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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1980-04-03 - Orange Coast PilotTHURSDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 3, 1980 ..__ ... 9'.t9"1•9'. N4Mt ' • ase-:1' I T~ Breaks Critiei:ed For-Live-in Lovers i t ._ ______________ ... ._am ______________________________ ~J ' • 1Transf er of· Hostages Due Soon? Aleala Trial Jail Ethks Code Cited By DAVID KtJ'l'ZllANN °'_....., ........ J It was a jailbouse code of fetbics which led to an Orange 1 County iDmate•s testimony Wed· 1 nesday apinst murder defen· dant Rodney Alcala. 1 Prosecution wttnesa Michael . Herrera. a former heroin user 1 and pusber, said be wrote down ~statements Alcala made to him in connection with the disap- pearance and murder of Robin Samsoe last June because the case involved a child. "People in institutions feel a certain hostility toward child molesters and rapists," Herrera said. Alcala, 36, of Monterey Park, is' charged with the abduction Tax Inequit y flamed.fo r Divorce Rate WASHINGTON CAP) -An assistant general counsel for Yale University serves "as a disincentive to marriage and an incentive to cohabitation" and should be changed. Lynda Sands Moerschbaecher .also said the so-called "mar- inate penalty" was encouraging !divorce and creatinc a reason I for women to remain out ol the labor force. 1 She suggested the simplest - •and fairest -mean1 of !abolishing the marriage penalty (would be to have everyone file indiYidual returns and use oaly one income tax rateabedule. Althouab W.S would IOlve tbe problem. lbe said, aome com· mentaton feel it abould not be adopted beeauae tupayen are familiar with the current lsyatem. I But she added, "When I familiarity with complexities prevents a return to faimeu and atmplidt7, all bOpe for tu re- form 11 lolt." .. Tbe couple II not a proper eaUty or tax unit; tbe ln· dl•lduala earntn1 the Income ..., proper tax unit.I. No com- 1>4tlllDC reuon exllta to force one wa1e earner and two wace earners to pay tbe exact same (8ee DJVOacB, .... "2) ~aadptTold LOS ANGELES CAP> -Wltb a 112 mlWon buUnsl from the . ctt,r•a .....,e f\md and no ID• • creHe la t•ae•, If a1or Tom Jraclley bu lnt.roduced what be ·=• ''U&btly drawn .. fl.• buqet to CMTJ the city . .r-1111. and slayjna ol Illas Samaoe, 12. of HlJDWllt.00 Beach. The proeecution in the case bas relied oo testimony the past few days of jailbouse informers who were wtth Alcala wbeo he was taken Into custody at Orange County Jail last sum-mer. · Herrera, who testified Wed- nesday that Alcala admitted ab- ducting and beating · Miss Samsoe unconscious, said in· mates look down on prisoners being held for crimes against children. He said he bad his own personaJ "code of ethics" as far as children were concerned and he admitted that the nature of the charges against Alcala bothered him. Because he bas lived in in· stitulioos most of hi s life, be said, the hostility toward rapists and child molesters becomes in· grained among inmates. Under questioning by both prosecutor Richard Farnell and defense attorney John Barnett, Herrera denied be had been promised any special deals or breaks for his testimony. Free on bail accused of viola- tion of probation, Herre ra testified Wednesday that Alcala told him during jailhouse con- versations how he lured Miss Samsoe into bis car at the seashore in Huntington Beach. He said the murder defendant told the girl he wanted to take pictures of her for a ma1uine, that it wouldn't take long and that be would pay her. When lhe. agreed to go along, Alcala placed her 10.speed bicycle in the back of bis small Datsun and tbey drove off. Herrera said Alcala told bim. When the child became frightened and wanted out ol tbe car, Herrera said, Alcala told him be becan slapping her. <See .ALCAIA, Pace AJ> Bania CIDae · Good Friday Most banka alon1 the Oran1e Coast will cloee their doors from noon or 1 p.rn. on Good Friday, bank offtciall aald today. County ancl clty Offlcet will re· main open for ballw1 u uaual, aldDI wttb county and elt1 libraries and UM <>hue Oount1 Dump, accordlu to aafborttiel. Saytnp and IOaa lD.utudom val')'~ ~U.., boun on tbe aacred bollda1. IOIDe eloltq at nootror 1 p.m., nd r.opealq at J r·m· and eome not opeain. at al Friday alterDoon. A call to the lndh1dual brucb cu be t ad• to determine when to COD· etballnlt1. r DeHeopter Wreekage Beachgoers Mark James, Jim English and Darren Kepner Cfrom left). get close up view of crumpled piece of helicopter that crashed in ocean off Huntington Beach last Saturday evening. The boys, all Hunt- ington Beach residents. were at the beach o.ty,,...,_~ Wednesday afternoon when the debris washed ashore. Divers are still trying to raise the remains of the helicopter which. they believe, contains the body of one of two men killed in the crash 45 Stricken by Fumes 2,000 Evacuated as Chemica l Tank Splits SOMERVILLE, Mass. CAP> - Toxic fumes billowed from a chemical tank car that split open lo a train wrect today, sending -45 people to tbe hospital and forcing the evacuation of at least 2,000 others. Official.a satd 30 people were taken to Somerville Hospital, while 15 otben were taken to MaaaacbusetU General Hospital in nearby Boston. At llaasacbusetts General, apokesman Martin Bander said · at least one person had breathed enoulb of the gas to be admitted ·to the hospital. However, most . were liven oxygen, •bowen and a •ariety of tats. Pollce ordered the Tobin Bridle acroa the Mystic River clOHd u tbe fumes 1pread into Bolton. The brtd1e ta one of the major routes C!ODDecti ng Bost.on with Ill northern 1uburbs. Offlclall said the .au. iden- tified aa pboepborua tricbloride caUJet lrrttatfoo ol the eyes Ud1 lun11, whlle those who set. maHlYe do1e1 face poulble1 liver aad lddntJ damqe. It ill uaed to mu• water tre1tmeat cbemltall. ' ''It'• '°°11tobe1olu on fw a very Iona lltQe," aafd WlllJa Greene, the aMJn1 SoDHlntUe nre chief. "There'• notb.lna we can do to atop the 1u. The only thii;a• w can do once tt'• •'°M*i leaktlal II to throw IOIDe dlrt OD Uae tr.Deb. II 1 .... - A white, foggy cloud of chok· in1 gas drifted toward Cam· bridge and was evident at leut a mile away from the crash scene on the Boston & Maine Railroad traclt. Railroad emplojees, wearing gas masks . u sed three payloaders to dig a trench beside the tracks to capture the leaking chemical before it vaporized. The chemical poured through 4th Hospital Anacker Guilty PENDLETON, Ore. CAP) -A circuit court Judie bu found a fourth employee tullty ot aa· saultlnt patients at EHtern Oreaon HOlpital and TralDlna Center. Jerry .R. Davis, 21, wu found lullty ol tbrM-CO.ti ol fou.rth- de1ree ... uit and two nduced cbar1ea or bara11meat. P1"0MCUkn .. , ... cboted a Pl· tlent • ~ blm wtth a bot· tleopeaer. Fifteen emplo1••• of tbe center were fired and lJ of them cbar,..S with uaauJt or bar ... ment folio= an attorney pneral't ill au.. l:arUet, two ..,.. eaavtet.d and ~r plea4edlullt). \ a gash in the side or the tank car, and fl.re officials said they believed about 16,000 gallons would escape before the car was empty. Officer Kerian Fallon said 50 to 75 buildings, most of them in- dustrial structures, were being evacuated. At least one fl.refigbter was overcome by the fumes and taken away for treatment. A small army of police and firemen wearing various kinds of breathing devices descended on the netlhborbood to stop traf. Cle and warn realdenta and work· ing people to leave the area. A spokesman for tbe 1tate Civil Defense office sald phosphorus tricblorlde la poisonous ii mixed with water. Tfle ai;:cident occu.rred about 9 a . m. near · the lnterbelt In· dUJlrial Park . .Amoni buildinp evacu.ated were warehou.us, aaraaes. body &bops, a motel and three schools. Edward llar1eaon, muter ol the lbaUc Junction railroad <lee TODC, Pa1e AJ> 'hbope Boycott CAIRO, El)'Pt CAP> - BlJbOJll ot Eppt'a Coptlc Chrta· tlan Orthodox Church boy~ Eaater services toda)' Mc:auae of rectnt Moslem~Chril n frtc· tJon heft. Militants Awaiting Decision BtJILETIN By'l'lle 4m r d r -.r ..._ lru'1 ......... .........,,. c...o ....... ,. ... .,,rl11 oa t•lllag e a sledy of t•e A•erieu -.&aps au.I Pftsi. deat Carter elar lfles •Is reapeue t.e eeedilJoas set by lraalao leader1, Foreign Minister Sadegb Gbotbzadeb s aid today. By~ Associated Press Militants holding American hos"9ges inside the occupied U.S. Embassy in Tehran said to- day they are ready to tum their captives over to the r uling Revolutaonary Council if re- quested. The trans fe r could com e Saturday, two council members said. lraruan President Abolbassan Bani -Sadr. inte r v ie wed on American television. said Presi· dent Carter met his demands for the government to take control of the hostages, and that he would aslt the council to make a dec ision later in the day. A spokesman for the militants told Canadian Press in Tehran; "We will accept any decision that the Revolutionary Council takes because it is the highest body in the ceunt.ry which is sup- ported by Ayatollah Ruhollab Khomeiru," leader of the revolu· taon . The militants had relied on Khomeini's support' to defy an attempt by Bani-8adr last month to tak e custody or tbe Americans. Bani-Sadr. speaking to CBS (See lltAN, Page A2) Coast Weath e r Partly cloudy late night and early morning; but mostly sunny and a little warmer throuab Friday .. Lowa toniabt fn the 408. Highs Frfday 64 at the beaches and 72 lDland . INSIDE TeD~ W At1Qtla OIOMr GeM Autry, 1Hll •teaming over U.. _,,,_ br bcueball .,...,.., '°''•fit '°°' Mp to ldm, ltie'd coll oft ,,.. NQIOft. Sec Sport1, ~ Bl. l ..... At,._..,.._ •n ..., l•I 9'a .,..~a -. ....... -a L.M..... M ............ .. ~-9M...... 91J.M _..__. .............. .. Cllwclll AM ............. M ct....._ °'" ~----.11 ~ ··~ ., .. ~ ............ '" .,......_.. "" T....,..._ au efltwlM ,...,, f-...n att•M ea .. r«u l 81M4 .._ M ......,_ C1.a......... M .. ...__ a ' / ----~ W.Vr!.QJ 8 Tl'lui 6 I Ae!!t !, ,.., Eneu . I .: I Train Strikes M;,v~ 41!!!.~tme~~ ![nit LOS ANOSLSS <AP> -A l WO•l lory 'partmeDt bulldlaa b•ln1 lowed aero11 ranroaa tracu .. raamed bJ • ..... movlq ,....._ lrW .....,, _, piece• o1 · Oat· buJldJ•1 nre strewn tar bundrecb et ,.,., a uthortd Nid . One man apralned bla ankl when ~ aaw the train romin1 and Jumpc-d on lbcl Lop "!. lhe 11 bulldlQ&. The man, aa em~ of the Cbeate.r SeQ H'ouM Mov· lnl Corp ol South Gale, t)ad bffn mak.ina sure lelepbone and power liDoa were kepl clear ot the rooftop. , "W~ undentand that the mov ••1 eompan1 had 10Utn permlaiiOD \0 crota the traw." aald Nor\beut Dtvlalon pallc. Lt. atdl Wahler. "'l'beJ have lo t bft.11 Mead, ud were 11ven tltaruee to ~rou at th.at Umt. Then, 1'1dlt t.be apartrnent bou.so 'waa 1traddUn1 tho track, lb tnln ca.me t.hrou1h " He aald the 2 15 • m .. craah n.,ar Ft1uuroa StrHl In the lUthJand Park aecUon w.a bt· lnLlDY91llaated u a tralf\c ac·· ci nt. No Cl.ama1e ealtmate wu aivatlablt1 Police Sit Paul Hermann said the bulldma wa.s moving alowly across tbe tracks near Fi~roa Street \i\o'hen the crosslng arms Biker Broke Knievel Ta ken to Court MIAMI (AP) -Daredevil Evel Knievel faces a $1~,000 damage suit over a yacht that he says he can t.afford to b_uy though be fixtd it up by adding a t eak deck. carpeting and extra bedroom mirrors. Tran.sit Charter Inc. contends Knievel's im- provements damaged the 116·foot yacht and he broke a cootract to buy it. The company convinced a feder!11 Judge Tuesday that the motorcycle 'Stuntman was liable for any damage to the vessel. Judge William Hoeveler set a beannr this month to .determine the extent of damage to the yacht Km.::vel says he chartered in mid·lm to take his family to moto~~ycle r~ces in Daytona Beach. . In a depos1hon, Knievel said the $50,000 he spent m yacht renovations plus the costs of several speed· bo~~: two Lear )ets, ~wo motorcycles and two Jet skis broke me ftnanc1ally. It put me in debt to the tune of.$4 million. I just never recovered.·· . KJ:Uevel . also. faces a multi·million-dollar judg. ment m California and an lnte.rnal Revenue Service property lien for $1.6 million. an attorney said. Trend CA»ntiaaes Holiday Visitors Quiet i n N ewport C1ty officials confirmed today wbat U. bten obvious all week -then are DO bordea of Bal Week celebraata mlabebavLnc en maae ia NewlJIC)tt Beach. "It's been quiet. Very, very qQiet, .. commented police Sgt.. Joe Lambert. ··we don't have any extra units working and just from what I've seen, we haven't had any increases in arrests." British Gals To Be Armed? LONDON (AP> -Prime Mini.Ster Marearet "Thatcher's government haa suggested that women soldiers may soon be carrying gum. It would be the nnt time British women carried arms since an ancient queen fou1bt the Romana. A defeme policy document la+ s ued Wednesday by the 1ovem· ment aaid defense chiefs look \0 women \0 "play an increaalng part in the work of our armed forces." With that in mind, it said, female recruits may soon be is- s ued weapons for self-defense or guarding military bases, u are their counterpart.a lo the United States and,aome other countries. llae Ki118 Five CHICAGO (AP> -A base· menl fire engulfed a SO·unit South Side apartment buUding Wednesday, and by the time firemen bad the blue under con· trol. five people were dead and a pregnant woman was critically injured. Ao exploding space healer touched off the blaze. DAILY PILOT , ... p ..... (714)MMl21 a .. ,"'" ~•aM11MHl7t "-~ The days of BaJ Week when lbouallDda of teena1en would deeeead. cm Newpon ended more than a dw.,.. qo. Tbe quiet on lbe atreeta and beach of Newport is testimony to that. Lifeguards said they've had some sizeable beach crowds, but few rescues and no problems with sunbathers · The beach crowds are averag. 1 og slightly more than 75,000 people until Tuesday when b.lgh winds and cold temperatures sent beach visitors home by noon, said Lt. Logan Lockabey. "We've been busier training some new guards for summer than we have with the beach crowds," he said. Both Lambert and Lockabey said they expect more people to show up over the weekend. "U trouble bits, it'll come thia weekend." Lambert said. ,.....P.,,eA J TOXIC •.• yard, said the tank was sitting on a siding when it was struck by an engine. "The tank wu stopped, and it looks like the engine scraped the tank." he said. A railroad spokesman said the tank car was destined for a nearby chemical plant. ...... , A reward tor the sate return ot Ronald Tolleson Jr., 10, has been offered In West Covina, and hll father ts be11in1 friends of a parolee sou«bt in the abduction to lead hi to the ~Y 0 even If he's ." came down. Ollt arin eamt down bth1nd th bulldlna and lb• other hlt \he alde of the bUlldinl and broke. Tb• lralD'I tnato .. r told pollce, ''I came a.round tb• curve aod there wu a buUdlq across the tracks. J put on the brakes. but there was notblnt el1e l could do." 8y the lime the train acreeebed \0 a stop. p ieces of the bulldlaa were acattered alone more ti.an a third of a mile of track. Lt Wahler said the train was moving al 15 mph when the brakes were applied. ft P.,,eAJ IRAN' ... and NBC News. said the RevoJu. lionary Council would decide on the timing of the transfer. and that an Iranian Parliament to meet this summer would settle the fate of the AmericaM. He aaid he received a message from Carter on Wednesday which met bla conditions. but did not elaborate. "Aa far as I am concerned, the United Stat.ea bas now met the condition for the Revolutionary Council to take control of the hostages," Bani·Sadr said in the CBS interview. According to published re - ports, the key condition was that Carter refrain from further com ment.s on the hostages unW the Parliame nt, or Majlis, m eets. White House spokesman Jody Powell told reporters Wed· nesday the administration will be "restrained," and urged Americans to "stay cool, at least for a while." ··we intend to continue \0 be restrained in our words and ac t10ns so long as real progress 1s made to resolve tbe crisis and bring our people home." Powell :-.aid in a prepared statement Bani-Sadr a lso said that the hostages would be allowed vis· 1tors. but that the council wouJd dec ide whether their ram1hes would be able to see them. No family members have been al· lowed to see the hostages since militants seized the embassy 152 days ago. Two memben ol the Jlewlu. Uonary Council wen quoted u aayln1 the hostages could be transferred as early as Satur· day. The Tehran newspaper Kayhan .eported that council members Eztalah Sahabi and Ayatollah Mabdavi Kani dis· cussed the issue with the mili- tants . FrwmP-A J · DIVORCE ••• tax aimply because what they have in common is havin1 aald 'ldo."' The marria1e penalty resuJta because Income earned by work· in& couples who are married is added toeetber, putting them in a higher tax bracket and in· creaain& their taxes. Tbe ••me couple. lf not married. would file separate returns and their in· come would be taxed al a lower rate. The Ways and Means Commit· tee. which writes the nation's tax laws. beard Wednesday from a Maryland couple wbo twice divorced each other and twice remarried before finally endlng their marriage to simply live together Angela and David Boyter said the reason had nothing to do with romance. They were just saving money at income tax time. The Boyters a re among a growing number of Americans who are disdaining marriage to avoid a provision in federal tax law that taxes working husbands and wives at a higher rate. The House committee, which opened hearings on the "mar· riage penalty" Wednesday, was told that one woman and her nance decided against marrta1e because of the higher taxes. Another couple married only to gl ve their child a legitimate birth certificate and others, like the Boyten, dlvorced to lower their lax blU. The issue was brought to at· tentlon or the public lasl October when the Internal Revenue Service took the Boyters to U.S. Tax Court to argue that t.belr divorces and reman1a1es were a "1ham tranaactlon." Tbe cue 11 pendin1. The Boyt.era, from Elliott ctty, Md., earn about $30,000 each as federal emplo7ees. They told the committee they h ave saved almOlt $15,000 In taxes over the pest five years by divotclna to take advanta1e or lower tax rate~ for Ingle pel'l'OnA. "I ask you, la this the kind of behavior you want to promote?" lbe Boyte.rs uked rhetorically. Tbe Carter a dmlniatratlon HJI no. but oftleiala told the comm.tu. t.be7 Uffll't dedded wbat tp., aboat tlle dilemma. Pa•clfl •e.ri .. llp Ching Ching, the London Zoo's female giant panda. receives medical attention from veterinary surgeon John Knight dur· ing the animal's daily drip-feed . Ching Ching. presented to Britain's Edward Heath on a visit to China. has been ill with a digestive problem which requires an operation. No l..ink Believed In FOod Poisoning S AN DIEGO CAP> -San Diego police do not believe the same person who was mvolved in the weekend cyanide po1socung of food items 1n two local Sa fewa y s upermarket s 1s responsible for a ahnllar occur· rence m the Riverside County commuruty of Palm Desert San Diego detectives ""ent to Clerk Routs Fow-Kids in ·Robbery Try San Clcmcntt.' polite C1re tn· vest1gatrng an attempted rob- ber y of a market late Wed.nes· da,y in whlch four suspects -JO· cludmg a boy wbo looked about 10 years old -escaped empty· banded. Police reports were aketchy. but employea at Albert.IOO'a Ma rtet. I02 North EJ Camino Real. said three of the four youngsters entered the market shortly after 9 p.m. One or the teen agers ap parenU y picked up a bottle of h quor, but was confronted by a market clerk woo orde red him to put the bottle back on the sh\?lf. The boy, about 16 years of age. returned the liquor. then pulled a large hunting kn.1fe and threatened the clerk with the weapon. The clerk ordered the knife· wielding you.npter to 1et out. and the boy nect. aJon1 with his two companioo.a, one of whom •ppeared to be 20 years old. A fourth suspect wu seen in the car by witnesses, and a customer obtained the license plate of the smaJI yellow foreign car as it sped from the parking lot Camp Pendleton military police said today they believe they have found the vebJcle in· volved m the market Incident. San Clemente Police uJd to- day they Wiii continue their in· vest1gallon of the attempted rob- bery Palm Desert to confer with s ber i rr ·~ de puties and FBI agents but all concluded the Palm Desert mc1dent Mooday was the work or another in· d1v1duaJ. authont1es announced Wednesday Meanwhile. in Beaverton. Ore . pohc-e said Wednesday that a n anonymous caller two weeks ago satd he put cyarude in • jar of pickle-in d market and de m Cl nded th<:>usand:-. or dollar.. in diamond~ Th1> C-<IM' 11o .1 .... .,1m1lar to thf> t 11o o ht'n'. in ""h1C·h tht-· 1>01~m c; J OS! · d tmJndt'CI !iu to 100 1l1amnnd~ in f>'l(C'h;ing1· f<Jr t•nd 1ng the Pxlor11on !\ J<H nf p1t k le-. and bolt It-of t~nyak1 !-aU<'l' \lo t•rt• found to bf· heav1ly lacr-d ""1th C'\ an1dl' HeaH•rton Pohc1> Chief Don ~ev.ell said a trace or c}anide v. a~ found March 22 in a JU of ptckl~ at J Fred Meyer loc. market. He sa1d officials did not a onounce the 1ocideot earlier because ''there was no need to alarm the publlc ... In the Palm Desert ~ man phoned the Safe wa~ ma rket and 1denllf1ed h1m~ll a.., the same ~rson v. ho Pot5o<>ned t .,. o food 1tt>ms at tht> San Ou~go 'tor<'s Tht> caller v. a med that " bottle or salad drcs:.ing \Ila ~ po1soO<'d and demanded J large .1mount of dJamonds and c<bh bf' de livered late Monda) Law enforeement offl c<'rs . Ln R1vers1de County said the FBI took over the case and met the extortionist's demand, but the suspect got nervous at the drop slle and fled. Meanwhile, San Diego police sa id they were be&innmg to get prank calls from youog,.sters echoing the threats and arrested two US-year-old Juveniles for makang caJ..l.s to Safeway stores m P oway and Rancho Bernardo. Both were released an their parents' cmt.ody. Authorities are sed:ing Richard Q. Williams. 46, of Wincbester, in the Palm Desert case. Wllllanu was acquitted of a poiaoni.ne charge ln a Sun City Safeway market Incident last May ·ALCALA ••• ·'I a.aked him bow many times be bit her. He s aid, ·1 don't know.' " the wttness testified. ··He told me he slapped the s- oul of her and she passed out." Herrera said be also asked Alcala during the August. 1979, conversations if he s hot or s tabbed MLSS Samsoe and he said he didn't He said the defendant told bim the ctuld's bicycle would oe.er be fowld. that he had left it aCa store with the word "thrlft.0 in the title. However. another witness in the case. Anyelo Bouzos. manager or a thrift store in El M ontc. testified la ter Wed.nes· d..l)' that o yellow JO-speed bicy- l'le -.1m1lar to Miss Samsoe's bad bct>n left at tus store on June 20, 1 lw dJy the httlc girl d1sap· pe..tred Bou.ws said he sold the bicycle later in the mooth and could not rind the ~e1pt with the buyer·~ name Jurors in the case spent a ~hort time Wednesday outside the courthouse in Santa Ana watctu.ng Huntington Beach de- tect 1 ves place a similar bike in the back of Alcala's small fore1~n t"ar to sbow it e<>u.ld be dont· Train Crash Cause Sought LAKEVIEW. N .C. CAP>- Ra1lroad omc1aJs searched to. day for the reason an Amtrak tram carrymg 300 people passed :.. warrung signal and sma,,bed into an oncoming freight, tossing 10 passenger cars off the track. No one was killed and there were no serious injuries in tM accident, whlch occurred in the North Carolina SandbiJls early W~nesday as fo& shrouded a bend m the track. Offi ciaJs at Moore Memorial Hospital in nearby Pineburat :;aid they examined and treated 102 persons, but most were al· lowed to leave. Eight persons w e re admitted, none with serious injuries, and one refused to remain hospitalized. $ 00 3 styles to choose fro19: oxford, brown or maple. Newport Surf and Sport Main Store 2224 fMwport Blvd. Newport9Hch t'1f.117'4 StON 2 210\lt Merine Avt. 81lbo1 l•l•nd 173-7126 ~ VISA' Star. l SouHt Coast Pf aa Cotto Mete 64l ~OSZJ with this coupon Expires April30, 1980 t .~May' £1 .. la« N. 't'. St.ell• ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA N TWENTiV.FIVE CENTS • Firem.en Ba Ck Challengers M•e'*" of Newpon 8etch polte. Hd Ore departmenta wbOH two-year contncta wtlb the e1ty expire thia summer, an acUvely campa1Jnint for clty 'council undldat • Pblllp II aurer 11.0d John Cox . Tbe memben ol the police and flreflahten auociations have been walking door·to-door with cam~p material for 6th Dis· trict candidate Maurer and 1lh District candidate Cox. Maurer la the kine opponent of locum- A119tlae1· •elela bf>nt Pa\&l Ryctoff a.ad Coz J.I tbe only OllCMlll •* Of Incumbent Ray WHUama. Both incumbent• bave op· posed co.ril MU1ure1 aimed at keepla1 tH lwo employee. troupe .__, the bigbeat-paJd in tM CCMmty. Tony DeTevis, prealdenl of the firefi&hten uaoclatlon and bead of that ooup's political action committee, nid more than ball ot tbe asaociaUon's approx- imately 100 memben have been Mount St. Helens erupts through a heavy cloud layer this morning, sending smoke. ash and ice chunks into the air. The voJcano, located 45 miles northeast of Portland. has been active since March 27. <Related story page A4.) Railroaded Train R ams Apartments LOS ANGELES (AP> -A two·story apartment building being towed across railroad tracks was rammed by a slow· moving freight train today, and pieces of the building were strewn for hundreds or yards, authorities said. One man sprained his ankle when be saw the train coming Sniper Fires On DepuJies, Slrrenders ROWLAND HEIGHTS <AP> - A sniper opened fire oo a group of construction worke rs and sberiff's deputies today before SW AT and other special teams converaed on a house where be w• biding and be surren· dered. W orllers reported bullets atarted wbistlinc past them about 8:JO a.m. at..a ~utruction 1l1e on South Brea 1:anJ'Oll Road ln this San Gabriel Valley com· aiunity 25 miles east of downtown Los An&eles, said Los Angeles County sheriff's Sgt. Jack Anderson. Thl'M patrol can from the Cl· · tJ of IDdallr)' ahuiff'I station were allo fired oe when 'they ar- rived at tbe scene, Anderson N id. There were no tnjurles, but one deputy said a {OUDd may • laave struck bis radio ear. Calilornla Hldlway PatrOI of· nc.n wen called lD to seal oil Ille ana at Brea Can1on Road at" Colima Roe4 and lb• Oraoae PrMwar. A.DdmllOll aa1d a roulh cUTJln1 ..22-eallber rtn. bad Meri seen wller ahoaittn1 at bladtblrdl ln' .. ~ "' tM C!OGltnlct.ioll lite. OM wttneu reported seeta1 *9 IDlpft' duck lnto the 1ara1e :iii a .... JUlt west of the C()C)· •Wiiia atla. Thi 1out.b, Wbo ll •• ..... aot ldelltlfted. ) ... and jumped off the top of the building. The man, an employee or the Chesler Seay Hoose MOY· ing Corp. of South Gate, bad been malting sure telephone and power lines were kept clear of the rooftop. , "We understand that the mov· i n g company had gotten permission to cross the tracks," said Northeast Division police Lt. Rick Wahler. "They have to check ahead, and were given clearance to cross at that time. Then, while the apartment house was straddling the track, the train came through." He said the 2:15 a .m .. crash near Figueroa Street in the Highland Part section was be· ing investigated as a traffic ac· cident. No damage estimate was available. Police Sgt. Paul Hermann said the building was movtnc slowly across lbe tracks near Figueroa Street when the crossing 8J'Dl5 came down. One arm came down behind the building and the other hit the side ·-of tbe building and broke. The train's engineer told police, "I came around the curve and there was a buiJdtne across the tracts. 1 put on the brakes, but there wa.s nothin& else I oouJd do." By the time the train screeched to a stop, pieces ol the buUcling were scatter;ed aloaa more than a third of a m.lle ot track. Lt. Wahler said the train WU movin& at 15 mph wbn tbe brakes were applied. Junia Continuee SAN SALVADOR EllSalndor (AP)-El Salvador'-• Jb,nta ex· tended the Jt.at. of 1Ie1e for 30 days as oppoclUon poliUclans and profaaional people formed a new front to betp lef\lJta bettle the recime. The junta lmPGMd the state of 1le1e Mareh I, itv· Inc lt bro9d powen ol IMtClt Hd arrest Add enabUDI It to restrict the preu. walkial pc'eelDcta ror the last two _._.,,., He said tbe1 will lM out ap1n Wt weekend. Mite llcDonou1h, president of the police auoc.lation, aaid in· divtdual members of bis group have been working on the Cox and M,urer cam~gos as pre· cinct walJters. However, the involvement of McDonough and bis fellow police officers isn't as representatives of the associat.ioo. "We are in· volved as interested citizens." * * * be a.aid. In the case of the firef(Cbten. the work on the two ca.mpa.tan.a came about as a result al the association eodors· inl Cox and Maurer. DeTevla explained that all nine council candidates were in· terviewed by the political act.ion committee before the eodone- ments were given. He said the group also would camSS'aign this weekend for 2nd District candidate Rutbelyn * * * ( Plummer. Cox and Maurer have ex· pressed concern about the toss of employen from the police and rtre departments and the fact th.at lbe pay and beoefit pacups earned by Newport's public safety employees give lower than similar packages lo several other cities in Orange County. Ryckoff, durinl his campaign, bas aaid be al.o is concerned about public safety in NeWi>Ort * * * Beach, but, u a fiscal COD· servative, doesn't want to prom. lse p~y . ra1ses tbe Cit)' mJ.tbt not be able to afford. Williaml bu echoed Ryckoff's statements and bu pointed out that recent statewide ballot meuuses such as Propoeltlon 13 and the impending ~ltion 9 have created a poor climate for public employees which explains the loss of policemen and firemen and the recruiting dif. ficulties experienced by both de· partments. * * * Cha1·ter Changes Eyed N ewport to Vo te on Four Prop osit ions Newport Beach voters. in ad· d1tion to selecting three city cbuocll members next Tuesday, will vote on four ballot propos1· tions to amend the city charter. They are: PROPOSmON A to change ~ the date of municipal elections from April of even·numbered years to November of odd numbered years. The measure was instituted by five members of the City Coun· cil. The ballot argument in favor of . the change was signed by Mayor Paul Ryckoff and council members Evelyn Hart and Doo ,._I • 1rimnage Penalty' Tax Ci1'ed WASHINGTON CAP> -An auutant 1eneraJ covmel for Yafe Unlvenl~ NrTH "as a · disincentive to marrtaie and an incentive to cohabitation" and should be cbao&ed. Lynda SaDda Moencbbaecber also said tbe so-called "mar· riage peualty" was .encouraging divorce and creating a reason for women to remain out of the labor force. She suigested the simplest - and fairest -means of abolishine the marriage penalty would be to have everyone file individual returns and use only one income tax rate schedule. Altbou&h this would solve the problem, she said, some com· mentators feel it should not be adopted beca\lse taxpayers are familiar with the current system. But s he added, "Whe n familiarity with complexities prevents a return to fairness and simplicity, all hope for tax re· form ls Jost." "The couple is not a proper entity or lax unit; the in· dividuals earning tbe income are proper tax units. No com· . pelUng reason exists to force one wage earner and two wage earners lO pay the exact same tax simply because what they have in common is having said 'Ido.'" The marriage penalty resulta because income earned by work· inl couples wbo are married is added together, puttlne tftem lo a higher tax bracket and in· creuiq their taxes. The si.. couple, ll not married, would me separate returns and their in- come would be taxed at a lower rate. The Ways and Mean.a Commit· tee, which writes lbe nation's tax laws, beard Wednesday from a Maryland couple who twice divorced eacb other and twice remarried before finally endina their marrlaae to simply live together. Bania Cl.ose Glod Friday llOlt benb aJont U.. Oranle Cout will clole tbelr cloon from DOOD or 1 p.m. oa Good. Prtday. bank oftleiall Hid todaJ. County IDd ctty olflcet wW ,... main opm for ballDeM u muai. alon1 wltb county aad ctt1 llbrartee llMI U.. ~ Counf.1 Dump, accordbaa to a..u.orttlel. Savinfl and roan 1a1t1tut1oa1 vary _.. operatiQa boun cin the Hcred bolida1, aome c1olanl aa noon or 1 p.m .• aad nor-ln1 mt • r·m· ud aome not GPeDlaa mt 11 P.rtdlr att.nooa. A cad te lb• ... Yldual brucb cu be made to~ ,,... to cm- duet bultn.I. ' Str auss. The argument against was signed by Mike Chnstiansoo and former mayor Milan Dostal. Those favoring passage say that consolidation of the city election with the school elections that are held at that time would save mooey. ·Opponents say that the only reason to change the election date would be to increase voter turnout. The voter turnout for the school elections ts as low as the turnout for the April city council elections, they point out. They note that city and school elections generally attract about * * * ftcDef F itt 30 percent of the reg istered voters. while general elections get about 70 percent turnout <See the arguments for Proposi- tion D.l PROPOSITION 8 to reduce the pay r~ given lO council members each year. Raises are now based on the annual tn· crease m the Consumer Pnce Index The change would set the increase at five percent or the CPI increase. whichever 1s smallest. The ballot argument 10 favor of tbe change was signed by Ryckoff. Mrs. Hart and Strauss. * * * Newport Co11ncil Hopefuls Profile d Nut r.ndlaf, If ft1PO"'f a.ct ootna .a .a.et u.r.. .._,,.,,. ol tladf' .... nwmblr dtw eo.eil. '" N~t0porf, cdadUatea na• /rom ~c:i/k aectbu of tOIOll, bMt en electrd ct la~. TM top oot'e· getting in toeh didrict ii e~«t. Following o~ profila ond OletoS of two of the /foe concfidoU• in the 2nd Cmmcilma:nic DUtnct, 'tdbch Cewttl West Newport -nnd Stred to tM Santo Ana Rion. The• are t M lait candidata to br profiJ«i Ar11cles abollt all the others ap- pNred in the llaUfl Pilot earlier tJlis wuk. David Sllores. 34, of 12 Tribute Court. Newport Crest. OCCUPATION: advertising. WHY ARE YOU RUNNING" I a m happier with my Ure when I 'm par · ticipating . giving back to others . I think the things that have made my life work can be ap· plied to gov· e ro meal to make it work SMCMtH for the people of Newport Beach. WHAT DO YOU SEE AS TifE ue&u& ... ie MOST PaBSSING ISSUE FACING THE CITY IN TRB NErr rotJR YEARS" Tbe real Wldert)'lna issue ls bow are we going to deal wWl the fi,,..,.aJ impact ot t.be Jarvis inlliatives. It's coin& to be a whole new ball game without state bailout money aod revenue sharing. nw council is so lied up with ot.ber things that these problems have not been addressed. The number one pnonty 10 t.hls regard is go- ing to be t.o keep l~al cootrol so that Big Brother isn't telling us what to do. AS A COUNCIL MEMBER. HOW WOULD YOU SOLVE THAT PROBLEM! There are a series ol ~ that ought to be considered. such as looking al leases with the Balboa Bay Club a nd Marinapark. We hav~~to have a new att&tude ·about COO· structioo ol hotels since they're very profitable for tbe city. We may have to go to user taxes and rees. Contracting out DOD· essential services could save us some money. We may want to sue the state in order to get it to pay its full responsibility for beach maintenance, which the city now pays for. Whatever CSee PllOFILES. Pase .Ul Station Operator . Slayer Convicted BJ DAVID IW'l'ZllAN Of .. OellY,.... ..... An · Oranae County Superior Court jury convicted Lee McKemie Bruell of first deCree murder today in t.be •botcun alayt.ns ol Garden Grove Ml"Vlce staUoo o~r•tor Gtor1e Bice last Aueult lo Westminster. Aa Bruell, 22. of La Habra, and defense attorney llicbard Bonoe.r l&ood to bear Ute Yft'dict ill Superior Court JucSte KeDDetb LH't courtroomT members ol both Bruell'• f amib ud Blce's famlly wept. Bruell lbowed no emodcm •the ftl'Ctid. wu ....s. Bruell wu accuaed of lboot· hll Bi~= Aatuat as t.be semc. owaer croacW ln the l'Mf bed ol a pickup tna. Bice b8cl Jumped lDto the tnlCk u lt sped • .., from bis Taaco 1tattoa when lbe oeeapant1 dldn •t pa1 for 110 worth of 1aso11ne. Proteeatlon wttne11H bad 1Ud lt WM BnMD wbo drcne tit• truet to a ncant lot lil w .. t......,.,tot•w1• Btn 111 tllle Mad at ...,. pa6Dl llW*fMle. t BraieU was arrested the same day by Huntington Bea'tb poUce as be drove the blood·splattered truck. Two juveniles bad been with Brazell in the truck and one of them was a key prosecution witness. Deputy Di.strict Attorney Paul Meyer Hid Bnuell could face Crom 25 years to life in priaon. Brazell cowd be elltible for pltole after ~ 15 years of that sentence. Sentencln1 Is scheduled May 2 in Judfe Lae's court. Meyer had characteriftd the alaylq ol Blee u a •·very cold, very callous" act. 'Bice, ,7, of Anah•lm bad made beadltnes earl)' last sum· mer u belnl the fin\ man COil· vict.ed ot violaU.01 state tuoline re1\lladclnl. Bice bad been ,... qubin& patrom to make phone raervadoat to buy psoUne dur· lnt the lt'1t 1u 1horta1e. ~<:overqe OtMr Bubot Ana coverace appean today on Pace AID . ' There is no ballot argument op· posmg the measure. P&OP06mON C to set at 29 days the residency requirement to become a city council can- didate. Al present, the charter states that a candidate must have lived in tbe district from which he is oomanat.ed for 90 days and nave been a regi.st.ered voter in the ci· ty for a year. The change brings the charter into conformance wt th state law. Arguments in favor of the change were signed by Strauss, <See CBAaTE•. Page A2 I * * * Cluctu l£velA Uwrges PolitJeaJ dirty tricks ltave bem I lid ato UM Newport Buda Qty eo.ncu campUgn. ueordlas to GDe anctid•te who reealled a prw ecmlenmce to- daJ dartnc wbicb be labeled re-tirtnc Councilman Don Mcinnis a liar. Diet Ctucas, ooe of five can- didates seeking to replace Mcln- ms who bas held the district two seat for 12 years, leveled. a series of charges during a meet· mg with reporters at city hall. Also attending wer e 10 of Clucas' supporters and cam· paign workers. The candidate cited newspaper ads run by the Irvine Company and the Koll Co. along with a mailer sent out Wednes- day by backers of Proposition D as eJlamples of what he said are "dirty political tactics.'· In addition. he attacked Mcln· nis because of statements the re· tiring councilman made earlier this week in eodorsiog Ruthelyn Plummer, one of Clucas· oppo- nents. He tabled as a lie , Mcinnis' statement that Clucas is part of a slate that ind1Rles incumbents Ray Williams and Paul Ryctoff. He further lis ted as untrue Mcinnis' contention that lbe re· hnng councilman bad been told by Clucas to mind bis own busi· ness when be objected to the slate. In a prepared statement, Clucas concluded "that my friend ol 1S years <Mcinnis) is so viscerally resentful or the current council that it bas af- <See CLUCAS, Page .Ul CoiL~t Weathe r Partly cloudy 1-te night and early morning. but mostly sunny and a little warmer throuah Friday. Lows t.ooigbt in the 40s. Hi&bs Friday 94 at the beaches and 72 ill.land. IN8DtE TODA W Ano-la °'°""' Gf'IW Atd'V, dill _,..,,... owr tlw drib ,. bcuebaU ,,,.,., ... fl it ~ up to Jdm. lw'd coll oft tM NOIOft. See Sporta, Poge 81. ..... MY•lllnilcll Alt .... :::I... 8\J .,,....._... OAmu..n a t::Z:i' ,.. ........ ~ .. .,.., ..... ., .... ........ ~ .. ~II AM....._.. ..... M ~ o.,......_..~u -.. = .... ~ .......... .. De.-...... ~......... 9tt .......... ,..,~ ., .... ..... Ull 14 I aitt~ ....., M ,....,... a.a......... M ..... 1. Q ------- 1 .... NEVADA TEST SIT&. Nev. <AP> -Ao unde""'°UDd nuelear tat waa CODducted today by tbe Departmeat of £Mr1Y at the Nevada Tes& Sit,. 1be teat -eode·named Upt.auer -waa de\outed about ~1388 feet below the turface oCYucca 'Flat. A spoleeeman saJd l.De tell wu In the 20-to-lSO kiloton range. _.. ........ .. BJUSroL. Cq1aDd (AP) -Twenty·<>ne police offlcen and nine other penoaa were ~ured lD fllbting between police and buodreds o1 immll,ant bllldm, authoritlee said today. Police 1ald Zl penom were arn.ted. buiJdlnp were bu.med abops looted aDd can wrecked. • ........... r • ...,e• CAIRO. Elnt (AP) -SOme 5,000 fundamentaliat Moelem atudenta demoutrated J3:!ut EQJ>Uan President Anwar Sadat and the presence depOted abah lo Eapt at a rally today an the campua ot a k>Cal university bl tbe Epptlu town of Asayut. No vtolence wu reported. 2-.re...,••e.Pred I BOGOTA, Columbia (AP) -Guerrillas who slebed the Dominican EmbaaaY five weeks ago during a reception today (reed two more of the 27 diplomats and otber9 .they bad held. The names were not announced immediately by the authorities. (Related Photo Page A3.) ,...,PllfleAJ CHARTER QUESTIONS .. Ryckoff and Mrs. Hart. There are no opposing arguments oo the ballot. PROPOSmON D to change the date of the municipal eleoc· lions from April of even· numbered years t.o November of even·numbered y~> The meutll"e Ml8 lnltltuted by the Newport Har~or Ar,a Chamber of Commertt with the intent of increasine the number or voters who tum out for dty e lections by combining the municipal election with national a nd state elections. iliaUve petition drive for the chamber, and by former ma10r Milan Dostal. Tbe argument against the measure was li1Ded by Strauss. Rycltolf and Mn. Hart. Those favoring the measure say it would save the city money lJl combtning the mwaicJpal elec:· tion with the ceneral eleeUoo and it would improve the quality of democracy by increasing voter turnout. Those opposed say the un· derstanding of local issues and candidates would become lost in t he campaigning done by na· tlonal and st ate candidates. The ballot argument in favor They say it would cost city can· of the change was slgoed by dldates more money to get their Christianson, who led the in· views across t.o voters * * * * * * F ... P.,,eAJ PROFILES LISTED. • • step1 we take, it's got to be done with a cold, calculaUn1 eye and one way t.o do that la to elect public offictals who will do their job• and stop worryinc about be· ing re«ected. HOW DO YOU STAND ON PROPOSITIONS A AND D! No oil A. no oo D. (A would change Ute city elections t.o November of odd-numbered years to coin· dde with school elections; D would change the elections to J\..plant Studied SAN LUIS OBISPO <AP> -A Nuclear Regulatory Commission a ppeals board conducted a ctosed-door session Wednesday to diacu.as anti·sabotaee plans for the Diablo Canyon 'nuclear power plant. A separate panel beard ar1umenta today on whether the Dlablo plant is earthquake·aafe. DAILY PILOT \ ....... ------ T1l11r.e .. (n4)__, a • •Msarc 0 .,... November of e ven-numbered yean t.o comcide with general electJoas. > • Lee W ..... 39, 4904 Neptune Ave., West.Newport. OCCUPAnON: Owner of ln· surance broteTage. WHY ARE YOU RUNNING? I have tbe qualities sufftclent to qualify for the job because of my work with o th er gov ern m e n ta l agencies at "the ci t y, county. state a nd federal levels. I want to get done WATKIN$ the things we need to get done to solve traffic conceation. WHAT 00 YOU SEE AS 11IE MOST PRESSING ISSU E FACING THE CITY IN THE NEXT FOUR YEARS? Traffic. The solution is to work with other governmental agencies to complete projects such as the R'oute 55 Freeway, rampinl of intersections, the Upper Bay brldJre. University Drive ex· teo1100 and the San Joaquin Hilt. Tt-ansportaUon Corridor. AS A COUNCIL MEMBE~ HOW WOULD YOU SOLV~ THAT PROBLEM? I'm effec· live at work1na with the people wbo control the purse 1trilip tor these proJecta at tbe county. state and national level•. I would~ tbeB.ack Bay Clean· up aloq the ume llJla. I bave good rapport with every As· sem bly o«nce 1D Oran16 County u well aa our three state senators. I'm tbe peraon who can best serve the needl of Newf:rt Beaeb by 1ettiftl to peop e y11o cu help ua lolve our problema. HOW DO YOU STAND ON PROPOSiTIONS A AND DT No OD .\. Y• OP D. CA woald cbanp UM dQ alildloal to No..mber of odd-~ yean to co&n· ~m:;.~~==~ No"•'*' of ••H·D•m._red ,. .. to '~ ...... ..-..i ~) ., .... Aleeda ......... lran•1 ruUna JtevohaUonary Covtscll hu 4tla)'td a ~ on tJklDI cullody of tlat Asnertcan ....._ uaW Pnll· d ent Ct1r&er elarUIH lalt retpODH to lnD1M ......... Forelco IUnlater Sade1b Gbotbudeb •a.kt t.oay. Praldent Abolbataan Bui· Sadr, lo American televtaloe in· tuvWn th1a mornln1. lmd be WU tatl•"-1 witb Carter'I poll· t Ion and would propose tbe COUD· HOSTAGES HAVE VARIED CAREERS-81 cal vote to request custody of UJe 50 Americana, now in their 1S2Dd day as captives inside tbe OC· cu_pi~U.S. Embassy. tJanl..sadr' was also quoted by Tehran radio as nyt.Qg lo an ABC News interview that Ayatollah Raab<>Uah Khomeini will make the flnaJ decisioa oo a proPoMl to tranafer custody of tbe All)t!rican ho6taces. Ubotbsaeleb, askeo Wbeu ne exp ected Carter's response. said: "I hope within a couple of days." "We have t.o have aome more tnlormatioa mi the predse posi· lion of the Unit.eel States con. cerning t.be statement.a wbkb were awde by llr. Bani.s.dr.'' Gbotbladeb aa1d u be paabed throuCb a mob of reporters and cameramen after a councll meetiq. Vacation Week Quiet In Newport City officials confirmed today what has been obvious all ~ there are no hordes of Bal Week celebrants misbehaving en masse an Newport Beach. (Related story Page AJ>. ·"It's been quiet. Very, very q~tet," commented police Sgt. Joe Lambert. "We don't bave any extra uni1' working and just from what l 've seen, we haven't had any increases in anesta." The days of Bal Week when thousands of teenagers wouJd descend on Newport eoded more t.ban • decade ago. Tbe quiet on tbe streets and beach or Newport ta testimony t.o that. Lifeguards said they've bad som e slzeable beach crowds, but few rescues and no problems with sunbathers. The beach crowds are avuag. 1ng slightly more than 75,000 people until Tuesday when high winds aod cold temperatures s ent beach visitors home by noon. said U . Logan Lock:.trJng ··we've been busier t som e new guards for .summeT than we have with the beach crowds." be said. Both Lambert and Lockabey said they expect more people to show up ,over the weekend. "If trouble bits, it'll come this weekend," Lambert said. .. CLUCAS ••• .............._3 Newpc)rt Eleetion · For· High Rollers a1 IOANNs llnNOU)8 .... ...., ...... J'tnandnf ctty eoundl c1mpe•.