,., •Ortt\ owr •II p ... a .. •l•ffl NOT•C E I!> HEllEBY GIVEN IP\al ,'--------------------Fluor assignme nt. please call: !LOii A to "" ln<luwwl of Tr.cl NO lh• ""°"'~ ... 11 ••II ~t Prov~lt I.& b __ ,,. b ~. 111 tlW C•IY Of lnrir•~ Countt ot ,.., lo I,.. ~'' .,,d bO\I b•dO.r, Why don'\ YOU go out in the iut.c en IUJU urn rar19•. Su tt of Cel1torn•• ., ~· \U01•< t lo (0111 rm•f •on o• \did something?'' Becky Replogle, (714) 975·2128. •P •«...-111 -l1s -· •, su~'"" cou., °""" .,,,, 1 .... 111110•, t • •Mhn• .... of '-'tK•ll•NiMI'\ ~P'S o• M•rc" ,_, at 1'"" ouu,, ot Pet•r J YOU GET AN IDEA of bow it 1oes. ", ... Offt<• Of, ... Counh II••:.•·~· of "'····· &llorney ., Law J~t Tyler J ,_. t of uri 't I'd 111. to '--w bow ' 1<1 c~ ., OH<rtbtd In S«hon • A~ El Mon!• c.111 •1n1 Countv OI -· OU c OSI y uae IUftl ""' f rtk .. VIII Of·-<t.Ulfl dKlerallOll LO\ ......... Stel• of Celllo•n•• ell many couples named the Fold-Up Delk You 1 Fl 'UQR co-••. c-1-• •"" ""''k ,,.. "O"' ""'and '"'~e11 01 .. ,d .w C Build . D t th lr di rce suit or .... "°"'rec.-f'ebr,..,y I 1•11 It\ , .. ,.d •I tile 11 .... of c»atlt .,,., ell Ille an 10 8 ay 0 e VO ' ' ' ' • 110.., .._ ,,,. 01 OHt<lel Ae<or~ Of r•Qttl t1t9' -tnt«f'st tlloll IN nt•tt for that matter, the Rice Divine ca11erole rw ·~R ENGINEERS tllL ldOr ... c-o• •••d o.c .. s.a .... •<ouor•d by recina that called for tWO ..... ...t. of flee instead r&Al'I CK PARCEL J· "" U<IU'l,_. •P90'r1•· o~<4110fl of law or ot,,..rwl~ otller r-...,_..... •nt .. .......,1 o,,., lllel -llOl'I Of llw INn O• on eoaollO'I to 111•1 Of Wld -of two cups. CONSTRlJCTORS INC ol '°"'~ • Parc.tl I .11o ..... u .. .., ti lllt lime ot dlHlll, Ill and 10 But ( es-lally wondered what bappeDed to • • .... 1""""1 "C .... tlWll UrtAlll •II,,,. <trt•ln ""'properly,,, ... ,.., In ..--d' ..11 U J 3333 Ml a. I O I e rntrt<l,.....,1 to de<lare11on 01 co..,. IN Coty OI Or-. CounlY of o.-. the couple wbo followe wrec OQI laW Cue ton r Y h . condlllllfll -rntr1<t1011> , !>t•I• 01 ce11tor111•. part1cu1ar1y recently for a rock garden tbat inltruct.cl, I I c• 92730 .Of-..._. •. 1'1•"' -11711 0.1'Crlb9dM lollOW\,t-ll. lo ln '---'-ard 8 b 9 f t" f"' ne, I' Ut 1101 ol Olll<lel RtCOrO> Of Lot Nlllt It) ol 8IO<lt "8" ol Crld-uB W up an area your~ Y Y et An ~l ()pportllflllyEmplor-rAllFIH art11• "°""'•· c.111omt• '°' lflO die•'• ~ulldl•ttlon ol Per~er •nd i~i:n:11:te;a;d~~~··:~~~:~~U:P~·~·~~----------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~urQ01•• ••more P••tl<ularl Sl•P~•"• A~lt~n to Or•n9•. et .crl-"'SectlOft SolArtl<ltVll l "'-"on• 'Mf> recOf'Ot<l In 8oOll ~ • ... "' ...... ol to-'•· ,_.. Paoe 100 ol Ml!ttlleneo<I' 11..:ord• OI Ion• and ru tro<tlon\ re<ord• Lo• A"9f,.. C-y, C.lltonHa · · ·-----------------••llfl!lllll;~ ellrU¥y 1. 1'1• 111 -Ito.I, -• more <~'I' llno'#ll eo: >O H. • ?tM 5'944 $t.u lfO!I 11• of Oltkl.tl Aetorcb ol w•d co""IY Harwood, OrM>99, Celllarnlt, eu Jlt . lllt '"'"' .-.U -ofllt• com H H•-· 0r.,., C..111-•. 1ft Oft -~lwt. II .,..,. ol ,,,. •Ml Pro-1y I\ -If\ .. ,.S IS" condition, H -~ m -rty -.cr1b9d -I• pur-1911 "° le<m11a <l•renc• , ...... •nuW ,...... • ~ o 111 : IJ 811lle rnv ll, lrvlnt hrmsolw .. ~lnlewful ,,.._'I' 1803 Newp0rt Blvd. ' etllornl• of l"t UMecl Sletn on conlorm•llon of Costa MeM TM -•"'9Md Tnm. dllClelm> Mlle len_.<.,.lof•mourtlbk'.llOIMde• y lleblllty ttlr ... ., ~llOH of 00\ll~wllllbld. ,. sl•Ml ~ -.,...,.. contrnon l!ldi or ~ 10 IM In wrltl11t end 11~11oft. 11.,..,, .-_...., w111 IM ~1-•I Ille elortteld oftlc• '-111 .... wt" bt "'"9, but •I"*'' •I eny lime alter !ht llrsl pvlf<•ll-~ or -••IY, e>IP'ftl ., Ill,. lle..of -........ dett OI •flt l)lllY9 1t cool during months White. . . . Woven Leather Slide thoae Spring and Summer led. ,....,..,.... 111 ... poaffllclll • ., Oeltd !fits 2'111 OS.y Of Fe~. ..... 191CM, ..... , .,.. ,.,,...1n1111 ,_ lncl ... I -ef IN -II) MCIH'ecl / CLll'FO•O R. ClEMl!HS Mkl 0... "' Tn.st, wltll lllleretl E9K\110f OI tN Wiii Bone or Cemel • .,.,...,,_, .. ~""Mid ,_..(t ), ol...U.~ --, ff ...,, .,.... 1M tHmt Of PITa• J. N•M ~. ~ ,_------4M~ SHOI>_.-----~ ' . 99 Fl9hloft tiland ... Newport BiiCti : •. ·7~1 • \ d 09.il f/I TNIC, ..... Clle"IN end • ...._, .. ~ ,.._ fl .. T,,_. Md ef .. 1 T,_ Aft, rvtll ~.., ...._ OM ef Trvtt, al..._, Ce.""' If the ....... ,..__.y ffllm•'9cl • ....., ........ w• -...11. fl'vllll,,_ Q>.., OMM D.tll'I' .. II .. TN ...-kNiry .-W Ni4I 0... ol MM 11, IJ, 1,, t• tm.te T<11tl llef'etOf•e Htclltecl •lld de· 1w.re4 te Ille ••• _... • writ..., PVBUC NOTICE lerellelt ef DefNt -o."""411 __ ....,,.....,,.,,.,.,..,.,,,,......,..,.,.,==--lot h ... .-,_ .mt1M .... k • 01 "'c:nfioul i111t•1h Oefe111t e!ld -~ .... lo ltll. TM lift. NAM8 ITAT8M•NT ftnftllM UllMf Wll4 Nollet •• Tiit '°' ........ --11 Clol .. INl6-°''"" ................. ,.. NU•~· etl'dN 1n .. CIOllMY WM<• '"' ... 1 "" eRAHO "'"oovcn , *' ~ ~II......_ -•Cr., ........., Vel...,. CM!fwilla o.•· ....._.,,.. ,. ,. TOPA TMllttfl'T AMO _,..,MMll W. ,......,_, ._ lm!MN LOAHAllOCIATION ~ .. l'owtalftVlllWl,CAttWtll•"* ...... T,,..., 9¥1 Thlt MiNM 11t..-.cltf..,•111- CM I , I........,.._ dlttld!Ull. """""' 1ft fl9<1 ~ w. AfMN ........ ~.1¥11. Tiii• .......... -n.-""" .. lfwnYHllltC ~1, C1«11 ef Or.,..._ Cel!Mf M (eljf,.,, Mertll 11, ~ ,..., (tW...... .. ..... .......... Or .. CMtl Oelff pt ........ 00....-Qe.e.....,. ""'· Me~'· u, •. 1• 124'-tO "'"· , .... 'II·,.,, .. IM ~,.. J ; Eateriea Cet Top Ratinga • ...,.EE oa roua va.ua AGO ... u.s •' l Ht~ ... he •ii.bed. "It'• a lilD ol UM tlaMI. ol thanlina aoclety, t.b1t it's ,.u1Ac Ill.,., to ftad anythlna oet~ hl1h 1a ~ ud ..,.._ food. "We hope It'• temporary and I.bat the wave o1 new youn1 cb ra wlU brlo1 back •t1U1b but ,-,_i reaaona.bl)' priced culalno to Ftance," heaaid. £OSI u•Gft i S Tbe blatory·malllq father and aoo are JOMpb Rostang, ~. and Michel ROltanl, 11. Thas fossil fragment from dinosaur leg almost dwarfs Liz Moses. "It'• the fint time ln our ao years that we bave who was at natlonal monument in Ut.ab to tape episode of "3·2·1 ............... ~·"'· .. J OBITUARIES /NEWS f'~I ,.,....,. ••Miieir I Snickerers Might Choke 81 ftl011A8 D. EUU For IDODtba, Gov. Jerry Brown bu been a laulhlu 1Wck iD California. Hit peripatetic pre. 1ldiaUal campalp and bit almott total abeeace from the ltate for four mooU. have broupt hlm va1t ridicule.· Tbe thnwt of all the talk la that Brown ls no Jonpr a poUtJ.eal force to be reckoned with, even lD b.la bome ltate. rr8 ftl1E THAT B&OWN LOOll8 like a COD· •latent loMr ln any box score ot b1a im and Ul80 poUUcal efforts: -A dlamal third ln every prilll.U)' and caucus raee be'1 entered. -Leslll&Uve overrides ot more 1ubematorial vetoes in el&ht months than in all the preced.1.n1 20 years. 80tml£JlN CAUFOBNIA FOCUS -Lt. Gov. Mike Curb's state Supreme Court victory, with eveo Brown's appointee• a1reein1 tbal the lieute- W.rle8W Sen . John Garamendi, D-Walnut Grove, says he will propose a bill making state e mployme nt agencies respon s ible for ge tting jobs for: welfare r ecipients who can work. awarded stus to same famnr, in dlfferent Contact" science series for Children's Television Workshop. res~~ants In ~e same ye1r,' said ooe of ~-----~~--~~~-~~~~~~~~~---~~~~­ Michelin's traditionally anonymoua lupeeton. nant 90Vernor bu full powen wben Brown la away. -Almost total public dlarecard for hla odd· even euollne ratluling plan, despite Brown'• re· peat.eel pleu and bJa coot.enUon that ratJonJ.na la nee.....,,.. GOP Cash . Supports Initiative 11IE FATHEa'S "LA BONNE AUBE&GB" ln lAnUbes on the Riviera won the coveted three-star ting, deslgnatine ''the best cuislne In France, :*ortby of a special Journey." Michel's Parts restaurant, caUed s1mply "~tana." earned two- atar status for cuisine "worthy ol a detour." "In tact, we must be the first six-star family in France, because my wife's parent. have a star at their Pie Pierre restaurant in Grenoble, "said Michel. The family may win more stars ln future guides. Michel's younger brother is training at Archeslrate, another Paris three-star house. "My sons are the fifth generation of chefs ln the family," Rostang senior said proudly. THE PROMOTION OF "LA BONNE Auberge" brought to 20 the number of three-star restaurants Ln France. The Implacable inspectors left au tbe previous top ratings intact, and raised eight restaurants to two-star level. Witb Its third star, ''La Bonne Auberge" joins $UCh temples of French cuisine as the Tour d' Argent and Lasserre in Paris. Troisgros in Roanne. and Paul Bocuse at Lyon and Michel Guerard's Les Pres d'Eugen1e, founders of the •·nouvelle cu1si ne." Michel Rostang's two-star restaurant ranks now with the traditwnal Lucas-Carton in Paris, La Camelia al Bougival and Barrier at Tours. "I'm very happy for us. for Anti bes and for the Riviera and for my ~on," the elder Rostang ir;aid. THE FAMOUS FARE AT ''La Bonne Auberge" is not inexpensive. "You can dine correctly for 250 to 300 francs (about $60 to $75) each, but we have sel~ted menus startmg rrom 165 francs <about $42)," the elder Rostang said. A meal at bis aoo 's place nms 120 to 160 francs CSSO to MO> per person. .Joeepb and Michel ran a two-star restaurant near Grenoble in central France before they took over a bankruP.tinn at Anti bes six years a~o. "WE HAD TO WORK BACK UP from one star." Rostang said. "I was hoping for the third this year. but you never know with Michelin." ..,----- Death Notit"e• Death Notl~n CONKLING Mew lonwerdlngdlrtK'ton. ~SSS. NETTIE MAY CONKllNG. Co"• ltAL.MllACM Mna. peswcl away ~rth 10. 1'19Q ICE NNETH M KALMBACH, of Sh« " >Urvlved by lier ""' Aoberl. of Newpor1 e..c11. pesMld away M41r<fl Cosia Mn• SIU•" Beu•• Jonu. II. 19'0 H• l\ survived bv his parfflli. P..Um Ooerl. Ellen Mull•no o l Her~n •nd Berber• Kalmbllcll of tjifllenon, Mluourl, Gl.Oyt RIQOon or Newpor1 6"•<11. his two!Mr Kun of llfden. tlllno<•. !.ervlC~ •Ill b• held Irvine. •hter laure11 1Clns•1 o f ~ P:rldaY. March 1• at lPM at Pac Ille Newport Bell<h. Services wlll be lwld Vt•w Chapel, Newporl Beac h Frlde1. March 14 al 3PM et St l<flerment Pecltlc View Memorl•I Andrews Presbyterla11 Church. Perk. Pa c Ille View Mortuary Newport Beach. In llt!U of flower\, dlreCIOl'S family ~" CMlrlbullonl to HfM9 P"ANTSl!N Memorlel Hospital. Paclllc View llEV. MELVIN K FllANTSEN, Monuarydlrec:ton. ,..O,~. LUlheran minister fOf' the PHl TEMPI< INS ~ yea", pnllKI •wa1 March ti,'"°· SYLVIA 8 . TEMPKINS, rul.,..,t H• wH • o raduate of Ill• Lutt..r or Fountal" V•lley, passed •••Y Seminary In SI Paul, Ml,.nnota, March 11, '"°· Siie Is M.!nrlWd by her 119Sl or o1 J ~ lfl Mon!AIM fro"' husband Lynn Temptilns, dauohter ftS7 IO , ... , ---IOI' 12 ..... rs 1 .. Evie Sautus, -"°" tMncNI -J North o.i.ot.. He Is wnrl...S by hts or-hi-Gra,,..kle l«Ykas wlll wll• lhU.r, ..,, ,. ... KHmey L .... Mid Thur.sey .. 12 ,._, .. Hartior ,., ...... "· HSIOr of ,,,. Prine• or L••fl•.Mouftl Oii ... -..-i.t Par11. Peace L.ulMrW> Oawch of CMta Mesa, S.nrlcn ....., the dll"KUoft of HM!!W ...., ~ Joel\. Fw.ral Mnrlcfl La*"·#lolall Ollw _,_.,. ~55.M. irllf .,. ... Id S.hwday at IM 1 1011 lull••••ft Clwrch '" MIMI. NOrlh ..... y 0•11.ola. lntermenl Wiii be al Illa FllANI( II. PE'IRY, of LqlH\e te"'llY P4ot 111 sto..11111 Cemetery, 8Hch, --_., ~" 12, l!llO. ~lnol, Nortfl D•llot•. Harbor Tnist"on .. BoenlolOlrectonolU. C:,.W,..""°""' Ollw Meftuwv Of Co&ta Sovtllt.oHlMedic.al~.--ef .P....---------IN L..-8Nct> R°'6rf. 5'1nlwd by .---------.... hlS wife Olivia ,..,.,.,,~ 8eacll, daUOfllen~ $-leof trvi-anct Jenls HMder ol Sol.,.. Beacll, efld 1 gralld<lllldren. ~. P9ny wlll lie In slat• al McCormick Monuary In Laguna Beach lllls•Wfllnl! and Friday, Wllfl Or•vttkle Mnrlctt lo De Nld Saturday, March IS at I 30 AM al TN Holy S.pul(lwr Cemetery In Or•noe. Mau ol Chrl•llan Burl•I will be held Saturday •t 12 Noon at St. Catherine ol $1ena C-ch, L.aour>a Beach with lltv. Myles Faughnen, iMStor, offlclatl1>11. In lleu of 11..-n, memorial donallOM IAln.a&GIROM NBALHOMI 646-2424 Costa Mesa 673-9450 PIHCI llOJHHS nil llOADWAY MOWTUAaY 110 Broadway Costa M8M 642-9150 s.MrTH & TVJHIU. MOll'TUAIY WISTCL.lff CHAPll. Mortuary • Cre"9llons 427 E. 17th St Costa Mesa ~88 ... CIDOTMBS ~'MORTVA&Y 627 Ma1n St tt.lnt~ach ,..,...,,., t CO&.OMAL PUHMAL NOMI 7801 Bolsa Ave. w.tmlnater 893-3525 PAc:.te YllW ....,llALPAU c.m.tery Mottuary Chapf_I ' 3500 Peciflo ~ Drtv. Newport Beach 844-2700 N&COIMICI MOITUAlbll Laguna Bt90h *'9415 ~It Sen "':-~rf1trano MtMa9UWM-NT. ouYI ~·O.rN*Y ,=:Jve .. eoetaMela ~ . )m•1 be ,,.... to IN Auxlllery of - South Coesl Medic•• canter, South I Leguna,c.tlt. Deatlu I Elsewhere 0 RLEANS, Mass . CAP) -GladyaTaber.80, author, magazine columnist and chronicler of New England country living, died Tuesday. She wrote more than 50 books and was a columnist for Ladies Home Journal morethan20yean. SOWETO, South Africa (AP)-UlllaaN10)'i,68, known u the mother of South Africa's black rt1hu movement, died I Wednesday. PALM SPRINGS - llr1. lleletl H..a Walker We1er1taeaaer, 80, the widow of John Philip Weyerbae'uler J~.1 who wu cble( uecuuve of WeyertuieuMr Co. from, 1133 until Ida deatb ln1 llM. dMcl ..'.l\IMday 1D •' bo1p1taf aftir ., extended m 11 •• Legal Entanglements Cloud Orphans' Lives ANSONIA, Conn. CAP> -Since William and Lydia Hartman were ldlled in a truck crash in Florida. their five children have Uved with three adults in a two-bedroom apart. ment, their new lives caught in a tangled web of legal and financial problems. The children, ranging lo age from 3 to 12, have been living with their grandmother. Olga Gonzalez, her second hus b a nd and youngest daughter since a week after the fiery crash Dec. 216. THE CHILDR EN HAVE NO place to play. except in the apart· ment. and the landlord is not happy, says Mrs. Gonzalez's son, Frank Padrone, who lost two brothers and his father in the Cuban Rt!volution. "My mother doesn't care if she buys or rents a house." he said. "She Just wants to get out of here." However. a probate judge r~ntly stopped Mrs. Gonzalez from using $15,000 in donat1ons as a downpay- ment on a house for the orphans, in part because she 1s not their legal guard.tan. THE CHILDREN ARE Donna, 3, Edward. S, J ennifer, 6, William, 7, an d Anna Cabreara, 12, Mrs . Hartman's child from a previous marnage. The llartmans died while traveling to their home in Leisure City, Fla . south"est of M1am1 /\ truck they were riding in caught fire after col· hding witb a van Almost from the beginning, there have been money troubles. ""E:amlly me mbers Clew to Florida after the accident. but could not af· ford the fare back to Conneeticul for the children. Word spread that the orphans were stranded. and their trip was paid ror by a Mlami company, Scaffolds ol Florida tnc. SOME $33, ... IN donations bas been placed in a bank accowit set up and administered for the chlldren by the Ansonia Police Department. Chief Paul E Schumacher Is In charge of the account until a trust fund can be establlahed Some of the money bu been used for groceries and other bills But most of the children's 5upport l.s com· Ing from the family Pa drone s aid bis s tepfather . a machinist. makes $254 a week. "On that he has to feed a family or e1ght and pay all the bills " MEANWHILE, PROBATE Court Judge Cllfford Hoyle has said that before Mrs. Gonzalez can use the donaltoos to purchase a house. she must be declared the legal guardian, then a trust must be set up and sbe must win court approval to spend the money. The judge has said he may not ap- prove. State law lmpUes that money given without a stated purpoae should be held ror the cblldren's future, not spent on immediate needs, be said. "We don't want to dissipate the funds," said Hoyle Moreover. before a trust can be set up and Mrs Gonzalez named the or· phans' guardian. a publJc notice must be placed m newspapers where all living relatives of the ctuldren re· side. Hoyle said it could ta.Xe six weeks to trace the family tree and set up the fund. SO 11IE CHILDREN'S future re· mains clouded. Explained Padrone, "It's foolish to dream if you don't have any money." Pu.bile laterest Law Satisfaction High By JOYCE L. ~ENNEDY Dear Joyce: I llltend to applJ to law adaools ud am laterest.ed ill pabllc lateral law. How doe9 tbb field look? -G.S., Seattle. Wull. The work of rallying for tbe und e rrepresented -tenants , minorities and so forth -juxtaposes a proud history of advocacy and immense personal satisfaction with rocky finances and a changing political climate. Not ooly baa the idealistic ardor of the paat two decades cooled, but alao the Ford Foundation, the largeat backer of public interest law, bu decided to encourage aeU-aufftdency and pull out. Congress, too, bu dealt a blow to public interest law by killing a bill that would have required all federal agencies to pay attorneys• fees to public Interest firms that sued and won. STILL, PUBLIC interest law bu always baJanced the paucity ol ftmds with a largeness of spirit. Despite the llkellbood of long hours -and starUna pay as low as $10,000 - plenty ol law school graduates are clamoring for the few available jobs. The cases tackled by public interest lawyers are varied: Consumers Union ls fl1btin1 to improve school lunches ln New York City; the American Civil Uberties Union coatiDuea ill priaoa project; and the Women's Le1al Defeue Fund la taJdna steps to erase aexual harassment o( women on the job. To move toward thla career, MX Questioned W ASHINOTON (AP) -A COD· 1re11klnal report que1Uon1 wtMthtr the pJ"Ol)OMd XX mobile mlull• pro- fl'•m. dalped to bJde American warhead.a from a aurpriM au.et. would wort. And 11 It did, the C09t ml1bt be prohibttlve, tbe Oenen1 Ac· COUAUll Otftce nport la.Id. . . . ( C4REERS J choose your law school carefUlly - only a few have relevant proc;ra.ma. Also, take summer /obs with public interest groups, lega services ofnces or government agencies. Students who have shown a commitment to the work, have gleaned experience. and have contacts in the field are are more likely to be hired. NAN ARON, director of the Council. for Public Interest Law. bu a broad dd"UllUoo of the field which, she says, opens up •cores of posslbWtles. Sbe encourages people to coniiclef' working for 1overnment agencies at all levels that are active in public interest work. Youns lawyers can start their own centers. and private practice lawyers can volunteer to take "pro booo" cues. A list of public interest law centers Is available for $2.SO from the CounciJ for Public Interest Law, 800 New Jeney Ave. N.W., Waablqton, D.C.,3>038. Some benefitl ol t.bla wort were expressed by Ellen Broad.man, a lawyer with ContUmers Unlon: •'There ta tremendous penonal aatl1factlon in carina about 10ur wort, ln waking up 1n the morolnl feellD1 lood about what you're ctoma. Alto, It's more of • thrill when YoU win, knowing that the decl1lon beneflta a lot of people, rather Ulan Juat a linil• client." RBADBB SIRVICE: "Lato ot o Co reel'•• 11 o atw A m.,kan Bor Auodotion JI-page ~ o/ QrMrGI cortn /oet•. For o COPJI, nclo# o pmfMd, Nlf«J4rtuff ~ Jobd toftla IOUJ' 'WU'lt to J.-LA* ~ ot ~ JlfO, Co#O Alna ,_, AJtn wo. rtMw U.. ~. tlw A.8A '*"d lie ~,.,,..... ...... d• .... -'*' do -.... "'°"" .. '"' ......... TREa£ WE&E 80 MANY DEFEATS on the campaJp trail that third-place ftnbbes wtth about 10 percent of the votes were labeled "victories." That prompted some radio and televl.s1on commen· tatora to label Brown "the clown prince of poUtica." But t.hoee who write off tbe JOVel"DOr may be too huty. He h.abit.ually tuma aetbacb into advan· tages, a real be tu.med IDOlt aueceafQJ.ly after Propositioo 13 passed in ma. ··Anyone who thi.nk.t Jerr, Brown ls finiahed now just doesa 't know what be'• ta1kiq about," aays ooe loogt.ime Los Aqdee politkal eonau.ltaot. "Rllht now, be k>ok..a a bit r1d1~. but that can change in leu than a week's time." And Howard Jar"l• bu provided Brown another opportunity to demonstrate political magic trlcb. Just u be did In UJT8 when be COO· vlnced the bulk of the public be bad •uwc>rted Proposition 13 despite actua.lb bavtna led the op- position. SO FAR, 11IE GOVE&NO& llASN'T taken a stand on Proposition 9. the Jarvla inrome tax· cutting initiative. But the measure places Brown 10 a can't-lose situation. even though he says It could create "senous problems" for the state. The potential beneftt.s for Brown are largest if Jarvis JI wins. For then be gets another chance lo dlsplay the pohtical sltt..11 he de· monstraled two years ago. lf the uutiallve pas~ and Brown s hepherd s the state through an orderly adJustment despite the current doomsday predictiom. all the cred1 btlity he hu kJst in bJ.a presideaUal cam~il'\i would be restored. There are otber op. portuniliea for Brown Ladt of ~ strong leadershlp m the st.ate Legisl3tUtt is one. Brought on by the battle over the Assembly leadership. the power vacuum pro· v1des tum with a chance to exert leadershlp of his own 1f be chooses BUT IT IS PRINOPALLV TIME that's work· ing for Bmwn. Just as very rew noo -pohtJcians re. member his 1976 victon es, rew wtll remember bJ.S 1980 bwnili a tions. Among those who do remember. the plctun or Brown s logging through the snows of New Hampshire as one of the very few issue-oriented candidates may even create a hero's image. What's more. in tbe two years from now unUI the next time Brown must stand for any office - either bis present one or something IJke the U S Senate -many of his current positions may be proven correct. BE WOULD GAIN ROM ANY nuclear accl· dent, large or small. He gains wbeneYer gasoline prices rise aod wbeo lines form in 1as st.aUoos. He would gain if the Afg.ban crtais ftuJed and bis clahM that it's been overblown are borne out. ID abort., Brown may be a lauahfn1 atoct for some peopl& today, but he's still in a spot that many other politicians would clearly mV)'. SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Ca lifornia Republican Party ls trY· log to raise $500,000 through a petition drive to curb the power of judges. The tactlc m'Olves a joint malllng, f'llauced by the GOP , of 2.5 million pet1t1ons for the toltlatlve and fund· raising letters for the party to each Republican household ln Callf ornl.a. P A&TY CHAJ&•AN Truman Campbell said that similar malllnp - com blning "action" items such as surveys with fund-raising letters -have rai,ed up to $500,000, and that tbe Judicial imtiative is such a popular tssue among Republicans 1t should generate a n equall y strong response The hrst petition<; and letters were put in the mall last week, and tbe mailing, which is ex· pected to roet $300,000, will take about a montb to complete, Campbell said. TR E INITIATIVE, backed by the Law and Orde r Campa1i;?n Com m1ttee the samf group that tned m 1978 lo un· seat Ca1Jforn1a Suprt:'me Court Clue! JuslJce Hos1• Bird, would r educe Supreme Court terms from 12 to eight years and require state Senate confi rmatio n or all Judicial appointments by the governor. It would also repea l the voting procedure for appeUate court judges, In which voters may on- ly vote yes or no to grant an appellate Judge an additional term . Instead, it would allow other candidate. to run a g a Inst a p ~ 11 ate· judges, as tblly can against trial cour' judges. ~Tree Party Set At Library Chinese Painter To Slww Artistry Chinese brush artist Wel Ll-s ben will demonstrate bis art before the Affiliatea or the La1una Beach Museum or Art on March 2S. The meeting begins at 1 p.m. at the museum, 307 Cliff Drive. Non-members are welcome to attend at $2 per person. Officials at the Dana Niguel Library are hosting an egg tree decorating party to celebrate the early arrival of spring PUBUC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE Saturday at the Laguna.---------.,.......~==-==-==~=--,,.._-NI 1 bran MOTIC:. CW APPUCA I gue ch. ftfCT'IT10UI IMllfM•u TO MU. ... Q)MOUC HHllAO•• UMll ITATUMMT ~IO-IO Younasters from kindergarten to third grade are Invited to attend tbe festivities be1ln.nina at 3 p.m. Children are aalled to brln1 three hollow e1pbella for decoralin£ tbe library tree. Trims, patnte me) dyel will be pro.•lded, aa well H refre1bment1 aftenrarcta. P'or tnformadoo, call LJa•e Anderton at ..... ,. ReeaDDue? OAKLAND (AP) -. Votera la Alameda CotiDQ wW decide , .. I •lf•tlaer Mulclpal Co•rt lud1• II arlo BanatU lbaii1i be r. calle. MHMH aome Betkele7 teaM1 Ml be ~ QllMld thatr ...!,~~ --It-.~ To~llMeyc-.n.: SUNLIOtfT STUDIO JIU~ MA"'" MEZA"' h .... .,..,. .. "'9 • ....... ~ 9Mal. ~ ....... ~ ~,;!":" .. ~" ~~~~ 8:~:0: l!"f9M Mk-....... ~ Tontl"A-c.talMM,Cel ......... WIN I! C80NA FIOI! PU8llC 92627 ' EATING PLACEt to .. 11 al~IK Thia..,.._ Is~ 'Y M ..._ ._...,._.. at "''0 W-r .......... . ......... Hwlt"'9Mft lleectl, c.i ....... ..... e.,....... Pwbl•..., 0r.,.. c..c Dairy ..,..., Tlllt ._ -,.._ wllll MM'dl 12, IW ,..._ C-ty °"" Of 0r.,.. ~y ... /Mnllll, 19. PVBLIC NOTICE ..... _ .. __ ..... --...._,----····. -~· .... ·-... "". PUBLIC NOTICE CP 11174 FIU..1 l'l(TITlOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT l tut follo••nQ perwn .. •r• do1nQ bviolM\S a\ Q c A<;SOCIATES. o~o Von IC ••man A-.n .... Sult• 400. N~wpon 8ff<l'I, Calllorn•a 92"60 OL TMAN'> CONSTRuCilON COMPANY, • Cdllforrll• <orooutlon ~1• MOtlf.,,..y p~,\ Ro.d. Montney P••k. Calltornla ~ti~ 0 DONl'lflL 8RIC HAM A PARTNERS SOUTHERN,• C•lllorno• o•rtnf!ri"•O. 43!.0 Von -<•rmen Av•nut !><>•It 400, N~wporl ~•<l'I. Calllornl• 92.00 Tl'l•s ..,.,,,. .. is <on<111< led by " Ol't'tPral ~,.,~nip O'OONNElL, 8RICHAM & PARTNERS SOU THE RN ap.,-1,,.r~p 8y J""" 0 0·0on .... 11 lM~ .iat~I "''" loleo w1!h ,,... Counly Cl~rk ol Ore~ (ouncy on llot•r< .. 10, t'90 O.MAltCO, 8EllAL. G•EENaERG. Tl4•Al.L& SLUSHEA AnorMn .. Lot• u• New_, c:....... onw. S.0•1•- ..... ,.., 9uelt, CA -PUbll,,_ Oreno-( .. SI D•1ly Pllol M4ir U 10. ?1, AO' J. 1'90 US. IO PUBLIC NOTJCE FICTITIOUS aus1NESS NAMf. STATf.MENT The touow1no "''°"' •r• do1nQ Du~MUa\ C a. C AEl.IA8LE F IAT SERVICE, 10U Pl•on!oe Avenu•. Unit J, C°'t1 Mew. C•lllO'YOI• 910• Cornttt 1t1euu, nu Pecll1< Street, Unll Three. Cosle Mtu, C•lllOf'nle ~ Lu101 Pellllttrl, JS! Vtctorl• Str"t· API. J, ~11 MeM, Clllfornl• 9261' This bu••Nu Ii c:ondwcttd by • g4JMfll .... ~p. Cornell llleKll T71Cs ite1...-1 wes rn.o w1111 ,,.,. Counly Cl••-ol Ora1199 Coun1, on Ftbru1ry U , "'° "'""' Publlsl'ted <>-Coest Dally PllO{, Feo n . 11. M¥ •. u. "'° llu.tO P UBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS aUSINESS NAMl STATllMllNT Thi' lof'-•"O perton I• do<nQ !N\t· .,. .... MEAllY AIDES HOME SUP PORT SERVICE. n1 ~ Ottw, ........ "91 ... lle«ll, c:.llfon>I•.,... Mary l.oulM LANI« ("""' C VI. n 1 A'111-O.lwe. Huntlnoton ~11. C•Hfornie me Tl1I• IMlllt~U is ~ bY Ml ln-CllvlOual ,,,_,, LAIUIM LaNlef' Tiiis _......,. was fllw •1111 ttw C-ty Clffil ot Or1n99 Co\IM, on Man1111,1-. .. ,,..,. ""41111Md Or-. eo..1 o.lly Piiot, Mer. 1i. IO, 21, "4J<. a, 1• m t.to PUBLIC NOTICE PVllUC NOTICE rlCTITIOUS aUSINEU NAMR STATIMl!NT KARI' EN TEltPRISES, IUI L••ll-1 Orlwe, H""ll"Q\CWI S.ec,,, Cellfomlem.6 ltic,,ero Arnold Hetp, •••1 L••kPOn Orcve, H""llftO'Of> Beec". C•lllornle ti ... T~I\ Du>-\\'' C~ by •n on· 01v1du•l R•<,,.•<I Arnold H••P T"i\ twlement "'<K Ill"' w1111 ,,... Cowntv (l•rk ol Ora1>9e County ot1 Febru•ry 1'. 1'90 "'"~ Pwblt\hed 0.-Co.nt O.lly Piiot. Feb ~ ~, 6. U , 1'90 867 80 PUBLIC NOTICE "I»~ f>ubll-Or-C.0.>! D•oly Piiot ~r tJ, 20, 21, Apt J, t'lt' 1,,.1 IO P tJBUC NOTICE flCTIT!OUS 8USINIUS NAME STATl!ME NT fht' foHow•rio per\on\ ,.,. do1no C>V\i nt•'' "' Cal N(WF'O RI HOM[ LOAN TRusr 11111. lbl NEWPORT HOME LOAN !RUH #11) (<f NEWPOAI HOME LOAN •114, co• NEWPORI HOMl LOAN •II~. 1•1 NlWf'Okl HOME LOAN •1tt 111 ,..rwPoHr H OME LOAN •NC a I 11 IQI NEWPORT H()M[ LOAN INt a I 11 l "I NEWPOR r HOME LOA N INC • 11•, I/ Cori-<1le Pl•I• N•,.POrt S..ch. C•ttlorn1•'7~ NEWPORT HOME LOAN INC ot C•hfOtn•• COtPOf•U•on. 11 COf'POf41• Pt•z•. NtWIJC>r1 8tt•<h. C•l1totn1d l rus bu\Jne\~ I\ <GnOuc.ttlld o., • '°' POr•t•on NEWPORT HO ME LOAN J •O R S.r,.., Tr .. wri"r N~t ~O"'W lt\M Tru, \1•1emf'f't Wa\ t ilf"(J w1tn -rw Co1.mtv Clt"f'k ot Or•nOt" Count., on Marc l'I • t'ICIO I'll>'-"• Pubtt\-°'MMI" , .. ,, D•··~ Pilot M•r< no. IJ 10 71 l'l90 IH• 10 PUBLIC NOTICE Pll9UC NOTICB PllCnnCM tutlWtte ....... ..,.,...,.... ~-,.....,,,.. --· .,. ,.,"' ........ , AltaTI , lf1U ~~ 11 .. , .,. .. -IMM. c:.tlfitrflle ft1U, m ., ....... ..,, ......... o .... . CefllltMleftlOI AIHlllRr • Mc0.11elll, " •10111•r. Cerdllr •r ·I"•·•••. c..i1iw111 .... TMl'M• e ~1 .. -1, tM 111"9 Ar lllllf c.wt. I.• Jtlle, CellfWlllt ..,, It*"' W • ...,.,.,, IU "'1191 .._,, • 111 • ..,_ INr•. c.lltonlle tMU ....,_. C¥1o c.,.., -111111, 09! M.r.c.I~"'" '"'' ..,..,,.., It <Mdil(I .. tty • .... , .. ~. ~•.-o.wtld TIM• ~ -111.e wttll C-1" a.ti el 1M Di19t CW.y l'tlltVoef'y "· ltll>, McOQlllM.O, ~ '· NAaLAM a COHO PUBLIC NOTICE ~.o....... ,..-.. --ruT='•"'•.,..,.,,""•~,..,°",.._"-..... --oo....,--.. -...,-·1mu .._,._ .... . ;w:HA:.u:::ru 0'1Al0 P ..... TM.._.... __ ,, doillt WM· "'C'Tl1'10U$94111N•HNAM• '""·4~tr1U "H6•• The lel-119 -JOll llf• ........ •1nu1 PACIFIC 8USINESS SYSTEMS. '"°' llU el U. lltUU-\ 1111\l,_.U M""' "'*lllMd (>-0.M 0..ly Ptla4, M0t S--... Clr<le, HWll~ l HI HU•OOUAATEA!> COM l!Mr IJ. I0, 11. A0tr l.1-IJff.IO S.~11. Cel-•~ l'AHlf\, 1114 W•9'11 W•y, El r .. o. I D••.O 4. G<cie. tnc ... c.ltl«n•• Cellk>fnt..... ,._ .. ._., M16 S-..et.,. Ctrc .. "''' "1Chliolft ~. ,.._ .. P\1aUC NO'l1CE HIHlll~ e..ci.. c.l.+ornl•.,.. ,.,., ... le _,,. •• ,...., 111 Of~ Tt.1t -·I\ <.oftdU(-Dy• C« Cov111y"" JViy 3t, lt1t. NOTIQ TO C•lotTOlll -••loft 0.tryl ~ • .00 M.<Artllllr OP9ULKT•ANUlll 0..nclA Gipe one ••vo . ~1 ISH<" c.i11or,... nwo li«L ,..,_.. u c.c I 0.V• A. G<oe th,. ~ .. 1, <-led by.,. tn Nollce I\ "•••by 01on lo I"• ,...._ dlvio..er C'"41°" ... LYNN MO• .. ISON -'"" -... ttleO ... u .. ,,. O•trylMl..,nelt PACIFIC SPORT~ Tr-lwor. -Count, Clel'tl of~---C..."IY Ofl T"" >t•-w.s 111.0 wilt\ ,,. ~Jne" _.,, I\ tlOI a.+-81'°"' ""''.,."' 1'. t• C 01111ly c...-• ol Or•noe Countr on Newoort 8H<ll C°""'y of Or..,oo f'lnttl M•r<h • 19'0. St•1• o4 c:.41'°'"'• ,,... •bull<,,.,.,,_, Pllt>ll"*' C>M191 CMS& Deity Pttot, M<DONALD, l'ULASlll. ,, •bowl IO .. m•O• to AAND'I' Feo JI,·-•. •J. lteo -~-HA•UN &~l'O BLUMER,,.,..,.,..,-""'"' .. ' Att-n et LAw -r<ru I\ UOt S.1-81.0 • N-port Ce11t"'"'.... 8 ... <11 COllnly OI Or..,09, '>lele 0t PUBUC NOTICE I'D ... t«>07 C•l•lorn1• tt1u M«Al"tftw a1vo , T11 .. "'-"' to De t•-l•rreo '' SUl'lalOlt C:OU•T Of' CALlf'O•NIA C:OU,.TY Of' OtlANGI Suite -•ocet"' •I 1301 8••-~VO, N••PMI Irvine, C.llfonol• '17U llurt1 Covnty ol OrW109. ~l•I• of 1t1 Owt< C:-on .... W..t ~ .... ~. Tel· 1110 tu.-C•l••o•"'• (AU NUMel • l>-16-JS.1' SUMMC*S CMA••IAOEI ""''" ~·o "'-''"°""''"'°in _, ... Publl\twc.1 Or•"'Ot' Cocnt D•1ty llltot d\ All \IOt k 1n tr.ore. t1•1'.1tf\ ~u1p Mer 13, 20.11, Apr l , 1'90 IJ61 men! •nd 900<! will o• th•! rei.ot I r'I r• UY tnMrlao--Of Pw,11t1onrr A•<hf'I Af\Ottt\OI\ 11tf"ld At\t)OnO•l\f M•<hffl E ,.,.,,.,._ PUBLIC NOTICE CP·111H l'llJttO "ICTI TIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT f ne foHo~•nQ ~f\O,,~ •r• do1n4 bv\t~,, ., 0 OONNf ll RR1c; ........ a. PARlf'fERSNORfHfRN •HO Vot1 lt•rm.,, Aw~~ Sull• '°°· N•.,Pof"t B••<fl, C•ltl0tnt• '7MO John D 0 Oonn•ll 0~0 VOtl IC•tm•n A'leftUe, $411tt 400, N~p0r1 BH<h. C•lllornle 91660 Tere-nc:e W 8t1~m. •lSiO \IOA k•rman Awnue. Sult• ..,. ,..••00<1 Bt•cn. C•1tt0t"'• "2..0 Ro'( W Cr-11!0 MonlQO""f'Y \trttt ~ Fr•r.rl~o. C•1tf0f'"n1••••1t JOhn W ~in\ • ..uu Bu~M\\ P•rk 6ou .. ii;.,.o, Anc:"°'4-0P Al•\\4 94so.J T "'*-bU\llW\\ I\ cnnOut ff'O b y • 0-Mflt C»t1,...r,tup Jotv> D 0 0on,,.11 llU\ \l .. ement W41' t1•t"d ., •• " IN> Coun•v (ten• ot Ordnqe Covnly o" M•t< 11 tO t'90 l>eMAllCO, BEllAL, CllEEN8EllC, TH R Al.L & SI.LISHE II Attorrtey, •t y.., S$0 New-1 C:...I., 011,. SuotetCIO Newport a..t<ll, c.& 91..0 Pubh\f'oood ()r~~ (O<Ost D~"1 PllOI M•r 1) 10 71, A~.~}'leO __ IJ60.·ll> P UBLIC NOTICE <klth•llQ "'""""'' ''''"'"" •• PAC1r1c SPORTS end 1oc4ttd •t UOI B•lbO• 8htd • Nt-woon n·~~" (Oul'\ty ot Or•r.Q• ~t•t~otC..ltfOfnu• lh~ bulll. lt'N"l\f•r Will 1'W (Of'\\"'" mttlf'd on OT•''"' lhf ''" d•Y ot ~s>t•• 1480 el 4 00 .. rn Al 0 AW\0N 0AW~0N I\ I <I( [ MIHI •610 VOii 1(1rmt!ln Nf'"""'IJll0"1 (t.,.., h Coonl-t ot 0 ,.,,QP "tlttf"(tf (A·lff>tl'\1c1 So •• , d\ tl'ntJM'\ ,,, '""" ,, • .,, ... ,~ •II OU\1"""\ n.Mnfo'\ ,.,-cj .OC-)rP\W"\ u-W-0 0 1' h•n\IHQt •0t t,.. tP\lf't" \'fO(H\ l•'\I p..t\f •rt P.c::1hc \ouc>rl\ ))Ot 8•tDOroit 8h'd N_.•00'1 fi.-•<h (ount1 or Or•n~ ~•t~ot C•llfnfl\1• D•leel """"" 11 ,.., RANOV 1'lU""E p ff_,,\ •• , ... DAWSON, OAW\Of4 & •lllEM.AN AHOffWf •t l..I• "'54 YN k4til"ttWft Newl'ffl -~ CA., ... NOTICE•"°" tww '"9 -TIM (-11 ..... -.C ... -lft•I Y°" Wl\Nw< , ... , .. 1,.. ---... ,_ ,.._.. willUll • UY\ lie• -......... _._ ..i- AVl'-0' U\...S tw .... -- 1'1 trl-1 -d«tdlr ,_,. VII , ... •tt4'te'9(.••,,,...,..... ... U.41 ,.,...,._ M .....,_,,.die ... _., U.t •• ,,.....~• , .. .,.,." .. 'TottwA .. '\~M • J,... or11hon11"· PW\ t11.a • o-ti I~ CGnC•tf'llll'W) ~ '"•'ft~ 'fr,.., """-" f1•• • •r1fttin r~ •tl,,..f\ JD O••' t"t4 mr CS.I• trw1 "''' \.UIT'l""On\ ., ..,.,wdan.-- 0 tt you '••• 10 1t #' • .. ,,"~" "'t.OOl'M W'ttwn w,,.c:h t1nw f°"' Or levlt '"ft ()r-...,,,..,., •f"ld t'W" (OIJ" I M•y _..l.., •I~ totWC•tntnq in fUN t1.,. Of 00W .. ~°"'"' \ « on(f'rftot"CJ OtVf\IOf\ of pr-~1y ~I \UpOOf'f Pubh\hlood C>4tN7 Co. t 0 .tH.-µ IOt l'hlO ( ..,..,100f (hold \.UOC)Of'"f .ettornrr o. M•rc h u l* l,MO llO ... .,,, CO\f'l ......, ~U(l't O'"-'' , ........ •\ PUBLIC' NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS aUSINlSS NAMC STATEMfNT Thr to11owrn9 Pf''\Ot1, ., .. dO•nQ DU\ln"'~ ·~ I owr Hf NOV M£ NOf t )JOO 0 Wr\I (OA\I Ht"""" Nf"•Po' t Bf'•t. h Ct1flforn1• 4?MO Toru C 1.N-no.1 1q Mvtllf' Ln l•<1un• 8-<h C•l1lo1n•• ''•~1 H•iO• Httnov J7• C•t•t•n• Mf'WOOft ~h (•11f,..tn1A ·~ ttfl'\Mlh P l Cl~• 1010) fi1H n S•f'lt• An• C.•htorn"11 Th 1\ OU\1t"lt \1 " cond~• t .. o DY .. O•Mr•I oer ltWt\h•O TOlllC ,,,_,..., Thi• 11.e-..1 *•• l••eo ••I" t,,.. CownCy Ciera ot 0••1199 County ,. • .,_,., 17. ,. l'I P14111"*' OrenQe Coe.i 0.llJ PllOI Feti 11. a. ,.,.., • n. t• PUBUC NO'l1CE "'•• EM" or.,,,tf'd bV ,,..,. <Our<t •l"l·(f'I ,. ou•o rf'wn '" '"" 4t1'"'''"''"tri1 , ' ••Of"' l••t'IQof ~, O' pr~y o• .,,,..,.,, , ...... • ff .,.._ wt"' 9 '"14' ,,_ ..S•te• et ... • t1 .,-,. 't .,, "''' fllPWttef' ti 'f'9U ........ 0. ,. "'"'"""',.. ... ~' ..... f' .,..,,.... ,.,Mft-.n If •"'t . "'•' M fi'flCI ort IC- 0.tl•O ....,...,..,,.,c:,.., I t•Jv l...,. A 8'•"'"" C•t--ri' ,,...,.. F Sm+r" C»C>VI. JON f' WMITY 11111 k«lt .... s .. 11.1u .............. 9N<ll, (.&.,.., T .. 17Hl -.,o An_.,..,.......,.._ Pvblt-C>~ C-•1 0.•I~ Poiot ~.!!!_•. 1)~11~--11)1« P UBLIC NOTIC E PUBLIC NOTICE "'*AND ACCIDlii"AND MCIALTM S~ll 0,. THe A .. NUAL ITAT'l:Ma'" YIAll U IDIO OearMelll l'I, tm 0, PttOVIO.MT MUTU•L Ll"I lllWllANCe COMPANY 0, l"Hll.AOll."'IA ~ MAllKIT IT•elT, "'"IUDSLl'MIA, l'eNNIYLVANIA 1U,. MDMI O,.,.IC• • t l ......... u. 1,no,$~ ..... ... .,. .... 10.t•w , ...... ~ 10,,.UIU70 ..... 1,IU EMHALD IA Y B.IGAMCE A beautiful 3 bedroom hom e with a serene view of the cove and all th£ exciting amenities or the Bay <tennis. pools. parks and beaches>. Terrazzc floors. view decks. an entertainment center. gracious entry, even a small theatre a nd a large hobby room Everything m meticulous condition Proudly presented at $645.000 U,._,l()UI: lif)MI:§ REAL TORS', 675·6000 2443 East Coast Highway. Corona del Mar EQUAL HOUSING O PPO R TU N ITY ~·sMotiu: All rt'al est.ll(' i.d' en1"if'd 111 Uu.> neW!tpaPt'r ,., 'ub )t'ct to the t' t'dt> r 11 I t-d ir UOU!>IOI( AC:l of 1!1611 whltb makl"'! 1t illegal 111 advt•rl•!lf' • .iny prt- rerenrt' ltmrldl1on or <ilM'n rrunallon b<lM.'d 0t1 r.t<'t' rolof. rt'hg1on <;1·~ or n.auonal onl(m or <1n J.nll'flllon to makt> dO\ i.u1·h pn·h.•rfflt't-hm1t.1 UIJn or ducnm1nallon · lllC. nt."W'< ~per w 111 not kn.owingly <1c:C'ept an~ advert1'\1ng for re;i l ~ wluch i.s en viola uanol~law aaoRS: ~~ *-ldct.dl .. och .., ..., repori ~ ran I ...... ,. n. OA&YN.OT--1 ....., tor ... first .. CDrrKt ......... Ollty. /~~~ ....... . !:!:'!!~ .......•.. !~~ ,.-ii Udo Co.dos I 2. 3 & 4 Bedrooms with ~ "lf'W. pool. S3W1a 'pa & I~ ol opt'fl !>part- 1 in Sunny San D lt'l!O 'ii.a rtm.i Sf7 500 v. Ith :, · • I down IM\ nwnt 11 75 m lt'nl!>t rate ~ 797 t or i I Sl0-c9K!i Uttt. is liq!! PANORAMIC VIEW Ot'l'lln and harbor • ~our feet from th1l> lovel 4 bOO.room with ternf1 famlly room. formal du uu:. J fireplaces. larj! dedc, s parklmg pool. A ( Ot' ooJ y $349 ,(XX) J.M.nTERS TOWNHOME Locatt>d 1n Untversll · Park Ill thL'I 3 year oh ronner model offers onh over 250(gq I\ ol luxu.r) hvmg Amemues mclud1 3 bedroom:s. den, famU~ room, formal d1010)( 21;,bat bs, garage doo1 opener & m1crowavt oven ibere 1s an • ., SWDI We U.tSllng loan & tlw owner would ron l>lder a l nd TD t-'ull price 1 181.500. Ca II ZS.311111. ti;: SELEC T T'PROPLRTIES ------ WHY PAY RENT? COUECTIT! Two 2 Bdrm duph.•x"'° Cornn.1 t1t>f Mar 2 pat1t>"· and IJunrir. room. a.' ~umabl,, 1~1 Tn. own .. 1 \A tll ht'fp f lnJ O<'t" 1>ljcl:l.S5(J I l1.L4',"itf1t'd Ad., an· rt:>allv I ~~1 "~:p~·1~~~~1>'::: r ~ lf~~'Jlltl I tdl•r..h1p and brl! r~uJL.,' ~ ---' • ,_ Tn plac1• your da\-.tftt~ I , .1rl <«tll tuday 00 ~Iii Ave yb!A qo1ft1oH-4Yw~ M~1' ~ven1{:l 110f.L( hou~ ~oi-1 ~ 8lo? a Go~ ~~~- Ea Ad-~ Ad-Sitta~~~ u nour' ~ ~ -ri a~ I)~. You may request Ad-Sitter service when placing your ad our Ad-Sitter number will appear in your Doily Pilot ad ... Ad-Sitter tokes your messages .. . you coll in at your convenience to get the responses to your ad ... this service is only $5 per week. For more information ond to place your ad colt M2-S678 WATERFRONT-SO' BOAT SUP A 41•l•_t str .. t locetlo. wltlt .. _..._.., YllW of the a.,. C._ Ir I ~ wHla two J ~ ............. . Ollf tro.t, ,... pra Jan bHt ..,. S I ,J00,000. 6J I· I 400 . SPAllUNG HARBOR HIGHLANDS Th....., . .,.... of o,..www1t1p•..._ et • ,.. aullh price! C.._ & •= IJ I J Mel. ......... ,.. dtlchtt'• ..,. .... ,..,....... -.,........ .,.. ,,. .... iMICkyW'Cl._...a••..._.,..... s llt,Ho. fth h ........ 631-1400 WATERFRONT HOMES, INC, REA1.ESTAT£ S... !Wnt .. Pl8'*1¥ ~ 24Jll W COlltt Hwy l 1 H4Mont A11t. ~ 8-h lW&o.11'.md 6ll·14IO 67Mtoo .. CANIOM 'WOU& -cam• 16W AlaM,.RI LOAM tlfere la JwcurloQI. tolnlortabl llvlftl ln preeUaloua Bit Caft100, on • qw.t. privet cul·d•·••e 1tre t. Lari• corn r lot. new muahroom-whlte carp tlnf thruout. Vlctorlan whlte-on·whll Rock" w Hpeper In master b<-droom auJte lnclud1n1 dre sm, room & aun~ UJe tub. A truly elegant 2 bedroom. 2 b1th. la mUy rm or den r aadenee ln 'N wporl 's Une1t resldenlial community. $359.SOO tncludln1 the land. Room for pool . ~ any tlrM. Whla,~ now., W M. TAnOI CO.. UAl.TOU Jiil S-J1 , ........ MIW..,.'POl.....,.IT,. C9ft'll. M.I. 644-49 IO C:USSY COM>O ~SllM•• I LOANS Sharp 3 Bdrm, 2 beth Townbome w1t.b a fonnal .... rm. an attractive ftallaD We entry. oozy frplc A a boaua room wb a calbedrat ceUlnt ,What 'a more . a.uuma 6le loans . A<"t now. ~o ALLSTATE REALTORS 51Db4.$159.000 Country lake al · moapbere. surrounds tbaa fantastic family home. Atrium e ntry, Aormal dining room, lanuly room + bonus coom too! Private, aecllDed muter swte Owners will help Wllh nnencing. Call now for preview.8"-7171 IUGAHCI 1201.000 Jl'mUltlc 3IOO + aq.ft. home. Totally re· modeled, hardwood noon. bey wtndowa too. Gourmet kitchen ovelook1 tunny brukf ut area. 2 larse bdrms downstairs, secxmd story bo8ta spec· tacular maater auJ le. Huge dre111ng area. raised Roman tub, mar· ble lop pullmans +2 more queeo sa.ze bdrms A must to see Call now for personal preview. 6tl>117l (."lt1,.,, tu Y • '' \ IUN 1()8' Nl(f ' ~=~C:.:5 I~ d!J1QI J Owner says bnng orfer . _____ ,_JJ I m this fantastic 6 Bdrm family home. Ma adsi-------- quarters & 3 car garage RUSTIC 2 IR too. Call for more tie <*ter home oo large tree lal..ls. covered Jot. Eastside 646-7171 Calta Mesa. SM,000. '[. ij' je'~ilil~Fl~Roy~nd~~~s a~7~~~:ou~7~29~~~~~l~·~ln . Dlll.ly Pilot Cl...Uieds. Ga Coldwell Banker ... . . . . . . •l Jli 't. 111,,_ 1\1\, , . • . •' UtolBRIEV AILE IUT 'RUE Owner will carry 2 year note with 1nten·st of 12'; annual percentage rate. on this c us tom 4 bdrm" 4 bath home on the Balboa Peninsula. C'ompl(•ll' with 3 car ~arage. wood floors & spa. Ca:>h price of $465.000. IN NEWPORT CENTER 411 644-9060 SlllC&llN C S U E l I S S J M D E D I U G H l G A R P 0 T T E H C A H R R 0 W S G E K C J U E T H I l S C 0 P 0 B T A T F I G U W 0 B S S 0 R M C 0 W 0 R l H l U l k C l k U E A W U A S A P I l l R H R N A G I T C T M T R S I D E l I A G E B l A E l S W S N RWFAA KORC TP HAH AG T E N D N W T U H 0 I U A S l R E S A I S P T R l C A R L I S G M E A F F I W 0 E B U I I l T R E I M S E E T X W A T E G N l S B B A S C T W I I T E X E H R G S S 0 R C S S R 0 H 0 H R R 0 A W T H R 0 W W R E IAKPUKLLETACBRWODSO -FANTASTIC FIMAMCIM•I O'lll $149.000 .., ............ ....., ltedroo• It•••· Prl••I• cowty•rd .... ,..., ...... Selet' wll c..,., ••• trmf ... l -2·STORY IXICUTIYI NOMI. Ctwu:Jq41M1 ....... JWM.•c:Wc• .... LoY.tr .................. ... ........ ~ .......... .._ ...... ,.,..... M•tter ..... wltlt IM'f•el• ....... ,..... Offet9d et 1249,000. 2744 I. CO.AST HWY. COlotQ DB. MAI 1•1111 BALllTA119'C"IPICllMCI lt4t C OMI WITH UI. • .te HAllOI IMHUl•I. A•a1h 4 •161• IV1 ................................ ..... ~ ................ ..... u11.-. NElfllT IUCH 75Hl11 IROADMC>Oa HADOI Y11W HIUS SUper ftnanc1D1 avail, oo this lovely 4 BR, famJ· ly rm home with re1axinc view ol mtna & bllla1de. ReallatlcaJy priced at $Z49.500. Ca II DOTITE VALENTINE 675-8000 or 640-0987 , .... He.,.... On a big wide lot. which provides a total of 6 car off.street parking af needed 3 bedroom+ 3 bedrooms with ocean view. steps to beach Take-over ba~ loan at low interest at the new. re- duced price of $319,500. JACOBS RWTY 675-6670 s-.rAM.HOME MIMUTES TO llACH Excellent family home, pnvate master sutle, maamve st.oae fireplace, extra 1arp same room. Askin1 SUlt,950. Call for all ammitiel. 9113-7181 ..JIJ'f'' lrf 0 I,, I ,, .. , '• ,. WISTCUflPCOMOO a.rp a bdrm .. 2 bath ecnfo. cenl.ra1lY k>eated, near WHtclllf Plaza. Beautifully decorated, wi&.h mirrored bar, frplc. 60\Wiookinl awlmminl pool. 1111,000 With at· tractive lloaoclng avail.able. A O.v1s1on of II arbor Investment Co . LOOIJ OML Y lo/o Newly remodeled kitchen. bwlt-ans. dis· hwasher, J bedrooms, 1"1 baths, waJI lo wall carpeting Assumable loan al 8"# Owner w 111 carry 2nd Pnced at only 113.<XX>. 0111751·3191 f::SELECT -r:"PROPERTIES TOI' LOCATION Low down moves you In! 2 BR 2 Ba, enclosed patio Adult occupied condo. CI09e lo fwys. aboppln1 6 achoola. IS7.000. lf 1tWJ&W;~1eg 962·4471 1:1: 546· I® lfill11l--oc-EAH-·v·1EW-·! - Watttf1oatH.. 5 BR 4 Ba custom waterfront home w/17x38' pvt dock. Pnced $1,095,000 direct from builder. For details on this home and af.pl to see call Carol Hof • agl 631.'.ooM. Prin only. STOP!! Take time to relax and sbop at home. It 'a simple with Dally Pilot Clauu.aed Ada. And u you ~ve aomethlnl to sell, call a friendly Classified Ad-Visor at 64:2-5611 $117,500! SECURITY BLDG. l.Jltn~ penU101.19e • 2 bdrms .• 2 batbs, frplc .• deck + community ammtt.ks . will trade · finance . lease option with $10,000! ..... ..,,,. .. •.. •'71-7060 * llE 110111 ILlllS ca. OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE lfG CANYo.I Most Gracious Veraalllea Model. Wide. Winding Suspended Staircase Overlooklnl( Marble Entry & Spacious Living Room SuperlaUve Four Bedroom, Four & One-Hall Bath Home. Elegant Circular Garden Kitchen. Den With Flniplace. Huge Mast.er Suite. Luxurious Italian Marble Baths. Vie" Of Golf Course. Call For Appointment. S74UOO. ~ --..... , ... ,, 631·1• lllDOm_,.. macnab I Irvine realty 4ICU COUlll ~I Overlooking the Bll Canyon fairways ... thl1 1p1clou1 4BR custom home wa1 dealped for executive or casual enterta1nin1. Dramatic vaulted celllnga :.... s fireplaces --stained glass -- hardwood noon -· over 5000 sq.ft. of llvtns areas & separate guest apt. Fully air-conditioned. 1885.000. Lynne Valentine 6"-6200. <E·73) o/ "·Wf"'"' UALTOIS "'"'''' IPftlAU..a.-~c;r .... .... •.............. 11 ..... ...... -...... 0 0 ::r.:=.:.:.:::::m....... I -IM catOMA-. MU -Oii a..·1pa • .................. =. ... •••1rro _. ... AM• ... c • .., .................... ., .. ............... COU OF MIEWPOD llALTC>aS Hlll.C.-HwJ .. Ccu_ .. ..._. 671-1511 IAYNOMT We have several fine homes with pier & slip B. TORO HOISi COUMT'IY ·4 Bdrms .. 3 baths: ranch style. mini-estate in orange groves. $249.500 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR j: 1 °'"Y" ,j, [)l'v• r,. K f, !', 1,161 5'RRSHAIP 4br, l._ba. W /nice fam nn. Is frml dtolDa. Nlce area or. Tuttl.D A 17th. Part .P!aca, lnc. 8'2· 7461 I.I.COTTAGE A p-eal beacb bcMMe a.od ~property oo a ruu saui lot. Located one slat b&o(k from the So. Bay this house bas tnmrtA'UI Investment polenltal. Owner will ccmider creauve financ· 101. Presented al $.125,000 BALBOA I SLAND REALTY 67U700 FOUi 4-ft.IXES Tbe&e WOO\ last With 00· ly Sl4,000 down on each bUlding they are cloee on break even Call now. Whelan Real Estate CHIMACOVE Faio&aatic 3 + dark room In uchalve Cbma Cove. Bay and ocean view. Fee land and assumable lmn..Call~ (,Jlliitt-. f I J •ti\ ' I"• [®lflftltl EmSlll CllAIMEI t:a.atalde. Coata lleu cb.armer. brand IMW, ju.at completely re· modeled! New roof. carpeta, peiot. k1&.cben. tbe wol'kt! lMredable value. just S102.900 Hln'y' Take advant.aae• ~7S2-1700 l)Pl>I Ill 0. ,, \ ll)ll ,...,,., ,.,, • ['111111 W1Sltp Ne"' '• Hedrm <1 1 hJ . l11n1ni.: room. mar n 1 r1 1• 1· 11 t l h;it•ki.:rou111I (111· \ " u r ,, r l ro ll f't'l1011 c u,toni bit bv ll•Jdlng nrrhtll'<.'l S3HOO mo . Lease1opt ion. at 11.250.000. :. , HERITAGE REALTORS 1°"9DOWM It alt you need lo parcbue thia sharp 3 Bdrm 2 bath home. 11 features hardwood floan. Dnr drapes &c IS priced only at only 117,860. For more ill· fannation call.~ 1 lSl · · ~ -.... HERITAGE . . REALTORS Mit9 .,,.. Gc:uwww• • 'I Lw Availabk lo everyone No Dl'W k>9D coat.a. DO quablymg. Interest u low u 9Wk. Uae your eqiaty and move up mt.o aoot.ber' bome ~ y. J " 4 bedrooms. Man y lo choose from . BKR ~lT.10 TRima.L. -· OAKGLEH Dls lloct 1 ve n e w 2 bed.room, 2""2 ba <·on dooumu.ms •. 9llO. 2518 Elden Ave, C.:.M MU734 OM. y St4,to0 Four 11oriou.a bdrms, f&IDl.Jy room. RV access md larp comer lot. Be fall! Won\lut!~ F ORE STE OLSON ... ... . . .. ------- ASSUMARE LOAM $121.SOOat 10.25% 4BR +PAMRM + DIN Rll + JACUZZI ~ cul de U C leads lO exttutave double door mtry' Step up hvt n~ roam+~ d.ln ma,. Spacious IUAShl.Jk btcben + aeparate f ama ly room• Spra.l suarcue -. to 4 buee bdnm wtlb 1weeptn1 magter "'1at. Huce c:ul de aal· ki wtlb bubbling II p<& +- boat /trailer 111 t•ctu OWner bol.&l(hl new & ma.mt 5elJ unmedtlllPI\ c .. 11 for m ort• 1n ro 11(1$10 la.SA VERDE move tn tadily. •I~. 12$,,000. dlL Hy, 4br, dm.. 2'4ba, no qual SllS,900 0-1~ Blll. 831 1251 IACl(IAT c..,.., 1026 lSl'TUIEOYFERED ••••••••••••••••••••••• A roomy 3BR bome W11b 1 OCF.AN VlEWS l)~ Tiil:. $13,590 Down! No Qualifying! Owner will finance• Brtgbt cheery home. ateps to the lake in Wood bndge Cal~Carpet 754-1202 DEER.FlaD like oew, 4 Br J Ba, 2600 sq ft ae.t locatJoo. Prof. landacapang. Sl85,000. Best buy. Bkr. Chuck Harrell Eve:a 552-8030. a r 7S4-Q62 ----Woodbndge Sycamore i br. 2""2 ba . prof. l.a.odacaped, lge patio. 111cross from pool & aauna. 1031 exchange. No cost • no habthly to buyer Pn.n only. Pnce SWS,000 ~~l --- ~LOAN COUEGE PARK Fabuloui. 4 bt:droom Y Ue Plan. ideally local ed oo cul-de-sac H1gb loan balance Newly c.arpeled • freshly pa mt· ed lhrouRhool . Tht!I ~also ba.'I <·mtral 1-..r <'OOd.. " llan1wood floor-. C..11 CU.tom home witb 3 bedlwms and den wtth pnvat.e atn um 2800 aq. ft. ElreUerHuny'' RANCH REALTY 551 -1222 pool Pnced to tell al OD· I HORlW~ ASSUMA.m.E ,.. r...s AMYOHI? I ly Sl.29.000. nus 2 bdrm 2~h mndt1 OLDCOIOMAD& l CAU.'44-7%1 I I ~DJOYS UH or ltled ~bndite. by owrwr -~ MAI N your own ~ ID , ~· clubroom wtlh RR zv, lia. t wnh1.1· Ovi>r True 2 Bdrm cott..ae. eox:D>' yard. ln<"ludes 4 ·an bar. lar!e 'un 2.000 sq.fl Ne.n lak1· Woodbumi.n.& nreplace Bdrm custom bul It del"k and BR plus 1182.000. Ukr assisted. andq\WtllpvtpaUo.Aa· home. llany elltru. '=R~~ATE (.)pm Houle Man:h 16. aume lit Tl>, and owner Pnced C9.000 ~ 12·4PM 43 Labshore may belp finance . 3:ZE.22ndST -Or~ SIST,.llO.Call~ OPENDAlLYl·S flfi+.)MtfOME lk:ll f•IMdt 1040 ------- liiMi r:~~ ~7.~ £Tft~~~ :.~'if~J; . --•••••••• __ ,._., ~ for PmnPtaee.l.Dc.IG-74'1 ._ ~ ~,. same plan. Tbas 3 Red h ii I 0-~ lkalty I a.Ii• t.:1 .all\ 1 lll1l1' UDO'SMOST SNCTAOI •I YllW an Lido Pm Dr .. Ith noor condo. 24 Hr. aecurtty. Call f0t app't. daUI SHA1P 2 .. C:.. bedroom and den homt- • CAMYOM IUYS ~ Only f77,500. Lowest a.llo bas a We rool and .. DOVD" 2 BR 2 Ba, price ID u.. Priced for cmlnll atr. Highly up- ocmma YW!W. IZI0,000. 21 cpm...._ l(raded with pro- "BORDEAUX" 3 BR 2 WartlllM l!stah fesstOo.11ly landscaped 8a. tharp. AI0,000. 8 516-7777 yards. CllU DOW af/lfiP.H?/I ~~n Hemt~~~1~ba R E ~TY PF77-•TE Nr. mt. adtJa 1t Hunt •irt .,.......~ ~ c.eac.a-. '4N-3 Bdrm. 2 be&.b. me. aft9 hr* P\aee, lnic. "2-7461 e--RANCH REALTY 55 1 2000 ~~~~~~~ ~ Sao. eo.t P\ua. r;:::::::~~::-::-:::"'-::--:-::::::;:~ m• ar.111~ S..--.n. loa. 3 br $97,000 STAR GAZE~• .. ~.=.:~....---Iii Cl.A y .. l'OLU t1. ,_ "'""" ,..,,.., c..Mot ~ y "' ...... ., ... , .... SMtY To ~ ........ fo-T~, r-1,.qO. ~ '°,...,.._.. of"°"' Zod« bltm l>QI". >• 0.0. J1()f ,,_ ,.._ .... ·-,,_ w•o ,..,. -0--· • , ....... t..,.. .,_ •)-.. _, 0$ ...... •l-., r._... ·-.. -. "°'-\I-.. _ ., ... .. .._ .... ::=... ., ...... ··-·- ...... ..... Ill .. _ .. ""'. ·-·-., , .... . ........ ·-io-"'-n-.... ,, ..... ,., ...... ,._ ,.._ ,,_ ,._ ,.._ •t-...... ··-·-.. ,_ ·-·--.,_ ·-..._. •w: .. ,,._, ~ llG CANYON .. A.MCI A quality Venaillea model at the end ol a cul de sac. From drunaUc entry, two story living roorft and formal d.lninl a f antaaUc vtew ol mountahu and 1olf courae. FabulOUI mutei suite on tl.rat noor also boutl the same view. Three other bed.room suites wlth tbelr own baths complete t.h1I exclUn1 home. Guarded 1ate community. '8'75,000 - I~ ba, beated pool, ... 'I Lomts .a.t. rool. fWb lmulat c llAIT sel CJi1. ed. su.z.ooo. Bkr. Ad: for 3 B d r m 2 b a • A I • ONC 1st TO on this Jule,,IQ.7411orM6-0809 Norlbwoods , Agl . 38r. 1~Ba. home.1;~~;.....;...; .. ~JD.~..,~·m;~m;;;;;; Only 10% dn .• $100.000. J(HS REALTY 67'3-Q10 ' •'! 14 rn llJ'>I WI 1\1 I Y / • I Dlll.Y PILOT SIME . mTDRY 00 ft' NOWI MN671 .......... ,..,, For Cl-'.6t'd Ad ACTION C:alJ A..,,._ ..... 642-1611 w:r-:: SCQ1t.6l~-4£tis· .:.~CUY a. POUM •............. °' .. .---.,..-. ._.......__.a.. .................... I MJSLIE I 1 I' I' I I I .111'1'_ .... .... I TIRNP Ii,· t R 0 Y V I I ' Only tn Amefloa: Where elH I I' f I I ,. could you '" • panhandler . _ t _ _ ~ outllde an or;anto fOO<I store .._.._.._ __ __, asking lot IPlll• -? l SUBRAO I • 1 1 1 1 1 !ai!z1:-=i= •;:rr;~;sr r r r r r 1· r 1 'R': I I I I l I I I ICIUM.111' ..,, .. C' 11f11•11lllO -··--__ ..... _. -.._ ____ . , __ ... .-.. ·- i ' . I t .. t I ' l i ' I • THE REAL. ESTATERS .,,. ...... 9Dd wiit. Ut, A I T.D/OWC. lil0.000 down. lll0.000. Ml.at 0.--/At/.. ...... 104 ... ,,... .... '°'' ~ C..t Concb 2 •••••••••••••••••••••• ••····················· ·~~.u s er • a er. a.A.MCI 1Hl-....S 1'eftllb, pool. Jacu111, PlUS !at_ fl otun •If'•! =· only Smith· AMANC .... ! Scllli*'..,..ted IOWDbome, Alt :w&-7813 or Des.ant TurUe1Wk u ft.-. • most deainble -.mi ' ea.a.Ive~? Hlt.11 ea.tty area k>c'aUan. P\f"lt ---·---- ltlld nJCht bcbt v'9w! s 0Uerlo1 by orl1loal S...~ loto Bdrma, for m1l dlnin1 owner. 1221.0llO. ••••••••••••••••••••••• room , eatreomely Aaent~~ IWldmnOoM-out 1p1clous1 Take over wu 1 • IA.LIOA ()ranaeCounty lOl4~ variable f1n1t loan ... _ z borne Duplnca Ow oe r w If 1 n .. n c e 01ent IMkl to buy nr Only a left l».1ance with 2$"k down leue optlOn • '"resaJe" From •.'150 at LS~ interest Askrng PaLnck Teoore.131-12166 9.N IMT. ~:!.'~_'l~all for l:i~~IXll eau~95A~~tment "4••1 •I ·J • I '• I ~~ N/J. 581>-4191. 54()-350() l ~ IRMtl ~.:..··..=. ~.; ~-:.:rit,.7E o; \~'. ------sale. Ideal family home. DORE. 4 BR. 8 ba .. 46 ft . cau now for details. pool, approx. 1-acre. LGIJlll9G leach I 048 ~trade or~ down. -~~~-~~;.;;· ~21 =gtS.U-1767 George Charles Realty IS ,.~ tt ""-'ck! proud to present these __, ....- view homes situated l'.t Har d to find starter against gentle hillsides Newport C.....-home In attractive area, ....... !!"? .. ........... . ....... . ••-UMITI l'l&DOUITllO>I . CM .......... no:'j,.Tco MIW Utn'I. C..M. ..-llld.lba~'lwut wlfrpl, yard, aanie-. 3 Wllta at s:m.OOO>and "mtta 1t sm.ooo. 11iL lnVlllnta NJ. H03 JOMIW UMTS-CM Beautiful 2 bd, 2 ba towobou1e unlls w/frplca, vauJted ce1l- ~·lnvatmta M2·UI03 MIWPOtlT tmGHTS 2 Br ~ • l br guest, Ira Jl..2 lot. Auume loan S137,500. Owner/bkr, ~ 2 HOUSES Only ~.000 for both. WON,. LAST. Take over 10% .loao. Great rental area. Wortd Real l'stah 556-7777 RIER·TalPLD Upper Nwpt. Hts, Coeta Mesa. 3Br, 2Br+bonus rm & lBr. St)ows gd in· come. owe financing wtlh k>iw dn. $1.S0,000, fast Pnced from S300 ,000 all neaUy patnted, with 2 67r7512 6~5357 bedrooms an d -wood escrow. ~ noors. Storage shed, PLAYAREALESI'ATE I shade trees In the yd. On 67J..1900 large lot; owner will help ~ ..... IEV finance qualified buyer n..tVIU"~ BKR. ca11~1120 Only 2 left! Good Costa Exciting new project bay TAAIBaL Mesa location Can be & ocean views, 1 & 2 ~ __ .Bdnns for sale or lease sold separately. AU 3 Br OJ)~~ -Vl-UA-BALB-OA- OCEANFRONT $lJ5,000 to $350.000. -· 2 Ba each. Owner will New modular t y pe Several to choo6e from. Assm 8~ 1st of approx. carryatt0%ror4 years . homes, pvt. community. 1).5.000 down. Full pnce ,__hs Agent. ~.600. 0 W.C. 2Dd No 1210,000 each. All units 2 ..... . 24 hr secunty. 975·MOOorG31·0486 qualif v 3b l"''-.. b I 0 . ac. r. .._,a, ..... ft .. upgraded and are ., u e t t I n g K r -_,,. A ..,..U'fi nJ4 ~3816. sm am rm ••'7,.._. gt. fully ~ed. Yearly in· ----Bllifs by owner $159.500 BUI. 831·12S7 come l20.000 pr bwkhng. !::XCEL.LENT LOT m pre 3Br den, country k.itch Seal 1eac91 I 014 Tenant.a pay utilities. ~i~:::W:~'rg~;~oaO:d Aft. 8 PM. 644-0781 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ f R€\TIG€ village, Priced under OCEANROMT I * OwMr-1-..!_ urty at _ _ HOM€~ rmrketatS95,000. Spacious S bedroom, 3 a.-,v 1 -"i"-R E I bath family home oo "Brand new custom --rm-••o-r · peninsula Large R-1 lot home" 2-!tory 3 br 2~ · Real flit.ate Investment.a 4'7-1761 Callowne~67~35.18 · ba, a&epe to sand-too 3333 W.Cout Hwy.NB 1MDY ameotties to list 645-6646 8Y Owner. 3br, 3ba, den, Newport Crest condo. bona. rm, wblte wa~r 2BJ', 2.,...Ba. Upgt'aded, view. walk to main xlnt. location & partial beach. Possible partal view. Sl«>,000. ~2300. rmtal. S298.000. Assum•· Owner. hie loan 11%. 