-ta Newport Beach bu turned into an exerclM lo 11.,,.maaabtp. 80 PAS. TRB .._ maaidpal eJ1dba 18 tbe 1D01t ._. penalve in dt7 blator1. As ol Marett M. tbe atDe ondidllt• nled reports 1bowtn1 CGlltribuUom that total mon tbao S81.000. ln aptte ot ~ state laws reicauirin& complete reportiq of all money taken ID and 1pmt duriq I campaip, and which Mt a $200 maximum on each in· di vi dual contribution. tbe candid.ates have eoouc.b maneuvenna room t.o play somep.md. Game number ooe 11 called Poor Mouth. It wu used aucceutuUy ill 1'78 wbeo Paul Hummel umeated lncum· bent Ludlle Kuehn. The rules are siJn. pie. ..""°"'°" nasr. vov must haft oob' ooe ~ oa whom you can focus your campalp. The &ADM eGMilta of ideoU· fying the opponent u the candidate ol BIG MONEY . 1be Point of the game ts to appear as under·flna'.nced during the campaign as your og::rmt is over·fl.naDced. After the election. you file your report wbicb reveals the ract that you collected more and &pent more than the opponent you'd said was represent.atiYe ol BIG MONEY. Hummel attacked Mrs. Kuehn on tbe BIG MONEY theme. ln his lnterim campaign repori just prior to the April eleC'llon. he showed that he'd ra.i&ed a paltry s...eu to her eoormou&·lookin& S10,Z216 THE PINAL report ian 't requi.red .W Juoe, so it wun't UDt1l tbea that the fact.a emerpd. Hummel raiMd $14.3M aod IPfJDt SU.cm to Mn. K'*-'t SU.Gil wor1.b of contrt~ and lll,T74 lo~. lo th1s electioo, there are two matdiies ol Poor llout.b belo& played. One lDYOI._ oppoDIDla Jolm Cox ad Ray WlWama and the otber plla Nllp 1laver aa••mt Paul Ryckotf. Wllllama and Ryctaft are i.Dcumbeala. Cox baa ral.aed more tban Sl7 .000. WWWu bas raiaed a modest 16 • .00, accorclln1 to bis Interim cam~ report. Maurer bu more than $16.000 lo bis war cheat com· pared t.o the mayor's $8,100. Both Wllliama and Rycltoff have attacked their oppo- nents for being in league witb BIG MONEY. Whether the Hummel game plan ls being followed oc not woa'l be known until June when t.be fin.al campaip ~ are filed. ANOTHER GAME is cOOtnbutioD Hide and Seek. It's a device for taking larger, t.bou&h t.ech.nicaUy legal. cootrtbutloos than tbe S200 limit in state law. Spouses and business affiliat>OOS are important in Uus ooe Almost all the camp&.1gn reports fl.led in this year's election show the spouse doca~ in which a cand1date re· ceives up to '200 each from a man and bi.I wife. The b\mtoea affillaUoo form ol tbe pme ia a titUe trickier.~ Watkins, a 2nd District eaDdidate. took a total or s1.ooo from fin firm•. eacb with a diftenmt a.a.me. but each with the aame Tustin address. Watk.lnl alao managed a combi.Datioa of tbe s~ a nd bwtoell atfWat.ioa acbeme with a ~ a.amed James and Mickey Herrell. Each aave bim i.o. as dHi a firm bearlng the name of Herrell and Scott. for a grand tot al of seoo. Virtue and Scbttk. a Newport Center law hrm 1!> responsible for contnbutlom totahng nearly Sl.000 to ~. Maurer and 2nd Distnct und.tda.t.e Rutbelyn Plummer THE FtaM gave $199. The two partners. Joho Virtue and Edgar Scheck. each gave $199 Two attorneys who work for them combined to donate another S299. None of the games are illegal. M long a.a each m· di vldual contribuUon i.s $200 or les'.S and the rePorts are filed on time and accurately, none or the candidates is go ing to land in legal hot water. If a candidate's report were to contain a major iuc· curacy, the worst t.bat would happen would be that tbe can dida~ faces prosttutlon for a misdemeanor riolation Even that possibility Is unlikely smce the law al!lo a!· Iowa the reports to be amended at any time, DOUng that con-ection of eM"Ors ls to be considered "evldeott or good faJth." • Not Seen SAN DIEGO <AP> -Saa Dleso poUee do not believe u. 4 Hme penoo who was lovolftd 4 lo the welllendeyaaicle ~ · o( food ltema in two local · Safeway 1upermarket1 l• reepomlble for a almilar oceut· rence lo tbe Rlvenlde County communlty ol Palm Deurt. Sao ~ cletectivea weal to · Palm Detert to confer wttb- aherUf' a deputlea and PBl a1ents but all concluded tbe Palm Desert lnddent Monday was the work of another in· dividual. authorities announced Wednesday. . Meanwhile. in Beaverton, Ore .• police 1a1d Wednesday that an al¥l0ymoua caller two weeks ago aaid be put cyanide lo a jar of pickles in a market and de· maoded thouaand.a of dollars in diamooda. Tbe case wu similar t.o the two here, in which the "Poiaoo Gang" demanded so to 100 diamonds in exchange for end· Ing the extortion. A jar of pickles and bottle of terlyalri sauce were found to be heavily laced with cyanide. Beaverton Police Chief Don Newell said a trace of cyanide wu found March 22 in a jar of pickles at a Fred Meyer Inc. market. In tbe Palm Desert cue, a man phoned the Safeway market and Identified himself as t.be same pel"IOD wbo po~ two food it.ema at tbe San Dlett st.ores. The caller warned that a bottle of salad dreasio1 was poisoned and demanded a tarce amount ol diamoods and cub t,e delivered late M.ooday. Law eol~ment officers pa Riverside County said the FBl took over the case and met the utorUonist's demand, but the suspect got nervous at the drop site and ned. Embezzlement A Santa Ana woman wu ar- rested tbia morning by Newport Beach detectlves who allege she embeu\ed $2.44,000 from the Newport Beacb·based Health ln· duatries Inc .• parent company 0( Jack LaLanne's European Health Spas. Louise Gerhardt , 46 . was booked into city jail on a war· rant charging her with si x counts ol grand theft. She wa:; immediately released on her own recognh.ance. AC'cording to Detective Ken Smith, Mrs Gerhardt worked in the accounting departm~nt of Health Jndustnes. Inc. The detective alleged that over a period of two years she set up a dummy advertising firm to which checks were sent. U5ually Ul $30,000 amounts. He s8Jd officials of the firm located at 610 Newport Center Dnve became suspicious ol the advertising firm when Mn . Gerhardt recently wrote It a Brih•h IF/ T Be ~---d? cbeckfor$114,000. M-0 W Omeft i 0 n_r'n,e Smith said about $112,000 of LONDON CAP> -Prime fou1btthe Roma.os. ~at:i~lnl '244.000 bas been Minister Mar1aret Thatcheris A defense policy document is· Jn addition. Mrs. Gerhardt fect.ed hi.a judgment." government baa auc1ested that sued Wed:Deeday by the 1ovem· waa named m a suit filed this Contacted at bis office aft.er women soldiers may soon bf' meot said defeose chida lo«* to week in Orange County Superior the press conference. Mclnni& carrying (UM. It would be the women to "pla,y an increasing Court by her forme r employers declined comment. :.t don't first time Brtllah women earned part in t.be wort ot our armed who are trying to recover the respond to those kl.nd.s of tb.iogs. arms sin~ an ancient queen forces." massing funds. Wbyshouldlgetintooneofthose ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ what·l·said·what·you·said sltua· lions. "I can only reiterate that I did talk to Dick in the past 10 da,ra and I have explained what the outcome of that cooveraaUon was ." Clucas said be was very angry at Wednesday's mailer sent out by the Yea oo D Committee, the group backing the ballot meaaure to change munidpaJ elections to NovembeT of even· numbered years to coloctde with general elections. Clucu im't meoUooed in the four.page mailer'that loots like a newspaper. It's called the Newporter Reporter. An ln· terview with Mclnnla covers one inside~ .• Clucu laid be wu 1peelrinc out .,aimt the miller out of concern for the kind Of dirty trlclu such a document repreeeata. 111 tbe material banded out by Clucu were l>Oint by DOlllt re- futatiom ol lt.ema UlteCl on UM Yea On D mailer. Amons t.be "abtolut.e li•" ctt· ed by Clucu are the mailer'• contenUonl: -That UI city couuctl de· 11yed constnlct.lon of the Bay Bnd••· -That the city council ua· d•rmlnld elforta to CODDec:t t.he S.n Joequln Hilll corrtdor to t.he Corona del ICar Freeway. -That the coanctl introclbced c.ban,. ta the trattlc. pbM•ns ordkumoe lata ooe Allbt CNM• lat • mant.onwn OD ...., r'OllCl ~ ••1 ..a. W ta ,...afte n.. oa u.. fl'allt,... ........ added. -. 3 styles to choose from: oxford, brown or maple. Newport Surf and Sport . . ...... 8tote 2224 Newpott llvct. Nempot't .. ach ..,...,..,. ltof'92 21CM Mtf'IM Awt. .......... ftd tn.nat . I !$ 00 • with this coupon Expires Aptll 30 I 1980 ~ ......... lliiii .. ~iill ............ ~ ..... ~ll::mlmllllll9m .......... ,,,.~ ' " .. - IT. Prrsaaauao. · raa . <AP> ..... A mo¥tt ._. V.... ':J••• ,.an Of ltl8N ,.._ ~=· I• Tro-A. I ......... ,. .. . DN9ol ............ . .,.,.................... . le..,... • ••rtae eembat VMl'M, le ltff1M .. \rial Mn oe c~a,.... ot bws&arj Md .....at He.aap M ._.., ,. ... ._ tu boura wt.ea ·poHce aa~ someone bnke lato three,.,.,... and tried to fotte aH on two women 'P 1111 8•• l••s, (:•C•lllil• ·-Easter Week IDflux Begins at Resorts By Tiie A..oela&ed Press The annual influx or young vis· ilors bas hit Palm Springs to c~lebrate the Easter holiday. causing bumper-to-bumper traf. fie 12 hours a day along Palm Canyon Drive, a palm tret_-Uned four-lane boulevard throulla tbe ~esert resort community, Catalina lsland also reported the usual influx -or tourists. as weather forecasters promised fair weath~r t h rough the Princess Target of Out,burst LONDON (AP> -An anti· f"Oyalist ·member or Parliament has called Princess Margaret a "wayward wom an" during a stormy debate in the House or ·~ommons, and the speaker or ·the House reprimanded him. WHlle Hamilton, an opposition Labonte from Scotland, was at· tacking the allowance increase for the queen 's 49-year-old divorced sister, whose state stipend goes ftotp $154,UO to $177 , 120 a year 10 the lat.est :1clvil list. "There is a w1dely beld view. even among pro-roya\iats, tbat nobody does more damage to tbe .institution or the monarchy than this wa ywa rd woman," lUmllton cha'rged Wednesday ~igbt. His outburst prompted the ·speaker of the Commons. ~eorge Thomas, to intervene a mid cries of outrage from pro· monarchy members or Parlia· -ment. . Said the speaker: "Whilst you are as free as anybody in this .House to criticize the civil list, _you must refer to the royal rami-Jy in courteous language. That is one or the rules of this House." _ Hamilton replied: "That is re· )atively courteous." · "It was exceedingly dis- courteous by my standards," tbe speaker retorted. Hamilton, whose politics con· cent.rated on a dislike of royalty and privilege, resisted protests from fellow "honorable mem· bers" or the House and COD· tinued his tirade with criticism of the queen's daughter. Prin- cess Anne and her husband. Mark Phillips, who get a boosted s tate stipend to pay for their co untr y e s tate in Gloucestershire, Gatcombe ;:Park. weekeod for So uthern California. A continued threat or rain and snow was predicted for Northern and Central California. Authorities in Palm Springs reported no major problems Wednesday but said arrests and citations for public drunkenness, marijuana, minors with alcohol a nd traffic violations increased over last year. They said few residents were among those cited and noted this year's holiday crowd included more high school students. For tbe entire week preeeding Easter. police were assigned double duty, which included dai· ly sweeps in the canyons outside the city to rout trespassing cam· pers from the Indian-owned pro- perty. Police said 50 citations for trespassing were issued last weekend. On Catalina Is land, a Los Angeles County s heriff 's s pokes woman We dnesday described tbe scenic is land as "quiet" and said it was not as crowded as last year. In Riverside, the Mt . Rubidoux Easter sunriBe service will go oo as planned, despite the withdrawal of sponsorship by the Riverside Jaycees. The service had faced an UD· certain future after the Jaycees announced in February they would not join the Greater Riverside Ministerial F ellowship to present t.hia year's service. J11lia Kiene, Cookbook Author, De ad CYPRESS (AP) -Funeral services were beld here Wednes· day for home economist and a uthor Julia Kiene, who died at her Seal Beach home Friday after a lengthy illness. She was 89. Mrs . Ki e n e was home economics director or West· inghouse in Mans field. Ohio, from 1938 to 195S. She founded the Health for Victop clubs dur· ing World War II. Owing the 1920s and 1930s, she was the women's edit.or or Cap- per's Fanner magazine The Russell, Kamas, native wrote four cookbooks, including the "Betty Furness West- in glrouse Cook Book" and ·'Sugar and Spice," a cookbook for children. A former president of the Electrical Women's Round Ta· ble, Mrs. Kiene lived at Leisure World in Seal Beach, where sbe organized a group t.o collect and sell rare stamps for needy children. Viet.um. Tbi mo\lle~ broqbt hlm rilltt beck m&o combat.•• Altoraerl for Coelu'u MY a Hltrt!d ....... ,...,... .... tbe fora.er Hrvleemaa tem, ~ut11Lauae . Coc:bran la claai' .... wtlb o.n. COUDW 0( bura1arY and OM~ tltb ol lawfuatarY MS\&11 bet· ltry and _.Wt la lM Oct. IO ln-olckna.,. JI *vleted. M tact11 a maxl.._u.m of two Uh 1etrJeDce1 anduyean. A 3l·yeat.old womu'fald lhe was awakeqed ln tbe eartY boun by a man wbo beld a IUD at ber bead and demanded oral sex She said the man told her be had been in Vietnam "and be aald it was bell,•• tbe woman \estified. Later, abe said. ~ called out ''bls oame, bis rank ~ bis aerial number." She said sbe talked to him for several bours before be left calmly. A couple of hours later, a few blocks away, another 31-year-old woman said she wote up when she felt a hand on her. Sbe sald she screamed and saw a man wearing a bolster and a silver gun walk t.o the door of t\er home. She screamed again, and he left. A little more than an hour later. George Holbrook said be was awakened when be felt someone tuQ.ing at his bed cov· ers. He reached around and felt a man's bead behind him and saw someone keeling by the bed. He switched on the light and saw a nude man run from the house. a large tattoo on bis s houlder. Assistant public defender Robert Dillinger. who Is representing the veteran. said Cochran bas a psychiatric his tory at veterans hospitals since he returned from Vietnam. Adft!1,..rtn c .. tn- eo1ombian government negotiator Camilo Jiminez <right> smiles as the M-19 guer· rilla negotiator and Ramiro Zambrano shake hands after the close of the ninth round of ta lks · outside the Dominican Republic's embassy in Bo~ota. At left is PeruVlan consul Alfredo TeJida. Slow Boat to Nowhere Sunken Vesse l May Be R aised in Pieces By DELOllES BaOOK.S laWIN negligence," Bloxham S&Jd aft.er The dispute began when Blox - Tbe ~~=i~cers wbo Wedoe&day's board meeung. ham 's leaking boat was im - pumped water out or Roger So payment or the $20,000 by pounded by the harbor patrol Bloxham's boat Jan 26 Lo 8 vain 8loxbam will be pending sett.Je-after he left 1t for several hours attempt to keep it afloat an ment of a $250,000 chum be filed at a 20-aunute emergency dock N against the county for loss of tus Jan 24 ewport Harbor likely will be vessel. The boat sank Jan. 26, and the last to have seen the M-foot Bloxham said he couldn't afford schooner in one piece Orange County supervisors or-to have 1t raised. He told re- dered Environmental Manage· Other Ban ks rvrters the dlspute was caused ment Agency officials Wed.Des· -----Y bLS long-st.anding feud with day to accept bids for removing harbor patrol officers. Bloxbam's boat from the bottom K~_.. Boos•a Bloxbam's attorney, David of the harbor -as cheaply and ~L-~ Beriland. pleaded Wednesday quickly as possible _ because it w1th supervisors to allow Blox· is a hazard t.o navigation. NEW YORK <AP) -The 20 ham t.o supervise the salvage And if the cheapest way to do percent prime r ate spread oper ation so that the boat could it is t.o bring the boat up in through the banking industry to-be lifted in one piece. Jos eph Gelso mlno . a psychiatrist and director or a Vietnam veterans' center in St. Petersburg, t estified that soldiers turned off their emo-tions in combat "in order t.o sur- vi~e. to stay alert, to survive." pieces, then so be it , s aid day as large banks that held And allowing Bloxham t.o hire :aL • .-J---•haler SuperviaorTbomas Kiley. back Wedn~ay match«t the the salvage personnel would re-fJ~U., Supervi.son set aside $20,000 record rate that some bankers s uit in a cheaper bill for the for the salv:f: operatioo, and bope will persuade businesses to county, Bergland added. -' will bW Bio m for the Ulta.l cul back 00 borrowing. But Supervisor Riley put down r 8 cost of removin& lb~ achoooer CitibaDk, the naUoo's secood· that notion, saying, "I think it's from the boUom of the bay in tbe I a r I est ban It • and No. 4 a unlque proposition that the P -----.1 Ueld moorln& area off Harbor Manufacturers Hanover Trust owner suggests that we pay him ... ~ 0 1 Depart.meet bern~rs ud Co. joined in the inc:~ tbat to raise the boat. And I reaUy Catholic funeral aervices have lhl~~~~al~the county ::1c ~ c!: ~~-!rte~~ ~ =Y ~~ l~'t have bffn held for the late Mrs. Viola should pay the btll. He blamed perC'ent rate was r•t at "----Bl _.__ l harbor pa•-• off' f l-1-~ '-U&:K" O.IWdm ater conceded that Muckenthaler Hays, a member uvs icers or a.u.ug M •::i::tao Bank. Baak of of a Getman immll:rat-famitY tbe boetalnk. evea lftbe boat, which be valued Promi.Deot ,_ n-aase "'---tJ ••1t•1 ufortunate that this A.mt··:-1 ~ ntkla20 ·s larsst. at AS),~ ra1.aed In ooe ' I au vb'" i .vuuu would ran to the tupa~ but ma caea urc: percent rate p~ tt ~ ban to be com· agr C\l ture. us ne-sa and it's due to tbe sheriff's Wedneeday. ~ra,.IJJI culture for 100 years. She died a __:._;;__.;;...;..,;._.;....;..__..;.;;..;..,_;;..;;;....;;~.;..;.....;;..._ ________________________ _ week ago. She was 83 aad succumbed in the North Lemon Street bome in Anabeim where sbe. bad lived for 60 years. She moved there when she married her late husband. Frede rick L . Hays, who died 16 years ago. Trained at Orange County Business College after gradual· ing from Anaheim High School. Mrs . Hays was employed in bakeries owned by the family. She also worked for the Pacific Telephone company and later a Fullerton oil firm. Her father. Augu.s! Mucken· tbaler. came to the Anaheim Mother Colony as German set- tlers called it in 1880, wbal it was an agricultural resort. He was a partner ia building the .Planters Hotel. There were two sons and two daughters bom t.o Mrs. Muckeo- tbaler's parents, ooe of whom. Mart.in. of Oceanside, still s ur· vives. Tbe pioneer resident also leaves a daughter, Joyce Ann Duffy, of Hawtborne; a soo, La Veme Hays, ot Burbank; seven cbtldreo and one great· graodcblld. CHAIR SALE by Drexel ·. 'VI Save 15% You can select from 30 ehair styles and 800 distinctive fabrics . But don't w.ait too long. Sale ends April 12th. H.J.GAl\REif fU~NfllJ~~ ... dlUoaa canceled Qllllta WedDtlday. but clear weather wa1 forecut for today. ' I I PAOfES9'0HAL "-9. & 121 1 HAllOl IL YD. INTERIOR OEStGNEl'S 0,....,.. Me..;. COSTA MBA 64Ml7S ~ ... ' ' " ' , AN,_ c_,,.,., ...,...,,.,..bf nmpalp rturtorte ot tM PIM ....at Hefti' ..... .U tW. J uat Ydte b~ 1our incllNiiaa•*-.... •!!f ...,onU..baUot. Tlllla _..... be U. ..., "*••a. for example, ll )'OU w.,. a aiowliee Ml•d'e• UM tnck and bettin1 oo bone Heel. Jmt cwsl• tM .... lMt..,.. oft and nann.lna l.n tbe S-.Ada ltaMS~aptodQ. . . You WMC a ..,,..Y Hlddate who could be euUy m· Ouuced on clOwuoa1u or ....-mt! One who'll vote the w •1 tbe lutfQ1 wbci wb.fipendbt laia eu told blm to" IN TODAY'S ROUI! nm, YoU'd have placed your money on Mllt the Tilt In lbe first race at Santa Anita On lbi! -Other hand, lf you were searching for a horse candidate for your City COWlcLl where only good Judgment My Horw Candidate Heu a 8(}M to Pick With Ewrybod11 would be shown, your money would have gone on No Bias in that same race. How about those City Council sessions that drag on far into the night? You know, the ones where lbe council de- cides to rezone half the town in the wee small hours. I have the horse candidate for you from the fourth race at Santa Anita today. He's Midnight Surprise. IN THE SAME RACE, however, your candidate might prefer a horse that will stand on principle and stick to items on the agenda. You could have put your money on Dedicated Envoy. You'd be surprised bow. from the race horses' names. you could put together an entire City Council that would give you excellent balance m all departments. How about these five Decent Davey •'rteod.ly Enemy Jnqulsltlve Lady Dominator Silent Oat.look Good possibililles for horsing around w1tb councLl can- didate names can also be found right here in the entries at our very own Los Alamitos race track. Some of the council candidate possibilities from Los Al's races of yesterday include: -Never mind that the council chambers are filled with angry citizens protesting trasb fees. He j ust sits up there !:>milin~ a ll the while: CheerfuJ Moose in tbe Second Rae<' -NOBODY ON THE COUNCIL or in the audience can speak to a topic without this guy getting h1s two bits worth in llc-ckler rn the Fourth Race. You'll never catch this polit.Jc1an doing somethlllg shady to help a friend at Cit y Hall because he always ha s some excuse: Cover~tory in the Fifth Race. -This city councilman follows city tras h crews to r heck coCCee breaks. and puts ..stop watches on the tree trimmers. He's lnto e verything at City Hall: Snoopy Rodney in the Seventh Race. I SO PICK YOUR CANDIDATE by any name you like . I got mine from the eighth race yesterday at Santa An ita. His name is Soft Reply. Trouble is, he was an also-ran. WMHINGroN (AP) -JoM Ad•w lDltl&abe .. ._"t be bo ••••d Oii&" of tbe raee fw tbe R•PtabMelD ~ DMllne· t.ton. llUl M • etW clulclalat U.. :-..:.=~ ...... tr.S to Aada ~Pnm.,. Yey ...... be could, In fact. 19t bJa ..... OG IDOlt ltate bllDoU aa .o •n"llpendeot or third-= eudJda 1D November, ht could face aome formida obtltaca.. "A Ud.rd-party candidaey ls ~o urpd on me by a lot ol , " Anderson told studenta at eclC"le Wuhington Univeni· ly Wednesday night. "I will con- s i d e r that matte r very care!ully." That wu Just about as fu-as the Illinois congress man can be pushed these days on the s ub- ject . IF 11IE CHOICE in November is "between the incumbent and Ronald Reagan. millions and millions of people aren't going~ have any choice," be told t.hi! GWU students. But he vowed to "continue to march," meanwhile, for the GOP nomiDaUoo in spite of his failure to win a single primary. Anderson already is too late to get on tbe ballot u an indepen- dent in Ob1o and be stands liWe c ha n ce o f mating it in Michigan_ THE STATE WITll one ol the toughest requirements for Uat- ing an independent presidential Explosions Renew Fear COUGAR, Was h . <AP> - After a day of violent eruptions, Mount St. Helens was bein g rocked by harmonic tremors - a type of quake that has pre- ceded eruptions at other volcanoes -and scientists were debating whether lbe 9,m-foot peak wl1l spew lava in a major convulsion. The new seismic activity Wed- nesday night app&reotly means magma -molten rock -is moving to tbe surface of the volcano that came to-life last week, said Dave E ndicott, a s pokesman for the University of Washington geophysics depart· ment in Seattle. mE S~ISMJt CHANGE oc c urred a few hours alter a series or violent steam explosions. the most severe to rock the moun- tain. ejected 60-foot-wide pieces of ice and blasted down a wall ·between the volcano's two <:raters, ofliciala said . The cr~ter now measures some 1,50(> leet across. Four chunks of u h-coated Ice were found at ~ 7 ,SOO.foot level after the smoku:Lleared. Scien were ~waiting in· formation f rom U·2 fllcbts over the volcano W~ on loca· lions of hot spotis, mudalides and ash. Winter Storms Hit Hard Hars~ Freakish Weather Widespread Teaeperat11ra HI Le .. ,, AlbuQur S6 17 Am•rlllo 0 ,. 1J All•nl• , n .0 All•nlc Cly SJ 0 B•lllmOt"P 70 4S 801~ ~1 3" e~1on S7 38 .OS Brownivllt" '" 13 Buff•lo 41 21 Cheyenne 37 1l .u Cluc-oo S7 38 C•n<lnn•H ·~ •S c 1 .. ef&f\CI so 37 0<11·FIW1h ,, S7 ~nvt"r JS 73 °" ~troot SJ "' .04 H•I-•• ,, ·°' H-IUIU 81 n HO<lilOll n .. 01 •nan.•" tM ~ J<ICll ... Yfll' 71 .,, ... IC-Clly •• •l .•1 LHV9911S •l « Liiiie 1100 7S n .10 Lct1A,.i9' .. S7 Lovh willt' 1• ~ Merntlf>I• II .,, Mi.mi II ,. MltwevtMe , "' l3 Molt-St. p "° 41 • NHIWllle n " Hew0.... n M J.41 N-Yorll " 4S Olll• City '1 l6 .04 ~ .. • .a Piil...,_. 61 ,, .., ... ........., ........ -~ lll'OllOOnot"-'°"' -by 5 30 p"' cell -· 7 P"' -~COCIY-bt~ s.r ... .,., -&nci.y "{';'. "° not ·--~: lly ..... C4lll borlor• 1 • "' -_., .... -Cli 'I f' a ~~J.. ....... , -M•-....,........ ... ... s.tl c........ c-.-a.-~~c::..~ i..oo-...... ....... : .,_.. •S .Q Pl tbburvfl S7 JS Pfl..-0,0n .,, J9 Reno )1 D SI. LOUii .. S3 S.11 Lffe 4t l3 S...Dle9o 63 SI sen Fr., "° .50 Seem. '° ., St Ste._,. 47 22 Tvl .. 1t .Q Watfllfllllln 71 SI CAUPOltNIA .... ...-1e1c1 •1 ~ . ,.,. 57 Blythe ,, « ,.,_ .4 0 Moflte,.y .. 4S NMCllti .. -0.-1-"° 0 PHOll~ tA ~ leer lil'M'1tO .. •• a-te .... ., 0 11.UIOll .. 4J 'tlMlnMI 74 SI ........ ... so C.tetlne .. ., ··~ .. 41 L011t9Mcll ~ ,, MtWlllOll 41 ,. H---18Mctl " ,, Oftterlo .. .. ._.___no " .. - C.onl<ll ••••• will be f•lr .,,. .. .,....,,...~~ ... w.,m wtlfl .,.,.._ , .......... Fr._ ••1. ----Mwft -9-'· .., lo ClroC> DMow •-dftll ~ HIOh t-will ~ft""-"" Fr._ dey. Nortll---9111Ufte fN1'11 1S 1111 2S mptl #Ill _ ...... In UW *-1 ..... ""••wnlno. c. ...... ftlt~ ' to J 10 1 4 II 4 s t2 c andidate la Callfonla, wbleb retaulret petldou al1ned by • 101,ae voten. PeUUoaen muat obtain tbe llpatunt between J uae t , alx day1 a fter tbe Callfonda primary, aDd A~. 8. Caroly n S t ewart , the Calltorala director ot tbe An- denoe campaip, wbeD albd lf she were -arilur up for a ~­ble pet.lUon drf ve, said, "Not really. Until 1 am told to do otberwlle, my priority ii to wort very bard oo our voter regiltra· tion drive." However, when aaked ii sbe thought there would be any prob- lem obtaining the necessary signatures should the Anderson strategy shill to an independent c andida cy, she replied, "It would be a piece or cake." Tbe Anderson voter registra- tion drive ln California is aimed at bavin,g Democrats and in· dependents re-register as Republicans so they can vote in the June 3 primar y. The deadline for changing party registration ia May S. Nap Time Sick seal rests at animal hospital in Seattle where scien- tists are trying to determine cause of illness. Forty dead sea ls have been found on Oregon-Washington beaches siace March. Parents Kidnap Own Tot Umcerom Child Returned to Hospital CLINTON, Iowa CAP> -Tbe father of a 5-year~d girl gravely ill with cancer wbiaked ber away from a bo9pit.al agaimt doctor's orders Wed- nesday, but returned her to anothel' bo9pltal aft.er authorities threatened legal ac:Uon. Tbe Iowa City Police Department bad luued a statewide bulletin on the girl Dayne King. and asked authorities to take ber to tbe nearest hospital, forcibly, lf n~eaaary. POLICE WE RE ALSO ASKED to check airports ~ause the parenta were believed ready t-0 take tbe girl to Me:uco for treatments with Laetrile, the apncot pit derivative wb1cb some cl~i~ can cure cancer. The Food and Drug Ad· mtn1Slration has banned It rrom interstate com- merce, aJthough some states have legabud its use. The girl was returned to ~ onginal bo6pital l>y air ambulance la!:>l Wednesday night, and a uthorities satd no legal actJon was planned agaimt the parents. "PUENT TOOK TRIS CIOLD from t.:ruversi· ty Ha.&lital. Iowa City 1. agamst doctor WlSbes, ·• the pollee bulleUn said. "Attempt to iocate cbtld. tile immediately to nearest bolpttal or duld will die." Iowa City Police said t.hey bad lbe legal aulbortty to seize the child. Dean Borg. a hospital spokesman, confirmed t.hat Dayne's father. Terrance Kine, bad taken t.be girl from a aecond·rloor room on the pediatrics wine. but would not elaborate. He a1ao would not give cktailed information on her coodilk>A. saying only that she was admitted lllarcb 19. Joe Beck, uststant Clinton County attorney. said later the parenLs brought Dayne to Mercy Hospital in Clinton after he spoke with them. Explaining p<>ltce involvement ln the case, Borg u.id, "We were only concerned that the child receive hospital care someplace We were COO· ceroed when we h n.t notified authorities that the child receive bo:.p1tal care because we feared that without hospital care her health and lire were in danger. KING ANO ms WIFE, Sandra , have three other daughter., Kin ~ worh at Jnternattonal Paper Co. and Mrs. K10g works oo upholstery 10 her home "It's sucb a temble thing," said a neigbbor. who asked that her name oot be published. "About three weeks ago, they noticed she was having trou- ble wallang and they thought she'd fallen off ber sled and hurt her baek." ' .. . .... 'We're liofng to eat.eh a mennaid.' Dal .. Piie• etarrlers ea tllelr ...., ,.......,, are Roflert llleden, left, &¥ s.,.~ ........ C'erwtt. Daily Pilot carrien combine /un, work and education. They learn 11Gluable •lcill. operating daeir mm bminen and dealing 11Jitl1 people. They eam and •GH money aoorlcing in daeir •pare time. ~ Daily Pilot carrien laat>e /un on their •pecial lriIM -fWai,ng, U> Duneyland, Catalina and other recreational ..... I/ you ore awe 10 or older and tNld to laoH fun "'°rlc- U.. and letarnUaw, mail Ila. coupon to Doily Pllol Circula- tion, 330 Jf'. Bay· St., Bo% 1560 in Co11a Me1a, 92626, or eall 6424321 • ,--------~----------------------, I Mall To: Ora•1e Cou& Dally Piiot I t P .O. Bo• I~ Colla MeH ·I I Callfornla I I I DAILY PILOT I I I Nam• I I I I Addrt11' n..t : flly A&~ " I ~ 642-4321 -------------------------------- , • ' ( -------------- OAKLAND <AP) -I\... u oa• .....,. _ ..._,, .... ..._... ktdl 10 .......................... ... , ................ ....... -W 11111 .... I i:111i t0 dilllai ...................... of ~l.\M · .••rtt crl•• 1preH ID • CallflilM ..... ., • ..... ~;,..,. &.••W, Dni4 iM •-•lloen .._. COlamltt.ed a total crl m ~ tlld .... • -.. ble ....... ala~.~-... beaUap -au lD • lp&a ol t,.-o mcmU.IDlt'rl. ...... DAvtD IC• ... nt A jury found t.bem 1u.Ut.Y of all thoee crimea. and Wedneeday seo- tt;pced David, Z'I, to the at.ale's tas chamber. Kenneth, 21, waa ordered to prlaon for llle without pouibWty of parole. But accordin1 to tbelr parents. Mr. and Mrs . Eldridge Moore, the brothers were raised in a secure re- ligious family or seven cbildren. A minister testified that the brothers we r e well-behaved as youn~sters, even singing in a church cboar, and n WAI A 80CKY Ume. l>wtftJ a ~ ...... v'8lt ... repoltedly att..c-ed bl• .u. end u.ea UHd hll two-r•a.r· old daQ&hter aa a abJeld when l\W'dl aimed at blm. A tamtly friend tHtlfled tbat ... ""---David's bebHlor aeemed to cbaqe P I ± --. markedly after bla releaae from ~ • ~ •p priaon ln tm. and that be be<:ame Construction goes on at Matson Na"'"'ation Company's dlaencha.nted wtth aoclety .. "6 Shortly after David was releued, computer-assisted overh.ead container handling system Kenneth wu Jailed for a seriea of <lower right> at its Port of Los Angeles terminal while auto burslartea. Upon bla release ln s hip loading and unloading goes on at dockside. July of 1178, be joined his older ======================= brother and beean the rampqe that included 211 robberies, six rapes, and Me ~ the fatal sbootin1 of Eileen Roten n eep and her daughter, Laura Muhlen· . Peeling bruch. ' THROUGHOUT THEO. six-week trial, Davtd and Kenneth seemed un· ronceroed about their fate. At one point they slouched in thelr chain and grinned while a 66·year-old woman told how she was raped al gunpoint. The Moores chatted during lhe 30 minutes it took to read the verdicts. They were found guilty on all counts FREMONT (AP> -Suburban housewives who have flocked lo a Fremont night club to watch male strlppers got some good news as the City Council adopted a law requirin& use permits for future strip parlo~ -but not existing ones. "They simply couldn't pass a law stopping our guys from dancing in their shorts. unless they wanted to look awful silly." said promoter Danny Zeno. The new law was the weakest of four proposals the council con s1dered Tuesday night OM. v PILOT A• Airless Tire Works Flats No Problem LOS ANGELES CAP) -If you've ever been stranded on a rainy night changing a nat tire, take heart. The Dwtlop Tire Co. says it bas come up with a tire that not only would get you home safely ii it goes flat, but would get you all the way across the country without even caualog your car to weave or your wheel to be dented. DUD.lop spokesman David Cole said a test car arrived tn Los Angeles from·Boetca oa Wednesday. driving all the ~ wttb one of its steel- belted ndia1a without alr. Cole contended the feat was ac. complisbed by u.slng a system made up of both the tire and the wheel on which it was mounted. The tire sidewall ls apeclally de- signed to lock onto the special rim and a loss ot air pressure locks it on even more, so the Ure can't come off the wbee1 Before atarttnc the trip on March 2'. Dunlop engineers tried to flatten the tire by drilling a bole in the self-sealing tire. But that didn't work. Cole said, and the tire's valve stem had to be removed to let out the air wesaure. Space Probe 'Dies' Viking I.Ander 2 Mars Artifact PASADENA (AP) -Aft.er a 3'r'z· year search for life on Mara, one of two space probes bas run out of .energy and died , tbe National Aeronautics and Space Adminislra· lion says. "Now it will Just sit there as an artifact oo the surface of Mars for centuries to come," space agency spokesman Bristow said Wednesday of Viking Lander 2. But he added that its twin, Viking Lander 1. ls still operating on the planet's surface and "we expect it to go on into the decade of the 1!8>s." .,...,. 'IAarlll•fl' SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. says he's glad to be home after learn!ng the voters "didn't feel I was ready to be presi· dent. "Every effort ls a learniog ex· perience," said Brown upon his re- turn to the state from Wisconsin Wednesday night afler folding bis bid for the Democratic presidential nominalioo. Brown finished third in the Wisconsin primary. ..... ..,,., • ' I • . LOS ANGELES (AP) -A count) supervilor wbo criUciHd a colleague whose aide gave confeased Hillside Stranaler Kenneth Bianchi a county windshield decal is trying now to re- cover three stickers sbe Luued. Supen11or Yvonne Brathwaite Burke admitted Wednesday she authorized three decals for a San Pedro bail boodaman and la having difficulty eettlnl tbem back. ( BRIEFS J ~ Bi..t Fefw••el• SAN FRANCISCO <AP > -Leaders of the homosexual community have denounced Mayor Dianne Feinstein for naming a heterosexual to a seat traditionally held by gays oo the Board of Permit Appeals. The mayo r appointed Louis Giraudo lo the post held by gay representatives for the past five years. Tbe board, a key local govern· ment agency. deddes on appeals of permit applications afte r they have been considered by the city's plan· ning, fire and police commissions and the Central Permit Bureau. a--. Delfl!I c ..... SAN DIEGO <AP> -Property owners already told they suffered almost $2 million ln airport noise damage have waited too long to col· lttt on their claims, a jury !fays. The final word, however, will come from Superior Court Judge Carlos A. Cilares within the next 20 days. He said earlier that a five-year statute of limitations governs the case. The damage must have begun by Nov. 30, 1968, and the lawsuits filed by Nov 30, 1973, the jurors said Wednesday. But the suits were all brought after July 1975. SFA s Stoiewide Post-Easter Clearance ... with 20% to 50% off Original Prices* Now find terrific savings on great selections of fashions from: \ Designer Dresses, Evening Apparel, Coats and Sufts Better Dresses 'SFAbulous and 'SFAntastic Coats and Suits, Sports wear, Dresses Designer and Better Sportswear, Sport Separates, Active Sportswear Sportcoa ts, SU1ts, Sportdresses Sportswear, Dresses, Coats, Ra mwear for Juniors _in Right On.' Robes, Sleepwear and Loungewear Maternity Collections Infants' and Tod<;flers; Girls ' and Boys ' sizes 4 to 6X, Girls ' sizes 7 to 74 Spot for Teens Apparel. Blouse Collections Fashion Jewelry, Swiss Watches, Cultured Pearls Womens Shoes Belts, Scarves, T-shirts Handbag Collections S.ks Fifth .i\venue at South Coasf Plaza. JJJJ Bristol Street Cose• ~ . Optn Monday throu11h 5.Jturday, from 10 A M. to 9:30 P.M . . , ~M! "9Af0Wia wat'h& 1.,... ".BiiCll ~ ........ the ~ 109'U m.n ,... lteUat .... d01nl to : ,. .....,,,. :tM "' "··~ .. ~-CC>UMU llu been operatlo1 tM ~t two yun, • • wbetber 10'ol tblnk lt'a Wm tw a~~ tome fNlb approacbeil. • I na. l>aUY Pilot'• YOte, ...... (m ..... lot of boun • of coaanc11 atetaln1. caacUdate forum• aad ibe · : perapecti" of a couple~ c1ec.-. la ~ tt empbatlcaJ.11 • la l1me for a dHlftP. • Tbe IHderlhip ot Ute eurrent Ctt1 Coundl bu latll , eredl~ Md ucrtneed raUaDal plum1na, ordtrlY pro. cedune and fair deallq all m ~ clalsn ol "preHl'Vina" Newport Beech. Tbe two prindpal U'Cbltecb ol Wt UDHtlafactory < stated attain, Mayor Paw B.y6olf and Vice MQOr ~ ... WiUJama, are aee.kln1 re-electfon. • 1 With Ryckolf and WUliama u tbe prime mown and spoll men, lhe pl'tMMmt couneil hu establiabed an UD· 1 enviable tract record for matlnl, remakiq, ilterint. · ·• ¥mending, re..ameodlna. retclndina and ,co.mint up wltb last-minute p0Uciea without enou1& public dJacuaalon or , forewamina. There have been too many Instances of cltllena and groups being rudely treated by Ryckotf and hil col· leagues because they quatJooed the wtsdom of the council ~rity. Among other thlnp, tlUI bu created a situation lo .which tboee who must deal with the council kDoW \hat what the council saya today ii not to be relied upon ; because it ia quite likely to challle at tbe next meettna. Now, we don't shed a teu for the bll builders and de· velopers -.!. a1thouP they are cJeJrly entitled to f alr and equal treatment. They're bl,& enouah to fl&bt their own battles. But thia council majority has made it very clear that they are Just aa willing to .,usb around the little pro- perty owner, homeowner or busmen. Now that the election heat is on, it is interesting to see both Ryelcoff and Williams talking ln a much more con- ciliatory manner about the people and projects they have so consistently fought. • But there isn't much evidence to indicate that either Ryckoff or Williams listens to anyone except a handful of political cronies and advisers. Open mindedness has not been a strong point with either man. ~ ... ! In District 5, now represented by Ryckoff, this calls ror election of Philip Maurer. Maurer, a longtime and highly respected teacher in the locaJ school system and three tlmes president of the Balboa Island Association. bas bad his roots in this com- munity for 28 years. He has shown a good grasp of the city's affairs and problems. And, equally import.ant, be bas shown a will- ingness to listen and to deal in reason rather than in authoritarian assertions in weighing the Issues facing the city. Maurer can add a much broader viewpoint to council deliberations; solid community background and badly needed balance. ~. *** Jl' Opposing incumbent Ray Williams ln District 7 is a well-organized, well-qualified and well-informed in· dependent local business~ John Cox. Cox has been involved with youth activities and with South Coast Repertory Theater. He projecu a thoughtful, reasonable program (or approaching the city's major problems and balancinl oppoeing needs and views. Cox is viewed as suspect by the environmentalist partisans because he bas bad strong support from busi· ness and builders. He insists -and we believe -that this has fallen bis way not because of any pledges he bas made, but simply in protest against the incumbent's closed-minded. one·sided performance. *** District 2,is the West Newport area now represented by retiring Councilman Don Mclnnis. His experience and breadth of view will be sorely missed. Three of the five candidates are the strongest -re· tired businessman Richard Clucas, publishing advert.is· ing executive David Shores and Ruthelyn Plummer, fo rmer business executive now an investigator for tbe Orange County Office of Consumer Affairs. On paper, Clucas' background of involvement in com· munity activities is the best. Unf ort.unately, his election eff ort.s are so closely tied to the Ryckoff and Williams campaigns that it is difficult ~ tell to what extent be is, as be claims, his own man. Snores' voice also bas been beard frequently ln city affairs the la.st year or two. He i.~ an energetic spokesman on civic business and is highly motivated. But be ia also headstrong. Plummer, a Newport Beach native• outlines a sensi- ble campaign, speaks a reasoned view, although her political involvement has been principally with the Orange County Republican Central Committee rather than city matters. It's a dartboard throw. We think the edge goes to Ruthelyn Plummer. Clucas has too many commitments and Shores' sometimes explosive personality is not what the council needs. Mrs. Plummer has the potential to make Ute most useful council member in th.is situation. In summary, the Daily Pilot recommendations are: Distrld % -RuUlelyn Plmnmer District 5-PhWp Mamer Diatrld 1-Jobn Co:& Ballot Measures In addition to selecting three council members on Tuesday, Newport Beach voteP.J will.have four proposed city charter revisions to consider. Two of the bfillot measures, Propositions A and B, represent opposing attempts to change the date of the city elections. PropOsition A, sponaored by the City Council iruU<>rity, would move the elect.loo to November of odd-numbered years to coincide with school el~ Propoaiticn D, sponsored by _the Newport Harbor Area Chamber ol Commerce, woWd move the eleeUGm to Nov· -ember ol even-numbered yean to eo.lnclcle with aeaenl ~lectiom. . We still prefer to leave th1no u they are, with mcmiclpal eleetiou beld In Aprll of nee-numbered years. We recommend a No vote oa botb Aud D. However lf vot.en wllb to chua• tbe clt1 election date, tbe iOiicat choice ii to put it rib the electloo that encouraaes the best voter turnout. Since 1eneral electiom draw more t.bu double tbe turnout for cit7 or school electlau, tbJa would call for Yes on PlopollUon D andNoon~onA. On ~ B, tbe meuure to limit annual pay tn· &re&MI far eomcll 1D9111bln, we ncomm..ct a Y• "'4t. f:Fropolltioa C ii a boal~ 11¥9uure to make ~ I Jdeaq nqulremmata ,.. cudtdat• na.ct ttata law. we nei.-,,,_, a Y• -.. - Prom repona ol ................ d&epatct1d to NfUMe C:AmPI OD tla• ftal·C••Wlaa border A bra•owtts laaa ad•la•d ~fl .... CJra Vme. tlaat "rape alMI robbery b1 PAVN <Va.tam ... > toldkn are .Uorml7 r•pctrted .•. from ~ ol ltampuebea (Cam >.'' SVEJll OFPICIALI or lb• QW.attnc penunent have ~ fleeln1 tbelr bomeland •n droves, Abramowitz reporu. ··'l'betr dedaoa to escape (foc> eventual reeeulement lD (otbef) count.rim la baaed oo U.. com· moo pereeptiQD that life unde:r the VWzu•!DeM ii litoleiable," atatea oae cable. It cites tbe twin mot.lvadnc factora u ··dread of a repl"eaaive Communist re- 1hn e" and tbe .. ublqultoua tbreat of atarvaUoo." Aa tut.one ethn.lc the Cambodians be Vlet· name.e bave DO ua1ma about , Supplies ltealjq food &om t.be ltantlll natlvea. One man ta blood- ttatued tl'OUMrl cleMrlbed to ... mtel'YMwer bow tbe VietDam 111 bad ambutbed bJsn aad Illa frteadl. "He still bad aome lie. ODIJ beeauae t.be VletaaaaeM a1nadJ bad ltoleD snonthaotbe, could carry from b1a murdered compatoaa. '' oa.cab&eretat.. ble m.tet. ~ ACOO&DING TO \he re!uaeea. tbe Vietoamete cliatri~ rejjef 1appUe1 of rtee bj day "lo tbe preunce of international workers, then confiacate Clt> after the worken depart the scene," or replace it with corn. Some Soviet-supplied com "aa atiU cJoai,n& ooe warehouae . • . but la ao uoappeallng that only the most bunary will eat ti.," tbe cable repona. A bramowttz ba.a a11o provided evideoce to support coatlnued claims that the Vietnamese are actually sbippln.J rorelp rtce 1uppUe1 intei>decl for Cambod.la baek to fWr OWD COUDtry. A mllltlalma •a quoted bl one ~able: "He N• two earao bar1e1 anhe from Vl«Dasn 1'ltb c:onl. After an,loedtn., OM of ... ...... ... ftJW 1'11.b rte., wldeb be da1111ed bitecled lor VMitnam." Otber witaea.., IDcladed a womu wbo "aaid lbe W twte. seen VietnameH load rt.oe on bars• at nlf.bt, UaeD IMl9d for VletAam," and ... formw hll· tory pn>fesaor Cwbo) claimed that be NW two tnaeb ao.ded with riee bead • • • toward Viet- nam.'' AM .A•&&ICAN acbol•r. ~ Heder, wu quoted at leGdb bJ the ambuaedor, who CS..crlbed b1a oblervatlona u a .. aolld, penetratins look" at Cambodia. llec*' wrote: "WeU-or1aalzed teams of Vietnamese troops . . . con- aumed some of (Cambodia's home-crown> rice themselves, provided some of it ·to thelt closest collaborators, IOad 10me of it OD the black market. lD tbe urban cent.era. and seat some 0( it back to Vietnam, offielally or unofficially ... Tbe few Cambodtaas wbo cooperate wttb u.e =uerw. get snera1 pounds of edJ rice a mootb, but onliDarJ' peuaota often 1eronl1 reef corn or •·small. bnJteD r1ee from Viet- nam ~they aaid made them vomit." one cable repona. aelief medical nppUa are al10 peddled on tbe black market, their forelsn origin clearty MSeatiflab&e, Abramowitz ~ported. Officla1a of the.. puppet re&lme are believed to be pro{· lteerlng on the i.Dt.ernaUooal relief supplies. Footnote: The cables, though detailing the divers•on of foreign aid. coofinn that many of the supplies do find their way to tbe Ca mb o dian populace . AbramoW\U told Vance thet the relief effort must coot111ue 1r famme a:s to be averted. And ----... -sour~ told my associate Les Whitten Chat Cambodian a.ad wiU s urvive Presideol Carter's budeet cuts. Mailbox f Move National Park South for 'Free' Land? To tbe F.ditor: The proposal to try and buy 19,000 acres In South Orange County from the 0«an to the Sao Diego Freeway for $76 million cannot be done at that price. This is only S4 ,000 per acre. and such land an Orange County has not sold ror that re· cently. But don't give up hope for a park -just move it down the coast 6~ miles and use U.S.