714-982-45C7 --------- Mr#poli •ach I 069 POOL HOUDA Y ••••••••••••••••••••••• Nestled lo Newport ~IT--Beach. Beaullful aod .-: ..... rv ll:A'"'-warm. 2 sty with formal I EAUTY dming. Huge gourmet XLKrTERMS kitchen, profeas1ooally HEW LISTING appraised. pnced right Lge & lvly c ustom 4 bdrm w/big fmly rm, ROUrmet kitchen & rt'fresbmg pool. Offered at S22S.OOO w /only SS0.000 down needed & low m t.eresl on exisllng loan I lurry can't last' 545-949 1 816 CANYON 66-0:m . FORESTE OLSON 1 .... C" UI A\fUtlf"'t. 601 LIDO Super Waterfront Condo. SpectacuJar View. As· sumable loan. Call ror I details. Spectacular golf course .---------estate. 6600 sq.ft. 4 to 6 Bdrm.s, 5Vi bath.'>. PoollOwner will finance/trade and spa. $1.295.000 r» water view custom THE STARNES CO. ~~.~~~~ home. 673-7761 RA.REWESTCUFF VILl.A UDO ISLE 2.st)'. early Calif. 3 BR. den, 3ba .. liv. rm. W/fpl, & beamed cell. Cozy SHY .. w w /•f•w! Assume 9.75%, OMC 2nd. Patnck Tenore, 631· 1266 REALTORS PENIMSULA CHARMER + I 00/o EXIST LOAM patio. Walk to beach:---------club & tennis facil SJl,5,000. Call MISSION REAL TY 04-0131 11.AYROMT- SI 10.000 lmm .... date 2 bdrm Oft the ba,y In lovely De Ansa WlaC•· Private beach . commamtt.Y PoOl Ir spa, clobbouH. ?>oo't miaa uy. u cltlo1 new op- pcidunlU. Adults OQ)yl WTauFF-¥1EW Low mal.ntenance yard, 4 8dnm and family room, up1rad ed ltltchen. S21J,OOO. 642-5200 •T1U 1~~~~~~ e.1 Walker 1: l er. BeelEltata HADOllVllW LoNlJ Jlllouco model ~.,..... Lrf, pyt. beet. Tard· Alaumable a.& T.D. Pritit: 111$,0IO. CaU owa•r tor appt. .... For Ad Actien Call a Oily Pilot AD-VISOR 142.5171 m 10th St. cau Steve CJoMcS Suaday OJoper-au >C3N3tT TllPllX a.er......... 2 Years old, near So. -•••••••••••••••••• Coaat Plau, built by ..... .._. Sewell. 3 Bdrm., 2 bdrm., rers.a. 1100 ~ 1-bdrm . C l osed ••-•••••••••••••••••• gara ges. Outstanding k»cation. '60.000 Down. COSTAMISA 34xS6 1973 Western, lo apace rent. 2Br, 2Ba, Akan sidine. garden tub, Island kitchen, many xtras. <LB7500 ) TOf"toiw MGY.Howws 972-8421 Newport a.adt ~Y the ocean breezes m this cute & cozy llingle wide coech. Call today for full details CFN!M 13 >. TOf"toiw ...... .._. 972-8421 12x44 '77 SKYLlN E, walk to Hoag Hospital. AMS. 557.9390 3>ll48 • 71 Skyline, 2B r, 2Ba. wal k t o Hoae Jbpital. AMS 557·9390 5Sl.ar parlt, l mik' lO Hoag Jbp. 1200 Sq. ft.., 2 BR. 2 botM.$.11,900 Realtor ...... Oii leeclt Double wide 1978 Somerset, low s pace nD. 2 Br 2Ba. close to beach, SJ9178-9. Tortohe ....... .__. 972-84Z1 &MOllOIAY Capture the beauty of the Padftc from this charm- inl 1 Bdrm mobile home. Qlly IZS,000. don osen r••u ltur.., 1213 N. CO~ HWY LAGUNA BEACH ., .... Illl wide 2 Br 2 Ba, like new. opposite ocean KB. Q..500 .... 7552 Cute 1lD1le Expaodo, DeAma 8dWt Part. N.B. S!l,7llO.mGJI. .., ...... IJOO ....................... ..19f.ooo 2~DOWM HWt IMSMIYLAMD Brobr' ('t'14 mo-JD .._.,. .. ,., I 350 ....................... 0... ........... Thr .. Are• hJ, So. lAfllla. ... ,.,. '° •· t1n Bo. eo..t. a.mitt e.daY9 OYlf..,.. H· =~.:.= .,..... ....... Ownes' will carry lsl T . 0 . $225,000 Owner 1agt. 833-9283 JUMITS E. Costa Meaa. Owner-hnanced. Gross inc. $14 ,200. Asking $185,000. By owner : 64().MM. IALIOAPIHH. 7UNITS Owner financed. Gross Swn/Wnt: SSJ.000 pro- jected. Asking for $487 ,000 By o wner. 640-MS4. lHOUSlS ON HUGE LOT AT Sl6S,OOO Can exchange also. AIL· Ben. 972-1740 XBS3. Four 2Br, 2ba units $13),000. owe loan at lnt only. Agt. 631~ I 0 .-W UHITS-CM S.2 Br, 2 ba. 2·3 Br. 2i,., ba tnbie, frpk, lndry rm. yard. 9650.000. TSLlovstmt.s 642-1603 S StortS + fast food loca- Uon across froftl m11Jor OC ceater. QI0,000 down Prim only. Bk.r. 5.56-6171 RENTAL INCOME PROPERTY $58,900. ModuJar Type Homf.9, 36 hr aecurity, 3 pvt beeches, pool & pier. (114 --3116 IMVISTOIS snctAI. e UNITS, 2 blocb on Newport Blvd. Take over $203,000 loan . Seller w /CMrJ papen with no payments W 1912. Act DOW! Call 7~67 ()PfNht9 •1I~ •&Jl'f 1-.1111 N~t leJUMll FOURPLll:X: Santa Alla. 10xl1'011. $171,000. Owner will C81'1'7 It lK rib 9'0,000 ctn. Break eno. Tu Shelter. Owa/A1 t . 5U.a4 WANTED: "f'« Sal. bJ Owner", lnveetor baa tll.000 Cub !OC' bouae or ndlple unl&a in C.11. °' H.B. a rea. Call Mr Moue U 1·1 H7 or -.ms. llJ.000 cblrn, DO qualllJ. ""' owe ,.per. 2 on a la&. -.oao. °"°"6/A(l. ... mn n.. J'OUt' o&d tt\df ror new 1oodlH wltb a OlllllftM ..s. IQ.51'11 ' m.-..... .... ..... _.............. . ........ -..:.-:::······· .._,.. .. ,,, 1000 .. lldu1;1 Hw"U.....,1hill ........... "·· ........ ~~-17tO ..................... . ~ai..tJ , ...... ,,,. ............. C-.MIN ~ ----~ , .................. . ..,.,~ Wllkto&o.ca.lt 0 W C llMtCH llTI 2 Id. 2 be. nper ff&W SXIC 9ao•• 5 • • 410ACJ\ll lkll •• ~ lntl. A 8*m. I N . tita cmmp. 'fteGilwW9W 800PwACN Aprtl let. '4U mo. Dcro.frpLc. ..... Over 11-i/eperCIH mo•.oo ---c.. rd's't'f, a lft H•rv A* b' Jttr Yoaq, Aat. Lull aw 2 , lbe · IMMdbalowl nJl'E'Pt.ACE. HUGE a I bilk. wet bar• IUll nc --------Na, Aaf D11 Tnn '-" • Acn ILudl + Home. Bdrm. I bath bome. raco, tnOtmo. -.-. 100 l U .m I u ,_, Rob&e9. t.nde -"'· S•c I uded u d u r 1 _ua_9-40n1 _____ _ MIA t900mSI ..,._ --prtvat.e. llu a Verde, U HB u-.n 512 ~ ~ front or bay dOle '° TewUlkAe ICbool. ....... JM4 a&\u -•1.0 ..... oc'PK.Owner.18111'. OnlJ 1150tmo. Ask fot •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• UDO P E NI NSULA . Condo on Ba:yfront "moo eq a "' bMut1f\d htQs. I Bil. dim. I ba. aCM• .. au Bfm &mNort.on. At/.. •Tm 18f'f AU ~~-h•ad 3 Br. z be. trplc. ,..,..,., ~~!~be.····~~ Wate rfront patlo. .. ,,,,,, J1'lY .... AU olfert w 111 bt ......... td lSl·la. •M•••••••••••••••• UI mo. lit• ia.t. GOO ._ .......... _,_. ~ l 144 dep. No pet.I. m. 70C7 5 Ba. Z"' be. .. . .. .. ll50 DAYlllQ AD MllnenS -·••••••••••••••••• _ 4 BR. 2~ ba. POOL UDO ISLE. Newt,, de· ()Oft~ 1n netUaJ tclnea with phu b cpt. 2Br. frplc, a trium ipatlo. 975/mO, yrty. LITE. BRIGHT Ir AJRY fl Newport Beach • · .. 975 4 UnlU/Co1ta Men. -.ooo. !ubject to 1031. Mf.W7 Act. ort::SM7'81. SIX MEW UNITS SIUM FIHAMCIMG ud what la more a ~at ~ are tbele •lx Ullita. Four larae 3 bdrm, J bath unit.a and two 2 bdrm. 1 ba unit.a with private palios. Excel area and owner wUI help finance. Also other units In dnt natal areaa. CaJI m.5J10today ALLSTATE REALTORS 8UMITS GARACFS. PRIME DISNEYLAND AREA. S300,000 Agent Si56-TT77 24UNITS Pride ol ownership No vacancy problema with tbese s h arp unit~. Amenities galore-near sboppang and transporta· Uon. Won l last! 752 1.920 751M1111 ll41 ... ....••••••.........• OCEANFRONT COT- TAGE. 2Br. pvt bch, adll&...am tta.,....... l 1" ....................... OCEAN P'RONT 2br, avail. wkly tmoaly. SU ~-0181 eat. 227, or 615-7973 LIDO ISLE Bayfront home, 3 br. to Jilly Isl. s.n Marino 2ll/44M466 ltGCAMYOM Execullve home e&eganl· ly funmbed. Pool table, graod piano. view, pnvacy. l2500 mo. leaae. ~UI ........ View ..... 2 BR. 2Ya Ba, den condo. beaut. furn. S900 mo. leaR or seasonal View d llgbt.s & mts UNlQUl!:HOMES 67~ OHWUAT A VIEW• 2 br, 2 ba, bltna . n9crowave, frplc, many U;y-Utea. Adulta. DO pet.a. 900. m.JrJ• or 7Sl-t187. I F WE DIDN'T LIKE THE MOUNTAINS WE·D BE LIV I NG HERE. Reapon11ble married couple only. Im/mo. lat• tut +li!IOO dep Just renovated, sput.ling cle&o. 3 Br I\,; Ba . 2 car cause + carport. Le yard. Near OMV. Call for appt. 714 /866 ·2234 days , 714~1eves. 3 Br. 2 ba util incl. Children <*. w al.It to So Coast Plaua SS7Stmo. RE 1MAX . Suz:eto. 56&.etOO. Of" TT0-1333 EA.STsn>E 2 Br, encl yard. dl:l· hwuher. No pets. $425. 6CQ3 4 BR Mesa Verde. cuJ de sac, new cpls. p~11nt. cov 'd peuo. SllilS. AU for BUI. S4G-l LS4 Nke 3 BR ho~. frnh paml, rov'd paoo. 2 car garal(e, itrdnr l.llCI $554.1 Asldor &l I, S4G-I LS4 Onnaetree 2 br, 2 ba, pltio home. Cenu-a.I A IC, ~ 6 plush_ Adult commwuty. ~so. H : SJS.1'110; B: ~ 1800. 3 Bdnn+dea+fam rm. C~lt view Never lived 111. Comm. t.enms & pool . 1 900 /m o _ Watedroot Homes 531-1400 VERSAILLES. Adult cond o . lBr. lba . Beaulitul •1>9 faciUtla. BO/mo)'rly. VERSA.ILL~. 2 BR. 2 be cuner unJt. Fabulous vtew. New decor S74S yrly. ON THE B A Y - Waterfroat ooodo 2 BR " dm. Lee paUo. e6e1ant decor. Spectacular view, slip available. S'l250 /mo yrly. WATCKFRONT HOM~ REAL ESTATE 631-1400 New ll ~ver hved in ~~~~~~~~~ BeaUUful split level 4 Bdrm w /s k yllghts & earthtooe decor A vat I DIJI#. tllOO mo Waterfront 631-1400 Brand new home. 2 br, 2 ba, 1575 mo Close to lXI SM--4847 eves Woodbndge 3Br, l' , Ha. condo Yard main ltonan c t•, all c lu b privileges ind ~95 Newport Heights 3 hr, 2 be, dln nn, frplc, patio. 2 car garage, fenced. Avall Apnl 1. l67S mo. No pets. 673·4705 or 673-88Zl. ------ UDO LIAS6"0f'TIOM 4 BR, 3 ba. AvaJ.I. oow' IAUOA...-wPORT REALTY 675-8170 J 9UAIL ....._~fwlllilled Eai.ts1de 4Br hou ~e I ••••••••••••••••••••••• w/J)OOI S7!"1U mcl Karden leaw ~ Aft Spm N~ Crest 4br. 2...,ba, fam ~ 719'2 rm. nuru ocean vu, frplc, --I wet bar, pool, t.ennis, jac. A.!~S~-'°'" Tll l ;lO P'.M.I TRJP'LEX E,ISIDE HEAR 17th Owner wtU carry paper at 14%. Two 2 BR ·s and one 3 BR for owner. Great locauon and polen· tial. 2200 ....................... 1'wo JOalll' klta. 43t Begonia. BW kS to suiL Ownr/Bldr. 190-l.125 ~148 AHR: l•liten R-l lOT Pnme Costa M~a locauon on Baker SL for apartments or condo6 liwlder's package .1va1la ble. Call Jack for in- formatJon. RCTaylQiC~ 64Q.99001 .. • #>, •••• MUST SELL 2 view lots near Greentree lnn. Vic- torville. Eves or Sat ph 714/581-6708 MJC:luiu, Oewri, RftOrt 2400 ....................... FOii.EA.Si New 2 bedroom 2 bath home Ml111on Lakes Country Club. Golf t.enma· poo I. Be a u ll f u II y landscaped, no mam· tman.ce yard. 9lllOClubhouse Rd. Dmert Hot Spnnp 213-37~2$72 KAUAI Octcm "'°"' COMtot 15%down. No qualifying 8"-7180. Aft 1494-51182 ~ 3202 •Po01sen1ce 5.>7-ZilSJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sew •:~er Twnhse nr S 5 7 S M o C o l Y Npt Harbor 2 ms r r netgbborftood 4br. 2ba, bdrm!>. ear h w prl\ frpl, blth\ cupboard'\. ba1h +ast i., ba frplc, 5S2'2 Laureltoo, Garden prvt palto & de<"k. BH<.!. Grove. <Spnngdale & pool, spa. 2 car l(ar No Lampton. 714'~ Pet5 Avail 4 I ~7 Z721 . .-.oa lllcmd 3206 556-<1227 eves • •••••••••••••••••••••• Olanning 3 br, 2 ba, frpl. :2.br. lba. Dupliex gar & yrly S7251mo. Avail 4 J fncd yard JO<b OK Sm Qlll~ ~OK. S380Mo. ~ ...,. Pt d •• 3207 i4Jk', 2BA 1..1'1 ram. •din. ••••••••••••••••••••••• I rm. New cpts. paint. Ptm.. J>t. Sbr. 3ba. Euc. j c.omm. pool. 16U1mo Ola.m Hm-f'antaaUc loc t _90-_Z1fn __ . ----- SJ.SOOmo. Parker Rlty. '4 Br. 2 be.. frpk, Men 551'3253 I Verde area. 1152$ mo + C:.-.. Mw 1122 DOO depot11t. 5~'7·1186 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • aft.er 6 30 pm HAltlOtt YllW NOMI Elilec. home. Ocea.o. nne th VleW. 4Br. 2~ ba. fanuly. 2 Bedroom, den. 2 Ba re" rm . RV area Monaco model. flrepla~ m5 ~ S29-4o4 • and large yard. Com· 'mo. •·'I'" 17· eov munity pool and green· 63'1·l1.53 ____ _ belts S79S mo. Agt. tWir14• •oct. )240 6t()..9a)O ••••••••••••••••••••••• HOMFS FOR RENT ~anside of Hw y 9 room 3 or 4br. Priced from Lhome. J bdnrul. 2-,., ba. S495-S!i95. Fncd yard & 'study &r family rm 3 car j!arages . ..-am a I 1 t•s .ur. 2 frplcs. laund please. Kids & pt·t ., $13)) •mo Lease 760-9!136 >A"1comt' Call 9&4-2:J611 or ai\Spm ~2971 Agt. noftt DUPLEX Jbr. 2ba . patio. F.xer Sbr. 2'-.iba. Sol \'1st a avail. J..20 LM S700Mo Home nr H Harbour Brkr Cooperation No 111115 UlC I grdn r 847-4525 smokers. Own Aj!t 644-1Z71. 957 ·S762 Spy9aa1 Hils Beautiful South port . w 'IUperb view. 5 Bdrm + Bonus, 41-.iba. $2$00 • Ex«ull ve Sol V &.Sta • Slater & Edw3rds SRr 2Vt8a. fam rm. rrpl\ $895 mo w g r dnr 847~ mon1h. Aft).: 760-9333 --------VACANT Decorator ccU.a ge. 2 Br I Super sharp 2 BR 2 Ba Ba. beam ceihnp, frplc SJ15. 3 BR, $450. '3 BR. S blb to ocean, S62S mis. Close to schools. 67S.9U7 fwys lrahopplng. :1r. 2ba. 2 cu ear Rustic lflllij@ilEIJ1£'lG =~ ~~ S7SO mo 962-44n (l':l~l 546·8103 ~x. front lower urut. 2 Qn:io. lg. 2 br 2 ba. aduJL'i Rdrm 2 Ba S800. Agt. only. Nr. Broo&blll'llt & 75-mt Adami. S4'7S mo. ~ COiia Mfto 3224 ••••••••••••••••••••••• KIDS iftT'S ()I( f:l8I"SIDl: 2 BR. M95 Oar. &fncd yard 642-~lOor 64iMMJ MEW HOME Large 2 story. 3 br. 21,,. ba . $675 H unt lngt o n /Clay are a ~~. 2 bdrm. cozy cabin ln the 2 Br. 1 ba, garage, adults ptnes Bi.g Bear Area. Big only.~ mo. lot . $48,000. Call Si 875-<Xle2 •Y9YPtlfVATl- 'Mny house. walk to beach . new crpts. lino6eum. paint, private. fncd yard. NO DOGS Waln' pd. 1295 mo ~ to move In 421 Late. See .i,,.-.3989 M>-4404. Im mac. 3 br. 2 ba a.dlts. ,..__ Flreplat'e. Near So. ....._ 2700 amt PW.a. ~. All • ...................... Sfi2..3850,642-1010 We'N~Aipt WlOver .Cali .> taeo 8CJ9 with cabin on iraln Ii cattle ranch 5450/acre. Owner will fi.nuff. Good b u.oling raocb. R·l lot ln Capistrano Beach. '70,000. U10 acre9 bl M aricopa area. Sat. wltb leaae back. 21 aa. wi&b bome In P uo Robles a r e a . • CIDD. 1JIO aa. 1Uitab10 for a lfalf• o r 1 rapu. $UJOO/aae. s...nl ID~ pro- .,.U.avallable ai.o. Prtnd,pall oelY p\eue1 Jlbr' n.ncllel, acrea1e, llb~lr bomea, COll&act im Marb at .... w ......... ReaJklt' A Aaeoclam IMSprtQIStrM\ PlllO Roblee OI wrlte to Ken ilarb, ISH ftl u r R o a d . ~ C&Ulomla, IM22 ... or call after I p.m. .._tnp '° tlOS) .... i!tlr, lbe, frpk, w/yard. St.ove1mrtg. Adlta. No PtU. S4'75Mo. Mf. I 105. 4148ema.rd 3 Br. 2 be, fam rm, pr, lie yd. IDd9 oil. No clop. 911115mo.131-tOll. Cll/NB area 3Br 2ba tow'DbouH, I ca r 1ar. 911115/rnO. 213m5"°'54 col· at .... frplc, 2 ear 1ar. nr . So. Olt. Plua. S700Mo. 5t8-&'il 01 MM50Z aft. l2 llOClft Mela Verde. Jbr. Iba. lra backyard, 2 cir 1ar. l blk from 1011 cou rse. 'J54.\ISOOI ~ New Eutslde houte, 2 br. den. 2 bl. f11>Jc. #15 mo MMOST. Bte\L brand new duplex. ar. 2ba, pnt Jf'd. I car pr. Truly elepnt. Good Mlll.t\borbood. Perfect tor couple. No Pe t•. •111o. C&U..., Exec. Landini 500 3br. 3ba. ram rm. den. UP· p-adaa. ST7SMo 846-3739 5 Br. tri·&evel, Super area. walk to beacb. etc. 1'795. 9..a21 Of" 963-0352. 2Br lba, near beach, wall· to·wall, d r ps. 1ar. sardener Clean. No peb. Couplet only. $400. •11NO. PaUo Home Sbr. 2ba. l5'7Sllo. <'Anlm. pool. 14191,Ml-5'192 a bt 1 ~ ba t mi to oeean. lg. )'ard. RV ac~. nr. Beads I Atlanta. ISIO mo. Kldl ok, no peta. Cali ...... m.m"1 ..... 3242 ....................... Tr1nldad tatand 1r1 3 Brdm, SHO. Wlth SS' dock suoo. ~-~1.MS N e w B r o edm o or Watel'front 2br. Iba, security, PoOl /t t nnta. ...,_ 511-1122 ICl:t. LOS. Woodbndge u!>Pl'r lrH•I J j MK> 6n.3313. 645-7953 br. ll., ba rondo ~ -- Al.50 !>lllglt-family llome Glamour condo. ultra de· 2 b r . 2 b,. w 1 l h hue ammen1l1K. l br microwave. A L frplc. 2 $49 5 Ca II J an t! H rar garUf' S6JO Both r714 ~2 have Range, d1shwhr. NewportCrestConb - g a r b a IC t> d 1 s P I • 3 Br view RISO mo washer dry .. , hook up I 2 er· S7!i0 mo llJt.h havt' re<.-package Agent. 64S-0295 Lake. pools. JllCUlZI & ~ Luse ~·9062 tH.arbor Ridge Estate' forappL lo5ee borne J Br, 3ba, 3 frpl~. ~Terra~ rondo 2 br I lgr fam rm,~ jac. 3 car 2be. BX>mo gar, sec eated Appl. on· S.Sl~ ly S2700/mo be. 760-9536 aft5pm 9\81'P 3 Bdrm + den. COY ....... V• .._ end peejo. ~Pm. lnuna<'. complet.eJy re- _, A&l m.93.13 furbl1hed. 38R 2 ba FOR LEASY., rharmin~ 3 Monaco model. quiet , Br. 2 e. bome w /larae bandy Aoc. Ava11 mo. at ~ 157Stmo. m...-n tllOO Debi Bibb , Act. act 17MODO, ea.-<Eva '· 1 bdrm C.oodo on creek I Newport Crest Condo 4 be. PooJ t.emus air 1adull$ lDIOsq. ft. Nr. Pool & tetl- No pets Uke new. 1385. rua. South-Meyer, A gt, 673-5003or ~ 548-7813 or ~U57. Woodbnd.$?<' J Br 2 Ba. Nwpt Crest 2 bd. 2i,, ba. den. frplr sgl house walk to ~ach, pool & + v. atnum. romm pool & tenrus S875 mo. Da)'!> I l.lke, avail 5 I l.ea"le 96l-8M7oreves_!73-~-- I ~7~5. itardenl'r irH·I HA.RIOR VIEW ~ 1821 J an1'°" "' "' Somerset model. 5 Br. B~ 12•, Ba. nu remodehng • I ~ koch 3248 redt'rorallng Sl200 1mo •••••••••••• •• •• •• ••••• lse No pets Avatl 3 '"'l2. I () l' E A N f R 0 " TI ~------ I MONTHLY RENTALS 3 bloclts to beach. 2 br + , fW'TU.Sbed mobt.lt! llomt><>. den. 2 ba. Comer IOC.. J ~. 3t hr secunt) l fpk' dbl ur w 1opnt, 'S.l.'iO RMP 49&-381 6 _ Pool & tenrus No pct.a • ~anlronl. vear 'round , I m>mo E~ 968-l.382 Sl200 mo or furn . $1400 ~,... ,.,__. 3br 21,\ba m 1 • .... ~·=~ , . new Walk to beach. 2 RR , 1~7 1 decor, frpk, wet bar, dbl ba S700 Mo I gar. I.emus, pool. rn5 Turner Assoc 494-1177 ~:1)49 _____ _ Ma wpott t.odl 3269 1 Detua Enc. HOftllt ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bay view, 3 br. den, 4 b11. I NO FEE' Apt & Condo l atnw:n, 3100 sq ft. Sl250 ~lats Villa Rentals mo. 646-3893. ~UBkr --- - 'l 28Rldh m.<1tr SU1te 1.J S-0...llh 3276 ba .den.approx 2100 sq ••••••••••••••••••••••• ft Frplc • v.et bar, 2 car 2 Br. den. 2 ba condo, I yr 1 pr TeMl'i. pool, sauna. ieme 1575 mo. Pool & I Jacuu1 pnvil Lea'l e spa.1st, last+ S200dep. 1116() 645·0101 or (2 13 1 .LSOO sq. ft. 493-1341; eves 7UHT70 493-1254 or 493-2734. Ask for Al or Jerry • •SUPER RF.NTAL ON THE BAYFRONT. leue; eat'11111ve Dover Sbres. S Bdrm boml' wtt.h pier & float for 60 ft boat. DlOO Mo Yrly Bay ., Beach Realty 7se-081 t SPYGLASS. 4 br. 2...., ba, view Gardener Incl. am mo. 64().-0735 BIO CANYON Bordeaux l!ome French Cntry kitchen, all amm1ties. April posaessjon SlSOO mo. Afl.. 837-0666 BeautlfUl large house l.n almoet ~ acJ"t. 2 Br. fflllc, bi ti,am ceillns. loca ol room for boat or camper. Compl fenced. 1575 mo. ~ '1971 ----T_.. 1290 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Br. l~ ba. comer lot. Brick frplc & natural wood . No. T ustin. lliO/rnO 760-9531l aft 5pm. C~ 1 I I en IAsflaad hd 3425 ....................... 2 Br, 14 ba cando near So. <hast Plaza. lmmed. <X' c upan cy . $4SO mo 642·4463 ; 87S·8380 , 873-lm2 • VIU.AGE CREEK • Split level end unit - vaulted ceilinp·mutir +LOFT-2 ba ·D.R.-pool -frpl-pvt ... ~ &it.chen-dbl 1ar+bobby opp SC P-matu r~ adulta -90. n t-TNB, Newport Crest I bl', Iba. 2 751-0770 lliol')', ocean vl.ew. 115() -------- mo. Property House. ViMa On.Dada, 2Br 2te. __,arta-1010. ocws¥iew, pmfed ccql, 0.03 aer DAY ,l;t'• aJf y0u PtY for a IO day ad ln the DAILYPILOT SBlVICI DlllCTORY I DO tTNOWI 64Z.1671 Aaoc PoOI • prt• .... Blmlrty:~. • I.WES l BR; caaclo: Oranletr*i EIDd msJt: sas mo • 3 BR; twnbme; E/SI~ °' . Elnd unit• 9JO mo 71Z.1700 ......... ,.., -----...,.. u . -.CJt ....... ·;,. 111, , .,... MM ~ ......... _··-·· •• .1:1 •a.t. MW lltr, Iba, w /1 .... t-. Cloae to btetlk la CdM. •11. -.tu& ' . ---------1:-. _ .. ______ .. ·. ... a•· PllAo tm.CM. I 'Ir, uni yrd tus-Clf R C. 'h11ar. AU for Crall. .... l707 ....................... S l e epln1 room• • ~.snwt• .. ~ITW740 BAY FRONTAGE v'"' l, Bil Sncl ed.lt. Utll pd. ,.50 winter = E Edpwaw 1..a71 ' .. : ·---_ ..... • SooNll *'~ °"' -.... -· _... pr. rwtiw-•AM lundly _._, .... Jlh'. lo. runc:ft•llO't .,.,. Ollilll Jlltua. -/mo. till•Plueniuch.... • .... 4mAT__... ,_,. ... a air. 1i.. be, Tenn .. •"" LMloflt ... A...U. 411. •O.&e. (pro . pro ""»>•2 ....... HNltfl Clutle•~• ~·Swim--................ . ming . DrMng Range lowellouH. lpacloua IWIT1N. UMT • ~ • pool, QulAJt MINTI: Slnotea. 1 , l1'M AduJta, no peu 2 8edroom1 • Fur Im m.INl/MS-13111, n~ & UnlutM~ IArp l Br w /1ara1•. • ~ lMng. No P.ta AdUl1a -· _,. • Modllt Open cJ111y ' no....-- 9toe MS-- o.kwood I Br. retn1, encl 1ar, G8f'Clen ~ta AdWu. no pet•. $325 -..-r . ...aa ... ._. INd\/lo. 81\INN1NO , ..... -.-8-R. 2 1700 !Ith St ,. .. 10ove1 •t 111111 b9 1arden apt. Pool, 111•) &428170 S* 110W lllb& Newport IMdl/Ho. I BR, kJwer. 1'15 uW ln 880 lrvtne cld. AUK>. 2 BR uppel', ZBr Wiater Rental '" rar 161111 S.UO. Nop.ta. 131·2177 1111S. l37S. 403 E . S.lboa ' ... __ ,,_1•_>_~_s_-0_s!50___ -..i.&-.. •-'\ 675-1171. I -,,_..... _,... I 28r Iba .. . .. .. . .. 143$ c:.w .. ..._. l7JJ Afnalwac•tt..... 2Brb ............ ~ ••• ••• •••••• •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 38r 2~bl Twnha . ' .. ~ 1 "-br, refliJC., 11t.ove, bl<K'k ..._.Pi•• 3107 Spacious new uolt1 at 3 lo bch. Adil.a Only. No ••••••••••••••••••••••• locatlon a. See re ntul Pas. 137S. 67S.s.42S al\ 2 Bl' unlurn. yrly. tns. a1ent at 1982 Maple s :.>. 6: w~ Stove. refrijl, utll 6 lndry Open Dally UM:30. facU incl. Rctp. couple. ~or S48-a408. eo.t. ~ 3724 SU.58S2. Deluxe 38r 2tMI, near So ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 Br mobile home ~ Gas Incl. Mature adults No pets Qui". secure 1991 Nwpt Blvd 6411-8373 CASADIOltO A.LL UTIUT1 ES PAI 0 Compare before you renl. C ustom des111n features. Pool. BBQ. cov 'rd aara.ie. new runnture. surrounded With phah londscap1ng Adult llYlng at its best Nopet.s 1 Bdrm rurrushed S38S J6S W Wilson. 642 1971 Spac 1 Br .:arden apt Pool & rer All uul pd Adult. no peU. $315 ~I Puerto 'wlp~;i 1959 Maplt' Avt'. Jpt 5 ~on leach 3740 .••••.....•..•......... H.B's FINEST Spani.-.h fo:.0.tatt• LI\ ini.:' Ht'aut1ful park hk1· 'ur round1ni:-. Tt•rr.11 , .. 1 JIOOI Sunken i.:a~ hhq ... parkl1nl( fount.Jin' Spar1ou ' r oo m ... Separate dining area. walk·tn closets. home Wee lat.chen & cabtn<'I!> Walk t o Hunllnlo(lon CPnter I 11Pdmom (um S:'OC1 • ' llt'dn•lm furn $VI., Townht>UM' unfurn S.11'> \dull .... n111"''" l td1t11·~ ....... . l-\ Ql 1"\I .\ llFH ~Ills \ lci21 l Park.,ldl' l.n l hllo. " ol Bl'al·h. J bllo.' ~ of ~r tM7 ~I 3748 ....................... 1.AGL"NA BEACH MTR f."lc"N Xa.id ~n . rotor 'TV. but~ pool L't1I ii'U M94·S294 9~5 No CoalH'w) Lwrury st udlO F'rtt ma 1cl ~ Color tY S8S v.k tlK' Ull I a. '1227 \11'...,, I br. "'~ ll·U~(" Repaos1ble adult,.. nn pds 04 \0iill Bil~. Ulll IOl'I . 1o1.11lk 10 town bea1·h Sills ct57 ~or m J0'71) l'VI' North f"n1J 11 .. nurit1111t Ul't"•n view :? llr $:1:1.) 4fl9 l~'b Mlwport leech l 7 H ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1&2 Rra11Jl(.~;?l I'. 111111 Sl AdUllli, 114) Jl('IH $.'i.")41 Vrly Al1111 u11r11111 60-47111 WEHAVf.SllMM to:lt H .. ~N'J'Al."i WEEK Olt MON'rll associated 0 11111• I ti •j U I 1\1 t ()U •, '" • IA 1• .• •1 ...... '' ft.t. I RI IOrtT Tl.:U M SQIWt'.,k .a.up A11enl 11·11111 1111 OCl!:AN "'IH>NT. •llt•t' 1arularl L>ally, wkly, monthly• RR, AU 71171 811autll\llly tum11hed I br wUh enrlo .. d .ttaratc"· pool, • all tlMI eatru . .tloomo PnoMm-t1• tt.111 l br. aba. Oondo w/vlew S.curi\Y 1ate. l'\llf ape om Adlt11 only. Shal1 or k>na tum IHao Avail NI. a.. to apprec. m m04ll.T&t 1t111 ' 2 Br. 1"'1 bl. 2 story. S4'7S mo )'Tly. s.45-3160 or 407 Harding St. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 bdnn duplex with patio & gar Lease SS25. no pets Dave. Agt &M·7211 2 br 3 ba w 1fplc. near beach. no pets. kuis ok tin> mo 750-1122 Ast for Bret Coaat Plaaa. fpk, no pets. 1475 644-1103 Large redecorated 2 br apt. New <'pt, palnt. etc Pool & patio No pets Mature adults 1887 Monrovia S325 mo ~:l) JIU ••••••••••••••••••••••• Nire. pvt 1Br Own pvt yard i:;ncl gur $340 mo 495-0227 2 BR. deluxe . patio, ----- garage Cluld 0 K . no <Xean F'ront 2 bdrm 2 ba petS S47S Mo 558·2626 i;pbt levPI Apt S650 mo fo)"ont 2 br hkt' ~;w Co~ Ccill 1!37·53'10 vernenl to b<'arh. bank & hus PO()I W 0 Adults u·as1• S.S.tS 752 5065 nr f)l#> Jiiii $100 FHEE RENT :! Br. I ba 11tu<11n apl p, I µat10 & l!llntj!t• IA•I' Ill J?ra.-..' 3355:? 111 uc• 1..rn I rm $4.Jel &. $4ii0 l!lli .1:1."'I EXECS. OMLY I tr l!lh 9ZJ(1 Your Phou'(' of 2 ,m,1rt .1pt...,. no opk(•t•p' I :!Bdrm. <:ttn.. , .1qwt :! llR. :.? hJ . dtlui,l· 'a s:t.15 !l.'t 1 71i211 &. &~:1 ;·-11. 1·ant l.. ready. $WO • rru fr l~·h l't•nlhoust' O\ l·rloolnn.: ha\ 1x·Nn & lrf'l.• lo~ .1 ~ltWwJOft leodl 3140 UH. 3 b& d1n1n)i.! 2 "Pl • •••• ••••• • •• •• •• • • • ••• bar.. plll.'.h' \'.,rant~ re ~v.l1200mo f.(11M1n dr/. ll~n •. f'uju ,/,(., 1 11/.I-\~.'I~ .'4 lb l I '"••I llwy C.fl M l824 ••••••••••••••••••••••• I J l\llrm ••Pl i.:u~ p.ml j 1-.nl I i:1t r .ullh M2 !.1113 I Bdrm .ipl Enl'I 1i:ar11i:f'. gas p111d 642 5073 2 Rdnns. 1 bath apt Adults Gas paid 642-5073 mt!SliB.AU ~ilTMEHTS GtlAHD OPENIMG 2 Br.2Ba S450 Jo:Xrellent locallon. walk to complete s hopping . Araut1fully la ndscaped Spar1ous aplS Private pi;iuo.. or de<'kll AdulUi lltf'Al paid No peu Spa Open l~6da1ly :u1 Wf'!lt Wilson, C' M 6.11 '\S&1 5-lS. 2Al»l •DELUXE• GARDEN APT. 2 Ir, Aduith ~ ''""'" < 41\t 11-.1 , .ir I'"' I l'J' ''"'"'!> 1111~ .. I h!h4' (11 fW\b & Ill hi> v.ulk lll ~hupjlllll( 17111 G.W...wed at WCll"Mr 847-6064 ._ .. .._. .. ,...... ,~., f\11111 I ..;;: i.~ I I \ I N I, • 1 & 2 BR P1t10 Apt\. • 011hw11hen & BBQ'' • Pool & Rec. Room • G11den land\cap1"f • Jog to Buch & Shop' ',t ., I \J 'v 11 < • 1 • .i , 1 t , I •••. (,' •• "''\I .• ff H 'II•! l 1,1 1t1 U>wly all udult. no l>C'h. •.! llr .! hu nr So l ''ll 1,2&3 Br &Jlta 620() f<:CI l'littu!"t A S4!lll l 'h11dr1•n lllti«r,h lJ ~IOIU9 t>K 7~111217 . f\..11 141i(l I llr hll111t, rt'flll(, pool A1lull N 1111 lll'h s.1:1~ WI 11411.! t"11m11y 'I llr l3M> !'>11111· :1 Ill , :• 1111 s:lll!I I' I 11 v l(n1t111tl, jMMtl t~I 14111\ :i hr. 2 tl11 , nr So ('011111 1'11.1111 ('»II K.'t.'t ~ M to•, " !l) () lkl No11r Nt1w 2 hr, 2 b•. 1lllhwt1r. aw1elt'1°k, 1.'115 ~lld'lfl btN LM'9f ROCMM l'leun, quiet, 2 tMt. I hu No k1d11 /pet1 S:L'101mo l'•JI Jt!ff 831 l.:nl RKALTOlt~ All ulll pd, am rhlld welcoma. a n r Iba , Nina. 01w. end aar. oo plU, a.. 1880 Wallace, Mir 1'7. Ml·IMO. Lar,. I BR In 4·PI ... Dltnl, cpta, d,,.. Adlu, no ~u. tl'll m o. ~llft Shalimar.a.Ill-MIO OCIAMAllA Wulk to lht1 hrat•h l.lit<lll(htful Ill«' I~ fir 111>W. aomt1 w /frplr. all p»tt1111 or hakorut•• fo.:n joy ;JI 1:11'rt111 w 11tlr111'llv1· ti rf'«n bti It . t re" 11, landllul)(I & II hol" put 1111 11 t(l't't'll , 2 j.IOUI• fo'r l tinJ ly t'I ubhouH, w!frplc, color TV, HUJ'li, mwn-tae & wol11hl room Startt 11t l300 hwludlnl( 1nu.J<>r uUUllt<11 Adult., no petN CilA .. SOL 21 H' lroolthwtt "~"u I ' 2 bdrm l'ondo at yh• 11pg. Newly df'<'<>rattod drape!I r arpt1U MltlYO Xlr• larae wllt1 Cnvlded family M'Cllon Patio • non patio apt•. 11vall NNT~ A trana Raadl 1t<l&rfleld. lilD 0.lawaN M1 m> .............. ,.. Cxtna lie aer Iba Pool.Ju, adlll. '4\0 ~L)'nn Mla41 I 8r El1taJdt, amall but '-~ w 1~ ol nut wood. ......... lbr. pallo, nr bch. W MMellOafter4 pm. M&Otmo. 117 Oenava. ..... orM41..aG E·1lde llbr, tra dHk, btamtd celllnlJ, aar , 11dl~1 no do1a.*'7&Mo. ... .,., NN I bt. I~ be trt.a.vel oandD. Qty vi.w, frplr, apa, tll6. Call Bill ....... 81autlful condo. AduU community. lBr. IBa, pool, 1pa. t•MI•. om ltc. Im/mo. MMlll or --···· • ....................... • P4Ul ... IHOI. OA OOtCDO ar:KrALI =Vr"''::t· ~ -t~1.,; Oolr,,... IYaUlbtt M ...................... • Nt• I ~r tH•o. 11J- ....... pool, Jac\llaJ RIM-4 lHolt eo«arta IMfla.I IM•r: our Cbab •• ,. "k11J ......., ............ JIOUHD: .. IAb, Ooldea ~miee ...... Myn.N& ZW.IO-l1'M . . ---1 a.._ ... 1141 ...................... • 1 8r Nit. i. ton. near main beacb. SDI mo Adulta, DO ,..,. l ti AeMta . ., ..... J llr .. lpec'°"9 l"OOIDI t i. ba. "bJU111. view balNft)', OCHDlid4t 0 hwy. No. Laa. Oar SUI/mo. Adull1 71'/l IU ·3121 o . ' r ·-·-::.?.:~ .... ~!~ Qiuatry Chab tM111 ; I BR + den condo . no dllldren, llOO. Auct.r..y . .. ••ma _...,. ..... ll6t • •••••••••••••••••••••• ~a br •l••r. peUO, PoQl. adult!i DO pet.I. 1801 JI Ul.b !It.. Nwpt HeiPta .. MJ.. 7MO. PABNEWPORT COUMTIY CLUI UV... Sln1lea, lW bedroom aiu •• t.ownbousea. From.. 644· 1900 OCEAN VIEW N.8. Adlt 2br, 21>1. frplc, bale, club hie. pool. aec, ST50M Cin · di 73l·S'188, eves 731·2.835 ~LIFF condo. all new Interior. pool. ¥Ciulla. no pets I Br s.'25 2 Br moo m SMO WESTCUFF 2 br, 11'> bo wwnhse, ~ mo Adults only, no pet:. 1728 Bed ford ln S48-7S33. ---- Modem. clean 2 Bdrm. 2 bath 11pt over .:ar 2 doors from beach Very pnvalt' U:.t• of lo\·ely palJO {)pt•n beum ... in h v UU( rm Lot.." of :.tora..:e. wal.lt 1n. hl(hlt'(J t losel s D1\h\\a11 ht'r l(.trbal(t· d1sp With or v.1thout pru.,:e l)nq· b) 5-lll:I Ri\t•r 1\\1• and 1·a ll fllr .1ppl !11 "... \1 .11lJhl1· \l.1rd1 I.'> r..i.., 11;1 ~urn1,h !"tl) 1'-lg" I llr .,,. Ip ,\-i:Jr $-llH) mo I .111 ~ ··~1 .lfl h pm ....... Olllcn.~r. ., CATHIDAAI. CA.HYON OOUMTRY CLUB ...., Ollt1-dral CU)'Olll Oft .. ~-o..t 11.-ori RJty Inc. Lare• 81• l!IHr oabln, pool tbl. color TV. I h'p(QI • ..,. 14. MMlll Ca bin• for rent. -.ehr+ . ..-1y. mon ~ Oreen Valley l...tke. CA.-J·r.34 Condo '°" rent. alpe e. Palm Sprln11 Wk.11 lmDt.h1y 84.Ml 11 .......... 4100 ....................... lloW:ll! A vciid depmtta • cut Uvln1 .. ~nae1 ! Profeaalonally 1lnce 1'71 HOUSIMATIS &12-4134 Dana Pt. share apt pvt. bath. $200. 1s t /las t ~.eve.493--0887 &.einess or prores.'1ional penoo to shr Lux Condo. Harbor Ridge N B 752·9442dyi.. 640 :M34ev~. F share 2Br 2Ba apt Pl H.B. Sl80 Need furn Av11I. 4·1. 963·8 417, 842-0:maft. s. M/F shr 2Br Oplx, qwet. clean, dependable S200+dep s.48-8008 Bt-n M F n smkr share J br 2 ba apt. CM Rer roe 210+UUI. 5S7 71SJ 4 9 JO PM Room mate want.ed. re~p adult S250 mo ulll paid ~aft S wf't'kdays MalUl't' workml( womJn s hare luxurv molJilP home l'n\ rm ~ lt.1 m 1 ~0 77RI Ff'm lo ~hart• ;J Hr httll'•' S?25 ~ ut1 I B<.'1 h :>IJ 375!1 l'\t~ wkn1b . ~.'>I '.>!OM'''' Roommate i.hurl' Jl><irm 'l;pu lhtd~ :'Hr :.!bJ hoos.> 28th St :"il'1o1.p11n u 1>l ... cl~ t•nd ~Jr l Bearh£5-4827_ ~dul~ nu pt-I., s:k1u Do you have a housf'. ('()fl ~25 5 I do. or ~par1ou. .. apt to DUPLEX/Upp« s.bare wtt.h a neat. quiet. ModmJ 3Br 2ba fplr. I l1beral male., Call !Wkll, bltini IC"'r roo 494 2646 befort-SPM. y11·111 b<"h A11•114 I!! 1~'7 .tl'ler lOPM •>r Jny\lml' 41Jl'1 '-A Will )' rl y 11411 •ti 1(.t Y.1"1 or Yr1dJ" I IJl-1 l~I I' f\1\'J 1-ltf)"''I h ·111 r111ml•· lu r I t·111 1111 1111 I• II I HI II•,.. Jlflf'Jf} ....... h frunl , .... 'r111 ~··· ~'''""'" 1 •• 1 t.!Ut1"1•· 1111 '· 1·, r Miii fi7 , 111~1 111'1 llC..1 •17'1 !J~1H 'M 1111.' 1-Ul:t' .lllf 11111 'r • u• ly ~Mo :! 'tl "" L from 1.n-11n ltirlir 1141i 110~1 111 67~ 7CWllJ JHO ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2br, Condo 2ba. llke new A:C, dahWT, prvt bale Av11I lmmed Room · mates OK . 5490 Mo ~l-7~ 3116 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Seawind Viltate Nt-w 1"2 bdrm luxury 11dult 11pt.11 tn 14 plarut from $37!1 , 2 hdrm Wwnhou-IMI from~ t 1ionb. lrnm ... watJ.r11ll11. ponds 1 G11a for c·tx*ln.: &. hto1111n11 paid f''rom Sao Oirao l"rwy dr1vt· North 011 lltlarh lo MC'Fiatldt'n °""' WNt on Mr fo'adf1ton lo Seawlnd Vlllalll' (110183·61118. ..... 4000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '72 Week & IJp S t ud1011 . 1 br11 . kltrhelnl'llflll, pool &. mild H rv S4M·9'7M l.an<lro Inn Mott,I l'HOMONTORY POINT lAll bdnn May~ p11rt ti"'" omr1loym .. nt for ,.,. duced rent K11 yla fm.2101 Roum w/klt prv11 Adlu only nr 1hopp1.n1 cntr llG '15aO ew 1wk.nd1 a Roome avail In lrt MV honw. llOO/mO f!a . lnr •Pll • Ill II ..!!-Bll_. __ Room In I .. houae. Oar, \t F 'hr 21ir ;-1,,, I ,,,,.,., 1n SJ(· lth.p11ni.1hl•• r1t111 '>ffiOk••r Sl!llJ ~ util I 661-64~ Working mother It 9 yr old daughter would l1k1· mature non·amolung in div. 25+YT. to ahr 2Br. lbil cottage on quiet al 111 Balboa. nr bay. S200/mo Rers rcq. 67S·7738 aft Cpm. 050 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WANTED Garaae tn CdM 673-0960 Garaae for rent. 10x20 w 10· cetUn.i l.A)(·ut~ on Cout H wy In 1·t'ntrul Laguna Bch 1100 f)(•r mo 497 21Uor4!n 111% Single 1111r11..:1· -..1ff' I. llf"t'ure Storu11r onl) $4() ;mo f" 11 Yt' MO 1''11" 1 Of&........ 4400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• l.Z3S SQ. Yl PIH mo 1617 WfllltcUff. N U Ag~t.S41 5032 ----- 1 or 2 Rm SUit.M from f7~ 77V W llllh St ('1111 Tom ~zm DIC. SUITIS Pnm .. Newport fltoaC'h kr Nf'ar 0 C. airport Htnt tnrl reception, ron ft1rcinrc rm, jan itor 11t'r v , utllll, 100 frflr r ople-1 & mo rt• l'ie<'n!Un al aer v 1n• a II Ua or Ooul ~lolM 11 PRESTIGIOUS LOCATION. •• laiaidry facll P'rpl<' l mi La. W.-. lo ()(."(; 1116/mo+utll I07.a& •ft.. v-... .... .._ 4110 ___ ,_7_MM_'6_2 __ ., .... •••••••••••••••" ltltecutlv. olftelel avail In Lowly Ntw Tualln home for tldiofb. Homo conk lnl P1Uo • lov1.n1 r•re ai-U171,UH'1fll ----v ............. 4JIO ••••••••••••••••••••••• r..nty ol anow at Tahoe. apacloua 4 OR . 3 ba hom9. Tahoe K1ya, louth lftore. Juu m lft , t o Henult Valley • 8111 ... M , AvaU. b~ tM --.-.a.&&MNm. ... • fUll Mf\I ofo bldl Nr 0. c. Airport. l\acapt • ~ ana., Ht')' atrv • l'Utl rm. 9'o. P it ... nll .,.. .. ONk ape~ SlOO Mo , 11ml offlct 1150 Mo 1111 WHtclllf Or. N w pt aud\Dl.4*JO OMNI In "-rvlft 1tot.1. tllatorioal landmark. 80 • up. Bay View. lmmed Ote\q>. Cont•t"t lbemlm Otne9 OI r9tall •PICH avail. Dena Pt Pla11 ~n. front IZ50 fl Up ......... <rnce Space avaUable, 7mlq ft. 8'Bmo lncludea ~ 6 ma.int Oood &oca· UOo. PCM • 112nd St, Newport Sborea cm.er. Call Robbie. day1 56-0'm. E\iel &U-0221. ~Sq. ft. MSOmo .001 &rthSt, N.B. Apm. S4 l S032 •BAYFRNTOFFICF..S :l)().500sq ft 714-4r13 1000 ..-wroaT CIENTH fUU eervlce exec awte<i 644 7180 c·~~.-=M~u~. 2790Harbor Blvd Comt-r H.arbor & Adams 80' sq ft. C.11 Jobn 8o)d. s.&Z313 . m i sq n o<r1ce '>PJ< t· Not i.t~ frontaRt' \m pie parking 45' rt 1.t•n llaynei. & A'~ f.40 IW:..t 2 C'OQ.IJ9('t 1 n..: 'ui le-. l>W '«! ft utlli. pa 1d :1J0<11 Clllt' Perft>t'to SJ( "'~' I mo lnM• 493 m'.12 4450 .......•...•.•......... For 'ton• & 0Hi11• 'P•t< •· .1t 1 t•.&.-..ma bit-r •• t ,., ~hMstled llft and atooeware ~in eteaant 1bop-J*ll cem.-. Ideal owner ~ratlou. Turn Key, wtth excellent return. <>wna-reUrtnc. m.ooo ~13 CAMPU5Dl·llNIN£ FA.Mii. Y SHOP COlfa~ 6da~. est.abl.labed llyn SLl.<n>Down TIME. 751·1400 s..at ........ for salt> 548·2S09. 646 ~ llBIAR Hwli14011leoda. Does 200+ rase,. 40 + kegs, plU.'5 gain." ~o mm petit.Jon ~k1nl( 12.5 1-Xl Cbwn TIME 751 1400 REST AURAMT Or-. Stt>ak & Loh-.lt'r hJ' betor & V. IOt' S Ii' 0011 rninlh 1, """' on book' SHU I.Cf) Full l'ntt• 29 , Duwn TIMt. i51 I.WO MAHUfACTURltolG ~Mokla: ••••••••••••••••••••••• '•a• nm• 1100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LO·Calorie Alcoholic Btveraae Rec1pe1 12. BACHELOR NUT1UTION StRVlCE. P.O Box 7200-U4. Costa Meal llG!m8 . 5150 ....................... Oar ~ t.o worli. H B to Whittler Blvd. Call 164-ZJt "' .... IJIO ....................... P&EONANTT Cutn1. ow••..,..l1l c.me1U:t1 • ~ Abortkln, ldop. tJan•.......,. A.PCAllE MJ.21183 COVIi ..... •flJ.0171• 2t Hr <>wcau Service PRE LAW student oeeda 12:5.<m. Will do anythl.oi Le1al. Conf idential DVM. P .O. Bos 3242. N 8 821111113. •FOXY LADY * OlftCAU. ONLY •97~1 Ill• &.oltlt"-d SJOO DIAMOND WANTED ••-••••••••••••••••••• Pnv petty wlJI buy l to 3 FOUND ADS ARE FIE£ Cal~ 642-5671 cant, cash. N. 8 . S48475 MASSAGE 1unpet.ico Your m8MeW· isBobJame. OW:alla ~ ll. fllM-511 l TOMMY'S OF NEWPORT ESCORTS alfir'! u.t or Found u l)('l" Ca 11 1 Animal A'iSl!l lant·t' •• 642-1571 1..('aJCut-537 221.J n<• ft-t' SPIRITI.:AL READlNGS lOam IOpm ~'ully Lir cl fo ·, tUOd °' lob l .. pet ' C t1 II el 7296 or "9'.! !kJ34 HHS ~pec1al P al'> llnlllne , S Camino Ri:al. Sc1n i'l4 "fl2 lZl5 21.'.l 258 739M Clem RF.WARD lo."lt malf' Tt·r nt-r mu do!! bt-11!1-m t Ir < \1 .; rt' .i (. 111Illr1 n h1-.. r1brok.-n ~" lJll ~~186 1.0 ... l "'1d lt' , .. 11 ...... Lt1 bradnr l>r 1 tl \1 I cl(t'J t;TJ ~ 675 l"2M REWARD O.C. A.llPORT •ESCORT• Spt>r1al1z.1nR 1n l"nJfl'f>.'llOOcils lr.':? 4!f7ti to<im lam FOXX SHOP S.S.• $100..a .. 10" lt-r amH Whult 'JI• ~.nes., mol<h f1ll.turt':'-I " J r m r P m ' n ' ri ,. l. ,w·k \ t1lut.'<1 at $31).(.JUIJ lJ.bT (..ti I ... I Jl1'1ll11 b1•"1..' F\Jll l'n~ 1..~ 01 ll()(J I !"it Wr\tm1n,lt r I.I! 972-4776 Tl \1 f 7~1 141~, oraru?f' "'ht m.•h 2 r. I :Mllr~ <'ht-< k-' \rt f'1)t 1-.1 .;;vntmr..t I r..c 'lRJl ,.' ---------OpporiwW+y so1s .. ,, t ' 11 Gr.atc-.-y ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cf11.IJI' rt·tn••\' r rnt' ESCORTS \1in l• '" ·n "" 1 1 ,.~1 lo m Ill...,..,.\ rn., -~··I 11 l • ' I I ;.nrr.. lillo. ,,, ,1, .. r (,!fl I .. H 'I 11 ,.,, IA I 011!11 lo • al I< f ••to 91, "'" IOI-H m" h·1r1 t .111 1 CHECJCSjMCjVISA 500 to 2700 Sq ft. ~H~,\ \'~.l<l>F !11< l'I. \/. \ ~ ~h..,.i \'t•rdr ~. I \l 545-41 23 ')" "" nun ,,, r11 t, ... "1 \I .... "'llt~•Ul J .... • JI I I I lt'tu .... ,,, \ ,,,. •• ;.1 ;·n l [Jo\ "lottt·r lt"'k ni.: l•1r I r n ,. ti 1 m .1 Ill lfH H \l \' ,,.,f rri.11• I \Bk \I>• 1H ""' ltl~ rrult· l \l luni: hJtr•~J nr .. nl!t' m•lt ,l . .,,. port &ach Anlmiitl Sh•llf'r s.. 3656 KIMS OUTC ALL !f ,_'I :Jl:!I RIHT OR IUY I t dp11al ll1i,:h rt•lurn of71Klsq I\ offl~ bwldin1!. JJOt>S•ble Call Joe. Image nt>ar Lido Isle, pun·ha .. e De \elopm enl Corp pn l'C tl)j s. 000 .... $1 uo. IW I !ti I s.41.l'l dwn 430 J2nd St . ------- Newpoft Beach Call for Mml'ytola. 5025 d"ails S1•rr11 Rea It)' •••• ••••••••••••••••••• 6:n710l • HEWPORT /C.M . I I• 1•1 171.1111 "I f'l ,, \ .11 I ,,1 lllllflt I lj(flt'I I dlt .\ , ... , .. Ill .. ,., .,,,_, /NEED I MONEY HJl.1'0 bnnd1t t ri1t1rt'tl fem k.rtt.en. uin col Lar ~ 3 1 11'8-M17 Found M arr h I long hal.l"f'd icray I. •1l1tP c c1t \11 lLlrhr>r \11·"' 11111 c 1tm "411 x •1 t' >I 'I> l'llfll' •Ill ri ' IO '1 .. , ,. 11111. I II \\ .t I j 1 •• 1 llo4K 21;.,1 f " I J>aJm & p,HhH' Reading, Ull'I p<15l. prr'lent & ( "~ 21.3..{8.C 32!18 Pre.I M~•ee by Ste• •. l.lr'd }"llerap1st, N Ii llam 8pm Appl Only sel-21m Mmtmq Studio GIRLS ·U c : Ii ~ I 'It• I \1 AX '• 'I\.. \t.J • ~ 11• "' n l<t.,,. n • • •. • I ri•·r11J ~ '"' Jll l;.,fl V I fl lfl fnt'(flf I 111•1 ' l\•.111 l"r lflt Ott I "' • upjln• ~ An1µ1 .. p.11 ~ lrlj( ~t·wp11rt l>C1 1,:,11 I • b1und f-o•m \(;:ti in ' ' l "pm ~JI ~ u 11 it/l\1 HlW 1oCJ1i .! l ~ti HST OH HAUORILVO. Nt'Wly rcmodt•INI 'h'•I• ping <'cnut-r 1n ( o't 1J Meo.a ha11 offleNI ll "tul for 1mmed oct·u11an1·y from appro11 480 to I~ fl. w ~w Cfl)ll> & pumunii at rraaonoblt· rau. Call Paula S Kati A6'. 213 464 U.111 Town •<"ountrv Shopptnl( Ccn It• r ltunUnilon llut h Awro.11 4500 Ml fl fur r ommt-rt·111I or off1rr llW• ~to4Y n11g,3mn11r a13 tl73 871)3 SUIU.ill Ofc&Won._,.. '"the l!:lpl•ade ll.4odh11l nl"ur Rn111A1I 1 ~. yr lc•ll..M' 4 offh't"1. rt"t"f'P t1on art111 , w,\r1•hou'•' With hirjlt' 11l11hn1o: cloor I. full llf't'urlty ~r1l1•m Av11ll al\Clr 3 2.'> *' ('all to lt't' IOA M to hi' M 540 ~ 64-4 ))4()() WMtt"d bu11lnM<1 & h v 11tl'll Of po11alblt• >. Npt t' M arn. 111~ 100~ IW8-0117A 4475 ••••••••••••••••••••••• orn~ or ahop apa ('f". ., !'> llC:t ft , Ori around fl r I ;> MijOin upper unit.A, tcll.ul mi m aq n On coa~1 ttwy . So l.a1una Slio!J Mo 4llM lt'7'7 , ............... 4500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• >em ~ ft fOf' It mta avail lmmod 7S4 '392 8arben or Gordon ~C ... el2'5' lnaped uu. 4000 s r. un· ll. top cond Ca II me for amen.JU., 0 . Thoma•. Ownr,ITMZl. f'TJ·14l7 .... W..tM 4'00 • •••••••••••••••••••••• 0. bedroom cotta1e In quiet 1pot In Laa un• Blft(h, COrona i.kll Mar or Oleta M•• rM OX> or ltll Qul9' af"fta Ml~n Ual Wrlt• Id ••• (' 10 Th• Dally Piiot Newapaper. P 0 8ox l5t0. 00.tt M•••· CA 82111 or t •l tphone 17>715'. CRB>rT HO r...11 llunt Hoh < .it1 rftOILIM 1;.11 I(~~ •If ·~11 .S./t" z.d & lrd TD loaltt I L~ll'l Uo1o: f-'t·m Slwph.-r11 I \ r rl'n•·h l:k'lr.;i1 LEMAN DE LARUE ESCORTS 972-0482 24 HRS (..'KS MC VISA '71-4531 I nUll, gr .. \ blX & t.in nop I CoodHa.. Lo.ts \lb32176 Uo~lrav,.f.ol f.tr Arranged h> l '') f .. r' B" n d 1 1 · Wldowhumooeyfor 2nd Rt:WARD 1.o•t l1Rht 1---------- T o·, No cn:d11 r hc·rk l'.illro ('Ill Wllh a ( ro·~' no pilty, Sl() 000 up t•or e > " \I 1 1 a r t1on r all Airnt Maqcut'Tll t' ~~i.v11·-. 6737311 Anytime CdM 117~ UNLIMITED FUNDS! H>UND Iii! bm .,,. hlk rrmrlunJC,S fum mu. tlt•lot \11 17lh • lu,1111 ~ l200 1-'0llNI> l\r ol<I Wh1I• lrm I irrm ~hr11 \ " !'a~k'r &-l1ol1h-n"'•'"I ' .,, It.ti li<1N Charlies Angels Ou I call 642-3812 MC/Visa lild TD Lo.a. CO.-. "' 2 -..kL T.,_ .. to 15yn. l-1•untl l AllHAIHllt llr1U l'nH•f ~ll~1t••n I r h11 1 folorr1l M PAL.OS VERDES FINANCIAL 675-2273 l'rhatco Party hlUI mon1•v 111 loan Rnl fo)lla lt• 2nd 'I' 1>'11 llWtnlf l'lt' 1'·1111 Actkln Rkr 9'7~ 11n R E Uu11 Ai f'M·s Loal\8 MaPoWt Alao t•Qulty & 11wl n1< loan... Sl0.000 & up. mi pn•puym,•nt M.annt'r ·~ P'lnanrl11l °' 9234 Mflntoy nvollahlt' for any 11'uon ~wty lo.n." C.ll 11at 641~ Morl111Jft. Trwt o.idi 5035 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WMlt'Mf9.Co. All lYJl8 of real nt.at~ tnvmt.meota aince lki ~­z.IT'Ds 64Z.Jl71 HM61 I 2ndTD'S ... ,..., 15 year term. $10,000 or more. No Ba tloon. Udo Newport Co m '1SC5 • • • . • • • • • )tlf rs WTD For tale. 1106,000, 15"' l!Qrelt Newport Beach Pftll)el\1. Dlacounl rate ne1o •lable Dou1 Siemer. U O·HH or ~ l.AllRAIHH< hlk M t 'llllltlAllllA mt~ M hlk wht CAT. 111 h111r In • olurc•d fo' Npt 111 h Arum11I Shf'ltf"r ~ :111.."W\ la11 mMll' Mm•'"''"' lnn11 luur c-at. hl11l'k w v.h1h· m•rktnll" Nru1t•r1•c1 & <1t'd11w•od V1r l11t·1f1t· Aw c M 1..(1&1 3 to KO ~ 0082 OT )Cit 11~7M fonund ln8h S('th>r. fo't•m. J 11. 1•c11 & w 111 nrr ., l1'lll SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS Simi~ Print Ivory Abi\unt VITAMINS Only in Amenca W'Mrf' rise could you nc a panhaodler outside an oraan.tc rood store aaklnc roraper-. VITAMINS' 1""81 buutllul Siberian Hl.llky. Oranae County Pound Muat be plclled up within 3 day11 . ~ . MOW IS THI TIMI for Job aeekera to rh~k the Dally Pl lot llelp Wanted cl.,,.lncrallon If ~ job you want la noc t.hett you mlaht con11lder offenn1 your aervlcc11 wtUI an ad In Ut. Job W_.ed <'llef(W'Y Phone MWl7I kno~ 11\411 • .-1110.i \our ""'he''' "" '"" f.. -.rur 1ru: m1••h hl*lt-cl 1:111~~"' Ill ••IC h•• i:r11nd II 11taM. ttuc .1t Y\1U1l1tt1l mmd my 1>4-1011 1111 111111r~11al\1'. ITlll y ht' ) tlll 'II ... t 111 I OUI' h W1tll mt•• 1'0 8VOtd tlh .. ,.,.n .. rall11. you knuw wtwore 111\ 1• Amy ltf.ll11xa1jon with C:l1111J1 EXCLUSIVE ESCORTS •642-8572• ~~lus5J60 ...........•....•...... l't-r.mnalm•d sy:.tem that br1na11 Pror S 1n11les to11eotht'r Saiidlebark Sangi .... 835 048!l ----Soc.WCtubt 5400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. UL II.ACK IOOK" Lifetime membenhlp $J5. women S20 Improve your llrestyle. W e penonally handle ea. •P· plicaUon lo usure a &UC· ~ful lntroducuoo. Ap. pllcaUons accepled by ~.Take part In ex· rllln1 1oclal events w '()ranp Co newesl & most prof dating <iervl~. 631 7181 "=-= ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sc-..& ..... , ...... 7005 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -... ~II 11 • t : -'" DS. •• ext au .... ••• ... ln 25 ••• •• rn % •• 'Cl. ••• ry llt •• • 0 .• )l e e I· f , to 12 I. d d e d a b r b .. r 1. '· )' '· ( n ( I a p ...... ....................... ., ..... .. It ··::r Smellbr , ,, ,. llUrla.1.er, ~ • ........ Id.eta remd'l, door11 , bme repalra ~ly wotk 114·1'10 Jim ..... ........ fbne repair. lddiUoas. -• ... ••••••••••••••• c ab1aeta, door• e tc R..ideallal·~mmc~1al Rmbl. .-n:a. ~-1' Do It )'OIU'Hlf CUilom 0 'g ... I 11I11!'---· .. .IAPANllaO.AaOIND .... ....... n•o4e.I. II JH HPJ. tlHp, ...... 0.0. ru...r la IUllilca,., n .. Ht. l&Uc'd.,.,.... ___ ., ... -.Jwc.. ~~!f.1.:9: ..... '"tlall1l1 J:. Ht ID If' •• I I ... t '. r . ...... ~ .... .. '"" '••111 ...aJed __ .. ... ........... ....... ~· ·-.. ................ ~, "' .,., ... Ive Ort.._ Miii& t.rUmaa. *~~~•Ith ........ ....................... ILICT1UCJAN Pn~ rt.itlo(r .. a tlmate un o.. ,... ... -..-a ..... II • ..... ~ •••••.•....... CarpeDlry, maaoary. rooflo11, plumbln11 11\oortai, Stucco • Ole Drywan • more. JB. ...., ~~U~3 ~ Pl1mbln1. eleetrlcal. ___ beaUnl. all aea rep&tta P'rt'e eat W. llll2 __ _ tlauUnt·llo•tas. Co•· mlta la l1" rem.oval. ~...S..-1'.M *-C..S.vlcie __ .............. ~•m•s. Reaid /· WW ..... care ol elderly 0:...'\. aew ccm&nac· at m7 bome, Hper. dla.2U/Jtl·MUeoU9d. ~ It 11 ~ Call aA I : U ,_ waat a t.boroulh job .... daot. l wwtl by m)'Mlt. It m 1 • t • OLU D1bb6e at lllM7U. ....................... Bdertnee9 . w .. a R.l.AILY 0.EAN -------- HCXUf CaU OIDtlbam Reuoaab&e ralet. alnt Gbt. rr.e-. "'"61%1 wart for The Penoaal Touch. MS-aae. Pam. OLU Saow-Houlecleanlna For a home or buamesa U'9t I~ like IOOW mrore , ..... , ............. •Ip, 1prtnkler, IOCh. ...... ma.lot, IO day wur., 12 yrs nper. Uc. lnaur. Ul·llU or .,,ma, Brtdrwoft.. &alall .tc* . ""'°"" Colt.a ..... 1"111e. l'IU171 eWll. Bn<*. ll&ODe. ~ won, We nn. ~ pallol. .um, drlv~aya. Free e&JotmN-lSl ........ ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... ....................... a.pair • R•roof. All ---------tf Pt1·tbln&le1 · Jiil/Eid.. Alrleu 1pray. rotlullaakN·~mpo-t.ar . ~ CabloeU fNe eR. Ml.-J'1o. retlDllbld.. '7'l-52IM _A;....nll.;.;._ _____ _ RA1HBOW QualUHld roollnt. Fret r.xt. bit. 4 yr l\l&r Lo eat. lAali: repalr. I». ::~ rr .. e1t. cau ~ ~ o;,~.! .. PAPEIUIANOINO Comm • r ... Quality Reroaftn& • Repe1n. all warti only. 5'eve . Oaya tnes. par. No WabJ.aa. -.mi.eve..4'M.Q:M e•c:.._IJ Redden«Lal • commettlal petnttn1 Free eat. Reu. ....... 8'7S-lll!il, sn-qJ37 ~th u I ..,... . ..................... . Sewmc Machine Serv. in rou.r home. Guar. 2S yn exper. W1$-U07 s.wt.J/MtttaffoM Sm.ob 0•• Wlr•IH• c..et s.r.tc. Haod P.•qp Free lnlo ..... •• • • •••• •• • • • • • • • • F.UX'TRICI A.N Beal r a t e•, be al workmanahlp S aull ~ prefemid 151~ Home rep1lra e x -Oeantng, AA1 type, lst Wam a Clea.a Houle. but hate to clean. Call ~ we 're John 's HouHcleanlA&. We do everyth1n& from &en dNo.ulg to thc»e aped al ~-f'uUy lie "d, & Ul· aured. 5.57 7480 ~,.. ...... ••••••••••••••••••••••• O.ve'a Palntlna-tnt/ext, ail yoar-pa.lating needs Ra. comm. lnd, free est -7467 aft 5pm ....................... QIW!ty peJntJna •paper Sewtnc Machine Serv. u:i Demo. ~ • •tum clean DIMOO Int. M.S-t030 Co&or brt&hltnttll, wbt qq 10 mtn bleach Cwan bv, dln rm. ball W Avr -••••••••••••••••••• • • nn S7 50. ('OU('h 110. cb.r CUSTOM OO!!RIOB CARPENTRY .By Jay 642 880ll Cu1tom C arpentry Int /Ext Boat dock re pjlir. Char ReoovatlnK MS-3749 STORM DAMAGE Rep¥1r . . Remodl'I Ref.ident \om mer Liren.<.t'd Honded Free FJi l 646-8649 C a rpenl ry ·Comm 'I ~Id Free Estimate J o hn . 646,042S, or 5.:ll-8082 & Gwi.r ehm .,e:t odor Cpt rt>paa, ~ yns eirpr. ~ ~ mr.sell ltefs. s:n-0101 We Olre Carpet Cl.ea.oera. Steam clean. Alao up· holstcry Work guar. Truck mount umt Free est, reas. rates 645-3716 CARPET CLEANTNG STEAM &SHAMPOO 960-3768 c-tlt/eo.u.fe ••••••••••••••••••••••• Thompaon-Kesel Contractors 11380165 Cement work all types 1be fastest draw 1n tht> ~ 642-8482 West d O:Hly Piiot Clmslfied Ad ('allToduy SPll tlun~s fa5t with Dally 642 513711 Plltit Want Ads p e r I e n c e d I D da.w won dooe w tlnte ~/outailk No Job \00 lrilY Ranbl. lm. SSZ--0105 RES IO.E NTIA l. & Landacape Qu a lity work Call Mike Ad Sitter IZT. 842· 4300. a&tU'8 Electricl10: Lo Hates Quality work. P'rH !!:Bl. 964-5227 Homea-Apts lodu11tn al Commercia l Licensed ln11ured. A&A Electnr 979-3330 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wood plank, parq~l & ceramic tile floon. Reas rates. Mr Ml1Jer67S 1.257 am.all ur large Work out bequahty. ~·2901 PUA CUFF Home improvement. re modettni, fencing & rool· IJl&. 25 yn exp. 631-42154 Halllnq ....................... llauhng & Dump Jobs Ask tor Randy. 641.&l27 llAUU.NG &CLEANING Re51d !Comm 'I. Free est. a.u 962-1462 AU around hauhog IT. truck. Free est. Call AM. S48·39M Let WI do the DIRT Y Verylowpncesoo WORK for you'! THE landscapecleanups INCREDIBLE BULK George !>49 201S ~m7 ------ ~ar Crpt 4l Upbol Cleaners. fir waxing. een. cln 'g. Ranbl. Prol. SUnanSS~. 7Sl-8961 T.L.C. Housecleaning ~rvlce. Dependable, thorough. U c'd/Bonded Try us! 7$4..ftl30 TIFfAHY"S Weekly or 1 lime maid 5VC. 1~ DJ.SCOUNT ON VACANTS. Steam ca~l de.arung. Insured. Pree ftit. 3' hr ave 831-7181 Housec are Serv ice, LesTroia Oomesttques, call 640-731~ for your ln.ase interview flnd what yoo want ln DaJJy Pilot Cl~1f1t'ds ~-. ..................... . HYPN061S WORKS For free coaault.atloa call Ad Slit.er • 18, 642-4300 lM tln. .._Ta ••••••••••••••••••••••• R.J Cook. 20 yrs ex~r. Loca l ye ar a r oun d aervt~ 496-11.Sl ,831 7132 ln~Tax Pttp' ~ olf before Mar lS M. Patemoatro. enrolled agt '714*2~ Call today fo r appt 646 S233 Sbort f"orm . Stat.e & fed SU CM. ce ntrally located J Monany, Acct PETERS PAINTlNG Espr 'd. Reas R1te1 Frtt Eat. Call Gene ~ Painting. INT /EXT Neal. booeat, rus.. 12 yn. exp L1c'd. Dave iM-1~. F\.ae ext. painting. St. Lie/Ina. Try me. R Slnor'.836-~ Pnil J)9iatlng. Ext & Int Most Ext r:ns • 3800Ci F r ee est 536 -4 383 MCMsa 1J11. Work guaranteed home. Guaranteed. 25 ~ell.Steve Sf7-4281 ynexper 714·9'75-1107 T.Y.Alllc rr ....................... ~~••••••••• Attic & rool lmtallaUoo. Nmt petcbec 6 tat Multiple outlet.I. 13 yrs ... IST. "J. m9 exp. ew Coyne. 496-7912 ---------,... ~EAING ••••••••••••••••••••••• AddJOons, houses Cerarruc Tile Installed. Freeest. 585-4892 f1 rs, counters, t ub:.. P la a terl o g · patc h es, r estucco1. add1t1on' ~ Ed 645-566() f'rtt eo;t Refs 540·0760 B&th'i. k1tchl'n11 , e ntr y WllY'> For ,-..,umatc l'llll fM.91112 a'k for Mike n..ve·s P&10'""'• :servlDg rt tiNg ""' _.., ...................... . TrwSentu ••....•........••••.••• ara 9 yrs, most n-u. c h eck m y rd lie: ~ ESSIAM Ostm Paanung. lo rate-; f'ret' t"!>t 3 )r RU.tr 962 14'18. 633-9837 aft~ Speaaln::m'¢ Ill r~1d rt-n tol property hland Senfl<."eS ~I ~t draJD cit-an ing. plwnbinic ~ SO up 5'-3102 d~. S48 4QJ .. n s TREE SURGEOH Trees LOpped & re mo\ 1.-d YilfdC"loup. 7~1 3476 liarRa1n 11boppers r ead tht tulle ads rn Clas'\1fied mcularly And lhE·y hnd what they 'rt-looking for Hetf> Wmthd 7100 Help Wanhd 7 I 00 Hltp Wanted 7 I 00 H1tp Wanted 7100 Hltp Wanted 7100 Hllp W.tect 7100 Hc4p W.tect 7 I 00 Hltp WCll9hd 7 I 00 7005 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... --------- AIRLIWll CAREERS , ....... , ....... • Awlln-. • f1a,..l A .. t1<i.t llt,.J_..r-c-W~ .. ·-wwy t. • Hdlitll <•-· .. _.....,, • Cw'-< s..vlc• •Tlda.t ~ ....., ""Ill ........ r..i,.---<111 t.-.it " ..,... ....,.. International AlrAcH .. y 40DL~111fo+od. V.__, Wo. 9'660 (206) ttS-2500 _,... OCiJt ... u ty ..... phone JobsWanhd, 7075 ..............•••.•••.• PROTE:Cr YOlJRSEl,Jo' I a m a body ~uurd . persuna I t·hauffru r & professional ha rtt'mh r I A'lk f or M 1f'h,Jl'I 213~30\ Mature Enl!IL.,h "l't'ak1111! lady seelu\ 11e>-.1lion ;a~ co mpan1un Lt A<.'CT(i UKPNG 1 Jo:MPORAHY Hl'J..'blc·r today to work on venous acrounltng & bookkeeping assign · ments. Work close to your home . Figure Clerks to Senior Accoun· taota needed throughout Orange County. 111111aa1 ........ accounleli'5 Zl13 No. Broadway "200, Coldwell Banker Bldg., SaoU Ana 0141115-4 I 03 FRE E P ARKING ACCTMG Cl.SU( SECRETARY PoRt accts rec /payahle vou1:hers. type SO wpm. rccept1on1st dut ies Irvine Mfr Call Karen. 54().8894 Acorti; Payable clerk for frozen rol)d mfl( ('(J lmm1·<1. OJ)('11mi:·~alary rornm<·murat~ w 1cx1wr For uppt ~>4(H~671. I!: 0 1-:. 'iAIJATASSO'S PIZZA ADMIN ASST r tJme. rm1mt1<ll plan nrn~ l'frwport ('enll·r f' .. O~. Call Mrs Oud11k, 644 7154 Adolt-...ct?nl Girl<> Home. AIR BKKPR. 9ulled Nu l'Slllll fac11Jty Respoos1b11Jl.les Inc pu tJent b1lllllg, follow-up, summanes and agings Famllianly w /Medl-CaJ pref. Will train person w/at least 1 yrs. 11ml11r expr. • gd typing 6 ten key llt1lla. XJat aalary ,, benefita. Apply Hunl· ~ Beach Coavales· Olllll Hmp. mu f1orida a. HB.147.ats A/RCLEU ~ days, nex hrs. Call Jun at 838-990'7 AS.5EMBLERS PCI $5.75 Hr. Dus A I min 3 yr. exp Sokler It Wire PCB 's Read B t P's & Schema tiei> 1\istrn area Omega ~-4443 ASS EMB LE R S As!>e mbler , m achi ne Wll'e wrappers, experd lst & 2nd Shift avail Pulilll Engmeen ng SA 54()..4229 A".wmbly, bght, fem fo'ull Lunt!, 8-hr day SJ 50 hr. Sm 11hop. If B. Non smoKcr Call 9am·noon f~ appointment 842 Jl21 ASSEMBLERS we will tra10 Ap ply 7am . MatGrel(or Yachll>, 1631 P!amilla. Costa Mt'Sa ~keepmJ: 5 day!> J)('r Wl'f'k 'l/urs1nr hark ground Prefrr llH ar1·a !IJl 71ZJ UH' m I lou.o;emother fi --------• Uome & apt rlraninl! Reliable, nf'at work <:all day· S48·204!J, i-:vc·s ~ Houseke.-J)f'r ;1va1I for live to po"11l1on Matur<' p rofe ss1on<t I. wE"l I educated, good dn vcr , " I n t re f 'i. P r e f c• r Newport Bearh or Anaheim Hills area 714 /88&-5572. HousecleanlnR. Exp . responsible lady. Re f on request.~~. ~'.1rl!>. 3 4days week. room & board+salary Call Astnd· 646 0530 or ~ ADVERTISING SALES 1bc Dally Pilot has an immediate opening for a i.alesp e r soo wllh ~wspaper display ad· vertlsing experitmce. Good salar y , com - nuss1oos & excellent fr. lnRe benefl~. Excellent growth opporturutiea for a person with career a m- ••••••••••••••••••••••• t.Uons. ACCOUNT AHT Call for appointment 7100 2 year sWf accountant nDIMf'f CQ1t'T needed for 0 C. office of UftMQ IW National CPA firm Tu ftlllY PILOT expenence preferred UN Send reaume lo LMater TI~. Ext. m W!Ue "Co. AttenllOO M, F.qual ()pporturuty Jlugbes, 1300 Dove St Employer 11105. New~rt Beach, --------• 9'!lla) ~ta Receivable PoSI· lion avatlable with bi~ medi cal c orp. Ex· perienc. an a mf1. co. a plu1. Computer u · perieDce prefel'Ted. Full bttlefiu. •Contact Ad· ~.111·1155 .....,,,.....,, AccouaUn1 Payable Clerk, nper1tnce re· ~ a.tl, Alpha nllnJ, amcro-ft.tmbls. 1bt BAiboa Bay Club. Pit ... call for appt. -.ia AIR COHOmOHIMG MICHAHf CS Loe-al operaUon ol major natJooal company has openinga for 2 qualllied A/C Mec h anic s for Service Dept. Mml be capebktd taldft1 care of 5 ton to 100 ton emtra1 \de. Year UOUD4 wort. BARBER.COUWI COMPANY t7H Ultclt Aft '""' 714/641-1520 Attomda P91able poeJ. Al'_ c:&.m tloc ualt. wltll blo· Vartoa. dudes. F /Ume. meftcat corp. Bx· Experltoe• helpful. ASSEMlt.EIS f'or medical electronic" Expenenced preferred, but wtll tram Hours 7am to 3 30 pm Excellent benefru & wortdng ron- dlt1ons . Mission VieJo area. Only those seek 1 o IC permanent employment Ol'Cd a pply. Call SYaan 58l·:lm. ASSISTIH IDfTOR SURVEY 5.:l>PM to 9:30PM. Mon· day thru Friday - 9:30AM to 1·30PM Setur· day. Great for collegians and moonlight.en. 914.00 per week . ONLY REQUIREMENT IS A GO OD VOIC E . Call: 642~. ext. 312 arter S:30PM, Monday thru Friday At.teodant-work w /han - dicapped adults. Must be strong, wilhnl to U11St lo task.a as tollellng, feeding, general clean· IC>· Xlnt. vacat.lon 6 In· auraooe beoefita, United Cerebral Palay Auoc. 311> W. Harvard St. San· ta Ana. 5*-5780. AUTOMOTIYI Mechaolc w /Brltl1b Leylasad HJ>er. Good wortdQI coa4. 50/'4 com· aa.ton. eG-5113. '9ienee In a mn1,. co. a =-ii'!f ~ +.a.,,..,a;""'1wuel ,,.,_le M..a. ........ "'11 a.:..ns.. 0 -"{ o.&ad M-nl!!WnUOD. SIU. ldlt it.. db a ftl4 ,...,_ wut lD --Dli1' PUG&a...aJWAd. D!!rPllotOM ltf'lcdt. AUTOMOT1VE TIRE SIRVICE and IJght repa1r5. Willing lo tram. Newport Ttre Center. 3000 E. Coast Jtwy,CdM. ....... ..,... Experienced, top salary, + benefit•. Apply lo penon at AZTEC Rent A Oar: 2082. S.E. Briat.ol, S.A..541 90I MlfOIOun RmlSR!R. Earty AM. l li'a to 2 bt1. 1375 to S•50 /mo . Xlnt. mooollgbt. Wives, r e - tired. diaablllty, atu· deda. Need gd wheels. 546-~or~22 Babysitter ottded m y tone, appnt 4 day wk, 2 k1d1. E nalls h. Re f 's 8::J3. 