· owned land -purchase price zero. How to do this? Coovert less than 1/7th, or 17 ,000 acre.a of the northerly end of Camp PeodJetoo to a park. Add this to existing Sao Onofre State Beacb of 3,158 acres and you have 20,158 acres and you 1Ull have our $76 million. TBE ABOVE ne.,, locatioo for free also avo(da all the roUowtng bad polDta about the propoMd Orange Cowrty location: 1. The reaJ land COil ls prob- ably $380 million ($20,000 per acre>. and why spend that huge sum when there ii U.S.-owned land 6"" milea south? 2. It will remove 19,000 acres rrom the tax roUa. thereby raia· lng everyone elae'a taxes. 3. It will eliminate residential locatioDI, aocl supporting bu.sf· neaaa for 225,000 penom, and all jobs tbereln forever. 4. It will problblt forever all the blllldrecb of tbouaanda of Jobi lD ~ re1ldences and ti..p.eqes oo 19,000 acres. 5. 11le taxes the 19,000 de· veloped acres will produce are lost fonver. 6. Tbe U .S. already owns 12S,OOO acres at Camp Pendleton wbich ii OGly ,,,._ mlles down the coaat aod the U.S. llarinea do not ~tor need, anywbere near all of mat 125,000 acres -tbe1 would not mi.A 17,000 acres. and would ltW bave 108,000 &CIW to operateoo. N.H. SMEDEGAARD tllh DOtioo is more garbaee than fact. The greater gM!ed ls shown by those who sellisbJy want to have their property and their way of hfe unsullied by any contact with newcomers who m1gbt want to come into the area. I AM NEITHER a developer not an environmentalist, but as a property 011mer. I AM genuine· ly concerned -as are some of the council members with the callous disregard for the rights or the citl.zeos to own property and to use it, remodel and baild on. within the zonina restrictions in force when they 1n 1ood faith purcbued the property. To cite that tbes4 meuures are ror t.be commoo good ia to cbaot the dictatorial refraln of the fud.lt ud communilt COUD· trte.a. Tbe ma,Jorfl7 ol the PftS· ent council seems not to rec· opiu their actiooa .. sucb.. If the council wants to cbanae density and sonin1, they can purchue the property by eml· nent domain aod then resell it. reioned or redeveloped, lQ a lef al. moral way. approve of the lawsuit.a in· sUtuted by thOM firma wtth auf· rlclent money and courace to tack.le City Hall. They are in ef. feet dolna battle for all the property owners. I bate to see our tu money used to defend the city poeilion ol wbicb DWlY •OC.n do not approve. t think tt aa Ume for tbe mu· Im um change lo the councU atructurel LADISLA W REDAY buildmg.s and banks. oot care! Many o( the home-owner resj. dents are their clients and fnends Do not the merchants of lovely Fasb1on Island want the goOd'to\ 111 or their rt'~ldent1al ne1~hbors, .,..ho oppose strong arm t.actJcs ., C'ONCEIVABL Y these edicts are not enurely locally inspired. When the "new .. lrv1oc Com· pany C'ame into e:1t1stcoC'e <re- ferred to as a ronsort1um at the llme I 1t was well pubhc1&ced that one or the pnnC'1pals w 3s a m3· jor Cbicago develoJ)E'r. We were assured that tb15 "ne w" Irvine Com paoy would not over· develop. aod be •ympathetic to protecting the res1denllaJ com- munities and OW' caty. noted ror its nat.uraJ beauty o( location. Now we are informed to prepare ror t.M 1980s boom. with t.oeVlta • ble develoomeot whether we like it or not. Do not bow to a powe r · rul poljtical colo ss u s, blehly financed and us1 ni smoothly or1aoi&ed political tactics to &ain control of the Newport Beach City Council. Vote April 8, for those can- didates who have proved tbef respect our resldenUal quality of We, and wtll continue \o fairt.y represent th• bomeowuen as well u the bwUnesa communit)'. The choice la clear, retai.Q tboM dedicated to this purpoee. WINNT~ SHORT s .......... ..... To the Editor: We know who the Bad GQJS are -you"bave constantly educated w to tbat la JOUt col· umu lo tbele mau moetbl. We know who the Oood G~ ~ rrom their full pa1e adv.U.. menu in the DallJ Pilot. Jt mat .. t11 wonder tbouib lf there ia any relationablp betw .. the hall ....... -4/cir the people ~ write tbem, ud J'OQJ' ~-mtl/or tbe people •lllO Witte tbem. weaowu..Bedo.,..., up the *Ir ., ......... &bey lllt all tbal 1111! Do .a IM oranc• oa tbe bay ~· after • ""rm bold .., ? We kao• the Ba• Gu11 bro\ltllt oa ill oar uatft.e~ blesu but wbere did u.., all the ~ to do tbe job Cer- tainly DOl &.. tM l*Ple .., to an4 fJ9'D all die 1MW ...... and,.... ol t-11tn111. structioo and with a jaundiced eye thereby denying us such arC'bitectural deli.;hts as the beautiful Promontory Point de· velopmeot. We know the Bad Guys att foisting off all of theae, and more evils, oo us becauae of the vast profits and emolwnents which wtU ace~ to them. We know the Good Guys have only our best intere"St.s al heart. giv. 1ng freely of their bounty to pre- serve what is left or the smalJ town atmospbere or the area. Are the Bad Guys really bad, are they motivated by tbe basest of ambitions'! Are the Good Guys ~ally all that rood -is It poaalb&e that their various halos are just a lit~ tie bit tamisbed '! . W bo is really wortillg for tbe little guys? ALANL.BLUM Trk•• To the Editor: l t YIU iDterest1ng to note that most ol the cootrtbuton to the campaip ol Jobo Cox gave Just Sl sbort of tbe maximum amount allowable uader the Newport 8-cb eam:palp pnc. tJces law. Could it be that tbeJ tlwtq.,,. that by not li.taa ... ,... .. that tbelr u.. ....id not be published lD the newspaper tbenbf bfdinC the fad tJaat a IUbat.alitW munber ol bis COil· tribut«I are tboM wt., faftl' contlaued ovet'-deYelopmeatt Tbe D.Jl1 PiJGt ii to be COID· mended for seelDc Usroucb tbia scbeme ud t4Wq it like it ls. CAROL 1CV ANS - --;--.A.-..jiil JM-......... Ila .... U. facnQ; ol BW Md Pit. Bart• of Na•••· f'la., ~ cOAllderabl• mecUa attlDtloD. The Bano. had clileovend that lbelr ._ ........... -. Tracy, •H ~m~lfnc . an lnordlante n •mom ol mart.Ju.an•. T~•1 4eclded draatlc meuurt8 ..,.. ln order. Here la 'bow one new1paper de• crl bed them: "The Bartone pul Tracy under con1lant wateh. Bill drove her to • school. Pat picked h er up. They told the 1chooJ that l.f she cut a class, the school office and the Bartons · were to be notl.fied at once. At home, Tracy wu IJ'OUDded. No dates. No 'private' phone calls. No being at home walb<>ut a parent preeent . . . Tracy got a - hiU..almii-• =••erl_~ .... ~ -ass Ir "• • .ui!t.-Wilfit-wf &Mal. but1 are1 ... , UWJ MW • owa ~ •tMAt ,_ · corredilll U. Clb&ld or tM ._. to ooue on net tut ODI like 10 ,-., oMW be Utere wt.• .... ,. la UM fae. ol youdftl tea.vtAa It la they wbo an lD Tra~ wu 'Dot workl••· Ae ml1behavlor ooe •lther doei tbe forefront ot the effort to d~•••toud,....UMbileh ~Laa or OM ..ammou ~ cen1or or even elfmlnate nearb)', ,_. I'd ~, 4111"81 .,.UC.. commerdall aimed at kids. downatoddmomeau.' TM~ meehaallma of BVT COJllllBaVATIVS or lnatructioD o1 aiactpUDe of the liberal, al.molt all pu'elllU Uft rouna have been abrotated. the feellN their kid.a .,. ...._ .\ asaOIC •lfort. but one which many f amiU• mlshl DOt be abM to afford to make. It ll also one that • famll1 _ ln a diffennt aodal anatrtx mpt net have to mak•. ln a "mmunlty whe~ the chJld.reo 10 to tehool clOM to bocne and where there a re atar·•t·hOaM adwtl, who know the chlldren ud tbe youth Ol UM eom11u1n.1ty , aupenilioa of the YOUI n,ay be • 1haied responalbility. Not in the United States, however, where many parents resent t.avln1 tbelr children corrected by otber adwll, even other adult family members. Thus. most 1rown-ups, when they see a youn1 barbarian committing .,_ act of vanclaHam Betwffn lhe wanlnf mor:! stolen from them Nor are ·~ :e °:taf!': •=nm mattera made betier b)' the po helplAs pro(.,lont, to UN tM laeU&utlioal. the 1ouaa Pl ,no mt.Jeadifta detlpaUon tlMlt la awdance and have 00 cheek. suppoMd to cover the ...._ of PAaSN'l'B wbo bridle wbeo another adult comes close to '"ld.inl their young 'un, suffu the aa1ne sense of out·of-eontro1Jne11 with their kldl u parents who accept help from anywhere in their child ralalng. Parents of a socially or poll tically conse rv au ve peraua&ioA do battle against permlaalveness and moral re 1 a ti vas m in the sc hoots. Liberal parents do mucb the "traioed" adviaon, coun ulan. therapists and assort.cl other worlten who, under tbe lube of rendering aid, l.nsttt themlelvea between parent and cbild. The cumulative effect of these occupations ls to propqate ad reinforce the not.ion, prevaJent eDOUlh among kids, that thew parenu and all parents are niDni•, i.ocompetenta. didactic bores and obstacles to the freedom and full development. of the youtbful l.odividual. vUU fl J COSTA MESA flt,;. UDlaappllJ, wlllle = away with the D0t Yeo belplal Pl'of~ would be a boon to the puBUc treuary, lt wouldn't reRol"e t.be cblld to it.a pareata. wbo are too buly trytnc to earn a liWq to take ea.re of It anyway. American children beloq to tbeir peer group.a; we all bow that. yet such peer IJ'OUllS didn't aist ID America a eentwy aco. T b e.y d e v e 1 o p e d a 1 a c:ouequenee of adult eeonomic organization or the modern school system and the d~mands of a commerce which discovered that. property manipulated. kids can be good customers. 'l1l1s summer delegates from every state trill be meetine to d.lN-......, ~ ..... ..... Boule Ollialll ... -... m •• or at a..t .. caa .... U.,wUJ. TIM coaftlmce tna1 de••• i&e la.to aaetla•r abottloa-SaA baUJe Cll" a ,PeP raUJ • IOdtl worlt ..a r.1daiaU7 ad tM needs or amUlea Ute tlle Bal'tml9 ID&J be kilt. U ao, Jet lllGl'e people may decide lbat .... -kids la too Opemift. too fnatratiac and too UDNWa.rdi.q in a aociety that exploits both parents and childhood. Whicb brings up another queaUoa. Without children, who will loot out for us ID OW' old ace. when America becomes the domicile of the Hperannaated spider people1 I -----· ... ~ ~-----. t Dotme, Not Old These lost children of Cambodia show varied reaetiooa to a photo- grapher -bright smiles, fright, curiousity -in Phnom Penh re· ceoUy. The scene is a.n orphanage, formerty a CathoHc church. St. Louis Leads U.S • .... _Cities in Murders &T. LOUii CAP) -street violence ..-mC11t el It ID the bUl)lted black aelPbar'boods cm tbe.norCb aide ol St. i.o,11 _.. bM put tb1I Midweet river ,ort cm top al tbe national heap ln 11118"der.u.tta. Polke recorded 230 murden ln St. Lotda ID ~ 41 for ffel'1 100,00I residents-bJPest raUo ID tbe nation and more than double the rate ln New York Cit.)'. ' . • LAST HAR TBE killings· ln- ere.aaed by 24 percent, pushing the rate to S7 per 100,000. This year, 46 persons have been killed, down from last year's 88 murders at this tlme. .. A sUckup id St. Louis used to be 'Your monel' or your life,' " said a cab driver. "Now it's 'Your money AND your life.' '' Tbe St. Louis rate-per-100,000 was highest despite dramatic jumps in homicides recorded in other big American cities last year. Atlanta bad a 60 percent increase !n killings -from 144 to 231 -which "Tiie slightest arg•· tllftlt• •ltna re••lt la . ....... ell."~ .. t• ' •top tlae lfllie• ,....,. io tlae g•n fo settle dis· p•t~" Peaela said. translat.ed to a rate of 51 pet' 100,000. Houston's murder total rose from 462 in 1978 to 632 last year, or 42 killings per 100,000. Dallas, Miami and New York al.so recorded more murders ln 1979. I ST. LOUl.8 CIVIC leaders say the predominantly black enclaves oo the north side, where murder is most fre- quent, have become virtual war zones. St. Louis' chief prosecutor issued a public plea for help in curbing the violence. In an open letter to black church leaders, Circuit Attorney George Peach said 84 percent of the 985 persons slain last year were black. ' In the cases that were solved, all the black victims were killed by other blacks. be added. "With tbele har:sb figures before pa, it is not difficult to say that •tack.a are killing each other at an ~armiQI rate, .. Peach, 'who is white, Jai4 ID b1I Jetter. "TU 8LIGBTEST arguments tft9 l'9Ult in bloodshed. We've got .., •toP tbe quick ruab to the gun to leWe disputes," Peach said. · Tbe tJpical murder victim in &. LoW. II a black male in his 208, 1uaned down by a neighbor ln a street near bis home. In 64 percent of the ltllllngs a handgun is used. 1be victim ma.y have resisted a robbery, fought over money or been targeted by drue deatel'S. "The law enforcement agencies take tbe attitude that, 'Well, there's another black killed. That's ooe less black we bav~ to deal with,' " said "llate Rep. Fred Williams of St. J.o!i!, wboi§ black. BUT POLJCB CHIEF Eugene Camp commented, "You can't patrol a1alnlt marder. U someoae want. to kUJ somebody, bow ean we atop it?" Blac~ leade,. say the bualneas community baa virtually aban4ooed the crime-ridden nort1i llde. Wbat'a left, they say, la unemptoymet and poverty. St. Lo.uh baa lost 58,000 manulacturlng Jobs ln 10 yean. It st.anda to ao.e another 5,000 over the next couple of years as General Moton abandon.a Its north side U · sembly plant, the city's single largest source of tax revenue and ooe ol ita biggest employers. The operation will be relocated in rural Wentzville, 45 miles west or St. Louis. ''WHEN AN uf'ouSTRV thinks about where it wants to relocate, it doesn't want to ha ve ita employees subjected to the kind or crime pro- blems St. Louis has," said Williams. Some police officers, unhappy with the department's failure to curb the murder rate, have organized the St. Louis Police Ethical Society. Its leader is Sgt. James Buchanan, a black wbo says the city should hire more black officers to try to deal more effectively with crime lo the black comnumity . St. Lou.is' population of 500,000 is more than 50 percent black. The police force of about 2.000 officen ls 18 percent black. City officials say they cannot find enough quallfied black officers. MANY MURDER "investigations are hampered because witnesses decline to testify in court and the reason. said Buchanan, is the unwill· 1ngness Of some blackS to cooperate with white police officers. "We could solve part or that ll we bad' more blact officers dolne bomicide investigations," Buchan.an ;aid, noting that of 18 detectives oa the homicide squad, only two are black. Sgt. Norman J acobsmeyer, com· mander or the homicide divlsloo, :taid arrests were made in 89 percent >f all alayings 1D 1979, a rate be ~ailed the beat of any of the nation's major cities. - "I think the department is doing ?verything it can." be said. BUCHANAN, BOWEVEll, noted :hat of the '89 i>ercent arrest~· ·•mo&t of t.boff who are arrested ~oina free because charges are er ~iled," be said. Peach said be didn't know what 'ercentage of those arrested are 1ever charged. But in "a pretty nice :bunk" of cases where murder sus- pects are freed for lack of evidence, Peach said, the problem is a lack of willing or credible witnesses . Peach said in many cases unwill· mg witnesses have an attitude or "to bell with the police, to bell with the :ourta." All new bu1lneMH ullng a ftctlllcMle name, mult by law be ,.._ered wMtt the County Clerk. The DAILY PILOT pn>vldes the tonne and fllng Mnlce• for our cuatomer9. If you are ltaf1ing a new ~cal the DAILY PILOT few lnformadon and tonne l'M VOTING FOR RAY WIWAMS IECAUSE: •He la a lcientlat, a blok>gilt. His ex- pertiee '8 Invaluable for the reetoratlon of the Beck 8-v He Is atlO an ec-oomplllhed ,...•ntatlve of the peo- ple MM to work with other govern- ments to 10Mt our problems. No can- didate has credentiafs aa irnpreafve 11 ft-v WHlieml." • George lnglet - : I I I Pi~ 35% . IJEF(i)a All· Pearl Jewelry • • ·All items regalilr stoek Sale on thrit, Sat., April 5th ' 21h YEAR, NOMlt&tJM M0t£YMARKET ACCOUNT 12.935 %/ J2.000% eee Of course. Citizens pays the highest interest allowed by law on insured savi~ But saving with your Wise Financial Friend means much more ... Cimens"Check Your lnterest!'Plan. Get maximum interest for your checking ~ tool Citizens .. Check Your Interest" Plan pays S•t.% compounded daily, with no monthly ~ charges. So now you can enjoy one-stop convenience and super earning-power for the money you save ••. and spend. ~ And then some more! Discover Citizens exclusive Family Financial System• ... an anay of valuable asomer services that make money. save money. manage money for you! Whoo ... ls your wi9e finardal friend? I :~BSCQA~ NEWPORT'Bf.ACH: 33QO West Coat Hlg.._, "* ftewpolt SW.. 631·9205. SYDNEY HARRIS ' I ~ ' '1 lWeWtaerla Sl•>t Nobody seems to ~ how this old plywOod craft suddenly appeared 1 behind the Costa Mesa Inn at 320$ Harbor Blvd.. 1ay1 manaier· Maryet JleUvier. She says 1be will report the wayward boat, complete with trailer, to the police as a lost but found April fool 's article. Palotio1 on the weatherbeaten bulk reads, .. April Fool's -Now Your (ale) Stuck With It." White twill. Surface appeal in a freshly white-washed cotton trouser. Comfortably pleated, too. 4 to 14, $42 All in Emphasis, 398 Bullock's South Coast Plaza Mon.·Frl. 10-9:30, Sat. 1o-6, Sun. 12~t 3333 Brlstol, S.M. (714) ~1. Shop BulocKs Mi$aion Viejo Mon.·Frf. 10.9, Sat. 1<>-6, Sun. 12--5 .. Mission V1-b Mal, (714) 495--3111. • I, .. 'Detiih ~el' S...pee• Free on Bail .- Bls111lssal Beal April'a· FOOi Backfire• BOSTON <AP> -Tbe u.en!IU .. Pt'Odueer ot u... ...... ..,.. cm 1laUoo WNAC·TV, Cbauel T, bu been find aft« lllowill ID ApJ11 Fool'• l>Q report ol a fake volcame enapOoa la dlll ..._ aurt>urb ot lllltoa. · Homer Cilley, 33. wu llred for "bla failure to uwelM jOOd newa Judimeot" &.Del tor riolatine at.aUoa and ........,. ODm- munlcaUona Commiaaloa nalea about lbowinl library ftJm tootaae ltiilbout ldenWytna lt u 1udl, tM ataUoe •uaaemem laid Wecl· Delday. A~ llAVB alleeed that worbta at tlae Lu Vepa bo9pltaJ made beta Oil tbe life G• peetucr ol .,.u.u. llW.. said there wu evi"-ce that •-u.en .,.__... -------........ -------------------1 mtPt bave been beWDI lD tbe SJl•aeeretl bo9pttal .. to .... • patieat ELECT '1'RB OONCBPTION AND DBan'ION "' that aecmeat eJI• blblted an eoormou lack ot new1 Judsment," •aid Robert WUUallllOD, ieaeral mana,er and vice pi.ldeat of tbe RKO-owned stadoo.. .. . ... tblnk the firiDI ... fully Jllltifted ... Cilley Wd.. "J did tt. Jt was my respoaaibilit,y and it'• aometbtllC I'll bave to bear aloae." THE NEWS PROGU. TVBBDAY SHDBD wttb a report al· letedlY showing an eruption ol Blue Hill, a small bill with a aki area IOUtb ol Boston. Tbe report thea showed footate ol llount St. , Helena in Wuh.l.ngtocl, and dipe ol Presjcleat Carter aJ>d Gov. mi1bl die.'' but be laid tbe tJt. A postal worker in a dlctment ot Miu Adami" bad Kansas City, Mo. aotlaiqtodowtth1ambllltl. suburb, Blue Spr-· Belli Mid, be would ·~ the ings, bad the spllil· !l= l:1 c!.e ~not~ tdering taskf Wedn1 es· trial "became I think we'll beat-8 Y 0 s o r t n g it in the appellat.e court... wooden b 1 o.c ks A tey witnes~i in the cue was mailed to Pres1dent Bertha Fraser, the victim's Carter by construc- widow. She told the grand Jury lion workers asking her husband, who bad been financial relief due bo1pitallsed two months with t o t b e c u r re n t kidney failure, d.Jed one day bomebuildUlg slump CLANCY YODER HUNTINGTON BEACH CITY COUNCIL Edward J Kina upreulnl their coneern. AJtbouch a reporter dlaplayed an April l'ool'a aJo at the end ol lbe report. aeorea ol people called police and some &epn fleeiDI their bomea. WNAC-1V la a CBS alftllate after a llUl"&e uted her to sign a Tb 600 · release for a mortuary ere were 10· · inch, two by fours. Repair Funds OK'd Clerk Named • City COundlmen amce FebNefy 1979 • Pat Membet HB ~ Commlalon • Member Orange County Community Oevetopment Council • • .. ....,... Mmyor°• Mt.tao., Comftllttlee I 30 years necutlve ftnendel ~ • EndorMd by HB Ctwnb« of Commerce. orance County Superviaon have agreed to help foot tbe $1.2 millioo bUl to fix Villa Park Road lD Orange where It was washed out by Santiago Creek during recent rainstorms. But they added the stipulation lbat owners of the adjacent sand and gravel pits pick up the other half or the tab. The $1.2 million expenditure ap. proved by supervisors will pay for patching the road temporarily, COUD· ty official! said. But eomt.ructioa of a bridle bW1t to withstand the likes of recent atonns would CI08t '8 million to SU millioa., they added. Officials said lbe project may be eligible for up to SJ million of federal disaster relief money. Had supervisors dedded not to aJ. locate money to repair Villa Park Road, t would have been closed. Of. ficial.s estimated that 6,000 dally trips were made on the road prior to the wash-out Coast Pupils Cash Winners Sixt.eell Orange Cout bigb school senion woo a total of $2,900 in cash awards in the semi-finals of Bank of America's 33rd annual Achievement Awards program recenUy. First place winners were RuseJle Revenaugh and Peter Cunniffe of Laguna Beach High School, Eugene DavUI, lrvi.ne High and Larey Wilken, Capistrano Valley High. RE-ELECT SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -The California Supreme Court bas named Laurence P. Gill as clerk of the court. Glll, '4, a deputy clerk of the U.S. Supreme Court for five years, was selected from a group of over 300 applicants by a 4-3 vote of the California tribu.nal. l'M VOTING FOR RAY WIWAMS BECAUSE: "W,hlle other candidates talk In vague terms about the Issues. Ray Williams deals with speciftes. He's a stnoere and honest man. My main concern Is Airport expansion. I'm agamst it So 1s Ray Wilhams. He's the choice of con· cerned r~dents." Clyde McDermont RAY WILLIAMS x PLACING SECOND WERE Joanna Mount.alo and Allison Cornell, Mission Viejo High, Holly Fleurant, Dana Hills H1&b and Cecilla Gaudier, Paid for by Committee to ~ Rey Williams Barbera Uc:hmen. 624 Poppy Street. Corona del Mar 92625 C.Yodlr lrvine~lace awards went to Allen Wix and Scott Chapman, Coroda ctel Mar High School. Elisabeth Nutting, Ntwport Beach High and Doris l'luueabau.m, University High School. FOtTaTB PLACE WlNNEaS were Mary Leoodb and David Caress, Sao Clemente Hlgb School and Newport Harbor Hl&b seniors Barbara Jacobi and Sarah Hufbauer. F1nt place students will advance to the finals wbere they will compete for awards of up to $2,000. Census Workers Ttms Scheduled .. Tbe U.S. Bureau of Census ia hiring temporary workers for the 1980 national census. Applicants muat pass an bou:r·lonc multiple choice test taking ab9ut two hours to complete. Tbe test will be pven in Costa Mesa April 9, 16, 23 and 30 at 9:30 a.m . in the Downtown Com· munil1 Center at tbe comer of Anaheim and Center Streets. Por lnformaUon on other teat tlmea and loeatkm ull 831-4310 or 831""311. Heads Division JfffT1 Blum of Buntinatcn Beacb bu been selected chairman of the Alloeatiml Plannlna Committee for the U~ Way of Oraqe Oounty, Nortb-Soulb. Blum bas been a e ln tbe Ualted Way for fin years. Put work lncludea membenhip on aeveral committees and panels. Bban bal a1lo contributed tedmlral aclYiee for UDlted Way'• curreal atudy of pereeived bu.man ..nice aeedl ID IOUth Oranae ~. . Planl Plan ·2 For ......... -.. $5.000. For tlaose wltll $5.000 ID $10,000. Effecdve April I thru 30 Eff cctive April 3 thru 9 . Now, eYCD a liUle • SlOO earns double-digit Now you, too, can qualify for our hiahesl· lntaat to help you keep up with today's living earning.Money Market Aa::ount; ~u loan you c:osu. Minimum term is only 30 months and ~difference needed to meet the Sl0,000 intaat ii oompowtdtd "'1Jly on thls account. minimum belanor. With our s.vmg, Loan you No bank CID pay this hiah rate. pay only 1 .. above the 6-montb Money Market Aa:ouDt rate 00 tbc amount borrowed~ Ask for details. 12.00% 12.940/o Earuupto il5576% AnnullRate Annual Yield Aoaull Yldd ' H8 JYIUor Ctwnber of Commerce. Cttfz.ena In Law Enforc:emMt Action Committee. fC>nMf HB aa.yota Ted 8uUett, EmleGl.._end George McCracken HE WILL WORK WITH YOU Plan3 For tllose wttl9 $11,000 or more. Effective April 3 thru 9 This is our hiabest aamina Money Market Account. The term is 6 mond'S, tbc rate is guaruttecd and no b80lc or savinp and Joan pays more. It, too, is insund by a U.S. Oowmment A&mCY to $40,000. 14.8040/o 15.5760/o Annualble Annual Y'add PAUL RYCKOFF x com~ ol lotermt on 1-moath lloney Market Account.a C Plans 2 and s. above). •Esamde <Pia 21 suoo borrowed. dllt JI week.a. total Pl)'men.t Sl,07l.M.. A.P.R.15.ICM<K. ••cu••n , ... ..... ..,.,,.......,. 11 ......... ,....., ....... .,..... • DAILY PILO T . . l ------------- ~II 1 ~ .. ~ ~no: R!ro M MUTUAL SNINGS ........ _ ' . -~ . .· - 6-... fer·~•••• At.le DEAR PAT: We need a .olunteer teacher ol mab·Joaa at tbe Oaail Senior Cttilena Center in Corona diel llar. We hHe 12to14 people wbo want to play tbla same and we have tbe game sets. They meet Mondays from 1 to 3 p.m. at tbe center. Can YCHI belp us? L.K., Newport Beach ._... wlllllaC to Wp ea.a drop a llDe to ATS. lie 1J 1111nrW lte fenranlecl&oJOL ...,._lh•me• ..... ,ers P.••e .....,te• • ..,,. DEAR PAT: My daqhter reeetTed a small ~uaic box as a Cbriatmai lift. She Just loves it, nd is very uoeet because a am. all ~ueat can be ard when the music mecbanlam ls revolving. I ow th,at oiling ls needed, but I'd lite to tlnd out w tbls should be done to avoid rul.nln8 tbe mu.sic x. N.L., Costa Mesa ;. ~rta recommead 1111111 a wa&dl·a.brteatiac ti. Dip a tooth pick ID&o Uile oil. Slaake eff atea il and upuy to.cb lite worm el &tie 11nnw <Ute ox'• medlaalcal brala, wldda eeMl9la Ila apen. Ion>. 'l1lls olUDC metlaod la recem••W fer ue very dx moa~ If &Jae mmk ba 11 la &Md eoadJ. loQ. I . \ DEAR PAT: I bear tbat taxpayers who live in • no.I ....... area cu.~al coulderatioo i1nlll Seeld•• se11ea.n1a1p • IMlr ta nt.da. llJ father's home was da• .... '" tbe reeeat nm and I'd like to check DEAR PAT: Where can I write to get lnforma. btto dlla .... bl.ID. I've also beard that diaaater vie· loo about federally·adml.nlatered scholarabips and timt haw a flllnl otemiOD.. oans for college students? I have been out of bigb W.F., Santa Ana cbool for a year. JU aQ9 tbt 8111 ~ wllo Ins la a LS., Irvine fedenllJ.....,.,. ........ area ... elalm• a Tiie Bareaa of Shdetlt Flaudal A,...uee la canal&J 1111 deaetlm eu pt a fu&er nfmd If llae Oft'lce of Edacatloa admtnf ........ m•eat snat "DJMBTD" ta trr11tea aaw ...... • &11e .... .Dd ::.ccra••· u ai.o 1au a te1J.1ree ....... &11111 ... It u ........ : D8 c.&er, AU ..... : ... , (811) IS8-C7M, • &lie Buk Eftea. QJef .... ,.., ... &lallliC s.eu., P.O. Ila lo9 ~Cf'8m. Tlda pncnm effen aid for iat'I, ,.._ ...,,._ ~ a ••• .... .. .... •tade•tl ... ~ -a ftau. c~ Ill -..W • .. ..._... .... IM al..,.. ...... For •on ........... write &e: ... ._.,... 11 ... 111 ...................... ~ •. 0111ee e1 PllMle Mra1n, omee e1 Mau· W •.....,.. .._ • tlllllt ......_ fll IM• ••· Delt•ri•e•t •f BeaJtll, E4acaU. a .. •I ,,, .. ..._. ... .._ .. ,._ ......... eatare.• ..... ..-,D.C.W. • gdting Nady fur f.89ter light~and comfortable madras ... · always a iBvorik forwarm~thcz,r wrz.ar. aolorful harrl ~en 'fn8Ciro& SJX?rt coats; go gN..OtWith poplln tJrou.ecz,ra . available. in blwz., ~and re.d. t:Dnee . .. 44 t11Non island, newport center 644-~ ~ yPur ·$1QOOO on 0 ~4,1979? .. . .. AnnUal Yield** 15.351%. ' . CALIFORNIA FIRST-BANK I. . , .. -1: ·~-.. ;,. ')'• ., .. ,;. . '.! ~ . "" J ·I ,. ,, "· J ' ' I..__. , 'THO!'& A 81ft0 IN .. R!' Chartea Baley With CNfplng Egg fU.S. ·to Sell ~Seized Birds ,_ { · 'SAN DIEGO (AP> -More tban UO exotic birdl, ecxafllcated by cUltoma oftklala lD a tlnsle seisure in Los An1elea lut year, will be acild~t public auction Aprll 11. · Tbe birda will be .old lD tbe Cultoma Hoose ln , , Sab Yaidro lD a fint-of-Ua-ldnd a\ICtJon beld by the :: U.S. Customs service. !f . TllE BISDS ARE WORTH AN estimated ; $50,000. . : : "Moel of these birds were smuated out of the : ~ Aalan ial.anda. IDdoD,alll and Australia and flown 1~ into Los Angele& from the Philippines," said Ron ; .. Edelltetn, chief of penalties at the customs office ~ in Loi AngeleL ~ Tbe birds were falaelY labeled as to countcy of ~ origin and were smuggled into the Philippines :; without permits from their home countries, ac· ,. cording to Edelstein. ., ; ' TBE DIPORTE& BAS SINCE BEEN convict· " ed of criminal bird amqgsllng charges, Edelstein ~ said. -.. A few of the birds such as a black palm :.-cockatoo are members of endangered sped~ and ~ will not be sold, Edelstein said : . •'The endangered species will remain the prop- (. erty of customs," be said. We are ma.klog ar- ~ rangements with the San Diego Zoo to place these ~ birds there on permanent loan." •• 1 The birds tiave been kept at the San Diego Zoo ~ and Wild Animal Park since their seizure. ·'· ''~ ., . ~· . . • • , . . -: ·~ .• , . .. ; • . r " l. .. Eaatet 'C~n' Inlriiue Blind Children . 4 .... ~ NDAU. N.I . CA.Pt:-.. -=:· pAek • die .... MOit tlted to 1Hf.:oad lfare·KHI 'I '"at tM 0 111rt1 ... WU llllllld W~tM ~ ........ -. uJd, ''TbeJ' are fffJ MDllU W.,. otbel' kids aay and t.MJ:: '° Neb otlaer ... ... ,... ....... "'" it -&utet ta bat fOI' bl1lld _. .t.ulb~JOU" ....... . TM boy, wboM ~t ta bM, 1booll the •ii Wtdlit14:f...al held It to b[a-w . Be to ,.... UarouP amall bo&'9 ... then attempt41d to pull lt apart to ftnd the bird b lbou1ht WU ID· •lde. .. THl•E'S A BlaD lnalde bere. I know it beeau.se I can bur blm." be said. "But bow can I take the ..binl out?" be aaked h1a teacher. llaro·lt•ea and about. 50 cluamates at the Helen Keller School all want.eel to know where the birdlt were. Tbe "birds" turned OCl.t to t>e battery-~ered devices that emit a c IOUDd. About 20 me m beu o tb• Future Pioneen -.ua11at1oa, a eom- munity Mrilce SfOUP of New Jeraey Bell Co. employees, fastened the devices ta.aide ea· like pJMtlc abellt that once ccm-tained women's panty boee. TB• BGGS ms bidden UD· der baM'N9 and beblDd treee ID an lnner-ci~ part. Led by their teacben, the aqueallna cblldren scrambled acroea a muddy baseball fleld ln what, for most, wu their lint Euter ea bunt. "We Ill wort ln Newert. and parta of tbe city are really deprelMCL We J\llt want to come back and pYe somethin• to tbe city and the people," aaMl Steve O;aulak. a telepbane COCDPNlJ' repalrman and veteran Ploneel'. Some of the bllDd children cocked their beads to l1Jten to the chirps. Some were afraid to A ... ftADITIONAL -lltaa& ._ lleld tor 100 o&Mr ••otfe•'b' « neutololieallt laaadle..-. 1tud.ata et UM teMol. AO ddldrea, r:._ ID ac• from • to u, received bllS ot eudJ or prilel. • • 'Tbe1're ao excited tut I can't keep them -11 ....-.. They're Jutt n.auMq all~ tbe park," said Demlla TalrDDa. a teacher ot emotioa.all)' d1sturbed child.rm. • 'Tbele kids mow theJ ao to • special school and tbeJ lmow about the1r bandicapa," 'l'lirlble •U maue tor a klDd cf day. Tbe1 cu I about Ml' budlcape for and Just hue f uo Uke kl"•·" -na ANDau eovtnitca. riluaU1 bmdlcapped child, belt part of thi lumt wu cbocolate bmuly sbe woo prue for nncttq one ot the 1n,..,.. Tbe PioGeen deeided to duct tbe Euler eft'mh:a beartna about a 1 sponsored by telepb employees ID Oblo. 7 in County Win At Bridge Tourney Foqr Costa Mesa realdeDta and three Fouotaio Valley denta came back wtnnen from the apri.DC North American Bri cbam~ps held lD Fresno. From Costa Mesa Kay and Clari.a Lanen. 2Tt7 Redwina Ci.re placed third over·all tD tbe Sequola open pain. Doo Hopkina, Mesa Verde Drive, and hi.a partner placed 12th ovuall in mb:ed palra. au.&ILYN JU.N80Ull. ms~ Verde. plAced fifth one-aesa1oa game in which 121 pgyera competed. From Fountain Valley, Sally Mu.rpby, 1asr7 Lime Circle, her partner were leaden lD their aectioo of the western st.a muter pairs. Gene Simpson, 185S9 Pnmus St., a th.ree--time winner. was leader in the men's pairs, a two-aeuioo championship Ul which playen competed. Simpson allo placed llth overall in the pain and wu a leader lo bis aeetioo iD the El Capitan ~o pairs .IOBN ANDEllSON OF f0l1N"l'AIN VAU.E'Y was ooe of master polnt winners, pladq flnt OYerall in tbe special pain two sesaklll game wttb lOC playen. The American Contract Bridge Lea&ue sponsored ~ event. Paid Political Advertaaement l'M VOTING FOR RAY WILLIAMS BECAUSE: "It takes a man who knows how govern-1 ment works to begin to solve Newport's traffic problems. Ray W1lhams has ttlat knowledge and a record to show he's making it worl(.. I urge You to re-elect hrm for the future of Newport Beach." Bill AJten BW S1oea · 8AC.AiQTO CAP> -Gov. 1!'.claullld Brown Jr.bM..,....abWtW poetpona •.WU doc· '°" .. tM ... Jlidl.caa btlllD1 1)'1tem for tlaree 1noadal. Tbe bllr, Owe by &-. Ka llMdr. ~ J'reeoo, WU tbe rwu1t fA • co......-wttll the state Health Servtee1 Departmea. ---RESIDENTS ARISE VOfE NO ON D BobSplma ... ....... ~ PAUL RYCKOFF INCUMBENT ,..,,~ ........... . ,., ........ ~ .......... ,..,.. f•RIT ~Of ~T. sc.amsr. COSlA MESA .... . • .. "Healing through Spiritual Perception" 1111' William C. Breen, C.S.B. . . . 2880 Mesa Verde Drive Ea.st · •• Costa Mesa, California Friday Evening, 8:00 PM April 4, 1980 · DAI lY PllOT ---..... -....-.. .... ·----------...-.. -·-----. QUEENIE / 19" ... • V-M.ec • Sun Shield Reg. $109. SAV&S20 • 100% Solid State •Auto fine Tuning Aeg.'598. SAYE$110 -BEAJ ·111£ DlVEUIUS \UfE· -Ke-.---·.-.-·-~ eve'"8y . fftthi DAILY PILOT DAVID SHORES ... a quaifled "get things done" candidate. NEWPORT /SHORES they belong together TE FOR I X ' DAVID SHORES City Council . : Newport Beach WALLPAPER SAVlllS BONANZA! • GIUT CHOICE - SOUD& ROIW.S. PRlfTS. STllftSr • MUY PAnEJUCS PllE..PASTED & WASHABLE PllM'ASTtD vtNYt.s •NO WAXiNG! • HISH SHINE! • LUSTROUS • SEU-STICK! . FINISHES! PllCE . .=7 I c ·~~~J~! 49c a r • v • 511 r a IT. •T FT. &Vt'' l 6'1J'' l 5118'" LATEX SEMl-GLO~S • DURABLE OLEFIN! • RESISTS STAINS! • FOAM-BACKmt • LOll&-WEARING! SELF-STICK FLOOR TILE • EASY TO INSTAW • GREAT PATTERN+ • SUPER TOUGH. -~Ml!MlfliJ+ri~.:ON~-WEARIMG:. •SOAP & WATER CLEAN-UP\ • QUICl-DRY! •SUPER· DURA BU! •WASHABLE! OUI PllCE ~ .. 8!_9 1!9 ~ · 11& as_. •••a 1an ca1111 ceaat" *" I. Westninster Santa An~ Costa Mesa ~ 15191 Blach 322 W. 17th 2221 Harbor Bl. 2 898-3388 547-7781 ~1126 : I Dally 1-9 ... ,.:w. 8-6 -sun. 9-5:30 P.M'r WI WILL W Cloe.:D IAl1"a MN>AY - • - A a••Mr ol Orage--'.!~_,..llML..ii:ecfD= C:t!:;fma DOf&..k cllurt.111 lllili tO tiili ·a. lf.'4 ·•*---·-• ............. l Mrvica • · -4 Ma. AM'•·PlHI. i...-. L ••• • ,... ............. Clll.a ... 'l -......... ••••••• Q••-... ""'°':w .... ad .... a.v-: 1 la ...... pl!l'I a 11 ol ell l81dla to Ml Lout... I f)e pert ol lbe QOOG '° ! ltlt.,dtao111taatloael commualty I Sim. oe.Mr•anee •t It. l••n I Oood~~· S11Pe•al Qercta, not Vie Lido, ' ~-11'.tAUoMt ... Nftplrt a.th. TM M6kM" cbo&r "1U t 1n1~u. ,wQI-.. ft'OID ._:ro r-• • ••Serftoe o1 Dartw" at :! lJ~h•P.~ ..... w. JllllSltMt.. :aop m • ' A muatcal dram•. "Bl'Mkfan la ; The Good l"rlda1 · obeanenee bJ Gatti ,"ta echldWed al T:30 p.m. •l :: the Buu.,tee ... d i Qudi el th• facllltiee ol =••n., _.mu. , • , aeuct-8dmee, trom DOOO to a Cla•rda. 30121 N Road. p.m .. wtl bit U.. coqnc.U0.'1 ftrat ~ activity at ha MW toe.UC. The St. Paul Sl.ocers wtll provlde ' Tbeauctuaryedjolutbefcxmtaln· apeeaal muat.e at tbe 1 :30 p.m. ~ patio area ol Se4dtff Vt.Uap at tbe aervice at 8&. P••I'• L•&laeraa ·: conj~ of llal.D StNel. Golden Chrelt, 1190 Mornln111lde. Drive. . 1 Weit Slreet and Yorktown Avenue. Laauna Beach. : A trllditiooal TmebcM ..-vice will • r..~,.fU!lY at 7 p.m. by , I ... ,.. Qmrd ol 'lrviM a. ......... ........ C'•re' at St. lla&llae•'•• ltlU :...Culver Ddn, lrvtne. Tbe South Coaat lllnllterial As· soclation ls sponsoring a community service from noon to 1 p.m. at Su Clemea&e Presby&ertu Cha.rd, 119 A venue de la Eltrella. • Tbe Good Frid ay servlce •t L ........ Clmd el lite 11.-.. 2900 Pacillc View Drive, Corona del Mar, willbeat7p.m. Tbe community iJ lDviled to 12:30 p .m . 1ervicee et C•••••lty C•••r•c•U•••• C9-Hell, at 111 RelJotrclpeAvenue, ~del Mar. · Tbe Good Friday service will be at 7:30 P.m. at FaWI Lau.ena a..rer., 8200 Ellis Avenue, Huntington Beach. Various cletaymen will partlclJ)&t.e lD the'aoooto3 p.m. aervlce at Quilt w &Mru a.rs. 1eo Victoria Street. Costa Mesa. Communion will be at 7:30 p.m. An eu bunt for c.hlklren Is slated from 10 a.m. to noon Saturda.y. The "Hour of Power" cbolr will There will be a 2 p.m . service at St. perform et 6 :30 and 8 p .m . M•ard'a CbarcJa. 33926 Calle de la candJell~ eervtees •t G..,._ Grne Primavera 1n Dan• Polot, with tbe C.• ••1'7 Cltarell. 12141 Lewis Dena Poi.Dt ..and c~f,~:ano Beech Street. eon~ ecbed • 7:30 p.m. There wt1l be devotioul readlna service. * *·A * * * * Vows Renewed ~ope Conduct,a Holy Thursday Rite VATICAN CITY CAP> -Pope John Paul II led more thm 1,000 Roman Catholic. priests, bi.shops and cardinals in renewing their vows of celibacy and obedience on this Holy the order ol Mot.her Teresa, winner of last year's Nobel "Peace 'Prize. , Thursday as the y concelebrated ,:. Mass in St. Peter's Basilica. r The Polish-born pontiff, wearing .a purple and white vestments, told a " c rowd of U ,000 jammed in the ~ larf est church in Christendom that I N JERUSALEM, meanwhile, Latin Patriarch Monsignor Giacomo Gulseppe BeltritU marted the Holy Thursday ritual for Catholic pilgrims with a Pootifical Mass at the Church of the Holy sepulchre, the maaaive cburdl that straddles the hilltop re- vered by many Chrl$tians as the site of Christ's crucif"woo. :..t Ho y Thursday was "devoted to ~. priests as servants of Goel and the 1 faitblul." TWENTY-TWO CAa.DINA13. ~ bisbope; and 1,000 priests, all from the •· Rome diocese, concelebnted Kass ,i with the pontiff belore tbe caaG1Jiec1 ~t main altar. "'~ The MUI prec•lil a maJar' Holy • Thursday ceremoQJ at tbe Builice ' of St: John Lat.era, wbeD tbe pope washes the feet or 12 men in a re- • enactment of the Last Supper of J esus Christ and his apostles. The Vatican said the 12 wbo would take part this year were elderly men s elected from a hostel run by nuns of ---RESIDENTS ARISE VOTE NO ON D BobSpRell -----~-- Paid Political AdYertlMment "' ,,_ . --·~ .!'!." ~·· -.. --~~ ' ,, ~,,,,,.~-~-,-t1 T HESE p;_..-,. COSTA MESANS ~-SUPPORT T H E RE-EL ECTION OF ED M cFARLAND ON A~RIL Ith RE-ELECT ED McFARLAND I\ I Ol5!• JI II ....... ............. ~ lfalf' 0 plcn"9d limtt to land~ indudirlO PlA:>lic and PJM;rte~ ..... _., eona111 1n CornQlete the lafftc OrculaHon Plor\. lrQ.dog the Son JoaQulnl~ a::r,,.on Corr1dor and ~Drtve. Um9Alr....., ...... lnSUf& a 11mtt a 40 nights per dav at John 'I.Jayne Airport. ,,.,.,,. ...... .., Estobfbh a~ ""O .... ht ... IOIP-""'°'lel ... re""" that wtl mcice poAlble f\xldlng for Chairman-Bonnie Hesse dredging and sllto- tton bOsit"4 to protect ihebO{. ....... ... , ......... ............... Honot tM City's oommlfments to both the iesidec rtlal ond busine5s communfty. ..... 9cMlnrMnt ODl*ol lake+tie~ln pd:Jlem soMng and not ghle ONO( control to out;de agende5. Al •a Fl 111 $It loCIJG.UUIWIM Conduct ~ cifYs business in open ~ igs tt'Ot reoognlle coc 11'TlOO deCenCY <*:S the highes1 ettilcd standards. CoordlnatOr-Dione Cox CN•• FOR COX CAll>S FOR COX ... VOTE APRILi • .. ,. JOHN C. COX,. J-• • -...1WlirfteCMllra.dOP ........... tww.e.a...-. .................... ' _L .--~- • lflightg Yall'• Alberta the gorilla lets Peggy Sexton know she's plumb tuckered out after a seven·hour trip from San Diego Wlld Animal Park to Fresno for her $100-a· plate first birthday benefit party for the Fresno zoo . $5 Million Claim Filed By RICBAQGREEN Of-~"" ..... A $5.008,500 claim against Irvine bas beeo riled . by the parents of a 2-year--0ld boy who died just outside of the city limits when tbe van be waa in was broadsided by a car fleeing the California Highway Patrol. The claim appears on tbe Tuesday City Council agenda. Such claims are routinely denied by the council and often precede a lawsuit. A SPOKESMAN FOR PAtKI N AND Woodland Inc., a Santa Ana law firm AS>reseDting llr. and Mrs. Martlo F. Tryk Jr. ol 111.ulaG Viejo. coallrmed tbat a lawsuit will be med 11.dte eouneU , denies the claim. He aaJcl the city, Oranae ((ounty and the St.tte ol Cali!ornia will be named In the lawsuit. The boy died Dec. 1S In the coWsloo at the In· tersecticm of Irvine Boulevard and Jeffrey Road. Tbe pursuit originally be1an on the eoathbound San Diego Freeway near Seal Bea.ch Boulevard. CHP o(ficers inJUated tbe purauit became the car wu weavtne oa tbe freeway. THE CAil EXITED THE FREEWAY at Jef. frey Road and proceeded north oo Jeffrey Road at speeds reaching 100 miJes per hour, police aaid. The car ran a red light at the Irvine Boulevard ln· teraection and broadsided tbe van, police said. · Immediately aft.er the accident, Mayor David Silla sent a letter to the CHP, expresain&Dis con- cerns about high-speed chases tbrouab the city of Irvine. He questioned whether hip-speed pursuits should be allowed on public roadways for .. anything other than violent crimes." PUBLIC NOTICE PVBLIC NOTICE l'M VOTIN& FOR IA Y WIWAMS BECAUSE: "He listens to us in Corona del Mar. We're primarily a residential ~tty and Ray Williams has worked ctoeelY with the COM Chamber and residential organizations to make life In Newport better. Vote for Ray Williams - a man who listens. .. Maxine Halligan RAY WILLIAMS x Paid for by Conmittee to A.elect Ray Williams ---8art.ra t.ichman. 624 Poooy Strttet. ~a del Mat 92825 , ETUS wlloeare• ellOlillll ,. ll8&e•. for Newport Be_. City Coancil ..... ..,c-.. IOE_,..,.__ ,,~ic..rtz. ao--.--.- ,,~ AT THE CORNER OF OR D WILSON. Grand opening of Columbia Savings beautiful new home in Costa Mesa. This is our permanent new home. and we did it in groncktyte. We put 1n the largest safe deposit vault 1n Costa f'.Aeso with oversized boxes big enougb to hold your jewelry. coin colledfon. and object d'art (it's free to Columbia customers with a mini- mum balance). -.·.~~.,· ·'!:~ ; ......... ·~ We hove the only community meet· Ing room of any finonaol 1nstitvnoo 1n Costa W'eso . It's luxunousfy decor· oted and furnished. and rr's yours for the asking 1f you're o quohfied noo-proflt soaol or community organization. Simply coll manager. Darlene Maguire. or ooe of her sroff to arrange a dote. All this, plus d course. the highest Insured Interest rote availobte any· where. a host of free services. con- venient dnve-up service. and o staff of savings specialists standing by to help you with a new high- y;eld account. f.Aeet us at our festive open house and help us celebrate. r\emember. thar's ot our new home. Af the corner of Horbor and Wilson. F....196 ~Copy of ... ~ .... of Qangei c:oumy. It's a Columbia exdusive. Inside. octuol menus lncl\Jdlf'19 prices from fabulous Or:onge Courty restaurants: American. Continental. Frend\ Seofood, you name it. Ard it's yours fn!e during our grand opening celebrciton. MBIA SAVINGS Cf·: • J •. t • , . • ... Sigarm Delta .Chi flnitiates Mesan ...... KJSDberlY Nellon, 1 !In paduat• of Sataoda • Bring the lcldl S1tuf$V, ~ 5, when SM St#nlon, of the" MWfilm __..tJtdl ....... ~ Jc*W '8 for 11't'111 holkiay fun . Come to Robinlod1 ~ at noon end ,. -" lnfonnel lhoWtng of \he Uttll Mia ~ dlW eolacdon bV Sow Age. too. ·rredaln•t of .s ~ b¥ UfWll'MI Otv SUllOI. lrlc. Hlcb &eMoam ea.ta ......... NHDtlJ aluated i•• a DMIQber of \be San LW.. Obllpo chapter of \he .SocleQ> ol Profnaloo•l JournalllU, Slim• Delta Cbl. . • Mlaa Nelson \a ln ber 1.cond Y.Hr of Journabam at\ady at Cal Po11 coneentratinc In , photojouraallam. TB& ~.\la POUCla TD~ 11~. lf91' t of ~ "W.,,,.\Y wan" Uiat -.re wa1ed by au Oll\Ueft la dl.9 a.. UllOI. 11"9 leU f&lt,b ·~ UI la WI CU', f'arTV 11y1. the mon U. be ii t. -u luvaoce poltcy to lolUN II t oa.tlJ brelkdowu. '1'e Gun Carriers Probed poUolee are eold throu1b car dealerl. At Farrar'• olflce, auto repair .,eelallata man telephooea 24 hours a da)' to d8al wttb repair abope around the nation where policybolders ~e can for work. SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -The city school board bas decided It will decide on tbe expulalon of any student found witb a lethal weapon on a public •chool campus. • The 5-0 vote was taken after board president P.m Maher said the action was needed to make lt Clear that the board considers lt such a serious problem that it would review each individual case. Maher said ln the past school authorllles could expel students in such cases without colng to the ~· He pointed out that three children have n tilled on city school property in three yurs. Deflt•N.c~ .. A•M•Y t, 1•. ~ bl' ,... lllaNllil lln- -trTHEl. .. MHIEV, ....... ...., ...... MollM"' eosu .... c.. .. J - Jt, .............. of °'""" 0-V-" ......._ llNCll MMl o...ics "'9 llY Mr -TN .-., ., ., CAsU IMM. ..,.... AlkNt r-.. M.,....,,.., 1 _..,.. ~ "-" rlMol• of Arcadia, Ce. end • MIGl'etlDl\S'"*-'c.rt...._,OMft,efeMC~ "-tlwtt. Of .. Holy , Mii Don AIN'f ... _, 0re9M, 1 Rosary Wiii De lltld °" """'*", •N hhr All<• .J•••• , ... as>. 1WetJ:WM .. u. ... ,. u-u11.-~-."'-~-*"Wlll ~ Oiep91, ~ lilllllltr IN lleld Of'I ~, Aprf1 J, I* • lllteetkln of Hetllar Uwn Mount OUW tdAM et 01• Mel rOH .Abll•Y Mort~ryolC.tew..a.S...us.&. •m•l•ry. Vl11tetlon el P ierce ~ a.11 a.-.y Mor1\lalr on ~ndeY -Frldlly from S:OOPM to-hllli:::.1ii~~m==~o::t:~'.ll :..r.t0PM. P itre• 8rotll•ra 8•11 ;1twd't¥•Y Mor1llMy dll"OCten.. ,~ aA•NaTT Deatlu •; LONE C.. BARNETT, rwsldef'll ol '.Cotta Mewi, C... P--•Y °" Al)4'11 : "t. '"°et tlw 4009 d tO. SN IS Sut'Yl-1 f ~ ,._,,,., deughter MHlne 8. VeUeryof' 'Els he 1< .... 1• ~ 1 >on Edw¥d Bernett of ~., ra ~ • -W•snl,,qton, 1 ~a .. Ootll Mcurefl"' !It"....,, • ..::::;. •lendale. Ga., 4 or...,,.&«.,, end 1 e n•l·qrandclllldr•f'I. Gr•v•slde "1ervlces wlll be lleld ., Fri....,, Aprll BALTIMORE (AP) - .. 1980 at 11 *» .. For• u-J l --33 b lillt!morlel Perk, 0 19"dale. Pierce eSB e alRlmU, , W 0 r •ro111e~ 8etl .,......" -.rt11•ry made medical blstory •~·~ uiac~" last summer when doc· .. AUGUST E. ERICKSON, 909 11, .... tors replaced part of her e4dent OI Hu,.""910f'I a .. cll, ~.. lower Spine with a metal • •a•sed ._, 911 Apr1t 1' tWO. He It d i di d lod .~1vec1 i.y nk .,.,. OenN. dauVflt• ev ce, e ay at '"'dalyn Tu\<ller, 9renddeu911t•r• University of Maryland :.i1ona1Y1W1 Nle..a. Adrw..,,. s.1-y, Hospital Mrs Thomas , .... Ht.qr__, JUllln l..M Ou-, ' • ( ~ht!r Peul Er~ • .isi.n H_. died of 8 bacterial infec· ...S E-E~. 5ffYlces wlll ti lb t b d d lwtd on Fr iday, Aprll 6, HM 01 OD 8 8 Sprel ": OOAM at 111a Or•ce L111tllerH from .ber ll:idneys to her (lwrcll ol Huntlnflon llaed\. I,... btain.- _..,., el W.StMI-Miwnor ... PMt. -----------• &11recled bf Westmlnsler ~let .. ~,... •c N011CE •~erk ...,,._,,,...,~. ""vua.a • OOU>eN : WILLIAM "JIM" GOLDEN, rw& ,_,,, ol t.oistl INM, C&. Pe~ .... • Oft M.,cll 2'. 