9221. BABY S I T TE R Rapom1ble lady to care for l()yT old cluld ~ves. CdM. 67>9121 BABYS ITTER -My home FlexJble hrs. Refs 54(}.1172 Costa Mesa. --- Babysitter ncede-d 9mo girl Sdys1wk. CdM area. Pref m y home 833-1670 d)'!; fi7!">-fl 128 eve11 Rabys1tt.er. Mature, IJght housekeeping L1 ve in Refs Dana Potnt area I baby Wrk : 499·4S97, Hrn 831-6234 Banlang OPB.TBJ.a 5oMfll Coad ... An independent bank 849 Sunf1ower St. C M. 540-5300 EO E. Bankang Pacil1c Federal Savtngs has openings for full· time tellers, Nwpt Bch ofc, ex per pre ferred. Olli Pat Pate 644· 7630 8a.nJdng ~ .. Procnsor Pre,lous expe rience woWd be helpful. Good typtng skills required. UnJt.ed California Banlt 3141 E. Cout Hwy Corona del Mar 873-9240 E.OE. ~ e•perimce de· •lrable. but will train. u,t& lYPnl la required. Cmh1 •• Senke .. ,. ... 111 .. ,,. Pr'ft1ouc experleoce de- linble, l:llbt l1PIN la ... q'l.ired.. 11\llt lie able to ~Spen•lb. United Callforola &Dk zaot So. Mahl St. s.n&.IA.na a.sm Od.ad Mn. Laffey E.O.E. BwWng SECRETARY Wells Fargo Bank local · ed m Irvine h.as an 1 m · mediate opening for a aecret.ar)' aa.aiating our new aceount.a dept. Ell· perleoce preferred but not required. Good typ- ing and aecma.rtal akilla oecaeary. We o ffer excellent benefit• and a pro· fe!llional yet friendly al moepbere. Pleue coo· tact: Greg Claytor 0141552-3100 s .• ,,@ ,~$: WELLS FARGO BANK 5401 Unlvers1ly Or. lrvuie E.O E. M IF Baolciog TB.ilRS lmmedJateopenlngs, full la me pos1 t1 on s. ex penenct> preferrtd Xlnl benetiu M 1fo' HOMEIAHee Weirtnwister Branch 21J/43H166 Equal Opportunlt y Employer Career opportunity ror 1nd1 v1 dua ls w i th 8 months previous Teller expenence. Full a nd part t1ml' positions available throu ghout Orange County We provide an ouu land· Ing benefits package com~lemented by con genial wo rking al O'.IOllpeOere. Please call· LClrra.inc Miller 0 I 4 lt7J.3724 S1•u@ 111: WELLS FARGO BANK Equal OpportunJty Employer M /F llAllTY ASSIST. to tral.D lot cUeelele . ~ opport. MJ.ntmum + .117-1719•111-4250 IMUTYMAMA .. ~~ Bea~Opendon .... ...... , ..... Jae \Ila Udo1 N.B. Space for leaae. Halr1tyll1l _1 1 mamcuriata • ...i.iaa Hnlct•. t7a·7UO or m.mo. BOOK KI=: E Pf. K f u 11 charge. for LaRuna Beach sub-contractor Mu.st have corutructJon apenmce Call 818-4782 la 1hl111plr i/C'-'il fU1J time, eJt~r. helpruJ ~ not net'. Many co bmefila. Apply at 1660 f1~. ec.&a Mesa. ~. PUii Ume for yacbl club, nper'd , xlnt frin&e beneflla, Ca II ~rorapp\. IOCOmll Rap6dly ap&ftdiq Dana Pt R. E. Bn*er Dffds penna neat p l'Ume Book keeper Qualllled penion will f'Qjoy a vanely of ts slgnments & flexible hours Ad.miruatrauve & lyptng reqLD red Ca II Cor CASHIEH . ma t urr respon11ble E~e!I inc· lllll!le&ends Apply M thru W. 8·11.am. Gitt Shop. 0 c Airport CASHIEa f\111 Time. &ood pay. Growth eo. 5 locat.iom. <Mr2D. We'J'raia. ..-..OCMWASH mo flarl)or mYd. Olc&alleu • MARKETS ()peungs oow availabll' C'lttlcal appt 681-6711 ___ _ f0r full tune Assa.slant 1---------fRvtNF. t:O E 732 6666 M F BOOK KEE PF:R thru M.ana.gers on 2:nd & 3rd financial s tatement'! slu fta No expenenc:e C P A p I rm , c M ntt We tra!D Ad\'an~ 714 ~I ment opportunity for ---------1111magement polUllOIU to lbokkeeperllunt 8('8Ch SS!>O per h our 1f Mature person to work quahfif'd. For mon.' m w 1 l h rn 1 n 1 m u m formation & in terview s u p e r v I 8 I 0 n • I u I I apply to sUlre •37. 111 re:.pons1billl1es for ull Del Mar. Costa Mt-sa booltJleep1llg 1accounllnR 631 ~ WI.II Ult.erv1ew funct ions 1n rl ud1n1t Monday t hru t 'riday payroll. gmeral lt.'<iRPr & from Sam to J:pm account!! receivable F~ual()ppor Emptoyer llOO Ca 11 SJS-111132 · Quldca.re Kousekeeplni. BOOKKEEP ER -fo'or yng couple w baby sttk IB!lti seC.s ol boob & re Liv-In, Lake Forest a rea. cords for am manul. m . 1Jt.e cooking. ~-2:167 or Mature 6 exper • accur ~-8174 to wort! wolf site CP A. --------- GG.a.8705 a&.DCAU M.wre penoo wanted to If you can type 40 wpm • & l'nJOY v.arlt>ly W .. : NEED YOU' Short or ~ Lenn a.ss12nmcnt.s No rtt Good pay. Paid ~y IRVINE t:O E. IOQCk&! a F /C PoliUoD W1t.b prom!Mnt Faa.b.loa bland lnveal mmt firm Excellent e>p-- portunrty Ca II 640--0123 care lovm&Jy fCK 7 mos. 1--------- IOOOWll/Sf:CY Wort ln one penon olc Learn computerl ied bookkeeptn1 ayatems & be able to handle the rmpon when t.be ... la llWJly. lrvioe Penoonel Aimcy 4118 E 17th. Coat.a llif eH 91.e ZM 6'2-1410 .... , ... ,... in Flllhloa bland area ~ Immediate openanc for CMhier. Houn 8.JO.S. Exper1ence prderred. Cont.act Helen Mc:Glnley for~lt4-2282 Braka' aeeda Real fJltat.e aalelpenoo to Mil e mllllon worth + ol ........ ~2STI. • a..t«erta • lnchat.ri1I. lmmed. openlo&• In Irv1D16C.M. anu. ruu 6 Ptr. 0.,. .. 1"1.q llblfll. LID• urve, cub.ler. 1rtll • other ...... dudel.IM-ml. c.s1n• ..... aoct Brobrap 1'nn _, O.C.A.lJ1»rt. T1Pt•I~ coal require· mmt. Jh, Cell Judy r.c.t C.ASHID P\all Ume ID our Fubkla ltlaod ctort for • •• ')le, .,.. ... ..._ ,,... -uac.t. ='11,...MCHCD AfWOI ................ old boy My home AM, lrvme, M F Good pay. gd vacations Perm poellloo 833· 7766 aft 4Pm. . CHURCH CUSTODIAN. Mao·Fr1 8-S. Sa!ary S7SO rm. + benefllS. Applica· Uooa accepted for 10· l.erview call $-'7$M. a.voe.~ a-room aides: lndc>- Cb.lnae blliDaual pre· femd. Needed by Ii 8 . Ot,y Sdlool Dist. J'rWlr.J /· day , 5dya /wk 5'.27-SUB/br. Apply ~ WU\St. H.B. SJl.81. a.•tcAL 0"1CEA1DE A0C0UNTS PAY ABLE We 1tt leeiEin« penou. ble • entbu1lallc lo· dividuala f~ above open· •omCEAIDE Office Al~tH IPOd. act'W'8te t ru. ... IDCld etl· =to releft Rettp. ~PAYABLE ao.ald etUo1 work 1.oa wb a..-• be able to Interface •ell wlth =--~ belpful Xl'at bcD.nt peckqe lJi. cllldJ.q eompuy paid ...,._. mtdicat, dcot.al • Ut la. prdit tbartn .. New, clean modern fadlltlll m 1DOC1 wort1Qa .'" ........ CIMCO •In• Oilllalfeu a lllL a. e1 .._on leclill> Claf ... '-Jia I Ii WJ Mmt ha~ lmowled~e ol t.aac matb a. bl~pnot ~ lrvtne A Ken da~ lnd. Co MO 7639 E.O E. Q..EU Need~d to a ss i s t maoa,(er ln bookkeepui.i dept. Mon t'n, ~~. App. ly al 1660 Placentia , a.ta Mesi a..ms Part time .ti full time sraveyard, part Ume sw· ing. Apply 7-Eleveo S&ore, 1087 W. Baker, C.M. a.ERJC TYPIST, P /'Ume. for Claims Dept. of lnauraoce Co. Please call Duane Callahan, ssum Clerk tr)'llUt /RttepUonial 40 + wpm, lil(bt book· k~1. plu11nt eo· W'onmeat. ('O, beoenta. PYRAJODSPORTS nJ !:. Alton S...AGI 540-1'1'!7 COMPANION El<krl)i woman :.eek ~ middle "it'd woman to 5hr home & ciome:;tic dutJes. Non 11moker Salary Mui:. VieJO ~~7 ___ _ Cook, full time days, app- ly M·Th. ~S pm, Coco'i., 4647 MacArthur Blvd • NB. 5«).z:M4 COOi( w AMT'ID Man tbru Fri ~ to Jpm Will trarn J uice & salad ~rauoo Call Gund J.:.i~h ~2411 ~~ & s-dwidt ,lnC)ft 'l:t-w expen errl't' in work mR f t1m•· & p lime m.2193 ------( :nurru.-r He Ip IMTERHA TIOHAL HOT DOG CO. "1<.'t"d p 'llmc & f 'time rount.l'rtlelp & food pre pat1'f"I for new I a!>t food n.>\taurant No expe r n1,'\"de(I Apply In pt-n.ofl ut Plaza De Cafe'>, Hlrrh & Von.Karman. N B . or C'all !lM ri20 A.'>k for Bob ~ Counter RI rl. Kuster':. Cle'~~-Full time. 186 Jo: ttllh. CM 5411 m22 Deuca~~n Ht'lp. Ex· pen~ prererred. over 18 1 f' 'T 1 ror Mnn Wrd'i Sal & Suo 6-M S6l9 DELIVERY Pfo:RSON fulJ & P 11me. F'reewa) Auto, 283U Avery Pkv.·y, MV -------OEWVERY & STOCK wrth oppty for adva m-e menl. M 11'' a pplica nt~ we lcom e Apply In person bt wn 9-S, sec Tom lS22 Newport Blvd C.M Dellvery people needed, have part Ume posltioru oc>en-You will make ur lo• per hr. Oall betweu t 9PM. 638-1135 Delivery person for L A Thnea. South Huntinglor Beach, 6 day work wlit Depe ndabl e c ar -..on.948.-3504 Dell very P fTI me, LA nmes. SlOO per week. Ir Laguna Beach.~ DELIVERY a INSTALLATION MAI\ -Elps. pref. Salary bued on exper. Xlnt bene. wauna Beacb 4M«BI f t I ' l Olepta1 Orapblea Co attd1 eaper•aDc e ~ bl produeUOD 1&Je9 olftce 1rapilln pboto 1Uk l<'t•• kJlowl..Ste HCUHt')' P\111 u.a. poMUoQ tallh plan. proflt •bar ·ln1 6 paid vacalloo Satar)' opea Cal m.- .... Alt. 1 t .......... Newport Arcbel Martna .. ••mnAn OM••t WAU:llOUll:t ASIDlBLY rACTORY can Judy: "2-4644 IRVINE 7&:·&eee E.O.E. MW Driven. ~~~~~~~~ Dllliver bakery products .;, to supermarketa. Early morning to m i d afternoon. Call 567-67%7. 1100Dsmvas- For dinlnl rm. Lilli rt· tlrement complex. La1una Hilla. Day • wtmd abift.l avail. Esper. HoUI Mlt19l Aedltor • °'*a.ti a.a Brem~ Allo 0. loft -.1111 •HOUsaa.IAM•S 9'/SUOht + boau.a. Will train PUU or p Jthne. Ad· vancement oppott. Mu.t have tran1Portatlon . .,. 011vas ClMd.er cab,-.- Driver/Gardener comb Have vaJ!d CA license Good drl vln1 record Mm. ap 20. Apply at Peony1 aver. 1660 PlatmtJ.a. CM. pref. WW tram. Call for JiuekeepeT/ Cook, live· tlPPl. Ml·5140 In.. matun lady for sroalJ Gardener needed for guest home. ~7107 or apertmeat eomplex. _a._i_071 __ _ ld-ao71 Gam:•Offke Pttime, 8-2. Muat type & •• !>RIVERS -l200 Week. -a1 -1711 WUJ tram truck drivers. ._.. .• ,,,. · ()penSam-Bpm.995-8413 General Housekeeper. lbllekeepln1 PorterputUme, movlna tumiture, clellJWlg win dowa, etc. Please call for appt. 1be S.lboa S.y Oub ~1358 Hotlsekeeper Uvc In cue 8mlll~~ llttsatlon firm In Newport C.Ottr , .. u ..... meed. etndeat. tt ner1et1c Je11I Hcr•tary. 8 .H .. die· ~ • alot.. typln1 1klll1 a mu.t. Xlnt. aa1ary depaMUaa upon qullflcauoo and eit· perieote. Oood benertl.a M0-e980. -----UXiALSECRETARY For P.1 . Defense Firm. 1·2 yn. experience Civil LtUpUon. Oood typina • dJcttphOne 11tll11. 0 .C Airport area. Call m-0152 U..AL SICUTAaY unGATIOH SIJOO 170 Newport Ctr Dr N 8 Sle 34.S 64(). 2920 100'l FREE DRIVER Raleigh Hill Ho.p1tal. Npt Bcb baa an lm· medlaW openl.oJ for an e xperienced housekeeper. Good start ing salar y & frin ge benellta package. f·or more lnlormatlon ron t.ad LLz Ml-1616. t-: 0 F, M/F for elderly C M couple ---------l!OO per mo. :;48-'200 Ucensed Real ~&late For data proceuing c'fJ'lter. 9am-5pm. Mon. Fri. Must have valid California drivers Ucenae & 1ood driving reoord. Housewives-Students, s.JespenM>n. Attractive 11.1ntP/foppt'y,flP1t hr11, Bay Vi e w orflce. ..:ood pay Call Tl.\ f>rocreu1ve commiaalon Hous PC'lt'anlnR SNv split 673-88.'56. ___ _ i.wn4 6PM 75'1 ll);j() Live In housekeept'r llou~cw1v1•11 1f yc>u 'rt•I rhlldcare. Call for appt· ----DATA TEN GENERAL OFF1n : MUlll enjoy phone um tact , work 1n~ w/cmtomera. typing & detail work Paid val·a ~.sick pay & he11llh im Apply9 4 Mon-Ft-1. at Barden.a Peat Control, 698 Ra ndolph, C M 546-SS70 friendly . l'ODSl'leOllOU!I &,. ~ 1672, 9.~ __ DIS Redhlll. C M. 50-0370 dt!penilitble we need you' 1 LOAM llP Datly 8 .4 Apply 10 Loan brokerage needs l>t'rt.OO. Stonemtll Tt•r sharp. llcenud in· rnl'l', 2511.S Rtodh1LI (' M dlv1dual. Top comm. DllYSS Men or women Z5 yrs or .,.-~-1tnow lhe COHt cillell Net 1111> • week or more. Oran&e Coast Yellow Cab. 17300 Mt General Herrmann. Founta1nl 'The Balboa Bay Club I). Valley <No of Slater nowhinng for betwn Ne whope &1 Secret.ary,ht:'a vy typ1nl(. ~:UClid ) bOllle CICt'OunllnK hdpful tl-s 8 30to5 Mens Spa AU.endant, no ex~nenre neceuary i-10 Mon thru F'r1 S3 ~I IN PROCESS 1St & 2nd i.hlft Opt•nJOI(.<\ for individuals having re l't'Dl l'X pc-rt l' nrl.' W ll h Jl'ffl'tpll<'l' fa«t~n"r' X I n t p a y ~ r J I 1· Outi.tJnd1nK t11·nd1ti. w cost or 11 v1nl( 1n creates & fully paid medical &dent.al ORJVERS-Cf'088 O>Untry No special ltcenae re qui r ed M 11rG regor Yachts. 16.31 Placentia. Carta Me1a per hr RO SAM IMC. Junior MalntenC1n l'f' ~5533 Ne-wport Hearh Engineer. Entry level An Equal ()pp0rtunt1ly Ory Cleaners pog1llo(l. Union benefits EmplQYt>r Open.Ing available ut Ury Cleane rs. J::xperiem·t• f-1le Clerk. Alpha filing. · --- m1cro·fllmlng. 8 . 30·5 lnsurance Mon. thru F'ri. SJ 50 per Co m me r c t a I lJ n hr derwrlter Lrg N B Acl'ount 1ng Pay<1blc agcy. Exper. nee. Sal ~:p referr ed but not <.• nea!llS&ry. Ca 11 548 ~5 ~:~ for Mike Belwt1en ". =~~-8-3 -Clerk. Expencnce re romm w lex per Call quired. 8 »5. Mon. thru Diane Bullock· 833-9550 ~'Dry dea n ing . Ex penenced? Will train Ful l or P IT . \ull 7»llll01 Dick lo'ri ' lmuranl'e Oilier. Raleigh Porter part time ELECTRI C I AN .I Journeyman MARINE Wl>dnc1l Thurs & Sun 4 t.o M1drughl Please call for appt. &U-13S8 Only hard worker need Gen1 Offc Clerk. accurate upply. Ron Manning typtst, ht.e bkkpg e'llper . ~I.AS Mature & neat. Perma· ~gxneer A MICHAMICAL IMCMM&lt Medical manufactunng oompe.ny needa worker to report t o Chie r ~r. doinl vartoWI tasb ln enstneering Ex cellellt benefit.I & work 1111 condlUona Mlaslon ~jo area. Only thoff • aeekln1 permanent employment ~ apply. Call Susan, 581-3830. nenl P rr. Call tpm-5pm · 714 4S9 C868. Gen1. Office Tratnee, full or part time, must be IP>d w /numbert, no typ lng. Ca II SS7-6'727 GBtOFFtCE WotllCERS FUii le p/Ume. Simple clerical dl1lla. Relaxed atmosphere. Ma tu re , n1»1moken pref. 15541 Computer Lane. Hunt- lnaton Beach. 898·4357 Aniela DIC. $IC. GtlL RIDAY Real .... development Aaliltant to lem!lal')' in ODqllllly la Anab9tm re· Newport Beach. Must be qtA1w upeiteoee •top accurate typl1t with • akuJs: Tnrin• 10wpm, iom ............ 1bortband 100 wpln Ill> ceexpr. --f ~~erred>. Good GOOD MOMIY /P'*- :;_.er mo~ =~ Uaiq~ P•llo co. Job: .~ rnlmunde wl\b abWty IPIU. forfreeeetlmatea. :: If qua II f I• d C a I i OIIJ n.ve at Mi-21'72 : ... "71~741. Ot1mpu1 P9dflc 1llt 'l GUARDS J\lU • part Umt. All areaa . Unlforau furnlltMd. A1n 21 or over. a.t1nd welcome. No~~r: Hills Hoepital In NB II seeking ex pertcnced In dJvidual with hospital ex peneoce & knowledte of medical terminology Appllrant will poe1es11 11.lnt. cJmcal skills & ~ f amlhar an all pbaaes of 1ru1urance Duties 1n · elude patient state meat.a. follow-up collec· uc.w. etc. Able to work on own ln1t1auve. Good salary & fnnge beoef1t.s package. For Interview oootact Shirley or St.eve at ~5707 EOE M /F tMSUltAHCI Founta1n Valley branch d lar&e auto l.nlurance agency bal openlnp for: UMDRWRITB TIAINBS JR. ACCOUMTS ••· No aper. nee. Salary commenauraie w /aper. &abillty. All co. benefit.a. can ros at 1MN1ei. 1rUrior plant co. needa bard wortdnl psnon for wuebouM lllltallaUon. IS7..Ql.50 or 54CM3&J. 754-Gl2. lovuli clll1d Can! needed 2 days wk . My borne Sa.n Onoftt area 498 5938 MAIDS Apply tD Housek.ffp1n..:. Sa.n Cle mcnt.e Inn. 12.S W Ell plaodian MAINTENANCE HOUSEK EE PI NG SUPER RaleJgh HJlls Hoep1tal 1n Npt Bch 111 loolung for a supervts0r to maintain 11mall crew. Applicant wtJI have 1·2 yra ex~r. & be familiar wrth main· tenance procedures. Good ll.arttng salary & fnnge benefit.I package. For Interview contact U.&Ml-1616 E 0 E. M/F ~ ...,_ OWta.ncUnl opportunity curT'81tly ~for ttli•· ble person with 1ome mecbanlcal • eJectrlcaJ ~ence.~ ladudi.al roc:r:: meal per ahlft. ·~=·noon. Moo-Fri. L MAlll01T HOT1L SOD Newport Cent.er Dr Newiat Beacb ,...... Opp« Employer Mana1er1 needed. M.wre b111bud le wife tam with aell 1toraie, apt rent1n1 or motel beck,niund exper. won 5 claya a week with iood pey. Please call 957-'191 · WMAa•..,. UnJhnl1ed lnCOCM JIC*O· Ua1 la prt;nary wbolet•le ~. Proftl abarinl tr cCer" benafila, Need oot leave pr-.ent ~l· Uon.~1755. MAMA .. f« amall bmJ ..,.tee bardware 1tore. Send brief re1ume • pbooe IUIDber to p .o. 7Ml, Sta· UOD436, Npt Bch. all() M.aniC\llUt, S*ilcurh t, aculptured nall artllt, m•kl·UP 11 arllat fadallt ....W.. WW paJ tAlp ..... w /fodowtnl· =PIUa.!OtDesit.o bland. Mk '"'" Rob ..... IRDIC.W TllANICIU:ID ror profeeeloaa I ""'9tai'lal NniC"e In ""'"" ..... "'"· daft . lilYll be kaowled,.ablie ta all medlcal .,.eaa1u .. : rlfld '1Jlll • eccwa~ ,,.11101 maodator1. lal&rJ com......,lll'ate wltb abltltl••· Ex-,.._..__..,,. l:r'.. OaJJ ....... uk tor JUI lllltJdenoa. lltdJeal froat ofllce Secntar7. Onbopedl<' omce.ean ..... MEDICAL Rl!CEP· TlONJST -P' tr. for bul)' oeurolOPt oMce ... be orpnl.red. tell· awted • able to baodle ...... pboam. TypUit nee. w /Ina know led I• pref. Avail. lmmed. Call ~ld-1437. ... TIAJ ... Medical ~actunna company needs a wortcer. Machlne shop expenence required, blab acbool mac hine tbop ok . Excellent beoeftta • workinl con dtllons M1s111on Vlt'Jo area Only thoee Heklll& penmnent employment need apply Call Susan. 581-m>. Moe.el Desk Clerk M 1 I'' Experience preferred bul not necesaa ry. Day 11h1fl . $3.SO per b r 640-7445. 2274 Newpon Blvd C M Need 3 1.ndivldu.als to .-ork from borne on a ne w phone program Can earn Sl.00-SLSO per week. dependin& oo Ume. Ideal for homemakers For romplete infor mation r all 5.57 1450 "low lunng, ~ Wholl) Cow Restaurant IO NB CUJTently accepting JP · plJcaUOos for full time rotJ11t.er help & rook In 'dlVlduala must ~ httthly 0'¥l0vated 6 penonable P\eue apply In peraon. Udo Manna Village 9 AM-U AM Ask for Jim ~ NURSES AJDES -/\II shifts . Exper or trainen. Mesa Verde Calvi. lbp. 661 Center St CM NURSING RN, LVN, DIRECTOR OF STAf.f' DEVELOPMENT Become a part of the growinl field of pro· fesaknal gerlatnc nun Ing. 79 bed 1kllled nura mi facility la C M. Com petJtive salary. 2 wlLll vac, health tr ~lal aruJ., hobdaya. Sick Ive plan Cont.ad Marjone Robb. D.0.N. 340 V1rtoria. C M M24J87 Nursing Eiperienced Certtrled Aides. all ahift.a. fuJJ " pert time, up to $4. u per hr. to st.art. TRAINEES 7 to 3 30, Xlnl NA tralnin& prog Eam wblJe you leam. SU> mlnlmum to S3. 70 F1apblp Convalescent ~.6G-8044 Nurslal LVN'B 7-3:30 tr 3-11 .30, IS.35 to te.75 per hr. OutatandiDI benefits. Recu1ar lament r•laa. 2 ..a v•calion aft.er 1 yr. M• med.lea!, den· \al •Ill• Im. at no coat to en4'a1ee. F1aplllp Con- v ale1ceat Cenle r . MUOM Nurainl NurMI Aidaa. All lhtlb Good,...of PQ. Nou· per. nee. Wiii train C..rt1flcatton pro1ram Hailable. ApplJ Port Mt1a Con•alHcant Holl*al. 2S70 Newport lll'd. C.11. eoou>. f.rvlc•e.!:!' W. 5th 8tna&. Ana. In· ....... boun .. 12 • 1-4 lbtllnlM INVENTORY 8'o\.IH dept, St. John Knil.I need9 a retpootl· bl91Qdlv to ovente Uaelr blollH Inventory, In· eludes record kaepla1. Should be bl-lln1ual ~/Zllal2lah), •PP-11 tn peraon: .. Johal IOIMI, nm Did-. In. '"JOIMTHIMIW ICIDSOMTMI Ol'l'lCI! WO.BK -WW trJfll -par .... to llatve •••Pl•, rellaf ..... ()pm Ian to lpm. mr,J n • taltl clal ..;;•.;..;..;IGI;.;._ _____ _ ,..... ..... ..... n.· .... u. X>AtLYPUDr SDVJCIDIUDJ'ORY laall•--1 ILOCIC'* RelWar today wttb ODI d lbe .,,... and tull· lq temp. placamtftl ~ lia tM COWl\7· ~-a.c ... , lltpr'•· Oilft. (Wfta ...... , AmioUl.0... lllJa, 5 dQI pet .. tll, DOO· enc. Mer. llcGUIDnell ..... pa&9 WW •~w/~. ™ · Small office. Com-PIUtlff pa)', laqaiN! Mark or Jamle . m~. ,df.,.. ....... , Allilt Ill ... IUl'V.,. ~ h'OCD our cl· .. It tbe Oraqe Cout DaJJ1 Ptlot. S:JO.t:JO llm-ftl t .IO-l:IOSat.ur· ~-O.....t for coUetlam aad IDDCIDll.,..... ... pr wk . ONLY B.r;QUUlDENT l8 A 0000 VOICE. Call e4Mo1Zl. Ht W after &:JO PB, Mooday Lbnl ftidq PART TIME EVENINGS Eot•rprillo1 adult1. aver Zl wUh Dyumlc, Adv•nturou1 penon&liU•. who ~ working with and motlvaliDI )'outhl agea lO to 1J. Pbooe 142-4321 Elll. 250 becween 2 and 6 PM ~K FOR LAURIE EO.E Ken Goddard CIRCULATION DIRECTOR P~TE-UP ~ with at leut l year u perlence, preferably newapaper. Excellent oompeny bendlt.a. Apply bfotwee11 9 AM • 8 PM Monday lbru f'T1day ~I COAST DAILYrtLOT no w .1ay st. CodaMna ~Opp a rt.5ty L:·t~ PBX Answering Sf:r vtt'l' Operawn MutW'e, de pendabk-ALI sh11'l.1. Jo.:11 per ptt( but w1 II tram ~~ ----- NXONl.ATC>a Dependable mature ~ for amwenna ..ntoe. pert tJme. Ai.o need irrave yard ttltef Apply 8-4. Mon thrU f'rl 657 W 19th St C M 6C2 1403 •PIX• TA B all!I st>rv ha~ a few poS1lton11 open 1n l\a . SA. CM. & Hunt B ar.as Vaned ahlft.s, P 'T' or fo' 1' Many ooutand lnJ( benc(1ts Work near your home" eam while you learn ~ t:O E Per11onnel L oral pubh1hlng firm needs respon!!lble person to aupervt.tle penonnel. ln· suranoe, &eoeral office Must like detail wQrk X1nt co. benefits. Good atart1n1 salary Call Penonnel~ P'tOO F'\nWunl Photo Clerk needed part U.me eves. 6pm tD llpm 13 2$ per hr. Ca II se.-73118 === penoaable. lrlm Sparuab spea1dnc a1de. al edJcaJ exper 6 typlnJ ak1 Ila pre f'ci F /time SA m 7934 Plait.lea JOBS' J OBS• JOBS' Won cloee to bome · Save on pa. Job ~ tnp exist on rrave Y•rd llpm lo 7am for ex· perlenced or Trainee lo· jt'CUon Moldinl Ma chine ~raton. Learn Oft the job whUe eamtna money. RAPID advancement for t.bme abowtni cSe.ire • ap&Jtude. Xlat beoeflta. You are ell1lble for: Paid vacation, major medical 6 dental plan, lhlft bom9 premium, Uf e 1.n1 • tr profit shartn1. Good CIMo worlllnl COO· diUcn. ~ 714 hn .• da,y, be paid for I hn Muat be Enaliah 1peak tns. CIMCO c::: Q ba a. ol Bahr oll RedhUI ) PUJllBEl8 Rl!LPD -WU1 tn1n ..., .... Lo ttalt. Open lam·lp1r1 . -.M1J ~Ttecbw.'9ad ....... ........ Train t.o be dlradGr In OW' 0 . c. tdlooll. Am.dean J>re. School, L•I Hiiia, m.1111. SD-1311 e.IDU.. ND HOllE SALa -aa 12-... tam bolQea nmctJ IDr move lo. Pref .. .. men wbo lhea la aa. ... ca.uae-1 ... ea People needt'd In Sunset Beach ore. top comml1111on Call Bud Hyam' C714t 146.5102 ......... w.. New U~ or Ex per'd, SlOO Schoohn1 Rebate on 1st com mu11on. no ex per ~. oormaJ wont Ull boun 9-~. c:all Rod 7)}.l.00 ......... s.. ~nlnl( for llt'ensed ulu peoplt. lot d ll) owned. Wll.b ruwonal r, fen-al s~ Y.xe't!llt'nt working r o1.d1t1•>n'I Earn l~ romm111~1on f''or <'Onfldcnt1al a pp t call 7»tlZ1l8 ~ E_\ECl! • .'i}'.UI . .' ti.\ \.._!' ·:.=· ) Real tll La~ UCIHSID UHUCIMSID Will train Be1t com ouaon split ln the an cMltry 70 /30, to top pro ducen. f'or lni.rvle• rail BW at RedhUI Rul ty. Udoolfi~. 673-7300 Real ~ t.a.t.e COMOOSH.AH SALIS unuud openm11.1 Rt<:il flit.Ate U cemed and .,, pen meed only. Loc*tn ll for somet.bing rw-& u CfUnR tn otf tt your old cbeot.ele We have rt ' A new concept IJl llmf!!lhar U14l wtucb ma~ ult><\ falter Top comrruss1on' for easy uiee Will not UUrf ere wrt.b )'OW ft' aale. lhelle will Mlp' Call G'-1)' Dtllow fM run de tads on April tralnlng ft attreditatioo 54S.t4t I .... Ea .... ~lonat t Girl Ft1 day· Smail dew~ co. near 0 C. Airport naeda hill tune mal.\ltt penon rib acJO.d lyplnJt tldDI for~ po1l- tlon wllb variety of 1eoeral offlu duties ~151·9'> ~-Secretary General office duties· typln1 eaaeat l al - telepbone manners Ir ~appearance · Lum C'ompltte office pro c edure of s mall manufacturlna co Salary .,n. 71' -8411!.. RECEPTIONIST / So:;RETARY -Perm•· oent part-time. Flu. bn. Airport area . K. R. AnlWllon. Co. wt-134J ~l'\n>iSt. Min. 6Swpm. Le1at office. La1uoa Hilla. M ra W\mk)W: 837·10.. iiCW'l~ST 0. C. M . Call Ratm Man.· l. 1SM21l ~t. full time, M·f', 1ood typln1 re· .pred. Call for appolnt- mmt. ~ dCIPT /JCftT M.clJcal O.vlce llf1. Im..,... ..... penon t.o bmld)t pboal9, COC'· re1poadence, t1P• 50wpm., lit• blrkPI lrttlpful. Gd bentflh . 111.-S ......... f\&11 • P rr PC>1itioaa 1a new •P•clalty food1 cater ln lrv!De. Call ...... Rmtmnnl belp --'ed. lmmed. C>peDIOP for. exper hoetes1, exper, codlta1l waltreM, " ex. pr:r. tu boy. can for appt·....,., Round-. a.tau.rant Boolen wan&ed: HOT for lr1 project. exp•r'd SECllEJAIY roalen OGly need apply. To aau 1..ee Roollq eo. IG-7222. ....... . lta ...... ..-.4 .. 0FlllJl"filr' SALIS Larae auto Insurance apncy bu Immediate openlop for tralneu. fmlde poeltlona. Good beodita. Salary + booua Call Kathy at Jo'GS MMllll. 8aJiel A&IOC late needed Busy Exec seeks employed people who lliVll lo supplement tht-1r income with a bu:ain!'11a tult around their s pare time Call for appt '1SZ1'11 .. 1bia la an excelleet op- portunJty for aomeone who bu bad prevloua ~ /recn.atin1 ex penence. hu lYPUll of 60 wpm, and a good pbon<> penonallty. Work 30 .: houn per week 9am lo ~ We otfer a good 1tart1n.: 111lary and excellent cnmpan y beneflt s Pleaae send resume out l.tnJna quail f I cat 1001 to FAMILY HULTH PAOGl'IAM Salee Olrt'C'\ory •PICI.' Comm1u1on. auto al lowance. clothing al lowance, m1m1 op portu.ollles. with pro I' r f' ' ~ I v p n 3 I I ,, n I I rom~)' 631 lilJtt' 99:1>Talbert Ave h1un1A1n Valey, Ca 927fM SAL~ t.:qual Opportunity t" II t 1 m P on I y Shot· 1.w-•l!.m-p•lo•y•er•M-t•·--i.ale9 llrl) + t·•1mm r- :Jm S Bnstol. ('\1 Appl> i--------· In pronton SA!.Jo~ (j If< I. not gc11n.: & fnendly n v1·r Iii .Ir !fpr.f'\6 w 1•11 r. f uJI '" IJd n ttml' Tht· S t·• 1111d 1;1&1K·~. 2122 \\ Oc •·J n t'tunt :-08 67~ JJbl ~ Jndtopt'ndrnt contractor 1tatu1 . TOP <'Om ldMior» Hiib prit"C! ta a .. 'JM~ SAL.Hl.AOY for e11clt.1S1v" c:h11drrns '\tort lD So ('.oe'lt r 1 .. z11 l':Xrelltttt pt•lt1un fur •·ll pt'rien r e d pt<r,••n l.rM&«i•'lD 549~ SAlfSI A.DY f11r tut(h qu.al.Jty 11nt1<1U" & ~ r~h11111 '"'"' ~ Lagl.S\.I C..n)'>n f(ll LB 5 .. ttcyT...-.. Some TV Stt'reo u lt·, t'xpe" needt.od. h nt w be arrangt'd . .11pply 1n penon Kenn R.tma llurdwa n.> :rJlllHarbof' 81 . C' M Sa.ls Manal!emt'Ot l>\euant d.11tn.tf1ed part lime Hlet & man111(e menl work f'lex1ble boun Sales a. manaie rnmt beck1u·owld a pl u. Subet1nt1al araduated 111come. Bonu.. profit abanDt • equity plan ~8D-U'2 s..: ...... Sparung Goods. Fu II or P 1T . a Int money mGim. Sam·Zpm Salesperson needed s.turdays & Sunday:. for 1t1t\abop in Corona del Mar Call Mon f'r1 IJ13.%.WIB Salesperson wanted full Ume (Of' athletJc stDre Apply at Frontrunners. llXX> Brtatol St N . N 8. or call for a ppt tM-016.5:.. Salelwomao, weekends Gift &bop, Lai. Bch. .-?·3W Wet.. We'r• •••••t _to Ml.,..i llleclll 1100 _,. SIOOO ..... ttk. StlOOW.._. 761 .. 101 Mr. lid sandwich Maker well tralmd. 0.19 t.2, Moo. llll'U rrt. Oil I M5.e«l 1 SECRETARY TO GEHERAl MAHAGER r n , v .. 1 1 y P , 1 ,, t ... Sttn:tJU')' t.o the Genera I Meaier h.as marned twm. and a new aecretM')' l.'I needed i'hJ.os LS a pot! I uon ol vaned duUa re qwrull SoOd l)'Pml s klll. maybe &<>me d1rtat1on 1k11l 4but not man da1«y 1 Ability to m~.'t and commun1r at{' with 1mp11rt.;nt "'1tnr~ dncl "'"'*"PJPl•r ~ .. mploy•·•·., mi .. I import.int Call I h1• IJ.11ly l'llol at 642 432 1 .. 11 •I J It t n r P a t St.c.,,nc-n .... JO lo mitkt: 1111 •PJ.>Mnt mt·nt for an tn tt'nlt'W 1\11 Equal Opportunity Employt'r SICHTAaY TRAINE•~ POSITION f'OR s •:CRETARY ~ GOODSKJLLS. TyJJe 60 wpm, shorthand IJJ wpm. front oHtce ap· - peoran c,. & good ~ VOt~ General atfice dut1e1 Will work for saJa 'talf 1n small ttal estate investment co Sa lary com men1urate with .,, penentt Call or wnte Mn A,nea Turner Village lnvestmertt.I lfQIZ Garfield. Ave, Hunt 11\11.Qn Brach 92646 014 'KJ-4.567 • SlCRET AllES * Set'y Travel $13,200 Re<-ep type eo sio.soo S«S 110 Mkt.Art Sl4.000 Coot.roller $24,000 ••Sales Counselors•• OurOfftre Appl Only Free Liz Re1ndel'1! Agency 403> 81.rcb, Eatab '64 Newport Brach 833-8190 Sec:nllary wanted for 40 hr. wk tn yacht salei;. Typln &, answering phones. non·1mokt>r, Salary neaotlablc Slaata /tJni!Ut.e. 645.feOO SECRETARY ADMIM. ASST. ToSl2.500 Branch otrace ot NaUooal Corp . .-a capable pro- teas Iona I for multi· faceted poellloo report· lnl t.b llanaier. Top fr. ln1ta + room f or advancement. Call Deb· bl• Frederick (1U) Ml·lDOor tend ..._ume: BARBEi.COLMAN P.O.lo1 I tlf 3 1m..t2714 E.O.IC. -M/F ~ wanted. Call j~~~~~~~~~ sst-0922 or apply In &lcnJtarY ~.aced In penon at l50 Clinton DllW home conatnacUoa Aw .• Cll t.o Mt11t In pu.rcbulnl tlCllT AIT c11pt. for blaay davtJop. rvu tlma • ...,., omce ~t. coea. l~Cl.~ .~ .... lllOll tnllt· 1 sirl ·--_,...., ofltee. Oood -.olT\ ~ b9nam1. Call WldAdHelpf • ' • llCllTAIY o vn a OP'n 11 PRESIDENT (.lDrp kadquarten ror statewide lnve1tm nt TOPU!:::5SllOOEL8 servlc. ftnn PN.bion Jn Dil,y. Paid Datty lal. l:.CllJe:nt Ul'ffr op No "P ~ •ms port Wtlb dlvenaty 6 ---''-------c:tw•-.. lfust ~ T RAY EL AG ENT - t op -lovel exec utive Wantl!!d. lmmedopenl1'i ~al uper. Call llm 2)-n uper. Gntat MG-01%3 Moo lhru Fri Jrv inr locattoo Dy t · 3D-$:30. ~ evee ~-Ul85 Typ&at Recept. wanted for --------.i prof olfc m N 8. Must be SICBTAllY /TYPfST entbusu1allc. have xlnt SCASHIONUS S typina 1k1lls . H eavy Wort for 40 hours & you will receive a S20 bonus We guarantee top pa)' for your skills Paid HolJday Paid Vacation-. Paid Weekly IMM ED I ATE OP ENINGS FOR Shorthand Secrelane-. Diel.a phone See re ta neo; Seruor Typasl.li Clerk TypUilli J oin the team of pro fES.">1onal temporane.., l\orrell' SDIVIClS. llfC IRVINfo EU fo. 7'>2 ~;{iii 111 " ... ...:: ........ -...:--. p h ones 67 3 0300 Sam-~m TYPIST -Growmg Npt lkh. ftnn needs exper typist. Muat be re bable & hard WOf'kmB. Mln. ot a>wpm. m1-SNU. Nancy 1YPISJ'S fl-0>, with new corporate offices located in Foun- wn Valley, has an 1m- medlat.e fuJJ ume open- ing for CORRESPONDING TYPIST This pos1llon r eqUJres the a bility to transcribe from m1n1 ·casselles Type BO wpm Wl• offer 1·ornpet1l1vc '>l.arttn.1! ..,Jlar). excellent tioc•1wftt'> For interview apl)Omtment, plea5e <·a ll <71 4 '96?.4431 .. Hotpolot elec:. ranae . ~. dbl ovea, xlnt cond SlOO Hotputot dla bwuber'. avocado. SM>. 5S&m WaahertDryer Great buy! Both $185. Call Sl&--Oll$4 Ref older aide.by-aide, clean. works good Sl20 Ref frost·free, clean, worb good 1100 548 &13 or~ Kenmore gas d ryer, cop pertooe, work) fine. S75 673-U..5.1 Kenmore washer Good cood. 1100 G E Dryer needs wort&:. S20. ~I 13 Refrig. 1 yr. old, SlSO S to v e , 4 burn e r wtoven.l50 8'2 lM~ llcydn 1020 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wanted · Tandem btkt• good ronditlon. multi speed Caih. 673-8049 Motocross bike. mags. bar pads, xlnl rood S75 642-8378 Mldlng Materiah 1025 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Olau chro m e coHee tabi9 1130 Gold cor Gn1 dWn, ~ each. al·la Compl ~won rum. flM.l,y C!Cl«d1nated, xlnt cond suo -.sn. Carpet lleflaln. u.> yds thick pile &Okien brown ut NB home beUlg redec 4 yra old, likt! new. S2 75 yd. w pad. ~-0484 D1nang set . oval table w lca! & 4 brown swivel chairs oo rasters liood cond Sl 99 S t t'reo cabulet ~ 644· 1627 or 8'76-5734 Green '&old couch. II '. 4 q1.1lted c ushions $195 2 ocCASlONll chrs, 1 gold, 1 blu lll:Sea. Magnavox 24 · cob-TV. oda tuner, color good, best offer 19'X•7' mabog desk w glasi. top l50 642-6&&9 Sola lli5. coffee tble SSS 2 end tbls S3S ea 2 Imps 9> Om set w 6 chrs ~. All nwt.clung & hke nt'w Must sell Thurs CdM H.S 760-1421, 7 60-0IJ87 Naullcal styled coffee ta ble . e nd table. lamp Spanish dmette. G real cond1t1on. 8.1.1-9220 I 9*1Jdl1moad rtn1, 15 *'*· lid. .,./080. I man'• weddlal band trlllte Jyel 1old. l4ct DK>BO. Ml-4IN ••••••••••••••••••••••• LU9eMNTA•S fi'om ,our tulDMI can t. Smd one cud '°' etch tac pha one spa.re We return pe rma nently 8elled annctive lat ~ 5tnp, meet.ull alrhoe I. D req\attmeOla. Pre· wm loss Ir I.heft ' For a penonahzed lal m clo&e wallpaper , fabric or "Day GAo" paper & we Vlill back It lnm your tap. Or try two cards back lo back PRJCES: S2ea or3/~ 4 '5 tap Sl.60 ea 6 l1H&IJl Sl.SO ea lOor more 11 . .0 t>a Sales Tax Included NO CA RD'' Draw your own or i.emt name, address. phone & we11 make one rard per !Jig. Add~ earb Send check or rn<>ne) or derlo PILOT l'RJHTIMG P 0 . Box 1560 Cc6ta Mesa. Ca 9262b Mlllrwsu.Horwts 2 uruforms Sl.S each I pant!w t S20 Sue !H O, d II m excellenl rond1tmn & ~only a few L1 mt"> by sw:ient nurse 5-40 5721 all 6 Wht wrought iron patio tbl w 4 chrs. marhlt' hkl' top, nds refuush ~drhn cl\r Davits. J bike~ :; trellis's, Best ofrer takC'.-i any! 957-0rol <Day 1 or St!<' r<.'l.u ry EXECUTIVE SECRETARY Qintrartor Going Out of B~iness. M1'lc s teel forms. r e bar . t ool!!, galvanized bolts. nuts & washers & plumbing s up· plies. Sale wUI be M-F. 9am·5pm. Everyt hing must be sold by 312 1. 16482 Gothard, Ste I, HB. 842.9713 Cheerful. yellow v toy l 968-556.'> Eves TO $1600 l=MP couch & 4 med. height IBM or non-correct 1n~ raLt.an banitools. 675-8170 Selectnc, xlnl rond. ~st Land development cor PD'alJon seelt.s efficient, o ut1101 n a . c bar ming FAM ILY HEALTH PROGRAM secre&a1y for the Presl· King a1z.e water bed wltb off rover tl!OO. 644-4.t92 frame " beater. Good nnu. Membenilllp, very OOlld. • SlOO. 6'$-971115 polJUlar Tenrus-Travel dent of their fut paeed 91D>TaJbert Avenoe N EW! S OLi D O AK c 44WI· Shorthand & Fount ain Valley, Ca KITCHEN CABINETS Uvtnc rm rum. 6 pcs all Socia.I club, good pnce. xlnt ccnd.. Sl550. Ca1J K.eny: ~3094. 1yping skills n~arv 927~ <complete) fro m our Excellent benefits, great F.qual Opportunity booth at the Lu Ve gas 957.11344 opportunity Call Rit a . Employer M 1F Buiklen Shaw Nauooa l G.-ap Sale 8055 ~. Coastal Person rranuf. will sell cheap ••••••••••••••••••••••• nel Agency. 2790 Ila rbor Call alt SP M. 530-98S45 U1h Grade Sidewalk Sale C.M Never a fee Veterinar y Ass1sta n · askforM.i.ke Ttctocker Thrift Shop. Service 6n shop I Xlnt t Rttept1onist Mature. 540 W lab St .. CM Sat. F\Jll llm{' Call 661 1658 c-raa & 3 1S lOam·lpm opp or & bene f it-----,.,...... 8030 w rapidly growang <·o WAITRESSES I ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sat & Sun, dishwasher. for mechan1rall¥ 1n :\11rumum 4 year.. food Kodak Supe r 8 m ovie elec. s tove.sew marh . clmed tndJ\ 714 540 6.100 l 'tpt'ntmce rpqrnn'<l for I camera MS and proJe<' radial arm saw. etc. 5612 •hnner <,f'r\1t·1· Apply t M 80 1 125 C II SpaDr HB Service stat10n alll'm1ant I dally 8 I lam or art 6pm or a ---·--·--- Ahle LO work days Applv Bernard's Rea;ta urant, 84&506l Garage we. Sal & Sun :II 1 5~22 "PCll. Hunt 33>1 E. Coast Hwy CdM Cats 1035 Everything goes Wicker Bch (213 >592·1571 ••••••••••••••••••••••• furn. decorative bas kets, Shipping 1Recc1vang, full lime, 8·4 JO Vtlarnm company an Lal(. l111ls Exper only Kristy, 11().5188 Station e r y Stor e 1 n Corona Del Mar nPed!- exper'd sales lady Full lime. 5 days. xlnt work mg conds F.spcc1allv fme cltentele 675 1010 Males Stockrlerk. food Waitress. Experienced Wanted Siamese Seal toys & pictures. 16581 food & eockta1 l waitress Point stud service Call Delt.oo Cir. Apt. t In wanted Full time Ask 833-l:W-4 for assignation bock alley orr Golden for Karen. Irvine Coast West & Heil. 9.4 ~ Country Club, 1600 E Docp 8040 ---- Coast Hwy 644-9550 ••••••••••••••••••••••• AUTO PARTS tir es, Waitress Good pay to the ngtit kind of person Ap ply an person a fter 3 Corner or 22nd. St C73 1451 KEESHOND Pups AKC Ola.mp sire. M F. Pet & s h o w P v t pl y 213 IB'1·134Sal't 6pm V ERY T I NY A K C POODL E P U P 6 WEEKS OLD 992·2178 m4l Golden R.et Pups. AKC Champ Blood line!> Guaranteed S200 See rims, 350 turbo trans.etc Pont & Chevy parts. 20131 Crate r Ctr .118 Adams/Brkhrs l area 982·378S. Sat 9-5 Gibson ES33S old pickups only S4SO Suzuki 380 good cond1t1on Must sell $650 OBO Good dryer only S50 Call 631·3375 perents. 831-0517. Garage sale Prom 10< to Silver bar. S F. Mull 100 Oil. Make offer 675-0u.> Brand n e w J e n sen speakers. 4 " x 10 · . S50 Sue 10 weddulg dres~ veil & tra 111. SlSO 552 5068 Roral Dalton f1gunnt• IBallen na 1 appra1s(•d perf cood S200 Gorham ste r l1nR s t l\t'r Sl.ra~bc!"ll II-pl setuni.:. 44 pcs, appra ised. $3200 968-roJS Fon-ed lo sell Ska Va1·a lion for 2 to Aspen Snowmass J 111 to :i 2.3. Air fare $100 round tn p Room disrounted also Call 644-7760 Beaut. whrte Alpaca rug Handmade an Peru Qu sz. s:m Janet. 67~ ScJllfoidmg $175 Lumbt>r rack $35. Aquanum rom pl F\lm & Misc 642·5887 CHIU>R!H HHDEO to compete m "Our L1tllt> M1Ss Beauty & Talent Pageant". Ages 3.7 Call 731·2885 aft 5pm .... .............. .. ............. 11. ==r.:=: :. .......... .!!!~ ~-=-/ fOIO --WOULDIMlltolrldtUted 1111111 uuu ........ .. bS iamd ait.l ~ ......,Al' a ··-'IO"TI· ll4UTIM U.U 6 1 " ..,_ for • V1t -.n;;;;: pa;';. ,.;.y UMUIUA&. CHIMISI ........... • ._ hltl •Imo. tncJucUq OIJIC1S. ,:..'!.:~& .. .a~ ............ 11A~ "•url n H , Inla id ,,_ ...... 9060 8crttD•. Clol1oone , ... -..... ••••••••••• Porc:elaloa. Ivorlu . 'nt&.,'s.:... ·a. Ludln 11, J5ft, varn rum llany ucuu ua l 10ft b ull , 1 U p I n N B, n-Me. ~from 10 to --·····--··•• beautiful. ••ooo . lpm. KENWOOD KMOlO ,.. ---·-~-·-----a dMp Ma polea wlt.b .... :.. ... ..= ~c1::; 'Tl c.c 28121. 2·boat •. ilM new as "S40 -AilantJc Mui 44.s CMDS, Amdoua. Loeded. 5e-&12 · c: c:. Racs-Cn.ilei'. ruu lo· E. l'llbSl.. C.M. It., lebrd, wbl, apla · Old lklt mactunes St ereo Equip m ent Dthr, m1n1 cu1tm Good ioveltmeot. ~ replarly $8$ atna. llip, cal.I Bob Of' 540-90 ,.,,, s.. At1ant1c: lluak Glean&· m.tm, Eves. 1rvine Cout OGU • Coua • E. l7th St. Cll. Santana 21' sloop, xlnt try Club membenb1p· Muat aell Quadraflex coad., a1&a 5, beed, 9Ulk, reuon able llov1ng home reeeiver. pd $331, llbp O/B, dip avail. Beat Eaat. 6'M411 Beatofter.$45--a:IO. F.d. oUer. Call between Movln& Sale . Nothing ~ S50. Wuber , dryer, 2S" Cdor' 1V. telescope, lamp. rug. appbaoces Eves aft 6 ~36()$ Pool UiWe. exqw11te old (ashlooed Wllh artl.allr piano leg s . Slate Leather pockets. 11..SOO ZllD. O*irT. V. Sl.2$. One Year Warnnty 642-satO I Pu.eerSXl50~1ver lpr JBL 88 Special speMe.ra. 1 dual model 604 turntable. Call Gonbl:~. 6-1Pll.SJl..7S value. sacnrace $485 ,MaraaU Car-300 am fm Dell ver free 836-8102 cas.s w I AS-87 tnaic s pk rs. 1980 L a o ce r 36 ' racier /cnbu. lcwlded • one wee& from comple- tion at factory. Owner tra.osferred. $3000 de- pos1L appllea to n ew bu.Yer · Ne wport slip avail • '°"' floancl.og CilJ m.MIO, 9-S. 9070 bra nd nu $200 /ofr S KAT EBOAR D Jo'O R 847-c746aft7pmGreg SALE ....................... Good cond1t1on 65mm ~ SX-71!0 rere1vn K R Y P C T 0 N I C S 4.5w, brlllld ou $2()(1 ofr WH El::LS. BENN E T 8C7-c746aft 7pmGreg SUPS AV AIL.AIU Y AC Newport IW6--05S I MAICUS CH.ucHEL Upto28ft SI \5 673-8145 e'V~ PRO t r ue k:; WOOD OOARD 2-S " IC 71,·· S40 494-!11£?, lll>k for Rich 'MISCEU...ANY TeML'> Rarket H ~ .. d X RC w Gut . Kne11sel Blue Star ~ku-. 1115 C \f. GelSC(' BllldJng..' Ampbf1ed f.x rels1ola at·c·o r d 1on t-iouresrt>nl \hop h ght h\.turc., m1n1 blinds WO\l'n wood OUl.Sldl' !16 ....,mdo.,.. :.hadi.' Vanou~ rl ,. J p l' r ) r n 1! ., t714 ~ .ifll'r bl''! Crall.sman eltttnl' lalo\n m>wer. twm 8" blarll·~ L1sed 4 months. 'Jtc·hrr 700-0207 after 7 PM Potte rs wheel. t·ll't' throws up lO 50 lb!. . nt.'lo\ ~.673-0168 You love your dog~ Cu me ~ this dog hae I Just f uusbed $30 541\ 70 I I Mhcala ID.a W..ted 8011 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MrOon a lds & R alphs ucltet UIS WANTED REWARD' Mual Have 751563or I 981 2057 Mllakal 8013 ....................... 9 pt('('(' Ro~er; Orum ~t Good rond s1onu 96ll:'>l!3 OHiu FwNtwe & liqi.ipn9nt 8 08 5 ...........•........... l'sed IRM Correct •nR St>lt"<'tnr II 6m~ old KiO 7S2 0547 --- 30x72'" Foldtn R tbl~ 531 50 Used steno <'hr.. S2<1 50 & up 72" dranmR tbb. $149 50 Mr Maha n Oesk. &l2 8450 DESK 36:x72" $150. IB\1 Exec t ypewnter S300 673-1.!m Sperry Rand Copier. S250 1bennolax rop1er. S40 M1rrofllm re ader. S75 673-0168 ..... 1017 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Canary hens for sa\r I pair Glow.cesLers Call 963-2600 ------- ~ sell E San. .. w 2000X receiver Ptoot'er Pl.A tum&able, 2 spkrs ~ Jk1· loah, Speoed & OOer 536-1674 Sid 9010 loahliMar* ,,,,.. .. ....•.................. 9030 ...•................... l50.ln> Manne bard....,are llq1.1dauon sale. 10 day~ only 810 Towne Sl C.o6ta Mesa. datl) '•I .. PM. starting J 7 thru J 16 ~EVIMRUO£ J ustrebullt 642 ~~ 9040 ......................... 1978 SCAltAI ....................... ~ boal. 17 Cougar. 11~ HP Ev1nrude Gond shapt' $2:500 or best offer 5M 51..SS T1CMif»CWtutloie ...•..........•........ Motoriwd ltMI 9 140 ..•••••••••....•....... l!n5 Purh MoPf>,J \Int 1~.tnd UlO or ti~..,l ufr 11>1~ Of'661 Oll5i l!1T7 Commuter MtJp.'<l. onl> 655 malt'~ IOO +mJles per l(allnn SJ2S Of' best olfer Call 751 38:'S -----~i.:-1 tl50 ........................ Twm JO's, tJO hours. loaded. Pn pty Beat Of rer-' CaJJ ~ 1200 (Mon . Fn daya >: 731-8216 ~ • weekends ). Aa& for Jerry 71 KAW ASAIO •JO'SIAUY~ a>~ll 121..9150. C2LJ) 9-2ll1 Dlys 16-1811 •-.-w... Ew:. 631-3311 ,.._ ._. _,,.. aall lor llJke Classic 46 ' St ephens·~~~~~~~~~ Ou.Mr. ~ Ply 634-0208 I or Ews. 5M-&5J6 1978 1.odlac Graod R<t1der rv 17"2', Slbp Men"ury. Gess than 100 hr!> 1 lrlr & many extras SiOOO m-6613 --- HydroH01st. hft 10,000 lbrs <Works oo Sltlt't1e I Lake n ew $25 00 1 568-~ 1975 nat bottom. romp re btalt. 454 Che~ Good slu boat, very fast Must !lee. 497 .4004 ------ '79 Apollo 22' crwser . ~. rdnR. head. sips 4 OMC 230ttp l.llboard Comp closed ranopy Easy load er t r ailer w elec winch Extras m cl 34 channel radio Sm down. Laite over equity Used 1.S hrs ~ Searay 220, overmter. OO· ly JQ(hrs. stored on trlr. xlnl cond. many xtras Sll.!W 494 1656 ---- 71 SUZUKI Dl-370 X rood 1195. &44-S2U '78 Honda ATC 90. gd rood. ~ bst olr 64.s-4923 ---------- \IW Tnke Ria~~ bod> Makeolfrr ~7J63 '18 1toncta ex 500 x 1n1 cand Sacnf1ce SI .32$ dys 5H •760, eve s 731-4&!0 *** Fad°' r Y.-.m RDtOOF Daytona ~111 Ud. F..ddJoa Coiled.or's rt em Very fut &i clean Must see to belJeve 1 1 llt-1513 ....................... ~ .. ,. ....... ... Ill Flaa t400 ................... :•••• ac paint • ....,...ery apedaL Repaint and de- tall + recover tnlllt fl re ar ..U and COtO mats. aaly •· David. CaJI 8·12 weekdays, 8 -4 . >• 111.eooa ,3 Ch ev J 350 e n g . QJmPete. DIO/bnt of- fer. Pb. 111-31STJ '71 f>tnto puts. Enginl'. trans It body puts. New rwhala. 548-1455 eves. • •••••••••••••••••••••• IMPORTANT NCYrlCETO READERS AND ADVERTISERS The price or item-. advertised b y vehll'll• dt?aJen; 1n the veh1<'11· dass1f1ed advert1s1ni.: rohnnrui doM not mclud1· any apphcable taxe ... license, tra nsrer fl'e-.. fmanre t;harges. fees for .ur pollution control d .. .,,,ce cert1ficat1ons or de aler documentary pre p;tnltJon charges unle-. ... Olherwt.~ specified h" the a<h eruse r. ----- oWi' u / OGask:s 9520 .••.•.•.•.............. 46 Foni Wood!~. rt~LOn-,1 SlJ.CXXJ '48 F'ord Wnod1t restored mint contl Sl:fJ.101 67~161 IA C.11fo:VY MALIBUSS '• t')I Clas.'lit: Ii. T Ong111.d BX> OBO ~5742 HB> Mercedes Benz =M l limo. Beaut. white t·ar. xlnl mech cond. 1ll'1I ie.u.-IDL. $14.,000 rirm 114-751-1337 ; 8J3..2211 or 1.s7-GIO ~1 MGTD Restored. spot m OOlld. su.1S0. M$,5l.91 4 ...... Dri ... 9550 ....................... lt7'TOYOTA 4X4 s.-t Trwdr lb.Ls • wht'f'I dnve 1, "LIK E NEW'' & h," man) extr as CJ 11 S4S-64ZI everung.s 1979 DODGE 4X4 DI SO PICKUP Loedt>d UK' auto tran' Ult. a.Lr cood , off rn.id ~'heels & I.Ires Never n· gtSteJ"ed . less than iOll actual lllJ les ~ a& 196 ) . $8481 THEODORE ROBINS FORD 20b0 HARBOR BLVD. COSIAMlSA b4'2 ·0010 ·79 Fo rd "'2 ton 4 x-I AM FM cassette stereo • spd. off road tires, xlnt <XlOd. Must sell S7300!h!.1 "r~ 75TOYOTA LAHD CRUISER Good cond.ltion. Ongm;il owner Must seU $3600 673-J858evs prep, &sandwiC'h maker H you 're fnendly, con• c1enllous & depPndJbh· we need }OU for our restaurant expansion II 4 weekdays Apply an person Stonemall Tt•r race, 291.5 R.edbJ II. C ~1 WOODWORKERS Modem producuon far· t.ory needs top people. ex penenced m millwork. as-,emblv & formtC'a Must be ·able to set up machinery Expen enred only M F Takmg ap phrallons 213-638-8746. -$100 Furniture. chairs, Corker Spaniel pups AKC sdas, love seats. baby ~f males Champ lines fumrture. toys. etc S al Top dollar rash for silver Sulphurcrest Cork a too coins 71• 638 9 101 l 'iyr old Very tame 29rt Cal1rorn1an 72 f'lberglass Sporthshe r, tW\Jl dsl enitS Npt :.llp avail Sal'rdtl'e at 127.500 C;all o wner n•~l 3133 RENT 22 ft lwtury motor home. sleeps 6. self cont. SZ50 JW + ~ ma 640-35&'5 ------lll Dodge Ram Charg,•1 Stockperson, full t1m1 .. pert lime mornings 1-;x pencnce preferred H N Ab r a m s Cata l o11 showroom, 181i Newport Blvd.C M. Ya<'ht salesman wanted for yacht broke rage e>t.abllshed in 1927 and the number l UruflJte de aler m the nation. Must be experienced. a. v ~ls. 645-6600 llAM 7PM 7 days zoo 9!52-8330 aft 3 s::/00 pp 714 /848 98J7 & Sun 9-4' Harbor V ICW ' Fem. lab puppy t8:JJ Port Stanhope. N B SWdents if you 're rnend ly, conscientlous & de pen<lable • Patt um« s hirts avail. Tues & Thurs. or Mon Weds Fn. M Apply In person. Stonernill Terrace. 2915 Redhill, C.M. Mlfdlanclae ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..... II 100$ ••••••••••••••••••••••• WEITMINSTER ABBEY ANTIQUE MALL Teacher /Pre-School. P rr Datly 10-6. f'r1 10-9 mornlnl position Own O..OSEDTIJESDAY c h 1 Id w e I co m e 117Sl Westm1DSter Ave. Amen can Pre -School. Garden Grove ss.M>l03 ... La1 Hills. 770 1991. ---------552-1331 ---1 St.erlm.g silver, 19~" lov- 8 weeks. S7 5 631·7<*> 8045 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fn /Sat, &-5. l!iOO Dover Dr, NB 2 refrlg, coffee tbl1, o ffice desk: & credeozaa, Side chairs, To good home. Eng. Set-mac. biltea. children's I.er, M .. neut .. shots, nd.s lo)'I, etc. .lg yrd. 847-M'J l ~'--~--~---HDnes 1060 A d o r ab l e black ••••••••••••••••••••••• poodle/terrier. Spayed. Bladt Morgan Stallion ar Loves people . Good Mare, R ose Par ade home needed 536-9935. v e t e r a n 1 . R e g . 7141338-1011 or :M-4-2218 4 Mo Fem Iris h Set -t ter/Sam oyed movln1. ha•thaW~ 1065 home ••••••••••••••••••••••• needl .19'7~. BRAND NEW, 12 place Loving 6 mo Shephe rd eet1ing of 5. £n&liab Bone mbt needs good home . all Oltna. Dundee pattern. sbots.call631-tl.83 Minton. SIS.50 per place ---------• sdtlnl. ~ price. ALSO, Two n e utered M a le _., ol ema p6ecel, ,,.. tn.ecall to IOOd home. pdca. 3 place aettinp of 4118-3884 &nC'lem.) crJSta) tor 12. Fostoria , Nabarre. SH·Sl8 pu L2Pta<'e Gorham Sterlin~ Blithe Spirit M pieces P IP. 714 1754·6737 or 642-:BT9 Oxnmunity flat ware S59 per new Selling for $15 Silver plate ste mware Venetian wine set, books, bleached mabo1any drop-leaf, teal.I 10. SJ 00 Orleinal 011 paintings Wknds only: 631-21647. Alld«. bolpital bed. Side rails & exercise bar Allo, bedslde commode 5419-1477 Phone Secretary t a pe. 81. Used ~ry hUJe ~55811 Car phone. a channel. ~.Orig. m>o. sell &1400. '7S2-18ZI. 79-111221 Teachen A.aa11t -Special !Ilg cup, 6 lbe. Dated and clM&eS ror handicapped ~ved. Antique value adub.1..2,yn.coUeae ·ex-exceeds t he sttver . pmimc:e req. 9600 Xlnt $10,000. Ad-Sitter t lU. 24 ~ • iM benefit.a bra. 6GGIO. Weeltdayl 8: 3CM. Uoiled __ CBO ___ 'S ___ _ AUit. Shep mix II. Uwlal. .S-. ~ priee. Call Ad Sbota A wormed. D19 Sitter 1144 :U hours. ntlAQJ'IOokl Cardmem- 75'-ur7, ne 151-1• IOG)O, t.nblp, SlOOO value, teU ,.,_....._andd.ryer. Jl•*r I070 tD>lolr. 752-18ZI Cerebral Pally a ssoc. W NEST 3ll2IO W. Harvard St San-ANTIQUES t.I AM. MN180 ii oct °"' ol bualned. We --------· d1d octtellout toUJOM. 'J'l'.A(;RD -The Read· We bave t•moo~rily Jllll tak9 tt away ...... ••••••••••••••••• BUYmQ Call 8'1M1m eveninp 1111 Game la eq>andloa. located to Bon .. 11 • IUk Lab, 1payed fem. Pmt.Ume ad tftemoom Oceuatde. We can be,. 4)Ta, AKC, alfedJonate. &raln•n1 p ro v ide d . a c h e d by pboitlnl ~obocU•at Nda •.lllX5 -.-iorGMIOl.. LOV'l6.nlam.811•aaot. T£ACB&lt -Speed 'lbt IJr1 Ooodl llll'CAD· ...... IOSO ~· Ii: 1bW'1. w. eo... Gm ,...,.., St., •.• -................ . ~ ~ ~-=ti!!!4:·=·~ **I IUY ** Pn1hc Game. · Npt. QIN)' ADUQuei.. Com• =a:-t':r.,"[i9 ft Mi -.u~ ID llld browN. lndlo bu rm..&.•Y M 111 MIOMI won =-~~n .. ,.. • or MMTlllAUcTIOH Part Umti owa bra •• -...:.~ 4 1 •• ~ t 64' l•I• & IJM621 0•1r. •• art ... 'Call • ,,, ___ Z·• - •"17.Mkf«Ulda ~ ,._ •i:.C::: llilliii rm••• on. .... Ad ..... •' Qdl=-. ::,::~a:: old, Senp Sold. IUYel' and eoma. lM4 Beaeb Blvd, ..... Beta. -- •DOll!!Dl.ATE CASH• Fbr<lokt. Stiver, Plat.Jn .. any lttnd , D ao t e l ~ ... CAIH•AST? W•o1toa~1 Newport J:":f ia currtntly b~-~ 1~.C~ W »I. 1'11 New-port llhd., C.11. look fOf' tbt bl1Pl ...... buUdlllt acro11 fr om Aaron BNdtatAltM.art. Coleman llac II 12,000 BTU atr condttlooer. New crated. "400. 548-as ~.03 per DAY 11\at '1 ALL you pa y fora "a!'.L9d DAILY PILOT SERVICE lllECTORY 00 IT NOWI 6U-l671 ,.... & Orcpts 1090 ••••••••••••••••••••••• UPRIGHT piano . x lnt cond, make offer 548 5431 Used console piano w /bench. 17116. S4S-098S Sl lgbtly used Yamaha Oraan. mod~I B l2 IR Days 5'5-7SOll. Sherman Clay Electroo1r Orpn. 8 ~ lo 5 833-0210 5 :ii on 813-5152 AU ror Patty UpritN piaRo. sz 00 . '79-5711 PIANO Y\JSTSACRJFICE ' · 'Horucal " Uprtabt In like new cood. Deep cherTywood fi.a1ab with 27 coats handrubbed vamlab. OriliDal prtce In _... ol $3000. Must be aold. Beat orrer. Call da1S ontr m.""880 Amique Plano, complete· ly rt>ll. l2ml5 or Beat of· fer, CaJJD1-1'310G&r)'. PIANO FOR SALE SlpWit, ebony flnilh. qlnt oand. mo. 1'7WIN2 ?r ... ~':1.~ ... !~~ SKATEBOARD P'OR SAL& Oood condltloD Urnm. KR Y PT O N I CS WHEELS. BENN ET PRO trucltl. woop 8QAll) 21° x 1" ... seo. ..... .. ,oa-Blda NOTICE '78 Monaco 23 1, 'd lx DodRe ••O. ai r . general.or. a~ ga:., all xtras. T·httch. lo m1. P.P. TI4154G-8308. Mon· F'n al'l 6PM W\nds an l ,800m1 Air. t1 nt1·rl wndows. sunroor. T \ radials. roll bar. plu. ... h Sl l.000 day 641·0523 . eves 8'2· 7350 bow Daily Pilot Clasa- 1f1ed ads d11play their messages with leR1b1bty and impact! Our ads. we are prou:t to say. really iet result s . P h o ne 642 5678. 8AM. T..-tHu Tralefol., T,...ef 9170 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1979TRUCK • •••••••••••••••••••••• WANl'ED 22' approx. In near new cond IFYOU ~7-281M have a servtce toofferor Older t r avel trailer, goom lo sell. place an ad •'-_..,. an the Dally Pilot ~5·-· CWsif1ed Section • . . Evea. 842"'944 Phom 662-5678. ______ ...., rower to4o SEA RAY ANNOUNCES **BOAT SHOW SPECIALS** ....... eo.. ...... c..hr' Madi 12 111 Mardi 1 & SHOW SPECIALS Al show or our stores Sl.500.000 In ve ntory Tremendous stock fo r immediate deli very HURISON ~· 'f< '~ - --- CIEARAMCE! We stW have some oew 1979 tr11clts In stock Drastac red~taons ! SAVE MOW! COHN Ell CHEVROLET .'.!\.'>< H "1.,, II.. I '1 r., l \ \1 ~ ' \ S4t>-I 200 lt79FOID FIOOPICKUP V8. automauc trans .. pwr. l&eertnl "lea than is.ooo milel. a.Nellln >. .... THEODORE ROBINS FORD !060 lil\RRll~ 1> l\i I, Cn"tTA Mf 'J\ t.: .' ~ 11111 - ·~ ( ' \ ' '-. "l 'nin SUvtndo a.vy C&IQper S~cl1l. 9500 • mtlea. T.O.P . 641-1701 •a.-.msI>Qs. "rf ~ " toe. Xlnt coad. N•• paln t . -'°'°· G14U J . " ,. . . , . . ~ ·. . ,. ( ~ ,, 0.Lll&n, HW palM, U... • ahe1J ao tnN. -or t.l ITNDll "Jl<lafty .. TQn Pkk u,, .... ~.brak-. ; ..-0, amJfm, all'. Oallt4Nn.1 74DATIUNNW <Ambonc ahll. rebll .... 1WW <'l•b, lllOW .. w. N.i. pelal ... '4Wl47aftS 31 tl7 •••••••••••••••••••••• 1llllt Yon! Van I ton Good condition Call •fter ~ PM.MJ-11174 "13 ford l!:ronolmr Auto ahU\, AM W M It track It.er, llllOO CM II »ft 6 " wlulda ~ 4474, wkdy11 ~I 1ll78 l''ord fZi() v 1in f':x l'dleol et.ndlL100 Many f'xtru. suoo or beat or r er 493-2111111 11178 VW v11n c»mper coo· v.tftj(JO, tde•I l11r vaca uon, AM 1f'M, lug11 r»ck. x.lnl oond 5'200 ~2038 ...... ~ 9510 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • U.ASIHG • AUTO '1JRCHASl ¥I.LEASE I Our "Coodbyl' To lluy ' hnJC·hun: o•xpl11ln'I tl lJIJ Wo"ll m.itl you 1101· •1tt..Jo; "1mvly <·ull PLAZA Auto uasina J!r.·•.;i Mat Arthur 11(v11 U•I .l.imt.1on'f' lt.0110 .1 lHVINE 851-1 771 'Nhf I • 4 t • &; I I I \ .. ,.. : ,, ............. c .......... "'-U•·tlOJ., UO.f07 PORSCHE'S WANTED Allow ua lhe opportu.nlty to conalder t~ putthaae or trade ln of your r h·an Ponlche. <-'heck with U1 'nxiay' l ~ t •••tl'MH' l.Mvft '·••o-n c .. uJ11111t • ..,._.nn Top Dollar Paid f'or Your C:ar ' 1 J~SOH&SOH I l.Jnc:ollt-Mercvry ~ llarbor Hlvd 1 l~l1t M<"flll :AO ~Jf.J(J . . . . : . LEASE NO DEPOSIT . ' NO LAST Any Makt, Any Modtl Oom~dic or Import MONTH NO CASH REQUIRED IMMEDIATE l , J ' L V I f t :; llOITHI DtSCIMMA,.... IMWIUY9ll *'laOWMID• •IMW .. • 'T1!20U11pd. •WTKI l 'T1 m auto. 4111MT J A l '711aaol 41pd (721fWRll' > "11Dll auto. "'41 > "llDH•pd. CWIAXZV l '7U00141pd 1>11UJV > 77 aJCSI Cl ) 1472T A fl ) 1910'1 tBIMOW! LANI S&ICTIOH OfHIW tt7t J20I._ & SZIJ'a IHSTOQ(f SADDLEBACX VALLEY IMPORTS 2JtG? Jibr1uerlt.e Pkwy MlSSION Vli'JO 831-2040 495-4949 Q.OSID SUNDAYS Oll»IGI COUKTY"S OLDEST Salt.., St>rv11·•· I .t•11"1111.: Rov Caner, Inc. J!ola Aoyc·<· UM w l~J11ml111r1·r· N('WJlfH1 lt1•1Jrh f!MI M4'1 IOI McUREH'1 K50 N UP111 h Ill vd I.A HAllHA c; Mt No olSA t-wy I U 141522-Slll ~ybyAJ>iit BMW 32{)1 TT, f)Ord blue. 11nrf. A IC. Ulaupunkt AM '"'M rail'! . nc-w Mtch.8 Ptrf1•rt rond SSIH)() or but offer. 1151-0379 TT ~I. blJick, 33,000 ml, 'Tl •&. al.JV«, All /FM ... A/C, map. ort1 ~.-.m-tl ,. D1UW1 8210, 9JOO, 4 ...-t. Olli -.aen after IPM '11 U O·Z h pd 1m/fm/ca11. Special wbHl1, S1200/0BO. 1111.-aA a. • Dll&Mm ~r XJnt cc.d. '1700 175-8:1113 7Z oat 110 WalOfl. New flll, UM9 rq pa. IZOOO. Aulocmtlc. 5'9...oell _ '80 Dalau.n 280ZX 2 + 2. 3000 rru ,$-1pd., all u tru. &t. ofr. 875-5475 ..,, ... ______ _ 71210.% ...... 41.IC mlles. loaded. ~ f\rm 640 l3ll9 --9725 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 74 l''lat l2R RUAI Wt!ll, nds body worll 11800 00 aft .. pm 4i4 2ll04~ ·75 Spyder lmma<'. Jn/out, new top/tires. 1pec Int 4 Y1 ·3849 Wllwtoda ___ _ 9727 ••••••••••••••••••••••• YISITYOUI ORA*HCOAST HONDA HEA.DqUARTIRS TODAY!!! UNIVERSITY ~Au ... -.;&. s,.:tt v1n; OlDSMOllLE HOM DA GMCTRUCICS 'X~J llMrbor Rivi! I l~IA Mf.'i/\ 540-9640 ill Unnd.1 C1v1r, fuctory .,tr Jll.1upunkt /\M WM '>lt'rf•11 w J t•n• .. ·n tn· JlllAll '>µo•.tkn-... ll11loR1•11 1lnvml( hvhh M1r hehn r .. r111.1~. 111 m1 $44:.4J fA'>M57 ,,.,.,,. 9710 ....................... Mu:.t IM'll' 79 XJ fl $16.500 ~ Hlue w /bU>Cw t tr'Ur 97J.21M 9714 ....................... 7J K.arm.ann Ghia conv. •pd Lo miles A I rond MW-AO ~7 5497 Mada 9731 c,.t t14' ....................... w8l&loo'wa,._, alot oaad. •111e1t on r. MMn1 ii Opet ...... llovtq amat tell. Real alee, 1110008. 831.azlZ P1 szat '741 ....................... MOOG DISCOUNT alf wtadow atlcbr price on ~ rematn1n1 lint ~--· llACH IMIOITS .. Dove8tnet NEWPORT BEACH 752-0900 9750 ....................... 72ro.SCHI ""t14·· Sharl> jet black 5 •PM<! W11h a~arance group and R1v1era ma11. l)yrwnit.e I C302!'.J z J S4H5 IOIWJTHAM VOUSWACHH 7SlO Westmmat.er A Vt' In Westmtnat.t'r Im-~I 838-7llflll 769121 Stmrool 87J. J2Z1 '63 l'onche CabrlolPl ~eel rond 2!1mp1< • Sl.2.Cn> ~ '65CAlalOUT 1-:xceptlun•lly r11 .. 1n, tJe.autllul. 11w...-l runmn~· F.xtr&8 SH . OOU rn 11h I ' I' 67!'>-1 00orlf7:11611J TI 934 w 1 'lunmor & Kini 1 Ult.I. IH. (UJ :'48 •t7111 F.11 O Ro111htt'r. tulJlly rt''llored lo or11e fie llPl'Cll, nu bUl paw w /blJl tnl, OU rubber " Cb~. xlrt INo'ctuul. 1111k $1 J .500 (:AU 714 270 z:u l. ll4 356-C JK on m•w f'nl( Chrome whrrl, nt·w J:>irt·lh ·, Nl'w t'•hau.'t S;.rnr1rt-J t SJ 1011 ~.MS-6373 1974 91 l C~. ~1pd, A I . rrw1t11. ~.000 m1. Jrniu· si.uoo no 1151 Spt-edi;t.M" 79 2IOO m1 Hnghl red. 11t1ll untfrr WIUTilllly 873 It 12 l ii7t I 114CHILYD. ·~-.... 14 2000 76YWIUS {)ynaJDti. 7 PUM01er with 4 lpeed and over· bead air concUtloaJ01. ~' Sfftl IOIWITMAM VOUSWA._. 7100 Wflltmlnater Ave, In W•lm.lolter •n61 at 7lllO 7tYWIUS Very 1ba11> 7 puaen lf'r wkh overtwad air <"Ond1 Uomn.c LUOO mlles 11od bJie QeW I IJOS3&4 ) S7H5 IOIWJTHA.M VOUSW AG-94 7000 WNtrnuatrr A v•· ,. a.rille. Jflt bl.k • /bilk ...._..,Nd.,.,.npe, Roi.i. Royce Ortll. wtre ""*• .C..O "'treds, lo rm, lint tonct. 9100 or bllt olfr ta. UU. weetl. .... T7 ~. Low mllea ... kl9dld, 91GO. 7u.7TD or ..... mi..ton.1ale. • Ddo. Wf9ter11 Seddle '1mniat S-Jnt, Votue lyre1, wtre wbeel1 , ......,, eu. u. mm WILL TAK£ llUOO for qlli4 ...... Car~ IJ> reb. bu tlS mllu 714 .... 7 ....................... T7 D : OriOoal Owner Loeded. Jmmac. cond Im> 562-ITI7all8pm tt20 ....................... '82 Cor va1r waaon, a c.i-1c. nda ~won. 11001oner MO-!te60 1' <lwvy Mont'" ('arlo 47,<Xbru PS l'B. A t:. tit11111 4!IJ.-04IM Mu1l '~II '711 ("h t'v y Mabbu.. 11.000 mJ Im .,..r rood ~ Sft. .. 