1'90. He 11 l•lfVIYM PvrMNm to Se<tlon 6104CCll ol Ule I,._ ' 91Js wife 0etty Goldlft ol CcsU ~ Mmel ,._.. C-, llGllCe IS "-'"Y •"9hlen JaO•• <:annkl\MI of 9'Wfl -lfte -• r-1 lor Ille fl•· pcx. ca. ana Je<lll9 11..., ol Ari-. 1 cal ,..,. '71 ol CllertH M. W•l-G llfotller 8ucl Goiden ol Ml-I 2 ti Fund, • prlvolle •--llon. Is evelle· "" Helen ScllOlt et Orego~ en Ill• et U. tounOatlon's prlt>Cl~I oflk• G I • d y s 0 e I I o f k a n t a t , fw 1""'9Cllon ckKlnO "'9UI ... llVllMU 1a ndc1111e1ren. ,,_,.. _..,le" wll ~ trom to·oo e.m. to. •·OO p.m. bY twld °" Frldiey, "-"1 6, 1• et MY d tlulll -rwciunt• II wl\llln 190 ooAM et .,. Pl«ce arotfl9rs a.11 deYt .n.ru.oeu ot 1ttts l>Ubllution ~~o.d••Y ,.,,,._., a.pe1 wlu. ""· Tiie ~Ion's prlf'lclpet olfl<-• h ~erlH 0 . Cl-oftlclatlnO. In\.,. ~ M iU Vie Udo~ • ..._, n\ el..._......,,. Memorial Pe Bee<l'I. Cellfomla. lends MllY u.11 et trw mort1.1ery on TIMI prlllclpel ~ ol Ule foun. ursdey APrll J ltlO from J·OOPM lo dellon Is ~· Fr-lln, I» Vie ' • f · 8 LldO Soud --1 8nctl. Otlltornle. tOOPM . Pl ere• Bro lier• •II Pllbllsn.d OretlOI <:oesi Dally Pllo! ~·' __, Cllrocton.. 1o.eO J MaLLOTT Mar. l\, Apr. 1, 2, l, •. S, • U ,_ Rose AILEEN MELLOTT, ban\ , _,..,. ·c NOTICE ,21.iaerd~_.,onApnl rvu... I"° In Al-sldt, GL ~ 1IW 909 of -----------1 • .-i. s .. r,.l....S llY "'Ullp .id ~le "1CTI110US 8USINRSS .~llott. -Cenllyn -Tom Ja.,,,.1, NAMa STAlWMUIT "'•nctclllldren NIChol.,, Slepllanle, Tlte folio.1119 ..,_ I• -"9 buM- fillltcti.I -Gvy, Servk»s Wiii ... IWld f'IHS .. : .. Frldey, April 4, 1• et l :CIOPM et J I. SLE10t4 EHTEAPRISE, W1 ~...-wa...nv Olurcl\. ptl,.ate lntaf_,,I Oaford Drift, H11nt11191on lle•cll, 4( FaJ,_ ,....,_l•I Pat11, s.te GelllonllotlM1 ~. Ca. Sefvlatt -r IN ~ _,.. 'MlllM> SMltlf'I, ~ o.twe ~ Felrllenn M•morlel ~erll Drive, Hillllillgllltl lle!K:ll, QI!.,.,.,.. Jilor1......,. 92647 " ~IMA Tl\ls .,.,..,_. ,, ~ 11Y., !ft. IRMA 001~ MOLINA, ,..lcMnl Ill dltlciu.I. C.Ste Mew, ca. Passed ewey Oft AIWN Jon W. Slelgtl nits ............. fll• •ttft tlle County Oen ol Or~ C-y °" Marci\ 11, HID. ,_Ca IROTHRS SWIMS' MOllTUA&Y 6'Z1 Main St. Hunt~ech PlmFAMl.Y COU>teAL N'HAL NOMI 7801 Bolsa Ave. Welt minster 893-3525 PACMCYllW MIMOllAL PAii Cefl'lllery Mortuaty Chepel 3500 Pacific V'tft# Onve Newport Beach "1MMI ,..,.,...,_,Or ... Cont Oellr Piiot, Mer.n.a .v.Acir.l,1• 1u1 PUBl.JC NOTICE PICTITlOUI 8USIM•SI NAM8 ITATRMCNT TM fd~ ...,_ I• 004119 IMKI· _ .. : C & H PAINTING COMPANV, 11S0Yt W ... lboa Blvd., NeWllO(t 8o6cll, Qll~nMI !Cavin 8rua Curren, IUOYI w. ea111oe Blvd .. H••Port •••ell, CalllonllaftMI Thia llllllMM It ~ttd llY en I~ dMlll*. ICwtflQlrren n.i. ~ -flleel wltl> tlW CoUfttY Glet1I of 0refl99 Collf'l t' Oii All'll I,,.. • 644-2700 PIU.. Pul>lltlWd Ore1199 CoMI O.lly Piiot, • ..CODC& MORTU ... S t..aguna Beach 494-9415 Laguna Hills 768-0933 San Juan Ceplstrano 4gs.1ne All'll ), 10. 11, "· "'o 1574-40 PUBUC NOTICE PICTIT1oUS aUllNUS NAM• STAT&MENT TIMI tOllowin9 _._ It 004119 busi-es: ' --RADIO CONTROLLED HOB· BIES, .SS W. 1'\11., Colt• fMW, CA , HA"I09 LAWM-MT. oun Monuary • CemetefY C<ematOIY 1625 Gitler Ave., eo.i.Mesa 54().56154 IALTl•••OM ........ ~ &C&-2424 Cost.Mesa 673-9450 1.erry Wern• Ven Osten, Ue F"""4' St., COiie NleW, CA '7617 TMt llull,..t II cOllCllKi.G DY 8f'I In vldual UfTY w. v .. OS1af'I Ttllt .....,_,. -111911 wit "'9 CollfllY C~ of Of9"91 CoUillt'I Oft ~ .. .,.,. .. ,,.,,, PUb!llMCI ~ .. ())Mt O.Uy Piiot .Mtrtll 27, """" •• 10. 17, ,.., ,~ PVBIJC NOTICE -· -s PICT1110UI aUStMaM ~'° _, ,,_ NAM9 ITATS*NT ..._•GADWAY toelewlng 1*'11111 Is dDlflt IMl- MCIMINAl"f .;~1$T COAST COHCHTI DU"'-110 Broedwlly ING, 2'871 ~St.. $tt. nl, Hllll-Cos1a ~ ._,.,CA,... 642-SU50 IUM•t4' "· W•rrlo. '"" ••••M M .. Sp. HI, H1t11tl11ttet1 •~a---• 11,CA,.. -•n ,.,.._ Ttllt..,..ltct1-.Ct .. 111Y•lfto WOtn'UARY 1v11111e1. WISfC4.W CHA.Pa 1(-.i-cl "· W¥rl<IC , u....... ,_, • C--tlOnl TI\lt -'tll-1 wes flled wllll tN .......,,_T •v.,_ 11nty Oet11 of Orel\Oll CoUlllY Oii 4'ZT E. 17th St rc11a, 1• I' taa. If your anchor's •way you can find • new one In the Boating classlfleds of the M2·5671" DAILY PILOT Robinson·s Newport Fashion Island • (714) 644-2800 . ------------------------------------------- Paid Political Advertisement "A Resp~nsihle Balance of Preservation and Development ... " It'~~· Quality of Life In Newport That Counts, It's Your Choice. 1. No other elected official In callfomia has the scientlf le expertise coupled with governmental experience unique to Ray Williams. He has been a success in get- ting governments to work together to save the Back Bay so far. We need him 2 He studies and understands what he ·votes for and against. As an ac- compUshed and recOQnized scientist, he has applied the dfsclptlnes of his train- ing to serve the people of Newport Beach. even more now. 3. Ray Williams has a 4 year record of listening to Newport resident s, un- derstanding community needs and pre- serving and protecting the Newport we all love. He's the people's choice. STATE-WIDE ENVIRONMENTAL CONSULTANT* SCIENTIST * PROFESSOR ·* CHURCH ELDER * EXPERIENCED COUNCILMAN * FAMILY MAN Phll Arlt, Mnfor stllft pfanner Pat Strang, edUC8tOf Steve Sholkoff. M.D. Carroll Beek, civic voluntee1 Ernel1 Camp, ret8'1 pt'Odwce Sue Slmpeon, homemaker Riche~ Slrnpeon, M.D. Ellen 8orc:hMnlvs, homemaker WllH•m ~.retired rencher Margaret~. hofMmalutr W1U&ant ........ ef' ,.MtOf laft ...,..., lnveetof ..., ...... ...,.., DoftHelwy,....., ...... Ra 11 nbetl. M.O • Merg..eAll!t. bDIMIHkiet MMd .................. OofotltJ llMc.11• alc:IM• owner .,......_........,,aducalOf ..... ""'· home1Mk9' '""" ..... ~· epedeltt DMlle Arll, 111\MMnt "°ler11'oMet,M.D. We Urge You to Re-Elect RAY WILLIAMS VOTE APRIL 8 TO . I RE-ELECT RAY WILLIAMS I x I eo.tl ._.... ~1"'9d Or .... C.tt o.lly "'!ft. 64&-4888 .H ~rclll1,.,,IU,l0,1J,I-························································••111!1•••••• ...._ ________ _,. .-U•Mt Ret~ilo•• ol Bate• A turbulent sky is mirrored in the reflect· ing pool at the ea.st end of the Mall. as the Hypertension Test Studied BOSTON (AP) -A new blood le;;l may warn young people that they will grow up to have high blood yressure, a disease that afflicts about 15 per- cent o American adults. The test, developed at Harvard Medical School, detect.a an apparently inherited''abnormali- ty in t.he••Y red blood cells absorb· sodium. THE llESEA&CllEll$ SAY THEIR work m<ty e ventually provide information about the origin of the mysterious disorder which doctors call hypertension. "It could be a clue to the cause or hypertension," Dr. Daniel C. Tosteson, dean of the m edical school, said in an interview. Tosteson was one of the researchers who took · !part in the study, which ( ) was published in today's MEDICINE ~;d1:':l•nd Journal of _ · _ BlOod pressure rises when the arteries narrow •nd constrict. The eondition contributes to such .killers as heart attack and stroke. TOSTESON SAID THE RESEARCHE RS s hould know within a year whether the test is ac· curate eoouJh to become part of routine checkups . "IDWally, it would be .for individuals too youne to yet be at rtst for the syndrome but who come from families who have a history o r bypel1enlion," Toet.e9oa said. Doctors do not have any way to prevent hypertension in these susceptible people. But 1f they know they are likely to have it someday. they can keep a clo.e watch on their blood pressure so i hat they will receive treatment aa soon as the con· •cllUoo developll. The Harvard researchers tried the test, which meuures ''sodium-lithium CC>jJR .. l'WM.sport,'' on 36 pe0ple with high blood ptessure and 216 others with normal blood pr:essure. THEY PUMPED BLOOD SAMPLES full of the element lithium. Then they put the red blood C?ells in a sodium solution and meas~ bow fast the sodium and lithium exchanged places in the cells. They found that this transfer took place twice as quickly in people with high blood pressure than in normal people. None of the people with normal blood pressure bad this abnormality, but Tostesoo said it appears to occur in most people with high blood pressure. Since hypertension often runs in families. the researchers gave the test to eight young, close rel· atives of the people with high blood pressure. And even though the young folks' blood pressure was normal, their blood cells had the same abnormali- ty as those or their elders. THE RESEARCHERS ASSUME THAT iC their theory is correct, these people -most of them in their 20s -ri~k developing high blood pressure later in life. Doctors have long believed that sodium plays some part in high blood press ure. But now they think they may be on the verge of understanding its exact role lo narrowing the blood vessels as well as identifying the genetic flaw that leaves 1ome people susceptible to the disorder. Tosteson said the test may be "telling us something a bout the pathogenesis of the syndrome. It could tell us how the m uscle In the small arteries is made to have too much tension in individuals with hypertension." -. • ,.... .., (1111( c............., MllCll Mtlon c:-..i-.... ,..,,,. """'-'· lllC ...... IW. ............. 9-dl. ~ .... PV11UC NOTICB . - PUBLIC NOTICE ITATSMmNTOflA&AMDONMaNT CWUSllOI' l'tCTfTtOUS •UtlNHI lfAMa Tiie ......... ,._ lle\09 •twin- .. -of -fkt!Ueut """- GOURMET ~-IABKET Ea1ter Suday la •••t 8u4•1, Aprtl •· For llat ~ I•• ' or, plew order ta adYuce UlloM f&IDMI •sect prime rtbl of ...,.;..C'ared u -aJ we ep. a.edad lepelllPl'lllilaabor Jut nee ready for euy e•rrilll at u.e bble. Fl'elll Zaeky Fanu tmey1 ud of eoane. eltMr bolle·la or boaeleu Bar·M H•m1. MORNING FRESH PRODUCE La. Sweet Tex. Grapefrd .......... 5/SL• New Crop Yam1 .................... Zic lb. Local Romaine Lettace ............ 3k ea. Sweet Pllg. Carrou... . .•........ 1k pak Lg. Baldng huet toee ........ lie lb. Sweet Brown Bermuda .. Z lbe./itc PRIME&TOP Whole or HaU Amerteu 1 Lamb DE LANE BROS. SEAF Fa E8ll s ... cllllla. • • • • • • • . • • • • • . • • I.II lb LARGE Crab Oaws <n.&IL;:ed >· ••• U1 lb: FBE811 le. Eu&en Sea ....... IM lb. FRESll .,.,._. Crabe •.••••.••• t.• lb. Ctleaned ud creded free> FRESH Eu&en 8eabau .......... ..3.t8 lb. F&E811 FUet ol Sole. . . .. . .. . . . .... 5.18 u.. UQUOR DEPARTMENT Deluey'1 Prhate Label (750 mill Champacne ..••..•.... _.. . . . . . . . . z.:s V In R.oee or Chablla • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . . • • . lM Monterey Vldeyanl Clauic WJnea Dry White. Role or~ <750 mil> tte. 3.8$ •••. Z.85 Jim Beam Keealeky Stralgbt Cl.7SLI ~· U .7S. ,,, ••••••••• , , ••....• 1%.15 !'.Un rises behind the Capitol dome in Washington, 0 .C. 1 cut. wrapped and nuh froz~ 1 ••••••••• 1.89 lb . . Hall or Whole Bed <cul. wrapped and fluh fro&e1\I .•....•.. t.•t lb. Kahlua <23/32 qt.) reg. 9.95. •••••••..•••. 8.60 Smirnoff <l.15 L> rec. 14.~ •••••••••••• 11.45 J & 8 Scotch 88 proof qt.) rq,. lZ~ • . . . . . 11.05 Scoresby Scotch c86 proor> (750 n'liJ) •••.••••••••••••••••••.••••• 5.55 <quart) •••••••••••••••.•.•••••••.•••. 6.30 .. This fireplace will be completely installed in your home by experts Yflth all that's needed for a - standard 16' elevation, Sf>' opening fire box, along with the stucco stone facing of your choice. We have several beautiful facings to choose from to compliment your decor. SUPERIOR FIREPLACE INSTALLED COMPLETE WITH STONEWORK Reg. 1,799.99 1,399.88 'S •Railed hMrth, ntra Rone Md blower 81Hmbly mao 8Yallable. Hem fir treated A combed 1 x 4 x6' Reg.1.19 88c .,. FULLERTON 301 So. State College . 870.Q060 Open Mon. thtu Fri. 9 to 9 Sat. 8 to 6 Sun. 9 to 6 AMOrled hand tools e· chrome slip foml pltets. 6' sieel taoe meuures. 11 piece hex key set. U11lrly knlvet with blades Also. t 3 p.ece drtll sett, oolor PVC tape. hammers. wfre. sanding dlsea, end sabre saw blades Reg. t .49 each 88cea. COSTA MESA 1275 Bristo! 556-1500 * I Open Mon. thtu Fri. 9 to 9 S.t. 8 to 6 Sun. 9 to 6 ()pm Dally .M , Cloeed Sanday 29211 Newport Blvd., Newport Beach "673-5520 ORANGE 324 Welt KateHa . 997-1224 Opfwt Mon. thnl Fri. 7:3/J fO 6 S.t. & SW.. 9 IO 8 SAINT MARv ·s EPISCOPAL CHURCH 428 Part< Avenue Lacruna Beech (2 blockS Inland from t-k>tet Laguna) HOl Ywtar I tlO GoodFttM: 12--.. 2,..-. The ~oftheCrou. music. and HolyCommun+on hshrlftCW.~1 11 p m.GlonousM mghtEasterCefebraflOn w11 h Gregonan Men ·s Choir. C40dles.. chanls -ant) oommumon EastwO., ~ 8 a m HolyCorrWonion 9 1 sa.m. HolVCommunf<>nfesttvatEucnanst wtth choir and Instruments 11 a m. Hoty COmmurMOn Pay No Income Tax·in 1980 and Recapture Taxes Paid in 1977' 1978 & 1979 Realize the benefits of up to a - 550% Tax Deduction this year. • • 4 years of pub I ic acceptance •Strong m erit for future financial gain • Flexibility of amount inv ested ACT NOW Available Only Thru June 30 Broker and Sales Positions Available For M ore Information: Gerald l. Kozak Newport Center 359San Migue l Dr. Suite 110 Newport Beach. California92660 644-2507 A 8TONE RO• TBE F&BNCB dungeon where Joan ol Arc was impriloned; hair snippets of presidents from Waahiqtob to Pierce; trinr- min11 from President Lineola'a beane; Mrs. Lincola'a 1Uver eolfM service, supported on replicu of chicken lep; a naptla uaed by Napoleon; and tile from tbe floor of the WHllJnatoa railroad atatloD wt.ere President GartMkffell wbeD UHlfl'O'Ated· Most ol the items la the ex.blbit were aatbered at random by aoveroment curators la the mid-19th ceot~ aDd kept by tM U.S. Pat.eDt <>mce. W... tM ....... SmM""11le• lmUtutioD C..· tJe WU ~pie& .. (D lml, tbe rat.at COm· minioeer ~:,_ua1enec1 al but patent modell to SeereWy Joeepb Hesy. who became lmowD as tbe lhper-of "The Nation's •Attic." ALTllOtlGB SO•E ITEll8 ROii tbe col- leetiOD wen displayed. llllDll were "nMcated tQ study co&ledkJu ID back rooiba. .. said Belljamin w. Lawless. project manacer ol tbe oew exhiblL Finally, ahboUlb ••IOIDe people always wor- ried it would make the mmeum look silly," the de- cision was made to mount an ablbitioa of tbe material. Tbm the thousands of dust-c:overed items bad to be sorted through to pick what would go on dis· play. One that didn't make it was a complete set or Army VD posters. As a centerpiece. Lawless chose a 14-foot·tall clock reminiscent of European. mechanical tower clocks with music and animated figures activated OD tbe hour. AMONG THE OTHER ITEMS THAT made it are a colossal American flag. 235 feet long and 104 feel b.igb. packed in a box : a 30,000-watt light bulb billed la 1925 as the largest in the world: co1' lectioos ol safety pins. paper cl.U>s. poison bottles and whiskey barrel labels. And Victorian flylraps and an eyeball massager and a finger gymnasium for limbering piano players' bands. And the amputated foot ol a ftrehone. A MESSAIE FROM RDIPIRT COINGLMAN . . DOllALD A. MdNNIS ' FOR RUTHEL YN PLUMMER: A PERSONAL ENDORSEMENT In a few weeks I will ep down from the Newport Beach City Council after 12 years of servtoe. w · h bel me. is more than enough for any person. In those 12 years ny city elections come and go. I ran in three of them and just stood by, he high jinks. in three others. That is six elections an all. In nooe of those etections did I ever endorse anvone else. I never felt like it. Things are diVerent now. Our city is in the grip of a tight little band of political malcontents who have gotten our city government in a whole lot of trouble, as our traffic, revenue and_public safety problems get worse. Their g'rip has to be k>osened. Their ~ of doing things, or not doing them hasn't worked. We need people on our City COUncil who can get the )ob done In an effective. civil and open-minded way. We need independent people; that is. people who have no overriding allegiance to any special group or interest other than the community of Newport Beach itaeff. We need people who can think for themlMtlves. yet wort< with others. We need problem-solvers. not problem-makers. We need people who can provide leaderihip w ithout being rude about it. That is why I am endorsing Ruthetyn Plummer as Ctty Council.member from my district She belonas to no slate of candidates. Slates scare me to death. I consider them ugly pawer pfays. They mean deals have been made. understandings reached. resources pooJed, and that someone or some group behind the acenes Is reaJly in charge. Ruthetvn Plummer will have none of that. She doesnl need it. Her queHflclions as a consumer affairs investigator. succeaful bulin111W01Nn. ocwemment tak force member and community service leader .. enough. Ruthelyn Plummer is not an. extremist For exarnpte, lhe believes the way to Improve traffic conditiOns is to wori< with rather than flGl.intt au lntereeted P8'tiee. Including other public agencies. She alao believee the way to I~ our Police and fire protectiOn ta to ~ wt'8t the job is worth. Uling revenues from a helllthy commerdll tax.... / Shew. bo!f1 here; no one le mare f6nd ~or .. ..,...,_ llbOut its future ttw1 ..,. ia. She ii I thoughttul, k*tl .nd ..,. S*IOft. She allo h8I plenty of IPUftk end ltMlfna. which I can ... , you the Job ,...ey dennda. She will pul her community ftr8t. not tome ftlf 10#. "'°"41ghted ...... tnterell We need her. I 111 mr. fettow cittiene to Join me In etedlng Ruthetyn Ptummer to the N ~Qty COunciL ii mv ttl"lt lf1d '8lt endorlement. 1 am PtOUd to mike tt. Thltdcyot.t. . DON MCINNIS atv Coundtman. 1968-1980 ~. 1972·1978 -.............. -...... Ill ........ CHICKEN-l.EGGED COFFEE POT P8rt of 'Natton•a Allie• &Nblt . . Wife Gets Shoes, Sheik Foots Bill TORONTO <AP) -U you waat to talk about biCb prleea. JUlt uk Seuell Arallta'I oil minister about lboea. Jt took 8belk Aluneed Zaki Yamul'a wife. Tam.ea, Jull um-.... to,. up a n.ooo bill whlle....._for .-. a.en tbia ~ YamaDl .... bis wife left Toronto OD TUescLay after e tbrw-day 'riait. Mrs . Yamant, 28. spent $1,043 duriac a 4$-mln.ute spree Jut before dosial Ume s.tu;r. • clay •• ebole • .., pair of suede und•. • $115 pair ol matme <Sandall. two ldeotieal Sl25 pairs of pillk 1eectats, two • pain of bedroom aU.,.,en aod two Olhet' pain ol sandals. ooe tmqUoiae and one beige. before Yamani told s tore manage r Patrick YAMA•u Po0n1th "lt'senough " Were Refunds Paid? • WASHINGTON CA P> -The federal govern· ment doesn't know whether $260 m1l1Jon worth of refunds for overcharges on oil prices were actually pa~. . Thomas Williamson Jr.. deputy inspector general of the Energy Department. said that the department. because of a laclt of funds. usually has to take the word ot the violators that the or· dered repayments have been m~-Willlamsoo said bis office loaed at a group ol cases and they sbowed a pattern of settlements that relied heavily on the word of the VJolat.ors Origfnil! Draw~On · Fine GOid. Hv1 t•rlv //1//,, · Th11r1•tlnv. t11ril .1nl. 7 to 'I f>.m. /,,';;;J: R""' h fmlnv. 4/'ril •Ith. -; '"CJ 11.m. HU I-HI} 1111.I~'· :!;"'; '"· /,n l:wn"Jl" H/1vl .• II lil.H k •1111/h of U 1#~/11,.,, J. (;!/.'I J 6.iCJ-14".!1>. IJJ\(; m:u~/l;.'JH."'i(JC:hl'rry 4iv• . .(21.ll42f>..7f)i(). Paid Pol1tlcal Advertisement ELECT O>Mlo.,..-... -.c...-···-.... N ~~I •·-7l'Ol~C> COO:•----'-~ Patd Po1tt1cal Advertisement ELECT lllCIMBENI DONN -HALL DONN HALL IS FOR ... * Proper balance of land_ use. . Residential -Commercial -Industrial *Quality housing • Decreased government con- trol in local affairs Improved traffic circulation _;.-.....-- * The Costa Mesa Marina· • R~~ment of down- town dosta Mesa I • Improvement of the . =tyJ!~~fe ''! Costa Mesa City Council Acffve •.• Experienced ••. Involved! DONN HALL IS QUALIFIED * Costa Mesa Councilman •Local Business Owner (Omega Industries. Inc.) • Vice-Chairman Redevelopment Agency · * Board otDlrectors. Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce • Past Chairman. Costa Mesa Planning Commission • Past President, Ocea view Homeowners Assoc. .. .; Vote f0"0>n'.' Hall on Aprll 8 T \ • NO IABIEI OR TEST TUBES Dr. "9ck R•ry and ~ DtU ............ AN Olll81NAL IDSN QKJft.81 were ac· ;::;=:;;;;;:;;;:========;;;;;==::;1 eepted for tbe )Jl'Olram, •of thcMJluda wbo ap. ,..~AIMI ... :•• plied. There were Z,500 eouples on the initial wall· lnC list; the day after the lab 1ot state approval, 300 more called. <:ti bshiooed,ron1antic dinner-dancing is back in style. ••. and cbc <.nnd Ponl8e now a&l'IJ you ID ncmas CIO COiillpCCe wtdt ~ flw>rtle maDQly. Soft ~elmer ...... dqpnt andldil tit*~ cbe .... ~ damUlg CabicUdr cookery. 'Die ul«lrcwd)' •• « •« Dkk Powdl 1\1o ii blurcd 'lbwtdiy dlfOUlh Slb.wdly 7 co 12. mdd ..,ocher~ SEAFOOD CONNO~EURS 11'undl)t Prtm,r. 5-rdly lllk b' our ~ Lobtccr" dinner fresh Maine lobstft'!, oysun. d2ms. ftoiM'I In from Boeton. ~cd fS.cmcrs. rtjokx! -~REGISl'RY An unspeclfled number of women have 1one through the process of 1n vitro fertill&ation, in ... ich an egg is surgically removed from a n.._-.. • ..,..._,,.._ 18800 MacAn1W 8oukvard (, ... ) 7~24f7i7 i I f l \ • ' . . • ' , , I ( ' I ' w»m•'• ovary. fertilised wttb her husband's =::=::::=:=:=:===~====!::===.L.-------------------------------<.: Sfel'ID ID ""lhe petri dlab and trUllem!4 to the woman'• u&erua. • The hospital bu DOt said. and will not say, ii soccessful pregn.anctee have been achieved, . Medical school apotesman Vernon Jones said the clinic's doctors. led by the buaband·aad·wife team of JllliWlltd ad Georaeanoa looa want to "shield tbe ladles'' from disturbances that could disrupt the bormeGe levels cncla1 for succesaful implantation&. ~ • I • TBB PATll:NT8 A•B WOMEN WBOSZ FallasUn tubes, the eendldtl from OYary to uterus, ate mkalna br ~ably blocked. Jones deseritied the P-rocess as aort of a "Fallopian tube bypass. We're providing the pneaae. It's sort of Ute a bellcopter picking up car10 -the ea -in one place and putttns tt 1D another.'' He said the clinlc should be able to treat about 50 wouien a 7ear. Tbe procedure COits about $f,OOO. Blae-Oroa of Virlinla bas aald tt will not P•Y tbe COICI. · · Tiie waaien see Ill 'Vttro f ertlllaat:loa u their Uat cbance to bear chlldnn. But othen see It u de nrst step toward aomethtng unsafe and lm-nioraJ. · .. . OPPONBN'll OP TllB nocEDva• have tine ..... ~:-tut ft baa not been tested -..: ~ e111t wldcb 10me ecm&lder • tiilll"0 1DC of life, wtJJ .IJe ~ U not de- Wlopiq properJ7: aDd that detecttt<e embrJol wm be aboried. · . J'be1 say they also fear that ln vitro f~ will lead to production -out of tbe womb -of tenettcall1 ~Ued babies, aa &scribed in Al&ui Huxley's "Brave New World." Tbe 'ndewater chapter ol the Utl·abortioa V)r,mla Society for Human Ufe failed in it.a at- tempt to tel· et.ate .AttomeJ General Manhall Cqleman to leek an lnjunction ~ainst tbe cliDic. · Norfolk buslnesaman Charles Dean, chapter president, said the group plans further legal action, partly on the grounds the state review was not done properly . .. BVI' DOCl'OBS INVOLVED WlTll the cllnlc claim the rears are unfounded. . . • They said ~t the procedure bas been carried out saf'elY lD EncJaDd -where Louise Brown, the world'• flnt .. teat.tube baby" was born 1D 1978 - and Australia that abortions will be neither more nor less aviil'able to clinic patients than to other pre1nant women, and that they have no intention of maaa producing human beµi,s. Dr. Jack Rary, the EVMS scientist wbo nms the lab, said f ertiliutlon is attempted on OD.l,y one eia at a tlme. Rary is responsible for ~ldng to see ti an egg is contained in the fluid removed from the weuian, for setting up the eu for fertilization and for determill.iJll ii fertillzation bas ta.Un place. BUT BE NOTED THAT DOCl'ORS do not make tbe final determination whether the eeg is good -able to be fertlllzed. "The sperm know which eggs are good," be said. "We doa't bave to make that decision." U fertilization does take place In a petri di.sh, uaually within 12 hours, the fert.Uhed egg la in· cubated fdt another 36 boun and then transferred to the uterus. That'• about the aauie Ume span an en fertilized naturally would take to travel down to t1-e uterus and implant itself, RarY said . • a.AaY MID BB KNEW THE clinic woulda't receive unanimows approval. "but I bad no Idea U.re would be that much oppoetUon." "I swa I'm laokina at it differently. that we'd tra1J' be belJJin8 J*>Ple 'Who couldn't have babies," b4Nld. Rary said be hu invited some oppooenta to villt the lab but none bu accepted. "I'd be willing to show them," be aald. "l've-JOl notbinl to hide ... : Firefighter Is Nun • SEA CLIFF, N.Y. <AP) -Tbe flnt woman •olunteer member of tbe Sea Cllff Fire ~ ll a mm. Sl.ltet Mary SOpb.la. • Tbe P'lre CouDcl1 c1eand the memberlhlp of &M ~ tra1Ded DUD. l'ln Cblef Sdwtn Nelce said that Sliter ~ a »-J'Ml'-old Durie at St. ~I am. .. ,,aa tbf Jlnt woman to apply for a Job wltb tlil •'lnember tire deputmmt on Loni J.alud. __ ....,_ RESIDEN'IS ARISE VOfE NO ON D BclltS..- , •· • -M'IE • . ' Rates effectlve.Aprll 1 through Aprll 30. -~I $100 minimum deposit. 30 month term. IMPO«TAHT:Vllldl~on1,..._...,.,._~'**"· Yllitdl~ .. ~~ltlefttn.,.eoccMttoroneyw . ..,... .. ..,....did dlly8'CIPlid~ .• ~dlllC1•11t~ .. 1ot1o1 .. mon1twnlrem,.1llof .. ~lfleft'"9~•end. ..... ~lor~wltOWllL We guarantee it. No one will pay you more on guaranteed. Plus convenience In savings with insured savi~. Imperial Savtrtgs ~ys the h~ hours that serve you best. Come in today to your est rates thaf federal reguladons allow. Hlg convenient lmpertal Savtnge offtoe. · than any bank.. Meet the fast and frkN'dy people at Imperial. The highest annual yields for · your savtngs ••• . 01mPEAIAL SAUlnGS .. AND LOAN ASSOCIATION Coeta M•11, Soult CG11t ..... lbwn Clnw-3310 Br1stol Street (714) 640-7591 I Nlwpoft l•ch -3386 Via Udo (714) 673-3130 Newport Cln .... -559 Newport Center Drive (714) 644-1481 • t ' . ' TIM Oorma dill Mar plaa -'Ord•N4 b7 cl\J eo•adl .. a •earU. UD year after m..-1 ot tb• Ooroaa del ..... Cbamber -.,, C'om.llMfCe com~•llMd ..._ ...eban1• 1D busiDeHea la tbe area. Tbat reqwt bnMlcM tlM .... l&naUoaa of Fru.k Ju.k ud . Arvo Hupa, two cJlamber boU'd 'memben and 1001-ttme .,.. busine11men wbo aald U1e chamber wu uttq fw city m. terferencein thecommunlty. Tbey also claimed tbe chamber reqaest wu related to the rwnor tbat Jrulam were : tryina to buy out tbe bualaeaea · alon1 the 10.block buaiDeU dla· trict of Eat CoMt m,ll•a)'. , Tla8t rumor DrOMci to be UD· lOeal,... ...... Geoqe nld be as much com· •ercial property in tbe ••t1bborhood as be could leeause be wants to cb~e the dlltrtct from being a service area for residents into an ex· duaive abopping area, similar to ~)>rive in Beverly Hilla. ... Woman's Bite 'Ilumrts Mesa Theft Attempt A man hooded by a ski mask fled from a South Coast Plua parking lot late Tuesday ~ben the woman be aU..cked bit him on the arm, Cost.a Mesa police said. Investigators said tbe man was biding in the back ol the 37-year-old May Compaa,. employee's van. When lbe sot off work at about 10:30 p.m. Tuesday, -he crabbed the woman, auemptin1 to drag her to the back of the vehJcle. The assailant was described as about 5·feet-6, 185 pounda and wearing a black ancf white shirt. New Condos Weighed for Woodbridge Tbe J"lae Planning Com· mluion will meet tonight to d.1.acuaa a staff report on water availability and to mull plans for an 87·uoit coodomhllum project In Woodbriclce. Tbe project la to be built by the Irvine Pacific Development Co. on 9.1 acres in tbe IOUlbwest quadrant of Woodbridae. in tbe area ol Blue Lake South mcl Raiostar. Tbe plaal call for t-wo- story coadom.iDlwna to be built around a 1.4-acre lake. The water avallabWty RPOrt the commission will loot at II an annual study conducted by tbe city staff and presented to the Planning CommisaiOD and tbe City Council. The City Council requested in November of 1977 that such re- ports be compiled yearly ao that local goyemmeot is appraised of water availability ·for the grow· iDg city. Studies Completed . Cynthia Lynn Hu1bea of Newport Beach completed her bachelor of science de~ in environmental planning and management during the fall quarter at UC Davis. ( Pilot Logbook J "-' '" fll tbe 0r...,e C•aat YMCA '1 Kid camp,•1et•111 co build tbe bl,l••t banana aplU II•' could. le ••ral feet of baaaau, lee cream ad :=_were laid oat~ by cam. pert and cou.na•lon before ever7bod1 turned t.o wtlb lpoGGI and demolished tbe ereatloa .-Ja1on Fumara. 7. dldn 't let hil nc.e stop b1m from •IOOd~ Teachers Waiting Report . Union Asks Acceptance of Fact-finding Pan·el BJ IEa&Y CIAt18EN °' ............... Newport·lleea teac~ aniCJD leaders are reeommeadiq that their district'• l,O'IO teacben ac· cept the recommendaticioa ex· peeled next week In a report Crom an impartial f act·findi.nc panel worlliDI on coatract negotiations. · Tbe recommettdation came oa a f.2 9Clte by cont.ran negotiat· Ing team members aad the Newport Mesa Federation of Teachers executive board. laid presidellt BW Cue. TD TBaEE·•EMBE& fed· findin& panel's report., DOW ft• peeled to be handed over to the d.i.atrict 's boa.rd of trusteel ad the union by Tuesday. orttiDall1 was due for completion March 31. Tbe report I.I apeeted te ldek off Ulther .....a ., wMawt ne•ollatlona wben reeel~ed. Teacben bave been worting without a eoatraet since JulJ l. Cue said the decllJon to aceepc whatever tbe fact·fanden pre- scribe u an equitable solution in neaotiatioo map followed a re- view of all the preHDtations made to tbe panitl by ~ the union and 1cbool district. necoUators. Ct1B SAID 818 union's leadenhip •• ._ convbleed Ute teacben lbould accept the re-- port became of our conftdmce m tbe umon'• prwotatioa to the panel." He added that be expeda a fair recom=redaticm by chief fan.finder Leo Weil&, aPOQi.Dted by the ...,., Pubtic Employ- meot R.elMicm Board. And, said Cue, tbe report sbou.ld be ~ because ol "'the iDterelta of teachers, stu· dent.a and the eommuaity in a prompt ad fair aeulemebt. · · tJNION LEADBU SAID TMlday th.It tlile ball ... dls- tr l ct Superintendent John Nicoll'• court. Teacbers ,... Mbd 'r.a.daJ to •lcn a petM:lea of '"no ccm- fidence" tn t.be dlltrict aaperin- t.endent u they bed ap for pay checks at Harper ComlDllDily Center in Costa Meu.. Alt.bough tbe pay line, wtiicb result.eel from a payday when schools are cloeed du.rtnc the week-kine lpriac vacation. few teacbert were al1oiog the petiUom, obMrven noted. Cue aaid. boweftf'. tUt the teacbera in ttDe wettn't «ip•nc because t,bey b a d done 10 earlier. A8ID'.D FOa TBE number of "no ccioficSnw'e" signatures col· lected so far. Cue said the lisurea are not unavailable becauae ooe collector LS out of town. Teachers waiting in line dld contribute $278 ror tbe fight against Proposition 9, the income tax-cutt.i.ng uuUatJve. Meanwblle. union officials bue ull~ for another rally l1l support ol cootract negotiators. Tbe catbering is planned for Harper Community Center at f :4S p.~ Ttaesda_y. some 4S minutes before the board of truat.ees ks to open its tt(Ularly sc~uled meetinl· Paul .Jordan, cblef union negotiator, llated several COO· cessions tbat his team bas gBlned i.n months of contract negouatiom. THE Dl.STRJC'T, RE nid. hac; agreed to esubwb clus 'ue averaces at each 1et.o:>~':-1ul oa tbe aradea belnc ta llDd la offert., aom• elemeMar"y acbool teacben f!ll bMr eeelt week forcl.aa preparatiae. He 1akl d1sUict H~ also have coaeeded t~at teacben who uk for ball-time wort must be '1"&Dted u..Ar .,. q ueata wttb a rt&bt to retuna to -full-time atatua later. Also conceded by the ~ he said, is the right of part-ti!be teacbef'S older than age SS to re- cetve full-time ctedit toward re- Urement if they have worked at least 10 years ror lhe district. EACH ELEMENT A& Y sdlool teacher al&o will be crant.ed m a year as an allowance for ..- pl em enta ry school supplies when a fiDa1 contra.ct ia alped. be said. . Teachers aod the district primarily are bung up on s&laries, be added. The union bas dropped de- mands of a 14 percent increase lo a retroactive 8.8 percent. be saad. The dist.net, be said, la ol- f e ri o g a &.S percent bike retroacth·e to July 1 or 8 percent retroa.cllve lo <kt. 1. Former Huntington School Official Dies Politics Hazardous to Your Health? William "Jar" Set.tJe. loac·time school administrator la ..a Orance ~and a coUece football of'flc.ial, died Ws w.et .t fkls bome in Palm Deff:rt.. Be wu •years old. Friends said be bad been in poor bea1tJt prior to bil deatll lut 8-· day. No fuDeraJ semces are planned. BJ JOANNE at:YNOLD6 y ot•Dlltf_ .......... Running for the NewPOrt Beach City Council apparenUy poses some unusual bealtb buard.I. For Instance, Wendy Williams, wile of incumbent Ray Wllllama, was missing from tbe first round of candidate forums. Wby? Sbe wu bome nuniq a llck cblld. WJLLL\118 G01' SOD L\TBE& at.andoffi.ab ttactiona when be'd expla,ln that their 10-year-old IOD, Barry, wu sUffer. inl from Scarlet\Fever. Barry bu lince recovered. I Then Ruthelp Plummer, a 2nd Dlltrtct eandidate m1ued a ,few . fonunl. Sbe aot tM nu. but ber campaip committee showed Utt.le mercy. reportedly dnCCinC ber door-to-door for. reci.nct wort tn spite.of ber stomach. Thia candidate PhWp Maurer wu the latest cu t , announcm, that be wu retirlnl from P ct walklna. . ..._... JIAvaD EXPIAINED TBE Al7LICl'ION CUM about because be w makinl a buty exit from a home petrolled by a ta.r1e, rather do1. Jn bis bute to depart, be Wd, be tripped over the eurb and · wrencbed ldl bee. · · "I'm sun I made a lutinl lmpnealoo on tbat boaHbold," be ollMr'nd ruetull1. ••• v 2Dd Dtmtet eandldate Derid ..._ no beMd MftlGp Oraace CouaO'• CAmpalln reform ordtnuce1, Udnkl tbe llD· pact of U.mbnU millen ewld be mvted 111 U. <*1 CoaDoil campalp bl Newport Beach. 1n 1eUen MDt th1I weet, Shone •uaelted to tdl = fellow candldat.et tbat they band over wt awuae m mai.rlal to tbl pnu ft" 4811 before~·· put ID tM mall. He Mid tbe ,,... people t'CMlld do .. tW ....... tM mat.rlal. bat wbat be'• ~or would be publlclltioo of lt IO "•• ean 8llUN tbat tbe wW btve amDI• time to a-amlM all tbe clalml and ...., that 1ueh mau.t m., produce." • t \ Sbon:is. a year ago, aUQes1lld tbe coancU adopt an or- dinance to thia effect. but couocil members dediDed to take action. • •• I Newport Beach Cit7 Cound1 c=--are ~ from electJom ln other local munid by ooe fador -the incredible number of candidate fonama spouond bJ dYic and homeowner IJ'OUP8· • Thia year's total ls 1.5. Tbe total audieee attraded to all of them ii about 500, inch.tdi~ campaip worten ot the nine caaclidatea. TBE THING AllOtrr FO&UllS 18 tlaat after rwpeadaa tMlr lpeechel too often, the cudid•tel deMklp boot aad mouib dla- eueSome like Bob Brockman ID tbe 2Dd diatrid. ltaNd tM camNlO wttb it. At ooe of tbe Mrtlelt foruU bald at the HDlOr cltben center, Broetmu GPeeed lala I~ by te1llnc ~ elderly audience members It w11 .. a &Mme a few ol JOU want be arOund to tee UM ~kOIDI of the el1 etiOll. '' He followed that dub6oul trtumplt bJ Mat taDlac tbe Corolla del Mar Qric Auodatioe tlMl'e oulbt IO be a~ bWlt aJon11be ~·11'ftb ATaue. . BE WA& APPA&SNTLY ONAWAaB 'l'llAT tbe or'· sanlsation be wu ad.dreaina Ud eome IMO beiDC • few years back apedftcally to flsbt 1Ucb a DtODOUL The moderaton ol .-. ol dllM mu0 • ... to hate similar problem.a. • ... ) David sa.ore1 on• of Broelrmu • opPOllft .. , a wars flnllbel b1a ;;eh by DOtiDI tMt Newpart ud .... '° toe~~ moderator 8t .e ,.,._ U. referNd to.._ u ••Newporfl)anel." ••• _ ~__. Barbor eaa AaMmMJ eedOrMcl ~ .,_;:;;.., 11111 tnn#tat. w llew,.t ._. coo~ LYDD TwMr uld aQ ftft cudldlte la U. diltrid -II.lie Pl_.._. IM Wddlll. Deftd ._... 8c»b Broekman abet Dlct ClUCM-... e I ad~,.. tM wolldt- ed IDdarN.-t Won a ddee ... ..... . Tbl two nmalDIDC_rM!ll -Palll a,,can n. PhUtp II..,.. la tbe • IMllliet _.-.., wwaa-....... Coll .. tM 1th Dlt· Diet -.... ~-~ bl 41 ••• ,.. ........... at uae 'm;~-;:.~ ~ cu6Sla'• pan, lflUiatlao waaa't coulcllred la die ......... altlMMllb Ill.II Plummer ii aeUfta u....., ..,.*• Ollf:ral c..atuM. • I oa. 8r:nt.E retll'ed from tbe Hunt.tnct.on Beach Uo1on Hieb School District in lt'78 after servlna as an aaaociat.e supuin· tendeot in charge of school operations for seven years. He alao bad worttd as an a.a· 1l1tant superintendent In tbe G1rdeo Grove Unified School Diatriet and aa a teacher in the Los Anaeles City School 01.strict. Friends Aid~ moved to the desert foUo~ l\1a 1t78 re- tirement but stayed active if! ooe of bia career passions -col· 1e1e football ofticiaUoa. 8B1TLE l'l•ST put on bJs blact-and-whJte PAC-8 uniform ln IN& He went on to serve as bead llnelman in tbree Role Bowl matcbups lncludiog the ms battle between Ohlo St.ate and bit alma mater. use . Settle ls sunived by bis wife, Vlr1lnla; aon William. and dau1bters Kathleen Small and Susan Pub. He also leaves five p-andcb11drea. Famlly members b1Ve re- quested that don1Uona in hi• memao-be made to tbe·Dollan for SeDoola hind. • prosram be wu active lJl. • *'····· Fire K10.LAWoman LOS ANG&La <AP) -P\re offlclall are lav•U1•Uac an apartmlat baule blue that left one woman dead and eaUMd $300.000 da1aac• after nam .. forffd abOut llO teDuta to a... 1utltor1Uel aalcl. Tw.aye n.r. eompanl• 1*tW tbe blau at Uae fbree·ttory balldlnl ID ta. ._ Part UM. Tb• bocl1 of tM Wlldeatifted woman wu fWDd In me of two •••rtmeata de1t.nJ94 la ~ • nre. l Hearing Set In Costa Mesa Murder Case A 22~year-okl Costa Mesa man wbo JIJeeedlY shot a Santa Ana resident outside a Mesa eatery March 2 ls scheduled for a pre- liminary hearing oo a murder chaue.Mav 2. Mlcbael David Gherardi, of 2336 Newport Blvd., pleaded in- nocent to the charge March •• five days alter Yicbael KeU.1 Spte.•. 24, died from .lt':bot wounds suffered ln a pa lot at Charlie's Chill diner, 2178 Newport Blvd. SPIES WAS SOOT, Cotta Mesa police reported, after a ftlt flaht with Gherardi in the lot. G~ tree from 0raqe • Count)' Jail on a '50 ,000 beill bond, oritiDallY ... Jailed fDr su1plcloo of aaeault and et- tempted mmder u Spiel 111ta Ho., Memorial Boapltal fallow· Ina tbe Qoatln1. The Orana• Co\&Dtl' Dtllrtet AttorieJ'I eomplatnt •Caimt Gberanll wu aineDded to • clode murder en tbe d97 a. ... le1ed aenllant ,appeared ta Harbol' Jl..Udpal Cowt f~ ~ llmJ.nary beartDC oa tbe Ol'lllUI c:bar1es. " · 818 ATTO&NSY, o-:.,g Chula, IOQlbt a dela7 to. 1 tbe on ~l a aeper 4111-trict attGrDey IUG. Polle. said tbe ftcbt aad aMat· tnc oeeur1 eel afW' GIMr.irtll ... CUHd ... of ~ & illtl* throaO tM dlMr'I ...... Offtcen, bowHer, NW ""9 bad QOt tbroWD tM mluUe. ! • • . .. • . ; ' .. _ mNaTANT in my :)niM la U OW' preMnt potential • advenarles. or· •nemlea, eall , tb•• •hat you Hite, ml•· • F•l~wbat the Uolted Statel Will-·.• be WU quoted U SAY· ln1. Aeoonling to the ma1utne. .Ni•• alllo uid: -It la "wllhful thinkinl" to expect the Soviet Unlon to AP ...... CRITIC Rlchllrd Nlaon • withclrmw from Afghanistan un· ~er a neutralization plan; --That he "as an American cannot have been too happy about the fact that the German8, the (°reach and maybe the Japanese a.s well have not given as much salport as they could lo the U ·" ... -"WHAT HAPPENS IN Afcbanistan does concern Western Europe. There should be an alliance policy which would deal with it collectively rather than each going his own way and saying, 'Well if Ute crisis involves Berlin or maybe Yugoslavia, then we would UJte to get in but in Afghanistan u.en we won't ;'" He thinks the Kremlin is "going· to cool it thrQugh this election year," to avoid engeo· Weigh to Go r :: Fat No Bar to Hiring OAKLAND (AP) -Louise Wolfe has chastised Al~eda County for discrimin•Ung ·against fat people, but her protest isn't being gjven much weight . .. Corpulence is no longer a factor in our bir· jng," said Alfred Nardi, county director of person . • nel. .. It used to be some years ago, but all U.at bas '&eea changed. .. \. -+ ... WOLFE, BEAD OF THE But Bay cbapUr ot the National Association to AMI Pat Americans, wrote to the county to pl"OMllt Its ~ ol awbbtq the obese at biriDI time. Sbe ~oat that California is preparin& laWI to ,...,. It illegal to .. weigh" a , job applicant'• :r·-··· ' A eouple of years ago, Ms. Wolfe wd rejeded for a job becatrse the county felt thpt 285 pounds on her 5-foot·9 frame was too much. ~ BtJT NAllDI TOLD MS. WOLFE, now an '"""flatland Park and Recreation Department worker, that the county Personnel Commission bad &bupd the height and weight requirements .•ev.eral years ago and in most cues -police and . fire jobs being exceptions -does not consider obesity when hiring. Fares on Amtrak .. Go Up April 27 • )I WASHINGTON <.AP) -The cost of riding Amtrak trains. like the cost of almost everything else, is going up. Starting April 27, Amtrak fares will go up at least 1 percent on all trains, including the popular Metroliner between Washington, D.C .. and Boston. FARE INCREASES WILL BE 10 percent on heavily traveled long-cllatanc:e routes, sueb as ..,. Chicago.Washington, D.C. and New York-Atlanta; Amtrak said. • Amtrak, the federally s ubsidized rail passeneer symm. said tbe rates are due to in· nation, particularly in ruet costs, which it said have rilen 75 percent in a year. ·~ , 'tBE IOGllE& &ATES ALSO ABE in line with ll conireaslonal mandate that Amtrak increase its raUo of revenues to expenses on aome )lnes, Amtrak said Amtrak'• lut fare increase, also 1 percent, toot eftect Oct. 28, sald Amtrak spokeswoman ":t>eM* llardnlak. . f -ftS lhdia:D ftATa ud eta.er ... a.n.. 1lloUI cbeck pot ..... 11 trouble •PGU and t.u pnvtliiidft aeu. ~ -,_,. w..una am. llloald _,, "·"" ean.cu .. aettoa .... ••er. eHDh t~e place ud "•&D tt ftltY elbr lD edfwe tlaat _...._.. tMre are MY iDd· dntt "" .............. Whether lt be 1overamnt-1upported or not, that tbe UDitecl Stai" will use what meana are aeceuary: •• -Thal be intends to devote the rest of bis We to speaking out "in a DOD·partiaan way" on foreisn Policy; -THAT, aEGAaDING the rt'cent bardenl.ng of the U.S. line toward the Soviet Union, be wondered "whether Presidellt Carter and bis colleagues lD the administration bave been jolted into a sense of permanent urgency or just temporary urgency." The Soviet Union sent tens of thousands of troops to neighbor- ing Afghanistan in December to back a Marxist regime facing a nationwide rebelUon among the predominant anti-communist Moslem majority. Just make round-trip Night Coach reservations and buy tickets Mleast 7 days before departure. Return as early as the Saturday morning after you leave, or stay as long as 60 days . If you depart on a Saturday, you can return anytime. Seats are limited. Call your Travel Agent. United is Partners in Travel with Western International Hotels. --, l:J a.m <l>C·IO) IOOO a.m (i -17 ) • 8111 Banduruk • . ,.......,", ... • Coleti '-"' tlol;peo.._. • . . ......... -• y .... $2 I • ..,.._ If> . ~ . ~ • • • .. , am vo ng • : DICK ! : CARSTENSEN ~! ! The Quallfted C.ndldate _: • J>ecaua there la no subatltute ,.. ! for experience." : .. ~ • hW .... Cc• .......... Dkll c:.r-wa • 1t1C1t ....._ T,_..,., 1111~ ....._ C-.MIM , ~ .......................• ; DAVID SHORES ... a qualified 0 get things done" candidate. NEWPORT /SHORES they bebng together P-tor 0y o.twoel ~ .. E1«1-c-.n .... r.,... A-. ,,.._ PO 8ot•t2l . ..._1>1-'31.11t• 1.lS pm :~:50 pm. 7·10 pm. .. I If> p.rn CDC· I()) -1 :2S p.m I IX'· I 0) I() :Jo p. m OX::· I 0)( N1ghr Coach ) 12 20 a.m (7-17 )(Nlght Coach) 10:05 pm. 4·05a m. 6·00a.m. From Ontario 12'5<) p.m . 10:55 p.m.(Night Coach) "This Super Value fare makes tl1e Windy c ·ry a breeu1 .. 6:35 p.m. 4:25a.m. ' \ . :\ . • . . Come in to Dick Vernon and the girls will be happy ·to pick out on Easter Outfit for you. w ............... .,.. .... I MM121 .. --.-.----. ---..... FOR HIS '· EASTER BASKET Select agUt from our superb · c.ottectlon of Spring neckwear. ' , : ~~ ~~ ~ '' ~ ... 'Sf. t . .> ~~ ~ OPEN THURSDAY EVENINGS - . --- SALTWORKS JUNIOR SWIMWEAR BYCATALJNA Style lhowr'I evellat>te In sizes 3-11. brown~ w ith yellow C)f1nt . \ h • •• .. • • • • • • o mes am1es • • Teens • \} \} \} VVestc*ff Aaze 1132 lrvrie A.le. Ni!Mpor 't Beech Cei( B38JBO 714-631-eooe • ••••• A child ts~ by the WOlldar of spring in this fine pewl9r &gum. . . . a aee.v Clark gift that aaya you c.e. Just In: Humna figurines. Exdullw diltributora tor Irish Dreeden figures. 'p ilt " Wt " ,,. .~ I ..,, u~~ i ~ I .. \' PAPER UNLIMITED UlllnlileA .... Naapa& .... Ill SCl-7121 • .... a I f Oally "'"" l>llOt• n Gan Amllr-l UC IRVINE SECOND BASEMAN MIKE NAGLE DIVES FOR A LINE DRIVE IN A RECENT GAME. UCI HOSTED THE ORANGE COUNTY TOURNEY TODAY. t ·--------------~ ~ . ' ~ ~-· .· Happy Day(s) for Pirates . . ~ >·,First Baseman ls Big Reason for OCC Success By JORN SEVANO Of tlile Dllit1' ,..._ SUllf \. For tboH of you wbo DlfY have been ~ wondering, there IS a rea8¥ (or Orange ~ Coast Colleee's sudden success in baseball th1s season. ,! Oil, tbere are the usual cllcbes like ~ tbe tetm is In sync and playing ,; tot•tW; the pitchine and bitting are ·' eomiDC around; and OCC is finally . ":' playju up to ita expectations. B'ut Uaere'1 mere to the Pirates' sue· Cftl than Ja.t the team concept. There ·;Ila Te 1bee'a 101me Individual 41 pe.t°""'ne-tb:ol~ are worth ootlng, aall none · ll&Te stood out more than • RUidyDaJ. TBt COLO&FUL l·Z SOPHOMORE · wt. of Servile High bu almost sioile· handedly carried the Bucs with bis bat durinl the fll'St round of South Coast Conference play. Day curreoUy leads the conference w1lb a .440 batting average (he's hitting .3'8 overall) and in 18 pmes be'a driven ln 18 runs and scored 16. !Jut even ii Day didn't have a slngle bit all year, be and· Donny Perry have still brought a quality to the Pirates Untt bas been lacking ln years past- leadership. ·As team captains of the Bucs, Day and Perry have fulfilled their roles to a tee, displaying direction not only on the field, but off. And their roles ha- ven't been just confined to the players either, as Coach Mike Mayne will at- test. ACTUAU.. Y, WHEN ONE weighs the evidence presented. Day and Perry just might be solely responsible for the team's turnaround. To flash back, there was one stage of the season early, when tbe Pirates possessed a 2-3 record and were st.ruggl· ing -rmUil atruggling. Mayne, the competitor that be ts, was starting to panic. He began pushing bis team, pushing them to the brink where 11 .,e pla9 •P te ••r e•p•MHtie. ~ ....... ~ lo•e •••titer ga•e all 9ear. "~ f• reaUw •• otlter "'ord to desrriw tllu team tJaa• •1eeS•..e. they were nervous, edgy. Day and Perry analyied the.situation and decided to have a meeting with their coach. The result bas been 13 straight wins and a 6-0 record in the tough South Coast Conference. "TOWARD THE BEGINNING of the year Coach Mayne was getting on every. body," Day respecUully admitted. "A couple of us <Day and Perry> bad a talk with him. We told him to let us play. too much presspre on us at the outset We told him to take 1t easy, not to get so uptight." The Pirates haven't lost srnce. ·'The way Coach Mayne i.s . .ts the way we'll play," adds Day. "U he's up. tight, then that's bow we'll play. If he's relaxed, then··that's the way we'll be, too." DAY ENJOYS BIS POSITION as the team 's captain and uses his authonly wisely. "There have been other years wben I UUnk this team bas gone in with the at· tltade that maybe we can win. This year we know we have the players,•· he analyzes. The Pirates, off to one of their . quickest starts ever. lead eigbt·Ume South Coast Conference champ Cer- ritos by a · single game. News? Yes. when you consider OCC bas beaten Cer· ritos just seven times in 40 prior meet· iogs, and the one victory this season was on Falcon turf. • feat the Bucs have seldom performed in years past. "l 'M NOT TRYING to sound con-ceited, but when you compare lineups with everyone else in the conference ... " said Day, his voice trailing. "Jf we play up to our capabilitJes we shouldn't lose another game all year. There is really no other word to describe th.Js team than awesome. ' "Coad,1 Mayne has since been crack· ing down on us in practice, and theq let- ting us relax in a game. He was putting "The team may have started out slow. but it came together and we re <See DAY, Page BZ> Olliff ,. ... '""' ~ ORANGE COAST COLLEGE FlRST BASqlAN RANDY DAY. Cell Off Sea'M>n, Says Autry . PALM SPRINGS (AP> - Gene Autry, owner of the Angels, is angry enough over the most recent action of the Major League Players Association to call off the entire 1980 basebaU season. Autry was still steaming Wed· nesday over Tuesday's action of the players, who called a strike of remaining exhibition games but will return to start tbe regular season in April. The players also decided to walk out agaln..pn May 23 If an agreement isn't reached by then. "FRANKLY, IF I had my say and the other owners agreed with me, I'd close down for the season," said Autry. "What's the sense in 1oing out aga1n" It's a waste of 6ur time, their Ume and a Jot of money. "There's no reason for it and I would Just as sooo forget the season." Autry said Tuelda1 that the r.layen demon.at.rat.eel bad tlm· 011 and blld Judgment and acted ln s uch a way as to lock themselves out when they walked out on the exblbtUons. On Wedwday, be aaid he miabt probe the sentiment of other owners felardinl •'a one-year moratorium.". •6C)NE OF. THESE days, tile pl•yen are 11oln1 to bave to take 1 deep look at "'hat their leader b11 cottea tbem loto,.. said Autry, rererrtna to Marvin Miller, u~ve clireetor ol UM Pl11en AaaocJatioa. "I'" belll a member ot un· (lee AtrraY, Paae 81) A Mackie's Angels Persist Memory of Daughter Keeps Coach Going INDEPENDENCE, Mo <AP) -Jack Mackie can almost imagine his daughter commg down lhe basketball court on those long dn ves and swi.shrng the ball through the hoop. Mack.ie's daughter . Janna. died two years ago of cancer at the age oC 11. But Mackie has con· tinued to coach Janna's friends -Mack1e·s Angels, as they're known on the basketball court The companionship of the nme eigbth·graders has kept Mackie on the bench and helped fill the void created by the loss of his daughter. "I do it because of the memory of her and to be usoclated with ber friends." Mackie explains. "It's more like coaching my kids than coachmg somebody else's kids. They're that close to me.·· THIS YEAR, THE TEAM dedicated the season to Janna. tvho Joined the city basltetbaY program in fourth grade. Mackie, who had dab- bled ln coaching since leavmg high school, came along to coach. Janna became sick shortly after she began her second season and played three games before a tumor ln her leg was discovered. The leg was am· putated at the hip. Mackie planned to quit coaching until his daughter intervened. ··r was going to give up the team because of all the time involved. But she wouldn't have it. She was determined she was eolnC to play when she came back." he says. c She was fitted with an artlftcj.al limb nicknamed "Charlie" and soon was abfe to ride her bicycle1 resume modeling and continue dance le.11ou MM! baton·l-.rllng. But JINla.inever saw game adion again, altbouah she sometimes joined the tea~ for pre-game warmQPJ. Mackie views the gU'ls as a father would and speaks fondly of them. "WATCHING THEM GROW, I guess, has helped me ma way ror the loss of my daughter," he expiru.ns "They're exactly the same age, and the tiungs they do are the same as my daughter would be doing " Maclue's game plan is informal enough to al- low an occasional hug from a team member but tough enough to keep lhe girls on their toes. Teamwork. often scarce among young basketball players trying to excel. is highly prized. Since the beginning. they've placed first or · second in their division. They just completed another season with 9-0 league· record and 14-3 overall. r lronically. the prowess of Mackie's Angels means this probably will be the last year for the team. City recreation officials predict most of the girls will be snatched up by junior tti&b scboOI teams, whose coaches have scouted some games. Mackie agrees. And although he'll have more time to dedicate to the s porting activities of hls other three children. he vows to monitor hls team's success. "I'm looking forward to seeing them go on aocJ. do well,'' he says. - ''They're good girls. It's.just somethio1 thal makes me feel good to wort with them. That wu my reward. They t.ook the place of my daughter." Pole Vaulter in Coma SAN DIEGO <AP) -Pole vaulter Cbrli Schnedar was ln a coma tOday with bead inJw1• snu. JANNA &EMAINED a member of the suffered ln a workout two days af\er qualifyina for team . She kept score until sbe was too weak aod the Olympic {)-youta. even then continued to follow the team's en-Schnedar, 24, hit the back ot bis bead Tuesda1 deavora. on a concerete slab near the pole vault plt at Saa When Janna died the Jlrls on lhe team con\.... _l>leeo State University. H-was taten to AlvaradO vlnced MJ~lde to contfnue ~~Ital. . An,tll center Camelte WUlls says the 1lrts "He h•d a creat chance ol mulq the Otym. wouldn t have been a team without their coach. pie team. With bis lntinite PotenUal, be could bu• "We au Uked ptaylq totttber a lot Hd been a record-Miter ... 1ald Ian Dleco S&at9 tract: tboulbt be wu a really good coach," •be uys. "l coach Dick mu. · really clolll't WM now we eoald play with ID10M O. Sanday, in Walnut, ~bnedar quited n.a. else." the minimum to qualify for the Olympic trials. ~ I . , r .... APDI...... · U Pbolnla ,....,. lta t.t«·dne PJQOtf ~ Ill • ....., Cl'1 oa P'rtda1 ~. U. Lek .. WW laau .... tlaaa • .,. to ~ .................. tM Fonm rMd1 fCW • uUoeab) Weva.t pl8)'Cllf I••• 8'IDdQ &ftenocm. ltut lt KIDfaa catJ wtu Pridly and IWli \M ..ne. lnto a lblrd 1ame, tbe Laken wU1 bave &o waiL unlll ~ t.o m .. t tbe wtnMf' LD tbe P'ot\UJ\. ~fee. t.M &Im OI' U.. Klnp, tbe Laken win have advanta1• b1 vlrtue of wtnnlq tbe NIA Paclf\e DtvtNon. Here'• UM Lak rs' pla.yotr 1ttuaUoa. It aou.ndt contU1inl unieu-you pay caot-attAtntJoft : • rt Phon.la wine 1 •WMP Frtd1y, t.be Su.na will mMl the Laken in the Fontm SuDda.y at lJ.~. • U t.be Phoenix-KC aeriet 1oes to three 1•m ... the Laken wUl meet t.be win.nu ln the Porum Tue1da.y nlaht alt. • The NCOGd ,.me ot the Laken' playoff wlU be Wed· nesday Dia.bl at 8 in the Forum. re1ardleaa of when the opener la played. · • • The Lakera' third pJl.)"Off came wUI be on the road April ll. and tbe fourth alao on the road Aprtl U . • JI neceaary, the belt-d·aeven 1erie1 wlll return t.o the · Forum April IS for came nve. Game 1lx would be on the road ArrU 18, and 1ame HVH would be a Sunday afternoon tamer a the Forum April 20. · • b that perf ec&Jy clear? -----· 4-•~ •I llw Da9----- Former bll leasue manaaer Leo O.roelter: "R•I· gJe Jacboa cou.ldo't thine Willie Ila)'•' aboea. He never hit .300, be'• a butcher In the outfleld and h•'• sot • bit mouth. What does be make, $8,000 •week! I wouldn't pay him $8 a week. He'a a bum." EI -·-Nn1r ..... II aerc• Wayne Gretzky's atab at a puck In mld·alr in Iii the second period defiected past Minnesota aoalle , G&17 Edwards for his 50th goal of the season, alv· iog Edmonton a 1·1 tie with the North stars In Na· Uonal Hockey League action Wednesday nigbL The point was a big one for both clubs. The tie moved Edmonton out of a three-way deadlock and into sole possession of 15th spot in the NHL's overall standlngs. Minnesota moved ahead of the New York Islanders and now holds down fifth spot . . . Pet.er McNab scored twice to reach 200 goals for his career aod Boston won for the fifth straight time since Harry Sinden look over as coach by dump- ing Toronto. 5-2 . . . U.S. Olympic star Dave Cbrlstlan s cored his seventh goal since turning pro and assisted on three othe rs as 'Winnipeg manhandled Chicago. 5.2 ... K e nt NllSson, Pekk a RautakalUo, Willi Ple tt and Erle Vall scored in the first pe riod as Atlanta McNaa stopped the New York Rangers, 7.J. The victory reduced the margin between the eighth place Rangers and ninth place Flames to two points in the NHL overall standings. The first eight teams have ~ home·lce advantage in the '-'Pcomlng playoffs .... Mark Joluaaoo and Greg Sheppard each scored a goal ln the final moments of the second period to help Pittsburgh score a 6-4 vlctory over Hartford . . . Montreal's GQY Lallev and Mad Napier each scored a J>air of .Joa.ls t.o lead the Canad.tens to a 7·2 rout of Detroit that all but ellm1nated the Red Wings from the NHL playoffs. J68-lao_. Tet111b Maf~la T•r11ftl De.,11 .. ESCONDIDO -Tennis pro Alex Rivas has '3 been turned down in bis bid to play 168 hours or non-stop tennis for charity. Neighbors said they couldn't endure the noise and lights that Jon~. Rivas bad a lso wanted to get into the Guinness Book or World Records with the marathon tennis match against a succession of celebrities to raise $300,000 for the Epilepsy Society. But the Escondido City Council reject~ it Wednesday night. Nine pwners of property around the tennis club com- plained about the plans to leave the tennis court lights on around the clock for seven days . ............. WHAT A"I THE ODDI? -Jorkey Dennis An ctcnon ond hlw hori.e friend check the pro1ram for n lltUe lrutldc lnformatlon ot Detroit Roe~ CourAP rcccnUy. ll wtuui •t r cvortl'<l Ir tht•y found 1 he orld" to their llklnu. s , .... "'•• r ..... Pre. A,,..,. A" University or Vtr1Lnla cent.er •alJ>' SamptOe • ls rccooslderln& bis decision to stay 1n school since the Boston Celtics won rtnt choice In the N1Uon1I Basketball Association draft. The 7-4 freshman wa s MVP of the National ln v il a t1on Tourn a ment ... S a1ar Ray Leonard s ays ha s ne xt welter- weight championship defense will probably be a1ainst Jose "Plplao" Cuevas ... T eams f rom the P eoples Republic of Ctuna and Taiwan w1U com. pete against each other fo r the fi rst lime m the Mt. San Antonio Relays Ap ri l 19. In· dividual athletes will not wear team un· iforms during the en•nt . University of Arizona President John Schaefer prom1sro there will be a full respon~e next week to newspaper allegations about misuse or mon<'y for football recruitment At lht' !'ame time, Schaefer declined comment on Arizona football coach Tony Masoo's n · marks that he and assistant coaches "N<' reimbursed for a irplanl' flights they never LEOl'l,1110 took. Mason said the reimburse ments covered othe r ex- penses ... Investigating magistrates an Rome freed on ball 11 players and a team p resident jailed oa charges of ta.king bribes to fix games in the biggest scandal m Italian SO('cer history ... An autopsy was scheduled today on the body of West Virginia Tech football player John Camt'roa Wheeler. who dled after collapsinJt in Ole dresslllg room followmg a li ght practice s es sion Wednesday ... T he Los Angeles Aztecs of the North American Soccer League have signed Brazilian forward Lais Fernando to a multi year cootruct a nd Yugoslavian midfielder Dragan Slmk to a one year pact A long-running feud between the l' S Auto Club and its s plinter group. Championship Auto Racmg Teams. as n · Portcdly close to belllg resolved and m1.·mbers of bOth or ·~an1zat1on." could race together next v.eek ill Ontano Motor Speedway T~Radlo TV: Horse Racing -Today at Santa Anata. 7 JO p m , Channel 52 ; Hockey -Capitals vs. Flyers, M1dn1ght, Channel 13. • .. RADIO: Hockey -Kings at Vancouver. 7 :50 p.m . KU S (1150). ----- ... IJ llOWAU L BANDY .... ....,NII .... The ehane• .,.. 1ood that the Women'• Kempe~ Open 1otr loumamt11t wm retum lo 11 ... Vetde Cowitry Club for...,. thlrd 1tral.bt HUOD ln lMl but no deflnlte dec'lalon wUI bt rucbed for •boot 10 d•Ja, accordlnl t.o tournament dln<tlor Don Ruhter ur thtt 1pontorln1 Kemper fnflur~ Company · f'm •f'ry optlmlJ llc about Ott' I 11t1rn1tm e nt 11\Jy ln1 htr~." It uht~r ul<I toflowtn1 11 meet.Ins M nnd1tv nl-ht of ftfflf'lalit rrom hot h I two "JIOTl~orlni •roup and MV< f "NUTRfNO "A q df'r ldt1tl Monrla1 nl•ht." Rubtf'r "aid w,. onJly d11"~ what WP itnllctpirtfld thf> prbbl•m• wflrf' Thf'f ~hod fc!r and w,. "•Id .,. wt1uJd prf!'~ an Mltlinl" uf tlH" ••r. thin~• 1hoofd 10 • I hitvt a ty~rrtt,,.n prf7PO"•l to pr~ to thf>m 11tWf I "'" ttll In« It <rvtr tlwtrf' t'Wl~y C WWl~ dayJ "TPM-y know ,,.,.,, .,. w 11nt ~ tourna~nt to rf"turn to MH• VPrde ,,..-xt yf!ttr ""f:'llE TllYJNO lo lf't thf' numhf-r1 wtM-rf' lhf' 'luh m,.11 ... out I'll ri•ht ttnd wp don t l<"'4• Ali Missing, But Fights Top-~ted N EW YORK <AP I -ABC Tv·s four.hour package of four champ1onsb1p f1g~ts last Mon · day rught v.as the top rated box mg show not to reature M uham mad All and the i.1xth tughe-.t rakd boxing tel<>Ca~t or all tJme. according to N1el!'>cn figure. re lt'a~ed Wednt"Sday . T he boxing spN 1:11. "'h1r h went rrom 5.9 p m 1 J'ST > "'ic. watched tn full or 1n part by 55 m1lJ1on VJewers. It '40n the rugbt for ABC w1tb a ratrng of 2S 8 percent o( aU TVs and a 41 share percent of alJ seu in use. The top ft\'e fights on TV all ha\ e lO\.Ol ved Ah . the former heavyweight cbampJOn Tbe LLst 1!. headed by All·s rematch v1c· tory over Leon Spmks in Sep- tember. 1978. which had a 37 2 'rat me and a 61 shar" The Monday ru ght ratmgs pro i:rec;s1\ely J?.few largPr uolJI a ~light dttreast' for the Larr) lfol m e'\·Ler oy Jonl'' \\B C: heavyweight flghl Thu~e half hours had ralUlg') of 27 3 and 26 1 The hour before , "hen WB(' welterweight champion Sugar Ray Leonard knocked out Dave Green. the ratings were 27 9 and 28.4. amrnca ALSO admitted that official• of lnduatry Hilla Oo1I Courae had contacted hta l'f'OUP •bout 1u11na the tournament there In the future "We have t.o know what our opllona aro and when they came to u1, we dl1tcuaeed the .UuaUon with them. Hut that'• aa tar u It •oH r1ath\now." Wompn'11 1011 on tolevlalon l•m 'I a paying proPQAltlon, ac· cordln1 lo Ruhter. "NRC ~n·t pay UI penny o nP ror the r l.Chll to the w,,m._.n·,. Kf'mrer Opon, .. he "">'" "We put I on TV bec1U1Jt1 Wf' want the evfmt ti• he 1een na t lt1 n tt ll y . ff u t It I 1 my u n df'r1tl•rwiln" lh8l ttwrc 11 Utlle1 If tiny. mornoy In TV rl1ht.11 rnr Wlllrlf'O " l(Olr "I UON'T KNOW tno mvt h 11ho ul l IPvlalt111 , lhou•h, hN ' » IJA4• that'• not my .,"' I didn't nt>&<JlJat1• tho detl " Ruhwr alt0 ,.~Hied a chenJ" In llckd pr1cln1 and ua. fo~ next year ·"We have dl&e~ a radlt'al change lll ~ ticket 1lructurt' fo r the tournament for Mxt yur to make lt more detlrable for the pubUc. "UoOeT t.be plans we are dis· russ1ng o n ticket c ha nges. nobody can be disappointed But I don 't want to jump the gtm on :rnythmg by saying what tht pl Jn t"> nght now." T he ongmal contract betwl"f·n Mt•">J Verch: CC and Kemper.<,{ f1c·1al') war. fo r two year., WhNht.•r lhe current proposal J') for :.i longer or shorter pen od. Huhter dedmed to say SOMETHING CONCRETE s ho uld ht-forthcoming on the s1tuat.1on wit.lun the next 10 days to I" o v.-t>t>ks hut at the moment. lhe ruturl· Silt' of tht' Kemper Open LS not cert.am. Nancy Lope~·Melton won tht· tourna ml'Tlt last weeke nd and JoAnnt-Carner was the ftrl>l "annt•r f 'rflJW PagP BI DAY ... f 1 n a I ly s t arting to assc rt our~elves ·" Pa m Page•J AUfRY ••• Baseball Back to Basics The program o pene d with hatr-hour ratings or 21.2 and 24 6 for tht' Marvin Johnson·Edcbt' Gregory WBA Uebt heavyweight boul. Theo Mike Weaver's dethroning o( John Tate for the WBA beavywei&ht crown re· celved rati.np o( 24.9 and 26.1. Day isn't all taJk. As a matter o ( fact he'd r ather let his actions speak for them.selves. A transfer from the outfield where he was all~ooierence last season. the nght·banded first baseman re· ceotly won a game with two home runs acainsl Fullerton. The significance? Well, Day hasn't hit two home runs in the lut th.ree years. Ions almost all my .Ufe and 1 know that once they get t.beir foot ln t.he door, they're never happy," the former s inging movie star said "They keep wanting more und more with no eon1JideraUon for the other alde ·'There's only ao far you can go, onJy ao much water In the well, and for un owner who lb trying to do the right things, ll'1' all very frustratln&. .. VOU BRING your club lo spring training to get It ready for the championship seasoo and then It walktt away from the competlUon It needs and the fans who pay lhe bUla. Thia club lao't ready to play and lt'1 not. goln1 to 1et ready working out on a colle&e tleld.' Autry referred to the Aneets' declal.on to work out at CaJ State Fullerton. Don Ba'ylor, the team '1 player representative, called a team meeting Wednes· day an(l the playen decided to return to their area homes rather than remaJnin1 In Palm Sprtnia and worldna out al their own expenae. / BAYLOR SAID the Angels wiU work out dally at Fullerton. Baylor will be In charge of the biuers and outllelder Merv Rel· te1unund wU1 be ln eharae ot the pitchers. Baylor eald th-t tn· surance comlderatlona wUJ pre· vent the team from playln1 practice eainet but almulated aame condiUona will be UMd. The Ansell, defe ndtn1 American Lea1ue Woat Dlv1-lon champton1, ar~ •chodultd to open the 1980 aeaaon on Friday night, April 11 , 11atnat Cleveland at Anaheim Sladham. ,.. The Aqels were to rac. the Los Anaefes J>odt•rs ln the an· nail Freeway SnlH thla Wffkend. at Anaheim Stadium Fdcla.1 and Sfturda7 nl.-.U and It Dodltr Stadlwn 8uDdaJ If. t.arnoan, but the players• acUon of TlMlda)' cane.led the eert.. ,, Striking Players Revert to Simple Training 8 ..... ft7!iJI Play urvg ltJST BECO•E a little -WI more selective,'' Day says ol bis By The ~lalA'd Preu 11f1"ner," he said. Auociation for not offlc1ally bittlfll. "Last yeu I started off rt '11 but'k to Square One for I" o r o th e r s. I i k e J ack nohfymg the owners or the ex-In llenefit Game slow and picked up (be fmisbed m<>t1l of the atnlong membetll of Orohamer of the Red Sox. a h1bit1on stnke. "ln all my years hittin& .333). I always used to the Major Lealue Baseball week without exhibitions won't in this business, that 's ne ver The Los AnaeJes Rams will be get my hits in bunches. So far Plt1yen' Assoc1&tLon t.klnte m11ke much dilference . happened before," he said. in Orange County eulier than that's changed this year." battlngandfieldln1pracUce and "l'miiotngtosltonthebench, MILLER. MEANWHILE. you think. bu-t not to play And so h a ve his re· poulbly ph1y1ng bome Intra a11 usual," quipped the reserve football. sponsibilitles-and he's eltjoy· 11qu1td aumei, Jw.t llke the pre Infielder, a product of Hunt· rapped the owners· refusal to Members of the Rams will tng t'Very minute of it. exhibition dliyit of apr101 traln lngton Reach High. "That's how pay the players' expenses dur take on members of the Orange "I look at myself as a com- ing I s tay In shape during the ing the minl·stnke . County Latin Businessmen's As· muoicat.or between the coach And lt'li on to round two for season." "First. those expenses will be so c lation in a fund -raising andtbeplayers,"be says."Itry ~' M 1 MUI a part or any settlement." he b ~etball Sa ....... .... l to 1 t t neauuators arv n .sr, ex~ WITH MILLIONS of dollars at said. "Second. I'm perpetually as-. game lwuay nl...,t. no e my teamma es get ecutlve director ot tho Players stake In the ongoing negotla· astonlahed that businessmen can April 12 at Santa Ana College. down oo themselves. Sometimes AaaoclaUon, and Ray Orebey. tlona, a1ome petty dlfferences be sp 1\0JPll. fo'Qr 8 coupl!? or h"'1· Proceeds from the game will a playef FD•Y need a little shove c b I e f b" r ~al nor f or t be crept int.o the picture, with the dred doUans they're taJclna the go toward scholarships for the from somebody and Donny and I club owners, who were acheduled owners refusing to pay room and risk of alienating the players benefit of underprivileged His-are the ones wbo give it. to hold their aecood aetalon with board _ 8 contract ._,uires 8 and making any aettlement that pa n ic children In Orange "It keeps me busy and that's reder1I mediator Kenneth E . player to participate· in, exhibl· much more dilficult. ll 's lunacy County. how I like to be." Moffett today ln New York. lion games !.-wblcb broucbt ... unless they're t.ryin& t.o pro-Tickets at S3 apiece will be on Not only does it sound Ute HAVING DECIDED to cancel gripes rrom some players, who voke a st.rlke. In that c ue, It's s ale at the door. Game lime is 7 Day is busy, but 1n complete the la~ week of exhlbiti~ wll~h~eto~do~Hvual ~v~e~r~y~•~m~a~rt~·-Tb=e~y-'l~l~s~u_cc_e_ed_.·_· __ P_._m_. ____________ co_n_tro_I_.~ __ . ______ ~ games but open the season as hundred dollars to stay in camp. s~heduled next Wednesday and "Because we're going to work give tbe two sldea unUl the out, I think we should be reim· Memorial Day weekend to reach bursed, but we won't be," said a settlement, the players Baltimore's Mark Belanger. branched out from coast to And Minnes ota 's Mike coast. with those not involved in Marahall, the Twins' player orficial or informal workouts representative, said he would re- promistng to stay in shape on turn home ''if my expenses their own. aren't paid." Only two teams -the· Mon· treal Expos and San Dle10 Padres -did not hold some IOl'l or practJce Wednesday. Tbe Ex· pos refused to work out under their coaches' supervision whUe the Padres voted to return to San Dteto. Some players were comblninl w out.a with a chance ror a ra prt1 vacation. ER TAKING battlna pracuce and dotna his runnlh1 Boston star Carf Y astnemakt Hid he would work out today and Friday and then spend the Euler weekend at hla Florida home. "I'll be back Monday and be ready te accompany UM team to IUlwautee for tbe ae11on IN ADDmON, lhe April J deadline for the players· modified proposal.a hu passed and they are no longer on the bargaini.n& table. That means, for example. the Ume period of ofive years before a player can claim free agency reverta back to the ln· itlal propoeal of rour years and the minimum salary demand goes from a reduced· $37 ,500 back up to '40,000. Miller· and Grebey also were at oddl over the latest develop- men ts alter the Pla)'ers' As· aoel1Uon's executive board de· clded oa Tuelday to call off the rem•ln.lna 9'2 exhlblUon sames and aet a strike deadline of May 22. Orebey crtUcl1ed the PJayen' H .. Anaheim Stadium Special weekend bua •n1ce to AAgel9 home gem11. The Anaheim Stadium Special wit1 take OCTO will serve 81 playoff and Wortd Sef1es you out to every weeken<;1 home game, games held at Anaheim Stadium. and1beck again. fOf just $1.00 one way. lt11 ..__c-. .....,......_ QIV8 you relief from st8d1Um trafflC and ""°'" M,•v~· . u:.:::- S8Ye the cost of gas and parking ~ -s.. ~ Simply check our handy map to see .... .... _ "". which departure pomt 1s most convenient to ~~ ~~1e;?,:-~ ..:=.:t..~" your.area Both Stadium Specials run ftAl 1 Ilea -on weekends ~ Just call us fOf a schedule UP .... Service wlff continue through p(ayoffs And, if the Angels win this season's ~· I -·-........ _ ., ~·----·---........... -~. • , "9JOff Pktut• W &. T "'-GflGA 1. •·""'._..P'N 41 11 10 '°' no 1 .. 2. a-MonltM .. 70 12 1CW 311 W J .• · lklffelo '4 11 ,. '°' ,,. 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Of>• -1~1111-nc~ IM'<llM- •rwl ... ,., IMO, 10 u .....• no two -··· tow• 09trolti119 ~ • • • • SCORES Coll90e UCLA 4, CS P:utlff1on 4 110 '"'""II" d•O M UI C.•I P04y """"°™' l. LovOI• 0 C•I POiy ISLOI l, P..:1t •C I A1u ..... P<0<lflc IJ, Cl•r.-nont M-1 h i<•• A&.M l. UK 0 CS NC>f1hr!O!lt .. 1. USIU 1 • u _ s.n o.., ,_,, uc S.-.1• &•n....• 1 " Junior College Fulltrton s . .._ 8"<n I Pu-.. USC JV I H6ah ScftoOI AMA.H•IM TOU•NAMllNT S.v-.. 1. L.8 Poly I IC.......,._.PI L• H-• 4, ,___,. l lt!Vrcll North Ton-.•,£_...._. l lfilllll Troy'· Oon Lt.l90 t (<-llOfll Hlgt\ SdlooC ........... 61,.._o.I,. 100 -I. BwrDll 18 1, IO.A. 1. F~r 1111. 10 s. >. a.-181. '101-. no -1. e..r...... 1a1. ti.o; 2. a-...... 1e 1. U J l IC-IMl.14 1. ..0 -I a. .. 181, U t, 1 A9111rri. IMI. U t; J. Rl9MY 18 1, U l llO -I. Fl-18 1. 1 02_0, 1 ~ IM I, , 01 o. 1. ........ 1¥>.1 cw 0 Mrl• -I. Pt...t• IMI, • U J. !. OI .. Ill), 4 3' t . l. 8r-. IMI. • Ma T•o mil• -I E~v IMI. 10 Ol 1. 1 N~l\Of'I IMI. 10 01 1, J PIMll• IM I. 10 1t I JJOLH -I G<lrl¥ !Bl, 41 0, 1 A1-v 181, •I 0.1. A-IMl.41.1 110ttM -I Gfr!M<ll 18 1, IS~. 1 Pol• IMI. I• I, l . 119~ (Ml. 1e 1 Misc. Wedne9day's Tranuctlont USilaALL &OSTOM 11~~1 W iii R..., m+t , .... )01vt 'TUdof' ~ F1nc.h Mtd .... th M•<"'"°'''""· P•1CM f\ O•w-• ~<""'•Ol kov•' l •f=r•r-to1\ Al'\d Jo"" Lt<,ert, r•t<tt•r\ Dew St.teMl'ton. ,,..,..,,Ofo, ef'\d <i•t t t' H~<oc• S..m Bow .. n •-"O R••O N1Chott outt .... f \ to ,,_,, f'\t"°' ~ c.•mptQilr~M~ or:AH!.A\ CITY ROYALS AUo-<I (. "••9 £•tor. . .P•'< '-'. \o tM C.•t fO'~• A~I\' S.11 LAt<e (1lf CIUO "' IN P.OC1lo< f 04\l L•~ •' ,,_ pte..._r to 0. ~ •••.., '" w. w ,u .. lllWn •f~' ,., ~ "-MIL'NAUICE( llR£WfAS OphONd Andt ~•JliO<Qlf' Jol'\n. s:''"" .tf\d P•u• ~•lc f\tU. Ptl<M'\ to V•n<oww•t ot t"• P•f "•' C04,1 l~•9w• .,,.4',, .. o eoo V•I•'"°· P.IC.~'. Oi.11,.19"' to 'l•l\CCJi'rlW t -~ •TLANTA BRA VES S•1tl 8• "1M.t..~•" .,._,tony 8tt,tol•r• e>ttC.,...'\ C,1tftf\ ~o ...a A_. .... A~trf't .,.._ ''''°"'"' 8oo &t-•11 tir\I tw,..,.,,.,_ P'f<~ ~~""" \m1tl't '*'U O..\•~" outh•tdit'' H•HV SlfMqtt ( .. (hff end Te'"' ... .,,.._,. OUUlf'kf+t to At("""°"° of lfW lftt«'WlaGn.el lfl~\H' ltE.,,YOAIC METS S.--t Ml~•ScOO ­Ror I.ff ~. poio.n, IO T-.M• OJI ,,.. 1 .... .-........... ~ ST lOUISCA•Ot-U -Wtol-"-Fr-.t1rt1 __ _ SAN Otf:Go() PAOJIE$ Wtl _.. ~ •l'CI J -. E~ ootc.,.o , -II<• S•Nt. <4ta.t', to ....... of ttw P._,hc. to."...._. P'OO'TaAU ~ ....... "-SASltATCHEWAN •OUGHlillOE"S - S19...., Tom "ou..u. "-'"Do<• ,.,. ,.,._..., olNM/W WC,ll ... -11100 ........ .. 1 ........ -.. .. MOCJCaY ...__...,"- NHL _, -_...,... (,otll ... Ol- OJI ,,,_. --. -MOU ~ttf"'· ,...._ ·---... -.-...cw NEW VO-IC lllAHGElllS -S..-0 Tom L Atdl•W, Orltf~. ~ 4t\~ "'"'to H•• H•••" o f tf!t• A~l'1<•1t He.<'•• l•-SOCClf• .... .--...-s.c-~ t os.MOS -~ ,,,_ .. ~ .,, ... -fist. torw•rcl. ~s.c:-"-. CLEVEU>.NO GQ4iJIA.S -s...-lMlll' s.-·<.~ PE NNSYLVANI A STOffEflS -~ "'"'° o.si1 .... -~. -llllCll llo<.e, -·rd. ~01 APP1'~AN STAff _,._..,.,. r•Sl9fl4liofl OI JI'"-... ·-1( .. _ OHIO STATE -...,_,,,.M .._ ,._. t10ftt. of O.Obf• Wth°" '-••4 •Of't'M'" t l>•.-•l lMll co.ell •l'CI S-(.ol1tn•. -......,•n•val~1c..-1> \T PFTERS E.n-llW <Clfttrt<I of 800 0 ..-1ot, -IMlll•lbfll <N <ll -., ... , . SmfSeeb S&ATrLE -'1'be Calltonla • Surf, loctiR1' 111GN lab -ft• plorer partJ •••kl•I tbe No~ P...,., m.U. b.a 1ff0ed IOJouna to tbe Padftc Nortbwea( Satuday !'11bt to face a.be Seaw. Sollll den. Tbe Surf. com1nf fllf a J.1 vie· torr lD laat Saturda1'1 ,Noftll American Soceer Lea1ue GS**' 1n Vaneouver. m~ hive trouble reeog:nh:lnc t.bJa week'• oppo11 • tlon. An'D ms81NG the NASL pJayoftl for the fint Ume lD ftve years, the Sounden UDderwmt a I ace lift. A new owner (Seattle conttructJon executive Vlnce Coluccio), n ew coach and several new players have been added. One of the newcomers, Rocer Davies, scored the wtnnlna I08l in lbe Sounders' 1'0 overtime victory laat Saturday •&abut Detroit. New coach AJan Riot.on guided the Tulsa Roughneck.a last year, and his first order of buslness in Seattle was to make a few deals which bro u g ht l>aviea , goalkeeper David Nish and Jack Brand from Tulsa to tbe Soun- ders. OTHER NEW signings include English first division midfielder Roy Greaves, Swedish interna- tional defender Reine Almqvist and St. Louis native Greg Makowski who played 28 games for Allanta last season. Me anwhile the Surf ~nters game two or the NASL season with everyone healthy, except Stephen Feeney who s\.lffered a ligament injury in the Van- couver ~ame. California's trip to Seattle is the serood of three road games to open the NASL campaign. Next week, the Surf travels to Tulsa MD Suffers Track Setback Bi.shop Amat banded two-time derending champion Mater Oei its first Angelus League dual meet track setback of the year Wednesday, a 62-~6 verdict which wasn't decided until the final event. A victory in lbe mile relay secured B1abop Amat •s win and left Mater Dei wttb a 2·1 record . Bob P1aDta woo the mile for tbe Monarchs with a 4 :35.3 showing and added a third place in the two-mile (10:21.8) which was woo by teammate Mitch Eddy (10:08.7). Eddy is a freshman. The Mooarcbs' Craig Carlyle collected a first place in the high jump with a 5-8 eUort. He also added a SttOOd place in the long 1ump with a mark of 19-3. SALE! SALE PRICES GOOD THAU APRIL 6, 1980 Extra cooling protection from overhe•tlng. No.3513 1 '~ 95 No. 3515 61' 12 7~ 36f1. lS11 1615 K-~ ... ..., Pc..m1111~ e, Siiicone Fonn+gHke~ NOW ONLY 229 a OI. TIM .. " {ll).Everco •• ·auto Thermostat -------. .... ,,,. 21• FREON CHARGING Kool Kit lnctudttct.Mp. otft,tlppet, 4~~ 14 C11L Ff'Mft. Magnetic - Retrieving Tool 18~" long .. i.acopes to 29~". Fuet· Filter sin to flt most care a light trucka. -----~ NOW ·525 ONLY ... GF .. 1 221• Fram Ex tr.Life Air Filter No. CAI 141f'l, 180Pt.. 1..,L, CA 803. 106. 324A. 111. No'aCAm.t11.m.MDA ...•....•... 3 . . . . . . . . . .. ,....,...... KC'S OTIS BIAOSONO SCORES TWO ON JUMP SHOT. Portland Falls Sonics Shake Playoff JitterS From AP Dispatches SEA'ITLE -Although the Seattle SuperSonics a re defending National Basketball Association champions, veteran forward Paul Silas admitted t.o some openine night jitters as this season's playoffs began. ••1t was kind of rrtgbtenJ.ng when they came back and got t.be momentum,•• Silas s aid after watchulg a 19-polnt third~uarter lead melt t.o four points in the final penod before the Soni~ pulled out a lID-110 victory Wednesday over the Portland Trail Blazers "If we lose the game, then they've got the advantage" in the best-of-three series, Silas said. Portland plays host to Seattle in the second game Friday night. Guard Billy Ray Bates with !>even points and forward Kermit Washmgton with s ix led the Portland rally rn the hnal penOd, when Seattle made only three field goals. But Portland's tenacious defense, which limited the Sonics to 17 percent shootinl; in the fourth quarter. paid a pnce by sending Seattle to the foul line 20 limes. The Sonics sank 19 free throws S-. ltise i• Plaontiz PHOENIX -Cotton Fitzsimmons. coach or the Kansas City Kings, isn't one to mince words, and it was no different after h1s club lost a 96-93 decision in its playoff game against Phoenix. "Tbe Suns just did a better job," said Fiusimmons. "But let's face it. they're a better team, the record shows it. But that doesn't mean we won't show up at home Friday. that we'll mail in the score." The Kings face a must-win situation when tbe besl-o(-tbree Western Confe'rence first-round series resumes Friday in Kansas City. Game No. 3, ii needed, would be played Sunday afternoon in Phoenix. "It'll be another deCensive game and hopefully it'll be our turn. finaOy," added Fil.zsimmons, whose Kings have lost six in a row to the Suns this season. Kansas City sbot only 30 percent from the field in the first half, and Fitzsimmons acknowledged that his club missed a lot of good shots. "You just can't have your scorers. Scott Wedman, Phil Ford, and Olls Birdsong. go four for 22 in the first half and expect to beat tbi~nix club," he said. PHILADELPHIA -The Washington Bullets left Philadelphia , asking themselves, "Who was that masked man?" The Bullets came to town keyed to st.op Julius Erving in the P llrst. of their three-game mini-playoff series against the • • Philadelpbja 76ers. • Instead, a guy weariftg a mask almost blew the Bullets out or the building as the 76ers won 111-96 to take a l ·-0 lead. The masted • • .man was 7-footer Caldwell Jones, who scored 18 points and, more importanUy grabbed 26 rebounds, almost personally controlling • the tempo of the game. Jones wore a plastk mask to protect a broken nose be suffered • recently when elbowed during a game. · Wednesday night, Jobes twisted bis right foot in the final two • minute& amd bad to leave the game •• He sat on the floor in the .. dressing room after the game, the root encased in lee. The injury to Jooes sllgbUy tempered the 76en' elation over tbelr vtdory. Tbe players were concerned whether Jones would be • ready for the aecood game of the series on the Bullets' home court • iD Landover, Md .• Friday night. •• .,.. areie •• ....... • HOVSTON-In frontier military terms, the Houston Rockets' -tblrd quarter defense tactic against the San Antonio Spurs on · • W.U11dQ allbt could have been described u cittll.na the ··--· -Tbe llock.U, riddled by the aJeek nmnln1 Spun 1D tbe nnt bait, •uddenl.1 atlffened lo the tllird quarter and ev..maally amotberect &be Spurs, ~. in a flnt·round plaYolt 1ame 1D tM Sa.mid. . .. We decided t.o defad lbe fort." Houston Coach DeJ Ranta said. ·~ l'Q'I dul tn and fouiht in tbe tb1rd quarter and It pald off. - Qearse Gervin, tbe thre&-Ume NBA 1coriq cbampkiia wbo was held to 19 polnta by Rocket curd Tom Hendenon, wu uted lf tbe RotUU Md ever C::-better defenae. · ''Nat ltnc. theJ'•• OD tlDa Mrth, '' be l~~ly ... ToalOt ..... f1I tboM .._ .. -=; 'were able to ..... . f...._ AD w .... to do ta t.un balk . • eoaktll't do Ullltia .... tldrd q....-,, 1'be Rcd9'1 trailed by nine polnfl, 51"'2, at balft.lme wttb ltar catef llOMI KaloDe slowed~ apraiMd ankle. w ~~,.arpl\y~lnled~r~~ ;Gbatt. crucial polnti to U.. atart • tbe wilmlDI rall.J. ) ., ALIMN LOm.Un Sotr1 c1e:ll.':''i:":c"Newpon to baenada '/.._ nee, OM of \M wwtd'I '1'1•ttll f ...... ~. bu been Ht for lleeda7, aeoordlDs to Jul')' •ram•, pnUclent of UM Newport <>c.aD Salliq Mlodatioo <NOSA> tpOGIOI" of tbe race. BOAUNC TllS AJllOSNI' llAIDID ft.11n 11 IMW Udl 1tAl'J ~ .. l.18 boats of et.a~ Ml 18· TIM OeND be· toa ,,_ OIOllf) ... M 0.... a.c. Jal ANocllaUoa <MOL\)· ......... .. bMa .Um1a.lt.ed from UM 19,... ... to llM lmall DWDber of_,.. ID 1'eceM yHra. . · At u,. It.art ot ta.. race •• 11•dt .r •JJtttatora crowd tbt beael•• of UM Balboa ,_tDMla1• tbe JC1 ad tM a.hlffa over CCIRU cW •ar to •etcb dlle Jaetlta By a beer welabt of number•. tbe Eoteoada race -a1lo facedoualJ tnowo aa the ••eacblllMla derby .. and the "race to Huuoap" la tbe l•r1nt lnternaUooal yacbt l"8Ce lD the world. Mou. senera1 dW.nna.n. n. oaJy ebule from ...-,..,. ll tbat tben wW bl onl1 four di*"-ln· atead of tbe CUltom•ry fin. Dtmaou acbeduled for ttaru are tbe l&UrnaUoul Offabore BWe (101U. P•rfolmance Hu- dieae RadDI n..t (PHRP'), Oceao Rae· lnl Catamaran <ORCA>. and the Aodent Ma rt.oer P1eet. maa.vvmaa for tbe atan. - AU of the 7lacbta do not l&aft. Ii tM same time. Th• nrloua eluaea wt~a U.. dlvlalom start at 10-mlnaa. .....,. ... "° tM tut claM at.art.lq at I p. aa. 9r dl9t Urne tbe vut nett la lprud .,._.a wtcle f'•panae of ocean from Newport \0 Da.oa Point. TU 8'1'An OP •O&E than !500 boata off the Ne-.port Jetty eacb year attr'acta tbouaandl of 1borealde apeci.t.on. Tb.la wtU be tbe 33r'd year of tbe ~mile race to the s.ia California fiabina relOrt LA-Tahiti Yaeht Race Canceled The Lo• An1e1ea-to-Tabltl yacht race, the loaaest renlarlY· scheduled l.nternaUoaaf yacht race in the world, wW not be beld tblsyear. That waa t.be reluctant deciaJon of the TranapaeUic Y acbt Club board of directors after not one single entry wu received by the Marcb~deadllne. THE TAHITI &ACE baa always been held on even-numbered yea r s. opposite from the Trans pac Los An1eles-to- Honolulu race, al5o sponsored by TPYC. The lack of entries was a blow to TPYC Commodore Hugh Rogers and the board inasmuch as more than 30slcippers bad expressed in- te rest in this ~ear's race when the invitation and entry forms were mailed out in January. Rogers said the TYPC board "'as at a 106S to Cmd any defuute reasons for the sudden lack of Ul· te rest other than the possibi.l.ity that it was due to the unsettled li S erooomy and the cloudy political climate all ov<"r tht! "'orld. THE TARJTI RACE was first s a 1 led r rom San Francisco in 1925. Twenty-eight years elapsed before the second race rrom Honolulu. After it waa taken over by TYPC it was sailed from Lo5 Angeles oo an irregular basis in even·ownbered years -usually when enough skippers petitioned TPYCforastart. Jt became a regularly - ~cheduled bierutial race in 1968 but entnes were up and down. In the 1978 race there were only four entries. ln the heyday or the race. thf' e lapsed time Cro6Sing record was s e t by the 72-loot k e t ch Ticonderoga in J.964. The rtt0rdof 17 days, 7 hours and 57 minutes s tUl s lands. Originally the start of the race was planned to allow they achts to reach Pa~e. Tahiti, in lime for the island's Fete Nationale. climaxed by BasUlle Day. But because of the length of the race and the long uphill climb of getting the yacht.a home. it u.sual- ly meant skippers would spend the entire summer. and crews were hard to get for that length or time. OCC to Host Benefit Run Orange Coast College will host its seeood annual 10-kilometer scholarship nm on SUnday, April 27 rn Huntington Beach. The event ls designed to raise money for OCC s tud e nt Single-handed ~ace Set Tuo Newport Be~h Sailora. Compete Two Newport Beath 1a1lon wlU be •IDODI tbe lt dart.o1 aklppera wbo wtll 1et the lltart Ing 1ipal at lhrtna det Rfly Friday for a 300-mlS. 1lntlf' handed race around the CbanMI l•laods Mike Kan., vetuan •lntlf'· bender ln raultibulla, wlll be et the beJm of b.la 5Z·foot trimaran. CruNder. and Brad Avery wlll be •allina the Tartao..ca aJoov Rapeer. The criA-croa coune runs from Martoa del ~Y t.o 81.abop ·s Rock. around San Clemente Island. Be111 Rock, Santa Barbara lalaad and back to Marina del Rey. MOST OP THE BOATS. rang- tng from Z1 to 48 feet, wW take at least three-days to compl«e tbe course. depending on the winds. although Ranger and Crusader are expected to fUlish earlier. Dan Byrne and Chuck Kite. race organizers from Manna del Rey. bebeve it is the longest single-banded raee ever to be sailed in local waters. Organuers of the race hope that it will lead to the formatJon or a single-banded racing or· ganiz.alion similar to t.be Sing.le· banded Sailing Society of San Francisco which is sponsoring a Plemty Lei t race to K.MW. ltawau .Urt.ll'IC June 1D Al >e.i a h•lf down 1aUan ln thf' upromlng Marina del ky r•ce ar• •n~red In tbe tta... Pacific riff. lncludlnt Kane and Avf'ty &ANE HAJJ DON f'! ('0Mtder8 ble •In-"' h•~ ••lllnir. tMlud Ina the W76 OSTAR race from England tn Nf'wport. R I Hf' fa llf•d to c-omplf't'" the rece beu1nw-of a brukdown '1f'I hi• lrlm1ran. Sptrtl of Amf'rlc• Ratt commltt.. chairman for the Marina d•I Rey race la Davkt liolMr, wtM> b .. .._,. the cooperauon of th• 8ouQ1 Coa1t Cortnthtan YHbt. Club • rvn1tln• the race 1'be yechl club wlll r~ t'hue and patrol boa&a for tbe C'OUIM •Jld 1"11 proride nd'° com mwrtcaUorw wtth the .,..,. ho all u well u the racers .. Smallest boeU ln tbe nee are two C•es Santa Cru-2'11. 0. la betos aalled b1 At •~ of Loni Beaeb and the otber by BW Foat.er. Redoodo Beach. Easter Regattas Slated A glance at tbe Southern California Yactltlnc A.saoc:UlUon calendar would indicate that moat sailors will be observing Easter Sunday on the beach. Two Orange County y:icbt clubs have S<'heduJed Easter ~ gattas oo S1turday. Balboa Yacht Club will C'onduct 1ls Easter regatt.a for aJI classes on inside and outslde courses on Saturday, and Capistrano Bay Y acht C lub wall h ost Perfonnaatt Haodscap R.acang Fleet <PHRF> yachts for an East.et' ttptt.a Satun1ay. South Sbott Yacht Club 1a the e~ception. It has scbeduJed the ftrst race ol tt.s W·Polnl Serie9" Sunday. Newpen Harbor Y-aelit Club is hos t lo the 5-0-5 district C'hampioosb.ip tb1a week with the final race Friday. The r e are no regatta!> scheduJed ror the weekend in the Los Angeles-Long Beach area. and ooJy one in Marina del Rey v.bere Del Rey Yacht Club will C'Onducl its Sunday Sklpper5 ~nes oo Saturday. Th~ clubs in the San Diego area have s cheduled serie6 f!'Vents and only one. Santa a.,. Racll\& Assod•kW>, will be beld Sunday , .. ---RESIDENTS Wat.ch Snow, Not Calendar Racquetball Toomey Set Orange C03!>t Collt-ge's Uurd annual Children's Center raC' quelbaU tournament w1ll run Saturday and Su.n · day . April 12·13, on OCC 's 13 outdoor courts. ARISE VOfE NO ~ D By DAVE CUNNINGHAM Ol-0...., ..... ~ Tourney pl"OC'eeds wUJ be used to benefit OCC's Children Caller. BobSpreen Por most Califom1a skiers. this is 1t -the final week to squeeze out one more downhill nm. one more oordic journey « one mpre challenge of· the cornice. The skiing is eood at some spots and not so good at others, but most resorts will keep t.bose l1tl wheels spinning until Sunday. Tlm Cohee of Soow Summit says there lS plen- ty of skiing left at bb retreat in tbe San Bernardino mountains. _ ••U)()K t\T THE SNOW, not the caJeadar, before you decide t.o bead for the lodge permanent- ly," Cohee advises. "Lut. year at this time Soow Summit wu down for the seasoa. Noc. so. this year.'' --c:--- Competitioo will be .-~~~~~~~~s held in A. s. and c ~LOW COST- clauificatioos in men's CAREFREE SAILING and women's sin1les ~ft•·•eo.\ra· and doubles. Entries are .._.,....,......._ limited wit.b fees at SlO ,,_.,..,..,.. per sin&1es entrant. and _._MA.•~ SU per doubles team. n r •CIWle T ropbies will be · ....._~~-Allly~ a..., awarded to winners and --· ..... ·-y.-vt! MONn: runners -up in eacb 2wo.,_. event. For more In--_,_.,..,,"-"" form atioft. call 556-5999. __,...__,. --1-.cMe • Most Southern California resorts got a li&bt r----------. dusting of new snow this weet, beJptnc improve s.41 w tr ... yew Md skis fast wfttl • IMw SlcUftl dMsffled ad In tM Daily PMeit. conditions which were deteriorating rapidly. The new snowfall gave them the boo8t they needed t.o make lt through the E,.ter botidays. '42·5'71 Fartber north, mott ski re.orts are also plan· ning for tbe traditional shutdown after Easter Sun· ~:::::::::::::::::~1~~~~~~~~~ SKIING a scholarships. The race wm day, but a few have suitable conditions to continue begin at 7:30 a.m. and regi.st.ni-beyond that. Uon will run from 6-7 : U . Entry MAMMOTH MOUNTAIN, Alpin..f Meadows fe~ihse$S.out -and-bac'-course and Sugar Bowl. for wtance. all plan to operate .. through April and lnto May. Alpine Meadows will begins just north or the Hunt· keep tb1ngs bumming uoUJ Memortal Day. ingtoo Beach pier and follows The U.S. Forat Servlce's Sierra Snow Lab at paved bike paths a long the Soda Springs says that area bas received• 1reater beach to the Santa Ana River snowfall this winter than in any seasoo of the put Jetty. Runners will finilh bac~ 13 years. at the pier. ~as moat ski activity calendars JO blank Awards will be presented to with \be flrat week of April, Aiplne Meadows bas the lead.blg finishers in each of penclled tn commercial industry races April 28-29 17 divtsloas. A total or 100 and tbe llt.b annual Tahoe Mastera Cl&saic May 11. awards will be presented. Kl~ bu also put aome late-season activi· For more lnlormation, phone ty on its docket, lncludinC a "Learn to Sid Sprinc 556-5765. Week" April 13·11. Tbe Tahoe area nllOrt bu Dodgen' Roeter Trilmned to 27 VERO BEACH, na. (AP) - Tbe Loa = DodlWI Ul· nouneed w~1 th.at rtcbt· banded plteber Joe BeetWttla hll been Hnt to tbelr Al ....... qu• farm dab ol tbe Padfte Coutl.Aque. • nearl110 feet ol snow pack on t.be sround· mKW00D ALSO llA8 I full aienda for Eaat.er week. lneludiq an oa·UOW· aolU*l same Friday and.an eu·ud·•poon race Satl&l'daJ. Baell· ln Soutbem California, lloUda7 Hill ll amoni thole reeorta plannl:fu Ul Sader •U bunt SUnd&J, c.rtalD prm •UI win tbe llDder' a T· abirt OI' boot ne.k. Ub tbe ~ Wrlditwood ~ RoUdaJ HW must mm do with ._.. than ao U.cbel of packed snow. u~ Ideal coodltJom, that =t be p1eety, l1oee ,_ cm1Y Mi oe tbe top four , but eoedi· Uona around Soutbeltl CallfCll"Dla aN 1eneralb lea than kleal. We'll Telt Y°"r C.lt>u retOf' '°' $6.95 ) BUY DIRECT FROM ORANGE COUNTY'S ONLY CARBURETOR MANUFACTURING PLANT • 1,000's of units ready tor 1mmedl1te • ••chenQe. each flow tested to provide mulmumquetlty1ndgasml'"". • All ~ton Must Be Oft h C.r • We CIO both For.Ion & Oome$Uc CAUV'aETORS ARE OUll ONLY BUSINESS 830-4320 OMJME"rl CARBURETOR ~-· Tbe move trimm•d tbe Do4 ... ' ro1ter to 71, !ncludinl left·banded plteben Dou• Rau ud TerrJ hnter. wbo wUJ bot.It op.-U. ...... UM ........ l1ft becl .. tMJ'N IW.l '""*"'· tn11rom-~. 111'. aDA AT BIA& YAU.SY ll DQlliq CMat IXCMANQE, INC. all ~ atop9 for It.a Easter ..-c:oeNbriUoft. bat ff] nan YI.-CkMde Ull wlth the team ll DOD· '°'':~Uber Steve Howe, a left· 1fbo ls J.iHD a.D ft• ceu.nt '9Mt ol m•ldnc tbe NI· Uooal Leque club U I N ........ l"tlMrt bee .,........ *1 dl'11111, ~ eontetts, ~...., c.tt. lln bands, ~ fl1inS C!GlllMU Ud a torebU&bt Moft.ttwv~.7:.llM:11 parade. ....., .. , Mt. Bacbeior. dl.lplt. ;a MlltbJ bluket ol 100% Kn 1..:.....1 "-..:.b -~· IDOW~ ii......, ap fw a.,,.,..,,. 1di¥i• OW euge in ~ W'el0r8 ty IP>' 11 -tbe-unual poa.pedal.pejcll• race. • ______ , _______ • __ ...., . ......... _ .... _ ....... ,.,.. .... ~----.. -.......... ..... M I ·----..