1 !"'4 Prea.cbo. C Ollla M ,.,.,,. or raJJ fl42...4300. Ad l:wttn l4l :.M houri ... Wf HIO ....................... ORANO p; COl1NTY 'S MIWIST LINCOtN-MERClJJC Y Ot!ALER8HJP IAYRA.DBOI LDIOOLH-MEJICURY 16-11 Al.co c.ur Or. SDfl"w)' Lake rOf'elt ex It IRVINE IJ0..7000 '78 llerrury Monarch Xlnl cond CB St.000 IOBO 640 4111 or '61-8C74 aft 8 • lrtarq\U. Good cood •.AlllOml. S700 845-7711 , ...179.MllforVr "18 mere. Grand Muqw• Pully loaded 15600. 75'-ll018AM lo5PM 71MmCUIY IOICAT WAGON low mHe•. wood&r»ln 'Tl Okla Cut.lall Supreme. mo VI. 75.000mi. PS, PB. A /C, am tfm. 11000. fJl.721112 dya NJ-4* aft. • ........................ lt7tPOttD ""1'0 IUNAIOUT 4 cyl. IO&lne. automaUc trana , pwr. •l~errnir . bucket 1ea&.1 " leu than 9.000mJles• «JllNXY ). Sltll THEODORE ROBINS FORD nu,o liAl111011 BIVO CO\IA Ml\A r,4·1 0010 J*Uce. ~uzw > ,.,, .. "'o M"5 ...................... . BARWICtc DAT4>UH 1 It I• 8Jl-1l7S49l-ll7S IJl77 P!y~ ~ YI.I ry ~burb.n 4 door 2 114:1l Wa1eon ~s 000 m11 .. 'I l'owrr win . ,,52 dow-1 l1r11kt'ft air roo•I / .•. ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• r<I<I rack. AM YM w,-..., '6S, 260 1 onv I Vrry nnllJl&I Hl-Urr th.tn lit· ~ !"('bit lfl2(JO 7!# <on radio, r r11111P rontrol. 1 uato m wht'rl~. Jad•· (;rPrn Mrl1illi r with WI .od f'1 .. tn 'tdfot. I: f "'"fl 'RI Mustang 289 3 ,p11 ,Kl ~tnyl 1nt,.rl<>r l'r1r .. 11 hrlow who6roiale 52'17~ lhe noor Heat Of frr l.lluly f'llcA Mi 4321 t:llt IMB-4~ --no ln W~r ~ l.lM-vy M .. l1l1u ,..,1(<"1 , l!B3-7~1 D 1M> 132$ bt-At urt .. r Kun' T1 GhtJI 12 000 Ml Onis 178 PlymoutbVol-;;; 1rwn lrnm.1 1 ".ml Aut.o. Waicon Root rack. PS. 'fill VW. •lnl rond ou whlll , palr1l & xlr.t' ~100 Al\ ~ 1M2 ~~ • 7 H r o n v ,. r I fl u v. terait fl31 I U7 Ava.LI 4 I 73 Mall bu Very 1¢ <Uld "~ C.11 1• ... ~· l.11111 /\ 1 I' S I' II ~I .w!J l'H, 11ul11 la1l gat.t-, ('Ii '66 <luair. ~ w1whll1• Many morto f'Xlraa . vtnyl LIN, nu lrana, t1rM, fliJ,<nlrru Sl700 642 JJ79 u1· 1nl $3,200/0iS(> !61 "427 Kh11wr1111m 111•w 11• •I i't <'ht-vdh· 4 ,p<.t, i\ I'. 14 1,h1,, Minor hod y "flfAT UIJ(i l:iM · m11 Wflr1I 1111 runn1r111 1 tlfHI 'TZ Y\Jry Mo Wl{n • 0(-W braltei. air, root ral'lf. Mt YM ftuM l(d fl200. '62 «.ill /\M l'M ''''"'"tu~"' I /J4 !WJJllJtm '1p n1 I ~1n11,.1 11~, 'M JJH;•, J •• 71, \.'•11 .. n· l'r1•rnu•r ,1n -~I' 'IWl1J4.:o o.ryw.r 9925 t....,,...4•f/ 11~1 w~~ IJ>atlt,,.J i\ll 1.11""'''' 'M VW uutu, xlnl • ond ....... •••••••••••••••• Cldl.~ '9SS 1•1 m,w Offl•r 1,1 1 n·-· rnaltcofrl'r i7 Cordoba, rull pwr ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,Clllticx 9965 112111 '4719 4JM. llUlll <'Und 129'J5 ; 3 T o r,, n a 11 r. . ti I fllJll •••••••••• • •. • •• • •••••• 7J fkc, rblt ~. tran.t1 ~ rarb, ou clutch " brakes, xlnt rood. moo firm. ~ '72VW Hu., ~. llXI 1 ltV I 644-B40l"~·5"10 mJles. alt'rt'll. t ru1111· ----Loeded. Xlnt rond 11200 all m>ITOll'S CA.I r aau ~Unt or Ad Setter ..,, 0.-,.Jer c.c..dob. 2 12. Jj lln. IG-GIO 11oor h11rdto p J 5.00IJ -- AM ...... l le'rt!O With t ' l JJ<>•l'r ll tr1Hk lioiP" 1 -e I) 197' PONTIAC G«AND SA.FA.II WAGON. 1..-ded b1c.. alr fUld , pwr ~~l.11 " Win· dows, Cl'l&lle, lilt, •le~ •root rack. 9 P--aaer. aPSQ ). A at.e&I at "61 ('1m\l ''"' thn~IKJUt S3 IJJI mii.-, utr roodltlOflf'd. f I pow.•r WJ ndo..., pmrrn ~ l\ • •inti •Joor lork..\ puwn \lN·r I I 11\1( and PQW\"r tir .. i...... I ~ I SZ411 :1411 •(?flt ii VW ~11.1 .. rvh.-r k C111C..c:I 1·q1111 I o rn 1 A' k 1 n If f,!,OJ! I .Jll :.46 -CU.! t'Yl'H "' .tny\11111· -.1rn11 .. l...nd..u ruul. 60 10 M'lil f I I du.J n-c!Jnton Sp.m111h 1 St•rtJng W*l atenor 1<okl r .. ...,n a New I interior Pr11 .. 11 JJIJU I Bualneaa I twlow wtlfJlt'\alo• Hlu•• I I tbllk s:un <~11 ,.,,.,.t . /\dm1n1~1r,1t111 . IJally 4't<<O•d•"ll ,., I 77 l'ont1..1r Honnt'vlll1·. c.111.,,... ..,_•• • ..., I ' "IOVWl>U.~ lt~J l 't '.~"M·.it l'liotMi-4..121 .. xt 2111 ""9•••-c-1a.c I :IJ OOO mJ. l(•JCJd rood. w tJrcl. M 1• t.1·l 1n ~. CaeUX.antul 9910 11100 10 uuo1 •" 1 1 SJlll) )...\2"""'711 I I ........... -... bu ....... i6 Ponl<'he !Hl..'i ~ 11p1.I 'lt>r1•11 . t .11 h. ~ra ,., ••••••••••••••••••••••• --· • ~· -l fi4 Jo'1n-b1nJ Xlnt Mrnf CASH REBATE MAKES YOUR 1st MONTH'S LEASE PAYMENT! a~. 11unrool. 1ur, alloy ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ml(ll, i1l.er cuaa. aunrl. l....U • rullll 1:•11•1 . "10&'1 1!172 l..inroln l:OfllU>Mll.ill ,...,., ltte • •••••-"' I I'S PfJ, A.IC, new Lin~ 11llver. 1mmar SH.!i()U 11(1:01 , t'.1tlrn"' \tu'>l w ll M11rtr <t. very rlt·un, I woh the eov ... ., Cle•~ f WlO Ph KJJ..2849 an ::. PP640 UHi! rv /wknd11 A.'lk SJ42!; •IH :'IJi\ flWlll'f WXI 0 8 0 Call ~:d., :·~ ,!' .~:"": I wt.dYl! ~~~RiN·u·J?t l ~=--;~~;; .. !?!.~ ~ '" •• :::~ ~;.;.§.:: ! =~·~~t:n~ 2 YW/UNllMllfO MILEAGE SERVICE CONTRACT WITH EVERY LEASE .. .. WE TAICF AN'.' TRADE PAID FOH OR NOT• ( ljlfl'I I r.q ( 1..mn • '1IAN1r10 • Al r cond • Mar1u11I /\ '"' "~"' • r tt;nl • •Ill() • Dflll'll A)llll • Complete 1111111 & ,,.,., t~ dill• "V~l1•m • E lw: Sy<1tf'm . ,,,. .... " .,, "".,,..,,,, .. ,.,h, ......... ,. .opytt1 ~c.A,,......,"'*"_ ...... , .... ~ .. ..• ,__.,, _, ''•lf,«I• .... 14.utt ~ ._...,,...,._ Mf; •~......-.. i1r;1wn.t ,._.., t1~-c'1 Yit~t t~ 4Wftl ht ,;()nl'fllN ()r -(~"' v,.,._ ... °"'"'wj,ltq ,,,. ~ wtw. Sltl 494-MI '74 BMW, a nrf, A IC, am/fm lmmar cond 815,<XXml.Uc #642 LQZ. ca.JI Dorothy 891 :JIHJ --- - - 1MW llMS, WHLSU. Alloys/BBS. Call De Oro. m.~11 'ell BMW 1800 Xlnl m«h. cond Ndi. <'01Jmet1c1. Pr1 ced for quick ule ~ Dave 67l-3370 '72 BMW 2002 4 11pd AM /f'M radio J<ad11tl tirea VPry rlean l3200 ~II 64CM820 a/U :ll. 'T1 m. Jmmar; k>adflt 18,750; A11k Nr11l, 83·3231 /dyi, 551 · 515/eVet. '78 :.ma, 4 11pd. aunroof, low tmlea. Muat sell DOW I lllNIO. IMIMM14 831· 7442. '78 BMW 300-1, auto, A/C, AM/FM cua, idnl cond, $10,500. Weekd1y1 9·15: 833-8300, Paeer: m-2112 181. Im RX7. dill rond, A1<', AMlfl'M . 1prr1al wheelJI RIOO. 486-583() ~r ~- MM c:a6ls letll '7 40 ••••••••••••••••••••••• t.BCIDISIBa Our ~1r lu1l vf' t-:XTEN DED 1' ERM UYW INTEREST buy or leaae b»nk plan with NEXT to NOTllJNU DOWN rneana that you CMn own a M ERCF.Dfi'.S BFl"Z tor • urr LEHS \hall )'OU t.boul ht. Sded f1'0m our 1ar1e ln· vent.ory or NEW and PRE-OWNED MODELS. MISSIOM YllJO IWOtn'I 131-1746 491-1704 1.. .. ... . . • .••. .•• •• ••• . .... ... d ..., ,,_ ...... ~~ rOY SALIS SIJlVICE I 197' COllffl'TI ;:::•=:,.::::-:::::' CARVER AMI> WslHG I T Top with automall<' Mott hn~• ··~"''• ROUS·AOYCC OVt:RSt:As UF.LIVt-.HY l1'1lfWI pwr ateenni .. .,._. ot flltot 110 ~ 1we u ... ._.. ,..,0 ., RTS j wtndowa. ur oond . Ult oo~..,.._., ...._.. ....... t..,...-• . wtM-rl. ('fWlt' rootrol. '"• D AILY ll'llOf ..._ -•--"io •-"'·'vt'r rn "'0"._' ~.....,•..ct ...... -• ..... .....,. ...... _, "" ..... ,..Mic.._ -..ice· •. ClOSIO\ONOAY\ ~ 11: tUor n:MV(X; I ....... lfte _ __, Wall'. 9762 VOlVO Now CW, SI I.HI ,.,..,. •ftd _.,_...,. • ••••••••••••••••••••••• l!llM ll.arlx>r Bhd ..c>WAal> C..Yrollt · ~·:•: "•;:"1'; 0 1: ,.'~; f Ul6TA MF.SA OoveAQuatJSU I Cowm.o.-°"-~ "111 ~ lpd wa11on. am / m '46--9301 540-9461 NICWPORT B~<..11 11 r • " • o • o " • (' .. rec. pa, xlnt rood I co ............ omce• Of S3800 Call 110 8328 & M«harur'• •JW<rlal 'till lll-0555 pllo,.. tu Ll!OAL 546-7828 1445. auto, atr. aood i~ T t• .... un..t 1maroon ~ll'A,.TWNf M1<4l7t . T .,,.,ta 916 5 body .liOO 97S. t37K U'1I AJI IJOWf!f 27 .000 m 1 ..,.°' "'-Md '°""• I ., -..-ft'D (11 J)J 1•1 MOie ••••••••••••••••••••••• Immaculate a .llOO Pr 1'80TOYOTA ...._ UMd ~ M Ad sm ... r • CC>llOLLA sa1 ··-··················· l4l. ~ . 34 hn • 11.M i.. U\M 4000 mile!\, IMC ffOS day AM /FM 1tereo fl road -•••-•• • • • • • • •• • • • •• • w b re I 1 J u a l 11 k e "74 Homllt X clean. 8 ryl .. e RAN D N E w .. I . Oood mpe. Auto. Xlnt fflTYZE > oond. 12,000 -..- Sltll Md& ttlO THEODORE ....................... ROBINS FORD Jt;t,41 ltAMl.t >I.I ht .llJ 'T1 Vet. un. "4>, auto ~. ~ atra., all( ml. aar cover, teacher"• pet mGTZor87MW. 1911 Blac* oa blk Conette T tap, 111117 k>eded. DX1 ml. IH.000. Ul·lOJO d9)S '7JI l..t'maM 2 door, atr. amlfm. only 2lllOO miles lllOO & tall~ over pay-mnu se 22W> Aak for Abee .. "1Tbtrd 400. 4.peed 8lO ~ 11118 or 540-4519 v..,. 9974 ....................... • • D> D, wpeed.. RecetJt. '711 1y retMJt enstne. •· 100. ,,,.,,,,,,,...,,~ 1,1, ,'llf "71 Riviera, moonroof. Beautiful '70 T top .wry available opt.Ion, QirwtU, fully ao.ded, 71TOYOT·.&. _. llmpc, alnt. lluat &opcond.f'TS..71J7 'T1 Qapri. XJnt AM /Fm ..... hpd, ve. PS/PB, C ml. SW75, tJM.a> ....... 9720 ....................... ~ Hll UO,I00 /080. 77 4IOSL LAND CIUtSll m.-a ~-··-·•••••!!.~~ AM/FM atereo, tape Oood c:mdtUon, OriaiMI C = ttll te Nata. Od t.rw ur. deck, maple yellow, lop OWIW'. MuR Mil . .->. _ ...... •••••••••• trnlbltotr. oond. 124.1.000. PP. t714> mm1.... '71Ddolllklbtk. moon.r'f, MMID ~ anfPM. it Coroaa, rwu 1ood. ua• pymata O.A.C. ,_., tt40 '7t JOO Sliver Dia. N•• Urea • baU•r1 ..... O.Um.Tm --••••-••••••••• Beauutul car. 8ullt'OOI, IUJO.OIUTMtml-1151 .. o..,. De VW., ••rJ 'Tl Reaet.ero. IJ,000 llklll. a.reo, fully auto. 'JI Onlla. ... 11,ooo 100c1 coed., lo mlle1. mtl ... A1kta1 13~ -mo. Leavtn1 it.at.. t •11 1r11 tl.-.~:m.... ..mi or &IJrGD. -ml, ••Dr · ,. • 11or 'T"orJotm. IOJNI ZllDPI· Call •fl I, 'Pl 1ftWe. Tmlld, 1Dlf, W7 .,..... 21MJ,,.., _.,m ..,. ftll, twc eood. "an..11. dart brown. ~ .... •u... l(Jot lillll..U."rlc.ltea.klob O.UtMmlalltpm. ··--· -nlJ). c.d. Noll. ll&llt .... .,_....., _l()IO. TDTlll•--- Qall-WOaft.IPll en.-o 9J3.., DAY '11 Palrmoat, 11 ,000 '71 ......... .... • A__.. d ,.. ... .. , ha1IJ *luipped, -• '11 c.lta. -coe • ,.. .. ALL ,.,.a pey ...., rdall. teoooor 1-t Ptrftet eo1d., orl1. lllllO•tfttr. fou an..waJUpp. 5'41-t.m ~ .. ':to ............ 5 4999 Automatic trans . factory air ex>nd P~ atMrlng & br~ Pl.US many more luxury llamt' Low. IOw moes1 ( 1N4'42821 7 CAM.LAC s2 9 9 9 COUl'I DI VUI •••••.•• Full pcJMt. factOty 11r cond • Ult wheel . .-.0, letther. Olddeci top & ONLY 38.000 mllell t931FZJ). ?6POMllAC s~999 ......... ,.,°' .... ~ Full ~. flctof'y .,, cond .. Ult whMt. •**>. rallye wNett. Oadded top -muet ... LIKI NEW condtttonl ( 171 RKT). oner. W /Mii at ••· __. ~~ad -~---.•· ... t11e ... raaoo. C.ftrtlble. 'Tl Gold ........... "rlToJUeor-a•:,:· ........ Whle/NCI ... NABllRS ISL, lt,OH ••· •II ~ ==-· ~I ., PILOT tr .... en..•Ull ••~ r1r.....-r• 11&rM+1_,,, ...... ---• 0-.....,. ---VI rwu1v~•~ w 1 lfv~.A* --ft'SUll'( 'Tl '"-· -~ · .., ... ,...1 •M•. .,, ,_. Ollea ..... .u1tiif om, n1P•. A111r11 1421 IAm IT. -..a. _...... mtry91Y ..... ,,,.,, tHoo. COITAt•IA .,... ~ ... pp 141 t•2 ~• ~ •n~Mll•Ur -11.n o -'* DO rr "°"' lfrl •• •••.n..k. •a ~-=·.:m·11~:.~ ~ ... ...U 6oQ.MJI =--~r, tltH., ...................... . ~;;ia;;;;;;;~--~·-~·=·==== ...... -----... --~ .... ------------, • . ... .. . . ····-.................... .,._ .. .. • t ORANOe COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MARCH 13, 1990 FIFTEEN CE ~Dag in llunti•ton ROD&ld All• .......... ,,_ H•Oftd ir::::•-1 bf U.• ·-~ a.a.• ., Com~ for bla ...... acu- -~--."-v.· n..-..-.,.... Wet bt wa1 • Ulf7 at i1:t an latr'lllllr la ldl Mm• that bl cUG't ...Uca ta. man be wu dlu-. wu clut.cblQa • ataak tour ,.., clty -,ao,.. wu prHH&ed with an •••rd of mertt fol' bll n>lt lMt ,..,. bl "8 a rreat of Utt ao.calltd "Pant.1boe9 Rallbt. •• iD eaptvl.Da • bur1lar y•d 1~labbbome. .......... aD elementary fCHol tuebe.r. aai41 M muat bave looked far ltom hero6e u be cblMd tM crook lut Sept. 11. "Here I wu ~ dowa the street la lllY ~ama bottom.a witb •Yiu c...am over half ol my face .a a b61 abovel in my bands.'' ~\D'S retai.d. "When I caubt up with the ,. IUY I beld him ci>wn and started r wavtna my arms around but 1( nobody would atop. I must have r looked llke a madman," the ~ Huntin1ton Beach resident l cootlnued. . "Even a couple of jo11era came by, toot a look at me and J . \ Um:>suits On IUDs lncrea.se By FREDERICK SCROEMEHL Of -o.tlly rllet SLlff Sixty women from throughout the United States filed lawsuits Wednesday m Orange County Superior Court claiming they s uffe r e d seve r e pelvi c inflammation arte r using an mtrauterine device sold by the A. H Robins pharmaceutical rirm. The latest court filings bnng to 123 the number of lawsuits now pending in Orange and Los Angel es counties agains t Robins, Newport Beach attorney John Van Dfkesaid today. More tbm 700 similar suits are p•cfing nation wide. Tbe latest group of pla..intiffs contend in the actions that a string attached to the Dalkon Shield run caused bacteria to enter the uterus and lead to infections. Most of the women identified in the latest actions. Van Dyke said. are Crom Orange County and Southern California. Others are from New York. Texas. , Uta h , Florida. Was hington, Oregon and Colorado. he said. The women, he added, learned that the UlD may have caused their alleeed infections through ne ws reports a bout previous lawsuits against the Richmond. Va .. pharmaceutical firm. Each of t he plaintiffs is seeking $5 million in exemplary dam a g es. and o th er co mpe nsa ti o n including re1mbursemeflt of medical and legal fees. The Dalkon Shield was taken off the market in 1974, but it is estimated that about one million of the ruD's are still in use. Last August, a Denver woman won a $6.2 million judgment against Robins after she testified s he s uffered a miscarriage and was forced to undergo an emergency hysterectomy after being fitted with a Dalkon Shield. He'll Remember What's-his-name Police believe the clerk at a Fountain Valley liquor store who was robbed of$90 in store receipts Wednesday night will recophe the bandit, if he ever -'ees him a1aiD. Tbe 1unman who held up Warner Liquor, 9555 Warner Ave .• about 7 :30 p .m . was described to pollc~ as a Caucasian, age 19-ZZ, 8 f•. 4 inches tall, 150 pounds. Iona blood hair, a "Fu-Manchu" mustache wearing wire-rim eye1luaes aDd a beige jumpsuit. Cocaine Targeted LD1A. Pena (AP) -A state ol eme,.,.cy wu decland !D • wide ..._ ol Pena'• Ama,....,, n.U-WedneedaY to .-lt .......... ~ to M'tnl ta. eeellM......_ ~::. ~ .. Robltallle Hid S.qluad, one or aeven award ......,. at the chamber'• nlntb annual public aafety award• luncbeon at tbe Hunllnston Beach Inn, wu a Tbt anwt. Robltallle Hid, Jed to IMt ...... COllrictkm ol Marion PrankllD JIWer • 31 countt of armed robbery, buralary and various sex eeu. ' UHLMllO -······ SllllCOJI home last April. tryre ~':\·d the man Ber1lund planed to the cround and held tor police bad jmt been releued from prtaon and was retumed to pmoo tollowlnl the September mcident . The city's men ln uniform also took home some honors w edneld.ay. N arcotlce Officer Robert Moran wu livea a mertt award for b ll contrlbutlonJ in lnvestilationa that have resulted ln the coolltoatioo by police of lar1e quantities ol lWclt dntp. Fire Chief Raymond Picard presented an award of merit to Fireman Larry Marsbbum for his hours of work 1n belplq a Huntington Beach coupfe pull their lives back together after losing three children iJa a ftre. family find a new home and spearhead ed contribution expenses that included drives to defray the cost of the funeral for the three youngsters killed in the December blue. merit awards for their roles in upgrading lifesaving techniques and teaching youngsters water safety methods. David Gallagher , a Huntington Beach resident, was honored for helping his wife and infant child escape the names that engulfed his Kei!lson Lane Gallagher wasn't present to accept his award. This was the first lime firemen and lifeguards were honored along with police officers. Officer DanJel McKerren. a Marshburn helped the Clark Marine Safety Lt. William Richardson and Lifeguard Dave Simcox were presented with Prostitution Target Huntington B e a c h Assemblyman DeM1s Mangers (See AWARDS, Page AZ> Law Nixed for HB --. • County unemployment rate increases in early 1980 Employment levels may remain depressed because of seasonal fac· tors for the first quarter or 1980. but January, 1980 employment showed a gain over J a nuary, 1979. G rowth later in the year will be '>lower than it ~as in 1979. according to the Orange County Employment Development Department. farm activities are l'Urtuiled by rainy weather. T b• unem plo~ ment rate in Orange County should remain the lowest In Southern Cahfnrn1a for the six·mOnth forera'>I p<·nod, the de- partment reports Demand will n ·ma1n '>trong for assemblers. machin1~t'>. engineers. tecbniclans and a variety of ski lled trades. ...... Da•ly Piiot Thursday, March 13 1980 -JOeS 1 .. T he latest figures show that the unemployment ra te rose to 4.2 per- cent in J anuary from 3 9 percent in December. Last year at this time the un· employment r ate was 4.7 percent. A drop in employment is expected lo result as outdoor building and A larger n umbt>r of enumerators will be reqwred fur the 1980 census and temporary clerical personnel wlll be needed for the rejitional census proces-;in~ <'t>nlf.'r 1n Laguna Niguel. Foxy logo presents firm's image -./1m Pond Carry Fox Agency's logo a fox dresaed in a tuxedo with gloves and cane -expresses the personnel Working women push ahead firm's values. "That logo Is my pride and }O)'." owner Carry Fox said . adding "1t was designed by an a rtist to sho" ~mployers and applicants ho" we conduct business with mtegnt} and By MARY JANE SCARCELLO s.eci.1 s.c-tl.,.t Wrll•r Women are making job progress, but it's still a man's world. A female college graduate still earns less than a male high school dropout, U S government statistics suggest. Those sa m e numbers show women hold onl y 22 pe rcent or managerial jobs. earning 59 percent as much as t he ir male. coun· terpart.s. ina: BUTTHETIDE may be turning: -Estimates reveal women in professional and managerial jobs have increased 180 percent in the past decade, a ccording to the Gallagher Report -U.S. medical students were 11 percent female in 1971. but Fortune Maaazine reports women earned 22 percent of medical deirees in 1978. -Law schools, expanding from 9 percent female enrollment in urn. produced 26 percent women araduates in 1978 -Women represent 21 percent of all business students -tradiUonal· ly a male stronghold -the American Association of College Schools of Business reports. -More educated. youn1er women will replace older, less· educated men as years pass, Fortune magazine predicts. WOMEN BETWEEN 25 and 14 with husband.a and youn1 childreo -traditionally the least likely to work out.aide the home -are enter· in1 the job market, Fortune re· portl. And women aren't Ju.st world.ni for Uae satlsf action and fulfillment, tither. Most of them need the money. • le•dln8 marketina firm obeervee. Almott twlce H man1 1ln11e women exist today u In 1880, and fewer women are 1urvlvln1 on tUJll(IO.)' after divorce. -Show a desire to ~uccced -Express thought:. clearly. -Be assertive without being ag. gresslve. -Taite criticism grareCully -Set goals -Join proCl''-'dona l organi za. tlons. elegance.'' SPECIALIZING for 10 ~ear::. an placing banking personnel. Carr} Fox r ece ntly moved into t he clerical field. The agency is at 1616 E 4th St an Anaheim hosts 'Job Fair' Orange County JOb seeke rs and employers will come tog~ther at the Orange C<?unty Job Fair, from 10 a m to 9 p m Apnl 7 and 8 at the Anaheim Convention Center. "This year's Job Fair will be bigger and better than ever exceeding last year's attendance of 7,000 -and is restricted to Orange County e mployers only," a spokesperson said. Career guidance and employment opportunity workshops also will be featured at the fair, he added. Firms recruit m g e mployees at the fair will include -Production and electronic assembly -Machine trades -Clerica l and computer operations and programmrn~ pe rsonnel -Drafting and designing -Business and finance -Management sales representatives -secretaria l -Banking -Engineering -Inspection -Auto mechanics -Health fields -Fast food prepa ration. Corporations recruitiq at the fair wlll include Gener,.1 Automation, BASF Systems. Control Data Corp., Allergan Pharmaceuticals. Southern California Edison Co., McDonnell Dou1las Co., Mlcrodata. Sperry-Univac, m . Smith Tool, Pacific Teleilhone and others. Anaheim Convention center ts off Katella Avenue at Harbor Boblevard In Anaheim. Abigail abbott gives iob tips P,.ntni oneaelf to a proepec. penome1 qeocy · IO BOW CAN women make it lD a tlve _.,., la important In ,._ ftat qeuey la at 14211 Yorba St. Santa Ana, near the Santa Ana Freeway. Carry Fox conducts business an ao informal ye t p ro fessional fashion, he said HIS FAat.rrY e\'en includes a full -service kitchen for a "home like" atmosphere. None of h.1s of· fices are separated by walls -only glass partitions are used "We like our applic ants a nd employers to feel at home ht>re." he said. ThoM applicants include persons interested in career cha nges, recent college 1raduates, employees re- e n terlng the work force and worken seeking better salaries, benents or jobs closer to ho me. he said. - WOU.JNG CLOSE to home is an 1o c reasingly strong val ue in employees because of the fuel eris~. be said. "Our role ln the community "111 grow ln importance as the fuel crisis increases," he concluded Carry Foz Agency's logo represents pride and integri· ty in Job placement. Dennis and Dennis finds Jobs fast maa '• world? Una a Jo'. · lD TaltiD.. ••1 tJdnk we've lot to remember . Tlpe I« Job aeekera faclnl lD· "Hb ...ten abould be able to re· Den.nla and Dennil Penonnet can tllat '" can•t expeet to 1et pusbecl tervlftw Include: Ja&.e to otber people, an ability oftea MDd IOIMODe to an em,ployer alae.S-we've 1ot to do the=• -Be~ -or even earl1 -Hpedall7 helpful durln1 In· witbtn three bow'I att.r betq eon· oWMlvee .. 1aya Bleanor , for aa Dll8nlew. temewt. .. lbe ta.Id. tacted. .See~ ot a New Yon a--0.'\anon. •M atlllt and coUece del!"MI 0 We ac:rteD over 2.• applicanta tel&lftMU'dl ftrm. -0..1......, llt 1tra11ht. area•t al••f,• •=to en1vre a moatlll" aa11 Pat IMran. co. a. na-Uoot Include: -1.d tbt Interviewer in the.,. •m=mmt.. • ..,. . owut' of tht aaency, ''and an the •Get an MBA. •• _ __...,, A Abbott'• COW11eJon help 1-?Jtlt llW')' ID Orana• Oc>ulQ ... ~ IAlna to==· -Let .tbt Interviewer 111taa ap appllca.nta learn bow to present Oftlc• are at 2082 ancbelaon -•....... a.nL ~. ~IOemplo,.n. Drlt•. t"lM aad 18118 ... cb -~·~·· ••• ... ,... • .. }ilU ._.... T1te1nD...._ttt.t.nh-. ....... ..,..__ a.acta.·• 10 ·~· •• ',•, '. ,,. •••• ·.,, ... '.•lit.• • •.·. ,.....,, ......... 01-: ·~ • ••• ~ .... ,... •••. •.' • ·~·· f ~. '·' ••• ~-...... ,• --·------... • -I I ~ -·-* •I Da11y Pilot. Thurlday. M11c1' 13. 1980 -JOSS 1 County unemployment rate increases in early 1980 Employment levels may remain depressed because of seasonal fac· tors for the first quarter or 1980, but January, 1980 employment showed a galn over January, 1979 Growth later in the year will be '!lower than It ~as in 1979, according lo the Orange County Employment Development Department. The latest figures show that the unemployment rate rose to 4 2 per· cent in January from 3 9 percent in December. Last year at this time the un· employment rate was 4.7 percent. A drop in employment ls expected to result as outdoor building and farm activities C1rl' curtailed by rainy weather. Tb• unemploy ment rate in Orange County should remain the lowest ln Southern California for the six-month forecast period, the de· partment reports Demand will r<'main c;trong for assemblers, machinists. engineers, tecbnJdans and a variety of skilled trades. A larger number or enumerators will be required ror the 1980 cerusus and temporary clerical personnel wlll be needed for lht· regional census processin~ c·1•ntn in Laguna Niguel. l1m Pond Swing Into Sprll• With A New Job! '* Thursday. March 13, 1980 (~-O{U1t') Foxy logo presents firm's image Carry Fox Agency's logo a fox Santa Ana, near lhe Santa An& Freeway. VVorking women push ahead dressed in a tuxedo with gloves and cane -expresses the personnel firm's values. "That loeo Is my pride and JOY .. owner Carry Fox said. adding "1t was designed by an artist to sho" ~mployera and apphcanls how we conduct business with inte~rity and elegance." Carry Fox conducts business in ao informal yet professional fashion, he said. HIS FACILITY even includes a full-service kitchen for a "home like" atmo,,pbere. None of his of fices are aeparated by walls -only glass partitions are used. By MARV JANE SCA RCEU..O 9-lal Sec11-Wrltff Women are making job proeress, but it's still a man's world. A female college graduate still earns less than a male high school dropout, U.S. government staUaUca 8U,8esl. 'boae same numbers show women hold only 22 percent or managerial jobs. earning 59 percent a1 much as their male. coun- terpart!. . BUTTHETJDE may beturnitfg: ina: -Estimates reveal women In professional and managerial jobs have increased 180 percent in the past decade, according to the Gallagher Report -U.S. medical students were 11 percent female In 1971, but Fortune ll••ulne reporta women earned 22 percent of medical deirees in 1978. -Law schools, expandlni from 9 percent female enrollment in 1971, produced 26 p ercent women ,raduates in 1978 -Women represent Z'I percent of all buainess students -tradiUonal· IJ a male s tronghold -the American Association of Collete Schooll of Bu.slneu repe>rtl. -More educated, youn1er women will replace older. teaa- educated men aa years pass, Fortune macazine predicta. WOMEN BETWEEN 25 and M wlUI hmbaada ud Youn& chlJdrea -trdtlooally tbe leut likely to wOrtJ outalde the home -are enter· lnl the Job market, Fortune re- porta. Alld women aren't Just wortdq tor tbe aatiafactJon and fulll11ment, tltMr. llOlt ot t.bera nffd the a>ODe)I, a 1Ndln1 marketilla ftrm ~. Almoet twice aa m•D1 1tn1Je woam u.llt today u ln iMO, 8Dd fewer women are aurvtvlnt on lllMO":a.J aft4J' divorce. • mw CAN women mu.• &a a ... •1worldT RJ tldU we've sot to , ..... .,.. .._ wt can•t expect to pt JN1W -we•vetotto. do&be=. ••"""''..,. ... ...... llolaNewYort~ ..... ftrm. a•r llaBllDoludil : •IOA. '° ..... :.=;· -......... ~ .,.,, ~-.I~·· 111 •1 • ' • • ''* •••.• 'ii'! • ~ 1''•.· , -Show a desire lo succ<.'ed -Express thoughts clearly -Be assertive without being ag· gresslve. -Take crltir1sm ~racefully -Set goals -Join pr1,ft"''1onal oq ,:a nlza· tlons. S PECIALIZING for 10 )c•ars 111 placing banking personnel. Carr) Fox recently moved into the clerical field. The aeency is at 1616 E 4th St 1n Anaheim hosts 'Job Fair' Orange County Job seekers and employers will C'Ome together at the Orange County Job Fair. from 10 am to 9 pm April 7 and 8 at the Anaheim Convention Center. "'Ibis year's Job Fair will be bigger and better than ever exceeding last year·s attendance of 7,000 -and is restricted to Orange County employers only," a spokeapenon said. Career guidance and employment opportunity workshops also will be featured at the fair, he added. Firms recruiting employees at the fair will Include -Production and electronic assembly -Machine trades -{;Jerica! and computer operations and programming personnel -Drafting and designing -Business and finance -Management s ales representatives -secretarial -Banking -Engineering -Inspection -Auto mechanics -Health fields -Fast food preparation. Corporations recrultln1 at the fair will include Generfll Autom~tlon1 BASF Systema, Control Data Corp., AUeraan Pharmaceuticals, Southem Callfomla Edison Co.. McDonnell Dou1lu Co., Mlcrodata, Sperry-Unlvac, ITT. Smith Tool , Pacific Teleilbone and others. Anaheim Convention center la olf Katella Avenue at Harbor .. Boblevard In Anaheim. Abigail abbott gives iob tips pntwlaamcY. Tbat qeaey la at 1'211 Yorba St . ID,..._ "Job ...an lhould be able to ,... lat. tD o&Mr peop... an abWly upeelall1 '•lpJul durlnf ln · "-• ..... " ........ .. .lob lildlll and tollett ....... "We like our applicants and e"'.'ployers to feel at home here ... he u1d. Those applicants include persons interea~ in career changes, recent college 1raduates, employees re e nterlng the work force and workers seeklne better salaries, benefits or jobs closer to home. he 1ald. - WOUING CLOSE to home ts an increasingly strong value in employees because or the fuel crisis, be said. "Our role ln the community will grow In Importance as the fuel crisis lncreases." he concluded. CCJrf'JI Fo% Agmcy's logo r~tenta pNde and tntegri· ty in Job placement. Dennis and Dennis finds jobs fast Dtnnll and DlllnW ...._.. can oft.a Mad IOllMOIM to .. •ployer wttMn ...,... llour'I .,._. ....., eon· tactad. .. ....... OYff ... e;pplieanta • .,...,4' hJ9 Pat •ran. co· mitt' -di =· ..... .,. the ........... • ~ .... • 2J085 • -",.. r · -.• March 12. 1980, Daily Pilot. Thu,.,dey. March 13 1980 ltesume tips forwarded Brevity advised By JAMES POND ~ i.1 s.ce-"•"-• Learning what constitutes a good r('sume Is a worthwhile Investment oft1mc. "A r<'!>Umc is the one device which may get you that all·importanl in· tcrviewfor the job of a Ufetime,L' said Eve Moore, owner or t'lata Secret.a.rial Service, 2082 Michelaon Orlve,Suile212, lrvine. Ms. Moore offers some helpful hints as to what conslllutes a good re· sumc. "A resume la an advertlaemeat for oneself, and like a good advertise· ment, it should contain only the perti· nenl information. have Iota of white space and be ln an attractive format. "Keep it br1ef, yet as complete, as possible -don't bore your reader with Jot.a of tedious detalla, but do make sure the resume preaenu an accurate and lnteresUn1 pleture of you andyourbacktround. ·'Some or our cllenls come in for re- 1ume conaultaUon with pre<:e>ncelved ldeaa about what abould be In a re- sume, based on aomethin1 they read on resume wnlmg, and lhey want to apµly Uus information to lhe1r O'\\n rt'!> Um('," shcsa1d. This doesn't always work. she said. because many times these euideUnes pertain to a person with a completely dlfferent ob,Jeetlve and background. "That's why lt helpe to confer wltb a consultant or to read aeveral sourc<"S on resume writing," ehc said. She cites common sense as useful in determining resume length. ·'The Important thing to re· member in deciding resume lenith is that one person's background will sensibly fit on one page, while another person's deflnltely will not, and lt would be fooU sh to delete Im· portant upect.e just to make lt a certaln length,·' she said. A summary of quallficaUoos often can "pull together" an otherwise flat reaume. "Such a summary can help highlight some or the areas of ex· pertbe which do not prominently appear in a client's resume," she said "Many penoanel dlredon and others in the hiring butineu think a resume without a cover letter can be a waste of lime. "Our recommendation la that It can certainlybelp, but the moct lm· portant upect of the resume la the , person's background and the care taken In prepariDI the reaume itself," shesald. personnel services "Old·Fashlon&d Integrity With Up-To-Date Methods" PBIUIANKNT & TEMPORARY H•LP C-£E8RA TING OUR 10th ANNIVERSARY ''THANK YOU, ORA'llQ8 COUNTYI'' I ~ -.. ~ \; --~. -~TUSTIN--IRVINE COMPLEX ~ .. 14211 ~St . .,...201 (~frf8WaY ' 17lti &tilt) NalWBT 721 ·Ttl1 mlflOIMY 73j·5627 RJIJ.OTON 1. .--• SANTA AN ~ I r'I TUSTIN COMMUNITY 1001 North HOSPITAL Tustin Avenue I'"' Santa Ana. California 92705 RN's The Future Yours. • IS • • At Santa Ana TuatJn Community Hospital. we have excellent nursing opportunities available for profession· ol lndlviduals wfth their future in mind. We are a modern 300 bed acute care facility and teaching hospital providing quality health care to C.entral Orange County Residents. We offer excellent salaries and benefits. The following opportunities are c urrently available: RN'• We have openings for both the 3:00 P['l to 11 :30 pm. and the 11 :00 pm to 7 :30 am shifts In the following depart· ments: • CRITICAL CARE • ONCOWGY • MEDICAL • 8lJllGICAL • OPERATING ROOM • PEDIATRICS • DIALYSIS (.W trala.) Call NURSING ADMINISTRATION at (714)953-3352, for lnformatlon about our 32 hour work Wffk, with full pay and beneftt1 for the 11:00 pm to 7:30 am shift. NEW GRADUATE RWs Call us about our 1peclal openln91 and 7 week orienta· tlon program. Thae are full time po11Uon1 working the 3:00 pm to 11:30 pm and 11 :00 pm to 7:30 am shifts. LVN's Immediate opening• exist on both the 3:00 to 11 ~O pm and 11:00 pm to 7:30 am 1hlft1 In the following depart· ment1: • MD>ICAL e 8QllGICAL • CIU'nCAL CAllE For more lAIOrmadon or contlderatton for one of these po1ttton., pleoH forward your rawne, apply In person or call: KA 11IY CINTtJBA P•MAMI Cooftllaator .. (1lt) 95S.MSI Dltcover the opportunlUu that await VoU at Santa Ana Tutln OMnmunlty Jiolplml .. , when the•-• h Yoanl .. 1~ ,_ W Daily Pilot, ThurMSay, M¥ch 13 19e0-J06S 3 College prepares students for varied career pat,erns By JOlll'\l 1\1. DODO 5-1~ S.Cll-E•1i.. General and hberal educations will help f uture w ork<'r'l make smooth career chang<'s. said Dr. James McG au~h. vier• chancellor at UC Irvine. As many as fi \t' t' a re<'r changes in one lifetime wnn'1 be un usual for future college graduates, some ex· perts believe "THE GENERATION just through college 1s much less content with its jobs than were past genera· Uons -and m uny or the recent eraduates w 111 look for career EBASCO looks for techni cal employees "Enormou!>" potE·ntial for busi· ness expansion at EBASCO Services Inc or Newport Beach pro· vides diverse growth opportunities for technical employees . .. The demand for our services - Including design and construction of power generating stations -will In· crease in the future, providing ground·floor opportunities for technical personnel broadening their careers." senior personnel representative Anne Stevenson said. EBASCO -a "relatively small" branch o r a corporation h ead· quartered in New York -combines ihe warmth of a small company with lhe security of a large corpora· lion, she added. Currently, EBASCO ts seeking 15 to 20 technical employees in draft,. Ing, engineering and design posi· tlons, said Rich Roda. another senior personnel representative for the firm at 130 Newport Center Drive. Offering positions for both ex- perienced applicants and recent col- lege graduates, EBASCO plans for "balanced growth," requiring many diverse employees. Roda said. THE FIRM employs approx· lmately 150 persons. said R.A. Don· oelly, vice-president. "We utlllze o ur employees tn ways that encourage t heir growth," 1toda aald, adding "our lnnovaUve approaches toward energy develop- men t keep u s f ro m limittn1 ourselves. ••Hence,. many or our employees ft.nd no limit to their growtb potm· Uall," be said. EBASCO. formed tn 1905 a.a a sub· sldlary of General E lectric. haa "been aroUnd since e leeu1Cjlt1 rinl came lnto use," personnel maqaer Dkk Collini 1aJd. Current hours at the nrm are tnm 7:80 a.m . to 4: 15 p .m . dally, he added. Call 759·7113. IALAalES AND benefltl al UASCO are at least as hltb aa lHH al competitive rlrm1, aod ·~· work envlronment can'l be ••Roda said. blneftll include: lluJtb and Ufe lnaurance pla111 changes," said F a ther Aloysius Kelley, pres ident of Fairfield University in Hartford, Conn. Those career changes probably won't be dras tic. Dr ~kGaugh said. "For example, an t·ng1neer changing careers may move u~ through a natural progression Into an administrallve postilion "But you probably won't see too many engineers changing their career s to Broadwa y dance performing," he said · ALTIIOUGH CU RRE~T UCI stu· dents predominate in s uch pro· Cessional-orlented programs a ~ computer and biological science!- those students with specialized skills may require additional fun· daroental skills to make smooth career changes, McGaugh said ''In addition to professional f'x pertise, future workers will need such fundamental skills as reading. writing and mathematics to logical· ly organize their thoughts on new jobs." he said. More advanced degrees and con- tinuing education also will help careers. "Continuing education not onl} will be necessary for copin~ "1th career changes, but 1t also "Ill be needed for soc1et.> ·~ progress." ~tcGaugh said. MORE AD\'ASCEO degrees also "tll become more necessary in future occupalJons, he said. ··For example. the business pro· Cession has an insatJable demand for employees "1th more than un· dergraduate education. "If everyone has a bachelor's degree, lhe value diminishes for all the rest -and it's the same for master's and doctoral degre~s." M cG a ugh concluded A T·ELEVED. ~ FRANCHISE Make H work for J'OU 7-ELEVEN stores · small, compact, easily accessible Their convenient locations. fast service and friendly image have combined to make 7-ELEVEN shopping a familiar part or the American lifestyle That It why we are so successful. 7-ELEVEN Is a d1vis1on of THE SOUTHLAND CORPORATION. pioneer of the convenience store and a recognized leader 1n the food and dairy industry Approximately 7,000 7-ELEVEN Stores are located virtually throughout the nation. 7·8.EVEN offers a business system for a ready to operate stOfe. It Include& training, counseling, book- keeping, financing, advertising, and merchandiSing ~stance. And out how you can put 7-ELEVEN's experience to work. for you. Simply call the number below or flll out the coupon requesting additional Information. You will receive details on how to get into buaineaa for yourself. The Southland Corporation 13517Fa1Mew, O.rden °'°"• CA 92M3 Nam•-.-------------------------------------- Addr•••------------------------~--~---------- - " Delly Piiot, Thursdey, Metch 13, 1980 Proper attire aids iob seekers Serious job applicants will come lo interviews dressed for the role. A survey or Orange County's top JO employers shows l.bey prefer lo h i r e the w e ll-groome d , a p - propriately-dressed person. Andrea Jones, employme nt s pecialist ror Alpha Beta Co .• says. "We look for neatnes s and personalit9. "Even applicant.a for store posl · lions. who will wear uniforms, should apply in business attire." Barry Brennan, from Beckman Instruments, Inc .• thinks grooming is as important as style. ··A wrinkled shirt, crooked tie or sloppy appearance tells us a lot about a person," he says. The majority or women applying to bis company wear • dress in· stead ot pant.a, Brennan said. Rockwell Inlernatlonaf Corp. spokesman Tony Longo said supply and demand ln Job markets lnl1uence 21elecUonof applicants. But appearan ce c a n a ffect employment chances, especially when experience ls lacking, Longo said. "Use good, common borse - sense," be suggests. "Personnel directors will favor someone who looks more presenta· ble." Allan St. Jacques, who hires for Hughes Aircra(t Co .• noted laws prevent refusal to hire because or a ppearance. "But we do have to worry about long hair as a safety factor," he says, "and an e mployee's ap· pearance can't disrupt work." Suggestions for job seekers in · elude : -Dress appropriately for the job sought. -Pay attention lo cleanliness and grooming. -Wear hair short or away from the face. -Mary Jo~ Scarctllo Victor helps employer, worker Employers find workers -and workers find jobs -through Victor Temporary Services. "Fast-growing and competitive Orange County orrers job op· portuniUes to everyone. and we're here to bring employers and employees together In that market," a spokesperson said. Victor ls among the most reputa- ble national temporary employment services, he added. The firm ls at 4341 Birch St , suite 213 in Newport Beach. "You'll never hear 'don't call us, we'll call you,' al Victor Temporary Services because we care about you and your future," the spokesperson said. Victor is a subsidiary of Waller J . Kidde & Co .• Inc. and has offices in Orange and Newport Beach. Phone 556-8S20 for lnformaUoo. • • • vn v SPECIAL OFFICE SERVICES When vou want A Job .... YOU Need It YESIERDAYI Let S.0.S. Fiii The Need TODAYI ~ PlaCa11ent spedallsts .. DESIGNERS DRAFTERS Leadership and long term e>'pans1on in power plant design englneen ng and construction enables EBASCO lo offer these opportun1t1es for pro fessional design development. CONTROL WIRING 3-10 years' experience In the development of designs and layouts of schematic and connec· lion diagrams tor control c1rcu11s. STRUCTURAL 2 plus years' experience 1n power plant or heavy 1ndustnal design of reinforced concrete or structural steel facll1tles. PIPING 3-7 years· experience In the layout and design of power plant, petrochem or related p1p1ng pro- jects. EBASCO oH9fS compet1l1ve salaries znd a com- prehensive benefits package For prompt, con· fldent1al consldera11on forward your resume and salary history to RICHARD 0. RODA Meeting the ChaJlenge of Change EBASCO SERVICES INC. 110 Newport Center Dr. Newport Beach, CA 92660 ACTION·GETTING RESUMES SINCE 1970 CALL NOLA IHELDON ANYTIME DAY~NINOS-WHK!NDS 997-7520 OFFICE·1500 E. KATELLA SUITE 6 ORANGE .. - EDD 11resents iob interview tips Many factors contribute to unsuc- ce111Cul job hunting. Qualified job hunters orten fall to i•t hired because they rely loo heavily on their qualifications. They neglect lo improve their personal attitudes and the charac- tertsUcs employers examine during Job interviews and informal meet· loss. The following list. complled by the state Employment Development Department, details reasons why job seekers often are not hired. -Lack of plaMlng for career. No purpose and goal -Lack of Interest and en· tbuslaam; passive; indifferent -Lack of confidence and poise; nervousness; UI al eue -Never heard of company -Poor personal appearance -Overbearing, overaggressive, conceited know-It-all -Inability to express self clear· ly ; poor voice, diction, grammar -Over-emphasis on money ; In· terest only in best dollar offer -Poor scholastic record; just got by -Unwilling lo start al bottom ; expects too much too soon -Makes excuses, hedges on un- favorable record, evasive -Lack of tact. vitality, maturity and courtesy, ill-mannered -Condemnation of p ast employers -Lack of social understanding -Marked dislike for school work -Failure to look interviewer in eye -Llmp, "dead fish'' handshake -Indecision --~ -Friction with parents, they make decisions -Sloppy application blank -Wants job only for short time -Lack of knowledge of field of specta.llzaUon -No interest in company or In lnduatry -Emphasis on whom he or she knows -Unwillingness to go where sent -Cynical -Narrow interests -Poor handling of personal finances -Inability lo take criticism -Lack of appreciation or the value of experience -Radical ideas -Late to Interview without good reason -Asks no questions about the job -Gives indefinite response to questions. Worid's Largest Manufacturer of Solid State Relays Offers a Variety of Employment Opportunities. Excellent Benefits Including Company Paid Pension Plan. 15461 Sprlllgcl• H•l ...... leac .. Callfonila 92649 891-5861 e.o.e. ··------.,.. •c. •• 1 .... J T' Cally Pilot, Thllf'9d9Y. M1teh 13. 1980 -JOBS 5 THE ORANGE COUNTY JOB FAIR IS COMING! MONDAY AND TUESDAY, APRIL 7th and 8th I 0 A.M. to 9 P.M. ..... AHAHllM COHYIMTIOH cena 100 W. KA TaLA. AHAH11M. CALIF. FREE ADMISSION Some o f the job openings that these companies will be attempting to fill include: UNSKILLED· Production & electro nic assemblers. warehouse shipping & receiving. etc SKILLED· Machine Trades. Bank Tellers Auto & Dresel Mechanics. Inspectors. etc. CLERICAL: Clerks Typists, Secretaries. etc. TECHNICAL: Computer Operators. Programmers. Draftsmen. Designers. Lab Techn1c1ans. etc. PROFESSIONAL: Engineers. Accountants. Financial Anaylysts. Administrators/Managers. Sales Reps. etc. If you are looking for a job in the Orange County area. then this Is the place to be. Don't miss itlll Be therelt Pfease bring your pen or pencil. Appllcatlons will be 1ccepted. Parta11 fist of companies attending this year's Job Fair Includes: ...... ... c.,.. ·n....-........ c.p. •IAlf~C.,. ·n.,_... c.,. ==·I f..,...... •'II· .,_MlslduM• ..... ~ .,... ..... c..,. •ftW •AM D1 h .,, ... .. . ......... a.. .n.,..,...,...... ..... T ... 6J08S-. .• "1S1' "'-1 • ·~ a-· ·w Dally Piiot, Thursday, March 13, 1980 Medox fills nurse need Area demand increases Nurses in the 1980s can expect large increases in an already strong demand for their services. Orange County expects demand increases even higher than national needs because or the area's rapid growth, said Susan Fore., placement coordinator for Medox temporary nursing service, Irvine. ONLY 50 PERCENT of registered nurses in Orange County are employed in nursing jobs, she said. ··w e have more orders from hospitals than we can fill," she said. Reasons she gave for Orange County's nursing shortage include: -Inadequate numbers of nursing schools -High job stress levels -Low pay. MEOOX FEATURES top pay, a large benefit package and "freedom of choice in almost every matter. including preferred work shifts, days and location." Medox is at 17972 Skypark Ci rcle in Irvine. The firm serves as a com· municator between hospitals and nurses. "We deal strictly with hospitals in an effort to relieve nursing staff shortages," she said. Coordinating placement of nurses is Susan Ford of Medox temporary nursing service. Nurses working for Medox Im· prove their skJlls, she said, because their job positions vary. exposing them to a wide application or their skill~. Hours at the firm are from 8:30 a .m . to S p.m. dally, although employees are on call 24 hours. Call 641·8551. M o R9an Employment; Agency 1525 Mesa Verde Or. E. Ste 213. Costa Mesa PERSONNEL PROFESSIONALS NEVER A FEE o, ••••• for: SECRETARIES•CLERICAL •BOOKKEEPERS MEDICAL •INSURANCE 754-1581 631-1575 ......... JOIN OUR FAMILY Karman Answering Service This Is a great S>lace to work and great people to work for. We are a family owned & cperated answering service wtth warm family atmosphere. PBX OPERATOR Answering eervl~ experience preferred. Costa Swing shift & graveya~. call 140-1777 Mesa area. • MANPOWER® TEMPORARY SERVICES r "" MEASUHOUR DIFFHa.cfS! For 1nterest1nq 1ob opportun1t1es that match your skills and your schedule. c.all your nearest Manp0wer office ANAHEIM 5 18 s. IH>o6itlli if 17141 774-1000 Meet Your Match • Typists • Secreta-1es • CtPrks • Receotionosts •Keypunch • Srenograpners • Bookkeeoers • DemonstratCYs • Factory Ware house Loaders • As!>emble<S ·Packers • \' a•"leoance • lndustnal Wor~er; • Ori\ O?•'> • .A"d "-'" ) '.'ore • Proven intenvew1ng and testing methods give you the nghl person for the 1ob. • Customer feedback helps bring you top temporaries. • Top performers get e~tra recogn1 t1on for a job well done SANTAANA 1223 E. s. ........... (7' 41 558-0231 RN~S LYN'S NA'S GET PAID WHAT YOU'RE WORTH AT KELLY HEALTH CARE We offer: Choice of Schedules S2Q0 bonus plan Referral bonus CEU Reimbursement Call ~ cqme In 11 26 N. Brookhurst Suite 109 Anaheim • 956-9660 Not an Agency. Never a FEE E.O.E. M 1F . f -• ~. l ... .. ... -•••••• " ••• , , , * ' ••••• ' .,I •••• •'•'•'·· .. •;; ..... ... ~-Da1ty Pilot. Thur&day. March 13 t980 -J08S 1 /\ l~l ., STAFF. I~C. PcrS<)t111el Ser\'iccs Engineering-'"fccl111ical.Clerical -Off1cc Tc1nporary & Permanent ALL STAFF. INC has been a maior suppl ,., nt fle";lir,. ·' O· 1"1'! Cfl ,,.,,. ln,j.,s:r v ~·r'\\.•· l'J l 1 great e)(pen1se In the local labor marl(et How \'c Serve '\bu THE El\1PLO\'"ER w~ have several thousand weciahsr~ ftlad by ( f.)<;\d 1r ,, '1n <111atlable 10 vou by our P'f!C•S•Of'I ,,.., I •J' $1 ., ·T They are Draftsmpn 01";11Jnr~s. En 1 ·"'Sand sub class•• •omons Tectinoc,JI Wrttors. T echnor •ms, Assemblers and related Secretarn~s. BouH r~r\. r,,.'°''''r)l Office Porsonnel, etc (}u( permanent pltcement candtdrtl!"', <)rf• thO<OU<)hl; , "1•nt:CJ and QUal1f1f'd by OIJI t1"lt' (1',fe-1 r • ••·()d\ • ,1• aocvrat~ preeent IQplic&nts that f11tl1ll thl' ~P<!C1fi. .. 11 11,r , qf J')b orde< re')u1rr"'1{'ntS a~ writ,)\""' ri ... , ·es \. • ,;.,. by the lndivic:su,I ~ .. r i--e mJfOflty ol our temPQrar,. Pt". ,r., I "'" ,,. ' " • 'I •• ( ..... ,,, l'mptl')yP~ ,,,,,.,, min·, pr • , ... •y A ... IIO\v \\t Scr\·c 'li>tt T'I IE CANf >II >:\'TI~ Ovr 1•;pt•11·net;rj sro1ff coord1n,llP'; vn•1r ,jl '"" • ,. : I ' . (11·rfnrmano• )ll"ln!J \'l''t'o. yo,r Of'•.•'": 'l' ,, 1ntj r r '. qoals. thPn find~ 01"1}1n11at•ons .ind f1Pnp11 ''"'' ' • ALL STAFF. IN(:. Secretaries needed for new FHP health maintenance facilities "As many scrrelanes aa possl ble" arc needed at a Fountain Valley health center Still celebrating its recent opening. Family Health Program's Fountain Valley Medical C<'nlcr "badly needs" secretaries with typing anr1 transcript abllltles. a 'pokesperso11 said. Shorthand skills uren't necessar), he added. Family Health Program (FHP> ls a federally qualified health main· tenance organization wlth new racllitJes at 9930 Talbert Ave. -at Brookhunt Street, south of the San Oteao Freewuy in Fountain Valley. Accounting Cterlcal Generef Office Organized Jn 1960, FHP opened its first medlc•l facility in Long Beach. Twenty years lit.er, with more than 200 health maintenance or· f(&nlzat.lonl in the United States. the firm Ls amona the largest of It.a kind in the nation, lhe spokesperson said. Providing comprehensive am· bulatory care, d1agnoaUc lab and X· ray tesUna. pharmacy, minor aur· gery and other runctioM. FHP'• professional staff lncludea: -General and pediatric physl· clans -Obltetrlcs and eynecoJogy -lnt.mal medic:lne and general 1uraery. Typist Reception 1st Secretarial l.l llS 111% flE£ ELIZABETH YORK PERSONNEL AGENCY 2101 East 4th St., Santa Ana, 92705 973-2097 Service Second To None WE(O IS dtve-.,..fted1 Be\ICll • l ie-" l 1 fTlO!O< ptO~ty. CfJ\vJl'Y and 11 Ir· tr•,,,... SArKO •, tht· th.r l I.,, l" • "' 1 (.,, J••· •·tie If' .v-,., 1n thft Untt-d SrotP\ w,. n v i develop arid~ rr..-r """' -)I tt• I PStolf' ond medOc:QI foc1l1!~\ W~ finon<:P business enterpiWt thtou if ... ,.,,., .. 11 kont f0t WKO vf'-J•t Company o d ~ CQl'l"f)U'Of CYCOvl'' !' l • '" " 'r') such ptl')ff'~'.>'Onol\ 0\ rn',Uf(')n((' 0~""''· doctors. dentish ond O'' v• "~ f I :JI ,...,,uol ,,, .. \fl"N'Of (~<YA ,,.,,~ l•y, WECO 5eCllitiM. We hove Mtci:>lt\rhed o "'f .,, 1r O< I " l•eqUt•nrfy ~9 fir>1 in our l>u''"''"• w ••• policie\ ond proetice\ w+..d UxorM rnodels f0t t~ rfll\I of IM .~1ry SAFKO is in necwfy ev<••y pr)I• nf thf> c°'-fllry 0,, ~es ond product\ ,.,, mor\eted ~ thP U S ord Canodo nootfy q (X)) people wi ,,\ f," SAFECO (orpototion in CV 200 0Hi<11•, Our Fountain v~ off K'.f' I\ () lor'}P Otvi.;oo off1Ce \8fv1nq '" inwrO!'<e A~nl\ in ~ Colifomio wx <• I~ w,.. ah.o hove ten servi<e o ff1Ces loco•~ ~ the areo provtd•nq claim\ ll'fvice f°' OV1 polic~\ We offer more to ou-""'pln'(e('\ than mo\I componi"s lmpmQnl th.nqs l.ll't Competitive solofies, svrrub w0<l •nq Sunounqing\. chollef'IC)lnq pos.t.On \ ~ oppott1111M s oixf oo OtJt\tondtnq benefo pr°'1om Wtt off"" politloM ~ mony sl 1lls and inl~Mt. Clencol ond Technical profe\sional potitiom include career\ 1n under.....,;t1nq, Ck>.m\. Mor*etinq and ~slro•rve wwvice fields. SAF€CO off0t1 o wide ,,,,. > of l:x-nPf1t\ Such 1hir1Qs o~ Life lnwonce Health or>d Demo C01e Holiday\ Sock t.eov~ Ard tOme lr\Jly uno\vol l)!Vlof,r\ incl~· Profit Shorit'IQ Coih &onu, Profit SN>rinq P e11roment T Ml RetiwNn! lncOtN Guorontee ~ .. ~fib, WKO it an Equal Oppottunty ~. ~ applicants en considered .olely on tht ~of their CJ.IOltficot~ ~ w ~ proctice ;, frM" of °"Y .art of it1f)QP6f dtetiminotlOtl LO.& -· 8JOBS -.... .,. ....... .. ,,. •· Dally Pilot. Thunday, MM:h 13, 1980 COAST COMMUNITY COLLEGES Our district person- ne I -Office-serving Golden West College In Hunt- ington Beach· <>range Coast College In Costa Mesa and Coastline Com- munity College In Fountain Valley , see ks qualified clerical personnel in all categories (clerks, clerk- typi st , stenos & secretaries) and other support staff (custodians, securl· ty officers, food se rvice worker s, cashiers, reglstra- t ion clerks, PBX Operators, e t c.). Posi tions available are both permanent & temporary, full & part-time. Pay ranges are com- petitive, and we of· fer exceptional fr- i nge benefits, In- cl udlng 15 paid hol ldays. To learn of openings, call our Job tape (71~> 556-5586, or drop by the personnel off Ice at 1370 Adams, Costa Mesa (between Fairview & Harbor> to look through our llst of current openings. We are oe>en from 8:00AM to S:OOPM , Mon-Fri. E .O .E . M /F. Norrell recruits permanent temporaries .. Blue collar workers are badly needed 10 Newport Beach and Irvine industry, making temporary employment a vital service in the area." Kenl Lee, branch manager of Norrell Temporary Services, at 2081 Business Center Drive near John Wayne Airport In Irvine, la able to find workers needed in the area by active recruiting. USING ADVERTISING and com· munily appearances, "we reach workers who mlaunderstand or don't know a bout temporary e mployment, and we emphaabe light industrial, clerical and data processing employees,'· he added. Man y applicants and clients hesitate to use temporary services through fear of lncurrtna costs, be said However. he stressed that Norrell temporaries never Incur cost.A. "WE OFFER OUR client.A uncon- d1tlonal guarantees In which they pay no fee 1f we can't accommodate their needs," Lee said. Nor rell has a reputation for employing temporary workers for long periods or time, he added. ·'Our temporaries stay with us because we make them feel they're part or the company through such benefits as profit sharing, referral bonuses and more," he said. OTHER BENEFITS to tem- wraries employed by Norrell In· elude· -Vacation pay Tapping the Orange Coast community labor force are 111anager J\f!11t Lee and Linda Christian of S orrell Trm- porarl/ Sen·1ces A pa.) ru1~e ~chedule Holiday pay A medical und health plan. Bcnefi~ to clients using Norrell's :;crvsces include 4~minutc n·spon:;e to inquiries about ternporar) help. s avtng time and money for prospective clients -Referral of clients to com petlllve temporary employment servicl's sf Norrt'll can t accom modate part1culJr ncl'ds -Two to thrl'e qualtt} c·ontrol 1n qulrll's on all tl'mporanes in ordl'r to assure hsgh standards. PLAN YOUR CAREER WITH ROBERT HALF PlrsM 543. We'll put you where you'll stay put. rftil ~~!!I..!' 0 !!ftLF ~ ,tflOllMI~ • • 3tOO WlllNN .,._d Loi~ CA 90010 (213) 318·980e 2333 Nottt1 eroea.~ S~ta A,,._ CA t270t (714) 835·4103 9252 E. T ... aph Aoed San Olego (714) 235-tw ClW of Comrn• oe, CA 80040 c211) 121.1111 Centl.lrf C1t1 (113) 2n.22t1 ... °"°'9d ~ Heny 011'*1, CPA Filling a strong demand for executives in Orange County is executive vice-president Ted Bavly of Executive Search and Placement . , __ . -• ffa1·u • ,. .. Firm specializes in execs Executh es are an strong demand in Orange County - But area firms face problems finding good, qualified executives, said Ted Bavly. vice-president of Executive Search and Placement Agency, Inc. of Newport Beach. "We're SVtteSsfal at finding ex- ecutive personnel because of our re· sources." he said. "Finding applicants with the ex- act expertise needed by firms has led to us completing 67 percent of our orders, compared to 34·percent completion by our largest com· pelltor," he added. E•eeatln Search and Placement is at 500 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach. Most applicants at the fi rm seek jobs paying between $18,000 and $35,000 per year. Bavly said. Although most firms seeking employees through Execut ive Search a~ Fortune 500 businesses, the agency also aids firms in the $2 mlllionto$6million range. he added "We're pretty flexible with our clients, which include companies ranging from stadium motorcyde racing firms to some of the largest bualoesaes ln the nation," he said. Executive Search and Placement also recruits Orange County sales representatives for Eastern-based corporaticlm, Bavly said. Currently, Executive Search operates on a contingency basis - where the employer pays fees only when bis needs are filled. and employees never incur costs However, Bavly seeb increased retainer business with firms - where Executive Search and Place· ment becomes the sole employee recruiter for clients. Most executives applying through Executive Search and Placement -Hold college degref>S -Have special skills All staff tests applicants for best position All Staff. Inc. provides timesav· ing services for job seekers and employers. The personnel service at 222 Fashion Lane, Tustin offers perma- nent and temporary placement in the engineering, technical, clerical and office fields. "We save time for Job seekers because we know where the open- ings are. · "Thus, they don't have to go chas· Offtcl ~230 ····••g. ""'-~ ing around the county responding to ads." said Miriam Stone of All Staff If someone needs a job fast, she said All Slaff can immediately place them in a temporary position until a permanent position is available. "Also. if a person doesn't know hls job interests, a temporary job 1S a great way to sample different types of work." she said . Permanent placement candidates are screened and tes ted b y counselors who have experience in the fields in which they specialize. All Staff's screening process a'I sures employers the candidates are qualified. "This saves the employer time. because he doesn t have to screen these applicants himself ... she said Pacific City Bank WE HAVE TIME FOR YOU! A progressive local Independent bank If you are: I. Reentering the lob...-.. 2. Di1sat11fted with your present iOb· 3. Wanting a career"-•· 4. Neadlltg port ttme WOftc whle °"=Khool. s. ; bonbr Millitg part ttma W'Ofil. We may have an opportunity for you Applications ecoepted Monday through Friday from 9:00 AM to 11 :30 AM and ft'om 1 :00 PM to 4:30 PM. See Personnel Oopartment • 18041 Goldenw.st Blvd. (Corner of Edinger). Huntington Beach. C.llfornla Phone (71 4) 848-1234. Daily Piiot. Thursday. March 13. 1980 -JOSS 9 ENGINEERS Mnfacturing Engineers Seaier Project Eopleers Prljl ct Engineers, .. pregrammer mlyst, and tnasdlcer Senilr ._.ns Engileers electr1nic, electr11111e .. ical Turn your back on the commuter rat race and face the future! Join one of the most advanced engineering teams an the country Endevco . a ma1or manufacturer of transducers for cr1t1ca1 applications an aerospace. industry and nuclear power generation. has immediate career openings that otter long term growth You and your family will live 1n the beautiful. San Juan Capistrano area amid the orange groves ad1acent to the sea. You can skip the freeway jams and bike to work 1f you hke -or van pool it with other professionals hke yourself. 1n one o l our own luxurious. spacious commuter vans. But yo4 won't find stale. end-of-the-line jobs here! You'll be challenged daily by demands of working on the leading edge of tran1ducer technology Surmount them and you'll find the rewards in growth that you've come to expect only from companies ot the highest calibQr. Call or write us for our complete employment package that outlines the career opportunities you'll find In one of the finest communities In Southern Callfomla. NDEVCO~ .,.. .... v-. .... ·'=-ir~~·=· 4tMll • nt. ltl/HI f ' tO.J:lBS -·• ,. Oa1ly Pilot. TN.irlday. March 13. 1980 Kelly nursing services seek temporary help l'a) 111~ top ~ages filling a strona dem anc1 for nurses has "really got· ten Kell~· Health Care off the floor." "Kl·ll}' Health Care temporary nurs1n ~ service began four years ago ~11h JUSl one offtce and has ex· pandc<1 lo 75 offices today," said Pul11 Mc Evilly, director or the centrr at 1126 Brook.burst Sl. in Anahl•tm Kelly Healtll Care la a division of Kelly Girls temporary employment service. Services provided by the firm in· elude· RPgistered nurses Licensed vocational nurses Nursing assistant! I lome health aides I lomemakers Llve·in compaD.!ons. llomc health aides help private persons with such tasks as t.akifll baths ;;nd getting in wheelchairs, wh 1 le I lomemakers provide such "h.md.s <,ff' services aa cooting and hou&ekeepmg, Ms. Mc Evilly said. The gre1te1t need for Kelly'a :.e rv1<.'<•s are for reglatered and liccns<'<l vocational nurses, hence mo~t iohs are in hospitals, she said. Ther•· are twice as many hospital nursing JObs in Orange County than the qualified labor force can accom· moilute. she added "Althcmtoth mOf\t of our clients are hospital~. we see ourselves as a Reg1 st ercd Nurse Pat ti McE v tlly directs many le ve l s of health c are employees at Kelly Ilea/th Care communlly service helping people make the transition from hospital to home ''And we offer a great opportunity to appLicanls mlerestcd in helping persons m~e that transition work ing as h ome health aides , homemaker!! and Irv<' in compa nlons," she s111d Botb mf'n and womf'n rand JObs at Kelly. RN'S, LPT'S, LYN'S AND ~. MENTAL HEALTH WORKERS f~ WANTED IMMEDIATELY ,. ~~ f<'ull & part·time positions available on hoth th<· 't~~?-' Adolt!srent & Adult Units. • at: Y · Capi,ilrano /Jg Ifie Sea.JJ~p l al lo(.'ated on 10 acres or beautifully landscaped J \ grounds on the crest of a bill, overlooking the J>acifi(' Ocean and Dana Point Harbor Competitive salary & benefits package off <'rc<t 496-5702 ELECTRONIC ORGAN SALES Sell in a hlJlh traffic air condi tioned realooal slioppJng mall. Highest commlaaJona & benefits. You must be able to play the organ ln<'ludlnl( pedals. C4 Mn. Jett ••••••••• ,, 1714) 116-7JOO Cellct ORGAN EXCHANGE ACCOUHTIHG TEMPORARY A SSlr.HMEMTS Orm1ge Comfy is loot11lll9' A8d 10 .-. Wfl IF YOU .. ! tH ~ ,osmoMS, THIM VlSfT There a<"e many new ltrms mowlQ 1n10 Inf" OranQe Coun1y area bnngW\Q at>oul an increasing demand lor e11e>er1f'nc£od Accounl1no and Data Process•nQ personoet C'A'a Cott Acco.t..ti A..diton S-'or AccOURtCIRh Ten AccOURt_.. looidl"'4" /I Ac cOURtiftc) C lfftl1 If you are not aware of the be1'(tflts ot ~.nq l~moorary 9'"" us a cat• r,," 11 u<, al our new location We w111 bf> h800°1' ro d•scu'><. 11 .... 1,., vou Wf' ;vP tr.r~IM '" the Cotdwett Banke< Bldg Suit~ 200, 2333 No. lroodway, Santa Atta (714) 835-4103 • CAllll PIOBLlM SOLVING Specializing in: • Interest, Skills and Personality Testing ·Career/Educational Goal Setting •Resume Preparation and Employment Strategies •Career Counseling • Sales/Management Training INDIVIDUAL AND ORGANIZATIONAL CONSUL TINO AVAILAILE 7141833-7511 4029 West*trly Place, Sulte 111 , NeWJX>rt Buch, . co·unty iobs ' booming Callahan helps fill Finding a job in Orange County today ls almost no problem. County business growth, low un· employment rates and extreme em ployee shortages In many fields ~mbine to make today's job situa· bo!l an "employee's market," said Shirley Callahan, owner of Callahan Associates Personnel Service. "Unfortunately, many firms aren't aware of today's employ- !1;1ent situation," s he said, adding employers had bette r grab workers while they can." "We .try &o send our best appli· cants first to our employer clients but fir~ often don't take advan'. Salaries increase to record level in data field Reaching record levels this year starting salaries for computer pro'. cesslng personnel continue lo in· crease. "Inflation, increased demand and business growth combine to push data processing salaries higher than ever," said a spokesperson for Source EDP, a personnel placement firm specializing In the computer field. "A survey we conducted reveals Increased salaries for program· ml••· soft.ware, 1y1tem1 dealaa. data eommuleatlona. mbd·mlcre pro g rammln1. data base ad· mlnlstraUon and technical market· la l aapport positions,•• t he spokesperson said. He added ''EDP aadltln,, managem e nt and computer ma rkeUn1 positions also ~port salary lncreases." The stu d y shows no n · management salaries depend on years of technical experience In program ming, programming analysts and systems analysis. However, d a t a p r ocessing aalartes at the management level depend on computer Installation alze, be said. Soutte EDP oflers results from ~e salary survey free at 2CMJ1 Busl· neaa CenteT Drive, Suite 206 in Irvine. Those results are published In a ~-page booklet focusing on career plannlna and development. · OOMPUTERS tage of that," sbe said. Callahan Associates tries to send at least three qualified applicants to each employer, she added. Placing applicant.a rang.ing from clerical workers to top manage· ment persoMel, Callahan ls at 3961 MacArthur Blvd. in Newport Beach. Altbongb most jobs filled by Callahan applicants are clerical positions, the personnel service avoids specialiulion. "We like our applicants to be as free as possible In thei r job searches," she said. . Those applicants number approx· 1mately 150 per month. a s pokesperson said. Manpower Temporary Services introduces new screening test A new method of screening tem· porary workers has been introduced by Manpower Temporary Services. Called the "Predkla Test," it i.s used to predict an individual's abiU· ty for temporary work, Marge Bartok, area manager, said. E MPLOYERS WANT workers who foUow directions, are dependa· ble and have a good work attitude, all of which are tested by the Predicta. Manpower , locally at 1223 E. 17th Street , Santa Ana, also test.a skill of applicants. Cuatomers r ate workers in five areas of a quality performance pro· gram, and employees getting top marks in all areas receive a silver necklace bearing the company logo. un •s IMPORTANT to formally recognize temporary workers," says Bartok. "We also ask them how they liked working for the customer." Manpower bas been in business for 30 years and places 1,000 tem· por artes a week in t he Orange County/Los Angeles area. ALMOST 8t PERCENT are cl&rtcal workers and the rest are In Ugbt industry. Since Manpower has '100 omces throughout the country, lbe fl rm c:an refer workers to another state for lmmediate worJt. SAN FRANCISCO IAY & MAHH~nAM AREA OPIMIMGS Dynamic & 8)(pendlng trme share compyter Mrvlce eo<ex>ratlon la tffklng growttK>rl~ted proleulonats HMIOI ~noMS ~·· IYST9d PloelAMMa DATA COMMCMCATIOMS Plo.tlAUtt• SIMOI .ufUCAnoMS/~HNM• To Qualify: • famlllwlty wlttl Bu~ ~nment ii d•wat>i.. Man~tNnt oxpe~ wttl Plaol you In 1 Pft)ttt ... & teti.fytng '*"' wttt, excetlem pereoNI bet\eflta. Pteele nd to Penonnel: llMOTI CO...,,.. CORPORATIOM 1076 ...... ~ .. c--. •• -.c ....... , ... , EQull OpQot1onlty Emoloyet. M·F f ... °' Oajty PUot. Thuraday, March 13. 1980 -JOBS 11 6~llOCr5---­ Wll~UI~[ ... ha6 &J l'ulllo'I 1111~0 "'"""()0(1 Beac~. C•lo t SOCI AL ENGRAVER PORCELAIN BRIDAL CH ILDERNS (71.C) 759·1211 E•I 27S WOMEN'S SPORTSW£AR FOUN!JAT1 0NS Equal Opp o1L t1..rn..i.ty Empl oye.1t. HI F baron PERSONNEL "THE PERSONNEL PROFESSIONALS" Our organization is a nationally franchised S¥stem with over seventy-five offices to serve you. We specialize in the placement of experienced and entry level applicants in sales. administrative. technical and management po51t1ons. 642-1287 AaOH PaSOMHa AGIMCY, IH CAllJUO. STI IOI , COSTA MESA PLAZA/Secretartat Service Specializing f n ~ RESUMES TYPING CONSULTATION-PREPARATION COMPLETE SERVICE CHOICE OF STATIONERY FOR COVER LEnERS COPYING SPIRAL BINDING JMMEDJATE TURNAROUND SATURbflY a EVtNING HOURS -I l 12.x>SS -Dally Pilot, Thurtct.y, Mwc:h 13. 1880 OC crime increase creates iobs for security guards Rising burglary and vandalism rates in Orange County have boost· ed the demand for se<:urity guards. ''This areal always bas had a de- mand for security guards, but now ll'a getting to the point where you need a guard everywhere you go. "You used to need a fence to pro- tect your property -now you need a guard to watch the fence," aald Carl McMahan, personnel manager for Bekin Prote<:tion Services Co. Employing about 700 guards, Bekin is looldog for appllcanta over age 21 with cars and telephones, be said. Bekin is at 2601 W Ball Road in Anaheim. Guards working for Bekin are paid by the protection service under contract with clients. Those clients include banks. of· flee buildings, data processing cen· ters and supermarkets. Earning from $3.50 lo $4 per hour, guards are registered by the state or California. Hours at Bekin a re from 9 a m. to 3 p .m . daily. Call 761·4831 for in· formaUon. Baron Personnel finds workers' proper places in labor market Baron Personnel Agency often knows where a person belonp lD the work force better than the person does. "Many people really don't know what they want to do," owner Larry Brown said, adding "We counsel a nd guide the applicants to help them find the right job." Baron i! at 129 Cabrillo St., Suite 101, Costa Mesa. "Although we try to find the perfect applicant for the hard-to-fill positions, we do much more than rind jobs for people," Brown said. "We're an extra set of eyes filling the Job needs of employees and empfoyers," he aald. Baron Personnel is a national franchise agency system. The Costa Mesa office specializes in sales and management positions, although technical and ad· ministra tlve jobs also are e m· phasized. Most fees are paid by employers, but applicants sometimes incur costs In the place ment process, Brown concluded. Hours at Baron are Crom 8 a.m. to !5 p.m . daily. Call 642·1287 for ln· formation ::l:>enn~ & ;})enni6 {J.r6onnl!f .service of Huntington Beach of Irvine 16168 Beach Blvd. #121 2082 Michelson #205 848-1288 833-2700 Our organization hu been succeu(ully servlclna Oranae County for 10 years ln the placement or Admlnlatratlve, Sales, Secretarial, Clerical, Technical and Professi onal applicants. Call your neare.t office for ~personal appointment. • SECRET ARIES Discover Your Potentia l! FAMILY HEALTH PROGRAM hat Jutt opened tta Corporate Office•, conveniently located at the San Diego Freeway and Brookhurst Street In Fountain Valley. We are expanding and strengthening our corporate ateffandarelooklng for SECRETARIEStoattlltour Vice Pretldent a. Candidates should have good typing skills (60-70 WP M) -no shorthand required, b ut should have good tran· scription ability. This excellent career potential offers a good starting salary. complemented by one of the most outstanding benefits programs which Includes Medical, Dents~ Vision. Therapy, X·Ray and Pharmaceutical ln8urances. Our Pension Plan will be effective after eighteen months. If you are career minded and would like a fut ure in a sta ble work environment, we would like to talk to youl Please call or send resume to. FAMILY HEALTH PROGRAM (714) 962-4431 9930 Talbert Ave. Fountain Valley, CA 92708 COMPUTER PROFESSIONALS Worts Close to HOIM! Source EDP 1s a profesatonal recruiting firm dedicated solely to the comp0ter field Since 1962. we have built a nation-wide reputation for quality placement and ethlcal conduct wtlich has made us the largeel firm In the United States. With 5 offioos In Southern Cahlomia -Los Angeles. Irvine Torranc.. Encino and Sen Diego -Source EDP Is in a unique potitlon to help computer proleu1<>n111 find rewwdlng career opportun111et clOM to hOme. a.c.ute each at1ff memt>N hes an •11tensive compyt9f 1>9Ckground. we 1re eble to understand vour si>e<:1!1c needs end provide In depth ualltanoe. ooYnseling and guidance Wh•the< ycu're lnteretted 1n • peeltlon c:hano-right now or juat want to discuss vour aiteer obte¢ti....s In oenera Cllll OI writ• yOur Marett Sovrse EDP off~ In' confidence: they're the e>eOPle Md\ ~ter profeatlonel should know BelOw are 1 few of OUI' clients needs to give you 1 feel for the current demand AJINCATIOHS 370 OS C090L Proo Ar. . ... 126.000 Batie Programmer .......•.•• 20.500 EDP Audrtor . . .............. 25.000 ContuH~Proieci leader . . . 29.000 Scientific Systema Spec11tltt .•• 30.000 SM.1$/MAUm.- Marlltttno 8uQpot1 Rep . . . . 28.000 sa1ee-M1n1ootnPuttr1 . . . . . . . eo.ooo Sal~ Ptek:age ...... '40.000 PrOduct Mltt<etlng Menag41r . '40.000 SOFTWUI Date ~ions Progr. . .128.000 Dl~noetlc Programmer . . . . . . ~3.000 DO IVS Syatem Progr . . . • •.• 30.000 Micro ProQ11mmer ...•..... 29.000 CICS ~em Progntmmer . . . 30.000 ~IUIMT MIS Meneger-6tlft Up...... 36.000 O.P. M~3 mod 15 . . 30,000 COrp. Planning Manager . . . . 36.000 Operatlona MaNQer-.370 ·os 27.000 swce<(::~_1 .... :;:;s:.:1 MOUi 714/833-1730 . ........., -·.. . ... - ••••••c..,....., ... ll'WMtlJtt ' .. Karman Answering Service picks up hook after hours Karman Answering Service takes lta client.a off the hook. Small and large businesses benefit from the services of Karman, at 2991 Grace Lane, Costa Mesa. Karman's polite, carefully screened employees answer phone calls for the businessman who ls out or the office. Messages are recorded and held for client.a for forwarding during o(· fice hours. ••we have one of the largest answering service offices in the county," said a spokespenon ol the , Job seekers find experienced counsel at Robert Half service that has been famlly-owned and operated slnce 1964. Openings are available for operators during the night and graveyard sbifta. Employees receive extensive tralning, which lncludes up to eight hours of observation of company operation, mechanical training on the switchboard and actual opera· lion of the switchboard. Skllls helpful Cor prospective Karman employ~ include: good penmanship, pleasant speald n1 voice and switchboard experience. Call 540-1777. Tem porary accountants, data procesalng workers and financial employees find jobs lhre>ueh ex· perts in those fields at Robert Hall Accountemps . .. All our counselors are ex- perienced in the fields they serve," a spokesperson said. Robert Half Accountemps bas been serving those fields for more lhan 30 years and now is at 2333 N. Broadway in Santa Ana. "We make sure our counselors re· lain their high standards by paying generous salaries and bonuses," the spokesperson said . Robert Half features 70 ofnces. The Southern California branches are directed by Certified Public Ac· countant Harry Gilbert, he con· cluded. The Butte. fly Is 01r Symbol ~ IT HAS ••• ~ Freedom to select a job of it's choice ... Flexibility to move from P'ace to place ..• Adapts readily to companlea' needs. JOI S ... S CAU TODAY ~ EMPLOYBS CAU. 'IODAY TO TO II A YICTOl ..,,,.fl..Y W Hlal A V1CT0, IUTTllA. Y ~-. \.) 116-1520 IJl-2622- a. • • ,. -~ Dally Piiot, Thuredey. Msch 13. 1980 -J06S 13 -CAREER OPPORTUNITIES- At EOCOM we design, develop, build, sell and service laser imaging systems for the graphic arts industr~. We're the best in our field, and have a place for you 1f you're the best in your field. For more information on our Company, our convenient location, and our outstanding benefits package, call our 24 hour information line 5'9·7911, and ask for T•pe No. 408 or call or apply ill person at : We have immediate requirem.enll /or: •Q.A. INSPECTORS •Q.A. ENGINEER •ENGINEERING (IUJ)) TECHNICIANS •ELECTRONIC ENGINEER •PRODUCTION MACHINISTS •DESIGN CHECKER · •ELECTRONIC It MECHANICAL •MANUFACTURING MANAGER ASSEMBLERS •ELECTRONIC & MECHANICAL TECllNICIA.NS • r-e ~ --I BDCDM EOCOI\1 Dmsro" o/ A '"'"co" llVC'ch.al Corporoll011 15771 Redhill Avenue, Tust!D, CA. H880 714/730-5051 STARTING A CAREER? MAKING A CAREER CHANGE? WHERE DO YOU STAND? u you're serious aboul your future and want to rnsure that your next job is the right one for you, then you shOuld talk ~o our exJ)erienced career counselors. At no cost to you we will carefully assist you in determining the right career path for you tn terms of both short and long term goals in such areas as: we have opportunltlel in tbeM a.ad maay o4,ber Job categories a nd there JI NEVER A rzg We lnlte you to call us and let our staff of profesalooala amwer JOW' questions. \ - 14JOBS -S Daily P1lol. ThVflday. Marcti 13, l9e0 Career planning offered Guiding personnel talents to rewarding careers is Pamela Robertson, founder and president of Career Concerns. Career planning and goal ~lriving becomes an ongoing, lifetime process. "We should always be aware of our personal talents and or how we can utilize them In our car~rs," said Pamela J . Robertson, founder and president or Career Concerns. Career Concerns. at 4940 Campus Drive, Suite B, Newport Beach. specializes in career/life planning. Through extensiye counseling, re- search and support, Career Con· cerns offers a total program that helps Individuals find the most re· warding direction lor their abilities, talents and interests. "Our program begins with an Ill· sessment o( the person's lifestyle - the amount of time he spends study· ing, working and playlne. "Then we take a comprehensive inventory of his skills and interest.a. ''Next, we locus on the serment of the working world that lntereata him and best suits his Ufestyle, u · slsllng him in obtaining lbe necessary information about bis chosen career area ," Ma . Robertson said. Hospital seeks more employees Workers are needed for a Len· acre, hilltop seeting wllh an ~ean view. •·u ·a lovely," says apokespenon Terry Bonyn'e of Caplltrano By The Sea Hospital. A private. 82·bed p1ychiatrtc taclllty , the hospital 1eetl full and part time RN's, mental health workers, LVN'e, LPT's and a food service worker . It Is located al 33915 Del Oblapo ln Dana Point and employs 100 workers. The bocpital includes a full time psycblatrlat, p11ycholo11at and social workers. It ls an unlocked facility provld· Inf acute psychiatric care and has been In business for 25 years. United Personnel counsels careers Job searcMng costs money and time -unlesa It's done through United Personnel Services of Tustin and Costa Mesa. ·'Our appUcants never incur costs -a II fees are paid by employen," owner Ann VesclaJ said of the aeen- cy at 220 El Camino Real, Suite 5, Tu.sun. The a1ency apeclalJus In career counseUn1 and placement in all areas of employment, 1be said. "I .tarted t.hla buatneaa lft.er aee- lnl a definJte need by both lar1e and 1mall companlea for com~t ~nd enthmt .. uc personnel ln all Unea of work," ahe added. United Personnel also conducta bualnesa at UOO Adams Ave. In Costa H~a. Phone Is 557·7193 Employment fi elds empbulzed at United include englneerlna, ac· cou nting , sales, computer technology, clerical and medical aervlcea. "Some employers and applicant.a have doubted the employment qell· cy'1 abllity to place quality people. and lt '• been our coal to/rove them wron=" Ma. Vesclal aal . M aUN her pel'IOnnel are ol bllh q ty, her aiency thoroupty 1creen1 applicants and dilcu. .. career aoalt and commllmenta, 1hl t0ncluded. --~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---, An uld Chine>"' prn,·t·rh n·ad:, Tifft t.:t.: C \~~OT U\'I: l ~OF.R 0:'\E ROOF- DRAKE PERSONNEL Perman(·nt Placement 8 l ' T \\ t: II A V E P R 0 \' E '\ T It E ('()~'TR \OIC'TIO~: I DATA OVERtOAl> Tempo1an Pl"rman1·nl • Seerttary1Clerlral • l\("q1und1 l>:1la Entr ~ • C'HT • Sales/Admanistrnt1ve • Computer Opt•r .11111., • M anagemenl •Technical 851-9041 Temporar) Placement • Secretancs •Typists •General Office 851·1044 • \\ ord Proc<"'"ing 851 9091 AN INTERACTIVE TEAM COMMITTED TO PERSONALIZED CAREER GUIDANCE AND PLACEMENT. RN's LVH'1 HA's START TODAY We1reHer•Wltll * Aale c ... H0tpltal1 • lxceplloHI •••flt• * CWc•••......,. .. • * ..,_ ......... * l•c:atloft Alow.ce ............ ,, TEMPORARY NURSING SERVICE 17972 Sky Pn Cln:le, Wti 4:1 lnW .. f ·•-' . Celebrating placement of an applicant by ringing bells and honking horns are personnel counselors Barbara Nelson , left and Debra Adams from Elizabeth York Personnel Agency. Clerical workers needed in OC Secretaries and clerical employees find a "vast market'' for their services in Orange County. "Industry expansion and buslness growth have caused a large 1hortage in clerical workers In Orange County, especially for secretaries with shorthand and ac· counting skills," said Paul Stearns, employment coruiullant and olfice manager of Elizabeth York Person· nel Agency. That agency specializes in clerical personnel at 2101 E. 4th St., suite 116 in the Arbors business complex, Santa Ana. "We at Elizabeth York foresee a definite increase ln the already vast altortage of clerical workers because of expected 1rowtb ln Oranie County and because many area school.a are de-emphuWn1 necessary skllla," SUams said. Temporary work often fills gap One employment agency offers temporary work to applicants awaiting permanent Jobe. Drake International i1 parent company ror:. -Office Overload, which pro- vide& temporary clerical help, -Data Overload, providing tern· porary data processing workers, and -Drab Pe.....-el which does permanent placement. All three offices are at 4121 Westerly Place, Suite 102, Newport Beach. "Located together, we have strong interaction and pass applica· Uona to the section with Job open· tn11." PYI Anna Souza, placement coordinator for Office Overload. ln;l.D" ur-. -":Dally Piiot. Thurlday. MM'ch 13, 1980 -J08S 15 We show women how to find the right career. how to become the best person possible. how to break into a new world of idenity and purpose ... Now. Helping women be what they want to be. to do what they want to do ... The Complete Woman CAU8 ..,_AHCl/DIY&OPMIHT/PUCIMEHT ltOI Wftlwfy rt.ce, Wh 202. Hta,...t IMdt. Cet26'0 17141151-1015 Specializing In BANKS SAVINGS & LOANS MTGE LENDING ESCROW featuring TYPISTS SECRETARIES BOOllKEEPERS ACCT.CLERKS RECEPTIONISTS OEN.OFFICE FILI CLERKS TRAINEES llo Cltatte ro Applicant EY•r .... t I ' I .. • .. I . ' 1 I • • • . . ............ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . 16J08S -, --\~ .. \ ~ ' l.ltt.. \\P. ,. · Daily Pilot Thurlday, March 13. 1980 * Signs made by partners ·Sign language plays an important part in the success of Orange Coast businesses. A new sign firm in Laguna Hllls responds to this need with the com· bined efforts of partners with a wide range of skills and unusual backgrounds. Eu1ene Wilkin and Fritz Pfeiffer co-operate Pfeiffer Signs at 23352 Peralta Drive, suite 14 . "We are both anachronisms - getting to work before 8 a.m ." Wilkin said . "But Frlti and I "ally llke to work, and making and sell· ing all kinds or signs in wood, metal, cloth and neon presents a great challenge, he said.'· Preparing art for a beauty parlor sign is Fritz Pfeiffer of Pfeil fer Signs in Laguna Hills OPTO 22 looking for employees 0 PTO 22 Is one or the largest manufacturers or solid-state relays in the world. "We have 80 employees," says Mark DeBono, vice president in charge of manuracturtni, "and ex· peel to have as many as 150 wilbin ~year." . The company bu moved to the corner or Springdale Street and McFadden Avenue in Huntington Beach, tripling Jta square footage. Most new jobs wUI be in light elec- tronic assembly, but other positions • include Inspection and soldering. .. Experience is nice but not necessary," says DeBono. "We'll be glad to train workers." OPTO 22 also has openings for tecbniciana and lead people . "We have no tight ratrictiona tor employment," says DeBono. "We Just want people who are willing to join the team ln a growing company." OPTO 22 is at 15461 Sprin1dale SL, Huntington Beach . ''<her four decade• of ·quality workmanahip'' IMA6E IDENTIFICATION .. in :WoOd • Metal • Neon • Cloth for lnduatrial/6ommereial • Re1idenee1 Marifii • Safety. • Automotive Ronald Allea ........ w• ._..•ored Tu,1d~1 bJ t~• ••tlllPla 8eada c:aaaw '11 Commerce tor h.11 bero&c lldloM lD capturtna a bur1lar he'd 1urpriled ln bll bome. Bat .....,._., an elemtDtarJ ,cbool tacber, said a.. muat bave ~ far hom MMe u H cMMd t.be crook lut a.pt.. lt. ''Her. I wu ~down t.be street ln my Pl'Jama bottoms \f with lbavlnl cream over ball ol .i my faee ancJ a bl& shovel in my J. baoda," Beralund related. ( ''When I caUht up with the 111 auy I beld him down and started f wavina my arms around bul ,( nobody would stop. I must have r looked like a madman." the ~ Huntington Beach resident continued. 1 "Even a couple of jogaers ~ came by, took a look al me and I . • t I l J • .. t 7 . ,. t } I i { t. I I ' l Lawsuits On IUDs Increase By FREDERICK SCROEMEHL Ol lloe o.lly 11'1 ... Staff Sixty women from throughout the United States filed lawsuits Wednesday an Orange County Superior Court claiming they s uffered s evere pelvic inflammation after using an intrauterine device sold by the A. H Robins pharmaceutical firm. The latest court filings bring to 123 the number of lawsuits now pending in Orange and Los Angeles. counties •iainst Bobial, NeJl'l)Ql't Beacb aUOmey JolmVan~Mid..._,. More tbail 1GO llmilar awta are .,.,.,ing nation wide. The latest group of plai.ntllfs contend in the actions that a striDg attached to the Dalkon Shield IUD CIU&Sed bacteria to enter the uterus and lead to infections. Moel ol the women ldentifted in the latest actions. Van Dyke said, are from Orange County and Southern California. Others are from New York. Texas. Utah. Florida. Was hington. Oregon and Colorado, he said. The women, he added, learned that the UID may have caused their alleeed infections through news reports about previous lawsuits against the Richmond. Va., pharmaceutical firm. Each of the plaintiffs is seeking $5 million in exemplary damage s, and other compensation inc luding re1mburseme11t or medical and legal fees. The Dalkon Shield was taken orr the market in 1974, but it is estimated that about one million of the IUD's are still in use. Last August, a Denver woman won a $6.2 million judgment against Robins after she testified s h e suffered a miscarriage and was forced to undergo an emergen cy hysterectomy aft.er being fitted with a Dalkon Shield. He'U Remember What's-his-name Police believe the clerk at a Fountain Valley liquor store who was robbed ol SIO in store reeeipts Wednesday night will recop1ze the bandit, II be ever sees him again. Tbe 1unman who beld up Warner Liquor, 9555 Warner Ave., about 7:30 f.m. waa deacrlbed to pol ce as a Caucasian. age ~Z2. 6 feet. • Inches tall, ISO pounds, Iona blond balr, a "Fu-Manchu'' mustache wearing wire-rim eyealasaea Md a beleeJumpeutt. ~aa-c=·~=::~ .. waa • ... .., at ft~ .., latniMr la Ml -... that he 4Wa1t Mdoe Ult mu IM WU cha ........ ~ • .u tJa¥:J:. ~rle Robltallle aaid Berthand, one of aeven award wt...-. at the chamber'• ninth aanual public safety awards luncheon at the HunUnctoa Beaeb Inn, was a UWe ~·d the man Ber1lund pinned to the around and beld for police had juat been released from prilon and was returned to priaoo following the September tncident. The city's men in uniform also took home some honors Wednesday. Officer Daniel McKernm. a NotPlalfing1 .. • four .,_.. cit)' .. ..,... wu pre,na.d wtth aa award ot ment tor bit role l.n ~ID tale arre1t of U•• 10-calltd "PantYbeM Raplet. .. The arrest. aobltallle aald, led to lMt "*'• eoavktlon ol llarlon Frank1Ua Miller om • counll of armed robbery, burllar1 aqd varioU au eeta. N arcotica Officer Robert Moran wu liv• a merit award for bia contri butlonf in lnvestiptkma that bave raulted in the conllaoatJOQ by police of large quantities of UUclt drup. Fire Clifef. Raymond Picard presented an award of merit to Fireman Larry Marshburn for bis hours of wort in belp&nc a Huntington Beach couple pull their lives back tosether after losing three children lo a Ille. M arabburn helped tbe Clark ............. Jim Wolford, an ardent roller skater. holds the ticket he received from a Seattle policeman for "playing in the street." Wolford, who says he skates "sometimes 100 miles a week," will fight the citation. Man Swept to Sea Near Pier in BB A 2l·year-old man i s presumed dead today aft.er be was swept out to sea Wednesday afternoon near the Huntington Beach city pier, lifeguards said. Six lifeguards equipped with scuba tanks spent nearly an h our searchin g f or the unidentified Huntington Park man, bot gave up because of poor visibility in the murky water. Lifeguard Lt. William Richardaon said aeveral bathers oa.Hrved tbe fully-clot.bed man 1tnaUUn1 about 1:30 p.m. in waht·deep water before vanlabtn1, Richardson said a pair of female tourists from Kansas at first assumed the man was splashing in the water to draw their attention. He said the women notified lifeguards when the man seemed to be pulled underwater. 1 Lifeguards later summoned a Spaolab-spealdne employee to talk with two Huntlnston Beach Park ineo wbO said they'd come to tbe beach witJa tllelr friend to bunt tor shells. Loreuo Heredia, 22, ad Jose Barbola. 32, told Wet~ tbat the lut Ume tbeY aaw their companiao be wu atudtn1 wr the water's edae. MdCa88UI family find a new home and spearh ead e d contribution expenses that included drives to defray the cost of the flineral for the three youngsters killed in the December blaze. Marine Safety Lt. William Richardson and Lifeguard Dave Simcox were presented with THUftSDAY, MARCH 13, 1990 merit awards for their roles in upgrading lifesaving techniques and teaching youngsters water salety methods. David Gallagher . a Huntington Beach resident. was honored for helping his wife and infant child escape the flames that engulfed his KeelM>n Lane Prostitution Target FIFTEEN CE a10tAaOIOfl SIMCOX home last ApriL Gallagher wasn't present to accept 6.is award. This was the first time firemen and lifeguarrus were honored along with police officers. Hun tington Beach Assemblyman Dennis Mangers (Sft AWARDS, Page AZ> Law Nixed for HB Massage Parlor By &OBERT BAUER CM .. DMty ,.._. SUit Huntington Beach city officials were told Wednesday tbal they can't enforce portions of a controversial ordinance aimed at reducin1 alleged proMitutioo io maua~e parlors. Federal Di.Itri~ Cowt J~e Matt Byrne ruled that the city s ordinance concernin1 new traioin1 requirements for Silver Hits Wwo/$24; Wld Falls From AP, Staff Dlspakllles The bottom ht.erally fell Out or the silver market today as prices in New York dropped to $24 .60. a decline of $4.70 per ounce. Jn addition, gold was lmder beavv selline pressure, falling $47 in New York to $S30 an ounce and to S5Si in London. Both metals came under heavy selling pressure because of a stronger U.S. dollar, high interest rates in the United States that attracted investment, and the fact that gold and silver do not produce income. Monex in Newport Beach quoted a late morning price ol $535 for gold and $2S for silver. which at one Ume dropped as low as $23. 75. The dollar gained value on world exchange markets today and dealers attributed the movement to high American interest rates. Gold at one point in January was selling for $875 an ounce and sitver briefly topped $50. VIENNA. Austria (AP> Austria bu ~me tbe fint Wat.em Ew'opeao nation to live full diplomatic rec:opltion to the Palestine Llberatlon Or1anbaUoll, Chancellor Bnmo Krellky coa.tlrmed today. masseuses ls unconstitutional. Another part of the ordinance that prohibited a lraminl school from operating on parlor premises also was struck down Bill Sage, legal adviser to the Huntington Beach Police Department, admitted Wednesday that parts of the ordinance were "irrational." That dealt with proviaiom tbat """ ...... SAO FAAEWEU · -Clayton Moore. TV 's "Lone Ranger,·• leaves funeral services for Jay Silverheels. who played Tonto. in Los Angeles. Moore eulogized Silverheels as a lifelong fighter for Indian people. Tonlo Hailed As True 'Kenw Sabe' HOLLYWOOD (AP> -Jay Silverbeela portrayed the truat.ed Indian companion Tonto in '1'be ~ Ranger" t.elevlaion aeries and films, but actor Clayton Moore baa told a memorial service that Silverbeela had a lifelong leadinl role in fights for Indian people. masseuses mus t receive 200 hours of traJrung and that the schooling take at least six months to complete. Sage said the ordinance wu patterned after ooe in Santa Ana which required 1,000 hours ol training in not less than six months. "Through an oversight, the slx·moaths clause was left in our ordinance . I 'll take respoosibility for that." He said the s ix -month requirement was irrational in tbat maasa1e technicians coacelYably could complete tralaiDc la a month. John Weaton, an attorney representing five massage parlors. said the ordinance bad the effect ol driving his clients out ol business because of the rigid t.r.uning reqwrements. He claimed that the state requires only 100 hours of schooling "The ord.inanC'e is very unfair and made 1l virtually 1mpo551ble for my clients to survive in business." the Beverly Hills attorney said He represents the Town and Country Spa. the Viking SaWla. the Four Winds Spa, the Spa of Hawaii and the Huntington Sans Sauna Sage said other cities have adopted ''fairly s trict · ordinances "Ours has been very leruent. We didn 't want to become another Las Vegas " Sage said the city is ana1yring the judge's ruling and indicated there may be attempts to reach a compromise with massage parlor operators. Tdo Unchanged BELGRADE. Yugoslavia <A Pl -Yugoslav President Josip Bro~ Tito. stricken with a relapse of pneumonia on top or failed kidneys and a weakened heart. today showed no essential change in his overall condition, bis doctors reported. Co as& Weat•er .Three-year P~ct Eyed 1 --tlQo.re, who played the title role fi\ tbe 221-epiaode TV aeries from UM9 to 1957. spoke at a Wednesday ni1bt service attended by about 400 people. Low clouds toni1ht and Friday wtth only partial clearing Friday afternoon. Lowa tonight 48 at the beaches and 55 inland. Highs Friday 82 to 67. INSID• TODA 'W O..rlttg World Wor II, o Alorh•• ~· Gerfftoa *plwnl Ofci--.,., ha of 150 ma n. cloo dMd ....................... ,,....... ..,,.. .. G COiia Moon said Sllwrbeeb was a source ol ltnmctll to him, and a troe .. kemo aabe' .. -faltblu.I frletld. SllYer,•els, 12. died of complkaUoe1 of pneuaoata Mardi S. Bia...,.•• eremated at a private Hrrice duriJll tbe put week, and bl.I ubel are to be leaUered °"" tbe famlly fanQ of bll blrtb lD Canada, on the Sb NaUOnt Indian lt8lerve near Branttord, Olltarto. Moore IJ)Ole at the Mnlce tn · 1 bU1bed wtce, wit.bout weannc the Lone Ranier'• mau w tbe muk-Hke dark llauea be bM a1ed ln recent public 1ppe~. Wbea ca........_ a]>pl'Oldled lfts Ida ..aoo, tM .,., ............ ~ .. t1ai14lm'k•hn11 llntS ,., °"""""'· 8'd Uw eoardllf••--~ bf ..... ,,...., See ,. Cl. - 1-leK AIY_...._ M AMw..n 0 .,........_ ca•.._ .,. .. L. ............... . =. ·: ~:':i .': c..rt et...... CM a.I... °'" ........... Cllmlk8 A• LC&,_ ~ Q L Oba A•= ~ ........ Cle -.. ...... ~"*MIL ,,.., ·-1 ...... ,..... ... :--cw;:;; M ·-0, :: l • . . _. ..... Plato atcla• ••Plocled ln flAmes wfml hit from beblnd. Pr•-.. Mw.& ()ag , ... * ., •rr:::• :tr ., ... r. JllMI II& ---1111 II tale .... .... _ ..... ., u. LAU.,,,..,,._,....,_,_ ... P r'-•11• net Fonl, J"isitA Carter. After Critical Barb ... W ASIDNOTON CAP> -Genld R . Ford called on Pnaldent Carter today just 12 hours after declarlq Carwr la dohla an aby1mal job and should be voted out ot t.be White House . °:" There wu no immediate indication wbat Carter and the former president dlacu.ased for 30 minutes lD tbe Oval Office 1n their third aucb meetina since Caner defeated Ford for the presidency lo 1976. The White Houae termed it a routine visit. • Ford Is In Washington for two days of politicking and speechmak.ing in advance of a decision whether to enter the Republican presidential race. . . ' E~s ... .,,. AH ···••11e• AH.,e WASHINGTON <APJ The State Department said today it has convincing evidence that all 50 Americans taken hostage in Tehran four months ago are alive and remain within the U.S. Embaay tbere. . UnW now, the department bas sa1d it could not be certain the 50 Americans, taken hostage in the embassy on Nov. 4, were ·all alive or that some had not been taken elsewhere by their captors. <Related story, A4 > But a department offtc1al, declmmg to be identified, said today ··lhe preponderance of evidence" showing the hostages to be ahve and au w1thm the embas8y compound was accumulated m a "relalJvely recent period •· Sir Elderlfl People l•J•refl 111 Blaze LOS ANGELES (AP> -A fire in a home for the aged injured at least six or the 119 residents today. firefighters said. "We have six confirmed inJuries. but It's probably going to be more than that because it's a home for the aged," said fire spokesman Ned Chatfield. An emergency medical station was set up at the scene to treat the reftidents of Mount Zion Towers on South Central Avenue fi'EC 1101'e• Co C'•C fi'ed~•I fi'-d• WASHlNGTON (AP> -The Federal Election Commission moved today lo cut off federal funds for four president.a.al candidates who have faltered in the early pri_maries. The commission voted to terminate eqibility for mat.ddnl funds for Democrat Edmupd G. Brown Jr . .:.._~ Califonda pvernor, and RepabUeam Howard H. BU.-. rmap Crane aDd Bob Dole, because they did not meet mln.imum vote-,.utq •W>danll Jn the primaries. Federal law aaya matching funds must be cut off 30 days after a candidate fail4 lo get at least 10 percent of the vote ln two consecutive primaries in which he Dartlclpates. Lawyer Guilty Of Stolen ; Goods Charge Huntington Beach attorney David Paul Carpenter, who has been a frequent past critic of Police, was convicted this week · by a jury in West Orange County : Municipal Court of receiving · stolen property. : Carpenter, 32, is scheduled to : be sentenced on th e : mildemeanor charge on April : 14. : Carpenter was accused of : aellinl three stolen sold rt.np at • a Santa Ana pawn abop for $'75 · last April. Police aald the rinp. ' were fdentlfled by a HuntinMton . Beach woman wbo said they • were taken from her home wt l year. . Deputy Dlalrlct Attorney Patty Manoukla aaid · Carpenter'• convlcUon will be · reviewed by tbe 1tate bar. which l could deny him the n1ht to : pracUce law in Callfomla. ' The coavieUoa, lhe aaid, could · carry a Jall aentence. Carpenter leveled crlUclam at : the RunUDaton Beach Police ; Department for use of excessive 1 foree in Uni fo11owt.n1 a July l Fourth riot at the city pler. I H/I' I '"'°' ... ~CllMY,_,_.,... .. ~ • _ .. _...._. .. ..._ ..... Or_ DAILY PILOT . ~ ......... ~ ............ ... l --·-....., .......... ,_, ... c.u t ..... .._.llMCll,_......,.. ... ...,_ • -~·· ....... ~ .......... c.."' I ....... ,....... ........ ,...._.....,,._ ~.ftlt ........ ,........_ .... ,. ............ c-.-...~n.a I ..,.:'.:.=-I -•.c-. ' ... ,........ .......... ..._ . ,..,,_ ..... • ~ ' • I i . '"r'tr='" ~~ .. -==·--==--lll'K!t~ ... .................. ~~ ... ~-=•er:~ fi'.,...P-seAJ AWARDS ••. told the audience of more than 100 that public safety officers s hould be considered "the sacred who help protect us from ourselves." He said voters throuebout the s tate agree that even during a lime of severe tax cuts, pe>Uce and fire forces should be kept strong. lectore8 Set On Medicine Healing and medicine as practiced lo non-western cultures will be examined ln a free six·week lecture aerte. at Golder\" W est College in Hunlin&tOO Beach Friday. The programs wlll be conducted from 7 to 10 p.m. ln Math-Science Room 123, except for the March 21 seulon. which will be held in Forum 1. Other classes are slated for April ll, 18 and 25. Lectures will focua OP medical practices tn primitive aodetiea, in Cblna and In Hl1panic cultures. t Showdown Slated OnBabySeala ST. ANTHONY, Newfound.land <AP) -Hunten lhlPI are in poaition and latt minute preparatloaa are bein• made for tbe annual Hal bunt off St. Antboay, u fem&M barp aeala cootiouetoalve birth tol>Ullt. Tbe GrMnpeac. Poundltion, which atases proteatl eaob Ytar •1atn1t tbe=ab Hal klll, aDDOUDC9d lt make pubUc ltapratlltplau , . .... •C5111'• ·····:L .. JW'1 ver-... IA dill L -~rtr ca••· tla• flrat crtml••l .,._...... ... .... .......... ~ 1119r, C1111dlt Mid tM vriet "ftlillie•• hl'd ...... o..=· ......... .. ~ ., .. o1 ...... Of • udp'• nuD11 la .... c.... , 01 tile verdlct.i... tile illl•f pr'OMCUlor Mid: ·-,, .... to me lbM mandaot•Nn HA mu• UJ k1Dd ol ear~--to aDd it.. up to ..... c to decide U they want to 1t or not. I do not pefllOD&lly believe that oorpcnUcm an dolDI wbat they CAD to belp the DeoDie ol tbla ooun~ but tl.e-Jury ap_p~ ." Def ... attorney Neal Mid tbe verdict, whlcb wu read.~ a packed courtroom that meluded more than 150 town•= reporters and lawyers, "you can be a bil corporation and the jury will acquit you, lf you have a fair story." He added: "I'm lrateful, relieved and r.rou of the verdict. The P nto bas ~n mallped for years, but we were tried by a jury of 12 people ln the heartland of America and all 12 found us oot guilty. That says somethiq." The panel's dec.ilion came in its fourth day or deliberations. Cosentino kept his eyes downcast as the jury of aeven men and five women walked by ht m. He 1hoolt tbe bands or fellow proeecutors and said to one. ''We gave U all we bad." "The Jury has spoken and that 's our s ystem . I 'm disappointed or course, but that's the way the system works," Cosentino said. The automaker was charged with three counts of reckless homicide in the 1978 deaths of three teen·age women whose 1973 Pinto exploded when struck from behind by a van. Engineers Enter Airlock At Reactor MIDDLETOWN, Pa. (AP> - Two engineers ventured briefly inside the Three Mile Island reactor buildlnf airlock today a fter two hea th technicians checked for radiation and said it was safe. The teams were tbe fJrst inside the area since it was sealed off a year a10 after the natlon'a worst commercial nuclear accident. Donnl.na cloth auill, boots and gloves, the en&ineera entered the alrlock to take radiation samples and make tests. 1be airlock opened at 9: 19 a.m. and waa sealed again at 10:"3, plant officials .said. No other entries are plmmed today, accordlnt to Sandy Polon, spokesman for the nuclear power plant. Tbe m,Sneen, a man and a woman, went inside the 9·by·U.foot airloet after two health tecbniciam left the area fol.lowlnc a lO.minule test. ••Tb•>' found no airborne partlculatu that require reapirators, ao tbe enpneera won't be wearin1 respirators. They abo won't have to put on any extra 1ear because or radiation," Polon said. As a precaution, lbe two-man health team wore breathl111 sear. Tbe:,followed three days of at c venUn1 of what Poloa ••a yery mtDalcule'' amount ol radioadtw krntoo ••• from the crtppled nUelear plot. The entl7 b • pnUmlnarJ to the first human eattr cl the huge reactor containment building since the accident. "They wW leak teat the seals and the doors, take surface contamtnation stldel and JDUe reedlnp of the door. They wW take eaten1lve radlatloa monttortnl," PolOD Hid. Tbe ndloacttve IU bad been trapped tn tbe airlock ol the plan~ ln tbe llarcb a, lt71, ae • Tb• alrloek htad1 to tbe naelMr·,.,....PllDt'• 8"Wely c ·o n t a m l a a t • d r • a et o r ooeteta=• ...,...,, Tb• Naolear ••1ulatory Com•W•ltdiDW' ...... PrOPOH_cl Wecla~•cl•J tla.at tiMttlaMl ndloldt" ..... .. _......,.build ..... .... IOOD, d .. plt. oppoelUoa from 009.-,.,.... Tiiie -=-... Nici k ..... dHttl - -....... ,,_ ............. ~ ...... &M 01U'1 eayfroaaaatal a11••;= .... ,, .... . ~ ..... ....... I - . ' - Die 'Big A' Gets Big,,er ~ . For tboee who haven't visited since the last Angels game, here is what Anaheim Stadium looks like these days as a S26 million expansion project contmues. When completed, in time fo r the Ram5' arnval next fall, the ball park will have more than 70.000 seats. House OKs Oil Profits Tax Measure WASHINGTON (AP) The House today approv e d President Carter's proposed "windfall profits" tax after defeating a fina l attempt by Republicans to make the levy more acceptable to the oil industry. The vote or 302· 107 sent the measure to the Senate, where congressional action on the SZ27. 7 billion tu ia expected to be completed next week. "Thia is a very equitable solution to a very difficult probJem -an4 one that b Sood for Aaaertca," Rep. Al UUmaq. D.ore. cbalrmaa of the Ways and Meana Commlttee, told colleaaues. Rep. John Rousselot. R-Callr , assailed the bill as "a major tax that will end up on the backs of consumers. You can't sock it to the big oil companies . . . they'll just pass it along to the conawners." Ftnal paaaa1e came after the House, by a 227·185 vote, rejected an effort ?ed by Rep Bill Archer, T·Texas. to send lhe bill back to a Sen ate-House conference commlllee. Alcoholism Seminar Set Recognlnng and coping with alcoholism will be the sub1ecl of a day-Ion.I seminar Saturday at Golden W est College In Huntington Beach. Registration will begin at 7 45 a .m . lo Forum I . The free seminar la co-sponsored by the college and the California Nunes Aaaocl.aUOD. Health ca.re profeulonala who attend the seminar are ellllble for conUoutna education credit. PACT ••• the system desiened to removt- people who have not acted ln the beat interest of the people,·· shl' said. "I don't think I've been guilty of that." M rs. Meyen observed that all three or the trustees will fact- r e ·e lection one year from November. A special election prior to that wW cost the distnct a substantial sum, she said. "I think the c harges are totally without merit," said Trustee Roeer Belgen. Asked to Judge h ow widespread is the sentiment for recall. Belcen said, ··r think 1t s a lot smaller than the noise they're making would indicate " Ail. Shah . mg Sees Surgeon PANAMA C ITY. Panama (AP> -Famed Ame ri can s ur geo n Michael DeBatey will Oy to Panama to examine Shah Mohammad Reaa Pahlavi and will remove his spleen 1f be decides the operaUon ia necessary. a spokesman for the doctor says. A !though the s hah·., persona? physician said tbe operation wu needed. De Ba key's s pokesman ~ai d Wednesd ay 1n Hous ton that "no ooe as committed to 1ur1ery. They lint will bave to examine the shah." De Ba.key. although best known for heart SUJ'lery. i• well versed ln auriery of the spleen and olber o rgans and beads the department ol 1urpry at the Baylor -Collete of Medicine. Wayne Estate Selling for $5 Million An offer of nearly SS m1llior h as been acce pted for th( Newport Beach ho me or the late actor John Wayn~. Papen1 fil<'d in Orange Count ~ Supcrior l'ourt Wednesda} identified tht> huyer only a.c; Mr.. Burton G Betttngcn, "a mamt•< ..-.oman " !\1 rs R4'1lingen 'c; cac;h offer o SJ 47 million for the house, wllt J $100,000 deposit. was acceptt•1 by executors of the estate M 1chael Anthony Wayne. Low: Johnson and John S Warren. An add1t1onal St 48 milllor would be paid lrvme Compan) to buy the waterfront land or which the house sit s. Waym leased the land 10 the Ba\ Shores section of Newport Bead for S6 Ill)() a y('ar • An Apnl I hranng date ha been "•'t before a o;u~nor cour JUd~t· v.ho \\Ill approve or dt-n tht.> .. are. which 1s ~u1ded by th probate pro<'ec dings und1· which Wa}ne s estate w1U II settled Dunng the April 1 hearing th court could sell the six·bedroon home at 21686 Bays hore Drive l · a hi$(h e r b idde r, cour document., said. But a second potential buye1 would have to come up with a . least $175,000 more than M rs. Betttn$(en's SJ 47 milHoo offer said Manon Buie, president of M a c Nab-lrvine, the r e alty company handling the sale. The home's asking price was $4.S mJllion. &rd& Halt Plane TITOGRAD, Yugoslavia <AP> -A flock of seagulls new into the left eqJ.ne of a Yueoslav AlrUM9 Boetns m as the plane started Ill takeoff for Belgrade Wedne1day night. ............... • LOS ANGELES <AP> l>eselftlatJoo ol up to 75 percent of Loe Anieles public sebool.a could be carried out uatq "a muJU-«bnlc" plan, aceordlnc to a witness at the school system's SuperioJ'Cowt lntecntion trial. John Caughey, a retired UCLA bJatory professor. was called to • • • Still Rising r-...i ....... olftda.11 bave tokt Lake Eblnon resldenta they•l beUK aot relax became tbe lake la caaUnui.DC to r1ae and sprea~ eodueednl aa many u 1211 bomes. • "II*'*"'' ol Lab ElelDore feel the wont ls beb1nd u That'e 1 DOt true," lakl BUI Mayer. federal coordlnatinl of fleet for the ederal Zmeraeacy • llaoaaemmt AleDC'I. "Vfe urae you to leave Off1cta1a said the amount of lmmedlltel1.'· said an omdal water pourlne into Lakf statement aimed at reskleata Elsinore from the San Jacin~ wbole homes remain below tbe River decreased slightlt Uill foot leYel. Tuesday whlle the amount of water flowing out of thi newly-cleared drainage canal increased. · THE ASMY COSPS of Enalneers said tbelr computations abow the lake wUl continue to rise from its WedDelday readin2 of I .2G.2$ feet above 1ea level to "at leut l ,2t5'7 feet by April 4 ... THE OOSPS of Englnee~ wblch continues to widen tht cbaADel. estimated W ednesdaJ that the channel now wu about 670 cubic feet per second. Bul tbe Corps pegged the watet flowing into the lake at a rate ~ 900 cubic feet per seeond, more than five times the outflow rate~ { __ SF-_:.t_TE_J testify Wednesday by the 'nteeratioo Project, one oi lbe plaintiffs seeking a wider program of mandatory desegregation in the st0.,000 pupil district. Flying over San Diego is new $300,000 medical helicopter of UC San Diego Medical Center. When Project "Life Flight" begins Monday, it will be the fint in California and third in the nation wtth a doctor in the flight crew. The mercy copter carries complete life support systems and monitoring devices, can take to the air in five minutes and land in an area only 60 feet in diameter. Tbe lake ia ·~to rema1D at that peak for more than two weeu bef~ slowly •tartinc to recede. But it will remain above 1..26S feet -the level at which damage la done to the city - until mid-May. Lake Elsinore bas risen more than 20 reet since the floodlnc began. wb..icb tzanalatea to a growth in surface area from 2. 700 acres to 6.200 acres -all in less than a month. The comlnC two-foot rise will increue that to 6,500 acres . sald Maury Peerenboom. Corps spokesman. Like Laite Elsl.nore, normallr tiny Baldwin Lake. near Bis Bear Lake ln the Sa& Bernardino Mountains, hu bee* ming with runoff from recert storms. Jim Dotaon. an engine« for the Big Bear Cit~ Com mu.olty Services District. said be believed three buHdinO were standing in several inches of wattt. Describing a multi-ethnic system. Caughey said there would be three or more races l"epresented at many schools which had white enrollment between2Sand40percent. Draft Ford Effort Set . Committee Orga nized to Urge Entry in Race AS THE FEMA offk:ials spoke at a Wednesday news conference. more of the Lake Point Mobile Home Park disappeared under water. All but two of the park's mobile homes have been evacuated. BALDWIN LAKE had risen one foot in 1.S days to 6,705.7 feet above sea level, be said. "Lake Baldwin doesn't have anything like the watershed that Elsinore does." Dotson said. "The lake would fill at 6.7"6 feet." Dot.son said. "but only Noah's ever seen 1t that htgh." ......... ~ SACRAMENTO <AP> -San Diego builder Harvey Furgatcb. who as - sociated with Gov . Edmund Brown Jr. during th e anti-Vietnam War cam - paign. is the new chairman or "111tMTat B r o w n ' s prealdenUal campaign. · Furgatch. 