-.- -~I~ Doubtful ' ~mething To Show? By FRED ROTHENBERG U'-'tWri• U there is a summer Olympics, if members of the United States team go and if NBC televises it, producer Glnny Seipt will have something to show for nearly three years of work. Aa it loots now, the Moscow Games will sur· 'rive wit.bout Ameri~an athletes and -almost cer- tainly -wttbout NBC. So much of Selpt's pieces as NBC Sports' senior features producer will never see tbe light of day. ... NllC WILL RECOVER around 8S percent of the S61 million it bas already paid to the ln-t.ernat.lonal Olympic Committee and the Moscow or1•nlren tbrouib an insurance policy. In all, between $10-lS million will not be recoverable. But wbo can relate to tbat klnd of money anyway? Beside$, NBC ia a giant corporation; it will mana1e. Does anyone expect Fred Silverman to . start taking a bus instead of his limousine to 'work! But what the public can understand is &eij)t's · aeme ol Joa • .. ,.ll mlu people aaytag 'Wu that your piece! Tflat waa terrine~·" aald Selpt. "I get my ticks from tba&. II)' )1Mees don't produee ratings.'' ID A...-t ol 11'1'1, Don Ob1meJer, executive prod11eer ot NBC Sport., uatped Selpt to -........... tbe Ol;Jmpk teatarw .=:-Ber Job wu to ..._ NBC a rw;r¥Cltr ol • tbe kind ABC calls "Up Close and Person.al". . TBESE SBORT PIBCES complement sie Games cmeraae of winners and losers. They're._. alPtful and proftde tbe human touch. It's always Sl'ORISONTV nice to be shown that tbe athlete wbo just performed like superman b really a homebody wbo bas nothing to fear from Kryptonite. "It's a shame that these athletes who have worked so hard are not going to get the exposure tbey deserve," said Seipt. "The public will never see that extra dimension beYond bow fast they can rua." Like the piece she did with star swimmer Mary T. Meagher, a teen·ager whose Olympic sacrifices included leaving her family in Ten- nessee and following her coach to Akron, Ohio. On the day she moved in with an Akron family she bad never met, Mary's mother comforted her by saying bow clean and comfortable her room was. Then another maternal instinct surfaced: "Make s ure you keep your room clean." AND THE PIECE on the American women's volleyball team. ''Their motivation ls basically an Olympic one," Seipt said. "Their workouts are by far the hardest physical workouts I've ever wit- nessed. With all the spiking and diving for balls that go on, one woman bad a permanent bruise with a cut on it that never healed on Iler hip bone." Or American decathlon star Bob Coffman, whose wife practices the violin because she can't live on her husband's career alone. In interviews, she called him "romantic and flamboyant," while hi.a coach said be was not an easy learner. Seipt and other NBC producers were in the process of editing 150 profiles, history pieces and explanatory segments last week when President Carter said be was prohibiting the export of technical equipment to the Soviet Union. Thal is considered tbe death blow to NBC's hopes of broadcuting tbe Games. SOME OF THE FEATURES can be salvaged. NBC wW show Olympic trials, so some segments can fit In there. Some will pop up on this Saturday's "Olympic Diary: A Salute to the Athletes," and there's always NBC's anthology abow. •'Sport.I World." Selpt bu a hiltory piece on nearly every O)Jmplc sport. For Olympic basketball, she got film of the United Statee' first 1old medal in 1936; when Universal Pieturel •PoMOred the AAU team which beat Cantda lN in tbe.Jlnala on an outdoor court in a rma.torm. EUCB SEGAL DOES A PIECE on women in ancient Olympic biatol')'. In Greece, females couldnti compete or watch. Segal called those . Gamel .. .., parties." Eveatually, women were ; • allowed to participate, but their sprints were ! · a.hrQ'I lllortel' 'tban the men's. Times have not : : c~ all that mueb, be polnta out. Today there ~: la DO wome'1 Marathon. delplte Grete Waits' -.... ~-·-.._..._. DUPONT GAS BOOST El 10,000 ............... ..,,.., .... ~lllW.l" IO 11.S• .._.00 l900STUI .,., ... ~ «JOO .... =~~,·"ors• ... ,2 ..... ,,., .-ct .. ____ ..._..__. = re1ull1). MECHANICS AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION FLUID ~Jf F80fdMotor7C MoUt Corc>e • OT. ._ ____ nycn.1481·M CAN At --r;c~ "~! 'fl»t!J' -~-'!. --·-·~ " ~ - . ..: I . •· '<' ~ .. ------.. RAC .--11!!!!1111---. MARVEL MYSTERY OIL ..-----... 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(~ .,,., -.c-•" rovr rl!l•oadi"Q ptCJ<.n"I SIZE 685x15 E78x14 B78x13 C7Bx13 078x1!l F78x14 G78x14 H78x14 G78x15 H78x15 PRICE 2,.n.-2,.u.• 2 .. ,, .. 2 .. ,, .. 2 .. u.-2,..._.. 2 .. ..... 2 .. ..... 2 .. .... , .. .... , .. .... 2 ... .. FET ~ -.111a FREE! 2090 60()x14 F E T 6) TRUCK RETREADS ,.........., on -"' ..._ ~ ..,_.. tuoed lor ....,,... -It\ ... _., Ao· ~ 11¥ Osc•-• ol T••--1. "'°· _ _.._on_..__,_ __ 3ft~, ALL SEASON RADIAL WITI Tll 30,000 MILE 11non111 WAllAln SIZE PRICE FE T Haelll<"'QlOCXX>,.,...Atp_..,.,..,._~ .... illCI ----------'*-9 9llCelllnl loed Qfa>onQltf()n It\ ollmc>SI 6 any.......,., p~ 5'19C1fUl10n5 ~tot . 3 more .. ~. oorrooreo _, ,.,.. Q)l>o 600-14(120 .... NO TRADE-IN REQUIRED 7()().15/ 120 650-161120 n .u 27.25 n.u .63 Sln.cttOn -... l'QllonQ .... ~....., ~,,,...sav~ Two~bOOJ~& 52 ""° lcitrgle• l)ejb ~ to~ ll S'"OOll> ~"'iill'~~ 750-16/120 800-16.SSGM 875-16.SSGM 950-16.SSGM 63 ,..,. & ~ .. bodV SIZE PRICE FE T. 29.11 M.SS .... .57 65 .88 P185/75R13 41M 1.87 P185/75R14 41.• 2.03 P195/75R14 46M 2.19 P205/7SR14 .,.. 2.35 IOIUl'S ...... ,,,.,,.,, P2 S/75R .. -·---.... ·-1 14 .. 2.52 -..,_. ......... e'\ ................. ,...... P225/7SA1• a .• 2.90 ,..~..__ ........ ~ -· _ .......... -._.-.. P205/75R1S 4IM 2.51 ............ ~., ........... ~ .... ··--.......... ..._ ... ,_ P21S/75A15 •••• 2.64 =..-=..~: .. ~,.._':,: P225/75R1s u.• 2.n _ ..... ---.. • ..-... -P235/75R1S 19... 3.07 ., ... .,....._-"_ ... __ •INSTALLATION&ROTATION ~ & e 8RAkE & ALIGNMENT CHECK .5.E. ·-·· ,. 2!IO.•time. ~ SelDt abo bu numel'OUI bow·to pietes, which J Auto PMta, T1rM Md Service .a theM toc.tiofta: : would laave explained to Olympic audiences the m ~ twy e.0; s.uoey M Surdav 9-5 • d)'Damlet beldad many of tbe·OiYmf!lc 1porta. In MIRADA ORANGE ~ ODe, De Adami•, tabbed to be NBC • dlvin• com· ' VI SA ~1 mo.111 Hwy. I• Mhdl EM 1 , 100 N. r-~ (eoou "°"' Poet Ollic.l Tires •nd Sefvlce : meaUltol' ID Moecow, wu belna taqht to do lllJ>• 11131 .. 1 ... , 771'3000 Onl a thl : from tbe blib tower. On the Jt.rat try, he bell1· Y "'t • flopped. wbfeb looked and IOUDded more palntuJ ~~ ~~RK ~9cs. o1Hwy.9,1 loc.tlon: tlaaD _, com.Ion from bia pro football daya. <• MIMrft eoaee '""'K.filllt) m.-.o .. .., IO&l ii tUt wben =.::-one of the <714>"4-1320 COSTA MESA SAN CLEMENTE 1114e.. t1M1 wtl1 dlaeover &My didn't SANTA ANA 1131._. 1tt3S.B~A111 bow before or they'll remember 1ometb1n1 _. 1. .._.a ...-. ~ ipedal," Uld Selpt, wbo ltal1ed !Mr NBC uner =• .-ic1-. .._, RIVIRllDE °"" M .1& Ma an u -~~-J'ye WrMd from tM1 II· ~ m:::r::Atwe.(ft91ltoo.-ol ....... To me, tUt't tbe leddelt pert. People "' 1. ....,.....,.,_ .. Oii-+ • C-188 .._"t ... • 'tfbAt l'Ye fomd out.'' .. ___ .,... ___________ ._ _____ lllmll!,_111._.,, ________________ ~---_,. .... -"' ' ) 50 NlaerUam wbo have n held 1D U. U.& EmbUQ Tebran .... It ... Miaed bY lUlaDU No.. 4. 1tr1 eome from ery part ol tM comtry. Tbey U men tbaD ao lt8ta ..cl the trict ol Colambila bome They ' from t.be bl1 cltiea .like Dttn6t and New York aod from tbe farm commun.iUea ol Iowa •and Nebruka. The bolt.ales are white. black and Hiapanlc. One ls part • American lnd.Jan. The oldest Is over 60'; the younsest is uDder • 21. • • ALll08T ALL THE bostaees ·work for the U .S. govern~ent. About 20 of them are members of the mWtary -the Army, the Navy, the Marines. the Air •• Force. An equal number are civWan employees of the State Department. 1'18"11.'fl •• H1!"9'PAPAUM' fticftard H. Moiefleld The1 have 1eeo H"1ce all o~er tbe ,aobe, in more t.ban a dosen countries, lncludln1 Saudla A.nbia, Colombia, Zaire, Vietnam, Canada, France, Pakistan, Turkey. Greect and Germany. Dnid Roeder, 40. is a lieu.ten· ant colonel in the Air Force. a pilot whose brother recalls· bJm u a perfectionist, demanding a 100 percent effort from every member of his crew. He grew up in Whitefish Bay, Wis .. just out· side Milwaukee,· where his aowoaa ••• AN aaa•• Scout ud a faotbell ...,.. :·J19 WU II tbe ROTC al-ne.... Unlftnlty la 'IN'Mt ...... tM~l'cllft---....-­td from coll•••· Hl1 •lf•. Sutaue, and tbe oou1>141'• two cblldren -• IOCI, 11, ud • dau1bttr, 8 -Jive ln Aln- andrla, Va. Kevin Hermenlnf, ao, a. a ....... ,f.D tbe Jlartoe Cclrpl. Litt Roeder, be JI fr.om a Mllwa'*-1uburb -Oat creek. HI.I paND1I were divorced wben be wulS, Aa a boy, Hermen.lna was a new1peper carrier. At 16, be got a job at a dl.scount 1tore. work· ID• • boun a week while going to tcJaool. He araduated from hi1a. ldlool in Im and entei-ed tbe aenice. vowing, bis mother aald, to be '"the best ~ tbat'1 ever been." DONALD COOKE, Z5. i.s from Memphis, Teno. He 1nduated from Ohio State University and joined tbe foreiin service a year aao. He went to Tehran hopi.ng, eventually, to get a job as a aeololilt. . Richard H. Morefield. :;o, lhe con1ul 1eneral in Tehran joined the State Department more than 20 years ago after a two-year stint in the Army. ·'His family calls hiln Richard. I call him Dick," said If you trunk things were a bit confusing this week when the staff of the Huntington Beach Union High School District moved into new quarters, you're right. New dis- trict offices are at the former Lamb School, 10251 Yorktown Ave .• Huntington Beach. The phone number is 964·3339.. But hold those calls. if you can, until next week. By then, district staff members ex- pect to have everything organized. Mirrors ·In Motel · Probed LINDSBORG, Kan. (~ -McPherson County sheriff's officers are investigating bow a two.way mirror came to be installed in a motel bedroom here. Sheriff Ellis Musselwhite said the in· veatlgatloo began last week wbeo an Arkansas couple beard noises coming from behind the wall of their room and found that the mirroT at· tacbed to the wall was a WE'RE MOVING! WHOLESALE WAREHOUSE ~CLEARANCE OF LIGHTING FIXTURES DOMESTIC & IMPOR"TEO •ONE OF A KIND OR QUA~TITIES • DISCONTINUED & OVERSTOCKED YERY SPECIAL PRICESr Cops End NO MORE COWS KdwynL Koob bla wile Dorothea. "1be tida call him Papa Bear. That's sort <>f a family joke, beeauae he •lovestocrowl ... Morefield, who wu bom in California, was graduated from the University of Sao Francisco and earned a master's degree from the University or California. ''HE SPENDS A LOT of time with the children" b.L9 wife says. "He lov,s to play cards ... He plays bridge ... He plays for ----~p." . i.-.;; ~KGOI>: 41, .. ol two••• bolta .... irew a.,ta Udws , eT, ton . .... snw up on a •mall farm, aad we aD Ud our ebolw to do," recalled Mary Jue ~· qu.llt, CIDI ol Mba Koob'1 ....... ''We Ud cowa which we hid to m~ ... w.-w claiekeu and It • .... .llrll' respoulbllltJ to . take eare oft.be ehickem ... '' •188 &008 G&.\DV.\TED from .r.tup Hieb Sebool near her bome and froqi W~ eou.... a Lutheran -.cbool 1n Wn·erly, Iowa. J11'1 Koob taucht aebool for seven years after leaving eoUe1e. tbea, in 1989, joined the foreip aervice. Sbe aerved in Iran, then in Up- per Volta, Romania and Zambia before she was reassiened to Tehran where she was director of the Iran-America Center. ar· ranClnc educational seminars. Charles A. Jooea Jr., 39, alto &re• up in the Midwest -but 1.n the bi• city. Jooes was born l.n Mempbia, Tenn., but bis family moved to Detroit wbeo be wu 2 years old, lootinc for a better living than poor blacks could ftnd in the South .. Jones Joined the Air Force after high school, serving in Turkey and England. Ke left the Air Force l.n 1962 and, with his wife. Mattie. settled down ln Detroit. "POOR, BUT HAPPY." re· called Mn. Jones. "'Charles had Pldllle Aeeess ••letl AJR FORCE PILOT Dntd M. Roeder gotten a job as apprentice draftsman and I was working as a typist ... We'd bowl, read - readln& wu his No. 1 bobby - and go to music concerts and that kind of thing." Jones wasn 't satisfied , however. He decided to join the fore ign s orvice and was stationed In Egypt, Germany, Zaire, lsrael and France before his assignment 111 Tehran. "He 1s a very good person," said Mrs. Jones. "He 'll do anything he can for anybody.'· PonderosaRoad Opened CARSON CITY, Nev. (AP> - The Ponderosa Rancb, a mock up of wild west history, has run afoul of some real h1.5t.ory . the Nevada Supreme Court bas orctered the reoperung of the old · ·4!fer route" from the ranch-to Carson City. The court ruled against Pon· derosa owner William A An- -derson. He tried to block off the dirt road, which runs off State Route 28 near Incline Village and winds its way over tbe Sierra to Wuboe Valley, just north of Canon. and later as the Tunnel Creek Road. Sili: years later, Richards won a Judgment from Washoe County 01stnct Court Judge John ear. rett to keep the road open. At that pom~ Anderson appeaJed to the SuprerM Court Judge Barrett found that ~ road had been in use at least since 1880. On appeal, the Pon· derosa lawyers argued it never was a public highway BUT THE STATE Sapreme Coan said evidence daowa the road dates before 1116 -nen earlitt than Judce Barrett said. Tbe justices added that the route was declared a public road by state law. ·'There ls no ttldeoce to sll.-- port any theory of abandonment of that portion of the road under consideration in this appeal,'' the Supreme Court said,· adding that any LDference of abanddll- ment i.s "spunous" given the continuous use of the road for more than a centurv AND THE COURT said no autbonty has been cited to !>UP· port a contentJon that a publir road may be deemed abandoned because of use by only a few members ol the public. The Pooderosa Ranch was bwlt in 1.962 and was used in f1lm1og the "Bonan za " televi.sloo series. Io 1967 the An- dersons opened it to the public Blg~Sell ::::--.:. DMMdfta,_DIUt_at.ue ud J'M ...... an llliltant cliblen Ud-lu llallll bu bffo IWMd ualatant vlc• prtlideat ot UM Suk el New,.n. • A.a. .,..,.1 11 1entor tecb.DJoaJ conauUa.nt for __,,..., S.mcee, tac., Newport Beacb. . Total ,..vtnu.1 for tbe U..... mODt.ba period ended Feb. 2t at. Bea&l•J Lallera&eriM, lae., N•wpon S.ach, were IU~ll0,000 compartd t.o ... eeo.ooo ror the Hme period ln 1*19. J • .llelvbl 11 ... 11 vice P""· ldent of ..W A•v•l'Ulla( ud Public RelatloH, Newport Beach. All outstandiae stock of Amerleaa NaUo•al BoHl•I Corp., Newport Beach, baa been MVH acquired a>i Barratt Developments Ltd .. Brit.a.ln's lareest homebuilder. according to a recent an· nouocement by Laurie Barratt, cbairpen.on. Lauel Wataoa is art director of Amuta1 A Hminar on lmprovlnl flnUJc:l•l ~ltk>n la scbedulN"Pril u 'tt'tbe commumtYl'OOtlr « I 1&1&e 8Hla&I ... Loaa, One Corporate Pla.u Drive, Newport Beacb. Tbe Hminar, 1pomored by the Small Bual.Den Adminlltratlon and Women's .llttearcb lnaUtut.. Inc., Costa M•a. wtll feature flnanctal advlters Dold Pllaco and Glbaoa M acDoeaW. ~pt.ratJob, lnformaUon M6-03l7. Actor Claartt.a ee.... will pruent awards at the Nadoaal 8Mllleu Ball of f'a•e dinner April 10 at the Bonaventure Hotel lo Los An1eles. Tbe dlo- ner will conclude a day-lcJni National Business Leadership c.onference expeCt.ed to attract 500 chief execUtlves and officen from~merlca. Jeff llraue, word proceastnc director for Plaor Cerp., lnble, was recentJy booored by of· ficlala of Saddleback College oorth campus in Irvine and the C&liforrua Bu.ainesa Education Aaaociation for bls work with the north campug busloesa center. The center features the latest in electronic business equipment. Si DarlJcll, Huntington Harbour. is vice presi- dent or sales and marketing for Tbe Feldman c. .. a Los Angele~ lighting fixtures designers and manufacturen firm. • I sso,oOo to ssOO.ooo JNOOllE l'MWEIUYSFCONDS .. •• .._....-y,....-· . .._. . •Cr• 1Pdnt . ........ ... • ... --• ~ID• I 't 1 rate ' •1 halln1• • ............... ~ • ......... c.IM ...... C:onroc1 our ... ... ~...,,._ ltK VC)Yr liNnclng Offds (714) 759-1515 MaJllCAN HOfC ~GAOi 230 N-l)Of1 Ce<lte< Otw• O..s19n Plaze Newport Beoctl. C.lllorn11 112680 American Greetings Corp .. General Mill.f Creative Products Group a nd Random House. are spending S5 million this year to promote a new r agdoll. Strawberry Shortcake. Officials of those tir ms are pre dic ting the doll wall become a "household word." Grau,areligioomagarlM~e~rr~eueloMQ. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The magazine wiJI be published lo Newport Beach. U-100 IMSULM TO l.IPUCI U-10 ByTeny Grant, R. Ph. BEAT THE DEVELOPERS VOTE Emeat Bemis is in charge of operations, Ric bard H. Cole personnel director. Tndl A. W a Iker bead of real estate fmance, and Dave D. Barbaap cons umer loan officer at PacUlc Clly BaU, Golden West Street a nd Edinger Avenue, Hunt- ington Beach. Richard F. Smith 1s manager of the firm's branch om ce at Magnolia and Adams avenues. Huntington Beach. I ; -~, ~. if I NO Errect1ve lh1i. pas t ON mont h , In s ulin preparation'! 1n the U-80 D Ame rican PaceseUer, strength 'Alli no long~r Newport Beach, reported net in· HHUuOfl be certified by the Food Bob SllliCC\n come of $4,137.734, or 70 cents per common share, a n d O r u I! y• "'" on revenues of $61 ,419,802 for 1979. That contrasts Admmlstratlon. There is •==-=-==='-==-=--===. with net income of $4,295,857, or 68 cents, on rev-no cause for alarm as enuesof$9.711,000for 1978. diabetic patients now using the U-80 strength will switch to Insulin in the U·lOO s trength. I U ·IOO is a strongtr concentratio n than U·SO. > This action ii. be 1nR taken to reduce tbe potential for patient error that results from having insubn a vailable 10 two dHferent high I concentrations. O ur pharmacy s pecializes in diabetic aids. Ask ~ about your special needs. YOUR DOCTOR L'AN PHONE US when you need a mediclne. Pitk up your prescription if shop· ping nearby. or we will deliver promptly without extra charge. A great many people entrust us with their preacrtpUooa. May we compound yours? PAAIC UDO PMAftMACY FreeO.ltvery 351 Hospital Road Newport Beach 142-1580 ~ ... Daltr Ptlot....., .... ,......,.,.....,,.._.. COfftMUnfty._....,.., l 1iiblaj(111 Nuke Plants Growth Urged WASHINGT ON <AP I -A preliminary Depart· ment of Energy study says federal purchase and expansion of three existing nuclear waste facilities would give tbe nation enough storage capability for the next decade. Tbe storage facilities, nQ.w either in the bands of state government or private industry. are locat- ed at Barnwell, S.C .. West Valley, N.Y .. and Morris, Ill. President Carter's long-range plan for nuclear waste disposal envisions developing a permanent method of storing nuclear waste by the mld-1990s. In tbe meantime, Energy Departlneot spokesman Michael Lawrence said the South Carolina, New York and Illinois facilities could be expanded by 1983 in time for storage of spent nuclear fuel after deep-water pools near reactors are full. Building new storage facilities would take at least eight years, be said. - - - Our Bankers Will Come To Your Office. That's Not Lip Service. --- Promising is one thing. Delivering is something els<:. CommerceBank was founded on the commitment that what we promise. we will ddivl·r. Over the years our experienced bankers have found that the: best way to know your business is to see it first hand. Because your time is valuable and your banking business is very special to us we will come to you. We promise to work with your growth projections and specifi c needs to an'in · at a plan that will accomplish your financial goals for 1980 and beyond. We are not in the lip service business. We are in the full service bank·· ing business. I There's an identifiable need for a bank with the philosophy that d>mmercc- Bank has adopted. This statement is backed by the fact that Commerce· Bank's stock offerit'lg had the hig hest over·subscrie:ion level of any new California b;ink in the last four years. Remember at CommerceBank the bankers are here to stay. They are owners and founders. The bank's future is their ftiture. You are guaranteed continuity-quick action on your loan request. Call us today: Let us know when we can come by your offi~to discuss your financial future. -- 4640 Bitch St~ Nrv.<port Beach. CA 92660 (714) 540·6961 MEMBERFOIC , - ... Your dolllU"s best friend today ••• REPUBLIC'S 11. LOAN. Access to your savings without losing interest. We'll lend you up to~ of your certificate ac-earns. for example. if you borrowed S 1,000 count balance and you avOld the penalty for frwn an ai account, 60 days later you would early withdrawal Your entire saV1ngs remam in-pay S 1.014.79 for an annual percentage ratP tact, while earning interest at their current rate. ot 9'l. So _your effect.Ne annual interest rate ,., You simpty repay at the per annum interest just 1%. (Repub/1e's 1% 15 far le'>'> th.an Tndn4 rate of just 1% more than the rate your &ecount ()(hers charge.) · Every time the Rooster Crows your Money Grows •••••• REPUBLIC FEDERAL SAVINGS RFS •"<I I0.1" i1uo<'•'fl0" SArn'A Al'IA 17th Sot ~~ o4 N~ Fr~ 1714) ~I ~286 -' 11111111 Al'CAKElM 202 Anaheim PIAl.d ~ N cu< ltd!>< rn 41 9~ 8l90 l.AOW"CA l'OOUEL 30212 Clown Vellf'Y p.,~y 171414~ 08~ WESTMJl"ISTER 134 WMttn1n,i~r Mall Bob4 r, 5"r ~qo F._,., 17\4113')4 ~)4' He.ad~:ALTAOL"1.!-U41lN l olo,,.A,,.,. lll.}1791 1281 181'>tlll f'SIJC NOW VOl:R SAVINGS L'iSUR ED l:P TO $100,000 Cal FeclJ • ~ I ·Bill Accounti • • gNeSyou . ·' . . 14.8043 15.5763 · CURRENT RATE Or lack up 123 in our 30-mc111tl1 T-111 Account. 12.9353 mmual yield. · 11o minimum. -Bob Hope . .. ANNUAL EFFECTIVE YIELD EflPct1"c Acnl 3· 9 Anaheffn: eoC> N Euclid Ave (71-41 n&.m2 •Costs~ (2 Offioesl 2700 H8rt>or Blvd 1714) 546-2300/3333 Bnetol St. South C'A>llal P\aza (7Wl ~•El Toro Lake i:oc.t. 24301 Mo1rtands Blvd (71'4) 5ee-0900 • HonrtnQ10l'I Beaic:h: 7222 EdtnQer Ave (7W) 848-0111 • l...9ftewood/Long Beach· ~ E. C..,,, St. Llkewood (213J 4'2~763 • Onlncle/Gl.lrden Gtoll9· The City. 4'050 Metrooolltan Or (lntereec110r'1 of l.arnDeon & Lewi•) (714) 834-8391 • Mall of ~"98 2'63 N Ma'l of Onlnge I 714) 637-4582 Tusnn 17632 17th St (7141838-9066 . ,. . - . . ... • t . . .. WAllllNGTON <AP> -,_. c•· l••=.lD a I09HDmHt• 1:ll1f .. ........ ,....,..._. ~ .... ,.,u ... u 1• .-re.t lat..-..t, , .. "•' offlelal1 '••• ••· --··· in. 1 ,.eat hK'NeR, el· 1..u .. '°4a1 ~.... ta all =~Nlral~= .W...........Olblilk .. t.JGI 11.1 .~to.JT.1,..0lilt.Ulll v ...... ·.~. • ....... ..,... -------~~·u .-, tertet ret. rer ••ltJ·faaU! LW ftlAN a rear aao. ma· Mm• wW,....... a& II.. I It, I•"• lalenlt rU.. I• fOV• th................ . .. en•G•befttd &olDI llofWed Bowevw PHA a.. ...._ ,_ uoud 10 per..at. mobUt ..a. wlU IO up lroCD 1' Th• 1overnment bad ••no ,.rctat &o 11 ,.rent, wlallt tbolte'' but to oeee ..... bo01t combination mobUt bo••· lta lottNlt rat•, Hld Mooa P"°""1 loua •Ill r1H from Landrleu, ~NtarJ of boullq and urt.. developmtllt. Ht Mid FHA Ud VA ratae are dMply affected by other 1ntenlt · ~ Can't Ffeslst Thia Picture rates. Wbldt b•••· IMeo rlllna dram~caU.y IUlce lut October when tb• Pederal Ret.erve Board lnlUated a U1bt-eredit pro1ram ln bope9 of tempertnc double-dl&lt lnflaUoo. THE BOAJlD'S effort.a were lotenslfied last month with a aeries ot oew credit cootrola. "Efforta to briq tnnaUoa up· ~C.r control an 1alnln! ,.red wttb ftve to MYea potma 11om1Dtu.m tdtA. tbaJ•ed111•~raiu~ .. 1e1-1 Uaa~....-IRID ..,,. Re.Mn• Board taklnt it.roar A •I.Dale polDt ii one perClllt ot IDHIW.. to llOW the rate ol the mortc .. e aJDOUDt. srowtta aad 1unty of credit,·· Lalldrilu 1afd. POIN'ft Aal: ooe-Ume "9: "la rwpoue to tlMM actiom. mluma Im~ by_ commerdal commercial bub bave railed lenders to olfHt u.e loea tbey the prtme rate to a record 30 would lDcw' leDdlnc m0011 at percent aa~ltal market lbe lower 1overnment-backed rat.ft ere at cally hi.lb ,... rat.el. rather than hiiber COD· cord1," be uld. "Morf1a1e venUonaJ rates. ralel an not tu.toncaU,y hip OooveoUoaal mortaaiea cur· reeordl." be 1ald. "Mortcace rently exceed 17 percent ln eome rat.ft an DOt iDlulated from tbil parta oltbe country. upward mevemeat." Wbile the biPer FHA aod VA Landrleu said tbe rapid rates may make more bomea mort1ap rate. lncreaaea are available to quallfled buyen, necessary to brlni some relief few people appear wlll1D1 to pay from IOU'lnl dlacount points. the record i.Dtereal. wblch mUlt be paid by people Exiatin1 home sales last aeUia.& t.beir bomea to VA -and month dropped by between 10 FHA·&.cked buyen. percent a.aid 70 percent la 22 Many tellers today an uked melJ'opolitaa areu acrou the to pay more than u point.a. com· country, tbe National Aaao- ... ... ol ... aetlvtty la tM moatb1 abeacl. •• 1ald Jack -cara... ..., ...,. ... ot ta.. . ........ sroup. LAND&ISV, tn •suaoun:~ the DeW mortcal• ratel. HUD aad otbtr Carter admln11tratloe oflfelal1 wlU "continue to IDOllltor the houl1nl market to dlitermiM when and a federal Intervention la necessary." Homebullden are calllna oo Carter to lnject billions of dOllan of emergenc~:!~ lnto the bousln& market to ce-low·lnterest mortpg•. The adminlatratlon. however, says t.b1a would fuel l.nflaUoo and run counter to present efforta to calm credit activity and reduce prices. ( tTl7 MIDI•• A .. •ally PaeTel InereaSe OK'd .~ ......... SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -Padftc TelepboDe wu O'eted an· nual rate lDcrea.les of $227 millloa today, ltariq bulc rates unal· feet.eel but addinl a monthly cbar1e for pbooes and lnc:reulne mesaqe unit rat.ea. Tbe utility bad aoupt $337 mJ.Woa on an emersency bula. ~ BASIC llATE8 WILL remain UDCllaqed for both realdeaUal and ba•ioeu cuatomen, but tbert will now be a moat.bly cbar1e per lutnament oleo cent.I unleu ~ cuatomer owna the telepbooe. Tbe total autborbed by the state Public Utilities Commiaaioo includes $15i.8 million for seneral rat.es and $68.4 million wbicb the company, at ttl dlJcretloa, can charge bual.Deaa customers for competitive termlDal equipment. Judy Ann Wrtter, 13, of the Maywood 4·H Club in Com· ing. cuddles her champion 1earling Southdown breeding ewe at the 34th annual Junior Grand National Livestock Show this week in San Francisco. L. Reed Waters, a Pacific Telepbooe vice president. said tbe lncreue "will hopefully enable ua to fmance the $2.5 bi.Woo coo· struction budget required lD ism to maintain current tervice levels. Without lhiS increase it would have been virtually lmpo&al· ble tQ ftnaDce aervtce lb.La year." . The $157 .8 mUUon will come r'm tbe cbar1es for pbooes and ~························· • Paid Political Advert!Mment • .. . .. . • « « Cltoifw• of... « • "mmill9 co....i..-. • .. A••Htsd...... it • « .. Beet • .,.. •• ~. « • .ctpro• .. ..., « • « • Add 1.-d ....._., « • ,n.clplH to c1ty F · · « • « • • • • • • • • : DICK : « « CARSTENSEN ! .. n.e Qualified CCIMliclah" • « There Is no substitute for experience • • Costa M•sa City Ca •cH ,...., tor by eomm.n .. l 0 Elecf °'°' ~ ii AICflBortd T-. tl tON-18Nd...CaolaMeoa • • • • • • ····~············~········ WANTED DIAMONDS • GOLD Jewell by JoMph ~ d•amonda. gem. stones. gokl ft lllYer trom private lndMduall and es1aW Qntul ~ land ev._. IJon by our expens ~ pnc. peld. t0-9 dally. Sat t~ Closed Sunday Phone today Ask tor Betty Grace or Ooug Kennedy A T~ OI ~I Po-~ 60 \'\AM JEWELS by JOSEPH South Comt Plaza, Coet.a ...... 540-9088 The Highest Rates In Our History t' OM ·'100,000 6 MONTH . 12 MONTH CERTIFICATES DEPOSIT CHECK OUR RATES BEFORE IMVESTIN~ can: Mlf1< Wright Executtve Vice Prettdent 714 7~1801 OF hither rates for message unitl and private HD•. Tbe $1118.4 million can come from blgber cbargee for such equipment as Cntrex, PBX and key telepbooe aervlce. data terminala, answering devtcea. call forwardina and tbeir coo- necliou &Dd lnstallatioo.a. ToU rates will jump me eent for dlrect dial day rates for the ftnt minute up to 30 mila aod for addltioDal m.laute rat.el fOI' atepa between 17 and 90 mUes. Toll rat.ea fOI' coin telepbooes will 10 up ftv. .eenta for tbe Cant three minutes for d.lstaDcea of 13 to ZO ml.lea. Surcbar&ea f« operator·ualated calla inereue by nve ceata per call THE C08T OF NEW raidential lnatallatloa WW jump from SZ7 to az. But lf tbe raideoce bu es.iatinC jacu and uaea a phone center to eet an lmtrwnent. tbe present cbar~e ot Ill will remain the aame.. .' Bualne6S installations will go up from S3'1 to 142 for a alng.le line aod ooe phooe Cert&lD Olbft' charges wlll go up from ZO to 50 percent. o,·er The Counter MASOU .... MUTUAL FUNDS ., . ·: I . DAil Y PILOT B-&eJD'l2 ___________ ..,......., ................ ~--~ ..... --. Wheele~ Dealer Ever .me. Kirt at.rtortU toot Oftt 11.uo. Gqld~Ka}w bl 119, tM u.twrltlnf bu-... oa the wall:_,.... an flat, but cMiDol are bea.w. Kenortaa LI a 1"9Cta.lve mu.-a1.re wbo bu made at .U oo b1I owa. A eareo pUot dua1ac World War II, be ftDl m&.o U.. etwt. alrliDt bmlcw an. the war <Loa AD&elea-to-Lu Vepa wu a faftrite bop>. uct be ma a 1iot ~ 1DOMY u • ~ • aeller ~ ptaaes. , One~ bil apeclaJU. WU t&kiaa Wled:ed plane. ud patlnf11..tbem tocetber so t!sal tbey could fty •t•in (and ~*1eable). ID U. be IO&d Trau-~Uooal A1rllnes, tbe charter canter be bad fOUQiSled, to Tranaamerica CC>rp. for •tock that made blm tbe largest slncle shareholder ln that San Franclaco-bued coo- giomeT"ate OGe of \YbQ&e entities was -and is -Unit- ed Artists. a major motJon picture producer and dis· tributor. B~ being a large l'tOckbojder in a C'OD· glomerate la not Klrk.Kerkoriao's thing. A year later 6e sold bis stock for $100 million. wrm TBE PaOCEED8 and money bonowed from European banks, Kerkorian moved a~ad on three diflenot front.&: be boaOt a 30 pel"CeDt stake ln West.em Airlines, be acquired a 40 percent holding ih Metro-Goktwyo-Mayer (MGM>. and be built the big· gest botel-culno complex lD Las Vegas, the Iatema- UooaJ Hotel. Fortune maga.iJne estimated bis net worth at S270 mUlioo. But tbe stock market crub of 19G-70 bad dis· aatrous COOM1Quences for Kertoriao ~ause be bad his stocks pledsed as collateral for loans. He was forced in the end lo liquidate bis Las Vegas sbowpkJce, the lnternatiooaJ, selling it at a bargain- basement price t.o Hlltoo Hotels, wbicb made a triumphant entry iot.o Vegas u tbe biggest casino operator. KEllKORIAN WAS NOT througb. Biding bis tame and resources and using MGM as bis battering ram. be reentered the Las Vega& sceoe in 1973 wtlb the MGM Grand Hot.el. wtucb •as blgger Ulan lbe lJl. teroational be bad ori&inallY built. Kertoriao sold bis West.em Airlines stock in 1976. lo 1978 MGM opened a Grand Hotel lD Reno. Now it plans t.oopeo an MG~ Grand Hotel in AUaotic City in · 1981. Add.ition.s to the MGM hotels in Las Vegas and Reno att being built Result: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, the company thal ·brought us "Gone wltb the Wlnd" and "Tbe WU.rd of Oz,•• ls DOW more of a gamblini op«:rator than am<>- Uop pscture producer. That's Cttlain!y wbere tbe prof· it.& are cominJ{ from. And Kirtt Kertorian owns 48 ~Tceatof )(GM. ,.. THAT aBJNG TR& cue. MGM ia DOW proeparinc to lake tbe &oil-cal step ol splitting lt.seJI ln two parts. At lts amsu1 IDeetiAs OD ~ 30, sbarebolden will be uked to appllllft • clivisien u.& wW aeat.e two com-pwa wbft'9 there was one beeon. Stock Market Takes Early Holiday Start NEW YORK CAP > -Tbe stock market declined moderately &oday lD a quiet pre-.boliday sessioo. Tbe Dow Jones average of 30 lndustrials was off 3.67 points t.o 78'. L1. . Losers oumumbered gainers b7 about an 8-7 margin In the tally of New Yort Sloct Excbaoge.llated lssues. Analysts expected a quiet day with a long holiday weekend approaching . Tbe marltets will be closed Good Friday. A 20 percent prime lending rate continued lo spread in the banking industry today. Oo1r,e11nA f"era~• '4£W ~ttlAPf F..._ ~•"II> ' 10< Tl•y•W.•. AV > nOCl(I lO '"" OJ;'l-6 ~'r. J:i, ::rl-~ 10 T"' 14'4'm.lllS~.lS14'.11 • 01' U Utt >CD 11 IO:l.ts l01 01 t02 GS• 0 Ol oS \,._ ~JI 217 >e 211 '3 :!SUI-0.61 ·-· . . .... .... .•.•.••. J.lGJ.200 T•-111,IOO """ ••••••••••••• ........ Ul,&ICIO ~ \C• . ..• ... . . .. . .. i.m.JOO ltJaat .'it~b Did HEW 'l"OttlC !API "-J W.~l\ HEW 'r()ttlC 111P1 ·NY SloO "iltt A#r'O• ·-total . . ,, .•10.000 ...,..,,._. W'f • . • . • .. • • l S.110.000 -... ........ . ~·-_,II ""° ... . . . . ",410,000 Y••• -. . . . l4.S20.000 T-.,..n -ll.-0,000 JMI I lo -.. J ••• 9H.IJI l'7't lo Mle •. . 1~.1.eo.000 lt11 14 .S.-... . • 1,llO,l<I0,000 WMAT AMalt 010 NEW "°"It IAPI /44'1r. l AofweoKed T-~ OKMN 1'0 ~ = ............ 1 New WI JI .. •' ' :: :- .. --. .. . • • SHOE .......................... .__ ·-- MISS PEACH ' . . ' l # ~ ,, • ' • e•._l.........,. ..... THE FAMILY CIRCUS "Why does that ham have tocl<5 in it?" DENNIS THE MENACE /.}./>.KE ,ANoTHER MARK, WILLIE~ I'Ve LOST I JO MORE' pouNDS ! ---~-... by Jeff MacNeUy by Mell Lazarius -EVENTtAAU.V, IT WOt.AL.D TU lrN LAP IN OW'. .. l(t~CMeN ~AW~~. DRABBLE by Tom lduk Jff) .5AID HE C.OOL.O DO IT r-OR TWem.l -~ OOUAR5 Fl.AT! .. ., .. /. ~ : ··Old rock mg chair got you?" . . c-~···---~ by Kevin. Ft1Jift 1'u.. St ~~£ 'fQ: 'SA'lf; f \l\~ ({1 &9Ctt l FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE • by Lynn Jotlnston ... (ft)se IF ')fOl> 'RC. WfUQMQ, yoo l.OC*' l'H~ 'bo-Ell'i -T~~ SUftS , Will HElf>! DR . SMOCK ; lwoMENj .; ¢ • ~ } lCNE.L'I Gi~ D'Oef#JG pt!JU(JME OtJ~ ~Te, ~,~~ Wf!CI~ J.ls::ib1 ~,~ OtJ JHIN~. \IVH IC.H o ,:: )IOU GAt-S IS PAI PRY::> "'T'HtSRE:'S A NURSE: I N 1"'HE:RtS I.J S t N ' YOUR PAPE:R Towe1-s ·' by Gus Arriola LU<ERK -J~"~-oot: by George Lemont ' . " J ~I 1 ~ TODAY~ CROSSWORD PUZZLE ~ ~ IN-~ ~' . ACROSS ~ ~ s natnf.' UNITED Feel\He SYNl"•l'e 1 Mt11 S4 Olill WfJCMldly'I Puute Solved 5 Outstnp !>6 °"'*• 9 Boom 59 BlernoSll • l '! , . l I • II ll II II I 14 GI-. piecie 62 Odin, • g , ti a I ' . 0 l • •I• I• I' I• •• C I • I ••I 1 tt IC I• l•I t::=~~l!I ~'4 15 ~ 640.. 18 ~ 66 Seperlted 17 ~ 67 CelHorTM City I I O t • • I ···-o I• I ·-Ttr D T I JUDGE PARKER TUMBLEWEEDS AAAR/l HIM LOSf HIM'S LlmE PIARY, POOR R<JNT! HOW-mA61C! fir'( 6REAf Hf:.ARI 60ES OOT10 'Tt>LJ.! ~ANCY OH, SLUGGO·-- l'M 50 SORRY ~tHl.W fClftHI.~ 5(.lfl""6 by HMOICI Le Doux /by Tom K. Ryan by Emle BusllmHltr ···ALL I SAID WA5 "'MY .... NEW PET JUST CROAfi<EO'\ 19 ~ 70 Rltlter Cendln girt 7 t Seo -·· l • c ti. c • l ' , • l c l I A •• • 0 • •• I C 1 I c l • l •• " . • .. l 20 A.-king-72 Twllgllts . ' ' • D I ••• c ' dom 73 lJMttllCal r I I ••• ' 0 I I 21 ~gp 74Adom •• 0 ·-· 0 I ... 23 ""'*' 75 RoM _, 24 Sl9tlt l\bf.eg 27 Thlilt••• 29~ DOWN a I I I I •• .,, .. • l I I I C , t • 111-. ( . • l • I I ITll-• ,, . ' 0 ' I I •• •• ···-" ,, N la 2words 31 AotlOer 1 Wasted 35 Goddtu Of 2 GtnNn COlll 18 N Y qy 48 Fur pe.nty 3 ''The '** 22 Com !Older 51 Droop 37 PYocllr nount you U'f''·. 2S Mt11. llOJel 53 E~l'g« 311 MM's ntc:k · •words 2& Swellllg 55 Unlnt8"11ted neme 4 Oiecount 28 Fuel 57 Granted 60 Cry 5 Equ.irty 30 Puni1l'8 58 Cwt 42 Fllfl dteector 6 Ollllhoma 32 OmMlntll 59 P1enet " PeruM City 33 Rutllll ,.., 60 Oceell llsh 45 - - 7 P0Mt 34 PIYllial 81 Vesuvtua hinds. Con· 8 Rob 35 Birds produc1 Mertie • 9 Alon Arf:tl. 38 Kind d moes 83 Submwge 47 ProportlOll tO Giiis 38 full 66 Attlml>t 49 Cln. prov 11 At"9fl' 4 1 Medlt~ 68 L-ondon's Old 50 Ofllct WOl'll· 12 Cepn Of Man 43 Hill ., 13 Thote ones 48 ConjUfttlOn 69 Deer's oouttt1 .. ............... BACK ON TOP Dyen cannon M........ ---.,..;-. 80~ (AP) -"Jt •N a 1(&11 Umit an c .... rte.U. JJl ....... alNM'. Jw,..,. •· un ........... ,.... ... JOU ll:eep t..ma c\own lD~l~l'°61 to partiaa. AU of • sudden UM ln· ~U..-.com1q." For abnalt four ye.an U. Cu.non ~a.reel' WJNd. delJ>tle lbe procnlH 1M ~ m ''Bo& a.ad caro& ud T4' Md Allee" <Aca4emy award DOIDtauloo.) Sbe WU uailvtoUtl aom~al tur~l u4 'E Um• lft IOl'tlDI out n.r UI•. • tMou0 t.er OWD elfortl ud a beJp from frleada Uke W arnm Dul· l7, Wapare~erent. SllS aJ:CENTL Y starred and did her own country slntlill lo "Honeyauclde 'Rose" wllh WllUe Nellon. Now she's appeartnc with Robert Blake lo Paramounl's "Cout to Cout," she as an escapee frorp a psycho ward, be as a truck driver who drives her, along with 50 bulls, from Pennsylvania to Callfornla. Sound like ''It Happened One, Ni&ht"? 1be film ma.ken hope so. fbe other day dlrector Joe Sartent was reheanl.ng Blake and Miss Can· non for a scene ln the S.Star General truck, wbicb bot.h stars learned to drive for the movie. Afterward Miss "NOW trl IN style!" &be com· mented wttb a rueful 1mUe. "Wben I thlnk of all tbe boura I spent tU'•:f:...,''Wa: my ba.lr aa a pl, to I • couJ look e tho 1blk.laa <1enU1e 1lrJ1) lD the block! • • "Cout to Cout" l.I no qwck trip for Dyan. She ta.Id ahe bas been a&· ~lated with the project ever ii.off producen Steve 'nlcb and Joaathan M. A voet brou&ht her the script a year qo. Sbe took it to Paramount producUoo cb.lef Michael Eisner, and a deal was made. "I 've been wilb the producUon from the embryo stage," said the actress. "I worked with the writer, I looked at the direct.on and co-stars, l waa involved in every aspect of tbe production. I can 'l be on the periphery anymore. .. COULD I BA VE done this earlier tn my career? No, l wasn't ready. Perhaps I cou.ld have gained control, but control is no 1ood unless you havewiadom<-aodexperience. "Now I have far more compassion for film making, especially ln its col· Jaborative asped.s. It really l.s a col· laboratioo in everything from hair styling and makeup to di~tiQn. Tve got to trust Joe Sargent. Trust goes ..... wttfttbe WCHd•COMNI. '"-·---~ ID an attempt to Nbouad from W down period, Ml11 CUAOJI ••• performlq "I Doi l Doi'' ID O.U.. wbea a call came from Warrm Beat- ty. Heolfereclberthe ro&eoltbetebem· Ull wlfeln • ·~vea Can Wah.•• "I TVaNED IT down three or four Umea." she recalll "which lbowa you bow good my JUd1meat wu." Eventually abe aereed, and another Academy nominaUoo aa aup- portl.nC actress resutted. She con· 1ider1 Beatty ''the best producer I have ever worked with." She followed "Heaven Can Wait" with another huge bit; "~ ol lbe Pink Panther.'• Co1nmenttn1 on reports that Pet.er Sellen can be dlf. ficuJt. sbe remarked. "There was no time with Peter except a happy time." M EA NW BILE S HE acquired another Academy nomlnation: as writer, director and producer of "Number One," a short subjecL Next time out, she plans Lo direct her own movie. . "I think I'm ready to do lt," she said. ''1 can't wear all lbe bats on a movie, and l don't want to. 8"1. I've found that it's better to make my own decisions than to rely on wbat someone e~ bas to say." KOCE Special _,., ... _..._ ...... ,,...~ ........ -... 181M.fll Changes • in TV Viewed "The Changing Face of TV" -a one-hour spedaJ program on the revolutionary changes ln the lelevisioo industry being brought about by the growth of cable television -will be aired on KOCE·TV. Channel SO, Fri· da'Y at 7:30 p.m. The special guests will include Greg Liptak. senior vice presi· dent oC Times·Mirror Cable Television: Ethel Booth, West Coast Editor of TVC MagaZJne. and seminar leader on pay-TV: and Pam Wilson . marketing manager for Trans -Video Com· munications. the nation's largest single cable TV system. to 72 TV viewLOg channels, the program -..;u examine research on ~hat the human saturat.Joo point might be in TV viewing of the futurl' It w11l also look into the im- pact <>n tradJtional commercial tel ev1s 1on , and whether t e le\ 1s1on of the future will become fragmented. much LLke radio today, with programming by networks all devoted to a single spedal lnter~t. cllllnv~I :.::-::::..!.:::- The program, to be repeated at 11:30 a.m. Sunday, will be a Channel 50 public affairs special. hosted by Jim Cooper. It will include samples from new specialized television networb which are now producing pro- grams for viewing by cable TV customers. Appearances will also be made during the program. by Ken Silverma,n, president of Cinemerlca. a net work entirely devoted to th e ove r -SO • populaUoo ; Peter Lauer, West Coast manager of Warner· Amex which operated "QUBE~' tbe two-way cable system in Columbus, Ohio, and Jennifer Casboty, West Coast director of Galavtslon, .a pay· cable network devoted entireb' to Spanlsb·speaking viewers. IT WU.L ALSO loot at t.bt n~ of "su_perstatioo.s" like WTBS in Atlanta , operated by Ted Turner, which sends its local signal to all SO stat.ea by satellite lranspooder. 'c ..... --... 1514 .._.. ........ ~t2S3 ........... --lft'ftl ............. ·MA'nMAU ................ , .. ...UAllft" WD.t>'f1-1lU&9';1S U.Tft9'1-·-,,_.Jf "BEIMG TiiERE" (PG) -,..?:M•--·--,~,. CLOSED ....,,.._ -LAueMIHOINI -PltllCO ..... ...... O-.-•a...di- A IOKI Of OMI INI -ntl YllnOI IWI =c.--...... ... .... """ ..... ........... U1U•.:t-"' MWl11"t ...... ,....._.,,,. .... -~ ... ............. ~ .... --· !!"-f'IP .. ---... • IT WILL EXAXINE dramaUc cban1es ln programming on teJevii.ioo brought about by lbe exi>109tve gowth of cable TV in tbe country since 1915 -a growth that DOW ._. 11 milJ1oo A.mertcan bomea boobd up to cable TV services tbrougb 6,000 separate cable 1y.stem1 • WITH NEW C~BLE technology oow orferin~ from 20 ··A revolutioft ia bappening in what people are seelnc on television. a.ad bow they are see- ing it -and it ts makin& ailJ>.ift· cant changes in the TV viewing habits of all Americans." said producer Jim Cooper. .... SIMAPUU -~~ ...-s llST1I c:MIT Cotl.I Mew *1111 r.wun·c-...wur Wn~ag1.39~ IMM8I MAU °'"'DI 637-03'0 l'Ml .... ,_,MI 'Mlll TIM • ~ V"lft 8J9 1 !iOO .. , . ..,..... W.rt*llW 1191·3693 l:IWUIOI' IMOl ll*CS ErToro ~ 1 5880 "A t~ rJet4dtA comeO,I ... I red.I do recomn.. Id l .'' -· ""' ,..._, . "DtE L.AUGHIMG" IP'G ·'fOXE.S" •"SATURN 3•• 1111 ''THE PttlZIFfGHTB .. IP'GI Daily 6:30 Sot Sun-I 2:3' 2~ BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR-111>t~ •~ BEST EDl11NG -•~ o.u. --2nd EXCITING WEEK!-- SAMTA Pl ltEWPOIT IU~ . Harbor Blvd Or -I n 531 1271 Edwards Cinema 644-0760 I MtUtOll YIUO GUKE Cinema V1e10 830 6990 Cmedome 63,·2S53 •U WCUW.STIR UA Mov1es(714) 990-4022 UA Twin 893-1305 ''A MASS1Vt MOTIOH PtcTIJM EVOO. rT STAGGEl\.S THE SENSES. A ftlm of beauty. quollty ond •xdt~t." ~a -...ci ~ CoUMIK ''A CAPTIVA11MGlY LUSH MCNtE Vmt A~ CA.ST." ~ c-ol 14 Y OAILY 14~ "A SUCC£S$ -A W~K Of A.SSUR£D EUGAMCE:' ~ n.on-.. LOS AHGaD 1Ml "'MUIGKY' ls o vMd spectoct.. on opu&.nt gift ~~· Ak>n 8otM ls ftrstof'Ote." ~ Sholl. MOC·TV "Alon DotM gfv.s on undeniobty powerlul and Imposing ~ In this krvlsh fUm." ~~"°'~~ "'HUl6KY' ls hk.ty to beoorne t~ c:onveno- don piece of the scrMC'\." .....,,._ SortlL V1UA(i( \'OKI NIJINS~9 A~S?t* ''l.ft.:u:m:~··· EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT STARlS,OMORROW (n&Olf5E1 Clllr tttO ,-._ .. •I'!»• ... • tt:IO \ Composer Paul Williams and Kermit the Frog rehearse their Oscar-nominated song. "'The Rainbow Connection," from "The Muppet Movie." They'll be singing and croaking the number on April 14 when the Academy Awards are handed o~t • ' " WlalteBope Marc Singer stars lo ''The Contender," a new miniseries premiering tonight at 10 on CBS. Channel 2. Tina Andrews plays an assistant trainer. llfdt ~~Ant. 111 to -• '*""' bMlg ttweelened by • • 6Mdly dicUllcr !Julie ~ (!_llrt 21 • , .. Olmt:C&L l&.OQ(H L~ It r.-..cs troin Pfil-on Oftt, to ~ • Pfil--°' eftOIMt eort. •O MOM&...,.. Wlltl the lllllp of WI OlilMI • 11'18CMne, Mott! tume lllmNlf lftto • ,_,le cMd gentlemen to court Mindy'• dlllll 1111 II gr-end-...... ~ . ..,. ··~ *Aatrm ~­t 1MO) Robert 8'ac*.. ..... ... BrMd. Blot ...... ~todalw.h nolClrlou9 ~-Al c.-to..--tttn.I .CMOL ... IER' IMO,.... au.it: Wllefft eorw-. .MCMI * * "The ~ Tttp• (1872) "'-* ~ F9)19 [)ur-.y. A INn ............ 1 -.A.lillJtW _lllf'W. OllloM llaflf' ..... M~tt eumtnH th• ....... ., ...... .,._... Oii ... ~._wewilett ----~'"•Wi= ;,.~ ...... WI II ClllNI" .... (1) llMNlt ...... 1!1-"Y .,._._ .......... .... ~twoOf• ...... ~...,,....... L ...... die~ OAllif .. • IWOft llcMI _._.a.c,i.•t~ • ~ COfMlt\tlon. ;1"1MXTIM "Tiie N'ottl ;ro Relle>ond" • 9 ..,..., 11&1.al ""'° t~ denoWs MO • "*' MIO dalrnl ttlel he'' .... II*> ..,_ •• el"/ l'ftoment lnv•d• Ill• ptecinet (R) ....... ~ au.ts: J.-Coburn. J•m•• Oerren. Steve ....... Pet• Margo. ~ --~. SklO Stephen- -..... Blanc-G ENPOY STOM Or George Aectlt>eck .... "°""'oaotwme~ that ..... pieOe~ Q-.okl and windows In ~._. .... NIW\.YWB> QAMI a:t TMe A880aATd ~~he'•tha fa!Mt ol • ctMld, but the mol'-,-.. IO i.t him _._ • JUUAC*.D ANO MOM oatMl'llMY "Old-FelhioneO Olldlen Dinner'' • STAMOAN> "Y OUt1Q Attd COie .• 10.oo •Cl) nc OOHTIJClP (Pl'wmlerel Johnny Cep4of (Mllt'C Singel'). an ~ bolltr, .,,..,.,... '°' hie tnt map ftgtlC ~ en opponent who once befrlelldild Nm. I ·= MGHT GAU.llW -«ltd\, Wiid\ 84lrNno BriQM"A~....._ gllkW .. celled In when • young~· ---'° be•wttdl.. -~'ME! °1llraclcr "' Edi" Soviet dnc1« ~ ~ -Mng In IN UJi. efter SO¥MIC ~ banned hit production or ''Mecbettl, .... ptollled. • NEWICHlQ( TUBE TOPPERS · . KHJ G 8:00 -"Alc~traz Express:· A movte lna~ired by the• Untouchables'' " TV series Wfth -"Rc>l>ert "Staclt u £1Uot Ness and NevWe Brand as Al Capone. KCOP · • 8: 00 -•'The Deadly Trap." ,._.an.IC Lanaella tries to leave a S,PY organization and finds his llf e tn danger in this movie with Faye Dunaway. . '. CBS IJ 10:00 ' -''The Contender." The prenifere of a five·part miniseries . starnng Marc Singer as a boxer seeking a title shot (photo at left, review below). • Do\WAU8UT ~ Due I• Cyra"o de Batgerac. Hwwy VIII end ,,_ the, "'*Y tMlet. • ALL .. THI ,IM/4.Y lvdtille -...., c:8lln tor en entwe ...-~ In order lo pal • compeny pny.i.. cal. • MOHTGAUSY rl'A "-' Of !Mood'' A llOUfNd ... ~ to 98' bed! • hie glrtlnMd. .• ,,_ lM( ~· A pari- lynd men~"* hill ..... Md doc:I« .,. ri...lno en"""'· ''*I~ Holl: JOflnny C•r90fl. Gue.ts: Joell ,.,,..,.., Didi Ven P•n.n. a.-ty Jotv.- --. Mlk• Hoo¥9r I Do\ TING G.Afi'€ 9 A8CNEW8 MOVIE ** ··n.e Men Al The Top" (HHS) Herry And••••· N•nett• ~ wt.'1 he II '*9d 1t1yaw911~ ~-""' ..... ,..,. '°" • 8llCUde wlc:tilft, • -----'* .,,... ...,.. .... l'fli9ll' ... ~murder. (2 hrs.I •HOCWr8t-.om HcloMMCI'*---• eecrwtO.-ctoo-• trorn l(IM. • HOM\'YOOI .. eo.tlng "* ...... ,._, ol ,. ~. "-' ll9e9 !NI he CS! bf1nQ 8 ~ -~~-.... • .. .., ... .,.. .. m .... •-11 • Het• Todey... H•t• T-row'' A~ lo06r et IN~ 'aow'O -tadloectl¥e ....... ffom ~ PGW9f Pl•nt• 1n A_,lce •• pr-ltlld. t , •• a:t POUmwc:.&AN ,..,., llftd ~ tal&e up • -c>•permen'1 crUMde .,.... dlf't goo-.,_.. ~.,., hellrnutdwecl. -~-tHO. Cl) OOl 'lt9) The nwwoer o1 • ,,,.,._. liOfMll beelletbllll ~ -.. ..arciNc ----l!Dge to~WI---....... .,.. ... _.,.. ....... , __ _ I IMICI .. LAUIH I Ok M"CJ II • A_........._ eclW"' _ .............. °" ... to .. Mm 11P tor WI ......... • MHL MOC'ICSY .,,,, fl ltle ~ "'· ... ...,,c_. ... ,..,. • • • .. '\C>Od••Otttl .. (tall~ • ._. ~IOI\. A....._.. _ ....... bumlr; .. ~ .._ M lf'll Na .......... ..,~ ..... JOHN DARLING _, ..... ..,~. ... .....,.._,..,.,,, tv .. &hlll\) t•e TOMCIMOW .,...: ~•t Larry • ..,,A ..,_. OOlllMte en OrtM- .., ........... 10 ............ ...._ °'""' ........ ·'"' • LftN/O.,.."" ... 9'05501 OMll '<nftw _, ~· MfUe blt*ly 0Yer e "" ....... ~ Mrlh: Eddi•'• mlutno l•b reportl .,. ,.,,.,..,: ~ W. !Mk.-• Mllf1llnt con- fllelllon llOolA '* P"8Ql"M-cy. , .... • • • *Abt UNioM "' ..... (IMC)t~ ~."""'~The ~Of NII"*" Uncoln le lt9C8d from ..... ewfy ~-·~to hie I~ In the 1MO ptee6danllel a6eclloft. (2 lnl • MOYIE * * '4-"Thet Men tn ltlel>• t>ul" ( 19681 Horst 8uchhoU, Meno Adotf A p6eyboy helOI en FBI •o•nl, po1lng •• 1 ~.•o-•llld­~ ,,_,.... (2 hnl I ,,. • Cl) tlJ;lt'( .wmAAH. ..,...., HAlllNAM ...., ~ TOll'I lliMO on the coudl. T Oll'I vtlitl hie ~ '°" .:twice, -"' MMY C*)'I .__ IO Conwl'Y Twitty. ~1= 2:21 .... t:m MCMI **"" "Oeolll And The Oeecl'' ( 19321 T allul•h Bal*'IMd. a.-, Cooper. To rid hllnMH Of N• .--""""" • 8tllill> ;....., _, .. Ider In North A.lric:a ~eMfy ... ..... ........... t1 1w .a5 "*'I ....... .. ~ * * * "Frontier Oat" (1M&I ~ Oe eerto. Alld C-. A f1i1111y ..._. r · 11 ._ • ...,. ............... knot _... a noeortoue Clllll.-. (I tw. 30ftl\ I Fridatf• Oayl i.-e Mo.,le• ---...;~:.::...:1:.:EAHOOH=.::.:.::::!.::=== • 1t:OO ••• ..,. .... Of MYM- ture" (111641 Dolt De Fote, Lon ~ JI. (1 Iv~ 30 min) • *** "ToBeOrNoi To 8e" (1942)Jeck Bantry, c.tole l..olftOet'O. A 00-0<.IP Of ectOB OUlemet\.e the NUIS end hel99 an RAF pilOt ..cape. (I IV., 50 """. 1:00~ "Mlnl'MOta 0tct>Mtr8'1 7&ttl ~Concert'' Ootr1ltllck Argento'• "In Pr... Of Mc.-c~ end ~·· Choral &ym. phony No. t In 0 ..... .,. conduCted by ~ Siu-lfJ, ..... ,..,.......8-dl Petty•• (11M) Frantile M9an..~,........ A-.,...,._ ..... -w,., ...... fNIMy, ~ .....,,.on..._.._ .. .. -.en. (1 )Ir~ 30 "*'. by Arm9tr0ng • Batluk Claan11~I L Ing• llnde hill -.. and tMI ol ..... Mdy --to-eel wfter\ he fr* IO br9I* free ol h1a ...oa.tion wtltl I ~~·IZtr&.I • 21TOMGKT Hoa a.t• Ao«letta. 6!) MAGIC METHOO CW Oll.P*11NQ ''Mootl8Cepe:: Hoet-WJ. Nam~. 10:t0•• .... • MAlllD#ECC THEATN: ERMA 00f"ef0<, ™15 15 TH£ HOST Of OJQ 51-()W \.()HN ~UNG! LISTEN. 'M-EN rn; II ME FOO 'YOlJ TO GO~. JU&T RE.LAX~ t>o-ti W~Y l 'M 1DtD I BRING OUT THE BE5T IN P£0PL£! 1J KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles D KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles U KTLA (Ind) Los Angeles '"The eua-Of Dulce SttMI II'' ~ has ~. IWlf'O ~ Md en wnblfiou. young .,.,_ WW1tS 10 ..me ,.., blogrec>ny (Pw1 18 ol 181 ID MAlllDUIECE ™EATM Aeovt A iHING! D KABC· TV (ABC) Los Angeles Cl) KFMB (CBS) San Otego G Kt-U-TV (Ind.) Los Angeles OJ& KCST (ABq San Diego G) KTlV (Ind) Los Angeles m KcoP·1V (Ind.) Los Angeles • KCET· TV (P~l Los Angeles G KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beach l:aO. 9 llN80N 8anlon. the ao-nor ...... deugtlW ~ • Ol'9QMft\ ~-~In• mountain lodge wlttl no ,_. °'food. (A) .. • lME OOOOCUIU F.ilx llndl oac. ,_.. llghtlng ... OOUINmWI In • dll'CIY .. to.., ,.... $AOO Felx ~ to "The ~ Of Ouk• Stl'99t .,.. tPst 18 Of ,., . Thi.s 'Contender' Has a Glass Jaw By PETER J. BOYER LOS ANGELES CAP> -The Great White Hope yarn bas been made into so many movies it's beginning to sag under the weight or its own scar tis· s ue. -With every new rendition, lbe story seems a little more punch-drunk than the last time out. It's Wre a great athlete who tries to hang on too loa,g. The Great White Hope drama should have beer1 retired after "Rocky." · "Rocky 11" sent it reeling. "The Contender," a CBS miniseries begin· ning tonight at 10 on Channel 2, may put The Great White Hope out for lbe count. YOU KNOW THE story -a white fighter, not good enough to be champloo but good enough to pre- te.11d, stirs hope in the hearts ot everyone who's tired ofnoo·whitearul· . . (TV REVIEW) ing lbe bming ring. Re fights bravely, but ls pummeled in the end (and about the face. as well). It's ooe of Hollywood's standard structures, with new twists oc· casioaally inserted to fresbeo it up• bit. "'Jbe Contender's" little twi&t is a black manager for the Great Whitt Hope. Sorey. It's like putting after-shave lotion on a goat. The thing still sllnk!J. Not only is the story worn threadbare, but the execution ls so sloppy and the acting so amateurish you wonder if CBS is airing lt oo a lost bet. MARC SINGER PLAYS the DOl·SO· Great White Hope. Johnny Captor, managing lo come off as an actor pretending w· be a fighter. Moses Gunn is no better as Johnny Captor'.s w aahed-up·figbter-lumed·mana ger. allboJJ.gb be does get the primo line or the opening episode: "He's got one I.bing nobody in your whole stable's got," Gunn says to another fight manager. trying to get hls boy a fight "And that one lbing is why tbls whole turkey town will turn out for him -white skln ... Yessir, I've got what the while folks is cry· ing for -I've got the Grut White Hppe." lets Dinwittie lake It because be feels sorry for Killer's little sister. I swear. "You couJd have put him away:• says Gunn. "I know that." repli~ tbe Great White Hope. •·But torught. there was somelhing more important." 1t •s hard to tell where the k>usy lines end and the lousy acting beains· LateT, when he can't arrange a big fight for Johnny, be slams bis hand to lhe wall in angst and cries, "Ube bad a manager he'd get tbls fight, in· stead or a punched-out &um like me." LOTS OF OTHER stuff is thrown In (tbls thing goes on for five episodes), including suicide, lust and the Fresgo Mob. But what it boil& down to 11 a.nolber prime time soap opera wbose hero happeo.s to be weartne boxing gloves. I have the feeling that "Tbe Contender" will take a dlve somewhere after the first epbode. It WELL, JOHNNY Capt.or g~ the so, perhaps ~!:•J0 White Hope big fight with Klller Dinwittie. but be ~tory can fmaU .. ~ :ts gloves. .,They're Gonna · 'StHle' the Dingltiat --BEAT THE DEVELOPERS \UfE NO • T BObSpreea -""""-~ ...... - LOS ANGELES <AP> Edith Bunker, the "Dingbat" wile in the "All in lbe Family." televisioo series will probably die in the first episode of "Arcllle Bunker's Place" next fall, a production source says. Carroll O'Connor, who played Edith's bigoted husband Archie Bunker, hu said Edith wW not be on "Archie's Place," as the se.ries is now called, 11 it is renewed by CBS next seuoo. O'Connor's production company owns half ol the show. stead of the Bunker home. "Carroll said be wants to kill her off," said a spokesman for Lear's Tandem Productions. No reason was given, alt.hough the show has sue· ceeded nicely without Miss Stapleton. .. NORMAN• BAS agreed in principal that if it Is creatively the right thing to do to kill off F.dith Bunker, then they'll take a look at it ... What all of this probably means is that Edith will die." The details of Mrs. Bunker's de· mise have not yet been decided upon, nor was it clear whether Miss Stapleton will make a final ap. pea ranee next season. Berore any tilling or characters can tue place, \.bouab. the series bas to be renewed by CSS. Tb.at it will be, however. is a forecooe cooclusJon \n light of the show's relatively strong showing lbia aeuoo, usually finishing in the top lS in the rating. NORMAN LEA&. who created "All m the Family" in 1911, owns lbe Archie and Edith characten and would have to give approval before Edlth could.be "killed off." No,,,.Fiction TV Returns Edith. played by Jean ~. .made only sporadic appiMtinces on the •bow after lt became "Archie Bunker'• Place" this seuoa. Ilia Stapleton'• desire to leave tbe com· edy series wu the prime faCl'tor lD tu cbanpd tormat, wttb the aetkla DOW revolviD( around Archie's tavern in· .·· "Non·Fiction Televlsloo,'' a weekly series ol documentary proerama Pt'O- duced by independent film and video makers in tbe United States. wtll begin ltl second season over KOCE· TV. Channel so. Sunday at 10 p.m. The pft>Cl'am repeats Saturdays, be&lnnlag April 12, at 6 p.m. The lftmiere telecu! of tbe oew aeuon iJ "Dead1¥ Force,'' an bow'· I Kuro .... Puta to Mime all other out· door edv•'*"" with ••• ~'UZALA .•. TheHunter • 'Th' tMtter' bftfttl9 to the KrHn an ot th• Love and lteapeot for Men and Narin ._.le,_ .. ., po ulblt •put on fHm. (N.Y. 1'1tftM) Wff..,.79'1d•.aP.11. luncleyl l:OO, 4:• 7:00 Md t:• P.11. lon1 documentary tum uplorin1 police use of deadly force. Produced by San Frana.eo ilJ.m • maker ~ard Coben, "Deadly Force" r the lave ol police ae· countabillt, In cases where undue force I.I used to subdue unarmed IUI· pectl. ' • The prosram foeUM9 oo tbe hllh1Y eubllelaed cue of Ron ~. .............. -· • ···-------n• ••• f • ... WATCH PUBLIC TV. ftMrLL I.ml Tiii LOOKS Of IT. 7:30 PM 9:00 PM PREMIERE!! .., DtGeorge Aachbedt Hom. .... ,.., Savlft9 Minta 9:30 PM t ... ·-··· .... ··---·-···· .... - ' Pinter Pia I~ YOO'VS MT IN ON the pn~ Plnten tt 9CR ("n.. 8h'tbda7 P~" '"TIM C.,....,_er," ''The Homecomlnc," "Old i1mm"> you'll rec- 01nlie a tood bit ol ree)'cled Pinter t.n "No Ila.n's Land," • compell1D1 but typtcalb ambllVCKll TJOr-. 'tbere 11 the Implied men,aee ol "Birthday Hl~I 5-fw• ...... FMI~ ' 1441 .... ......... ......,,. ... 0..T<'t,_ .-.w ....... Party" and "Hom~mlnc." the mlnd games of "Old Time.s" and some ol t.he mut.er-senanl role reversal or Pinter's movie .. The Sen ant" • This tlme lbe focus ls oo two m.Jddle-aged men in a study of a comfortable Engll.ah home who, as the play opens, tout each other meticulously <everything done in Pinter ls meUculous) and drink to old times that may or may not have oc- curred. Their characters change constantly. like a beach slightly altered with each visit from the tide. Dominance is passed from· one to the other like a hot potato. and ls complel~ly unsurped by two younger men. ostensibly servants, when they arrive AS DIRECTED BY Gordon Duffy, a newcomer to SCR, "No Man's Land" is performed with stealthy deliberation. Its characters stalk each other psychologically and occasionally move in for lhe kill, then retreat to begin a new game. The performances are polished to jewel-like excellence. Hal Bokar creates an ominous effect as the erstwhile host of the gathering. Philir Baker Hall is perhaps the• most notable as bis rather seedy guest through whose eyes we view the charade. Don Tuche, who has been aboard for all but ·one of the first four Pinters at SCR. is granite- sharp as one of the servants who may come UD· Osmonds Split Up Into Four Acts r-------1 I SOUTH COAST ACTOH STUDtO I I o•ld "' _, n 3 011ue 111 ,.,7, '"' eomm..c ... ,"'~ I v-.~T-1 -1 ....... -,...., -,_ All .... 11.,.... I L. 11141 t11..0212 I ------ "BLACK STALLION" IGI. .. GILDA LIVE''tat a1'*9 al. a a>OCMD\'• notkoe. Jam• R. \Vblker ptay1 IM Olber. •more aeoteel IOl"l but equall)' •· vlou. PINT&&'I MB88AGE, SUCH u it ls, lt dropped by Bokar HrUer ID tbe play, then ttpe•t· ed near tbt tooel.Woo with a~ of l.rQay: "No man 'a land doe. not move« cm.e OI' srow old. It remaina forever. lcy 1Ueat." M~ percepUn ls Hall's character who, after ~•ch aucceedina unexplamable incident, calmly remarb, "I bave experienced thla before." Pin· terphllet ln the audience may echo, "So have we." • CAU.BOAaD -AudJUona for Neil Simoti'a "The Gln&erbread Lady" will be held Saturday from noon to 2 p.m . and Tuesday from 7 to 11 p.m. at the Newport Theater Arts Center. 2:501 Cliff Drive, Newpor't Beach ... direct.or Gregory Bach wlll be casting three men and three women for the show. which opens May 29 . . . for further details caU 67~3143or 642-8119 ... ~- "The Sound of Music" att1ves Saturday night at Sebastian's al the Grand Hotel in Anaheim wit.b Judy O'Oea reprising her role of Maria which sbe performed al Sebastian's West in 1976 ..• David Cryer co-stars as Captain \ion Trapp in the family musical. 2 ACADEMY AWARD" . NOMINATIONS CISTA.U mmu -C•l'fN Cfflrrr 919 •UI Mrsst0n Vlfl(' ·~ 6120 o,..., flt116.l1·0~ .,,. ...,.1ua ., __ WoodbrtdCf ~SI °'SS [dw1tn Hu"''~Df' Ml-OJI! --- ·I .. CHAPTER TWO"tNI THRU APRIL 6, 1980 .. HIDI IM PLAIN SIGHT"' •at41 " CNJ SlHUIUlll ~ Scr czczn Ddv4Z -ln coll 6l9 7860 LA Mat STADIUM "AMERICAN GIGOLO" {R) "LOOKING f()ft . .... ~ HOUWtat LI• ~ ... , "1MlellAT • --"M'.,.....,.,., -~.•.•JAWS-r.,.. :'._.CUI.A .. •• Good only at: 30ll H8rbor Blwd. COSTA 111!8'r , .................. ..., ......... ,,..,..., DRfW..,...~VldlAV~ WHAT ARE THE F:ACTS?. Have you ever felt llke1ou..nren 't.belu r•prtHDted oa UM cf. tycomacil? Well. lf you live ln lbe aoutb, south cen· tral, north. oortb cen- tral, oreutsJdeColta Me••· you h•ven't been repretena.d for years on the Costa Mesa City Councll, becauaepresent coun- cil members Uv~ In west Costa Men with moatollbem Uvina lo MetaVetde. ' A 11 al t.be current council members hve wit.bin a mile ol each other except ror Doon Hall, who Oves wit.bin t WO miles Of the others. Putting it very simply. eighty per· cent or Costa Mesa LS not being geo · graphically represented on the Cl· ty council. Now to make a bad representation silua· lion even worse, seven of lhe rune can- didates now running for city council Jive an the g r e ater Mes a Verde area or in west Costa Mesa. Again, all but two of them Ii ves within a mile of eachot.ber. Those candidates living in the greater Mesa Verde area 1n dude: lanun~t Ed McFarlaad. Bkllard Carstemea, lllchard Johns ton. K. Paal Ranr, Eric J obuoo, and ~rt Grabam. Incumbent DolaD Hall lives on the extreme west side of Costa Mesa. Candidate Cllris Steel uves on the soul.beast side of Costa Mesa. and I live on the east side about an equal distance b etween both lbe north and south sides of town. Mo.t of these same candidates -lacam· lteat lkPartud, lD· ca•beat Ball, Cantemea. aldaard ,.. •••• aanr, and Grall•• -1ivln1 tbelr views in the Co1ta M~1a N~ws were all against elect· in& the cit.)' council members by geo· graphic di s trict, wbicb would give all sectors of the city equal represeolalioo. Obviously, 1f dis· tricts existed. only one or two peo ple could be elected from the west side and the Mesa Verde area of Costa Mesa. Naturally, I'm for the Mesa Verde area being represented on the c1tycounc1I. Butto make things better rn Costa Mesa, we need balan ce d ne i gh borhood representation from all ~eograph1c areas of the city As a city coun- cilman, I will ad- vocate that the city be divided into council districts. Jr I cannot get the support or fellow co uncil members. I will lead an lnillalJve drive to accomplis h thi s effort. Being a former in· vestigative newsman f AraaMim Bulletin) and the author of 18 non- fiction books includ· ing the muJU-million copy best sellers, In Search of Noah'• Ark and Th~ Lincoln Con6J)lrary, I've de· veloped a reputation for being a thorough researdle.r. What I've present- ed in th.b ad concern- ing the facts on coun- cil representation is only ooe example of tbe type of com . prebensive research tbat l'U strive to dooo laaues coming before tbecltycouocll. I 'm tbe east side Costa Mesa candidate a nd If we are to make tblnp better. I need your vote on Electkm Day. Dave Balalger for ColtaMear. City Councll • ~·llt1l ,,,_ "•CT1nouse1no•1u MAMI: STATaM&WT Tl•• IOl-tnoq .,_,._.~ ••• 00t1'9 tJl\#\in+\\ #\ o·oo .... El l . 8 R tGHA¥ ' P&A f NfR\.NOAH•EA ... ClSO oi- K••mM' &-w ile .CO • ...._, ati•< n C..lf10t'"n•• 9'1ttO Jo"n 0 0 Oo,.,..tt 0)() VOft k •• m.., .. _ w<te .co. ...,,,_.. '"•<" c..t·-· ~ f •rl'nC• W 8ru1't.em .USO VOft "•'"''"" .. _ wit• ooo. ,.__, e ..... '-"''-"'•'1'1MO Roy W c.--tl50 -~y s',-"' ~ ''"""'""'o c..·~··'''' JOf\I\ # -... ~. 44"1 111<1\o~~ ~ eo.Mv•o. --.... Ai..-. T"'' ""1\1"'9"\' ,, <oodl.Kt.,cl 1W • ~, •• '*'1,.#V'wQ -0 O'Oor-.lt T"1\ 'tat~ 4tft l1t.fd .-.tft trw '°""h ''-'• o• OteftOt eaiun.v Of' ..Wren~ "91) 0.MA llCO. ellUl., Glll:lltl91:11G, TMllALL i SUJs.11:11 ......... .,.., uw ,,. ,..__, c-on ... \ult•-__, .._,,,,CA._ Pul>ll~ 0r....,.. '-'' 0..ty Potor ~· , 10 JI Apr ) ,.., tW-«> • • •eetJSsN. OP couaas. tallH to the ~milieu u comfwtabl.Y u WI.JM, Cooper &utwood ever cllcl. ud •"fom 1tom•· tak" •ant.ace ol that partaenblp. 1te•1 ahnultaneoua· Jy the scruffy loner aod the looely 'Wanderer, shy with the schoolmarm. but a,ureaively dangerous to adversaries, uncomfortable 9ihen plunked down at• picnic dinnertable, but at home when unload- U\'I a shotgun barrel, lusting fJ>r wide-open spaces aoa rendered ineffectual when confined behind bars. If McQueen doesn't appear to be acting, it's be.tause -like Wayne and Cooper -he's learned te ;act this type of character so well, all thealrlcal tt&~ery is virtually lnvlsible. ;: THE OPENING CllEDITS (as well as W-.rn«a' ad campaign) point out "Tom Hofn" is l.>ued oo a true story. Tbe real Hom was an 1880's la4ian fiehter who won hla greatest fame as the man who captured Geronimo. The accomP.anytne screenplay by Thomas MeGuane and Bud Shrake picks .\lP J:1om some is ~ 1ears later after the Geronimo ePtaoele and covers the last three years of bis Ute, 1901-1903, when be drifted into Wyoming and ultimately fell heir to a bangman's noose for a crime be supposedly didn't commit.. ·• The plot is basic: Hom is hired by some }Vyomlng ranchers to stop cattle rustling or their '-'herds, and he's given unwritten permission to be a legal assassin, to that end, U necessary. He does his job, and does it thoroughly. BUT THE RANCHERS soon get nervous that neighbors will find oul Hom is their hired band and, in order to divest themselves of the jJS· sociation, set him up to be erased by hang\ng. Horn, all knowing about killing '8nd being killed. isn't wise in the ways of psychological trickery or doublecross, and goes to the gallows because of it. So much for the plot line. Where ''Tom Horn" shines is in the telHng. thanks to McQueen's low-key playing, Willard Wiard's masterful direction and George Grenville's inventive editing. Scenes fade in and out as if memory pieces, occasionally punctuated Shy :.S,expot' Gere Opts for Privacy NEW YORK tAP> -"l don't want to be a personality." he said. But after "Looking for Mr. Goodbar." "Yanks," "American Gigolo" and "Days of Heaven," Richard Gere doesn't have much choice. Not only Is he a personality, he's a "sexpot," says actress Lauren Hutton. NOW STARRING IN Broadway's "Bent," he's won critical acclaim for his oerformance as a GEaE homosexual who carries on a love affair with another man in a Nazi concentration camp. But he still seeks privacy. '.'I don't want to be invaded ,•' be told People magazine. "How can anyone pay attention to Eliubeth Taylor's work when they know all about her six husbands? lf·I wanted to be in the public eye, I'd climb the Empire State Building. "IT WOULD BE A HELL of a lot easier than do- ing this (Bent) eight times a week for six months. "But the creative high," admits the 30-year-old actor, "is as close as many of us get to God." •ftur IS THE IUT PICTURE OF THE YOUll YUi 10 FAIL" • -Chw1el CNmplln.,L.A. Time. CISTl llSA UA Clntma 5'0·0594 --------·--r=w''7' ·~--- .. , ....... Wlatd baa 1110 filled 1cenH with 1reat char~ fa~ add •tnt0tolletlc navor, aided by John Alonlo'a du1Ua1 Cl•=::pby, whlch paint.a eomt of the m0tt •Y• •eeMt in a western alnce Winton Hoeh'a eamera work on "Sbe Won a Y.UOW Ribbon" or Loyal Gl1H•' con- tJ1btatJona to .. Shane." A MA.I08 COMPLl•ENT can be shared by bar & grille Scr.t door Strong alumtnum frame with ver- tical alata 10 reln- lorce klckplate. 30". 32". Of ~" wkttha. Reg. 17.95 1311 - 'lancer' enhancer Roll formed. mill hn1sh alunvnum scr.een door with pneumatic air closer. pushbut- ton hardwar e 30'". 3200 & 36" Widths Reg 25 95 .19~8 spred It on the house Ghdden Spred House Pa1n1 goes on easily. dries Quickly The ne1ghb0rs may th1'1k 11 s magic Reg. 15 49 11~~ f antastlcllly spreadable Extertor spred telex glost houH & trim paint from Glidden. Goes on with eaee. Wide range of oolors. Reg. 16.59 tra. raining buCllets of , ..... 9-quart plutic txld<et wl1tl carry-ing handle la grMt fOf painting chorea or cleaning around the l'IOUM. SANTA ANA l $ofl Diego Frwy. ii D D to hang and to hold Great places to house your growing tr1enda. RedWO<>d tor long-lasting use. drainage holM tor gOOd growing. Place them aroond your yard lor an eye-riveting landscaping Idea• #PS· HT12. Reg. 7 99 Structo ~mer gaa grill Wl\tl eleCtric '**·heat lndieator, aide lid handtea. wwmtng grid Witt! tank. '9750. Reg. 259.95 Sul*' for camping. picnlca or bac kyard blrbequu. Cut aluminum black fmi.h. carrying handles. From Structo. 19000 Reg 84 95 -.... -----... --------..... -..... -. -.. .... -.. ' ENTEATAJNMENT/ MOVIE Rl!VIEW the great gobbler • ln-Slnk-Erat~ mak .. thla gar- bage dlll)OMr for trou~ee 1erv1ce o,ulet. vibration~ ooerauon i't·h p. motor. . Reg 54 96 hey. Vlgoro, get growing! --- V1qoro Lawn Fert11tzer with coo- trOlled ttme release formula. for l'le.11th•er. greener lawn. long«1 25-tb t>ag Rag 9 95 7aa the five- percent solution V.qoro 5' • Sevin protects lawns and vegetables from insects Also tor usu on dogs and cats tor fleas. I 10 139 support your local tomato Germain's tomato plant support of oatvanized wire ahm1nates 1tak- 1ng Reusable. oollapslble tor easy storage. #TPS-32. Reg. 3.69 111· If the old heater can't get It any hotter Time tor a new one Dependable. el- llc1ent gaa water heaters Glass· lined tanka. rapid t\QI water recovery ay1tem1. high tempe<ature shut· ott1. 30-9a1.: ~.119.95 10995 ......... rtf. 1M.H ............... 111.• Jt.tll, ,.... 1St.t5 ............. : 141.11 • ... -1 ····----·-- . ·~ ., . Erma BombeC •Cl•ulfled ~ ...... ,. 1 / couldn4t beHeve anyone could do thi$,' says Huntington Beach mother Lori Kissell. But it happened to her, ana now she's trying to help other parents cope ytith the reality of child stealing through a new hotline, the 'Stolen Child In- formation Exchange. ' By JOEL C. DON Ot_.,..,, ......... lf Lori Kilsell made two vave errors follow1n1 the separation from her husband. First. she hadn 'l leeally settled the divorce or tbild·custody rights. Her second mistake was out of the bands of jurisprudence Mrs. Kissell didn't anticipate her estranged husband's reaction to ber renewed dat ios llfe. One day, he decided rfOl to return the children to their mother's home. Until that time. the couple bad agreed by word of mouth to liberal visitation rights. . "f n!allY wasn't concerned about getting the divorce· al the time," she says, taking a nervous drag from a cigarette. "I fell I was divorced." BUT WHAT SHE FELT and what was law were not the same. Police officials, she says, told her they could do nothing. Her husband threatened Aeeording to La"7 Child-snatchin_e incidents are expected to increase in tandem with the rising divorce rate. Although an estimated 25,000 to 100,000 child-snatching cases occur eac!l year , only about 10 percent of the children are ever retrieved. (Police officials report the actual number of cases is difficult to determine. because many of child-snatching victims fail to report the action.> Interstate flight, especially to states that don't recognize other states child -custody decrees. has long been a method of skirting extradition. IN RECENT YEARS, however, 39 states and territories -inch.ading California -have passed legislation under the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction Act, recognizing the custody orders of other states. And federal Jeglslation under considera· t1on may put a plug in the interstate flight loophole, according to a legal counsel to the Senate subcommittee on Child and Human Development. Called the ··parental Kidnapping and Prevention Act," the legislation would: Make child snatching a federal of. fense, if a parent or parent's a_genl kidnaps and takes. a child across state lines. Holding a child in violation of legal custody or visita· lion rights for more than 30 days could bring a fine of $10,000 or a month in prison. or both. Concealing a child tor more than seven days could bring a fine of up to Sl0,000 and six months in prison, or both. -AUTHORIZE THE Federal Parent Locator Service, which searches for parents who fai) to make child support payments. to search for parents who've snatched their children. After two months of no success, the FBI could be called in. -Require all states to recogni2e the child-custody orders of other states. Meanwhile. a national organization. called Children's Rights Inc. CCRl>, has been set up as a clearmghouse for Information and counseling services for parents who are child-snatching victims. CRI is located at 3443 17th St., N.W., Washington D.C. 20010. to have ber arrested for trespags10g if she tried to conh'ont him on his property, she says. · For lbe next three months, Mrs. Kissell agonized over lbe loss of her tbi.ldren. The 30-year. old HunUngton ~ach resident sold everything she owned and moved her meager belongings into a one-room apArtmenl. "I didn 'l know who to call," she says. "1 really thought I was going to go nuts until the children were returned to me. I couldn't believe anyone collld do lhls." Seven years after her own experience with child stealing. Lori Kissell is on the other end of the telephone, lending a sympathetic ear to parents wtio've bad their children stolen . She's a volunteer for a fledgling boWne called the Stolen Child Information Exchange. STARTED BY HUNTINGTON BEACH sisters Laurie Cancellara and Barbara Freeman, the 24· hour hoWne ofCers personal counseling and con· solement as well as referral and information services to police agencies, attorneys, private de tectives and psychologists · The telephone service was formed after Mrs Cancellara, 33, helped her sister-in-Jaw go through a harrowing chHd·snatchin~ experience • Although her 21,4.i-year-old niece was retneved. Mrs. Cancellara fe lt there was little help offered by law enforcement authorities or private agen c1es s~salizing in child stealing or snatching Soon after Mrs. Kissell's cbHdren were stolen. she hired an attorney to settle the dispute in court "When I actually told him I was getting the divorce. be took the children." she says. ''When I told him l would get it. anyway, he gave them back." Mrs. Kissell knows she was luckier than the estimated 25,000 to 100,000 child-snatching cases that occur nationwide each year. IF HER HUSBAND actually had wanted to keep the children, he could have ne<i to a state that doesn't recognize California child-custody decrees Crossing state lines or even neeing to foreign countries has made child recovery cosUy in both time and money. "When your kids are stolen, you're in a state of shock."' says Mrs. Caocellara, a divorced mother of four. "l know a woman who wrote $9,000 in bad checks to find her child. She went to prison for it." Child snatching or stealing is experienced by men as well as women. The word kidnap rarely is used to describe the action, mainly because there 1s no federal law obligating all states to recognize each other's child-custody decrees. But the experience, Mrs. Kissell says, can be as traumatic as the felony offense. "The kids didn't know what to believe. they were getting confused,·· s he says When the children eventually were returned. her daugh\itr suffered from uncontrollable shaking and spontaneous crying outbursts. '"She didn't know what was real and what wasn·t. All of a sudden he dropped her back to lb<.· person he was ridiculing." Mrs K.issell says. ONCE THE HOTLINE volunteer helps the parent through the initial emotional trauma, parents are told how to tap sources to locale and rctnC'vc their children Sometimes the first place to search is public records and telephone dm.'clorics. Mrs Cancellara says. ' "' "There are all kinds of things they can try. but initially they can't think of anything but lht!1r gnef." she says "The people are JUSt so happy to tell someone their child was stolen and not have someone say ·oh. you mean kidnapped ' " says Mrs. Freeman. a divorced mother of two. "EveryOOdy knows what <See CHILD STEALING, Page CZ> L ori Kissell · Cigarette? T hanks , But No Thanks ' Editor's Note: It's been one year since AP WriteT EUen Nimmons wolked ow of o Greenwich Village re1tourant, dehberately leaving belrind two poclu o/ cigarettes. She han't had a cigarette rinu. She alllo hcun't burned a hole in a akirt ma rear. Or alrMst nai ofl the road r~hing for a fallen butt while driv- iag. Or itarled a fire in an cuhJray or ftrlged her hair with a match. • • • By Eh.EN NIMMONS .---~-..- NEW YORK -Yes. l OC· casionally"tbink about smoking. No, thanks, I don't want a cI1arette_. I became a non· s moker a year ago, wising up after thousands of morning couahs. cancer warnings and tOo mueb bad breath. ID fact, I'm almost an abti· smoter now -indignantly shun· niDI elevaton caM')'ing illegal smokers, wallioc abe'ut co· worken' smelly cigarette butts aad brlngln1 out my lone ubtra)' at home only for the belt of friends. After 12 years -I started smokina at 18, when I knew bet· t.er -I'd bad enouab. Statistics on lane cancer in •omen were rapidly approachln& tbe fatal forecut for male smokers, and t rett an outcut amonr my mostly noa .. mokinl friends. I llGNED VP for one of those courses promlaiftC "You WILL • ~-tmoklftl· la five weeb," ,.._ my $2M, and quit after ~ effD eKeltedJy, :ra:L tM i*•~= .. ~·tbe I..,.. Mliflfld~ I l chanted their Jmgles, count ed my cigarettes, brushed my teeth, drank OJ and gargled - keeping to their rules . On the ap· po\nted day, I deserted two packs of cigarettes on a table in a French r estaurant in Greenwich Village while a friend applauded, I felt nauseous and light· beaded lbe next day. I decided it was the wine. I haven't had a cigarette since. 1 used to be a nearly-two· packs-a-day-when· I-was-honest smoker. And while a year is just a sta.rt on a non-smoking life, it's a milestone nonetheless. I EXPECTED to be mlsera· ble, aod sometimes I was during the past year, but the misery had nothing to do with cigarettes. Usually. it is people often yourself -who make for misery l expected to be healthier. and r was. I don't cough anymore. and I get over colds more quick- ly I didn't sign up for tbe New York Marathon, but r CAN jog a mile. I expected lo be cleaner, and I was. Long hair smells a lot bet- ter from·VldaJ Sassoon shampoo than Marlboros. And my teeth - I finally went to the dentist and bad the nicotine scraped o!J - are whiter without cigarettes. Filllngs, sadly, hurt just as much. l expected to gain weight, and l did, about five pounds. l lost it later. and regained lt during a luscious weet o(f in New York City -much of it spent. in restaur~ls. Food always tasted wonderful, so I can't really say it's better now. But at leut I no loncer rush the meal for the cigarette. I HAVEN'T BU&NBD · a hole iD a Kirt -or Ul)1.1Wlc elae -=-in a JMr. Ol' almoet run off the ~bid · ~u1~1 for a fallen butt w ... drt~ ..... Ol' •tarted • fttt la an Mbt.ray or slnced my halt w{tb a match. I didn't expect pleaau.rea from not •mokint. But there they were: -Sbak•peare at St.rat.ford, Ont. '1ve pla,ys ln seven days - lnchadin1 tbe two Henrya - wltlaoul a cllarette or a nleot!ne ftt. I did .. ,...._. at times. Too mucb .._,_,... -.P'btnc-Pio .... '° aw. at th• "No Salc*tna"·ato. J\llt pt OD, buckle Ul>t lfab ' boOk q4 fortet the world. -- Camaraderie with other former smokers Of the people I know best tn my quit-smoking group, two are not smoking at all. one is smoking on ~casloo and the fourth is back to his normal half-pack·a-day habit. -Cross-country sk,iinf. Un- counted miles at tbe amily farm. with non~ to take Ume for a smoke, no sullying of the western Massachusetts woodland and only occasional shortness of breath -SMALL PURSES. Without the cigarettes and matches •. I just don't need a big saddlebag. -Wrinkles. Fewer wrinkles, that Is. My mirror doesn't prove this one yet, but I beUeve the scientists who say smokln& ai· gravates the lines or care. I know I squint less. -Stress. and dealln1 with it ~lone. I lot muqed on • dark Maxi the Taxi corner after working late -a week after qu1tling -and didn't smoke. It was. however, a long 01gbl. -Slaying home. Also known as never being forced out Into the rain. cold or dark of night because )'OU're out of cigarettes. -POTIES. ONE BAND to· drink with, one hand for snacks and never a search for an ashtra,.. -Fresh air. Even inside my too-small Manhattan apartment -Children. I don't feel like I'm setting a bad example anymore. -Money. About SSOO a year, or more, that I'm not spending . on ci1at'<ettes. -Freedom. Let the others worry about where their next cigarette ls coming from, and bow soon. . -K.issJnc. You flsure It out. Can't ThlDk, Drive . ~ NEW YORK (AP) -Fred A. Grewe m. cabbte. can't think and drive at the same tlme. So New York's ••f•aalHt" back wrtlea bLt at\lft cm the ltoof. The Gru, .. M e ... hlmMlf, b clOllef' to tbe IOU tbu U.. City. He'• from .. WHt BJ God Vlrallde" -WM-'n1, to lte u - act. Sliateapeare It bit atm, backlftl la b1s 1aaa.e. Today be la owtftr of the Mart .. tbe Taxi Award, up for ara'-'1 New· YOC'k's 23,000 cab drtven. It'• no Oscar or Tony, nt Gotbam'a .baeta doa't ~ • lot about mattn& tb•lr passenaers smile. Grewe doee. Beblnd tbe~wblll he wears a baa~ dert9J, adorMd with 1Uver wtap ucl riPt nll:Y 1tart1 boaaclDI jolt• oft lllt c•tomera. (leellAD',Pa1eC2) 't .. --. -· ----. . HWtll PMmNCI 10 • AUCTIOHID .............. .... ...,_'eo.11....,Md ...... ......., ............. ""No Campaign Headaches , ::For These Unpoliticians ;. . · PALM CITY, FJa. (AP> -c.o. "Chick" flle a ficUUous name, stmllar io noUces Reln.bart never cot a vote bat be ftpra be's sometlmel uaed by buaiDeuea. Then be went to ·• mayor-for-life tn · paim· ·city, Ud. With ;ooc1 tbe clerk o1 drcult comt and paid $4 to bave it "' reuon. recorded. · He'll aever ralle toes, and be want.a every Prelto-new town and IDQOr fot life. dty employee to have unJ:lmlted pay railea. Not PA.Lii ~· located 10Utb o1 Fort Pierce lo mention unlimited bolldays. Plus frff along Florida s IOUtheMt coast. la an unln· airplane traio ancf ship rtde&. corporated area. So ls Port Salemo Juat down k Of c:Oune, tbel"e'a a 1mall catch. ••we don't lbe road. Jack Dosa ls mayor there -also by !{ have any employees.'' be admits. court record only. !• But then Palm City isn't really a city. In both areas, the actual work of govern· •· ment ls dooe by the county. AND aEJNBA&T, 73, isn't really mayor. ''We'll probably declare \eaal bolldays at except in a rosy world of unpotltics be and aome least maybe every other day," MYS Does. who friends decided to create a while back. . runs three marine constructioo companies and u--..1 t a m~c store. A cigar-chomping re""1:1U coat accountan • Dou recruited a pal, Keo Rodgers, lo be Reinhart got interested in the posalbllilies of Port Salerno's t>Ollce chief of record. Rodgers trumred·up tiUes and towns when a friend, Ray says be doesn't know a t..bina about law eofor~- Rice. obtained a copyright on "Confusion ment. No one seems concerned. Corner," a legendary traffic hazard ln nearby Reinhart bu some belp these days, too. Ci· Stuart. • ty Clerk Pam Boswell put herself ln office about "He could sell 'Confusion Corner' T-sbirta a month back. Reinhart la looting for a police and everytb.iog," Reinhart muses. cbiel and a city manager. He ls th.lnking or in· Thus inspired, Reinhart went to a stalling bis golden retriever. Duke, as dog newspaper and for $19 ran a notice .of intent to catcher. ••• Maxi (.,._P ... Cl) ··u you don't talk to people, you•re Just a robot gofD1 from st.reel to street." be saya. The Gru, who bas a degree in lbeater from the West Vlfainia University, bounced into tbe Good Times Restaurant on Mon· day wearing a red NBC windbreaker, a New York Yankees baseball shirt. loud red and blue plaid trousers and black and wb.Ue Addle oxfords. Tbe ZT·year-old bachelor was one of 10 cabbles wbo answered an invitation ln the t.u1 trade journals to compete for the tiUe of the f\Dllliest taxi driver in the city. AboUt 50 lo 75 lunchtime dinen ptcked lbe winner wilb their applause. Grewe writes bis own material, but not while driving. "I do my best thinking walk· •• • Child Stealing <From Pase cu log," be Mid. IA what be laid was bis first gig aa a stand-up comic, Grewe presented b1a version of the pope doing an American Express commerdaJ. "Without my miter aod my big blsbop'a hat, I'd be just anolber Poliab cardinal. That's wby I carry my American Ex· press credit card. Don •t leave Rome wit.bout it." • • TM AdopUoo Guild ot 8outbem Oranse Couty ......U, •Pt•cn _. ol the w111t amlleur bind t.tGAll ~tD tbe U.S.,. ud...,.,...................... .... 1'llM ,._, II 80 ac.ption. Tbe baa ne.. 11 tbat ...-cl .,... m1Ut Leiter ...._ .. lw £'""' • •.._color of ... Lawer and a., im-, ,...port Beach'• tenni.a srea&a, to be •8diaald • • CCIC'tiall PAl't1 llQ ao. Tbe I ' If 1. UM aa1ilt. .., oa d1IP1Q at CUllMlll and QMfftn ,........,. and. UDlortunate. "· tbe ,.n, ...... La.er .... ~ too. 1MJ bo&b..,. ~and 9'bleto attend. GaUd fnlldMt ~ c.. eNdlU ber laua..._.. lllft, wWa U.. klM ol aMiDI Neiman to do. peW1ac. to be a.eel -tbe prosrem eDV· tt and tbeo aetloQed foe beaeftt of Roly Fam.i· ly Servicee. ·~1 thoaebt tbe cover '-ecled aomethinc." Cooll Aid. "l ltarted clrea•tna ad I lboulbt. "11le bi&lmt aparta artist we ba.e la LeRoy Ne:tma' I saaestecS it to tbe board ud they dedded to pursue lL '' Cools almpb .called the artht on tbe telepbane lit b1a bome ln New Yon and the deal wumade. Na.-CU\e to Newport 8eaeb to meet lbe Coob. talk ....... the ...... ba .. cliDDer' with u.m. U.'1 ICbeduled to nam tar tbe 11ay 30 fettiYitiel. Tblre a1ao .w be 100 liped pr1.ata aYalla-~ for ... doutba. ~ to om. BID, beDeftt c:Mirmu. The toa.rnament will becia lla1 M at varioal dubs bl Oraqe CoalQ and wilJ COG· elude June 1 with the fbaala. All funda will ao to Holy Famil:Y Seniees in Santa AD&. a noa-aectartan aenlc:e whieb olfen adopUon placement._ J>recnaocy and post. delivery cwmmeHnc, child care sentcea, proe. venUon pro1ram1 and care for batt.red children. Attending the prntew party were Cele S.•lllllld. 8ua &epa. lblalle Gan, Dwe&ar7 YanDeJ, ..._ 8&aMft. .._.,. Osa1 .. Dlma YardleJ, ..,._ea,.._,-~ .......... and Silla' lledllle from HolJ Family. ~ p.a,, _.a.cit .... 'I of Balboa II.land are gnndpaNlltt for the ftnt time. Tbe new ad· dltioa to tlaetr family 11 Aa1a1eJ AA*,... R......._ and ber parent• are ·canba ... Tw· l'&llee .......... Newport Harbor High.School ,-raduat.e Erk S•hla ls the new pledge claal preatcMbt of Sigma Chi fraternity of USC. Rick Jolm la Alpha Upsilon chapter PftS\· dent and other new members are Seou Lolllnum.. Fn.U Veadlk, 'hay &aqer, &Jct Marny, nm G.odl.ag, Jeff BMeUt. Jeff 8Lan. Doog ud Todd Katten, MJkll Gray, a.My Parole and Rolf Scbwalk, all NHHS grad.5 _ ~ ~ Tamu of Irvine wa.s a semHlnab.st in tbe Third lnternaUooaJ lmltation Hem -ingway Competition spomored by Rarry'a Bar and American Grill ln Century City. Tbe winner was &k:laanl WU&aWre of Portland.. More than 2,400 entrlea 1"e!'e received ln the coot.est this year to "write one ~ eood pqe of really 'bad' Hem.inpay." leeepll ftlfeT of Newport Beacli "9Cel1Uy joined five generatioo.a of bis family for a re- union at Singing Winda Ranch in Santa Ynei. ~ Boger Dana of Laruna Beach will display his collection of Japanese sword& at the Hanamatsuri Festival April 12 and 1J at the Orange County Buddhist Temple. 909 S. Dale CUSTOM FRAMING Sp.ciallzlng In Hand RNeMd Fnimes 1803 NewPOrt Blvd. Costa Mesa 54M511 lddllaPDID& is, but they don't always know what dUld-liea11n• la... . Mrs. Cancellara says t.rainiD& for boUine volunteers baa been offered bf offidala of the New . Hope hotline, a relieloua-based counaelinc ---~=---­ telepbcme service. .. ... . Bappeal•g" By Judith Olson - \ SL.. Anabetm. Tbe evnt COllHDllDorate. the blrtbday of Buddha. ----~ If,_,.._ a~ /or,_., •••• __, ts lo JwllUa OC.. cd U.. noiu. f'MoC, P.O. Ba !19• COiia MtlG, CA .... OP eaU W at ICMDJ. lfnr1' ,.....,. ,,... ..,., Tuadaf. RUFFB.l'S U"40lS1'BY W'-Y•W• ...... .... ''" .......... 'c.tt,...-a..11u , ---RESIDENTS ARISE VOf E NO ON D BobSpleen ----- tttls at,mmer 1n this swil'TlSuit from High Tide. $26.00 173-4510 WHllE Easter Bonnet Parade/Prizes Open to chlld""1 2 thru 1. Jost PUt on their bonnets and brfno them to Hul'tlngton center th1a Sat. at 10:30 am to entet. 'P....se & 1udglng ltwts et noon. Beech BIYd. & 405 fwv. In Mditian to boldln& meet.tap with vtctilM of c:llld at•Un1, Jin. Freeman aaya Che IJ'OUP plans to Ml up a speakers• bureau for clubs, civic groups and PTA meeti.Dp. The hotline number -847·26'76 -la operated out of Mn. Freeman's home. With funding, they hope to rent a permanent office. ''The averqe penoa waltlq down the street doetn't know bow oft.en lb1a ocean:• says Mn. Freeman, 30. "When lt happens to them, tbe7 don't always know what to do." Adds Mn. Cancellara: "We're not into who gets custody. We're Interested in both (parents) SUPPLY LASTS! ____ _ ' Heallh Fair Slated South Coast Medical Center will sponsor its third annual Health Fair from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday, April 20, at the center, 31872 Coast Highway, South Laguna. Health screening will be offered free to persons 18 years and older and educational ex· bibits on a variety of topics will be displayed. Aaeumentl of beleht. weight, nutrition, blood p~un and cbemlatry. lung capacity, vtaloD beaJ1Dt will be made. There a1IO will be cbecb for anemia, oral and colon cancer, glaucoma and other Wneatea. Mmlakm to the f alt la free and a minimal charpolte w1ll be made for25 blood ie.\t. Refrellbmenta. food and entertainment will be provided during the day. . Coordinator of the event ls Barbara Llriden. d1rec:tor ol naning. eo-spomon are KNBC, the Orange County Chapter ot the American Red Croea and the _Hoepital O>uncll of Southern California. having a right to see that child." Weddmg and~~"""'' not ors Sunday zn IN Daily Pilot. F(lf'f!M art oomlabW at all Daily Pilot ~/f'ces or by caUa1lg tPal Feattue1 lHpcm- ment. 642·432J To ol!01d d11oppomtmen1. proapechw ~s are remmded to havt thnr weddini;11torie1.1Udla a black· and-white glouy of the tnide or of IM couple. to the FealUTts Department OM Wttk t.f~ tlw IOCddang. Engag~t annoamc~. llllth block~nd­ whtte glouJI o/ the /ulurt briM or the~. muit ,_ recrived bfi the FeaJure1 /Hpartmtfll dz tottb t.fore the wedding date Baldwin Pianos and Organs LESSONS • INSTRUMENTS TAPES • RECOAOS -~ ·~ llo. $[] 1 ~ ,~ ......... IGl:ID !MIA• ..... tull U•I MON.·TMUllL.ftll. ,... The cruise f avc;>rite . • • detatled .. you love them. The flneat in Cl'llftarnanlhlp. . &own ~· ..,, Whtt• C.lf Plug Fully Cooked ZESTILINK Smoked Sausage z.• I S t • s-· II • ' rmlf ................ .... ........... Navy OIM wtth White Calf PIUV FOOD GI FT PAKS FOR EASTER-TAKE WITH YOU OR WE WILL SHIP! &ma ... AAAA~to 10 AM-6'°' to tO M~to10 A-6'°' to 10 ! .l.b B-4to10 ~-~~SHOES .. ra ..................... 7.,1 . . ff ickot7 '•rm'· WESTCLIFF ~PLAZA ,,.··=;-....... • • ,,,. --. ·-·~··-· I . .. , ,, --~---- TmAT m WllY l ee9111a't wd .U ft tot •~t.lntac. be•••••..-Ma.•to I weedl all tbe ftlw ..._;rw talMd • • 5 abMt.o • tos.U.. 'J'be lancuase deftnl\eb' oeeda work lf ID watdtlns them. 1 ,......... L'et mcwitl. pror.mty ls to COGtinve on televilloo. 6-bacl ..... ~tabb aa.c:.. ......... t ~ --------YC)tj nnrr-cANNOT'liiv. 70iD .vorta---- Profaatty bu beeo.me a NeODd ~ t>.ln1 edited for commerclal ~levition in Not only tbat. lt bu oot aidded a...,_ cnaUYt "SatW'day Nlabt Fever" wtlb bb liP6 formlo• 7 new euu WOfd alnce I wu a ktd. an Sand bt&ri.Dg him u , "For com'a l&ke." Rave you bad anj ldel bow bor1ns 1 Amenca ·s second r~e ett.ber need.a vocabulary-coaaiaUna ol ftve four-letter worda, lltelp or 1hou.ld be d.iscootiDued aJtolether. It la oae t.bfe&.\euer word. one ftve-letter wont, ooo becomhl& tawdry aod predictable. HVeD·letter word, and ooe U -leUer word c• U lboee wbo use the laniuage are serious be" about keeping it alive. then wby not appolot a Creative Cu.salog Committee that would ln· troduce new words from time to Ume! We've WE'aE TALIUNG about nioe words that nrten have to carry • tw~bour movie. Aller the shock of hearing the same words over and Oftt wore off. I began to listen to them ln the context ln which they were used and made aooU>er dis· cover,. . The prolimlty wes not grammatically cor· red. Sometimes. the subject never went with the verb more and more ollen, the noun was used u an adjective and most ol the sentences were incomplete. There Ls oothi.og more unsettling than an in· complete profane sentence that is Just strung fallen behind the entire vrorld lo profanity. WREN WAS THE LAST time you saw~ words. "Deleted Expletive?" How otten are "bleeps" be~ used on regular TV? When did you laat see a new word on the restroom wall in lipstick? Dtlty words are being 1sed up at an astronomical rate. If someone doesn't do something sooo. one or these mornings you '11 hit your finger wilb a bamme r and do you know what you'U say.? Nothing. You won't have a word for 1L Jury Wouldn't Convict ..,_.. DEAR lt.NN tANDERS;fJVff I.be Years your column hi!! dealt wi~esaJ.ett.ers re._ ---liraiiig IiOmosexuailty. to your everlasting credit. But you have yet to address yourself to another sex-related illness: pedophilia -at- tracUoo t.o young children. The homosexual ceo ftnd sali.sfylog <even rewarding) outlets with those o( bis own lund, but the pedophiliac has no such option. I am a professional man (certified public accountant), 40 years of age and the father or four young boys. (I am attracted to little girls.> Please do not recommend tbat 1 s eek psychiatric care because I have already gone that routf with two psychiatrists aDd a cllniol psychologist. _"Treatment" hu.._c:ost me more than $6,000 aDd I received no belp'wbataoever You cannot respond to my home becauae my wtCe might open the letter and it would mean the eod of our marriage. Please belp me I am dMperate. -NO CITY. NO STATE, JUST DEAD-END Sl'REET, USA DUil IJSA: Wlle9 .....,_ are aid 6e -17 a•wtee I aaa On Is ••sea cleetGr-,•• ... TM are a•_, a. .._.. E.