52, who said be bas headed various San Diego Cowlty campaigns. was named to s ucceed Tom Quinn, a long-Um e Brown confidant. The campaign's announcement Wednesday said Brown named Furgatch late Tuesday before leaving for a seven-day campaign tour of Wisconsin. ftmlt• Apprel'ed SACRAMENTO (AP> -The state Energy Commission bas given final approval to the construction of a geothermal power plant in Sonoma County. The commission also reported Wednesday that it gave first-step approval to two other plants, including an oil burner that could become the nation's first to be converted to methanol. Gcu Nezt Year SAC RAMENTO (AP) - Southern California will get Canadian natural gas by next year. thanks lo a new agreement between the federal land agency and a Callfomia pipeline firm. James Rueb of the U.S. Bureau of Land Management and Harry Prudhomme of Pacific Gas Transmission Co. signed a document Wednesday givine the firm permission to expand pipeline capacity over federal land in Idaho and Washington. SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -A coalition of Republicans bas o rganized a Draft Ford Committee in California to urge former President Gerald Ford to j ump into the race for the GOP nomination. "He won't run for the fun of it," WlUiam T. Balley, a San Francisco attorney and spokesman for the aroup said Wednesday. "He wants to know if there's an outpouring of public sentimenL" Bagley and Los Aoeeles attorney Olarles G. Bakaly held news confereocen lo their respective cities to amounce the draft effort: THE COMMJTrEE includes California Republicans who bad backed George Bush, John Connally and Howa rd Baker. said Bagley. who was served a Ford appointment to the federal Commpdity Futures Trading Comm.Casioo. "I have felt. .. that President Ford la the s est ca ndidate that the Republican Party can put up in the November election,'' said Bakaly, who was a m e mber of Ford's 1976 c a m p a i g n ,LUCMI steering committee. Among the 10 Ford supporters listed by the committee were former Casablanca Records chief Neil Bogart, singer Tony Orlando and industrialist Leonard Firestone and J . Robert Fluor, longtime GOP money men. THE OOMMl'ITEE said in a prepared statement that Ford had proven be "ls a stable experienced, s trong leader, whose ability to reason, sort out options and make clear thoughtful deci sions is desperately needed once again to get us out or this mess.'' Ford. who was scheduled to consult with President Carter Sex E ducation ~ Bill Buried By Opponents SACRAMENTO CAP> -The religion -based movement against sex education bas returned to the Capitol and buried a bill to allow televised sex education in the Los Angeles schools. After ~aring from a parade of sex education opponents. the Senate Education Committee voted 10. l Wednesday to kill a bill, AB542 by Assemblyman Herschel Rosenthal. D-Los Angeles. THE ASSEllBLY bad already passed it with liUle opposition. One foe, John Banducci of a group called Llfeline in the San Francisco area, said· a vote for the bill ls "a vote for pornography and perversion." The measure. would have allowed Los Angeles schools to show sex education programs offered by a k>caJ instructional television station. ROSENTHAL SAID the programs covered such topics as preggancy , childbirth, parenthood and rape prevent.ion. Current law allows parents to see all books, fUma and other materials lo be offered in sex education classes and then decide whether their children can attend. School officials say few parents keep their children out of class and even fewer review the materials. GOURMET MARKET DON'T FORGET MARCH 17, ·.....; -~FT"- . ST.PATJllCKSDAY! DELANEY-~ MORNING F R ESH PRODUCE BROS. SEAFOOD La. SoUd lle•d Gree• Cabbage ...... 1ee lb. ...... Beklag Natoe. ............ lie ... Loeal le-Sweet Strawberrtel .... lie Mkt. ~=-~~~.~~~.~==-•• Aillirltaa Ila•--•• .............. ZIC a.. • Fre9' Swordfllb .................... 5.18 lb . careat to Bar-b-Q or broil, espedally When basted with lemon butter> today in Washington. bas said he would become a candidate ii be receives broad·based support from Republicans. Democrats and in~pendents. ------- ingval -------.-r I ftft(Mlll- 1 UIMlf 77 DlllllER () 0 c '1) 0 z I Good IOf two ~ of Ille eotonel's QriotNI Recipe Chocilen Of btra Cnapy c:n.ci<en. plus• single semno of mashed ll01•toes and 'Jf..., and a rott. Um11 1wo otters .,.. ~ c>ef CUalomef CullomM ~ 811 aPC)fleable ..... IU. Good for eo9f'lt ~of IN ~·t ~NI Aectoe cnocun Of E.ma Cn&C1Y ctuc•en. tour IOI.._ A ct'OOOll ol •U. a large Q06e llaw Of • large maahed c>Ota10ft and small 'Jf""V Limit two ~ '* COUOOl1 '* ~-<A.ta!OIMf PllY' ••• Otter e1porea M~fl 22. 1980 1 Pncet may vary •• p.ftt<;>pattng IOc•llOn•. Good I only tn Soutflefn Cahf0fn1a wflefe ~-Ille I Colonel's taca ~---tu. Ofter e1tplf'et Maret\ 22. 1980 Pnoes may • .,.., at l)ltr11etpahng IOcatlons. Good only tn Sou1flem Cahlorn1a wtlef1I y<>u -11'9 Coiof'91"s ,_ Window bennef WlndOw Dannel ---·-----· Tiie We•tcJiff Plaza Cltallenge We invite you to find the store or service establishment that does not off er prompt, courteous seruice- and tell us/ -- .,CoUJa ~ Costly ' f Former HunUnltao Beaeb Diplly CttJ;MtimeY.Jolu\ :••o·coanor -~~&alt .... u..t a PrW*t~ "1 recommended U.1t U.. ft.red city employeit nat bl put : back an the clt:iyroll. , &ut tMt'a on · part of the story. O'<Dmol' ~Uy olftdall waiWd MVtft maothl f« ~ the reeommenclatJon lrom Loi~ arbitrator Joeeph • Gentile. ' • Gentile. who sat throuah O'Connor'• three-day appeal • bearinl laat July. ort1lnally prom!Md be'd have bJI Work •'•completed by Ottober. . •· · The deadllne for the "'CC>mmeodaUoo wu lat.er ·" moved beck to December and tbeo February and finally •4, , arrived lut weeJt. I According to a 1pokesma.n from the •tale's omce of .. , admin.latraUve ttearlftp. the Job could have been done 1 • qulcker U a atale·appolnted arbltrator had been used. • •• He said state arbitrators normaU)' are required to · • finish off their work in 30 days. Jf they don't, he aald, they · must supply a report explalnlna the delay. While the time delay in this case may have been maddening to O 'Connor and his former boss, City " Attorney Gall Hutton. it ls taxpaying citiiens who should be upset. 1f O'Connor eventually is successful ln winning back his job, the city may owe thousands of dollars in back pay '· for lime just spent walling. ::··.Recall Seems Excessive .. Fountain Valley's teacher strike ts over, but some local parents are determined to conttnue a ·recall campaign against three members ot the elementary • • school district's board of trustees. ~ . • • • • ~ ,, 7 " . .. • " . . . ·. " . ·. .• .. ·~ Facinj? recall are veteran trustees Betty Mignanelli, Sheila Meyers and Roger Belgen. Some parents have• accused the three of eroding community trust and teacher morale, failing to act responsibly at a public board meeting, and contributing to a decline in the quality of education in the district. The charges came up in the heat of negotiations during the teachers strike. although campaigning parents maintain that their ~rlevances extend to actions prior to the strike. Perhaps the trustees would not be facing this action if they had demonstrated more sensitivity toward concerned parents during the strike. Still. a recall election seems an excessive price to pay for such behavior Parents who wish to restore harmony within the district may well find that a recall campaign achieves the opposite effect. The charges and counter·charges likely to be exchanged might only further aggravate the \\OUnds created durm~ the strike In the normal course of ev(•nls. all three trustees will fat'l' n· ('li.·t'l1on a \"l'ar from :'-Jo\'cmber fl woul~ seem to bl' a \.\i st·r eourst· to wait until that time before jJdgin$? wht!thcr thC!>t! trustees deserve lo continue ~oveming the district Parents Show Spirit Ocean View <elementary) School District 1s faced with closing another neighborhood school because of dctlirung enrollme nt. On March 17. dis trict trustees are to receive a report from their Citizens Committee for Master Planning rl'l'ommending closure of Glen View School in northeast Huntington Beach Built for 300 s tudents at the height of district growth. c; lt•n Vil'w now houses only 174. Tht• citizens committee believes closmg the campus and transferring its students to nearby College View :: School will save about $80.000 a year. -Glen View parents are adamant in their belief that •· ·the school's balance of conventional and innovative ~ programs provides the best education in the district. :: They are earnestly preaching that gospel among ::f parents of private. nursery and other district schools. 1 And they have launched a sophlsllcated advert1smg campaign and open house schedule to increase enrollment during April when students annually may transfer from one school to another no matter where they live with.in the district. . :; . . ~ . . . . •. ~· . . . .. ~ Win or lose, the Glen View parents are to be commended for their pride and effort in changlng statistics that could close their school rather than rabing voices in futile anguish • ()ptnions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Plk>t. Other views expressed on this page are thote of their authors and artists. Reader comment is lr'lvrted. Address The Daily Piiot. P.O . Bo• 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642--4321 . Boyd/ British Driving By LM.BOYD Q. How many of the 12 Apoatlea died a natural death? A. Only John. ·•How come the Brltlah drive on the left aide of the road? .. inqulre1 a cJieot. Beuuae the hlahwaymen cntwies ago habitually at- tacked coaches from the right. according to the his· tortan.s. Supposedly. Jett-side driving therefore gave the • potential victims a slightJy better chance or spoWn1 the robbers in advance. Why the robbers didn't switch to bit from the left ls not explained by 11Jd historians. Vice Pftlidents tend to be fond o( those wall plaq~ that read: "1bere is very lit· tie future ln being right when the boss is wrong." Presi· denl8 are more inclined t.o like William Wrleley's ob- servaUon: "When two "'en in a business always agree. one or them Is unneceqary." Dear Gloomy Gus Q. Who's tbe moat suc- caaful muak compoeer of all time? A. <ndit Paw McCartney wttb that cliatlnetioa ta tbe matter of moaey. Witb a IOftll ...... lm .... ml that NC'h bu IOld more than a mlllicn copM&. He•1 a1lo Hld t.o be tbe workl'I molt sucC9Qtul recorcUna artlat wlth 100 million tlnllee Md 100 mmtoa albums. • Nixon P ardon Sfill B urts FoM PORT WOll111, ,._su -TM nnL -lut qUMt.lou I WU ulltd Mtna • villl to Tnu Cbrt.1Uu UDJvtntly were U.. 11•e: Wby dld Ford pardon Nlao..7 Wu U..... a dtalt Tbat QUiii· Uon, 1U11tUy dlfttrenl. wu Uked • ...., • doHa thDH la•bttWHD. Oera'4 hrd ll.v•J'1 Didt on peopl•'• mtldt thtH days, whleb 11 whtN be wanted to be when bl told t!HI New Yortt Tim•• the obvious trutb that Rona&d Reaian would be a pret- ty sure ao.er 1n November. "I v«ed •1Jinst Ford tn 1V76 becaute of UM( pardon," the first questioner sald. ''Do you thJnk there wu a deal with Nixon. or do )'OU t.bAnt f'orcl dJd It beCIUM be thouat 'jt wu aood for the couaitYf'' ( thlAk botb. IN WarrtNG a book about. Ford ftve yea,.. .. o. J conelwlld that a deal wu made durt111 boun ol eonvenaUon between lb• tbtn·vlce prealdent and President Rldw'd Nfxon·a thlef of ttaa, Alexander Ha.t1. I doa't know whether the words -"U NlxOJI ~•lam. I'll 1raat tbe pardon• -were actually spoken. But 1 do know that Ha.ti cavae beck to the White Houle amJd private talk of a pardon - and Ntx.oa then stepped down, makln& Ford preatdeot. That does not mean that Ford dldn 't sincerely believe tbe pardon -for the crimes or Wateriate -wu *t for the country. "Puttinc Water1ate behind us." was bU phrut at the Ume, IW• df:in', Cy? Mailbox I abo tblnk, after btartaa the qunUoo qatn and aaald ID Fort Wok1,b. tbat tbt pardon ts Vord 't ChaPPf'lluiddtclr. IF Hf! BZOOMa • eandldate to atop Reqan, the former pret· ldent wW want to1~-~ about t.he fact UW the nauon•a lD.flaUon rate wu 4.& pe~t wbeo be &e:ft olflce 1n im -compared with almOlt 20 pereen an..r three yura ot llmm1 Camr. But lint. l ......,.., bt wtll have to uawer more q~a.Uou about tbe ft:a.r'Cloa tbaia I did. TboH qua could cripple b1I early campaJlftinl In tbe um• way that~ ClUettloGI bobbled Edwud Kennedy. By tbe ti~ Ford really got aoln1. lt would probably be too late. Under the sulfocath\c new rules of presidential pollUcs. hill late-startiq candidacy would bt> tricky at beat. Defendin1 lht' pardon for a couple of well pubk&Mcl weeu eoWd kill h:tm off btfCll"t bt had a real chanee. Tbe arllbmetlc of the rulea la terrtbJe for Ford. If he entera the race on VI• day an.er the Mattb 11 llllnol.t prtmary. ht will be eompetJ~J.for a max- imum ol 1.300 of ~ 1.-. del· eaatta to the Republican Na- tJonal Convention. Only 8U of thoae 1.aoo dele1ate1 will be eelected ln ltatet where Ford's name can le1ally appear on prtm~ and CaUCUI ballotl. The =~a~ ~t:.=a:~ other candJdates Uh Oeor1e Buah. Howard Baker or John Andert0n. Too many ct.adllnes lncludinR the nun1 dates In New Vork. Pennaylvan'a and TtxH -wlll be PHllf'd by March 19. So il would be! v..ry loullh. Ford ml1hl be wlM: to t'OMl<ier stayanl[ Jn rdlrtmPnl and ba11k· Ing In hill new alow as tht· statesman 11bove tht· .sl1np. ;Jr. rows and 11tumblt-1. of cam palcns Maybe ~ rouJd ~Plfl Carter ln November wh1('h I 'm aure M would dearJy fovp ti. do but. the truth •~. M ma)' not hau u &OOd • <'hance. now. lo defeat Rea~•n a• 1Ju11h or Andel"IOn has IN FACT, A f'ord candtdll<'y m1aht niaure Reagan·~ nomsna tlon -a.nd destroy RepublJcan chan<'es In November Jerrv Ford 1n HMO 1<; very 1>1m1lar t•1 Hube rt flumphrt·> on 1~11· DemocraUc side 1n 1972 Wh1 n Edmund Muskie and llt·nn JaC'k'>Ofl Caltned a bit aicd1r-1 George MC'Govl'rn 1·1i?ht \l•:u .. ago. Humphrey rusht•d ·nto itt. Florida priman rlt•\trrJ\111~ l\f<'Govem'<, mon· modcrdll' '•I• Poi-Ilion and guaranttt1n~ U11· nominahon of a lefl1sh C'and1ddl•· wno appeared a1> eittreme \11 moH of thl' country a!> th1· nghtaah Rea1o?an f'ord's time. I 'm afraid, may have pas.~ fie · and the fl"ol of u~ might be a lot beUer off if ht' ~tayed at hrs home :n Rancho MiraJ!e High Rentals Not All Landlords' Fault To the Editor: Mrs. Richard Arl.'valos an thl· Mar<'h 6 Pilot. blamt•s greedy apartment owners and greedy hom~rs for !ht' decline an school enrollments an addition t.o all the other sins for which we are blamed. Since my wife and I fall tnto both categories as homeowners and apartment buildm~ owners. we fCl'I that oc·c·a st0nall' c;omeont> -.;hould print a rev. fact; "bout us·· greedy·· people . We have a substantial portion of our life savings tied up in the property -it was only by saving what we could out of two joint incomes. after taxes. that we were able to purchase our first home. These savings did not come as a result of rent controls. subsidized housing allowances or food stamps THE llENTAL property was acquired with the hope of being able t.o support ourselves in our declining years without having to depend on government aid. Is that wrong? Exorbitant rent fees are caused by bureaucratically created shortaees or rental prop· erties among other factors such as mortiage money coets, inOaUon. POPUl•tJon shifts. rear of imposiUoO of rent controls. Tbe figure o/ Sl,000 in advance for accommodaUoo.s for a fami· ly ol five la not, ia my opinion. exorbitant comldering that the OWDff normally wants first and lul month'• rent plus a security depoalt. 1be land.(Ord ml.&St have 1ome protection too, since wltbout payment of last month's rent many tenanta have been known to vacate overnl1bt. behind 1n tbeJr rent. or without tbe 30 da)'I notice to the landlord normally agreed to. That the security deposit Is a necesalty I can vouch ror, idnce one tenant moved out taking the sUdJng bedroom closet doors with him as well as leaving dama1ed paint, plaster and general dis· aster behind. Did Mn. Arevalos ever try \o repair a bedroom wall wjaicb had been \Wed M a dart board? ID spite of PropoeiUon 11 tax 11vta,. other cotta ~ to eacalate and the mortca1e tnmt be paid. Ut!Utlet, Ina~ traab c.'OUeetlon, repairs matnttnaAce costs nae •aeb month aaxt tomeOGt bu lb pay free <'OUnt ry for us and the \Oun~ peoplC' of th1!> world Thev made 1t possible for Social Secunty to help the disabled and widows If 1t hadn't been for them -;ome of us m1J(ht be starvm~ loo. My thanh ~o to every 'lt'n1or t•1t1zf'n of this countr} Cherish our oldl'r pcopk 1hc) need love and care! GLOIUA J . OSWALD P~11slo11a Mf!a~r To the Editor In reading your MarC'h .\ editorial. "Public Pension., Mortgage F'uture." I was stru<'k by the fact that It <'Ont.ained slatements that might be mis leading. r speak as a dassilied school employee who has worked ln one posltioo for 26 years. Would you believe that after 26 years of service my monthly pension wiU be approxJmately $400 a month with a 2 percent cost-o(.)lvtng in · crease each year (hardly an ex· orbit ant sum)? ALSO, J might call your at.ten· lion to the fact that school employees arc part of the slJlte retirement system and con· tribute the 11amf' amount Into the fund a11 the stale employee~ However. school employees· benefits are lower than those of the slate emplovees. The state Legislature has re fused to correct this inequity If you care to invnUgate. you wtll find that many school dassi(ied employees will not re«I~ a pension of more than $300 a month. It seems to me that when your paper prtnta an editorial of this type, many cltisens believe this is true ol all pubUc employees J should think you would print the other aide-showtna the mea1er penslons received by most claast!led employees NA.ME WITHHELD Pedt le•l .. e reff To the FA1tor~ On March 4 I read your edltorlal concerning Geor1e Oabome, dlteetor of &.be county &nvlronmental Man•a•ment A1eney. You 1uted, "ffe bu Hrved the county well, 11 rarwe 11 we can deUrmlne." He ~ have done, but not ao ln s.ta ADI IWCIU. I bad a~ wttb tum on behalf ol the conterned P9flOGI for all tbla. DALE.JOHNSON ror &.be peweneUoa of Acada StrMt on .Ju. •. ~ffmlnl tbe ••.:: .. ~-... ,...,,..._ abandorun1nt ol a small strtp ol ..,~ • ..._ Acacia. To UM Editor: 1 TOLD ROI It wu vttal ror It aeema we betp evetr l~ the reakliMlta aQd our children to co~try and t.belr PMPle and keep OW' roed and not have It •lltft. ow own. We an -., to 1lven awar to prlvac. lD'--ll. wtlllq t.o blip a.tJ boat Jelple that our aaltt1 wu at st.ke. Wtda welfare 9" can. Bill eur To my dismay l wu told, It ~ IMll•• are "6il :-.. yo:u doa't like it. mon. I 8*ed -~·1a11 · wlltre to . HI• anawer. .... uo ... am W ba.d a inabllc beann«i bdort! the Roard of Superv1Sl)rc; on this matter on Feb 6 Our pl.'tllaons with 180 ~1gnaturl'-. were romplctely ignored I fttl it 1s very sad not to <'are: and w<.> the taxpayers have to pay thl.'1r retirement salaf) It 1s m my op101on lud1<'rou.-. \\ f• the people have right.~ according to our Constitution IRMA/\ R/\TH/\~I B•rfl •• .,~r~ To the Edit.or As an aclln alumn\lS oC USC and a graduall' of the School or Busint"Ss. J ('a n't behe,•e tht• school <Graduate School of Bu.-.1 ness l would be a\4 ardlng Dr Armand Jfamm~r the En treprent'ur of the Year Award Or. Hammer 1s certainly no "free-enterpnser." lie just last wffk announ~ that he would be nuUgating his S20 billion deal with the Soviets. Th.is. in spite of their Invasion of Afghanistan. Hard to believe . Wasn't it Khrushchev who "aid they would hang us and that the businefismen would btd for the ropt>' RA\' N CIBRS s •• , -s ...... . To the Editor Well hcfl! 1t comes n~ht off the bA<'k burner where it has be<'n slmmenn~ and back on to the .front. It 's the same old goulMh and they haven 'l even bothered t.o add seasoning to il. I am releff'fnl to Wibon RJ'"' talks ID Hunllngton ~ach and Santa Ana where he sa)'I if Jarvis II passes the schools will automatJcally go out of busloess. Rlles states that Immediately we will witness the dlamantllng of all public schools. He also st.ates be managed to keep the ~t'hoot doors open after Proposi· lion 13. but don't let anybody tell you It wu business as usual. What Mr. Wilson Riles forgot to mention in hi• bleeding heart s peeches Is that the cost of cross-town bustne haa tripled since PropoeiUoo 13 puaed. Mr. JU les sa)'11 no more achooll can be built; but do we need more~ So many parent.a are pulJing tbetr cbUdren out o( public 1cboob and eN'Oltin1 them ln private acboob to keep them O'om • two. to three·hoW' bus ride e.adl day. ma.oy tebooll lit balf empty now. YD. 11.r. Willoa JUlel II uk· ln1 111 to pve.. &ftt, 1tft. for laxtt ., we will onty baw our Social Seewtty at the .Mt ol ow workia1 days wtd'9 be wtU re- Ur. w1th over $60,000 tach ~, moet of tt com1n1 rrom ua over· burdened taxpayera. 'andall-.m I "ould lrkt· t o ht.·Jr h1 ., ,JO.,V.l·r to wh~ ~o man' parenu. Jrf' '>Um~ bccausl.' tht·ir <'hald 143S ~rcJduatf'd without bt• tnJ? tau~ht to r<'ad These Judi! ments are ha\lng to be paid '" tht• ta"<p~1~"('r-.. not Mr Riles If Mr Ril~ v.111 show that h•· as wort<ing for us taxpayer'> ho ma) be surt:' our J>O('kctb<JOb will again be open lo him. G EORG F: WlUil'\ Cll#•p Slaot To the Editor I find Arthur Riley's March 1> letter to be very <1ffens1ve to all teachers who are C'urrentl ~ struggling lo make ends m~t ~ ithout the benefit of long over due raises. He 1s appalled at the poss1b1llty or a slrike. and ad· vises u.-; lo consider lhe poor taxpayer. He says we must not continue to throw his dollar down so many ratholes . Mr. RJ&ey states that when h1i. '>On rou.ldn 't at ford a house on his leaching salary. why, old Dad just stepped in and saved the day for Junior with a down payment for the boy's f1rs1 home Lu('ky Junior ~ Few teachers I know are blessed with .. urh an a<'e in the holl• MR. RILE\' then took a cheap >hot at Dr. Pat Kubis of OranJ!l' Coast College. chasllsing her for bean~ too cheap to help her son :>Ut with a monetuy gill so that he could purc hase a house. Perhaps Dr. Kubis. being an educator most of her lire, was more interested In molding young minds than In amassing big bucks. lt's bard to build nest esgs on a teaching income. Mr. lllley relates bow his 10tt took the bull by the horns. and ~uppkm>ented hia teaching in· come by moonlight1n1 In real estate I suspect that he did well 1n real estate due in large measure to Daddy's tutelage How nice to be shown the ropes by an old pro, and to be privy to Dad's contacts around town. A ready-made inside track. Mr. Riiey did allow that teacbera are underpaid, but added. "We taxpayers are pay. lDa lhtoulh tbe nose." That's an old f unillar IOag, but l Yt'OUJd like to remind Mr. Riley that teacbera a1ao pay taxes, JU1t like the firemen, and the polic.men, and all atate emplo~MI. In 1hort, you are not tl"Vlq 1.&S anytbtq. Mr. Riiey, tbat we ha· Veil 't peld for ill apadet, MARX MORRIS I wtth Mr. Rllea woWd ••aln the lax security at the I.Al An1ele1 and Or••I• Couty U...t .. coetllll ~ ti mlWoa Hell fear tor~•~Wli ·~-~~· ORANOE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MARCH 13, 1980 \ . City Rall 17 l ~ i I ~ I f l J -~t.flfSN Tbe Irvine C1aamber of Commerce 11 coneld•rlq a cllJ·INblldllOd &eue ln the avlc Center. TM .... &nanpment WU OD the Tue1day evenlu1 City Coanetl comeat cai.dar. Counclhnan Larry A1ru i:.eq_QMteid that UM matt. be di.eu.ed by the comeU. wtYeb ulUmatelJ aent the proPQeal back to tbe dty staff roe-more ..... A ··-~• ..... P..a 8rMr 1r. Aid u.at UM ek:r IMMI ,..,.... tM ,..., ... lMM an•::rirn• .. u ......_,to ••t tJ·related or1aalulioial IDto IM DIW a&1 Hall ...... ~11~:.:~~ ta~ :It.. tbe cU.mtMlr to wost out a 1't·to-be den ·•new deal. Under the term• of the an .... ment, the Chamber of Commerce would ban been I ~«• ••••• , ... P8fclst•• alloftd Lo~ out 1,000 aquare fMt ot Clft'lee apace at • e.ata peT lqu&re foot. TM city ltMlf pa)'I 'JO eeata per l(IUaN foot for UM otftce apace it hH ottered to th• chamber. Brad,y aa1d there ls a aimple and stral1ht forward ex- planation for the s ublldiled rent. ''The c hamber was just recently formed and bu only been ln existence for several Six T-37 Air Force training jets, wrapped in protective cocoons, tie up traffic on Sacramento's Garden Highway as they are towed from McClellan Air Foree Base to a military dock on the Sacramento River. The jets are to be ferried to Oakland for shipment to Pakistan under an agreement executed before the Russians invaded Afghanistan. Off Y 011r Knees, Kids NewSclwol Law Hasn't Got a Prayer BOSTON (AP) -The state Supreme Court ruled today that the new Massachusetts law reintroducing prayer in public schools violates the First Amendment guarantee of a separate church and state. The court e njoin ed enforcement of the statute, which called for teachers to ask if any student wished to lead a prayer and for the student then to lead the prayer. It provided for students not wishing to. participate to be allowed to leave the room. "Tbft program as contemplaled by the statute, and Orange Coast as actually carried out in the schools. was r e ligious in character, for prayer ls a n invocation or the deity." the court said in a five-page order. ·'Here, then, we find a religious program which was sponsored and put into effect by state and local officials under aegis of state statute ; was conducted from day to day by teachers employed as public Silver Price .Pbunmeta In New York employees in public schools, and was carried out on public property during school time, and as part of the school exercise," the court said. The state argued that the law accommodates religion but does not sponsor it in the schools. The statute took effect in February ·'According to the precedents, the statute could not be saved from unconatituliooallty by the fact that the prayers were spoken by volunteer pupils, or that pupils could choose Lo be excused from the exerci.H," the court said ln today's order. · The luue was brought before tbe court ln a suit flied by a group or pupils and tbetr perent.I. The court said a more detaUed oploioo would be inued lat.er. A similar ault bu been f'iJed in federal court but no action bu been ta.ken on lL. monthl " be aald. "Tberelon, lt ha• not had an opportunity to develop fundina resources with wblcb to operate a run aervice chamber. 'lbe aWf recommends tbla arrangement becauae lt would afford the chamber lbe opport\lllity to become more 'well rooted' durillc the next year." Larry Hoffman, chamber of com,ineree vice president and former plannln& commiaaton cbalrnwi, said the firm bu 390 members lncludin1 tbe lrvine Company, the Koll CorporatJon and other large flnDI. "They have extra apace at the city ball annex," Hoffman sa.ld. "Rather than leave the apace sitting there, the city has offered to lease the apace to the chamber at a reasonable rate -the aame u we are payin& in our present home in the University Town Center building <across from UC Irvine.)" Don Port.er, execuUve direetor for the Newp>rt Harbor Area Chamber of ~mmel'ce, said bia organization remains independent from the city. "If you're abarlnc office apace you might have some problems," be 11Jd. "We prefer not to do that because sometimes we diugree wttll the cit ." ~osta Mesa Chamber of (See mAllBE&, Pa1e AZ> Ford Motor Co. Finn Acqtiitted In Pinto Deaths WINAMAC, Ind. (AP> -A jury acquitted the Ford Motor Co. today on three counts of reckless homicide in the fiery deaths of three teen·agers killed when their Pinto sedan exploded in flames when hit from behind. Prosecutor Michael Cosentino and defense attorney James F Neal sat expressionless as the judge read the contents of the Police Hold Suspect in Wife Kidnap By JERllY CLAUSEN OI .. OeifY ~ IUft A 300-pound man in a red jump auit ia beln1 held by Callfornla autborltlea for kidnapptne h1.s estranged wife to culminate a biurre case that began ln Ora.nee County some seven months ago. Tehama County Sheriff's Capt. WUliam Cashdollar said Wednesday in Red Bluff that Jimmy Mack Dixon. 35. was arrested when he got out of his car near a restaurant in Coming. The former La Habra man was booked for Investigation of kidnapping and f alse imprisonment and also 1s being held on an Orange County Municipal Court warrant for suspicion of stealing his three c hildren f rom hi s wife Kathleen's La Habra home in late August. 1979. Orange County officials said Dixon took the chlldren during a weekend visitation agreement worked out shortly after be and his wife were divorced in Orange County Superior Court He and the children eventually were traced to Macon, Ga .. but Geor~ia law enforcement agencies never arrested him on tl\e Orange County warrant issued in late August, officials said. Eventually, Dixon's wife gained custody or the children with help from Georgia authorities, county officials sa.ld, and then moved to tbe Corning area ot Northern Callfornla near the home of her parent.I in an attempt to elude her eatranced buaband. Dixon went with a 1un to the home of her parents. Mr. and Mra . Milan McGraw , on Tuesdav nl•ht. accordine to <See KIDNAP, Pate Al> three envelopes containing the jury verdicts in the landmark case. the f irs t criminal prosecution of a corporalton for an alleged products defe<:l. M mutes later. Cosentino said the verdict .. vindicates Ford Motor Co " He said there was a ··strong possibility" of an appeal of the Judge's rulings in the case Of the verdict, the chief prosecut.oc said: "It means to me that manufacturers can make any lund of car t?\ey want to and it's up to the public to df'c1de tf they want to. buy it or not I do not personally believe that corporations are doing what they can to help the people of this country. but the Jury apparently does.·· Defense attorney Neal said the verdict. which was read before a packed courtroom that Included <See PINTO, Page "%> Brief l•speetio• Engineers Enter Nuke Plant MIDDLETOWN. Pa. <AP> - Two ea.gineen ventured briefly inside the Three Mlle bland reactor buiJcftnf ~ today after two bea tb technicians checked for radiation and said it was sale. The teams were the fitst inside tbe area since it was sealed off a year ago aft.er the nation's worst commercial nuclear accident. Oonning cloth suits. boots and gloves. the engineers entered the airlock to take radiation samples and make tests The airlock opened at 9 .19 a m and was sealed again at t0·43, plant otri cials said No other entries are planned today. according to Sandy Polon. spokesman for the nuclear power plant. The engineers. a man and a woman. went inside the ·1-by-l2·foot airlock after two health lecbnicia.n.s left the area followinc • 10-minute test. "Tbey found no airborne pa rtlculates that require respirators, so the engineers won't be wearing respiraton. They also won't have to put on any extra gear because of radiation." Polon said. A s a precaution. the two-man health team wore breathing gear The entry followed three days of atmoepheric venting of what Polon called "a very minuscule" amount of radioactive krypton ~as from the cnppled nuclear plant The entry 1s a preliminary to the first human entry of the huge reactor containme nt buildin3 since the accident. "Thev will leak test the seals <See NUCLEAR, Page Al> John Wayne Estate A $5 Million Buy? An offer of nearly SS million has been accepted for the Newport Beach home of the late actor John Wayne. Papers rited in Orange County Superior Court Wednesday identified the buyer only as Mn. Burton G. Bettin1en, "a married woman.·· Mrs. Bettiogen's cub offer of $3.47 mlllloo for the house, wtt.b a $100,000 deposit, was accept4'd by executors of the estate. Michael Anthony Wayne, Louis Johnson and John S. Warren An additional $1.48 million would be paid Irvine Company to buy the waterfront land on which the house sits. Wayne leased the land in the Bay Shores section of Newport Beach for $8,000 a year. An April 1 hearing date has been set, before a superior court judce who will approve or deny the sale, which la guided by the probate proceedings under which Wayne's estate wlll be settled. ee W~ leha Aetlea During the April l bearing the court could sell the six·bedroom home at 21686 Bayshore Drive to a higher bidder . court documents said. But a second potenUal buyer would have to come up wtth at least $175,000 more than Mrs. BetUncen's $1.47 million offer. said Marion Buie, president of M acNab·lrvlne, the realty company bandllnc the sale. IUD Lawsuits Mounting Tbe 1atalt IJ'OUP r.f plalDtitfl contesad ln tlMt .ctlou that a 1trlA1 attached to UHi Dalkoo Sbleld IUD cauaed bacteria .to enter the utenaa and lead to lnfectlona. MOit ot the women ldentllled ln the latelt actioftl, Van Dyke aald, u. from Oran1e Cowtty and Southern California. <>then are tro~ New York Texaa. Utah, Florida, Wublnston , Or~•on and COiorado, be 1ald. TM 'f'OmeD, be added, lelt'Md v a .• pbarmaceutlcal nrm. Each of the plalntlffa la seeking $5 millioa ln exemplary dama1e1, and otber compenaatlon lncludln1 relmburlemeat of medical an4 legal fees. The Dalkoa Shield waa taken oft the market tn 1'74, but lt la eatlmat.ecl tbat aboUt one m1lllon of the IUD'• are atlll lo use. COUNTY'S JOB ~J'IEWED Today's Dally Pllol covers Oran1e County's employment market ln "Jobs," a special matulne section. Flrma aeetinl worken, dpt on cetttn, joba and news ot the county's emp&oyllMID\ 1&ta...,... hlcbllcht the ie-pap lff,tkle. Don't mill "Jobi.'' ID ~·1 Dally PUot. that the um may bav• caUHd u.. 11111.ct lnfectiou ~ n.ew1 reports about prevloa law1ulta aaalftlt tlM R.lcbmoad. Laat Au,uat, a Denver woman won a $6.2 million 1ud1ment a a atnat Robln• a ter 1he testlfled abe 1uffered a m1acan1ase and wu fciftd to under10 an emer1ency by1tereetom1 aft.er belna fitted with a Dalkoa Shield. ""----.-...-... ................ _... t After Crit. W~ CAP>-OeriMa.r.wi ...... •Pr 11111• Cal18r ... , Jwt 11 botan 8ftll' ......... 'Cuter II ..... ID •byamal Job .. .-w be ---ol Ulil WMt. ..... . ~ ,,_. _. oo l:lf'• •rt'e ..... ~~......can. ... \1111 '.. =~·:=::.oaiF··~~a::.o::-.: .. ~----·--Home"1 -.•a11at'"9td. lt ln .......... -twO •11 of .......... ad l~hmU1q ln adVaDC!e ol I cllddlmi wlMl&.W to --\1111 RepabllHn .....-u.1 'aft: Bt'drw••••A••--•••A•ee ... __ :.~:10N (AP) -'ftM S&a~ ~ .... todaJ It -r ~ taat all ao AIMric&M '*• ......_ ln Te~four mootba aao .,. all" and maala wttJUa' U..11.s. Sm UMn. · V aow. tbe depa.rt.mmt bu Mid tt could DOt be cmalD ~ ~ Americw. lak• .._.,. tn tbe •JnbNQ ~v. '· "" au a.uve or tMl 80lnt had not been tahD elle b,y tbe1r ,, Upton. (Related IUwy, '") But a departmHt otnclal. detlinkl1 to be ktntlfted. aald toda)' .. tbe Pl'9DODderance ol evldeoee" ihowtq tbe ~ea to •• be allft ud all wtt.llln t.be ~ wu accumulated in a "relatively recent pe ............. - .. · Mr Ellle• .. r..,,ie •• , ........... se .... ELES (AP> -A fire in a home for the a1ed _-.. lnjur t aix of the 119 residents today. flreflghLera said. e six confirmed injuries, but It's probably goln1 to be more than that because it's a home for the aged," said fire spokesman Ned Cbatlielc:l ~. An emer1ency medical station was set up at the tcene to '· treat the realdents of Mount Zion Towers on South Central -.; Avenue .. l'EC /fleen •• C•• f'efler•I ,._.,. .. WASHING TON CAP> -The Federal Eledion Comm1aaion mov~ today to cut off federal fu.nda for four presidential cand1dales who have faltered lo the early primaries. The comm.laston voted to terminate eligibility for matching funds for Democrat Edmund G. Brown Jr., the California governor, and Republicans Howard H. Baker, Philip Crane and Bob Dole, because they did not meet minimum vote.getting standards in the primaries. Federal Jaw says matching funds must be cut off 30 da~s after a c~dale fails .to get at. least 10 ~rcent or the vote m two consecutive primanes in which he oarticipates. f',.._PageAJ NUCLEAR PLANT. • • a nd th·e doors. take surface contamination slides and make readings or the door They will take ex tensive radiation monitoring," Polon said. The radioactive gas had been trapped In the airlock of the plant, crippled in the March 28, 1979. accident. When purging of a trace of , adioact.ive gas began Monday, the airlock contained an estimated 47 millicuries or k~~· The containment b bu 111ore t.baa a million times tamount 1be NRC staff aaid It would try to penuade resldent.s near • tbe plant that venUng more gas into the atmosphere poses no health threat. "I knew it was going lo happen, but I don't like it .. There are a lot of people upset with it," said Middletown Mayor Robert Reid. whose community lies next to the stricken plant. People livj"'.! near Three Mile f're91P.,,eAI PINTO •.. more than 150 townspeople, reporters and lawyen, abowed "you can be a big corporation and the jury will acquit you, if you have a fair story." He added: 'Tm grateful, relieved and proud of the verdict. Tbe Pinto bas been maliO*I fOI' years, but we were tried by a jury of 12 people in the , heartland of America and all 12 ; found UI not &uihy. That says : somethinl." ~· The panel's declslon came in it.a fourth day of deliberations. • Cosentino kept his eyes downcast u t.be Jury of seven men and five women walked by him. He 1book the hands of fellow proeeeuton and said to o.ne, "We eave it all we bad." "The jury haa spoken and tbat'a o ur system . I'm dluppolnted of course, but ' that '1 tbe way the 1y1tem worb, '' Coleatlno laid. DAILY PILOT Ti.Or-~o.11¥1'1191,--..... -. --~ ....... , ..... ,""°'-,~-ltllllleC-. ,.....c.---..... ,_ -........... , .. ..., -(;Ml.a -... .._, -· -~ _,_,,_ ... ft ... ....,,.._,~ .. -""""c-t" ............. -.. ..-----_,.. __ ,.......,._, .... -... ~.o. .. -.c-i-n.a ............ ..._ __ _ -·•·09tt9 " ... ,......... ... 0.-.. ..._ Is land have opposed venting gas, and NRC assurances that any releases would be well within federal radition safety limits have bee n met with distrust. "Venting ls just the cheapest and easiest' way of removing the gas." Reid said. In choosing venting as the removal met.bod, the NRC staff rejected plans to absorb the gas with charcoal or compress and bottle it. Both methodl were couidered too time coasumlng and technoloeicalb dllficult, the st.ff said ln its report. • "I rearet to report t.bat the technology for cleaninc up a mass concentration or krypton gas is not as advanced as J had o n ce hoped ," said Harold Denton, NRC director of nuclear reactor regulation. The staff report noted that some psychological stress is likely in s urrounding communities during venting, but the staff added. if the gas remains in the containment structure, "it is likely tbat future accidental releases . . . will occur" causing even gteat.er psychological stress. Offlciala say radioactive releases during last year's accident posed no health threat. The overheated reactor came within 30 to 60 minutes of a meltdown of its radioactive fuel. which could have caused major cont.mlnatiao of the area. Rites Slated Friday for Mr. Kalmbach Memorial servlce1 will be conducted Friday for Newport Beach realdent Kenneth M. Kalmbacb wbo dled Tuetday •t the aee of 28 after 1ulfeil.nc a cerebral hemorrhage. He WU the IOD of Newpdrt Beach attorney Herbert Kalmbach. Services will be conducted al 3 p.m . in the main sanctuary of St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church in Newport Beach. Mr. Kalmbach attended s chools in Ne wport Beach, graduating from Newport Harbor High School. H e earned a business admlnl.IU'aUoo da1rff at USC where be wu afflllated with Kappa ~ma fraternity. For the past two years, be wu director ol leuinl for HopkiDI Deve~ment Co., a Ne~rt Beacb·bued commercial developmellt ftnn. llr. Kalmbub wu a aporta eathqalut who w•• active ln loc:al buket.Hll le.,un. He wu at.o a melilber of the Newport Hubor c~!~fo of the USC alumni ors n. Betldll b1I father, be leaves bia mother. Barbna; brother Kurt Kalmbach, and 1t1ter, Laurm KlnMy. Hla father wu form~al attorney to form« t~taon. ne faaallJ bH IU(Jelted •••Oi'lal donatloDI la Mr. KahnbMb'• 1*D• to Ute Hoaa llemoi1al no.ptt&J FoundaUon. Coa1truotaoa on the new Parifto Oolllt .._.,9 ....... "e~ Upper Newper\ I_., e.ild ~-.11.:::•r ...... .......... _ ......... . Clfi.. IDw ~ ... -......... Nl~:.--maa fOr tbe Man blNd ftrm. Nici tbe4 .. co.otr11t taH~et to IM IWaJ"dldtoUM~ •llE#AI l'Outtao review b7 e ataa. AUofmlo.er.&•aome.. He. Mid. tM awanl "'"Pd Ille made wtUdD tbe Mat two Wllb •nd COllttru~Uoa wm IM&ID lmmed1Mal1 def'U..t. Ttte com,_, wbldl bldlt tbe Coron. del llar ;..;.;;;.,. and bu worked an lbe eo.t. 11 .. ud OraqetrMW..,., 1abat.JUedaMd of •·• JDilBoD for the project. dlle low•tolaluubmltted. Tbe new bridle eveatua.U,y will replace the fou.r·lue atructure that la nearly~ years old andt.bat repre1eau one of the elt)''a bi1aesttnftlc botUeDeca. The new atructun wW bave three lanes of traffic in each direction with an extra westbound lane for can btad•n1 northbound on Dover Drive. T b e project include s improvementa and expansion of lhe highway interaectiona at Bayside and Dover drives as well as conatructionof the brtqe. Estimated leaath or construction is 18 months. Soffa explained that the contract calls for the existing bridge to remain ope n to traffic during conauuct.ioo of the new ltnlc:'l\U'e which is to be built to tbe north. The old bridge will be demoli!hed when the new one is finished, he said. House OKs Oil Profits Tax Measure WASHINGTON CAP) -The House today approved President Carter's proposed "windfall profits" tax after defeating a final attempt by Republicans to make the levy more acceptable lo the oil industry. The vote of 302·107 sent the measure to the Senate, where congressional action on the S227. 7 billion tax la expected to be completed oat weH. ''This ia a very equitable solution to a very difficult problem -and one that la IOOd for America," Rep. AJ Ullman, D·Ore., chairman or the Ways and Means Committee, told colleagues. Rep. John Rousse lot, R-Cali! .• assailed the bill as "a major tax . . . that will end up oo the backs of con.swnen. You can't sock It to the big oil companies . . . they'll just pass it aJoai to the consumers." Flnal passage came after the House, by a 227·185 vote rejected an effort Jed by Rep'. Bill Archer, T·Texas. to aencl the bill back lo a Senate·House conference committee. Navy Dancer Stripped of Rank Again I MOFFETT NAVAL AIR STATION (AP) -A Navy enliat.ed man demoted to airman laat week wu reduced in rank agaln -tbla time to a1rmaa'1 apprentice -after admiUiq be broulbt "dl.acred1t to the Navy" by dancinl u a male 1trlpper. Jeffrey Bandy Ill pleHed 1ullty Wednesday to viobUq uniform retulatlon1, dlacredltiq tbe Navy u4 taJdac two days~ una\ltboriled IMYe in a b8l.rinl before Capt. R.F. Marryott, commancl1D& •cer' at Motr.U.. BandJ WU fined $100 • mantb for two monthl and restrict.cl to the bue for 80 daya. The bale is located about 35 miles aoutb of San Franciaeo. The five.year Navy vetetu, who moonlighted •t a Pnmcmt nightclub aa a male cleeer. wu demoted from petty officer third clau laat -week after Navy offtdala ordered blm not to ltltp out of biJ unt.torm. Bandy wa1 one of 12 male daocen featured at tbe fremoat ~tub which ta ~ IDOltl1 ~~U:u.He.:"'t!:P.:: Nav1, •• wtllle dllOlutu a 0.. Conduct Medal Ptlinei to blt 1hort1. .Amhull Un..Jved SAN JUAN, hlrtO llteo <AP> -Terrorlat advoeatH of iDde~ for Poerto IUco we,. bdtvW ~.,.. ,.. .. aa:abuth WednHd•J of • aovtl"DIDIDt car cltl'Jial...,.. tJ .S. Anti llMD bot DO llOliP lmmedlatelt clatill•d r•~lltJ. No OM wa llal't .. uaty. HOLLYWOOD (AP> -Jay 8Uverla••l• portra1•d tbe tnalted JDd1u compuJon Tanto ··~l.oatBaaV''te~ Hrlff and fllm•t but •etor Ola1ton Moore •aa told a aemorlal aervl•• tlaat IU•erlleel1 11•41 a llfelon1 lead.lna role in ftllat. for IDdlU people. ii~ wbo .,..,.. ... We ,,,._ iD U. m....._. TV lll't. from .. to lilrl. ·apoke .t a WedaHdar nS1llt Hnlee •tteaded by about 400 people. lloore uld Sllvertaeell wu a aouree ot ttnaClh to him. aDd a true •"kemo aabe'' -fa.ltbful friend. SUverbeel1, 12. died of complluttona of pne•monla llareh 5. Ills body wu cremated at a prtnte tenice durt.q the put..-, ad Ida ..._ are to be aeaaend cner the f UDlly farm ot bil blrtb ta CU.ada, on the Six N.UOU lndlan Beeerve near Brantford. Ontario. Moore IJ)Oke at the service In a buabed w&ce, without weartna the Lone Ranier'• muk or the maak·like daik a.IUH1 be bu uaed In recent publi c appeanmces. When camenmeo apj)roacbed after hia eulotY, the 72·)'Ul'-olcl Moore quickly put on the dark ""H'I. "We are all saddened.'' Moore told reporten. "The world lost a CHAMBER. • Commerce Executive Manacer Nate Reade alao said bis oraanizaUoo ls independent of the clty. "It ia better to financially dlvor~e yourself from the city," Reade said. Asked lf sharlog Irvine Clty Hall oftlce a~ce might put the chamber in a peculiar situation if it wanted to crlticiu the city, Hoffman laid, "No we are all adults. Jt la a similar situation to that of a reporter sitting at the presa table In the Council Chambers." Carter Wim In Delaware DOVER . Del. <AP) Preaidenl Carter bH swept Delaware'• first Democratic caucus, wlnnlng rouahly 60 percent of the delegates to the upcomlDastatecoovenUon. Ofthel72delegatescbosentoeo to the st.ate convention May 24, 104 went to Carter and 40 to Sen. Edward M . K e nned y . Twenty-eight were uncommitted. Wednesday's caucus was the first step ln the delegaLe·seledion procedure, which will give Delaware 14 votes at tbe Democratic Nati o nal Convention. However, neither Carter nor Kennedy officially won any national dele1at.es since those goinl lo lbe state convenliol) do not have to contlnue with the c aodidat.e they supported Wednesda,y. and tbe lndWa people loved ,., very Vet')' mueh. Tb• lndlan CAUM WU ulmo9t ln b.la mind a& all tlmea." An IDd.lu spiritual service allo .. Dl•mect for Sllvwbeela, • family IPOkelman Mid. Friends aai d SlJverbeela worked tlreleuly on causes to aid the unfortmate ud diaadv~. and be founded tbe lndJan Acton Worbbop ln Hollywood In Ute JJ809 • Born Harold J•y Smitb, be Wll elven the nickname , Silverheela by hia 1raodfather because of bis unusual hl&b·ldcldng ru.ruUng style. An atiileUc •ix·footer, he flnt came to Loe Angelea in the early 1830s with a professional lacro111e team. When be turned to acting u.._.. in 1938 he used the nickname profeuiooally. Hi• name was let•lly cban&ect in wn. IAD FAll!WEU. -Clayton Moore , TV's "Lone Ranger," leaves funeral services for Jay Silverheels, who played Tonto, in Los Angeles. Moore eulogized Silverheels as a lifelong fighter for Indian people. wonderful man. I t.bougbt of Jay as a brother, I loved him very much. "He wu a fighter for the Jodlan people. be loved his race, Tom Shelly, a longtime friend. buah>eaa aasoclat.e and part·time •tent for Sllverheela, said that after Sllverheela suffered a 1troke 511.a years ago, "Three things kept him alive; his tenacious, warrior-like, fighting, full-blooded Mohawk spirit; his heart, the bfpest part of him. and Mari. hi.a wife ." Sllverbeela' survivors include his wife of 30 years. Mari Dlwroma , and their four children. Kidnapped Inf ant Located Unharmed LAS VEGAS (AP> -A 10.mom!H>ld boy abducted from bl• Las Vecas home by a muted gunman was recovered unharmed in San Bernardino less than 24 boun later. Tbe kidnapper apparently "had a change of mind," the FBI says. The infant, StfteD lllller Jr., was abducted Tuesday ni&bl. then left at a hospital ln the Sout.bem california cit.Y about four boun later by an untnown Ailing Shah Sees Surgeon person who left a note saying be or abe was a drug addict and wu \alable to care for the tot, Joseph Yab&onaky, the head of the Las Ve1u FBI office, said Wednesday. About 12 hours later. Yablonsky said, a security guard at the hospital received an anonymous call saying the child bad been abducted in Las Vegu the night before. "It Jim seems lb.at somebody bad a cti.:nie of mind on this UUng." Yablonsky said. Fa am P.,,e AJ KIDNAP •.. PANAMA CITY . Panama <AP> _ Famed Capt. Cashdollar A · He said Dtxoo tried to get hts m er 1 can s urge 0 0 wife to come back to him and Michael DeBakey will fly their children but was refused to Panama to ex•mlne Shah Mohamm•d Reza The ctuldren were not at tht.· Pahlavi and will remove McGraw home. hl I if ... _ After an hour. Dixon tied up s sp een u ... decides the the McGraws and left in their operation is necessary, a t:a r with has wife. Cashdollar spokesman for the doctor said. says. McGraw worked free of tus Although the s hah's bo nds and tele pho ned the personal physician said sheriff's offi ce. Ort leers later the operation was needed. f o und the M c G r a w car DeBakey's s pokes man abandoned in Corning a nd sa ld Wedneaday lo learned that Dixon had a car of Houston that "no one is has own. committed to surcery. The alleged kidnapper's wife ;::~'U!e :t!l. ~ave to was reported by Fhoenix. Ore .• DeBatey, alt.bouah best police to be safe in a motel there .. Halt Plane known for heart •"-e"', Wednesday. suffering only -• ·" mlnor bruises. TITOGRAD, Yuplavia (AP> ls well vened ln aurcery Orange County authorities -A flock of aeaplJ.a flew into of tbe spleen and ot.ber said tbia morning they have the left ftlli.oe ol a Y\ll'OSlaV organs and heads the placed a hold on Dixon in Red AirliDee Boe.l.QI 7'Z7 u tbe plane department ol •urcery at Bluff for eventual prosecution on st.rUd its takeoff for Belarade tbe Baylor Colle1e of the child stealing charges Wednesday ~n~l1~h;t~·~=::::=::=:~;M;::;edi==cine===·::::=========::::::.........;.:le;v;e=led::..::be::::::.;~;·~=-=-~~~~ 7 \ f I ; • St ti T\ IH A ~ er wf tr pr t• fe 'C I" ! ( l ' , ............... LOS ANGELES (AP> - DeHlftlaUon ot up to '15 percent of .... Anaeles pubtie ...,,. could be carried out uamc "a muJU«bnic" plan.accordiqtoa wit.Qesa at the school aystem's Superior Court 1nte1rauon trtal. Jobn Caupey, a retired UCLA biatory protesaor, wu called to .. eter's81i8ult'•9 S:till Rising . Fedenl diluter oftletall baft told I.Me BlliDon reakleDta they'd beti.r aot relu beeaue tM &Me la CODU-tn• to die ud spreed. ~a many u Ulbomes. .. .,~ .......... of Lab ~ feel tbe wont ii bebind us. That'• not true," Mid BW lla)'el', federal eoordlnaUna olflcer for tbe ederal Emer1enc1 llanuement AamcY. •''We urae you to leave Immediately,.. Mid an oftldal statement aimed at resldeata whole homes remain below tbe 1.-root level. THE A&•Y coars or Enaineers said their computaucm. abow t.be lab will continue to rise from Ua Wedneeday readin& of 1.-.25 feet above sea level to "at leaat 1.257 feet by April 4... . Ottlda1a aaid the amount of water pourln1 Into Lake Elsi.Dore from the San Jacinto River decreased allebtly Tuesday while the amount of water flowing-out of the newly-cleared drainage canal increued. THE CO&PS of Engineers. wblcb cooUnues to widen the channel, estimated Wednesday that ~ channel flow wu about 610 cubic feet per second. But the Corps pe11ed the water flowinl into the lake at a rate of J 900 cu&lc feet per second, more , than five times the outllow rate. I { __ sr._:4_TE_) testify Wednesday by the IDtep-ation Project, one of the plaintiffs seeking a wider pro1ram of mandatory deseiregatioo in the S40,000 pupil district. Flying over San Diego is new $300,000 medical helicopter of UC San Diego Medical Center. When Project "Life Flight" beJins M~da}'. it will be the first in California and tt\ird in the nation with a doctor in the fligt)t crew. The mercy copter carries complete life support systems and monitoring devices, can take to the air in five minutes and land i.n an area only 60 feet in diameter. The like ta e~ to remain at that peak for more than two weeb before slowly st.artine to recede. But It will remain above 1.2&5 feet -the &evel at which damage ia done to the city - until mkl-llay. Lake Elsinore bas risen more than 20 feet aiDce the flooding began. which translates to a growth in surface area from 2, 700 acres to 6,200 acres -all in less tbao a month. 1be coming two-foot rise will increue that to 6 ,SOO acres . said Maury Peereoboom. Corps spokesman. Like Lake Elsinore, normally • tiny Baldwin Lake, near Big Bear Lake lo the San : Bernardino Mountains, bas been ;: rising with nmoff from recent" ; storms. Jlm Dotson, an engineer : for lhe Big Bear City : Describing a multi-ethnic system, Caughey said there would be three or more races cepresented at many schools which bad white enrollment between 2S and 40 percent. Draft Ford Effort Set Community Services District . ; said be betieved three buildings : were standing in several inches of water. Committee Organized to Urge Entry in Race AS 11IE FEMA officials spoke at a Wednesday news conference. more of tbe Lake Point Mobile Home Park disappeared under water. All but two of the park's mobile homes have been evacuated. BALDWIN LAKE had risen one foot lo 15 days to 6,705.7 feet above sea level, be said. "Laite Baldwin doesn't have anything like the watershed that Elsinore does." Dotson said "The lake would fill at 6,746 feet," Dolson said, "but only Noah's ever seen it that tugh.'' ...... 11q1aen1 SACRAMENTO CAP> -San Diego builder Harvey Furgatcb, who as - sociated with Gov . Edmund Brown Jr . during the anti-Vietnam War cam - paign , i s the new chairman of ru•o.-TCH B r o w n ' s presidential campaign. · Fursatch. 52, who said be bas beaded varioUs San Diego County campaigns, was named to succeed Tom Quinn, 'lonl·Ume Brown confidant. The campaign's announcement Wednesday said Brown named Furgatch late Tuesday before leaving for a seven-day campaign tour of Wisconsin. PlaatsAppre1'ed SACRAMENTO <AP) -The state Energy Commission has given final approval to the construction or a geothermal power plant in Sonoma County. The commission also reported Wednesday that it gave first-step approval to two other plants. including an oil burner that could become the nation's first to be converted to methanol. Gas Nen Year SACRAMENTO CAP> Southern California will get Canadian natural gas by next year, thanks to a new agreement between the federal land agency and a California pipell:ne firm. James Ruch of the U.S. Bureau of Land Management and Harry Prudhomme of Pacific Oas Transmission Co. signed a document Wednesday giving the firm permiss ion to expand pipeline capacity over federal land in Idaho and W asbington. SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -A coalition of Republicans bas organized a Draft Ford Committee in California to urge former President Gerald Ford to jump into the race for the GOP nomination. "He won't run for the fun of it," William T. Bagley, a San Francisco attorney and spokesman for the group said Wednesday. "He wanta to know if there's an outpouring of public sentiment." Bagley and Los Angeles attorney Charles G. Bakaly held news conferences in their respective cities to a.mounce the draft effort: THE COMllI'ITEE includes Callfomla ~bllcans who bad backed Geor1e Bush, John Connally and Howard Baker. said Bagley, who was served a Ford appointment to the federal Commodity Futures Trading Commission. ''I have felt. . President Ford ls the s candidate ... - that the Republican Party can put up in the November election." said Bakaly. who wa s a member or Ford's 1976 .A .. ·.'l·::-<-··· ·• : .. ,.ffi. ' ' ~·· ·.--., ,"'' . •'. ·; :,.""*°'l .ii" t .. '. . • \~': c a m p a i g n PLUOtt steering committee. Among tbe 70 Ford supporters listed by the committee were former Casablanca Records chief Neil Bogart. singer Tony Orlando and industrialist Leonard Firestone and J. Robert Fluor. longtime GOP money men. THE COMMl'JTEE said in a prepared statement that Ford had proven be "is a stable experienced, strong leader, whose abtlity to reason, sort out options and make clear thoughtful deci s ions is desperately needed once again to get us out of this mess." Ford, who was scheduled to consult with President Carter Sex Education 1111 Buried By Opponents SACRAMENTO (AP) -The rellgion·based movement against sex education bas returned to the Capitol and buried a bill to allow televised sez education in the Los An&elea schools. After bearing from a parade of sex education opponents. the Senate Education Committee voted 10-1 Wednesday to lcill a bill, AB542 by Assemblyman Herschel Rosentbal, D-Los Angeles. THE ASSEMBLY bad already passed il with liWe opposition. One roe. John Banducci of a group called Lifeline in the San Francisco area, said a vole for the bill i s "a vote for pornography and perversion.'· The measure would have allowed Los Angeles schools to .show sex education programs offered by a local irustructiooal televlsioo station. ROSENTHAL SAID the programs covered such topics as pregnancy, childbirth, parenthood and rape preveotioo. Current law allo~ parent.a to see all boob, films and other materials to be offered in sex education classes and then decide whether their children can attend. School officials say few parents keep their children out of class and even fewer review the materials. GOURMET MARKET DON'T FORGET MARCH 17, . .......; - DELANEY__;:::~ e ST. PATRICKS DAV! MORNING FRESH PRODUCE BROS. SEAFOOD Lg. Solld Read Green Cabbage ...... ltc.lb. a.-Bakln1 Potatoes ............. lie lb. Local lC-Sweet Strawt.enies .... 8k bMt. · Wblte ec;:nJ OnloM (new crop>2 lbll t•r Zic La. Sile a.aallle .•.......... 3te e1t. s.. A1mr1caa ••a••• .............. ae lb. Fresh Swordftab .................... 5.18 lb. <areal tb Bar·b-Q or broil. especially when basted with lemon butter> . DELI DEPARTMENT t lb. ceflo.Plk aa~:.a,eora "8eoll .. tk lb. 0eaa.,•1,,.. cre•med IPIUCll .... 1le pe. UQUOB DEPArl'llENT . Dela.,'• Prt•ate LaMI ClaamPNIM, bnDl1 •.......... ,,. .. ,z..a. ( .... )1'7 ... St.t ... •18"dal ON I t Ml°' lrtlll Wlllillr.e1 (4*> .... It.• .,._.,,. Prt•ate LaW <'JM mil> v• a.eeora.a .. ·················. 1 ... ...... (DIJZ ... ) rei. t.71 .................. .. Gn .. Manaler CDlll'4t.> ,.... ........... 7.tl <U..-Prte11 Dt ~leel ... Tu> today in Washington, bas said he would become a candidate lf be receives broad-based s upport from Republicans, Democrats and independents. ingvalues. ----------------~ I Aft( 11111-I UIMll 77 . DlllER 5111111 _, () 0 c ,, 0 z I .. ~r Good '°' two pieces of the Colonel"• ()riQlnal Recipe ci'ltcMln Of Extra C'1IOY cN<:'Mn. l>klS a 111no1e serving 01 muned potatoes and gr8V'f and a roll. Limit two ottera per OOUl>Of' per customer Customef pays all appftcabte salel tax. Offer e•plrea Maren 22. 1980. 1 Prices may vary a t panic1pa11no location• Good I only In Southern C.llfomoa where you see ,he I Colonel s I 1C41 Window ban!l9t. Good '°' 9'gl'lt ~ of IN Colonef'S C>ngfnal ~~Of htra o-tspy c:NcMn. tour l'Olla. A ctlOkie of elttlef a large oole ,,_ Of ;a 1.-ge lftMtled poCatoee ~ amell gravy. Umlt two oNen ps coupon ps euttomet. Cwtomer pays a ll ~ ......... Offer a~ Marcfl 22. 1980 Pnc-es may"*"' at petticlpat•ng ioc.11on1 Good only Hl SoulNm C.ltlom1a wf!ere you aee the Colonel's lace window banner. z 0 (l_ :::> 0 u ---·-----· -- Tlae WestcJiff Plaza Claallenge We inuite you to find the 'store or service establishment that does not offer prompt, courteous seruice- and tell us! I t • "(. •• • J ... r. U ~an be 1&ld that. ::: Spirited Race Ahead By all indications. lt will be a spirited campaign · ' a mong the 10 candidates who are running for three seats on the Irvine City Council in June. Growth -Its pace and its ramifications -will . . apparently cmer~e as the principal issue. " The 10 who have filed their election papers to run June 3 are incumbents Dave Sills. Mary Ann Gaido and Rill Vardouli ~. Ja.mes Kinca nnon. owner o f a n architectural firm: Beverly Wright. a former member of the College Park Homeowner~ Association board . Dave :!° Baker. an a ttorney: P a ul Todd Jr .. a school teacher :..; Gilbe rt Nelsen who 1s spearheading a drive fo r councilmanic dislricts: J ames G row. a businessman. and :· ~ Michael Barnes :• Expectations are hagh fo r this campaign since it 1s ~ coming a t a crucial tame in Irvine's development as a ~. city. The community 1s heading mto the 1980s after a ;, d ecade of spcctaC'ular ,:!rowth. :: A city council campaign. like any other for public ~ office, mev1tabl.v generates stron~ emotions among th<' :.. • contestanL., And urowth 1s an issue that inspires some :-, ,., ) • t-o ugh-and-tumble rhetoric on both sides of the question. • ~ · The citizens will be well served if the coming ~ campaign is vigorously contesl t·d a nd thoroughly :• debated. Ann dean . .. .. •. :~ ;. . .. t . Cable TV Study I rv1n<.• City Coun<'il members took a s tep in the right direction Tues day when they told the staff to examine possible revisions to the contract granting Community Cablevision Co. a is-year non-exclusive franchise. Since the passafite of a state law r emoved the city's power to regulate cable television rates. it seems only right that the city be allowed to modify the franchise contract. Shortening the contract and making adequate performance a condition tor keeping the fra nchise would be two positive moves. Shortt'ntn~ the contract would e nable compl•tmg firm!> to offt·r c·able tdevis1on to the city al reduced rates Making performance CA contraol requirement would encourage lhl• franchise holder to provide good service. ThcM' two steps. combined with an active search for firms which could immediate ly compete with the current ._ -franchise holder. would ~o a long way towa rd right mg e:;· some of the wrongs created by the s pecial interest state :~:· legislation. :!:: Immediate competition would give city residents a ':;? way to jud~l· the fairness of Community Cablevis ion Co. :-< r ates and th(' a dequacy of its service ~ ... ~ ~ ,. ~ .. .. .. ·~ .. .. .. . .. •• !' ~ ~ ' I .. ~ • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Pilot. Other views expressed on this page are thOM of their authors and artists. Reader comment is 1nv1ted. Address lhe Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Phone (71 4) 642·4321 Boyd/ British Driving By L.M. BOYD ''How come the Britis h drive on the left side of the r oad?" inquires a client. Because the hlghway me :1 centuries ago habitually at- tacked coaches fro m the right, according to the his· torians. Supposedly, left-side driving therefore gave the potential vlct.ima a slightly helter chance of spottina the robbers in advance. Why the robbers didn't s witch to hit from the left is not explained by said hlstortans. You know how elephants go down steep hills? They sUde on their mldsecllons v•ce presldenu tend lo be Dear Gloomy Gus Now comes newa that. tbe n a tlon'1 bllllon -dollar computerized attack al9rt ay1tem breaks down under pre11ure Juat like a , human beta1. could ... the baman ltnk. Maybe .... d11 computers will beset comput.tt without human IMei'flleee. • • fond of ~ wall plaques that read: "There 1s very lit· tie future in being right when the boss is wrong." Presi- dents are more Inclined to like William Wrigley's ob- servation: ''When two men in a business always agree, one of them is unnecessary." More than 50 perce~t of the people who appear to at· tempt suicide by poison don't even come close to any real danger of dying. Or so con· dude British researchers. Maybe 30 survive after con· side rable ri!!k. And 19 per. cent do indeed give up their hves. Q. How many of the 12 Apostles died a natural death'! A. Only John. Q . Who's tbe most auc· ce11ful music composer of all time? A. Credit Paul McCartney with tbat .u..t1netioa In the matter of money. With 43 songs between 1962 ancl 19'78 that each has sold more than a million coples. Ile'• alao said to be the world's moet succeuful recordlns artist with 100 million sinatea and 100 mJIUon albums. II ' ixon Pardon StilI Hurts Foret JlOn WOHftt ~ -TM ftnt ... lllt ,-uou I WU ........... rillt Co Ta.II Ola,... Ulllwentl1 were the .... , n, did ronl parc1oo " ... , W• ..,. • del1! Tbat -'*· Uoa, •l&dtb dUft,.nt. wu ... •J.lf ••••• u ••• ...•. , ..... Gerald._.. ... ..., .... oa people'• 111lad1 U.ne d111. w~leh 11 w~ete he w ••t.id to be ......... told lM Ntw\'Ol'tl TlmN the obvloua truth that flMaJd Reqan woWd _,. a pnt. lY aure mr ln November. "l voted acalnat Ford ln me becau.e of the pardon," ~finl que1Uoner 1ald. "Do you think there wu a deal with Nixon, or do JOU UlllM Ford dtd tt became ht ~ It w11 &ood fOI' tbe tOUnLtyT''- 1 WM botb. IN Wllft'ING a book about Ford ftve 1urs a90, I eoncluded th1t a dMl was m• durlq bovn of eaavnwatliDa bltwen tb• Ut..,·YIH pretld.at and Prwlclmt IUcbard Nlxoa'• cblef of it.an. AluUldlr Rats. I cbl't know ~ the word.I -"U NlsoJl ~l1na. I'll 1rant tbe pardon -were actuallj 1poltm. But 1 do know that Hala came bedr to tbe White Houle amid ortvate talk ol 1 pardon - and Nlxon then •i.ppeci down, maktq Ford preAdent. That does oot mean that Ford didn't sincerely belteve tbe pardon -for the c:rtmea of Wat.erpt.e -wu beat for the country. "Puttln1 W at.er1ate behind ~." wu ~ pbrue at tbe Ume. IW•iin·. Cy? Mailbox I allo t.tdllk, lbr bta~ UN caunu. qatn anct •••ta 1n rort Wort.It, dud. tbe panlon la P'onf• Cbappequlddlell • rr RB aaco•a a candldaW to •top ae.au, the former~ ldtnt will want to talk about tbe fact that the naUon'1 laflaUon rate wa 4.8 perceot wben he left Offtce tn tm -eompand wtlb almo.t 20 percent after Ulree yean of Jlmmy Carter. But flnt, I ..-pect, be will U.e to 01wer mcmt quntlont about th• oardoa than J dld. TboH quesiiam c:ouJd crtpp&e bla urty campatcnlat id tbe 1ame way that pel'loaa1 questlona bobbled Edward Ka:med.y. By the Ume Ford really sot aolna, It would probably be too late. Under the 1uff ocat1n1 new rules of presldentlal poUUca. hl5 late-ltart.ina candidacy would~ tricky at bat. Defendlna the pardon for a couple of well- • pubUdllO W..U MW '111 ble off before be had a reat cbMee. The arithmetic: of the rules ii terrible tor FOC'd. U be ent.n the race on. tbe daf after th• March 11 nlblol9 pnmary. he will be com~• tor a mu-lmum of 1,300 of the t,894 deJ- eaatea to the Repub.Ucan Na- tional QiovenUoa. Onty IU of tboH 1,300 deleaatea wiU be selected ln stat.ea where P'ord'a name can le1ally appear on prtm~ l.ftd caucus ballota. The ~=~--~t:ca'zr=~~ other candJdata llke George Buth. Howard Baker or John Andenion. Too many ct.lldltDes includiag the filing dates in New York. Peonsylvania and Texas will be passt-d by March 19. So It would be very tough . Ford might be wl~ to consider ataylng in retirement and bask- ing In bis ne w glow as the statesman above the slings, ar- rows and stumbles ot cam - pal1ns. May~ he could defeat Carter in Novem~r -which I'm sure he would dearly love to do -but. the truth is, he may not have u &ood a chance. now. t o de feat Reagan a~ Bus h or Anderson bu. IN FACT. A Ford candidacy m1aht en.sure Reagan's nomina· uon -and «kslroy .Republican c hances 1n November. Jerry Ford an 1980 I!. vt:ry s1m1lar to H u be rt JI u mp h r e y on th 1· OemocralJc •11de in 1972. When Edmund Muskie a nd llenr)" Jackson faltered a bit against George McGovern eight years <•RO. Humphrey rushed into the Florida primar) de<;troyinµ McGovem'i. more moderate op- pos1t1on and guaranteemg t~ nom1nalt0n ot a left1sh candidate wno appeared as extreme to most of the country as the nahtuh Reagan Ford''> ltme. I'm afraid. may have passed I le -and the rest of ui. might be a lot better off 1f hr s tayed Jt his home in Rancho M1ra~t· High ~entals Not All Landlords' Fault To the Editor: Mrs. RJcha rd Arevalos in the March 6 Pilot. blames greedy a partmeot owners a nd greedy homeowners for the dechne in school enrollments 1n addition to all the other sins for which we are blamed Sance my wife and I fall int(' hoth cat('f.tOrtf"S as homfflwner.., ;tnd aoartmt'nl building owners. we feel that occas1onath ....omrone should print a fe-. facl'i jbout us "greedy" people. We have a substantial portion of our hfe savings Lied up in the property -it was only by saving wh at we could out of two joint incomes, aft er taxes. that we were able lo purchase our fi rst home . These savings did not come as a result of rent control'>. s ubs idized housing allowances or food stamps. THE RENTAL property was acquired with the hope or being able to support ourselves in our declining years without having to depend on government aid. Is lhal wrong? Exorbita nt rent fees are caused by bureaucratically created shortages of rental prop- e rtl es among other factors •uch as morteage mone)' c06ts. mfiation. population shifts. rear of impo81Uoo of rent controls. The figure of $1.000 in advance ror accommodations for a faml· \y of five is not, ln my opinion. exorbitant considering that the :>wner normally wants first and last month's rent plus a security deposit. The landlord must have some protection t oo. slnce without payment of last month's rent many tenants have been known to vacate overni1bt, behind ln their rent, or without the 30 days notice to the landlord normally agreed to. That the security deposit is s necessity I can vouch for, since one tenant moved out taking the slldlDI bedroom closet doors with blm as well as leaving dama1ed paint, plaster and general dil· aster behind. Did Mrs. Arevalo. eve r try lo repaJr a bedroom wall wblcb had been used u a dart board? Jn spite of ProposlUoa 13 tu aavlnp otheT COits continue to e1ealate and the morts11e mUlt be paid. UttUUu, lnsuruce trash c0Uectlon, repairs aDd malntenance coat• rise eacb month and aomeol\e baa to pa.y for ao U\11. DALE JOHNSON a..rwtftnl To tbt Editor: It ... ms we help every fonlp country and their people and ne11ect OLll' own. We are oil. ao wllllnc to help all bolt P'OPle with weJlan and cart. But our lfllkw dtiaBI .,. ridHai .... aDd ••tllll uebalaaced ._. ................. ,.,.. NllM ......... Qlb ' rree country for us and the young people of this world Thev made 1t possible for Social <;ecunty to help the disabled and widows H 1t hadn't bet-n for t hem 'ome of us m1~ht be !>tarvmf: too My thank'> ~o to even ..,t•n1or r1t11Pn of lh..., l'Ountry Chen~h our oldt•r µcoµlt· th€'' need love and care' GLORIA J. OSWALD .. ..... ,. ... "'~·~,. To the> Ed.Jtor· In reading your March 4 1·d 1torial, .. Public Pension'> Mortgage Futurt'." I was strul·k by the fact that it contatned !ltatements that might be mis· lead in~. I speak us a classified school l'mployec who has worked m onl' position for 26 years. Would you belie ve that arter 26 years of service my monthly pension will be approximately S400 a month with a 2 percent cost-of-living m crease each year (hardly an ex · orbitant sum >" ALSO, I m 1~ht call vour atten t1on to the fact that school employees are part or the statt' retirement system and con tribute the same amount Into the fund as the state employees Ho wever. school employees' benefit& are lowe r than th<>se of the stat.eemplovecs The atate Legislature has re· fused to correct this lneqwty. If you care t.o investigate. you wlll Cind that many school classified employees will not r eceive a pen1lon or more than $300 8 month. lt seem.a to me that when your paper prtnts an edJtorial or this type. many citizens believe this is lrut or all public employees r should think you would prlnt the other side showing the meager pensions received by most classtned employees. NAME WITHHELD Petltle•l .. e.-N To tbe Editor: On March • I read your editorial concernln& Georse Osborne, director of die COdDty Env lronmental M ana1ement A1ency. You stated. "He bas served the county well, u far we as we can determine.'' He may have done, but not IO In Santa Ana Hetattll. I bad a dlscuaalon with bJm on behalf of the concerned penons Cor the preservation of Ataeia Street on Jan. 29, C!ODHmiq lbe abandonment or a emall strip oC Acacia. I TOLD RDl It wu vJtal for the rnldentl and our cblldren to keep our road and ftOt ha.e lt 1lven away to private tnwr.ta. that'OUI' Nlet1 waa at ~ke, To m1 dllmaJ I waa told, tf yo11 •'t tta It •. tDOv•. t ululd where to. 1111. aa1wer, ··~··· We lllad a publ\c bealiD- befo re the Board of Supervlson on this matter on Feb. 8. Our µetitions with 180 signatures "'e>re completely ignored I fl't'I 1t 1s ven !.ad not t<• < .1rt·. and we the t ;~xpayers have· to p:.i' lht·ir retirement !.alal) It 1::. in m~ opinion ludicrous. "<' the people have nghl.!. accordJOR to our Constitution IRMA A UATHAM S••~ 'fi•lll•••· To the Ed1lor Well here 1t c:ome'> n~ht off the back burner wht.'re 1l ha.., been simmerin" and back on t<1 th e .front. It '., the same old goulash and they haven 't even bothered to add seasoning to it I am rt'fernng to Wilson fUt~· lalk!'> m lhmtington Beach and Sa nt a An a whe re he s ays if Jarvis II pa55es the schools will automatically go out of busuwss. Riles states that 1mmed1atel) we will witness the dismantlin~ of all publie schools. He also -.tate.., he managed to keep the .... chool doon c>pen after Propos1 uon 13. but don't let an) body tell ) ou 1t was busmess as usual What Mr. Wilson Riles forgot lo mention in his bleeding hean ~peeches is that the cost of c ross-town busing has tripled since Proposition 13 passed. Mr. Riles says no more schools can be built: but do we need more" So many parents are putting their childre n out of public schools and enroUlng them in private schools to keep them Crom a two-to three-hour bus ride each day. many schools alt half empty now. VES. Mr. Wilson Rilefl lei ask· Ing us to give. give. give. for taxes so we will only have our Social ~urity at the end of our working days while he will rt- lire with over $50,000 each year. most of it coming from us over· burdened taxpayers. I wtsb Mr. Rile. would explain the lax security at the Los An1eles and Oran1e Couoty schools that is cotttn1 taxpayers over S2 millioa eacb year for vandalism.. I would Uke to bear hi s answer to why so manv pa~nts are sumR because the1.r r h1ld v.a" ~raduatf'd without be· 1nR tau~hl to n>.id These JUd~ menl'-Jr<• h.I\ 1ng lo ~· paid h' th•· "" r·• ~ 1•r.., not Mr H 11 ...... If \t r Hilt .., "'111 'ho\!. lhal ht ..., \l.Ork1nj? for w-la~p~,·l'r-; ht m 11' bt• ..,un· our po<:ketboo~., v. di JJta1n bt.-Opt'n to him ca:oRGE WILS07' 8•rff••••~ To thr Editor: As an active alumnus of USC <iOd a ~raduale Of the School Of Rusi ne~s . 1 can't believe th~ <;('hOOI I Graduate School or BUSI· ne'i!-> I would be awarding Dr. Armand lfamwner the E n· trepreneur of the Year Award. Dr. H3mmer is certainly no "free-entl'rpnser." He JUSt last week announced that he would be 1nst.1gatmg his S20 billion deal with the Soviets This. m s·p1te of t he1 r mvas1on or Afghanistan. Hard to beheve Wasn't 1t Khrus hchev who '>Bid tht.-y would hang us and that the busirws~men would bid for th«> rope' HA\' N. GIBBS Ge•ff lfl~• To lh(' Editor · I re-cet"ltly ~e1ved a newslet· ter from Irvine City Councilman Art Anthony expres sing his v1rws on Irvine city government •rnd pohUcs . "Here we go a gain ... 1 thought. "It's getting near elec- llon so the candidates are com· Ing out of the woods." I wa& very impressed by his ideas and comments; but SS· sumed lhey were just more elec- tion· year rhetoric. But I now undentand tbal he 1s not even up Cor election this \('Ur ' THIS IS the first time 1 have ever seen a Politician take the time or effort to write to resi- denu other than in a campaign. I think It ls a wonderfUl ldea. Perha .. it more elected of. fic:lab woukt 1hani hi• HDR of respomiblllty for commGnica- tlon with people there ....id be leea eyn,tcum 1bout ou.r tladen and about our 1overameat. On a closing note, lincere thanks to Anthony, Mvar Dave Silla and Councilman Vardou.lis for thetr eft'orta to malhtaln tbe Irvine aeoeral plan. MJ h•band and I are now buyln1 our teCOnd home ln Irvine. It '' an adting and lulfllllna experieQce to watch our town crow up alon1 wlth our family. RJDI N'Jjt.SON t :-..,.~~~~~~~.;;..;.,;,~~~~~~------"'!-~..;;.,;-.....::.;;;:;.:.;::::,:::.::::::~:.:...:~:;;:.::.:.;,;.:~~--~~-T~H~U~R~S~D~A~Y~,~MA~R~C~H~1~3,~1~9IO:.;_ ____ __;~..;..::~:..=.:~JF L Mystic lli11s _Honie Sites in Trouble? ~. l • f ,... :-im.. ..... ftnn thet l1mr11 a lailb ,_..bWtJ of fMrtlMr urtll •llPPaa• In ·--~-~ .. Al'M 9ildt........,. more than• ..... ..,. Tlaat report •H l11ued to couaell m•mlMn and Arch B•aeb Hel1bt1 homeowners Sat8"1Q. Tbe lateat 1eoloclc report deala wltll problems .spel't•C'ed bJ nve pt'Of*'ty OWMn CID TablU AYnU. where ~•table earth cracked Jc)Uta, bt1mt ud wtndows lp at least two ol UM TU.ltl Avenue homes. T•rry Dyk• ud Pat Ryan. wbo live at 1815 Tahiti Drive. fled their bWtop bome Nov.• when earth becan allpptq under the structure, joltln1 the t, 700-iquare-foot house and cracldna windows. But the two Six T-37 Air Force triiliung jets, wrapped in protective cocoons, tie up traffic on Sacramento's Garden Highway as they are towed from McClellan Air Force Base to a military dock on the Sacramento River. The jets are to be ferried to Oakland for shipment to Pakistan under an agreement executed before the Russians invaded Afghanistan. Off Your Knees, Kids NewSclwol Law Hasn't Got a Prayer BOSTON (AP) -The state Supreme CoW't ruled today that the new Mass achusetts law reintroducing prayer in public acbools violates the First Amendment guarantee of a 1eparate church and state. The court enjoined enlorcement or the statute, which called for teachers to ask If any student wished to lead a prayer and for the student then to lead the prayer. It provided for students not wishing to participate to be allowed to leave the rOom. I ''Tbe pro1ram as t eonw"P'•ed by the statute. and t Coas& as actually carried out in the schools, was reli1ious in character, for prayer is an invocation of the deity," the court said in a five-page order. "Here, then, we find a religious program which was sponsored and put into effect by state and local officials under aegis Af s late statute ; was conducted from day to day by teachers employed as public employees in public schools, and was carried out on public property during school time. and .Silver Price Plummeta lnNewYork as part. of the school exercise," the court said. The state argued that the law accommodates religion but does not sponsor it in the schools. The statute took effect in February. ··According to the precedents, the statute could not be saved from unconstitutionality by the fact that the prayers were spoken by volunteer pupils, or that pupils could choose to be excused from the exercise," the court said in today's order. The issue was brou&ht belon lbe court in a suit filed by a group of pupils and their parenta. The court said a more detailed optnlon would be laaued later. A similar suit bu been ftled lo federal court but no acUon bu been taken oa it. Several communities, notably Brookline and Newton, refmecl to carry out the prayer law. women bave l1nce returned and all the four Tablti homes are curreotly occupied. An lnveatl1allon by city offlciala showed crack& in the roadway and streu marb oo adjacent properties u well as Tbuntoo Intermediate School, located oa a aJiope directly above the affected homes. Geologist Lawnnee wu b.lred by the city t.o Investigate the earth movement and the resulta of bis bortnp and test.in& were revealed to city offlclala earlier this week. While lar1e craclu were observed oo a service road at the school, Lawrence said it does not appear that any structures occupied by studeota would be affected by any future slide movement. And while that ia good news t.o 1cbooJ oftlclala, property owners on the street below the 15-aere campus milht not be so lucb. the report indicates. The report concludes that a substantial portion of the study area might be built at~p a landslide, possibly a rock ~k slldine over more rock. But he warned no remectt..J action sbotald lake place below <See lllYSTIC. Pace .\%) Ford Motor Co. Finn Acquitted In Pinto Deaths WINAMAC , Ind. CAP> -A jury acquitted the Ford Motor Co. today on three counts of reckless homicide in the fiery deaths of three teen-agers killed when their Pinto sedan exploded rn flames when hit from behind Prosecutor Michael Cosentino and defense attorney James F Neal sat expressionless as the judge read the contents of the Validity Of Recall Queried A March 21 Orange CoW'lty Superior Court bearing was scheduled Wednesday on San Clemente City Councllwomu Karolloe Koester's claim that recall petltiom flJed a1ainat her should be declared invalid. Judge Edward Wallin set the date during an afternoon conference with attorneys for parties in the legal action brought by Mrs. Koester against San Clemente City Clerk Max Berg and Orange County Registrar of Voters AJ Olson. Mrs . Koester, elected to the council in 1979, is contending that the petitions do not meet a state code of Civil Procedure requirement that petition circulators declare where the petitions were executed. The petitions contain the signatures of 3,409 persons wbo said Mrs. Koester should face a recall test on June 3. The recall effort ia financially backed by land development in terest.s. Mrs. Koester is asking Judge Wallin to issue a writ of mandate that would invalidate the petitions, and thereby prevent the recall election from being held. Orange County Deputy County Counsel Terry Dixon. Olson's attorney. today termed Mrs Koester 's argument a ''bypert.ecbnical interpretation·· of the law. Dixon pointed out that the slate Elections Code requiremeota for reeall actions require petition circulators, under penalty of perjury, to state sueb information u their name, addreal and the dates aienatorea were collected. Circulat.on a1ao are required t.o say they saw the slpaturea beine made, tbat the stsnatures are valid and that the ctrculator ls a re1btered voter in the <See RECALL. Pa1e AJ) three envelopes containing the jury verdicts m the landmark case . the f i r st cr 1m1nal prosecution of a corporation for an a lleged product.~ defect Minutes lat.er. Coffntino said the verdict ··vindicates Ford Motor C.o • • He said there wu a ··strong poss1b1Lity" of an appeal of the JUdge·s rulings in the case Of t he ·verdict . the chief prosecutor said. "It means to me that manufacturers can make any kind of car they want to and it's up to the public to decide 1f they want to buy it or not. I do not personally believe that corporallons are dotng what they can to help the people of this country. but the jury apparently does " Defense attorney Neal S&Jd the verdict. wtuch was read before a packed courtroom that included <See PINTO, Page .\%) 'Lost' Kids Watch As Rescuers Search An hour-long search for two San Clemente boys reportedly lost in a storm dram ended with a rescuer getting stuck in the underground pipeline Wednesday attemooo. Al lt turned out, the two wayward youths were not.really lost and watched as firemen began searching for them b a newly installed drain near Camino de Estrella and the San Diego Freeway at 2 p.m. A motorist reported seeing several young hands waving from a grill on the CaJTrans drain pipe. He thought there were several youths trapped inside When firemen arnved at the sce ne . they found two 10-year-old boys who sa.id their two companions might still be trapped inside. Fireman Jim Pemgelly crawled mto the pipe to search for the youths. Carrying a flas hlight and radio. Pemgelly was trapped for it short lime when hi s shoulden; became wedged m the narrow pa,pe. To make matters worse. · PemieJb lost radio contact with the aeardl party waiting at the mouth of the drain. A.n hour after he started the search. PemgeUy finally made his way out of the pipe-almost a mile away from the point where he began. Fire Capt. Dick Worthrop a.aid the two youths feared lost wen found watching the whole search operation after they somehow managed to climb out of the pipe from another shaft. The pipe and adjoining shaf\4 ranged in width from 10 inches to three feet, firemen said. Northrop said the four boys were turned over to their parents and "counseled'" on the dange rs of exploring drain pipes. John Wayne Estate A $5 Million Boy? An offer of nearly $5 million b as been accepted for the Newport Beach home of the late actor John Wayne Papen filed in Orange County Superior Court Wednesday identified the buyer only as Mn. Burton G. BetUnaeo, "a married woman." Mrs. Bettiqea's cub offer of $3.47 million for tbe house, with I $100,000 deposit, WU accepted by executors of lbe eatate. Michael Anthony Wayne, Louis Johnaon and John S. Warren. An additional $1.48 million would be pald Irvine Company lo buy the waterfront land on which the house sits. Wayne leased the land in the Bay Shores section of Newport Beach for $6,000 a year. An April 1 heanng dale bu been set, before a superior cowt judge who wiU approve'or deny lbe sale, which is auided by tbe probate proceedings under which Wayne's estate will be settled. DurinC tbe April l beariGI the court could aell the six-bedroom home at 3816 8-ysbore Drive to a hither bidder, court documents said. But a seCClDd potential buyer would bave to come up with at c&ee SOLD, Pase AJ) • lt'.-e11 .Jela AeCtea Otisen Switche& IUD Lawsuits Mounting Tbe latelt ll"CNP cl pl•lnt.Ufl contmd lD Uae 4ICtkm tbat a atrtu atto.dled to the Ddm Sb.lela IUD c:aUNd baetena lo eni.r the utenaa and lead to Inf•~. Va.• pbarmaceatical ftnn. l!!aeb of tile plalatlffa 11 Heldnl '5 mlllioD lD uemp&ary dama1••· and otb•r compensation lncludlDI relmbunemflllt of medical and 1e1alfeel. Tbe Dalton Sbteld was ta.km ott tbe marbt lo m._ but tt la uUmat.ed that about OM mWklll of the IUD'• an atill lD '*· Lat~ a DlaHI' -- WOD a M.J millioll luqment a1aln1t Roble• a ter ab• te1Ufled tile aufferecl a mtae.,._.. Md WM ,..... to ~· •• .. ~.~1·.;.~1 wltha~ OAKLAND (AP) -Ed1ar Kaiser Jr., chairman of tbe buae Kaiser Steel Corp. and a realdHt of Vancounr alDee 1970, bu beeome a c ........ elthen. a San Franc:laeo aewa~ reported~. Af'ter Criti ... .. ~· Sb EWer .. Peeple l•J•r.fl I• •la~• -LOS ANGELES (AP> -A fire In a home for t.be aged injured at least six of the 119 residents today, firefi&htera said. "We have six confirmed iQJurt~. but it's probably eoln& to be more than that because It's a home for the •led," said lire spokesman Ned Chatfield. An emergency medical station was set up at the scene lo treat the residents of Mount Zion Towers on South Central Avenue ··- ... Ftt Me1'ea te €•t fi'ftl~Pfll F••fl• WASHINGTON (AP) -The Federal Election Commissk>n moved today to cut off federal funds fo_r fo1:1r presidential candidates who have faltered in the early pnman es. The commission voled to terminate eligibility for matchin& funds for Democrat Edmund G. Brown Jr., ~~e California governor. and Republicans Howard H. Bak.es:. Philip Crane~ Bob Dole, beca use they did not meet minimum vote·getUng standards in the primaries. Federa l law says matctung funds must be cut off 30 da~s after a candidate falls to ~el at least 10 ~~cent of the vote m two consecutive primaries in whi ch be oarticapates Los Corrales Tract :.Repairs Progress ·San J uan Capistrano offici al~ say a developer appears to be ,' m a king progress in re pa iring :· Jeaks and minor problems that have irked nearly two dozen new homeowners In the Los Cerritos tract. Residents or the year-old itevelopment near the San Juan ,.itllls Goll Course off San Juan C~e ek R o ad a pproached cqundlmen a week aso t o complain a bout the alleged lack of cooperation by the developer in correcting problems In the ,new tract. • Homeowner Nancy Ferrazo ·presented a 46-page report citing :major leaks from sliding glass ~doors. flooded s unken li ving !r ooms. Imprope rly installe d French doora. wet spots near ·windows and proble m s with '.plumbing, electncal and furnace :piping i.n the homes. i Sympathetic councilmen told ·the development firm the city ·would not issue a ny mo re ·occupancy pe rmits until the problems in the new tract were : cleared up. In addition. the city sent a questionnaire to residents in the · 170-unil project , asking them the : nature or their problems. if they : had contacted the developer, · a nd if corrections had been made Th e r esults o r those : questlonnaires are begmnmg to : trickle into City Hall, where they • will be i.bulated and presented ! lO the Cit y Council March 19. : Meanwhile, William Murphy. : dire ctor of the city's public : works department, has met with : o fficials o r the Patrick t Development Co. to monitor 1 progreu on the corrections. : Realdenta cited Ooodina and t elope sUdea caused by ~r • drainage and said the deve r i I nstalled french dra n s • im_pro.perly in the community. j · Tbey dtAI lm.J?OPlrly •loped l •nd M8Jed deeldnl and poorty j lllltalled ftuhln1 an4 roof Wes ' I l I • '· DAILY PILOT ror interior damage to al least 18 of the homes, and said there .arc ··num e rous con st ru ction errors," in the buildings Property owners are expected to meet again with councilmen next week to assess progress on cor rections to their homes Candidates Give Regards To Broadway B r oad w ay i n downto wn La guna Beach might aptly be r en amed "Candidates Row" after next week as all four City Cou ncil hopefuls set up campaign offi ces on the street. Mayor J ack McDowell has his headquarters in a vacant omce at 310 Broadway, and candidate Steven Riggs has set up shop ln the old Dean Witter offices next door at 298 Broadway. A nd n o w , in c umbe nt Councilwoman Sally Belle rue and candidate Neil Fitzpatrick are setting up offices al the old Artists Cottage at the comer of Forest Avenue and Broadway: Riggs plans a grand openrng Saturday at 11 a.m. and Mrs. Bellerue and F itzpatrick say they'll open shop March 21. Jurying Set For Artists Art.lit.II who wish to participate in tb.11 summer's Art·A-Falr wtl1 be juried Sunday by a seven-member panel that wtll determlne wbo exhibit.a arts and craft• durtne the •hl·week festival IHIOD. Artista and craftsmen may bring three eu1DJ>1" of their work to tbe BoYI Club bu1ldini at 1085 La1una Canyon Road between 8 and 11 a.m. SUDday. Resulta ol the ,fu.r)'ine will be announced before 5 p .m. For more information, call Sachis Long at 5'2-67'74. Pl••P.,,eAJ lllDDLWIOWH. Pa. (AP> -TWo ........ wetu.nd brWlY lulcteii. ftne 1111• JalanCl reactor bulwa.. l&rtock today efttt two 1Mlla~ t .. Mlelan1 cb .... IDrlMla*llaDCluldlt ........ The tHIPI were tbe ftnt lntlde I.be area alnce lt WH Naled off a yur qo aftw I.be 1tatlo11'1 worst commerclal oucl•ar acddeot. OOatU cloth •u.lta, boots and 1tov•, tlte ea&laeen eMered tbe atrlod: to tab racllaUon 1ampa. and make tettl. Tbe airlock opeaed at t : 11 a.m. and WU MaJed qaJA at 10:0. plant offtclala aaict. • No oc.bel' entries are plamect today, aecordlns to Sandy Polon, spoke1man for the nudear powr planL Tbe m&tneen. a man and a woman, went inatde the 9-by-12-foot airlock alter two he a Ith technlclan.s left the area following a 10.minute test. · 'Tbey fouod no airborne parlleulatea that requi re re1piratora, so the engineers won 'l be wearing respirators. They also won't have to put on 11 ny extra gear because or radiation.'' Polon said. As a precautioo, the two-man healtb team wore breathing 1ea r. The entry followed three days of atmospheric ventini of what Polon called "a very minuscule" amount of radioactive krypton gas from the crippled n\iclear pla nt. The entry is a preliminary to the ri rst human entry of the huge reactor c ontainment building since the accident. "They will leak test the seals and the doors. take surface contamination slides and make readlllP ot the door. They will t a k e exte ns ive radiation monitoring," Polon said. The radioactive gas had been trapped in the airlock of the plant. crippled in the Marcb 28, 1979. accident. Mayor Hamm Calls Recall Try 'Obscene' San Clemente Mayor Roy Hamm i.asued a formal reply to the recall charge. a1ainat him Wednesday by call1n1 the ouster attempt "quite obscene." Hamm said, "The three persons that signed this petition are the same oaes tlaat led th.e 'near-riot al the City Council meeting of Feb. 6. •'They were down in front with their placards and sip yel.ling 'Hitler ,' 'Muasollol ' and 'Ay atollah.' Their continued yelling and screaming actually pre vented the regular meeting ... from continuing." A bout 200 Jeertne protesters shouted Hamm down after be and councllmen Richard Ahlman and Edward Kallebed appointed local entrepreneur Roy Hurlbut to replace tbe late M yrtil Wasner on tbe coundl. Tbe three men wbo liped Hamm 's recall notice served on him last week have cbaf19d that tbe mayor i1nored a 2,oet-signature petltlon demanding tbe council call a special electlon in COQjunct!on with the June primary to replace Mn. Waper. "To serve an elected olftclal with recall papers merely because be does not vote the way a certain apectal Interest group diet.ates is quite obeeeae,'' Hammaald. "I don't thlnk be <Hamm) bas any def.-e," laid Alan Kanen wbo ~ \t: no•» papers ~!~1~ts ·:= • ...:r.~ ·~t.ber. 1Smltb, former cbatrman .. councU·•DPOiDted Cltlaena Advllor)' ~. ·•1 dao't tblDk IO percent of • l• a 1peclal t.nt.r.t IJ'C*P," Mid Konen ref•= to Ule 1,472 votes for a 1 al electkln (of 6,051 caettn1 ) aft« three council members were recalled from office ln January ol lt'1'9. Konen, a local Mmeowws group leader, 11ld tbe reeall committee a1atmt Hamm will submit a draft ol their petition to b• clrc111ated to tb• eoant)' ree::==:'1~j period, realitrar offlclala wlll either :::r.r~-~. == It the~ la a , recall wtJi UD ct•J• 1•tb•r abOut 1,000 1t1nat rt• to ca.ualtfr Ut• mea1ure callln1 for Hamm•• outtel' oa tbl Novtmber Wilt. Recall _Jl'opoDIG'-ban Ulo =:·~~ 0U1 that wUlea .. proMama wttb ••••••·.water, .\ratn:..,.~d owewf •=..W P ~-= -.... , Uall CUrll Ill .... .... ....... ll • u•d la ta ••••••••1 ............ o.lly ............... POSSfll.E IN8TA81U1Y CITED ON TAtfm AVENUE IN MYSTIC HILLS NEIGHBORHOOD O.C.giet a.,. Cltcted Home, Four Ott.. Properttea NMd Further Study ,.._P,,.eAJ .. MYSTIC WLLS HOMES THREATENED. • • the five properties until furt.ber borin&s are conducted to confirm hla suspicions or a landslide. He s aid othe r po11lblllties lnclude lnltabllity due to sublurface dralnaee. or groundwater 1aturat1oo. The report al10 cites the flne·erain aoil found in nu dirt below the properties. The nu ... placed in the sprtn1 ol Ul64 to a depth of 180 feet down the slope below TabiU Avenue. and is 55 feet thick and 340 feet long. Lawrence said his review or compaction or the soil in the fiU shows predominanUy fine gram dirt in the mas!. adding that due to tbe low permeability of the soil, an adverse groundwater c ondition could d evelop, threate ning t.he prope rties above. He s ug gested a d d itional borings and tests would be necessary to deter m ine the exact cause of the November slippage. PINTO •.• more than 150 townspeople . report.en aod lawyers, showed "you can be a big corporation and the j u.ry will acquit you, 1f you have a fair story." He added: "I 'm 1rateru1. relieved and r.roud of the verdict. The P nto has been maligned for yeara. but we were tried by a jury or 12 people m the heartland of America and all 12 found us not guilty. Thal says something." The panel's decision came in its fourth day or deliberations Cosentino kept his eyes downcast as the Jury or seven men and five wom en walked by him . He shook t he h ands or fellow prosecutors and said to one, "We gave it all we had." · 'Tbe jury bas spo ken and that 's o ur syst e m . I 'm disappointed or course. but that ·s the way the s ystem works," Cosentino sa id. P11a1P-AJ SOLD ••• least $115,000 more than Mn. Bettinlen'a $3.47 million oUer. said Marion BuJe. president or MacNa b·lrvin e. the realty comp_any band.ling the sale. Tbl home's Ukinl price WU M.5 m1111m. Commentlne on the '9,852 repe.rt, City Manager Ken Frank said be bas uked the 1eo&ogilt to set up a meet1ne with the five prope rty owners on Tahiti Avenue to dilcuaa further action, ii any .. The dty manager said be does not believe the city should be Involved any further in future, geololic studies or remedial a ction oo the private properties. He said city crewa wlll continue to monitor devices set in Tahiti Avenue, which is the c lly 's r eaponslblllty, and suggested the school d istrict keep oo eye on its property. "We're asking the geolosiat to meet with the property owners. and that's about as far aa we can go." he s a id . adding th e respon sibility for remedial acuon or further bortnp rest.II wltb the resident.a. To date. the Laguna Beach Co unty Wa ter District baa picked up Sl.333 of tbe aludv cost.I and Frank said be la still negotlatlug with the school district for ill portion of the study. MeanwhUe, geolo1lsts from Beach Let~ton and A.aaoclates of Irvine are awaitinc a four to five day break ln the weather before be&innin& work on the Del Mar Aftllue slide ln Arch Beach Height.I. Earth slippage Feb. 17 destroyed a home and damaaed two others In that hilltop neighborhood. and geologists ha ve recomme nded minimal remedial worlt until the ground la dry enough to support heavy equipment. Cocaine Targeted LIMA. Peru CAP) -A st.ate of emergency was declared in a wide area of Peru's Amuooian region Wednesday to make it easier for police to control tbe cocaine trade. Coast Highway Reopening Eyed j A one-mile MCtioD of Pacific Coast l:lltbway ia Saa Chmmte. c lo1 ed since late January because of rain damaae, may be reopened by March 25. San Clemente City Manager George Caravalho said Monday a construction firm bu ~ to clean up a nd re pair t he hig h way fro m C am i n o Capistrano to Avenida Pico. Caravalho said the Ga r y Phibodo Construction firm had already been hired to build a se wer p ipeline a lo o g the hiabway and would have due up the road sidt? anyway. The pipeline will someday connect lbe city sewage plan on Avenida P ico with the South Eas t Reaional Reclamation oce an outfall sewe r line. Caravalho said. Heavy rains aioce the Jul week in January na•• eameo rocks and mud to fall on the bighWQ from oearbJ bluffs. There ii a 15-foot deep bole near the northwest eod o( the closed hfibw&'f sect.ion. Tbe city hired the Phlbodo firm to ccmt.ruet the sewer pipe last year. The planned worlt alon1 the b!O•a.Y., already UD· der way_asot:Frlday, .ou.ld have required trafllc to be diverted ·away from t.be coaatrudion atte. Caravalho said. "Now they won't bave to con· tend wttb tramc since the road 1s c losed aoywa y;• the eity ma nager said. Construction firm officials m· d 1cated the y could complete their preliminary work to allow the hlgbway reopenine within LS days. Rain Due In North 8y1'9e~ted Press A Padflc cold front will be droppine s lowly southward brlngtn1 rain over Nortllem Califonda today and Frtda.y. tbe N atJcoa.I WeatherServiceaaid. Sbowen will be likely Pridu as far southward as tbe San Franmco Bay At'ea and tbe Tahoe Bain. a temperatwes tum cooler. the weather service aaJd. Tbe snow level was erpeded to drop to 2,000 feet tooigbt in the northern IDOW'ltains. 1 64H Wll OlalRO (AP> -4 ......... _, .......... .. 1"4fw•~...,.. tlaet NHiabled Ute .. Zebra kJ...,. .. ot 8an J'raae&lcot Ml ....... Tbe 1tate Boarct ol Pri1oa Term• 1•n a Jaaury t•l relewdat.eW........,tDLany a. Prett. -. ... ot u.r... ,_, 81Hll 11..allM coevtctM m tM A'rll lt.J.1'14 • .,...... 11.,.._ ot JOeeph ar. Belmore, a. u ht .. tat a pl&n wtadow ol htl Not1h Rlablabdl~ ... , •. ., ....... LOS ANGELES (AP> _; DelelftlaUon ol up to 75 pereent ot Loe AnaeJes publle ~ could be canted out ualq "a mult1«bnle" plan, aecordiDI to a witneaa at the sclp>l system's SuperiorCourtlntearatJon trial John Caughey, a retired UCLA hlatory professor, was called \p •• Beeter's Ota Bia lt'•9 Still Rising ... , 'I I Federal diluter otfldala bave told Lake Elllnore resideota they'~ better DOt relu became tbe lake ta cont1Dutn1 to nae and spreacl eodanllrinl as many as 121 bomel. • "Many .-ldenta of Lake E1l1nore feel tbe wont 11 beblnd usl TUt'1 allnpl)t DOt true," NJd Bill Mayer, federal coordlnatlnt offlcel' for the tecleral Emeraency ! llanaaement Aaeney. "We urge you to leave Offtdala 1aJd the amount lmmedl*b':· Mid an oftlctal water pouring into Lak statement aimed at rnidenta Elllnore from the San Jadntd whole homes remain below the River decreased sligbllj l.211 foot level. Tuesday while t.be amount ~ water flowing out of th THE A&•Y CO&P S of newly-cleared dra1nage can E n g i nee r s s a i d t b e I r increued. : computations show the lake will THE CO&PS of Enginee~ continue to rile from its which continues to widen th• Wednesday reading of l.2JISS.25 channel, estimated Wednesday feet above sea level to "at least that tbe channel now was about 1,261 feet by April 4·" 870 cuble feet per second. Bul ( STATE J . testify Wednesday by the Integration Project, one ol the plaintiffs· seeking a wider program of mandatory desegregation in the 540,000 pupil district. Flying over Sao Diego is new $300,000 medical helicopter of UC San Diego Medical Center. When Project "Life Flight" beJins Monday, it will be the first in Califonua and third in the nation with a doctor in the flight crew. The mercy copter carries complete ll(e support systems and . monitoring devic~. can take to the air in five minutes and land in an area only 60 feet in diameter. Tbe lake is npect.ed to remain the Corps pegged the watet at that peak for more than two flowing into the -lake at a rate of weelts before slowly start.tnc to 900 cubic feet per second. mo~ recede. But it wlll remain above than ftve times the outflow rate.; 1.~ feet -t.be &evel at wblcb Like Lake Elsinore, normallf damaie la done to the city -tiny Baldwin Lake, near Bi! unW mid-May. Be a r Lake i n the Sa Lake Elsinore bas risen more Bernardino Mountains. has bee riling with runoff from recent than 20 feet since the flooding storm.a. Jlm Dotson, an engineet- began, which tramlatea to a f 0 r t be B ig Be a r cit f growUl in surface area from Community Services District 2,700 acres to 6.200 acres -all in said be believed three buildino less than a month. Tbe coming were st.anding in several inches two·foot rise will increase that to of water. Describing a multi-ethnic system, Caughey said there would be three or more races cepresented at many schools whjch had white enrollment between 2S and 40 percent. Draft Ford Effort Set 6,500 acres, said Maury Peerenboom. Corps spokesman. Wmmittee Organized to Urge Entry in Race AS 11IE FEM.A officials spoke at a Wednesday news conference, more of the Lake Point Mobile Home Park disappeared under water. All but two of the park's mobile homes have been evacuated. BALDWIN LAKE had risep one foot in lS days to 6, 705 7 feet above sea level, he said. "Lake Baldwin doesn't hav.e anyUu.ng like the watershed that Elsmore does." Dotson sai4. "The lake would fill at 6.746 feet," Dotson said, "but onJ¥ Noah's ever seen it that h.lgh." SACRAMENTO <AP) -San Diego builder Harvey Furgatcb, who as- sociated with Gov . Edmund Brown Jr. during the anti-Vietnam War cam-paign, is the new chairman of f'UltGATCM B r o w n ' s presidential campaign. · Furgatch, 52, who said be bas beaded various San Diego County campaigns, was named to succeed Tom Quinn, a long-time Brown confidant. Tbe campaign's announcement Wednesday said Brown named Furgatch late Tuesday before leaving for a seven-day campaign tour of WLS<:Onsin. Plaats Appre.,ed SACRAMENTO (AP> -The state Energy Commission has given final approval to the construction of a geothermal power plant in Sonoma Coqnty. The commission also reported Wednesday that It gave first-step approval to two other plants, including an oil burner that could become the nation's first to be converted to methanol. Gas Nert Ye.ar SACRAMENTO (AP) - Southern California will get Canadian natural gas by next year, thanks to a new agreement between the federal land agency and a CaWomia pipeline firm. James Rucbofthe U.S. Bureau of Land Management and Harry Prudhomme of Pacific Gas Transmission Co. signed a document Wednesday giving the firm permission to expand pipeline capacity over federal land in Idaho and W ashinglon. SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -A coalition of Republicans has organized a Draft Ford Com mitt.ee in C8lifomia to urge former President Gerald Ford to jump into the race for the GOP nomination. "He won't nm for the fun of it," William T. Bagley, a San Francisco attorney and spokesman for the group said Wednesday. "He wants to know if there's an outpouring of public sentimenL" Bagley and Los Angeles attorney Charles G. Bekaly held news conference:> in their respective cities lo a.mounce the draft effort: THE COMMl'M'EE includes California Republicans who had backed George Bush, John Connally and Howard Baker, said Bagley, who was served a Ford appointment to the federal Commodity Futures Trading Com mission. "I have felt. . President Ford is the s ca ndidate that the Republican Party can put up in t h e November e l ection ." said Bakaly. who was a member of Ford's 1976 c a m p a i g n f'LU01t. steeririg committee. Among the 70 Ford supporters listed by the ·committee were former Casablanca Records chief Neil Bogart, singer Tony Orlando and industrialist Leonard Firestone and J . Robert Fluor, longtime GOP money men. THE COIDllTrEE said ln a prepared statement that Ford had proven he "is a stable experienced, strong leader, whose ability to reason. sort out options and mak e clear thoughtful de cisions is desperately needed once again to get us out of this mess." Ford, who was scheduled lo consult with President Cart.er Sex Education Bill Buried By Opponents SACRAMENTO CAP> -The religion -based movement against sex e ducation bas returned to the Capitol and buried a blll to allow televised sex education in the Los Angeles schools. After hearing from a parade or sex education opponents, the Senate Education Committee voled 10-1 Wednesday to kill a bill. ABS42 by Assemblyman Herschel Rosenthal, D-Los Angeles. THE ASSEMBLY had already passed it with UWe opposition. One foe, John Banducci of a group called Lifeline in the San Francisco area, said a vote for l h e bi II i s " a v o fe r o r pornography and perversion." T he measure would have allowed Los Angeles schools to show sex education programs offered by a local instructional television station. ROSENTHAL SAID the programs covered such topics as preenancy , c hildbirth, parenthood and rape prevention. Current law allows parents to see all books, fl.lms and other materials to be offered in sex education classes and then decide whether their children can au.end. School officials say few parents keep their children out or class and even fewer review the materials. GOURMET MARKET DON'T FORGET MARCH 17, -..; - ST. PATRICKS DAY! DELANEY~.Y MORNING FRESH PRODUCE BROS. SEAFOOD Le. 8olkl Read Green Cabba1e ...... He lb. &D9tet Baking Potatoes ............ tie lb. Fresh Swordfish .................... 5.98 lb. <great to Bar·b-Q or broil, npeclafty wtlen bated wltJ;i lemon butter) Loeal J..c. Sweet Ska~me. .. • .. Sit Wt. ftHe ~ OlllH1 <new crop>2 lbe for ZIC 14. Sbe ~Romaine ............ 3k ea. DELI DEPABTllENT Se. Amedeaa ••••u ....... ~ ...... be II). 11 lb. een.,u taat.Raeora BHea .. lk lb. Plll.llE6TOPCBOICE1MEA'i's'' '·~'iaw11eteameia.....-. .... 11ep&. 11e41tleaii&•4ta79toelle,_. ... ,.dedm UQUOR DEPA&TllENT ' De.._,,, Pr1••te LaW O.~pe, . 'a.a. Df7, •.••••••.. <TltriM) Cew>ZT ... . IL .. _..,, 8"dal . OM~·•lrlill ·-...., <•> .... 11.• . Del '•Pd• ... LaNI C'lll lllll> VIII .... or Qaltll .................. I.ti ~ CSl/lt ... ) "I• t .11 .••• , •••.•••.••• 8.to Gralld ....... CD/la-4t.) ftt· ............ 7.H C ........ ..,._ Dt Net Ifft• Tu) today in Washington, has said he would become a caodldate 11 he receives broad·based support from Republicans, Democrats and independents. ing values.~ I ftft~Mlll-1 UINf 77 DlllER SUPER I Dl9tDI () 0 c "O 0 z I Good'°' two piece. of lhl Colonel"s Or1gtnaJ Rec;lpe ctuct.en °' Eatra Cnapy ch!CMn. plus • single MMng ot muhed Potetoee and g..avy end a roll Limit two 0119"1 pet ooupon P9f customer Cu1t<>tnef OllYS ell eppltC&t>ie Sllles tu. OlfM t•PKH Merell 12. 1980 1 !>fie.es may .. ary •• pan1c1pehng 1oca110n1 Good I only m Sou1t1ern C.11torn1e wllere YolJ see the I Coloriet's tece window Danner Good fOf 9'gtlC ~of the Colonel's Original Aec•pe cNc*en 0t Eat•• C111py chldlen, tour roaa. A cno.c. of ert'* • large cole al•• ex • 1-ve ~ potatoee &nd amell gy....-, lJmll two otters per couoon P« w.torner. Customer peys all eCJC)focebte ..... tea Ofltlf elll>ffltS March 22. 1980 PneH may "''Y lit pertte:•Ollt•ng IOcaltOnl Good only If\ Sout'-'l C.h!Off\tl '#flefl YoU 5ee Ille Colonel's lace window bllnner ' z 0 n_ ::> 0 u · ---·-----· -- Tiie Westcli[f Plaza Cltallenge We inuite you to find the store or service establishment that does not offer prompt, courteous seruice - and tell us! t l • ; I • I 1 SC Recall Fever b SliOws No Cooliriji ( .. ~'' Another ~p of a_nary Sllil m.-. ... ~dwll la ··~ eekl!\I to recall a City CMdl-•ber. ~ 1 Mayor Roy Hamm Is tbe 11.U. San CS.meet.a CCMaell member ln I than tYt'O years to be served wtth nollce ol ..:;•·tnt nt to recall p_i pert. '·' · lronic1ll1. Hamm 11 the mOlt •x.pe"'-<.«t member of J the ~ell. He Wfl elected 13 qM)Gtbi -_.a and bu 1erved lonaer u1an th other four mem ..... ti-• 1be recall pattem hu atrana• twtltl. LUt >'1:. the l• 'biggest targets were ~u memben Karoline ter and the late Myrtis Waan r. ~ • It wu later learned that out-of ·town and local develol>era paid more than 111.l>O ol tbe IM.000 raiHd to ouatMra. Koest rand Mn. WaperbeforeahedJed. .. Now. a 1roup of •~•I realdents. urned wlth a 2.000..algnatun peUUon catun1 for a speclaJ elecUon, want to oust the mayor. a common roe or Mrs. Wagner 1·, and Mrs. Koester ln months gone by. r. The petition signers want Hamm and two other •' ·council memben; to call a special June 3 election in .. conjunction wlth the state pramary to rill Mrs. Wagner's vacant seat. ·· · It would appear there are already 2.000 residents who ... support Hamm's recall. The only quesllon is lf there are another 1,000 needed to qualify the recall issue for the , . November ballot. If Hamm has the "silent majority" of supporters he claims to have. the issue won't qualify. Whatever the determination on that issue. San Clemente has had ,. enough recall activity and hardly will benefit from one more Geologist Essential f • Laguna Beach City Council members have directed their city manager to look into hiring a geologist on a consulting bast~ to oversee the city's soil reports and review its grading ordinance a nd codes relating to geolosn. r The council motion. approved earlier this month. comes at a time when city officials received two somewhat disturbing reports from geologists investigating two hilltop areas m town. A report by Beach Leighton and Associates of Irvine ~ shows "a high probability" the Arch Beach Heights ~ neighborho6d where one home was destroyed and two ~ others damaged during last month's floods might suffer -; more earth ~ltppage ~ And <.1 report released about the same time by South ~ Laguna geologist Harry Lawrence shows earth instability jn the Mystic Hills neighborhood and says slopes in the area are possibly "approaching a condition of gross instability " ~. • . .. : ' ' t ~ . "" ' • When tied to the Bluebird Canyon slide of October. Hl78. in whic-h 24 homes were destroyed, it appears the nt•t·l·s~1t v tor .1 t•on">ult mg geologbl is i mperat1 \'l' in L.1 g1ma lh·ad1 With an v~pl·rt on hand to revtl"* the city's pl<1ns and n·pnrt.., 111 <H'l'"" Nlll~tdercd haz<Jrdous. future problem., in areas t•ons1dercd for home-building might be avoided. War Chests Vary rr t·a~h <:ontnbutions to candidates are used as a rull'I" to mcasur<• the intensity or campaigns in south Orange County. It appears the race for city council seats in I .a~un<1 Bc&Jth will be the hot one this ttme around Campaign c•xpend1tures recorded by canctidates and mn1mbcnh in LagunCJ Beach. San Clemente and San Juan Capistrano this month s how those runnin~ for offtct· in the Art Colony far s urpass their counterparts m the other two munir:1p<ilities in contributions. It comes as no surprise that those gathering the largest war chests arc incumbent council members Sally Bellerue and Jack McDowell . who have gathered more than $.5.000 each . The remaining two candidates have collected far less in campaign contributions. In San Clemente, the largest war chest is only $2,000. collected by candidate Bernard Allen. Incumbent Richard Ahlman, who dropped out of the San Clemente race this week. collected only $1,000 and most of the other candidates have collected less than $200. In San Juan Capistrano, four of the seven candidates. including lhe two incumbents, say they've spent less than $200 lo date. The big spender in San Juan is candidate Dale Smith. who has spent only $426 of his own money to date. Meanwhile in Newport Beach they're talking about council campaign war chests in the range of $10,000 to $25,000. Maybe the issues are hotter in Newport. Or maybe the contributors are richer. • Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Dally Piiot. Other views expresaed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader ~mment la Invited. AddreM The Daily Piiot, P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone(714) 642--4321 . Boyd/British. Driving ByL.M.BOYD "How come the British drive on lhe left side of the road?" inquires a client Becauae the highwaymen centuries ago habitually at· Dear Gloomy Gus Now comes news that tbe nation 's bllllon ·dollar computerized attack alert syatem breaka down under pre,Hure Juat like a human beln1. Could be the bumaa llnk. Maybe aome day computera wm beaet computer• • l t Ii O'lt t h u m a n ........... tacked coaches from the right, according to the his- torians. Supposedly. left-side driving therefore gave the potential victim• a sllahtly better ch&DCe of apottin& tbe robbers ln advance. Wby the robbers didn't 1wtt.ch to hit from the left lJ not explained by said historians. P~on Still llurts Ford ron woam. ll'riu -Tbe ftn, ...... , ......... , ... ......... I Ylall to Tau CllrtlUaa Ualver'litJ were U.. ... , : "" 41d rord pUdaD "'--' ............ .n 'J'Utqu. Uoa, 1Uot1J' cllflernt. wu --•1'111. dOHI Ume1 ••·b•t••••· Otrald Ford ii very mQCla oa people'• mlada tb .. e daya. wblcb la where he •anted to be when he told the N .. York Ttmea the obvious trulb that Ronald Rea1an would be a pret- ty sure loeer ln November. "I voted qain.ll Ford in 1976 became of the pardon." the flJ'lt queaUoner said. "Do you think there was a deal with Nixoo. or Mailbox do JOU tMall Font d1d •t blealM M tl9ou0t ll WU lood lot Ult eo.antryf'" I th1M both. IN ftlTINO a boo1c aboUt Ford five 198n qit, I CODC-..cl t.bat a daal wu m9de ~ boUn ol eaafft'AUOn ._.,.... tbe tbeft•YIH pr .. tdt11t Ud PrteldMI& JUdWid N~'I ebW of ltatf, AJesMdlr ff alt• I don't now .........,. t.be worcll -••IJ Nlxu mlpa. I'll 1rant \be pardon" -were actu1 Jj 1~ But I do know th.at Hall came beck to the Whit. Houle amid private t.alk of a pardoe - and Nixon then 1tepped down. maklq .Ford p,...ldeal. That doee not mean thlt Vord dldn'l alncer1ly bel11n the pardon -for tht crimes of Watergate -wu ~•t for UM country. "PuttlnJ Wat.r1at1 behind us.·· wu hi• phrue at the time. . publ1Cllld weeil could klD tum off MfoN be bad a real chanee. The arithmetic of the rule1 ta terrible for Ford. If he eaten the race on the day alter the March 18 llUnoll primary. tM wlll be eompedoJ for a max· lmum of 1.300 of the 1,99' del- •1atea to the Republican Na. Uonal Convention. Only 81' of those 1,300 delegates wlll be Mlect.d tn it.ates where Ford's name c.n le1ally appear on pt·hn.82.. and caucus ballota. The ~'l:~~t:.=~ other candldatea Uke George Bush. Howard Baker or John Andert0n Too many deadlines Including the fiUng dates m N~w York, Pennsylvania and Texu wlll be passt>d by March 19 So 1t would be very tough 1-·ord m1dlt be wise to consider ,laying tn retarement and bask· 1n1 tn has new glow as the alatHman above the slangs, ar· rows and stumbles of cam- pa11na. Maybe he could defeat Carter in November -which I'm sure be would dearly love to do but. lhe truth 1s, he may not have u good a chance. now . to defeat Reaaan as Bush or Anderson has. IN FACT. A Ford candidacy might ensure Reagan's nomina t1on and destroy Republiean chances tn November J e rn ford m t!lftO I'> very similar t~1 lfubt·rt Humphrey on tht> Democratic -.1de m 1972. When Edmund Muska e and lf enn Jackson faltered a bit aga1n.\1 George McGovern eight year-. ago. Humphrey rushed anto thP Florida primary destroying McGovern's more moderate op posit ion and guaranteeing the nomtnaUon of a left.Lsh candidate wno appeared as extreme to most of the country as the rightish R4:agan. Ford's lime , I'm afraid, mav have pass<'d. lie -and the rest of us nught be a lot better off 1( he stayed at his home 10 Rancho M1r ag('. High Rentals Not All Landlords' Fault To the Editor: Mrs. Richard Arevalos tn the March 6 Pilot, blames greedy apartment owners and greedy homeowners for the decline tn "chool enrollmenLc; -in addition to all the other sans for which we a re blamed Since my wire and I fall mlo both categories as homeowner~ and apartment building owners. we feel th at occas1onallv someon<' should print a few fact~ about us "greedy" people. We have a s ubstantial port.Jon of our life savings lied up in the property -it was only by saving what we could out of two joint incomes, after taxes, that we were able to purchase our rirst home. These savings did not come as a result of rent controls, subsidized housing allowances or food stamps. THE RENTAL property was acquired with tbe hope of being able to support ourselves in our declirung years without having to depend on government aid. ls Lhat wrong? Exorbitant rent fees are caused by bureaucratically created shortages of rental prop- e rt 1es among other factors 5Uch as mortgage money costs. Inflation, population s hifts, fear of imposition of rent controls. The n,ure of $1,000 in advance tor accommodations for a fall)i· ly of five LI not, In my oplnlon. exorbitant considering that the owner normally wants fim and last month's rent plus a security depoelt. The landkn'd must have some protectlon too, since wlthout payment of last month's rent many tenants have been known to vacate overnight, behind ln their rent, or without the 30 days notice to the landlord normally agreed to. That the security deposit Is a neceuity I can vouch for, since one tenant moved out taking the sliding bedroom closet doors with blm as well as leaving dama1ed paint, plaster and general dis· aster behind. Did Mrs. Arevalos ever try to repair a bedroom wall which had been used u a dart boerd7 In aplt.e of Propoeltioo 1J tax 1avtnas other COit.a caou.n• to ncalate and the mortaa1e mall be paid. Utllltlea, lnauruee traah coUectlon, repair• ud maintenance co1t1 rtae •acb month and tomeooe bu to pay for all tbll. DALE.JOHNSON free country ror us and thl' voung peopll' of this world. Thev m ade 1t possible for Social Security to help the dasabled and widows If 1t hadn't been for them some of us m1~hl be ~tarvm~ too. My thanks ~o to even "cn1or c1t12C'n of thi s countr~ Cherish our oldN pcoplt• the} need love and care' tiLORIA J . OSWALU Pew•le11• Mea,,er To the Editor: In reading your M art'h 4 editorial, "Public Pensions Mortgage Future," I wa;; struck by the fact that it contained statements that might be mas· leading. I speak as a classified school em~loyee who has worked in one pos1tioo for 26 years. Would you believe lhat after 26 years of service my monthly pension will be approximately $400 a month with a 2 percent cost-of·llving in· crease each year (hardly an ex· orb1taot sum l" ALSO. I might call your alt.en lion to the ract that school employees are part or the state retirement Rystem and con· tnbute the same amount rnto lhe fund as the slate employees. However. school employees' benefits are lower than those of the state emplovees. The stale Legislature has re- fused to correct this inequ.ity. If you caN to Investigate, you wiU find that many school clasalried employees wm not receive a pension of more tban $300 a month. It seems to me that when your paper prints ah editorial of this type, many citizens believe this is true ol all public employees. I should think you would print the other side showing the meager pen1ion1 received a>Y most claaalfied employees. NAME WITHHELD ••r" t• •••e-ee To the Editor: As an act.Ive alumnus ol USC and a p-ad.uate ol t.be Scbool of Bu1ineee, I ean•t beUne UHt acbool (Gnduate Scbool of S.l· Dell) would be awarclial l>r. Armand Hammer the !:n· treprmeuroltbe Year Award. Dr. Hammer la certalnl1 no "free.«rterprtaer." He Just lut week announced that he would be imti1atlnl bit $20 blWoo deal with tbe1SoN'8. TbJa ID 1plte ol their tnvuion· of At1banlltan. Hard to believe. Wasn't it Khruabcbev wbo Hid ther:Jd bani UI and that the bus men would bid for the rope! LaJ?una Beach voted SH.GOO of taxpayers· money for lbe study or Laguna Canyon ancludmg tht- golf couJ'St'. and this dunng and right after the severe flood A<:· tunll~· any intcnllOO for rebwld ing the Laguna Canyon '>hould be abolished. ""hen the natural watershed area should tM' '>aH-d from more housec; or any pa\1.· ment. The Count} or San Diego rull'd recently not to spend any mort' taxpayers' money for the re· bu1 (ding or houses tn lhe flood plains and explicitly said that the planning 60 years back was done without consideration of future .1ienerat1ons. which have to pay for the mistakes far back. THE SAME can be said for our Laguna Canyon. A re<-ent article Wlder "readers letters" showed that golf courses are very sensitive to flood s . Therefore anything disturbing oar watershed area, houses , pavements or golr courses. would be disastrous. Do we not have the responsiblhty for future genera- tions lo leave the vicinity of La~una Beach so they don't have to fear any nocxf? BETI'Y HECKEL N~IW.., To t'te Editor: In 1969 the winter rains flooded my garage with mud and swept away my car. That loss is as nothing com pared to the continuing tragedy that ot'· curs with every heavy raln for those who are flood victims in Laguna Canyon. Meeting with those victims in 1978 convinced me that 1m· mediate action was needed. That February the council ap· proved altAu'nalive 8 or a county nood control plan that wouJd ex· tend the flood channel from its present terminus at btc bend to El Toro Road. The office of S upervisor RUey expressed every desire to cooperate. Unfortunately tbe eity cannot seem to make up ita mind what it wants. For two years we bave waited for actioo and only 1otten t.alk about golf courses and the lrvlM plm. 1be county Wanta to improve tbe road and build the channel at the aame time. Tbe pretent mayor seems to feel that ls the WQ to proceed, but I ba'N alwayw felt we aboukl pioceed lmmediately wttb &he flood coo· trol project. IN ftlS past two years the pl•= process baa become con and chaotlc. We havo seen plana developed for tbe road that 10 trom p.u11n1 Janes. to a four.Jane dlvldecl roacl, to movtna the road to a new loci· Uon. countywidc flood control bond~ Rv contmutnj.! to wait for soml· )!rand plan 'Nt' are n sktng hve ... Jnd darruig1ng property and 10'> ing t:lx dollar.. Every winter v.·· -.ec thousands or dollars r" J>\:tlll\t'I} V.J!:>ted ~IS the C'OUnt\ n•pJ1r-. thl' rtood dJmJgcd roJd Jnd ran\On It 1-; nn lon~n .1 IJughtnli!. mJtter to ha\e to drt\1• fo .,.. urk throup,h an errant Cfl'l'I.. \\ c ),hould mO\ 1• the creek ot I lhl' roJd JOd put 11 10 J fl()(><I l·hannel .,..ht:re 1l bt!lungs. \\l· don'l need to watt for J "pl an." We need action nov.. JONS. BRA.'\I> f:Nelc tlw lll•fl To the Editor: There has been a lot or verbal abuse or Mayor Jack McDowell recently about 2,000 homes sup- posedly planned for Laguna Beach as part or the Sycamore Hills plan. Councilwoman Sally Bellerue a nd her running mate, Neil FiUpalrict. are both waving the red nag about bow our Laguna Canyon areas are goang to ix.- destroyed by these supposed homes. Mayor McDowell bas. on the other hand, repeatedly stat· ed that no homes-other than the 350 promoted by Sally Bell.erue and lhe Laguna Green· belt -will be built in the Laguna Canyon area . SIMPLE check of a map of the area shows that McDowell is telling tba tnitb: no homes are planned inside the city boun· daries of Laguna Beach and those homes proposed are in the Irvine Company property locat- ed in Orange County and have never been approved. What is more, 1f the Irvine Company s hould win approval from Orange County to build homes in that area of their own property. what could Laguna Beach do to stop them? The Irvine Company proposal to build leu t.baa l,'100 homes in an area near the lntenediocl of Laguna Canyon Road ud the San DiefO Freeway -ftl'1 dis· tant from LaiuD• Beaeb -is juat ane ol aeveral ~ve f=-'8~ :::rt 3 .:v~ lnl tba S)'Camora Hilla~. It ll quite obvious tbat Ms. BeUerue andjlr. FltapUrlok are lrYlD.1 to aUr up emodom with mt1leadln1 and unaupported atatementa. Anyone wbo wanta to boneatly 1et at the fa eta should take time to vlatt the La1una Beach Clt.y Hall and look over the map eo""-the S1camon Hilla plan. • TYLZR WAGNER TM flood channel doald .... been bulb. • yea.n •ao ftlD La111aa11 tltl&eaa •otecl for ~4i1iiiiil-.: • .. '.°Y••r •••et••• J Dally New• .. mter J VOL. 71, NO. 73, 4 SECTIONS, tO ~AOU ORANGR COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MARCH 13, 1980 c F IFTEEN CENTS j 'Die 'Big A ' Gets Big~r For those who haven't visited since the last Angels game, here · is what Anaheim Stadium looks like these days as a $26 mil11on expa1'\51on project continues. When completed, m time for the· Rams' arrival next faU. the ball park will have more than 70,000 seats. House OKs Oil Profits Tax Measure WASHINGTON CAP> The H o u se today approved President Carter's proposed "windfall profits" tax after defeatine a final attempt by Republicans t.o make the levy John Wayne Estate A $5 Million Buy? An offer or nearly $5 million has been accepted for lbe Newport Beach home of the late actor John Wayne. Ford Motor Co. Fi1ni Acquitted In Pinto Deaths WINAMAC, lod. (AP> -A jury from the nation'• heartland today found Ford Motor Co. innocent of reckless homicide cbareee in the first criminal prosecution of a corporation 10 a products defects c a se -a verdict the prosecutor said "vindicates" th e giant automaker. Defeme attorney James F Neal said the acquittals on Bank Hikes Prime Rate To 181/4o/o NEW YORK (AP> Chase Manhattan bank, catlllg tugher interest rates generally. today boosted its prime rate to a record 181 • percent. It was joined at that level by Uruted California Bank and Wells Fargo Bank. The i n crea se o f half a percentage point cam e only six days after Chase and most o\her majo r Am er i can bank s announced half.point boosts in the prime rate to 17~ percent The nation's third-largest bank said: '"Today's adjustment brings the prime to a level more reflective of the 1eneral increase in market rates, which bas continued oveT recent months." Bank• have been paying higher interest rates on funds that they acquire t.o make loans. c har1es s temming from tbe fiery bi£bway deaths of three ~n-agers showed even a giant corporation can win the day if 1t has "a fair and reasonable story " The three teen·a gers were burned to death when their 1.973 Pinto exploded in names alt.er being bit from behind by a van on an Indiana highway in August . 1978. Th e s tate co ntende d d efects in the s ubcompact's fuel system made It likely to leak fuel in rear end crashes at low to moderate speeds. Ford attorneys said the force of the impact, rather than any alleged defect, caused the gasoline tank to explode. The verdict came in the fourth day of the jury's deliberations, including a m arathon session that went into the early morning todav CSee PINTO, Page AZ) Mesa and Newport . Differ on Airport By JER1'Y CLAUSES Of -o.lty .., ... St.off Costa Mua City Council members· support of Orange County's plan to acqwre land m their city LO expand John Wayne Airport cou l d become a back·scratching matter 10 the coastal area The council lS LO consider the land acqws1llon at its 6:30 p m meetmg Monday in City Hall l n a s tudy session last Mon day, counc1 l members reported they probably won't oppose the purchase or three parcels on the west side of the airport planned for relocat.loo of general avtatioc;i facilities. But Newport Beacb Mayor Paul Ryckoft' lnd:icated \.be same day that be wants it understood that Newport's support or Costa Men Freeway completion and construction of a marina on the Santa Ana Ri ver would be Jeopardized by the airport plan to protest the airport plan They sa1d the effort to move general .tv1at1on fac1lit1es will JUSt make room for expansion of tht> airport terminal s er vmg no111v commercial 1et traffic. Newport Councilman Paul Hummel. who s a rcastically called the plan a neighborly gesture , n oted that its 1mplementallon would give Cos ta Me sa in come from genera l av1at1on operations while sticking Newport with jet noise and street traffic from the commercial operations. Although the expansion plan is 1n the preliminary stage, it bas been submitted to Costa Mesa to d4;tennine if it is compatible with dty planning Althou1b llesa councilmen indicated they wouldn't oppose the plan , t hey told Raul Regalado, airport manager . Monday that they would obJect to aoy propos al r outing commercial air passenger traffic thro ugh Costa Mesa streets. 7 more acceptable to the oil industry Papen filed tn Orange County Superior Court Wednesday identified the buyer only u Mrs. Burton G. Bettingen, "a married woman." An Apnl l heanng date has been set, before a s uperior court Judge who will approve or deny the aa.le. which la guided by the probate proceedin gs under which Wayne's est.ate will be aetUed. During the Arru i bearing lbc court could sel the six-bedroom borne at 21686 Bays bore Drive to a higher bidde r, court documents said. Prime rates have been climbing steadily since Feb. 1.9, when most m ajor banks raised their base lendin1 rate for business loans from 15~ pen:ent to 15~ percent. The prime i.s the rate banks charge their most credit-worthy corporate borrowers and is the base for setting interest rates on almost all co mme r cial industrial l oa n s . Ot her businesses pay th e prime plus several percentage points, depending on their cr edit Newport Beach City COUDCJI members. wbo discussed the upcoming public bearin& at their own Mooday session, indicated they will show ap in Costa Mesa General aviation const.Sts of private small planes and Jets. The vote of 302-107 sent the measure to the Senate, where congressional action on the $227. 7 billion tax is expected to be completed next week. "This is a very equitable solution to a ver y difficult problem -and one that is good for America,·· Rep. Al Ullman, D-Ore .. chair man of the Ways and Means Committee, told colleagues Rep. John Rousselot, R-Calif., assailed the bill as "a m ajor tax . . . that wi II end up on the backs of consumers. You can't sock it to the big oat companies . . . they'll just pass it along to the consumers." Final passage came after the House, by a 227·185 vote, rejected an effort Jed by Rep. Bill Archer. T-Texas. to send the bill back to a Sena te-House conference committee. Driver Flees After Weird Behavior Costa Mesa police said today they were tryilll to identify the rampacinl driver wbo tried to puab IDOtber car tbroush a nd li1ht, the n accel e rate d bectwardl aQCt crubed Into a ~.ad ftnally abandoned lale car. TbeJ aid the oner of the car r.ponect hi.I t e71 '"" ........,, Md Will t n1ea were unable to tde ntif1 either him or bis roommate u tbe driver ln tbe to:• p.m. l"lddent Tuesday on IDdutrlal Way near Newport ~Boulevanl. Mrs. Bettingen's cash offer or $3.47 million for the house; with a $100,000 deposit, was accepted b y executors or the estate, Michael Anthony Wayne, Louis Johnson and John S. Warren. An additional $1.48 million would be paid Irvine Company to buy the waterfront land on which the house sits. Wayne leased the land in the Bay Shores section or Newport Beach for $6,000 a year But a second potential buyer would have to come up with at least $175,000 more than Mrs. Bettingen's $3.47 mill.Jon offer. said Marion Buie, president of M acNa b -lrvin e , the realty company handling the sale. The home's asking price was $4.5 million. NetDport Student Charges Dropped In Cocaine Arrest Charges of conspiracy to sell cocaine have been dropped against. Newport Harbor High School student Bruce Lester Caldwell, according t.o police. Caldwell, 18, of 1208 Pembroke Lane, was among seven people arrested March 5 by Newport Beach narcotics officers and a1ent8 from the state Bureau ol Narcotics Enforcement. Sgt. Darryl Youle said no cbargee were filed on Caldwell d ue t.o a lack of evidence. His record wu altered to lndicate be was detained for quesUcmiq, not arreetecl, Youle added. Harbor Judicial District Court will be: Kyle David Slaughter, 18, 900 W. Ocean Front, Newport Beach; Fernando Cuteneda, 31, of Los An1eJes; Leonides Diaz, ·37, o( Santa Ana ; Connie Birdwell Smith. 29; of Santa Ana; Ruben L . Jimenez, 39, of Santa Ana, and Danilo Ruiz, 33, of Glendale. T he conspiracy ch ar1ea reaul~ from an alleged sale ol 20 o u nces o r cocaine to undercover lnvestlgaton . Police identllled Slaucbter a a Newport Harbor Hilb Scbool 1tudent. stand mg * * * Silver Price Plummets In New York From AP, 8&atr Dlapakbefl The bottom literally fell out of the silver market today as prices m New York dropped to $24.60, a decline of $4.70 per ounce, before recovering to close at $25.SO. lo addition, gold was under heavy selling pressure. falling ~ in New York to close at $Sal an ounce and to SS57 in London. Both metals came under heavy selling pressure because of a stronger U.S. dolla r, high interest rates in the United States t h at attracted investment. and the fact that gold and silver do not produce income. Monex in Newport Beach quoted an afternoon price ol $52111 for go&d and $24.75 for aUver, which at one tlme dropped u low u S23.'7S. 88 lt'.-e11 l•I• Aeite• Association Enters Mesa Zoning Case By JACKIE HYMAN 00 ttllt o.ily pt._ Si.ff Calling the case of Amel vs the City or Cos ta Mesa a .. landmark 1n Ca l ifornia planning litigation ," the California chapte r of the Amencan Planning Assoc1at1on has filed a fnend of the court brief in the case with the California Supreme Court Chapt er president David Booher of Sacramento said the importance or the case led to tus group's filing the brier. which agrees with an appeals court decision that invalidated a Costa Mesa voter irutiat1ve. Booher said the statewide goal of comprehensive. fair city planning "will come to nothing If the plan can be overriden by initiative." The struggle between homeowners. city officials and the Arnet Development Company over glans to build 539 apartments an 127 houses just weal ol South Coast Plaza nas been Jone and bitter. City officials approved the development but neighbors objected and placed on the ballot an initiative to rezone the property to per mit only alngle-famlly homes. It passed in March. 1978 Arner offiC'1ab ~utod the ctt) City off1c1als. 1n th<' pos1t1on of defending an 1n1t1at1ve they disagn.~ Wllh. argued that they h a d acted proper l y in implementing the rezone. but agreed Wlth the developer that 1t was an improper use of the in1tiat1ve p~ss Some residenL'> protested that the city should more strongly uphold the measure because 1t had been a pproved b~ voters. The Orange County Superior Court upheld the re:ione but its dec ision was revers ed in Novembe r b y the fo'ourth Distn ct Court of Appeal The appeals court stated that the rezone was d1scnminatory in that it wa11 a imed at a specific developer . and tha t it improperly used the legislative process to handle what should be an administrative matter. Coast Weathe r Carter Plans :O.Mlget Talks WD Laws.uits Mounting Low clouds toa.i&bt and Friday with only partial clearing Friday afternoon. Lowa tonight 48 at the beaches and SS inland. Hilhs Friday 82 to 61. INSIDE TODA 't' During World War 11 , a Morine Corp• Germon lheplwrd nanMd Old .wed tM Uoe1 of 150 """' Tlw doo dWd fn Jtst and um buried witla mWtory "°"°'8 flt c Cotto MelO pd ~· But the war doO lto.t flOt bin Jorgottett t>, MorilW frWnda. S.e Page CJ. Tbe latelt lfOUP '!~ plalnUffa contend lD the .. ctlooa that a at.rm. attached to I.be Dalkoo Shiela JUD caused bacteria to enter the uten11 and lead to lnf ~. Va .• pharmaceutical firm. Each or tbe plalntlffs l1 1eekln1 SS mlllloa yi exemplary d am11ea, an d o t h er com pens a tion lncl u d ln& rclmbunement of medical and .., .. , ... Tbe Dalton Shield WU taken off the market in m•. but lt ll nUmated tbat about OM m1lllon oft.he IUD'• are ltlll ln UH. Last AUl\llt. a Denver woman won a se.2 mUUon Jud1m1nt 111tn1t Robina alter ah• t••llfied ab t s uffered a mJaearna,. Pd wu forced to 11n d 1.r1.o~ .. •n tmer1ea c1 btit.,.eetomy aner bttnl nu.cs wtOa . Ddmi SbMld. v· . .... l l l I ' After Crit. WAIRIN010N (AP) -o.nld ll. hftt caUed Oft~\ CaNI' toda1 imt U boUn af\ir ~ Cut.r la dolq u ab)'amal job ud lbould be ¥Ot.ed out ol the 'lfblte HouN. ,,_.. waa no laun.eat.e tndlcaUOD wbat CartArr and Lba fonner ~t dlkuaed fOC' • mlnutea lD the Oval omee ln t!Mlr tblrd weh mHt.lAI dace Carter delHLed fiord for the. pfftldloey ID 111t. The White HouN tarm9d lt a rouUne vlllt. BOSTON <AP> -Tbt mte Supreme Cowl tWed today tbat the aew lluaae9'U1,tt.1~• ,.....,......., pr.,..-kl c .. l"Ol"d la la W~ for tWD dQt of pollUckin1 and 1p.-chaa11dn1 Ja lid•uce fll a dedaiCID • ..._. to 11Dter tlM ltepubtlcaa ..-..w .-.. acbooJ1 vtolatu tbe irat Amendment 1uarant•• of a eeparat.e church ud 1taw. Th.• court enjoined eaforeemeat of the 1tatute, wt.le .. called fGr t.acben to uk if any student wt.abed to lead • prayer and for the 1tudent then to lead the prayer. It provided for 1tudeots not wialaiDI to participate to be allowed to leave U.100m .. '• .. ~· Bdll1w ••••AU ... , .... A8.- WASHJNGTON (AP> -Tbe Stale Department 1aid today it has tGDvlncina evidence &hit all 50 AmeriCUI taken bolt.aae Ln Tehran four mootU •So are aUve ud nmaln within the U.S. Embaay then. UnW aow. tbe deP&tUMat U. laid Jt could no& be certain the 50. Amt:rtcam, t.Uea bmit111 in tbe e1nbqay on Nov.•. were all alive or that tome had not been taken elsewhere by their captors. <Related story, A4 ) But a departmeot otftelal, deeli.niq to be identified aaid toda'f ··~~ranee of evidence'' •bowint the bolt.aies to be alive aU Within tbe embasay compound was accumulated in a "relat.ively recent period." Sb Elller .. r.,.,,ie ••J•rell •• •i.~e LOS ANGELF.S <AP) -A flre In a home for tbe aaed injured at least alx of the 119 residents today, f1reflgbt.era 1&1d. ·•we have aix confirmed injuries, but it'a probably aol.na to be more than that beca"8e lt'a a home for the aaed," said hre spokesman Ned Chatlleld. An emeraency medical station was set up at the scene to treat the residents of Mount Zion Towers on South Central Avenue. FE€•~ te C•t E'eder•I r-• WASHTNGTON CAP) -The Federal Election Comm1sSJon moved today to cut off federal funds for foW' presidential candidates who have faltered in the early prtmartes. The commission voted to termlnate eligibLUty for matching funds for Democrat Edmund G. Brown Jr., the California governor. and Republicans Howard H. Baker, Philip Crane and Bob Dole, because they did not meet minimum v<>t.e·&etting standards in the primaries. Federal law says matching funds must be cut off 30 days after a candidate fails to get at least 10 perc-ent of the vote \n two consecutive primaries m which be oarlicipates. F,....PageAJ PINTO ACQUITTAL. • • Chief Prose.cutor Michael Cosentino said after the verdict t hat there was a "strong possibility'' be would appeal. Defense attorney Neal, whose fee in the case has been reported at $1 million, said of a possible appeal: "l don't care about the appeal. They can appeal all the points of law they want. I'm through with the case." He said later: "I'm awfully pleued. It ia the most dllficuJt case I've ever tried. The .iat.e had an eaar emotklDal cue, but we bad a Jeu emotklaaJ caae became we were defendlnf a bfc , corporation." , CoMatiDO, who led a Spartan · s tate effort that included funding of about $20,000 and the : use of volunteer help, said the verdict "vindicates" Ford. He aaid: "It means to me that manufacturers can make any kind of car they want to and it's up to the public to decide if they want to buy it or not. I do not per sonally b e liev e that corporations are doing what they can to help the people of this country, but the jury apparently does." After the verdict, he shook the hands of fellow prosecutors, saying to one, "We gave it all we had." ·'The jury has spoken and that's our system . I'm disappointed of course, but that's the way the syst em works," Cosentino said. Earl Ulrich of Osceola, Ind .• father of two of the three victims an the 1978 crash oa U.S. 33 near Goshen, Ind., said of the verdict. "I'm very disappointed. . .But lhi• bu notbfq to do wttb as. Th1a WH the state Of lDdla.aa 8'a1mt Ford Jilot,orCo." . .. .. . Killed in tbe crub were Judy Ulrich, 18. the driver, her slater. Lyn Ulrich, 16, and their cousin, Donna Ulrich, 18. Because a corporation cannot be imprtaoned. a convtction in th~ case could have carried a maximum penalty or a $10,000 fine on each or the three coanta. But the case was conaidered a landmark battle because of its possible effect in other such cases and on pending civil suits concerning the Plnt-0. Slayer's Alcohol Consumption Told Thoma• Andrew Barley cons umed enouab alcohol to cause brain damaae before be stabbed b.LI wile to death at a Santa AD.a sboppina center in May. a court· appointed psychiatrist teatifted today. The testimony or Dr. Seawrl1bt Anderson came durln1 the opening of leaal proceeding• to determloe lf Barley wu aane at tlMt t.lllle be stabbed bia wUe, Catherine, 46. Barley was convlc:ted of second de1ree murder by a Superior Court jury last week. He had pleaded innocent by reason d lnlantt}'. Under questklni.nl by defeme •••• ..., c DAILY PILOT O... ..... Oflm -.i ..... &:llt:t...- ..=;.-c..?i:;::. T .. 191t JU O"MJ..,_.. Ch11•1tMulf?' ... __,. ' I attorney Geor1e Cbula, Andersoo 11id Barley suffered from mental disease "of sucb severity" be lacked the capacity to understand tho criminality ol his acts. The j»)'Chlatrat aald Barley used alcohol to such a desree It caused certain braln damaie, artecttng bia thlnktnc ~···· Anderson said the former Dlil.y Pilot newsrnan sulfered from epiaodes of paranoia aa a a.ult of what he termed "alcoholic paycbolts.'' Andenoa Hid he aaw Barley io tbe Oranae County Jail on Aug. 4. He interviewed Barie)' for 42 p:ilnuteab H_!t ... aatd his dla1noa1a waa H.u oil that interview • U tbe jury flndl Batley WU ln•ane at the tlme of tbe 1tabbinl or Mn. Barley, be would be committed to a state mental hospital for treatment until pbysiciana determined him to be recovered. If the jury makea a sanity finding, Barley would then face a state priton s•nteoce of bet•een 15 years and life. He would beeome eUitble for parole aft.r 10 years. Durt.q tbe 1even·week trial the deflllle attemfted to ponray· Bartev a an iaMcw'e IDdSYlclu.al wbo wu tn the mldat ot an alcobollc blackout when. ht at.ebbed Mn. Barlq lT U.... with • 1eUer opener .. bol'ltfttd wttn.._ watcbed. Proaecutor CUU Barrll, a deputY dlltrtct att.orne11 _ USd lt WU the def ... bufclea W Jll'Of* that Barley n1 baloe at the tlm• of the ltabbla •. Bard.I Mid "'4ence wtll abo* otberwtM. At tbe tlm• of tile aaa*r BarllJ WM GD pro~ M a ~ ...,. attaok • Mn. :'l'b9 J;• octam4 II Decemw JIN. \ · 'Tiie program as contemplated by t.be statute, and as actually carried out in the sch ools. was reli1ious in character. for prayer is ail invocaUon of tbe deity," the court ea.ld ln a ftve-pqe order. ''Here. then, we flnd a religious pro1nm wblcb wu aponaored and put lnto effect by !late and local offtc:iala under aegis of atate statute; was conducted trom day to day by teachers employed H public employees in public scboola. and was carried out on public property during school time. and as part or the school exercise," the court said. The atat.e araued tbat the law accommodates religion but does not sponsor It in the schools. Tbe statute took effect in February. "According to the precedents. the statute could not be saved from uncomtitutionallty by the fact that the prayers were spoken by vohmteer pupils, or that pupils could choose to be excused from the exercise," the court sald In today's order. The wue WU brou.1bt before the court in a suit riled by a group ot pupils and their parents. The court said a more detailed opmion would be issued later. A similar suit ba.s been tued in federal court but no action bu been taken on it. 145 Teachers InN-MUSD Face Layoffs Layoff notices have ,ooe out to t•5 teacher& n the Newport·Mna Unified School Dlatrict, .UOOl official& aaid today. The ootlcea of latent to d.lsmlu. which by law must be sent by March 15, ,...uhed from declinio& enrollment and from program cuts aa tru1teea try &o shave S3 to SC mJlllon from nut year's budget. The layotrs will save about $2.11 million next year, officials said. In addition, about 60 teachers working under one-year temporary contracts will receive letters after spring vacation, which ends April 6. saying, 1n esaence, that t.beir contracts won't be renewed. Regular teachers, but not tbe tempotartea, are eaUUed to hearings before a st.ate bearing officer, officials said. The district bu been Informed tM bearings .W be scheduled in late April t.o det.ermiDe euctly bow maJ11 t.eacherl can be eut. Teacbera are laid . off in revene order of aenlof1ty. Actual dlamillal notices must be HDt prior' to May 15. The number of teaehen recet.tnl them will probably be aomewbat lower due to nallnaUoal and retlrementl recel••d in tbe int•rlm, 1aid K"ln WbMler, distrlet Uliltant 1upertntendmt for penonnel. Lut year. be sai.cl 25 to ID rHlgnatlon and reUrement notlcet ••re reeelved by the dittrtct. A coocert to ra1ae money for tbe tour f\md will be beld at 4 p.m. Sunday at tbe ODeta .._. High School LJceum, 2150 Fairview Road. by the school's iDltrwnmtal ~· . Pert~: on~ 9lll bt th• COl&a coaoert band, the Jan ~and the percuuion entemble, uoder the cllrectlioo ol Earl Trelcbel. · Adm'~ ii '1 fot edulU and &0 een 0r 1t11deai., with Uck.U~•Cllat_.. IM& Ritea Held Con1tructaon on tbe new Pacll\c Cout H11hway briqe over Upper Newport Bay coWd bealll b)' April. accordlq to an offtclal wttb Kuler Corp., low bldderoa t.bepro)ect. 'Nick Sofia, apokeaman for the ISaD Bemantino-bued flnn, Mid tbe contract baa yet to be awardedtotbecompany,pendtn1 routine review by the state Attorney General's oltlce. Re ta1d the award abioQjld be made wttbin the next two weeb and con1tructton will bectn immediately aft.ertbat. The company, which built the Corona del Mar Freeway and bu worked on the Costa Mesa and Oranie freeways, aubmltted a bid .. of $8.9 million tor ~roject, the lowestofsixsubml . NetPl891ag1 Jim Wolford, an ardent roller skater. holds the ticket he received from a Seattle policeman for ''playing in tile street." Wolford. who says he skates "sometimes 100 miles a week," will fight the citation. EngiJWers Enter Disabled Plant MIDDLETOWN, Pa. <AP > -They also woo't have to put on Two engineers ventured bneny any extra gear because of inside the Three Mile Island radiation." Polon said. reactor building airlock today As a precaution. the two man after two health technician'> health team wore breathing checked for radiation and said 1l gear was safe. Tbe mtry followed \hree day., The teams were the first of atm08pbenc venting of what inside the area since 1t wa~ Polon called "a very minuscule" sealed off a year ago after the amount of radioactive krypton nation 's worst com rnerc1al aas from the crippled nuclear plant. nuclear accident. Tb~ entry ts a preliminary to Donning cloth suits. boots and gloves, the engineers entered the first human entry of the the airlock to take radiation huge reactor containment samples and make teau. Tbe building since the accident. Al•l--'-~ a tft __ .. "They will leak test t.be aea.ls .u ~~at :-a.m . ....., and the doora, take 1urface :i~c=:aaln at 10:4', plut cont.amlutlioa &lldea ud make The oew bridge eventually will replace the four-lane structure that Is nearly 50 years old and that represents one of the city's bisgest t.ratfic bottlenecks. The new atructure will have three lanes of traffic in each dlredion with an extra westbound lane for can heading northbound on Dover Drive. The project includes improvements and expansion of the highway intersections at Bayside and Dover drives u well as construction of the bridge. E s timated length of constructJon Is 18 months. Soffa explained that the contract calls for the elli.stlng bridge to remain o pen to trafric dur ng construction or the new structure which is to be built to the north. The o ld bridg~ will be demolished when the new one is finished. he said Navy Dancer Stripped of Rank Again M OFF ETT NAVAL AIR ~TA TION (AP J -A Navy t•nl1-.ted man demoted to a1rman last 14 eek was reduced in rank aJ?atn tb.Js lime to airman's .. ~pprentice after admitting he brought "dlscredit to the Navy" by daodng aa a male stripper. JeHrt-y Bandy llI pleaded guilt~ Wednesday l o violating u nif or m regulation s. .discrecbllng the Navy and ta.k.ulg two da)'lJ of unautbor1z.ed leave in a beanoe before Capt, R.F. Marryott. commanding officer at Moffett. No other eatri• a.re planned readlnp of the door. They will today, according to Sandy _take es.tensive radtatLon Po Ion, spokesman for the monlt.orina," Po'°'1 uid. nuclear power plant. The radioactive gas bad ~' Tbe englneers. a man and 8 trapped ui the &Jrlocll or ~ woman , went Inside tht' plant. crtppied in the March 2.8. Bandy was fined SlOO a month for two months and restricted to the ba.se for 30 days 9·bY·12-foot airlock after two 1979, accident . health teebniclan.s ten the area Wben purging or a trace of following a 10..mtnute test • adioactJve 1as began Mooday. "They found no airborne the airlock contained an particulates that require estimated 47 millicuries of respirators, so the engineers krypton. The containmen t won't be wearing respirators. buildlng bas more than a million CLJUNTY'S JOB M.4RKET YIEWED Today's Daily Pilot coven Oran1e County's employment market in "J obs," a special ma1uine a«tiDD. Firms seeking workers, tips on getting jobs and news ot the county's employment situation highll.ti.t the l&-pa1e tectioo. DOii"t m1'a "Job.," In today's Dailf Pilot. times that amount. The NRC st.a!C said it would try to persuade residents near the plant that venting more gas into the atmosphere poses no health threat. .. I knew it was goin1 to happen, but I don't like It . . There are a lot or people upset with it." said MiddletoWll Mayor Robert 8etd. whose com mun.ity lies nest &o the stricken plant. People UYini near Three Mile Island have opposed ventJng ias. and NRC aaauruca that .any releases would be well wttbln federal radition safety ltmila bave been met wtth di.alnllt.. The base LS located about 35 miles south of San Francisco. The five·)E'ar !'Javy veteran, 14 ho moonlighted al a Fremont nightclul> as a male dancer. was demoted from petty officer third dass lai.t week afle r Navy officials ordered tum not to stnp out of his wtiform Bandy was one of 12 male dancers featured at the Fremont club whi ch is frequented m05tly by women He would strip to his shoru to the disco tune "In the Navy," while displaying a Good Conduct Medal pinned to his shoru Birds Halt Plane TITOORAD, Yu1oslavia CAP> -A flock ol seagulls flew into the lef'l eOline of a Yueoalav Alrllnea Boei.ol 7Z7 as the plane started ita takeoff for Belerade Wednesday ntabt. 4 ••.:.10 CAP) -'fte ~ m111w to tM tall Bea .... trw ec-m•b ... ~Qditle Uaaa J .., ..... I I I " no ...... tJon. "" .... •· An 18 per~t Ihle "7tt11 Dtl'Mtu MUJ A r11111m WMld cut ..a. ~Ill• rete, •ben •u that ever Am ar... ll'lidld Calilwala'• taa revHu. and raltt tb• ebefore?" 1111~ wdl' •Me lato a ~ po11lbUtt1 UW tM ~tun ~predicted the ltate aurplua u n'• "* • 1*'. aeOOl6\I would bave to make cl•,.r· 00 June 30 would exceed the Sl.8 to Ma. O....,._ lb1n·anUdpated e\lta lf Propo&l· •a. Gra.,.1, Gov Sdmlilftd Uon '· tbe liO ptteent ttate tn· blWon predicted earUer bat aald •an-. .Jr.'a. top eeooomle ad-coine tax cut sponsored by •b• did not ''buy" the elaJm that YlNr, laid WedDelday lbat UAUI tloward Jarv11, ll approved by it would reaeb sz.e billion. two ..,.. qo IM bad a "rut vote.n June 3.. Sbe aaid abe d1d not have a re-~· tlaat ... eartler f~ut Aalled aft.el' the bearlD8 if lbe vised .um.te of what tbe aur- ol a mlld Ca!UIDr'ala f'fftlUkm •1reed with tbe receuion pre-plua would be on June 30, Ul81, W1 ,..r.,.. wroq. dlcUon. lb. Grave1 said. ''I am the end of the next fiaeal year. • * * * * * Little Aid to Inflation? J'be elf.Im.ate earlier Ws year WU that ft would drop to 1512 aillllon. "A lot depends oo what ba~ pena ln Weahlngtoo," abe aald, referrtna to Carter admlnlatra· lloo efforts to curb lnllaUon. Ms. Graves said her staff ls prepartng a rev\Md economic forecaat for the st.ate and could have a Jarvta II budget ready "in a few days. But I would not be comfortable with those num· ben." ahe added. * * * Beeau.e of the prospect of Juvl1 II, Brown ordered state 11encles to draft new 198041 bud1ets that epelled out 30 per- cent worth of cute He said he would unveil that ne w spending plan thia week. But Brown wu campaliCJllnl for preeldent l.n Wlsconeln ~Wecfnes· day and his aseoclate press secretary, Steve t>uacbea, said no new date bad been set for the budget. * * * 'l'llAT WM before the prim• IHdlq rate at m-.tor banks belU P"1"ln1 II percent and lbe met wttll a ~ ol prtvate economl1t1, moat of them representtq m-.tO!' Callfomta bank&. "Every alqle one of them ob- jected to her analysis and aald we would have a recession l.n sax months." sbe told tbe Senate Rules Committee. 'Whtch voted 3·1 to approve her appoinlmenl as finance direct.or. BalanCed Budget No Cure-all Al"WI ........ FINANCE DIRECTOR Mary Ann Greve• THE COllllllTl'EE also ap- proved several other Brown ap- pointees, including rice grower James Leathers a s an Air Resources Board member and Terry Trumbull as chairman or lbe Solid Waste Management Board. The votes sent the appoint- ------------------------------------------~ $50,000 to $500,000 INCOME PROPERTY SECONDS • ••t-• -av ... v-ent ···--• Co••ft'dal •A-Id-rial • w..Jdy CCI .,... .. . ..._...,,,....... ••_...to3.,_. ·~Callf--- { •l<'lldC"I our ICN1n lnformerioo Mni~• I ,, 11our lindnr in9 net!ds (714) 759-1515 AMERICAN HOME MORTGAGE :> lO Newpor1 Ce111e1 011ve Oes•gn Plaza Newpor1 Beacl'! C<1hlorn.a 92660 ~- WASHINGTON (AP> -Although President Carter intends to make a balanced 1981 budget the centerpiece of h.ls new anti- inflaUon strategy. almost no one expects it will do much to bnng down the nation's inflation rate. Then why ls be bothering'! For one thing, he bas to do something. For another. it's widely believed that government deficit spending is lnflaUonary. And those who accept that premise will be reassured that Carter has done somethlng. The president's anti-inflation program is expected to include a Floating Bank Rate Decision Rapped TORONTO CAP) -The Bank of Canada's decision to introduce a floating bank rate will hurt the stock market, devastate the bond market and do nothing to fight inflation. says a Toronto investment analysL Kersi Doodha of Aideck Investments Ltd. sald a noatmg bank rate wall "sub6tantially add to uncer- ta 10 ty because businessmen won't know what the cost or money will be from day to day." However. while agreeing that :i rtuctuating bank rate will cause headaches for busi· nessmen, another Toronto ex- pc rt said the decision was possibly the most sensible action the bank could have taken. Gerald Bouey, governor of the Bank of Canada. announced Monday night that the bank rate will be fixed each Thursday at one-quarter of one per cent more than the rate established earlier thal day for 91 -day treas ury bills. ORDER YOURS NOW Not So Much A Seminar • • ~A 4-l>cr/ lnvesb111d: TALK SHOW HalTJ SchuHz and 12 Experts balanced budget, selective credit controls and a new trut.iative to conserve ener(ly. Rep. Jim Wright. D-Teus. the House majority leader. said earlier this week that congressional leaders and administration of- ficials have tentatively agreed on almost $15 bUUon in budget cuts for 1981, although there were reports Tuesday the cuts would range from $12 billion to $15 billion. White House official say revenues also may be increased $S billion. CARTER ORIGIN ALL V PROPOSED a 1981 budget with a de- ficit of Sl.5.8 billion. Tbe government has not had a balanced budget since 1969. _ Alan Greenspan, chief economic adviser to former President Gerald Ford. is among those who lhlnks the b~dgel-balancing ex- ercise lS important. He says the hundreds or balllons of dollars the ~ovenunent has borrowed m recent years for 1ts.def1c1ts are a ma- )O r cause of inflation. But Greenspan doesn't thinJt a balanced budget wall result in a ;u bstantaally lower mOauon rate m the near £uture ONE REASON A balanced budget won't help much m the short term ts that a ma1or sbare of the nauon·s mnauon tS coming from hagb energy pnces and h.lgb Ullerest rates , neither of wlucb would be directly affected. Alice Rivlin. director of the Congressional Budget Office, said the reductJon an inflation from a balanced budget could be measured in "tenths of a percent." That's not much from the re- cent annual rate of t8 percent. although that rate as expected to ease somewhat as the year wears oo, even 1f oothm~ as done. Cnties of the balanced budget approach, and they are many, say that by balancing the budget. the adm1n1strat1on will be trad· ing lltUe gain agamst inflation for reduced economic output and in- creased unemployment. O"·e r 1 ... he Counter MASDLi~ flown in from Around the Wortd. H e presents the Original Schultz International Monetary Seminar in the Bahamas May 15-18. 1980. There will be a number of firsts: MUTUAL FUNDS 1000 BEAUTIFUL STICK-ON LABELS STYLISH TYPE ONGOOO 00AUTY WHITE GUMMED PAPER •PERSONALIZED •EASY TO USE • FOR YOU OR A FRIEND 1. The first seminar to be conducted in talk show format, informally, where speakers will chat in a dialogue to give investors what they want rather than a series of sleep-inducing formal speeches. 2. The world Is being taken over by the unholy trinity of inflation. taxation and Russian intervention. This will be the first seminar to cover all three. We'll discuss International mllltary movements and what they will mean to your survival and investments. We'll discuss investing In strategic metals. the exciting new area. And lots of vital subject matter. Harry Schultz created the first International monetary seminar In 1967 and eet the format for 13 years of flattering lmitatk>n by others. Now he la back In the seminar business to create a totalty new format tor the 1980'a. YOU VE BEEN TO THE REST. NOW COME TO THE BESTI Come to where hiltory will be made. I wish to attend the Schulz Ortglnal lnternatk>nal Monetary Semlnlf May 15-18 In Freeport. Bahama. Encloeed 11 my check or money order for. seso atngle .••.•••• '97& couple Thi• COYet8 au seminar ectlvlt'-Including 2 cocktail parties. 3 lunchel. 2 dinners. but not the hotel. NAME •• , •••.••.. • ••••••••••••• 11111;. ' ••• ADDRESS ••..•.•.•• . ................. .. A<oni" 0 -... ,. I . • ·~. • .. BUSINe-' I STOCKS ay &YLYIA fOltTSa -- 11 tbe ck>wnturD deepaa deilP'.,. tbe •••• lD mtlltal)' 1pendjn(, IOIDe I to 8.5 ID11lloa mea and women au1y be joblaa 1'ben the U.S. soee to the poll• w. fall, aD UD- emp&oymem rate of arouDd I percent a&ainat UDCler • per- cent now. Who wt1l c.be9e jobleu be and what mi,ht tbey m .. D to the unclktatee for the p1"NSdency? Mtaoritlee. particularly blacb and the )'OUDI will be bJt the bardelt, u ln put downtums. The unemployment ---------.... rate for blacks. for in· 1tanc•. now about 11 percent. may Jump to 18 percent. up about five percentage poiot.s. In contrast. the jobless rate fo r whites. now Money's Worth rouahly 5 percent, may move to 7 percent. a 1maller rtae of two percentage points. BLACKS WILL BE laid off becauae they frequenl\y IJlck 8ftliority or hold assembly line or other les1HkiU..d and noo..eaentlaJ jobs which employen eUminate fint durlnJ rec:e&aioos. Black teen-agers, wholle numbers have been tncrea.sing fa stl'r than other clauea of workers, will s urtn-because of the lack of new job openings. In addition. blacks. on average, are less well-educated, have less training and often are taraet.s of racial dis· crimlnalion as well. And anot..1er reason black teen·a1ers have high jobless rates In good times as well a& bad Is they have a much poorer "network" of job contact.a than whites. A recent study by Boston University economics pro- leasor PauJ Osterman of labor problems in two Boston communilles -one mostly wh1te, the other black -dJs. closed that white youth found JObs twice as often through friends and relatives than did blacks. THE a EASON : 01urimmauon. both paBt and present , put black parentJ. in less of a position lo help their off spring get work than whites As a result. 'llack tPcns must depend to a much greater extent than wh1tt.•' on !>uch Job placement mst1tutlons as schoot.. employment ag~nc1E."s e1nd manpower program~. None of these has had notable success in placing appli- cants ln good jobs Rising ;oble68neiss also tends to undermine the programs lhat the federal government has put in place to fight dis crlmlnat1on Affirmative action plans are undercut becauae lhe last hired are usually the first fi red JOB TRAINING PROG RAMS. too. become what Osterman calls "empty promm~s." since there are }Obs available for lh<>5e who have been trarned PartJy in antic1pallon of lh1s problem. the Carter ad ministration intends to reonent some Job training pro- grarn1 toward basic education and away from job skills :t 1s asking Congress for ao extra S2 billion to teach basic readlng. wnting and math slulls to teen agers and give them after-school jobs that would help them in the open m arket Will the unernplo)ed. assummg their numbers mount substantia lly. become a political force ror President Carter and other presldenilaJ caodicbtes to cona.lder? Will unemployment become a campa.lp taaue• No. THAT'S ntE ANSWER, according to a new book. "b jury to Insult: Unemployment. Class and Pohtic::il Response." by two Harvard University political scientist~. Sidney Verba and Kay Lehman Schlo1man <Har vard Uni versity Press. 19791 The unemployed do not convert their anger or hardship into poht1cal action. the author~ rind In (act. they are lt>ss l1kel} than the employed to be in terestNi 1n politics. to read a daily newspaper, to watch the TV news -and most significant. less likely to volt' than the employed The explanations ar(' much more connected with their backgrounds. education levels and other demographic cbaractensllt"s th•m their lack of a JOb. report the authors . UNEMPLOYMENT, HOW EVER. has "the potential for influencing national elecllon outt"omes. but lhat effect comes from others "ho vote in accordance with their opi - nions oo employment as an issue.·· claim Verba and Schloiman Fundamental messaJ?e-Much as Carter 1s pushing tnlla tion into the background a!> he assumes the role of statesman in a foreign crisis and creates the "Carter Doc· tnne." rooming hv1ng costs slill lhreaten us all And nothing Wlll detr act rrom inflation as the No. l Econom1t' Evil of this era -nothing -when our eyes t'ome Ullo focus again. Color TV Set Imports Down WASHINGTON <AP > -The number or color television sets imported Into the United States in 1979 was only half the number Imported the previous year. the government r~porta. Even so. more than one ln 10 of the color sets available for sale tn lhe United States II.ft year was made elsewhere. The Comm~ Deoartment said recently there were t.• mlJUon color sets Imported in 19'79 compared to a record 9 million made In the Unll· ed States. In ~· \here we~ 2.8 milUon seta import- ed comp~ to 8.3 million made ln the United States . Moat of the imported aets come from Japan, Taiwan and Korea. Exlatlnc federal Umlta on co\or TV Imports expire June 90, but U.S. television ln· duatry \eaders are urcilll President Carter to extend tbem. Gold, Silver Quotations