-e11 ...._. J'• feel Ute 1>rofffllloaals dJd not help yoo, I'm &oiaa to l'ft· om memd &hat yoa &ry still aDGCMr &Mnplat. -1_-~_n_o_r_o_•_c_o_p_e_-_}- FlllDA Y, APlllL 4 By SYDNEY OMA&t A.RIES <Mar. 21 -Apr. 19): Complete details. forms n~ for journey or long-range pro- ject. Improve distribution. display -find ways of "getting past the secretary." Money dilemma affecting one close t.o•you can be re· !\O\YM. TAURUS (Apr. 20-May 20): Keep res· olutions concerning possessions, budget, frills. streamlining techniques -means be your own efficiency expert . Member o( opposite sex dis· cusses money, extravagance and what to do about it. Be receptive, but adhere lo principles. GEMINI (May 21-June ~): UWlze lessons recently learned -gather additional data. Take notes. plan ahead a nd avoid direct con- frontations. Accent on direction, legal ob· ligations, lotwtive intellect. Check rights aDd permissions. CANCER (June 21.JuJy 22>: Maintain low profile, obtain hint Crom Ge m.in.I message. Ac· cent on service. versatility, curiosity, ability to ask right questions of proper persoo Opportuni· ty exists t.o expand base of operations. Don 't lend money. LEO (Joly 23-Aug. 22): Quick changes benefit your cause -member of opposite sex is attracted to vou and makes no secret or it. Aquarius, Taurus, Scorpio persons figure prominebtly. VlllGO <Aug. 23-SepL 22): Diversify, refuse to be pJi,nted into corner. Your position is stronger than originally anticipated. Property you own has probably increased lo value. Know it and obtain valid appraisal. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Rel,Uves, viaits, domestic situation dominate your ptrsonal scenario. Utiliu cr-eaUve resources to beautify, Improve home surround.ings. Check messages. revtew appointments, do not ~me victim of conflict of1nterests. SCOSPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21): See=•ces. people u they are, not piereb' as .you they mitbt ailt. · Get money's worth, c0un your cbaqe, protect valuables. Pilces, Vlrfo in· divtdmla play dgnilJcant roles. Be aware of dictua. •.You iet QOtbiq for notbln1!" MGJTrAaltJt (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Mooa .. pect eobaeld..-1ritb actcs.4 ........ ee, 1ree1a ...-, areater producttvtb ud ldlprowct u...., ..,. coa)d be 10UI' poww.plq day. ielattlia• are tntenalftecl Yoa M'ft more ,.,......ty wt peatw ..... ,. ..... l'e• ..... ' CVlllt'OllN (0.e • ..., ... It): ...... --arer6"QDb' ldlem-. Look..._.. ee.. for .-... wllleb eoWd,..,. 0 0ftl''lllll tip." ~ Utn ,.._. pla7 Mpt&ellt rolel. Yoa an -for ........ -"' plnHat YutltJ. A ~..:~:~=-•>: a.t to~ of 111 ..... ntRwl ............... cloM to )'OU. Romnce, ~ ~ .,. .. teeDarto. Yod'"loald mu• • •alaW. ..., cm. tMt. Leo. s.,tttari• peraw a,.. .,.,,.., ... IJ. PSBI (hb. •Mu. IO): .Room II mllM -,.,. • '°'i~~ ..... ot ~-...,. cw.-. Lio,__,_.~,..,.:::;=. ...... ~.,...,.. .... ........ ........,. . .. Ann 'landers Apparenty yoa were "helped" nffldeaUy Utat you •ctlvtt.les are kept to a mbalmam. altenaaU~ ls to keep cota& aloa& wttlHHl ~e.rap7 ._ 'l"llltG_. one of tlile9e daJ•, the fa titer ol a ~m JGG beeome "a~" •ay-,., a I.use ~ ID yoar ltead -ud ao Juy ...w ee9Tidtim. DEAR ANN LANDERS: A dear friend died of cancer (a.ge 40 and left a 13-year-old The grieving h ... band ls bavtn1 a difficult tim . He has a compe-.nt bou.aeteeper, but be ·u 1 her SOOll lf sometUg isn't dooe. His sister.I, Wac> live in another atat.e, ba been sending the~ children wHkends to bet "cheer up" the bty. They are sloppy, sassy, wild and nmning _,e poor fellow ragged. He feels be must "entertain'' them . The bouseteeper resents 'be extra work and has told me so. Should I pbooe the mothers and tip them off? Please~dvhe. =-.. nm---- DEAR VIDA: No. It.am.JO tk.l.aCMr tlau e pliOiii ltie moeien tad aay, "U yoa re'illy waa& to be belpfal, lnllt.e my boy to YOUR homes oo alt.erna&e wee-Dela for a wblle.'' Bf.AT THE DEVEIDPERS VOTE NO ON D BobSprccn __ °" ___ _ Find SCttuus wt\at you want In the Skiing classlfled ads of the Daily Pilot 642-6678 lids! Free! Puppet Show Mitchell Marionette theater 1n the Hu"tmgton Center mall ca11y 111 Easter Weeildays 1 ~ 30 4 & 7 30 Sat at 1 2 3 4 Beach Btvd & 405 fwy New Line for Children! We are busy mak1n1 a new affoniahle "ummt'r line for inranti. and ch1ld.rro Sun.suits. rom pers. shorts & lops. and rute sundresscs Tiny tnkinis and rover ups too All handmade and adorable_ We also have a cut e line of baby quilts. infant seal rov. crs, diaper bags and ctO<'heted ~ms ........... ---~ ..... "'""-"" -QOllt 5'>eOIOll.nno"' :Ut L 11"1 St. MOnOmOdeO eollOr.s c .. , ....... w .. 1,.rt ~ CWQn\ WOl'c ~ 14 -is ••• the Jin~ 8 D A I L ----y -C L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 mlOU: ... ~ .... .a .. .. ~ ... ,.,.,..,.. If YOU nn I • tW,. n. DAILY P9LOT .._. haft a &en'lCe to olfer or ~lo aell. pa.~ an ad 10 t be Dall y Pilot Qasgified Sectaoo ...., far ... first .. anecf ......... _,. --------·1 Pbone'42-~ llCEAJf-vtfft·wrttt tt6HTS·--. &dtWJ ~ .. 4 W. coado la He•porl en.t WI~ by CJrHMry. Privah C9d .wty decorahd witlt dMl/f-'Ay rooM. wet bor. Super co••••ity foclliHH. ......... SIH.7SO. 6Jl-1400 WATERFRONT HOM~.IM IUAL l'>lAH ~ k. ' ... "-"".. ,, ....... ~l,lt. 1,1,, ( ..... 11 •• ,...,.,.,,. ... ho " • llE llGlll ILlllS CD. OVER 55 YEARS OF SERV1CE rt.ICE IEOUCID llG CAHYOH-VtEW \fn1't (,raC'10u• \1·r••11lle~ \lodel W1df'. Wmdm!l SU.,Pt·ndt'<f Sta1rr1se O\t>doolu.ng \I arbh• 1-:ntr~ & Sp.u•1ous L1vmR Room SuperlJlJ\f' f>'oor Bedroom. f'our & <>M·Half ll.ai.b .. Jlome ~~ c .. r NIH,. Oanft'rr- Kltrhm Ot>11 With F1rt>pllC'f' HUl!t' )h'llt'T Swte Ul..umo1.LS 1Ul1an M.arbkt Bal~-\'- Of Golf Couri;t• Cull ..-or i\ppc>intmrnt $72.S.O(X) __ ....... _ .. 759-9100 #2 CCMpototw fttaa Siii< & FINlf CLEANING OE\'ICES C S 0 B I 0 W A S H C L S T C M ~ H 0 M T £ C L A £ R K E W 0 C A B S A U l T S H R V E S 0 H 0 L I R B U N T £ S 0 H R 0 V S W P E H S P U R 0 0 W R H I N N P F I I 0 T N E E B T W 0 A C E H K 0 E 0 E E 0 T T G H B L T H S A T HM A [ 0 ML Ts H r.c I 0 0 TH R 8 0 T 0 C U C H W T 0 T B N A W A C P 0 H E 0 A T Y E S 0 E 0 A G R E 8 l R l P R T S 8 E R T l A H E 8 A l T 0 C l 8 I U S P H 0 A R 0 R E 0 B l L T W E W D R E T S U 0 R E H T A E F H H R C R 0 R~l E AN I N G'S R 0 S I PS W H 0 u'Elo E v I c ( s T 0 w s ( s TH U I S S H H W K A 0 S I S K R E T H 0 l"'vuctiont H>OOtn words b111ow eppeer fotwrd. b«Ji ~.II&>.~ Of di~ly F•nd Md\ Md boa it In: Whal T ootttbMh 8'"' T °""" ~ Mop Waslldoth Cltpf 1 SWMj)tf ..; Hott Hand TOMI 01111 Mop ~ T OWll Fllttltt DustM Outtcl01tt a.om Savbb!llQ 8oerd Stmrttt T omomiw: The Phihc>l>t!\tl .. - BILL .GRUNDY , REALTOR - J: r,'f\11it(J1.,. '•·~ ()/J(1IU1 MUST SB.L MOW! Super fl set-upper, Newport Bei&bta 2+den. wood beam ceillncs . P~ couJd be UD· der 900 mo. witb '20. down. Seller needs qwck sale. 7» 1920 ~QUAIL A. !~~J-. ____ _ MEWPOaT ...... $104,900 10,.. T'll l :lO ,.M.I --------i Ownel' wl1I help ftoall<le --------1 Uws fantuuc 4 Bdrm ELEGAMCI garden home. Huge add· SI H .500 oo family room, secluded pedo. chnmg room too' . .!".aastic..3800,,_t &Q Second 1to1r ~\nT!r ho m e T ota lly re· master aus c.e +3 more modeled, ha rdwood ~bdrma.C&Ufor Doors. bay wmdows too. (1n a oc1 n g d e ta 1 ls. Go u r m e t llllc b en Chance of a WeUme: o v e I o o It s s u n n >' M&-7171 breakfast ana. 2 l.arge A,. ~. , , ,,, "J"' ,,. , bd rms do•nstairs. I I =':r-:::r !~. ~ lt~&inw . ralied Roman tub, mar· ble top pullmans +2 ~fled .... more queen au.e bdrms w .... <>c.afs Olll A mi.ill to lee. Call DOW On Newport Pell.D. or f~ pel"llOllal preview. Soutb to Laguna Be.._ w.nn SiDc'e fa.nub', uallipk dWJin& or CIOCIUD 1. io-~~_._.~...._~~~.-,r. "RM~ [Dded.. r ® IR!llill ~ii;5~ l --•••••••.., 714-337·2'1' or Eves 117-1711. . Patches of Color! A Jump Ahead! .. . ,.... n."'"'"'· REALTORS 675-HI I I SPY8'AS$ l&L -~ c;-.._. .... .... ... •.•..... ,_. ...... ............... ,....~ ... , .. ~0...-wll ,.. .... C:::1tsW w co•••rcW. 1-4 .t $4'7UOO. < PIMIMSULA POI« SJJ0.000 o.n.-wtll carry ~ LDa. No quallfJlDt to buer. U•beU.vab~ • Bdrm. 2 story bolll$. RJebpa~~ Matqen)I celU011. lotal11 ret-cE: SHOllS: Mewpwt -Ir. C:SELECT ·--. J..i ._.c ..,,..._,......_ T'PROPC.:RTIES lilted! WOD't wt~ • SHOltlS ...., ...., SI Jt,SOO. um price " &crmL Cal • J ----~ -·~-------iiill· ... -1-~'Wtr..;,-;~,. "''!"'t'?\ I ·---I I I \.-COLI OF MEWPOIT HALTOIS .%SISE: Ciiit HWj .. Cii-·~ - 675-551 I · ··COMflACTTBMS .... -.-. .. aw... Eutalde tri-5 ..:.-_ 4 6 a den. j lewla:eck>S-tbanone ._ .... -• ~old. Elaborate me Immaculate 2·1tory of llHI can Ule an4 tDne with all the atru. 1 '1llOOd. BiablY vPtraded Gara1e door opeoer, •. : With tasteful~ water aoflener, de- t Om>SJ!!l!Y ~. pool ~ wall COYerlnp. ' ad apa. Fulf price Callfotapp"l.Sl•.500 • $155.000. Call~ m.-s ~net C:SELECT 1T'PROPERTIES associated RJJ ("'I VffJ<; Rf/\L.,.n~-:, . -6 rJ/ W ~Jib•, c.' :t~ -""' THE REAL. ESTATERS 1 __ .J ) SB.L WITH COMFIOINCE Utt yaw ............. ,...,....... at Oc .. ~RMllstate&NCelft• w,...,. .._.,. ot9dlo. ,._ ot "° cott ..,... ---- -CiLAMOROUS EXECUTIVE HOME. Wall• of gl•u onrloold•g d•l1y conred hllh & pri•ate ..,..._ ' .......................... ~ ........ ..,.. & ....... ,,., & _spat: J ~ ..., r&~caytr,k..D19 ........ ,.. Ho.. CJNNC1 to ~ ••erlll I go OMy S2St,OOO. . -SW'a SHAlr IBITAL $650 r... ......... 4 ...... 2 be.; dloac. , ..... \ locatto.. c ,..... pool & ..... 2744 IE. COAST HWY. CORONA DB. MAR 75S.1&1& , ..... ltUll OCIAMYllW! . MOW 1174.IOCH E"CUlllTT 111".DG . t1ltrHelu:u pentbouM . 2 bdrma.. 2 ball», f rplc .• deck + comm.willy ~•rm?'* . will tra~ . wil.b llo.000! .... ..,,,.... .. ... •675-7060 .. - THE REA i. ESTATE RS AT LAST. NEWPORT IEACH FOR uMOa s200.ooo .!Jig C<!ro-on. McLain ownhQm .. delightful, spaclous. "El Dorado model. 3 bdrm. 2112 b~. private patio, microwave oven -move in , condit.on. Good financing available. $192,000. macnab I Irvine ---:--TBBltg"- A SUBSIDtAAY OF THE IAYINE COMPANY VIEW HOM~ 132.5001 Newer 4BR home V(./J1ool & assumable VA loan. Near freeways, schools & lg shopping mall. Owner will assist in financing. <H-83> IMVISTOl-S COMDOI 2BR 2 bath newly decorated townhome w/nO deferred· ~aint. ~ good rental area w/cb1ldren 1 playground & pools. Assum. loan -- owner will assist w/flnancing. (ff-84} PAULA BAILEY 642·8235 ... ..,. Woootioid,t C..- '44-6J .. Vl ~----ecoEFs , BRAND NEW HOMES -· Lat chance to buy, 2. 3 Ir i& bdrm. homes. l le 2 stories. finest. latest amenities. some with view. sizs.ooo To $250.000 INCLUDIMG LAND. Low 12~% interest financing! For app't. to see. call - WAta.FttOHT fOUQ.OSUll fo'ew porl Beacb, 3 bdrma. 80 Ft. froota1e oo . water. Owner needs fast ule. Wt.UM.l-i to -b.e ~. call for de- W». M&-nn HUNTINGTON u~•a O¥l!I c~ ; UJvely 2 Bdrm. 2 biill Sl.Dgle story MARINA PLAN. Upgrades galore. $112..500 ! Ask Cor G ln.oy 962-44M ·. ·~-. ~ COATS& WALLACE REAL ESTATE, INC. ,, .... o...-f'/~ Y.A. ! .. Sflilllow l.oYely 4br. eDd . amlt. 2 car pr. PRINC. ONLY. Call Pat ~-> ~2906. crm.allBl ~ * HERITAGE H t Al T<JH'> ... nm REAL STCAMOal • llMeMIW m 11111T•ERS ~=~' ~,ft~ ·=-=·--,~~~~~~~~~ . MaAW9.IOCll. ~~~~~~IC-.MIM .............................................. IOM...._ .... .. , • HERIT\CE REAlT.)~S I CH ' If --'' I' I '' , r r 4 . . . Ol ',c ;r-J QUAl"'I' BUT IN PAaULOVI CON· IJl'IQCI Nlltlli a.,.. ..... , ...... . ..... 1 ......... .. ............ .. ,.. .. ..... ... ... ...... .... . aaA.T iW 'l'OOt =WLllfAft . .- - - _., __ _ ,. .. . . ~~ .. ~.!!.~.~!! IU"sMml' 3 llr, 1-be. z car pr, 4 ....... ocem YW. 1 __..Dt*UYlllsf --------,,., aut-. .. wtar. JI' ...... Gentllr. illd'd. • ..... ~ ...... ml PM:mc. 1 br, ... '*-iNI 1 tnS mo. _...,. ___ .. __ . ----• l"CHUl41Dt•· Terraced .... crpl. --. .... ti Cano•. ID ...... ea.do ~I pool. ............ . ..._ Ncathuud. 111-saz t to -.i-.it.a.-.,.,1ru., 1 ... ta1 .. . I 1111111••••1•1••• .. arw ... aw.~b&,z $, -tin Prl AYtJJ. AalSIM-UD Spaciou room•. ,q caadD, 2 car ,_... /tftl.-. ,...,,... dlalat aru. -~ -•CANYON wa..m eloNta, bome-.,._ .. ....,._ 48r,a ... 2c:arcar.lrpk. ·-2lr __ ..._ . 1111e ~•ca~ . ....... ,,' ..... , ................ . .... , : a Jll7 ..... ,. • ... lam rm 6 wt bu, ~&a:':"Guard !!!~to Bun\lo&ton .,.. UJ2 nitiwlt iD rmtr bdrm, #151-..•-~ . 8-1 Dtu~ ISZI ...,_.,ca.a--uuu•eou•••-••-• a6ae ........ _, mo. ..... 1aedn.mtaroSG . ... kuetJ JDIW. OIMt Hwy, NB °*" s .._ til Jw •. m roll U:lfT lie. I Dftiil7, Notdtwuod. 1 lulw ..... •t•11 2Bedroam fwD S-.S -fir-. I JOO 645""46 o..Ae or 2 &biClla. Lia-a or *· Prie..t tram 'J'Sl.121Z t to$. ..., Un Sia :lilt" Home. <bu. Adlllla, .,~. , .. ,................... Qolled~ dao.&b,..._-.W --Pocd 7Wd • Fri. A...U. Ajlr.aatb. =Dldll liOt ftrlr. J Util&iiM ! ~. rvtt ---------· _____________ , t•n•••· p •• u... I. j ._..scar pr, .. -... 'ITLIAW l2 waUa. Pool. Co.ta Mr.,.,t.... SI .. ,. ..... K.lcb • pets Ulr.Zb&,2c:arpr,frplc. J.c.8etnlll.f&mrm. LAQVJN'l'Anr..amOSE 111ma. MltOOO. 10'.lt In-aounnnannnn•H .... (ll'N Olll-.-or far-.1 flll nD. dllnrtlr: _...., raa. ATail 11a7 1 lllZUParbktitLD,lblk ..,... ... ,.. c..t. 1110.000 down. o a.. haa ~ 2 marl.Alf..aofee. HTS mo . he . 41 ar -· .,_1mo or W.otBuda.JblkaS.ot !ftDOWM Owner.59-T171 Br • ...U Wl ,_ 1llt.. S7caaaou Creek • .w coaald•r we or ,,....,.. r-o n r STE 'NIM~ lllO/mo.C.UfTl.15'71 . r at•Y..., llM 1'lrtJend. avail. Juae luse option. Call IC7..Mil Broll:s<'nC>ftO.lGI ,...,.,,......,,.. 111111 nHnnu--• 1IL S.121Z I to S. llGa °"'8/,._ 8/S or ft.clJ's ........... 37• 3tJNITAPJ'BLDG.CDM ·~i:reec1-:.:o:: ~~•1ue!'!!...2!!.~ '=".:!"'...:::~~·= tlll'afti. _._ .. _.,.... _______ ,~~··;;~~ Ma.Mtl OLS ON ~ Walkt!r & lee ·--~ ReelD&IM _____ ...._ _ _. All 2Br, uper loc, at 1141,000. Very liWe 3 ... 3 Ba, deeb, dbl w/BBQ. Sl.epa to pOGI, i.-IMdl )JM Miit ,..,._. CODllr> 3 Br. Maid tolQr' ---------,, saeo.-. Byoww Cn4> ne1ative. Call Ast. _....PvlJard.Oceao ~--~AMf« 111111n1111u .. u-2Yi Ba, 1ar, frpl. INN. eerv., UUl. ________ , Plllrft SHOl£S a.3307orCJL1)'J'90.3401 ca107~. .... Neer d. temda. Nena.-.: o cg A 1'f r a o MT Wub/drJer. retric. TV, beated pool. U · ~ ~~mo. .w771 <TI4)4,M..5.294. 985 No . • CANJml Ulrlll lwltPr•rtf t3IO •JUSTUSTa• orllMOJI. JI M , • .._. JMO ~~~· :i.Ua{· T3IMM80 Q.aihry. -..w1 •• -c:oane IK" -H••H••••••••••••• ZZ UNITS. all 28r, 28a ueeuuuu•--••-• ;-bc:bl, at hr ~: . . . ..----Motivated owner sa)'s 0.. FNllt Wit w/N:;. OD 1 acre +; 2 yn l:IOllJIS P'OI\ JU:NT tllO. llllP--.-SEAWIND CONDO 2br, Lmury studio. Free maid e1b11e. -aq.ft.. ' to s .,,._ • ........ ~ b 1 u.--..11...111 I ~ ... 3 or 4br. Priced froal -~. 2 ...... ......... ""· Color tv. tB5 wt. Bdnlal, si;, batba. Pool .--.....Ullltopeu 5 r .. (AIJlll'Oa l·Acre> Three new, &rQu ucome .._wou1 10 -. .. _ -.w cvuo mc.llW.~222'1 IDdlPLt:l.8.000. pool home w/180 p-ee Ari:b BAJ, So. Laauna. $100,000 •/low rents ............... ·-·•·--.W l"lM:d Jard • Oc &oat huuy pm. •P•· patio. NSSMo. TIESluur'SCO. OCMDview.CallfOtde-SlterwetoeallreSo. PriaMIO<:ofGarden c.-...... mz 1an1u. Famillea *-.1Mbeedl.S8r2 .,,. ... ews Viewlbr,blocktobeach. ,...._ W1s a.a. Security enclave ~. %LNT TERMS. -~--· pleue. Kida IE pet• Ba. frple. W/D. suoo. · $31115/le.-e ~ aqlUite CO"re. mo.ooo ctn. Sl,050,ooo. Beau&lfully deewated 3 wiMMDe Call~ or m 5505 m Mli5 nee. Hlrtlar va eam e1 mr. ...-673-7761 Courteey to artra. Prin ·only. Ait. Lea Br+den Inc.op Jocatioa maTLAIL,nof•. -.ms' All1aftao, bot tub, Wl ~ ~,.S ·~ti?. oal¥ Blnlbart <n4~~~"~, .-mo.dee oce&D view. a ~ Wlllome. 4 br 2 l'f' -.. . .__..., irdD. oceirpaacy ~l. ... .,.. IMdl 1769 _.-... ___ .~ __ 1~ ___ --------·1 blda.laOO/mo. .. 191 be, lam rm. DI' 9Cbooia., Siii>:;..~.a:oo SL0'751D>.Ml>a2 --··---········· • · C rdal * 7 UNITS• Cll BepU. 3 yrs old. 3 cmY. locadca ~ mo. n.--A9oc. -.un BLVFl'S; 'l· BR.. tam. t .. wpoft C....,. "•rtr 1600 ~ dwa, 10 mo. old, Bdrm, 2 ba. frpk, 2 car Oard. i.Jlcl. No pets. rm.. md uaiL Pool. Lew· 640wllS7 --·••• .. •••••••••• Garden Grove. A~. gar. Near pub. Drive ~ 2 BR 1 ba boale. P'rplc, ti>' vtewa! $1000 llOl!l&IL ________ , ~AL/LAW !51-)8116 by. Avail April lal. =-=-~-~ _ar_._IM-GU4 _____ _ •C8nm• S825/mo. Jo ADD A,sl. IWl&/PE'r.>09' Park Ave. MOO/mo. 4br,3ba,Cual Frat. JUST USTED · 340 Newport·Bay /Hoag -~= 851-1522 VKaS.. super ebarp 3 ~ rn Ot.ul. SllOOllo. aiffDr-VIEW. VIEW. 2 O.W.C. Gl-079eves. 2100 2 Br,., ... _ d·-i-·, 2 car BR2Ba,~3BR2Ba. 16-0lSl Br·J.ri lot·ll'Ul poteo· ----------•••••••••••••• .. ,_ _.. ~ 2 BR $41$ Nr ftl&er'dlnalptreealaaded tial Owner will finance Commercial Bldg for 11·1 HEMET AREA. pnae.Nearoew. . ' .1 • ... bdcS ~wd to llQ/OC9M view co.do! at 10% ini.er.t. $250i000. sale. "'1..11.Y leued. Triple Riwnide Co. 210,000 sq lll-«5i9or fM..S7S2 · ~ ,,.,.r... . ..,.1"311_..• Ur deD. lba. Miika No {QtlJ'f!]!;w•tlnut coast Properuea. net. COL. Good wwna· a.~·~ Sl.15per mr. ,.,., SootlnrJ. New •f.lflijfl.NlUJD =~~-:;~ -. ... tobwb.. Ne. l'BMlO · ble loan. Located 1q ft. Good terma. qU.quiet.oopeca.$125.. ~~Im .,..w/clind~&o SDI ..wim. Call G.rt Real Estate ~ll..uct, Riv. Co. in Owner-, 11ary Ne1eoa 2733 bed. Me-teo4 •'-maM' UDO-ISLE • EastblUff! 2t00' laxwy stqiptniceat«. Allcud· Sarver Lao e, San _•_UM _______ ---------hHa •• a ......_ -------- tawabome + 5 phlab reo-dilloaal dnelopabJe ~12011 Pb NowA'lllil.3br,a.,.2ear 21mcbto'-dL BnDd .... ._,...u, n.i ~Cr-Ml Coaclo. -·::.·~.~!.~· .• ',~ -u1e.~o1 ._ ... comm r anG.llary ew9'"i!R.-.... lbllltic9wdllltff111c .... ar.a..2car·,.,. •. lllllr'*-w,..l~ ..... ~Poollitm- -.. ow ·--,_ Nelllma. 0.-01.A#. 2'133 1-£..--llL.&.. ...-SJID~)lo.111--~~· .. -°'9' .... J ™ 8lltL c:da. .. _ ..... •beamed ceU.. Cozy owo. tn5.0DO 1"' down. Sarver Lane Sao ._._._ --__,lldJa patio. Walt to beadl; ,,__. __ .._ ___ ,u. ' lllUHUU•••-•••••• .,,, W/ .... Of91'., .... a..-..._ r9ltk wood ~club •cautenola fadl. ~.:;.r.:,:_--"""43 Marco., Ca 921119• Ph C..W.. J224 4.llr'.~ 'fiew ltalk •••t tameroom ...... Z8r, 1ba,frpk, aa.--·-1M/74'-5Gllevaafts.. _. .... ,•-••••••-•• • oc:a • .,..._ 6 ..._. •· _ ~ ..... -L __ •3 LOT z&rn-to beta, _. mo. .... ---_.,.. -lllSSIONRBALTY ltbftoorVlllWOando .._,..,,, ly 2000 ..-· ---. -.-CW. 0.11 h '· ~ •so ·aa.LetfDoAJ"l. ...... l tr 1 ba, )I.~. OD anun•-•••••H• PrilDll c.oata M.a - -~. Wlllll•la f L ?rt.. Aft8S/1.-. IG la5 --~wt-· .. "fiew ---------t .,___.,_ 00 .. _ .. er 0..6fllled78"4. Re-1..-ect Ur, Ula titdlm a.. ... owaw. t9MCOUMl'RY iiis.ca~inboat ~~ ICNSM).-..... t.w. ioc.d __.. truaa <1•ped«, bltll S...Ma UIO Cl.U9 sUp/marina included. 44 lllTS or condos. Builder'• 2 Br. 1 ba. mee ... Uo. fl'OCll beada.. Call Mr. food proc:aear. a..ildna 1111111•u•n•uu-• ~.RAK ___ ·-r;;..70Wiier. 67rn'4·. ~ST-·... pacbh available. r-Moaea 1$1·1117 o r '* --,.a. I.IC. lut. 2 aa ~ !Ure D9W; 1aY • .vv "6• ----garage, adult• only. = j &! ~ Jl'rill&..Lle ~ callJoU.AIL _ _ _ Ol'flJGaW-__a.lLJo r Info . Goodloclfton ~ a.ms MC'llritJ. C.U ~JC1J 0 .._!C;.: ~ bdrm. 2lt.ol'y bl move-In in doWllitoW'D SaDla Ana Terms available. I SUany 2Br bou.te with ...,.. . ..rn ---· -conditlcm w/aparkllng $10,000 Down aaaumea rednelopment area 3 a. 2 ba. fam nD. pr, Pvh•c*'r • ._ .. OD b-• ._..__. -· --------POCI • IPL Owner will t.i..nce ot $250,000. ~ sm.ooo OI' bit otr. 09{C • yd. Kida Gk. No dop. ;:-...;..."i:m ~ ~:::r.:: ••• I=. '* a ' Pa l2tl help w/flJaaneln&. iaten:&t.. S Br, 2 story et mlJ lK inl. w/~ 1115mo.Dl·90ll. c.11 llr. -.. ~1...., ......._ -new. 1 , ................. _. Hurr)'lWoo'tlast! 1 bmne.Noqualifytngnec. dD.. AclWta. New 281', Z~Ba. _or_l6-__ TTa ______ 8r f?plc IDk:row BOIOSPORREHT 54M49 I Vacant. Move right in! Call dir.et or collect 11 ,,.f7 alc'e exeu:i":e· 3 or *· Priced from Pno.only.668818 8Q,Ytime-lMbrs. d1l•-~:!sber, •,e 1 • I ..... • home. S1SO pr mo ...... P'8Cld Jard fl s.aut1•• 1076 W011DILI. tta t•Deeart. ~--onn, 1rpufo· llwl1 w 1242 o.m. poo1 • tftlats. caraaea. ramlllea •-•••••••••••••••••••• c~1111 "-t 2400 ..-. 2 ear pr. w a . 1111 .... uu•----· D1rtJDe lll·llll. or eves please. Ki de • pets NOQUALJP'YINGI ,,.,,,---•••-••••••••• doc:r~. Pool •epa. OntbtWater. Burcin.,... 4M.-n M6c "Callt14-Z516or 21Ji1'4downOWC12Ya%. lam4pm:IM5-HarbJur bame witb t.er· ~AIL,nofee. """-'-...___. 38R ~I R.a.51 ---..___ ,,,__ ___ .. _ """ ~. Beautihal 2· New Twabu, aecu.rity Ull 11 D~_·BOA . ~•IWIIIJI 111 ._.new .-W INTS. c:.M. ""'9l .....,_ ~ ="°'z.u.. v::_~,.-iu::' ~. 3 Bdrm. lamiJ)' 1JU, 3 JIMDimn, 2Ya• 92 Br. yard. prqe. ut1I Ill.LAW--& FR. 2800 sq.f\ .. Pano C.3bd.2baowner'sunlt New 2 bedroom 2 bath ._ ...... , .,.,.,_, wq, rm. iDdoor pool+dock Ba. form. dlo rm. 2 pd. 1425. No pet1. NO LEASE REQUIRED YEAIMtOUND FUN: Social Achvit1H Ot·• rect"'. "" Sunday &undl. 880'1 •Par- tlel. Plua much more. cm.r~ Tennill• ffM lAeaOtls (pto .. pro lhop). 2 HMlh Ola•Seun8• ~· rtge•SM'n-... ming• Driving R!1inOf>: IEMITIRJL ANlrT· WlfTS: &nglea, 1 .. 2 Bedrooma • Fur· Jlished & Untum1$hed • M>ll l.Mng. No Peta • Modela Open dalfy 9 to 6. <>akwood a.den~ Neaport 8Mdineo. · 880 Irvine , .. 161h) (714) 645-0550 Neaport ludt/So. 1700 1611'1 St !Dover 11 18th) (714) 642-8170 .. ExdtlD.1 new project. oceanview.$265,000. home. lll11ion Lakes rec rm . RV are~. for z · ...__, ""-'·"''~-fPl"'a, A tC, atnu-. 1S4Zl7;NJ.l460 ·---rJ;.__ .. ..._ _M.B..k.al.D\&te w/frpl,Jard,pra1a. Count'"" Club. Golf· 1125/mo "-szt.4U7 ev -=.,:-._I .. .... --~-. .. ..,,,.,........ ..--at-~. ·~ •U::f• • avail. _,,.,.,/mo vr v, "Omm. pool, Yard. c • '. rma for aale aod · n ..... ,'.rv\llJ ....... -....... tamis .. -i. Beautifully 6311153 ' ' " -• • ...-· Waterfrool Homes water, truh pd_ Refl F-• + d 3400 WEHAVESUMMER • RENTALS WEEK OR MONTH : _ -----.. -0 'iSL,,.,J.Wla'..WAl~IU!lllil!iAIM!.__,.+-Jaodac•ped, oo main· sn.1400 req.._-.17CMlll50 __ ;.:•••••••••••••• Sl2S,OOO. Several to 1 4 % D W N • N vst.mta tmaoceyard. 2 Br. 2 ba ocean view. cboolleltom. Aaeot. QUAµFYING 13% in· 20MEWUHITs.CM 9mOClubbouaeRd. • $700. Adult.a. no pela . .,.... 3244 Oean4br,Zba, pool It prk _..AMT\.Y 9'15-(8JC)arS31-0tl!l6 t.enlsl on new home. Im· ·r I bd 2 b DeeertffotSprinp m.33'16or~l·918T. --•••••••••••••• ..,,.. _ ...... , ... .,._..,_ mediate occupancy. Beaut1 u 2 • . a ~2572 __ .._.S priv.w.ato~915Cl-o. ~-Dynamic ocean view. towobouae un1~s 2 8drm, new qit. new a _..,_ aazi.-.llll SpeOoue 2 Bdrm 2 Ba. associated BROKERS-REAL TORS JJJ" VY l otb,,o b71 l6•? Huge roof deck. Formal ~~rplca, vaulted ce1I· painL Gar, fbcd yard. 2BR.2Ba ........... ~ n-if 1 1 1 at.a view. Pool. -.auna, -I SELL dine FR. wetbar ud .._. -KAUAI . Oilld·pet ~/mo 3 BR.2Yaba ......... f150 """aut u peop e or eurci.ae room. $1700. SHORTTERMrentals . ' ' TSLln.--,. • ..... .-. •00 31..-...,,.,_,,. t-...~ . .1 .. • 2.,.. ~ bocne. • .. ....._..,-r too 1mny mas to men· ___ .Y_...,,.._ ... __ _._._.._ lsl/laat+aec. W. .. _ .... · · · · · · -_, ~~ ... ~ ._... ---Weekly• Monthly :. Back Bay new coodo. tion. 1255,900. CaJI for RENTAL Oceca,.,_,C--. Wil.anGl·._ 3 ~irf·B~~ b .. .....,,,. ... u: 3 Br. 2'°' -C--,-,-,--1---Ageot~l70 ~ Only •.ooo. 2 Bdrm, 2 appl. INCOKEPROPERTY ~;~r:!-'= FIREPLACE. HUGE 3 tBR.2Yaba..pool91S w~ber/d:,.:'r. ~r:ic'.\ii:kt '' d 1425 --~----- ba, ft1*:. Mi dn or8~% . .II. 8 . Real Estate u.aoo. llodl&Ju. Type Bdrm, 2 batb bome. lanchcaped paDo. Pool• ---·--.. -··· Ur. New ec.to. Centra) ~~:-1ptioawilbl 71447·3000 Homes. 2t hr eecuritJ, 3 Dot.Ii U..: T~ ·secluded and very jac P rl v . Q ca i et Nft'parter.t3br.3ba.2 Joe:. Fully furn. Nuf _ ..WOil.Dai.-: s.lfaAm IOIO ~ .. ==~pool&pier. mm fW -U private. lleu Verde. .,..,,.,.......,... lmtmo~ llGl'Y. oceaD view. tll50 =-~:~~~ ••••••.-•R•••••••n•••• _,_, __ ,_._ __ ~----Yea . You can owu pro-doee to Tewintludaool. _.. IDO. Property Bouse. ...._ Janet 1 -MS-624~ ~1111 perty 1a Tahiti. Work! 1 IG.-oorMZ-1010. '4::1" 14 -<" ~ ._ 101/~a.o-,. INYISTOIS famoua1lali Hai Hotel i.5 OnlY tmc>/Mo. Alt or I ....._Yiato 3267 evesJoycenu92-451S • 9cmllld ••• • 5"CIAL coovertin1 to condos. au NonOD. ,._.. .. T1T1 I .. I I I I I·-··-·····-Adulta. NeW 2Br, 2Yi8a, Ocufront nil Reduced! Take over low 6 UNITS, 2 blocks off Owner/Developer I.a liv· 2 Br, pr, quiet •t. nice 3 Br, 2ba, 23$41 Ave. d IS b was be r • s e Ir. apt. 2Br. lBa, 60 I 1 mi.A intere1t lo•n on this Newport Blvd. Take over !Al a alide presentation yard + pdnr. Adult cpl TtJpmp. en, bt/lut. de&n141 oven, frpk, pets, MOO mo. CZ13l .....v daanninc2 Bdrm coodo. $203,000 loan. SelJer on tbe -rty It Tahiti N .... SlCJl>.+.4ep.m-... pltio, 2 car pr. w/auto. ll&«X8. <nt>Mi-0553 > -_._ t ...-.L.. Walltowall •· ,. • ...,... only. o peta .... :i. l&Jl:."Hl".~aia.ft.._t-1 ...._ ....._. ... pa • -·-·roo "__, carpe .... own W/earry papen wtt.b no locally. ForreservaUoos 541M1znor19-7131 TJ'~"""'rv~MWCl"YM ..... opener. rvuo •• . Bacbdorapt..dosetobc~ with Spedaft1at view. patio; J pooa, sawia, payments UJ um. Act • loc•tioo call Bob ...,,,... IMdt lZ" 9ilm4paa: MS -Ideal far quiet. ~,"_.. Amumableloan..Callror spe.IDWoods.ideVillage. now!Call714-96U'767 Wataon <714)997·1000. E'aide mr. comm pool. ---------i --··----· adull.$295.Mo.utf:~ ddalla. $73, 700. BKR. Call Ol'rN rl10· ll ~llJNI0/11 Nl(f• ,.,.. Gw. PY' yrd. ad.Ila. 9425. Terrace townbouse, 2 NO FEEi ~ • OaDdo 2Br 2ba Condo. Adult *C t"'ftealj ~l'120 ., ; Oltofeo..ty Jllr.3'5180raqeAve. =.~i='::: =·~.a lleot.W =·~~ =:=2br.~ & ~n~estmeni' . ~ ' Propafty 2150 <NLDWILCOf•• _s.ow&. ________ BIG CANYON BDnlNa arSZlll Jl&mt.Bch. ba condo overloolrio• .. -. r9T'9 , --------·----•..::~~='=~=' .. -···-············ • _,...... ... ..._ ._..__ -u .... "" _.~,,, _.., • .-, -r ~ P9tiO bome. 2 &m.. rr .. cta C.trJ I rl~tt' .,.. courH. -mo~ ~~~~~~~~I n.000,000 t Unlt11Co1ta Men. =.,.c.::,~ ~per ~ =~:::;, tr, 1 ba. kar prap, ~ ~·-'*'-, LIAlW Sl·m>d&J's. Fonner bome of tbe ca,GOO. Slabjed to 1031. •'Uu.d bide-•••>'· A pd. NO D006. NJSllo. pool/teonla/1dulls. SM71Mo. ..... m.-18R~; <>r....u-SmJ 1 Bdrm, back ot ,:C:~~~ =~.2.~~:: -.rAt&.oras-cm. =-f~roc~.1"e •to .... lA. 2151 i.w-.a.suu1aa.s !W'ar Dr. BJ o-.. a ~:=.:.E!Sws. ~AllLA'iOm~ Cllll"IUd.SS..-to)Mbcb. pool, approx. l·ac:re. ... _... ..__ ___.._.. -~---•-•...-•-----2 bdrm. 2 etOl'Y lYI be. Llmlr7 ...... *· b, Cll ' l8lilZ ~ a.. .... Prieed to OIAMllCOUNT'Y ar.h&MW Aa --· o..lo ID '"?be I.alli9" ram rm. fnD1 dlD rm Eld .. -.U a-.GOO. Oub. tndeor~ don. lZ UNITS WITH me. 14 e , 28a, w/fam. rm. XbL loc. Bta.-. deeont· bMlll llll?rllU6te, • ma.aJ 2 BR+.;_ <orsTR> IAn Omfmt 3Br, ZBa. Apt_ a...a...-...... 1 --Owaer/81&!50-1'1"7 T ...... tYr.OW · 2~,berbetaa.NewtJ _.. ~-•..1 ______ 4 c--..i-..___,...... is.JuneU.dly,or ~ ---· --.rT ...... onrl1l c1att LAND. palDMd, drapertH • ._. ----· -· • ..-__ .. , __ , ~=-=--. ~d.,.. mo.mmo ... ---------1W1 I • hu I 091 --. _M .-u. 11 ... 1 .,.... No pieU. llOO mo. -.-·-r..a ________ .,._.................. ,,_, lS ..... comp&e.ses. b. tile. and take OYer "a Pa P• r · "" c • s.-o ,._. • a.culitt botqe comm. IUOOmo. •Spectacular OceanS S'IW'STO VAUMNllBlllBa,new WW MU on coatnct at D~E LOAN. 2 -~ ol Mesa ID WWCc:M. 4 br i ba. 7'2-1100 front! 4br. avai.I will{" IAY ... CH PlblllD-out. New cpa t.~. 4.5~ c:uh oo Bd unita •t1are1ea. Verde. IDcl. 1ude:Der. Woodbridte *· ccmdo. fam. rm., 11. cowatry oPf"' r••O ·•' \IUN•OllfN<f• now tbru summer 3Br I bachelor. .,. Jard. m.soo. mi ~TD~ u~'1°.' ~ free muaced Water pd. ~b o:oer. IDdd NC pq. lab, pool, ldldMG. ..., utru. [il&J. l.tlli 1; LI 13117'7 $155,000. _...Ave.-.0 =·~~3b::!~i '*~~~t;?· ioail• .:,:,_r~ ~&wala. '500/lae. 2:~~al~l~h~NP!;a~!c!!.!!!'!~.~!·l~l-5...Jl .1J(J"idi) ~ IEILTY a..r....... .,...walUDc u.t . .can •:attar •ua.. ~· Ntwpart cnat. Bta1111. 1 · ~·-•1••••-....... Ml ....... • ............... -.... Pl&Pc ...... 1D-18llO ••1 t ...... SD.Oil ,., CelldD. .... ac. ......... + ... 2 llr, 2 ....... New qlt. ~ a.da o.cso. 67~10 Mallli..... 00 •u1w J70G ae.AIC. .... CDD ba. fr,lt, ~aft, ................. jac. Nt. Boat Hosp. All ---------I ...... ., 11 . _ ...... ,,............... = re•M, db· e I c -, Lab, -1a111l 1m1• ... I• + --~ -·-WW!YfjW u11•u•n••••••••·--J_ ftll'•fL -a ~a ., -..-.---·-M •---·--.,.AU. ~-~ LOftMCM•? • --...... llldd. .. ca..-........... He. c•t•. SU5Mo. On ,,. ,..,. romd. ::.,.-...... ~.: ~c;-=~ -·c1.· ~,,::-~:;-: --------farlwa.lf•d a ... ..a =':i ... ci~w::t= ---..... ~ • .. -Ii:~ •• , ... ~··· ••• Mt.at C41Mo, &·•&••· ....... Ual•. Patt. •I ht ........ NPT. BCB. N ... Vllla e••lp•ed0 kltdtHI, rn' 6 ~,._,-na NOf•Jm• ........ ,........_ .. W,.,..._Jar,SW..f'tt .,....,_T11 .,oc. • ......_.._..,,.... . ..._~Oc.aw. .....,r~.~ t•b, t•~:,r.r,r:: . .q.nwr.MJ lllldllt et ..... ., rWiDI ......__.,,.._ VlrJ *-. frflC, lfeC. -.,trNm a trs...., a be.. fl'ple. _. .... .,,..,. in-,( · •. . tnila. 1 .. eona1a. •Drtdt1 i ~ W AMlwt1 allr, ....... pwt,.,.._ ~~.~· C.W ...... JU2 T...._ ¥r!J '•~=: 1!;. 1 llr,,,.,...., a.et )'ll'd. _..., cleeara&M .-.... , ....... •••·--• ........... fllorH end rider. Jo CI D, natl l••••· New At. c-6>. SaCI 41utt co.pit oalJ. IWllCBO llIL\OS. de-OntJJblb.'°~ 1br HluM"9w"-t 972-8421 sml£ :S,~ Park ~rH. tu0/80. K.Wa *· ao lneL WoodllcWlw. All ...,.,,__, _.,IU2Ba.alhtna. + d911, au. ca~u . ... S _ & '°~t~ .... l.Wll n.etwood OWCtt~ ll'Mtlllt. ....... -W a MW. --.. No ~ --a .... t 8' llurtoU Betel .. dn,.,, nfrts ...... ---.• <--a-"" --.;_ ~ -...__1-,1--P•t•. Let, A~. --. ....., .... ..._:--.m.1111 Omia 1k11 ot lnrJ. No -Patrt• T....,. -·•> .. auUtaJ -_._ ... ·-,...-,...-,...r:-=:-_,,.. 111---. --~-·,....-l:o = i::.•· 401 I•••••·· -· . " ·= • .. -=:: ..... -__ ,_ .......... ............ ..... ~ -~---.~ ... W-lli· =:--· . ft.loo --us: ' ,_ Jldeal ...,.m.n.t --U.,._ -Wallue. •· ==t· , -.--a: 'it • IUI .... .. ... ..... ... • .... WOIKM•DG• COlfDO. 11 ••• I··········--·· a.., 1 ..... trplc. pool 0' •• ALT A a ca.;·JJTI um&.11"1Bft. ........... =-t"81.....-; ............. ~ ....... ~·,ea::: :." * .. ·-=1·· MCWll8)1U! f#i/////r. • 'IW'l'IJt 6 .... ,.., .. ,,., .... Gl9' 1ML...,. ._ • tia/i -·.Ii .ii,~ --~=~~-=-~.:.:.;: --------~.I~~~==~~ ___ !11...._.au ___ WlllMll CID.... ........ ... .... o.war. .......... ·s.a. ... +• ..... - 1107 r • t T -- r ,.._ ,.. old IUff for ... ~ JOodlH wllb a ~---5171 --..e11. ,..;:"""' ~tremOved. New lawaa. 'Bl.acTI Ea:p. ,.ideaiq. ya.rdt • cl~anups. tree trtm· mbl. Free est. Gerry. •7Z27 ., ............. .,. ........ .,....., .......... .,..., Af*l•••••u.tw.. .Af=•-·••UilfwlL ~.................... ...................... ...................... . ............................................ . C-...._ •24 C....MIM 3124 ............ 3140 L14i-1Nc1t 3141 •lluuperi.,_ 316' ....................... ....................... ....................... ....................... ...... ................ . sBllnD• ,_ P1k1 _. ..... SL.air. Adha J ar. l be. oceam""'t'lew. YllWOPIAY- lrlmpr, .a.-oaly, DO pets. SllOMo. walk to beadL Upereded &Al'l'BU1P'P. !lltmntq 10a1J siao dep + i.t 11 tut pMa&. c:r1Jl. drDI. Wna.. z b r . J b •. lrp •~ • .--.. ·-....... _ stove, lodr1. 1525. kMalloule Orpao. FVGI. o;-vt;-· _...._ •·•· e1.ZUO Noa·•moken. Mature • 1 & 2 IR,_.. A~ 6a1ta. No peta. S$50. l Nrm-sil ............. p&ld. ___ IO.sm _____ ,1 Br .......... ama1I bllt • DMwallln a 110'1 LYlwY 2 Wrm. 2 ba. 2 ... J ............. COt:Y w /Iola ol neat wood. .. IG-M50 after4 pm. • Poel a Ate. AMiii ~ peltiq. Block -------- • GMH L......,., to t.eb. walk to abopa, Sll5 2 br. 2 be beaul1fvJ • .Mt to luch a S"-" Olurcta. bank. vlllace. lined .., 4-plu. Nice Flreplace, open beam. quMt U"M. 2 car eac:l. Adlllla. a.. paid. ___ .. _5Cn'I.. ____ 1315 mo. ZBr, ZBa ttuctio, 1 • z ar,·bltm, mni. =~:~· poel. Adult., DO peta. 1-------- S115.l&Sl50. HMN82 Twoble 2br. l'Aiba, pvt . . Leaae$900 mo. lncld 1ara1e. frplc:, WID l&Ua. tM 00. book·~. f'lulliU1. 2 Br SMO.. Spac. 3 paUo. Eocl pr. orw. Br, 2 ba "95. Play. adlta. No Peta. 13'75110. groaad, pool~••· cty-~eves 541-totM ~ New 2Br, 2Y,Ba, dishwasher, self · cleaDiDI oven, .frplc, petio. 2 car 1111'· w/auto. door opener. Pooi .fl spa. flllaHlpm: 64S - 38r 2ba, oew, kids o&, ·-..&er' Ir pa incl. near So. Coaat Pl. U50. ~: mo to StOO. 1.a Br, tfa ba apts. Lndry rm, patio/yard. Some wlacl pr • tleam c:d.l· -TSL ..... &Qde Sm. studio. Stove• refrig. W /D. UW I.Del. S2l0mo. 6'.W461 2 Br, l ba. Avail. H. Drive by 89' Center SL Apt A. Then call Dun.ger •. /woe. 957-0701. $31115 mo., req. lat, lut Ir eecwil)'. Shown by appt. only. l..Arse 2 Br. l "'6 ba. adult. Pldm apt. pr. No pd S'B>lmo SO.SC'11 ' • • ' • I • ~' • ' ,. I h • ' ~ I ' • qh.1 .1· d. l ________ , OCaAM A..UA Walk tQ tbe .,each. Delig.blfuJ lge 1"2 Br apla, some wtfrplc, all patios «' balconies. Eo· joy 20 acres w/attnct1ve greenbelt. trees. lmdacall6 • t bole put. tine 1reen, 2 pool•. Friendly clubbouae wtfrplc, cokr TV, aauna, e:terciN • wei&bt room.. Starts • $MS 1ncludlnl maJor' uWWea. Adult.a. DO pets. .. CASA .. SOL 21'61 lr111t .. 962-6653 Nee t-bdnn. apt. Walk to '-di. town. $350 1\roer' Aaeoc.. 4SM-J JTT ~ ....... llSZ ....................... ..... AM'f COt4DO $550 ... •8Y owoer·lBr, 2"1Ba, or new, 2 pools. Uat vu, wtk to stons. To see call Teddy most dya/ever:y eve 831·7°'8, or ownr 415-lilZSllN/A Iv mac. tkbdparf .... ., ....................... ~a:-;r.',~:. 8: 2br, encl yard & gar. 2 Br. newly decorated. . Adlta. Sm pd OK. Nr So. ptt1o. encl. puking, lo 2 Br studio U50. No pets. recreatioo.allpdutiJex. Cat . Plan. S390lllo. +plex. 78Jl Sycamore NMrlloqlbp.631#79 cept eiec $5.W . .,.13llO; -~--------· llC. $350mo. 752-•l. <:rl·W74-2ml 6'S-Q32 -------~ Lge lbr, 1ngl mature 2tr. 21Je. patio, gu. Near *DECORATORS llNe..W APTS penon. Stove only. Lota bch. M.50Mo. 817 ~a DELIGHT on Waler,. 1.110.FREERENT ol st.ora1e, encl gar, H.BM5t(8).-.~ older pref. frpk. lBr. 2Br2be •••••.••••.• U50 patio. $31.S+dep. Xlat. llliOyrl;y m.8145. Spaciou new unlta. refa.only.MS-3487 Walt to beach. lbr, stove . · Private patios, decks. ---------• & refrl1. $325111 o . WestcUrt l1e 2br Iba. JS MapleJ..~;~· Mee.a Verc:le-Olt.e 2Br, DO ~ m.:8050 adlU. DO peta, Dew decor, Open U&ll)' 10.5 petg. lat/lut +SlOO. ~fs. piolMMIU ~.646-6811 1385mo..G8-l.938aftSPM. 2br. Zba, crpts. drp1, or548-at08 D/W, pr. Nr 5 Poiot.a.41 New luxury coodo with Beach. 9'2-8032 Newly decor 2br, adlt.a. view on The Bluffs. 2 Br. No Peta. Encl patio. z ba. frplc , & many 2br, l'Aiba. studio. Gar, Sl15llo. '70& James Sl. x\ras. Call Rbett, frpk,D/W,U50Mo. Aiic-B. By appt. m-6410 962-8847 orlM2·2711 752-7474. S3&-33W7 MIW ADULT .AnS 1961 FULLERTON Mc+JtltB"S W ALI( 1110 FREE RENT lBr duplex clean Ir quiet. 14 2 br apt.a from M50.. 2BR., 2Ba. M50 Adult.a, 00 pets. 12115. Frplc. Wle yd. patio. =~ ..... ---..... , 11 ...... , •• ffartlow', cblldrea OK. a.t No pets. Spa. Upper 3 br, z ba. ~mo. 18862· Jib Qrcle, apt 1, 1M Dally No pet&. 1 child oL Call ...,, . YEARLY·2Br. Bloclta from oeee.n • bay. .. w/ulil. 8'1S-J.IOI. Brand new Newport lal...s laurioul 4 Bdrm, 3 ba llllit.a. Over 2000 1/f. $1200/mo. Sl3·3900, &11-950 New 1Br la 2Br, jacvai. pool. Dr bch. .. up. 140I &apertor. 145·8'14 or IOlmn -... -~... afta'4. 751·~ ...... -..._--,.._-_-...... -3-Br--. -~-u. ____ ,lll.Ul:n(...,o;u. _.,. ae.it.new......tomin!UllL Bache&or unit. Carpeta. ba APT. Frplc, dalrwhr. 2 Br, 2ba. Ocean new, ~ ~ !lpoot 3br, drapea. refri&erator, blt. yu-cfla ;..nie. Kida 6 1 frpk. £st.r.. ~/mo. -...... pnv•te patio. ins'. Adult.a only, oo pet.a. pet ot. U7S + $400 de· ~171-700 $$50Mo. &15·7070 or 1285/mo. Call aft.. ~: posit. can 9&t·2:5M or _-._7& _______ , ~. man. A#. oofee. air.a.. up6donRain. -~ , .. -... __ DIW. frp&c, p.t car sar. 1nu1""LAV ... '""'· -. Brand new. Lease w/opt.. IWl!c4• Plltio.IG-Gl'1 ..._apt. Pool, tee area. 2dbrm. 2¥.ba, 2 car attcb Hst 1• 3142 •--------- 'ISLMl:mt DrNxe 2 br condo. rrp1c. ocean Ylnr. security, pool. rec. facil. l'12S mo. EW!ll 6wtmdl .......... YIU.A IALJOA Ntw ~ MC. bid& .• aub&erraDeaD Pf'kc .. nice patios, some w toceao ~ ll frpk:a. Adulta 0e1ly. lbr. 1 ba; lbr +den; 2br. Zba. u.nits avail. JRL PROPEJthES ..... ~ . Jl7' 4000 ....................... S12 Week 6 Up • 1 Bn. kltcbeaettea. pool • aa.id .... 541-'7SS. l.ADlko Inn 11*1 Room •l full bouu llrivilesa lD Westbluff .. ol N.8. avail.. lm· imd.MUl'I Roam for rea1.. c&u all. .. lhD O.C.C. la !leach. c.11. Gl-Ol"J't Mltr' bdrm. fwn., ref • bal p&ae. For 1-l males. Nur PCB at Beacb. --- ....................... ........... 4JOO Pt:IDS PAJHTIJllG ltllpr'd. Reaa latH. Free r.t. Call Geae a.om Palottoa. INT I EXT. Nell. baDe9t.. nu., 12 yn. up. uc·ca. Dave IM-11*. • t -· ....................... No Job t.oo small. R-uoatb&e rates. nee a 97-3271 ....._,..,.... T ...... .................... ; ....................... .. NM&~•~ Cred. teacber. matb, ,_ IST l9J.l•H Ea1ll1b 6 readlag. • Gr.-l-7 ~1731 after Pl.AST!!RJNO ~epm..--~---~~ ,.,.... ... ...___ ,_,-·-.-wt wCll 'I ---------...................... . Expert la patches • Profe11looal window small Joba. lat/ut. ctewanM>1 bJ JoeJ>aD1ela . &..~ ~ DAMA POtH'T l<Mll~lrae• ....,. u. MR dllllaMftta1/o{fic:e Cl\16et spot la ~·!1!~ 1p1ce, 1rou111d floor, 8-c:ll. C.... - -~111.-oraa.&a-.lot-• ..... <Wet ----llZS/mo. r...e ____.. ta.a. wnc. ....... c/o lni. Xcroa copy. Tile Dally Piiot a.. a.do. lhd'n&IOD *"iMfOltT B&Aal• s.na., W'rice avail ~r. p .o. Bo• a..dl. DDO mo. MtF. •P1IDllZLOCAn<Jlh -~ U9, C... Meaa. CA C.U.1 Ul·tlll da1a •.• ,.,,_Wifed,_! IHH or tel••llaeH ZlS/GlaUev.. • .. ft.. s..D ......,,... omc.. --~ ffhetoabare &q 1!9111•'! (TIA).... Mi .... ol be.J. aYall. l·&a.11--«--Jft-m!--W-'6-· LooklDI for a room· *ODii DELUXEsmTES. -~~~ kit. .._....,..for,...,.,....."' From -· Air CI09d. • -&.? IMp. Vic. ot lnlae. ***HO'Wll*** amce. ... to C.11., or 1'4.8 . Uoder A..._ lbariq aervtec 11Dl Newpon _,__ "9G1'0.. "\ .... -UUl pcL m6 h Ped E.C.Hwy.~ ~ bave~ for you 2111. Koob)'. w....s m CGlll.a ._. or m.Ga-?days·l'72-C75 to aubteue. 1"tne ....... 2 or 3 BR. -~"-anc. iD BeJ'fMW Ho&.el. II.. ~ Cooslduate outgoing WIOmaD Jt..JO to lhr yrly 31r. apt. w /man/wocna.o Balboa. $230Mo+uhl. lm.sl2I MJneedl to mow. Have peg. Shr~ home with )'vd.11U111. P'tmale wuted ZS..30 to abare 2 Br. I~ be apt lo Hum. Beta wtt.b malun m1Je. IC'1-t11'1 aft •. llale .... male to lhr 2 Brapt.CM.~ +ae<w. IG-,.., ...... 9aare 2500 sq. ft. condo ID 1br mare.. ~ mo 'i'J &ail call S5MSl9 to S. lll Y. Park Newport Towubouae. U25. "'1 ut1llliu. Call Jao : 794)8. Kelp.. II. to aha.re Zbr. 2ba.. apt. • 21..a. C.111 . 121110+ll&il. IGOUO Nd P'em. rm.mt.e ZS·~ reap. job, $190 /mo. 1moe ..... -.... ~ motber. tyr okS dau1bter would llh a.bn nae-•mbkilll in· dlnlual Z5Jn or older to .,_. 2Br. lBa cottace GD quiet ltreet m Balboe Dr. Ba,. DllO/IDO. Bela. req'cl. m. TT3I aft. 4. Goll cam. .... to.a.rs.a 0 I Id• SIJS/,.. IDO- ca&J-... aft epm . PaatollilrCIU .. 1 Ba ......... deea. indd.-- Elaec. i.m. ......... rwp. 11/PtolibanZ br21Mi '-I NB. AU fWD. . sm mo. + ~ uUI . ...-. • tcz.GllO ~ 1111,. ...... Hlstoncat landmark. mo• up. Bay View. lmmed.. ocrup. C.ont.acl Ame~ ~Sq."-~ mo. 4001 Bittb ~ N 8. Aeeat. Sil ·SOl2 Ml'wtO«T c:ana Pres. oceaa Yu. hll aenire Ellu. Suites. ~TllO JIUS.-W .... CID 0uapa Dr. in N:r. Bcl1. A•al. latme . Gramd nocr. ~or owner C2U> S · 7103. fhdm&fOD Beach l8m 8eadl. Ste A UJOL w/or w/- t"1u. 7 pbone l.uMs arer! ! ~ 566-nlt •PLUSH• ~~E1c.Sle. Has lrDCi nr. wiDdDw amce avail. mo. to mo. rail iDcl fe(1ll. • COIJI. rm.. tdfec. mall • tee. ..,, . • eopeer a vall. m.n. ....,O«FCIMTB TWo phllb affices availa- ble lD attorney sllite. Mau1 extras included wtLh rent. Call Debbw. Sfllt . vw. "' Bay. lit ti.me ol · lencl ZdboCfie9. • pre-.. 10Ga9q. ft. ! ,.t balbs. MOO W. Coaat Hwy. TD.ml.MO-SD WEST ~L:O BL~C ... ~ ,•, ' ... r t 11 ,,,, 1 t t ..... t Ir~ .. -l -l t , () ~ We waat MW_... 2 wlDdow ol· bouae prefened. 3 &bare Rttept. oc MuMa. xmt mer.ces. ~ HlJJa. 613-5101 Eves . • flClll 6 A&rsa1 or f'1'S.4llM. ............ • I 111 ._... 4450 llathiel' • 2 ff old lirl oa ........... •••••••••••• Mud procram needl 2 otrace ·~ at Bdrin • UI HB. NZ-0058 ral.el. Arl&aft• n-reab'e soo .. ~ noo s. R. • • 1a""'"9f / VD.D£ba n :,. Pl.A.ZA. ...................... . im-. V_.£.C.M. ' • • MMIJJ Ofti t 1J 5005 ..... 1.Jl>COOID ~Bl. Ull>tq ft ID Aull fOC' cupucy. mi. HA Newty mil Sliftc ceo .... bas far lmmed from •PP =:. n&a.caD ,._.m-. lnblmto{ l.aC\llMI Beach a.bop io· Jt u -. Art Ceal.er'. .,..,. c ... ... 4415 ••• •••••••• . ......... . Ollke• .... Newport/ C.0.ta MeH, ....................... Edalll1•ed Rdail Oft ud l&cnew&re .... m -..m sbol>- ~ Cl!lj&«. Ideal OOWDer opeulJoo. Turn key, with ncellen\ return. . Ownet-rmnnc. m.ooo ....,_ 7lOW. J.ahSt. pr. •Mo. Call Sherry -•••--•••••••••• Adult 2tlr. 2be upper. Nr -$Cil-mo. Ola 2Br ltucUo, •'1155Att. Mt. $$50/mooth. Near Hoaa. No Peta. Gtr. --------• beach. 3 tiilnn. Call alter P5llo. -..no Roamtonat. J.niDe.LUe .,.._'250mo.-... si.r 2 Ir 2 Ba apt , o.twood NB. P'em. only. ............ IS . ant i.. 100,000 trafc 13IO sq. ft. r,, lab fadl. count. HOO'. Bkr. IJ9UOIS'r'Olll Prtma 8tadl BlYd. loca- tion wit.. loa1 term "••eeUleart ·~ lease, 1ro11lac sss.ooo to a.oDO per IDClldh. A real llll:m1 maker! -.ooo Plllf iaftlllar7 frplc, D/W, yd area. eocl EASTSlDE ADULTS, 2 e:~ (71A)&IMTIM ..-.... Zil'1 EJdeo. To Bil Lanai, 1araie, no .._.__ .... 4 21r, 1~ IQl1 atory, for -call~ pets. New decor on cul· ....----. aatm. womao. ACJ'OU -.... MZS mo. 511.3535 -···-••••••••••• trm eoeaa. sao. w.1rv. mColta Meta. aoo.. m•Cllrb •n1• ... ..,-.:., 4JIO ......... 40IO ............. -....... . 3Bll. NIQ. WI paid. Ad!ta BeMlihlJ 2 br CIODilo. pool, Ave. C.M. MUZII Cllly,DOpeta. 2 Br &ardeD apt. 1~ ba. teaaia. tao. TbeSpriocl. ••••••••••••••--••• WANTCD: -..1 Pl&io fl ........ Ad1&IU. PbrlllP-_.. '.::!a~..VW~~~~_.:eG-:.:5171:=:.:.: ID•' I larK~for O....l9Qlll. ,..._ · ••-no pets. $d. 5tt-11T1 eldartJ -. PNf col· m.. -· ~. dlallwa1ber, I t cl t CDu ---------1 e~I. 1ar. h50/mo. 2 Br. PoOI, quiet. 1335. .,;:.:,,:,:.;.~;,..,,. • Oflle...... 4400 _--. ___ l_41M11L ____ ~V"ll-i... DO pela. G3 Welt -~ .... 2 1111 . .,_ PR. D/W, paUO JJ"dD, ..., bbp. CbUd ok. -- .... ............... .~~=:; .. , .. _ .... ,. hf ....... ............ .., ... ..... . ---·-4-------··- ....................... .~~~ ... ~ Im~~.':' ..... SllOG nD BIO UAJl ~Ml.-fl.a.....,._ A»o cm- • bJ ..... ' ... 2 be. a.:. SUl'llS r o r b • • R • E . PrbDe Newport •acb (TM)Sa -loc. NW' o.c. airport. ..... illel. ,.,..,... ~ lM'll Bil Illar cabin, fereoee rm, Jaalror pool tbl, ~ TV, 2 ..,..., .ula, l• ffff frpb....,.M.MHlll cop •• • a ore . a.:r.ww _..,, anll. ......... =. ..... Ul•Dllllflll4W. .... ....., ........ i ........ 111 ... ft. • by ... , or •ntk. • • ._ a Tit w . <1MJ1n.•lw'hlillfo attla It. Call Tom ........ ..... ·---~~---------...... -... Diiis ............. .. ...... ,,, ..... --9'ftce ti• Mo. 1121 Siar No.La191a4 bom•. Wn'tellff Dr. Nwpt Ptof, Male pref .... ...,_ . ltnlllt. UOOM• . ........... ... -, .... " ... = 8Nd1. Ample •78. PrtaOG!J. -..01. Ba7 .. ~= baa ErM omc-e 250 aq rt. i.m -a. a. noor 81$/mo. ~ a. NB. ....,. ~ •• fr'aal.ale. _.., 111-1115 1'trml n19Df11ble. U5iS PllSTl•I YlaUdo.87MUI. W~lmaONT LOCATION '= .... Sq.ft. ~a.,v-.. ... Ban. l'lreplaca •Prt .... Pltial •lz ••• An!JalallltJ ....... .... -... ft.6 ..... lild tiaf lat. .. mD. .. -c. •. ... 45IO ....................... ( 714• '7J.4400 fJutu..JUI HARBOR A Oivt.sJon of Harbor Investment O>. Wlllll .. YoarTndet SUI per 0.,, ,,. 'S llUle '°pay b' AD ed lo tbe Daily fUot ~ um cm •lblilb your pro1 .. 1oeal Iden.lily. For _.. ialormaUOa C.Oto5171. DOING BUSINESS UNDER A FICTITIOUS NAME? I ' I ... V'NEEO V'MONEY .... ~"° ...,.._ Jiit& JINft .... t1Ullt An-.-1~ c.... ..... ,.._ WEDl:lt 'J'rauMld ... fa Pel Daa'...., tD aao,.&esa J .D.6ASSOC. (7H)11D..UJ1 POUHI>: or., IHI· ........ a&-.l&nlC• .,., ..... M. ftll l'IM C!Gllm-., ... aft... .. Lall; ~Alllaata. HB. ""7 ... ..at ..... per Scbauaer fem. "flllllde". QaU .._S or "''nu Lut ,... ,.._Putlarea. &&WARD Silver braclele4. to.t J..Z5. 8)' ~ libadl. l.q Bcb. eMm tm: Larae wbite male cal witll oruc• ears • Lail. blue eya. Corona del llu vie. Reward. &1S·H24 eves; days ....,w ...... SOJO _75_1900_.ext.._m_. __ ""u•--•••••••••••• Loat: blk. St.. Bernard, WAHl'EI> Jou ol $35,000 male, vie. Delaware & fff ~o days •t lK. Clay, H.B. Haa tags. Seculity, 100 aCl'el Sula ... '1252 A Frencb Delight I.IMAM DI L.AllUI ISCoRrs ..,_1757 7Jl..lt5Z OPEN at HRS . ~ m.PNG TDIPOLUlY ........ t.daJ to wort anv..-.~a....,6 bookkeeptn1 uat1n· ~ntl. Wort, cloee to your bolbe. Pi1ure Olrb to Senkll' Accom- t.u ..... thn>ucbout OnqeONlty. 2SDNo. Broadway dlO. OailchNU Bu.Iler Fe, N .11 . 673.'4697, -------- ....._.,Bob FOUND Small black dot, •LORI'S* IUdg., s...ta Ana • ,.."tl•Oillc411 t714)1JM10l Mu I Tnlt v I c Be a ch 6 l n · o.fJ " 50lS ctimap>tia, HB. SIMlOl 24th. 7Jl.t952 -•FRE.E--PAJUON ___ G_ -·-·--••••••• Pbuad: Doc. Fem. Shep/- s.M.1-Mkj.Co. AD types al real estate mw.. ....... a.iDce 1N9. S,1cW1agill JllldTDs ~71 S4M611 IBUYZNDTD'a FAST Pvt Ply, PriD ooly 780-071.S Dobie II.Ix. Blk/e>raqe short hair. Approx a moe. V11e: Bulbard, Guf'91d, FY.a.mo FOUND~ Bit Cbibuabua. P\tJpy. Vic. Irv. • 17th St. C.M. 836-0812. 631-0Q) FOUND: Para.teet.. cor· oer Brook.bunt Ir Ed· t.ncer. F.V. SM-2123 lstT.D.s 2ND&:lRDS Found . Sealpoint NewO:DstructiooLoana Siamese. Vic. Fubioo 1Dwltor Money Avail. lalaod. ~-• a:~~~-Ullt April 1.sL Blad Toy AdSla.er' f1'-64.2-4300 Poodle fem. No J.D . .lfis· •inl froat leet.b. Vic. l'OtJll T.D. CAN BUY A lieu Pet Hospital, nr. BlllB. NO DISOOUNT. iab • Paaeeatia. Na.me: ...._ '!Anale .. REWARD. ~-~---~~-1 59-Ull. ....... ~..e.4 --~-~--~~ 1111111___.a.IT.D. 'a Loa& ut. Gl'aJ S\riped ._.,.,....._ male. Victoria Beacb ... I I I *-er 111.mbUd. 41/n·U-. • I . •I LclBt: lnUIWt Pwport. • II / No. 1S62193. Amir H . rw an 1 Vaktwho«pov.r. ror re. ............ wudcall~ ....................... ' I rnm r... SI 00 L 0 ST ' ' SH A B P ' ' -•-••••••••••••• CALCULATOR . - NOWJllJUNG • TOUCH ~CLASS JlliCORTS .. M-lm Pa ...... Set •Ices Sl'O ....................... EXOTIC US PLANr SRYICE ~ plant desi.pmc. Leu1ng. Plant main· tenance. As low as D>tmoatb. Call 759.9545 Uno answer, s>'eue keep t.ryin&! ~ ! PROBLEMS-Need to Talk! Free eotmeli .... ABCBelpHne~m2.. s.cwc:... 5400 ....................... LO-Calorie Alcobollc Bever•&• Recipes 12. BACHELOR NUTRITION SERVICE: REWARD! Losl -1oog tJ0r.e patJll OD one ol Ole foDawtnc stree.ta: Adams 'l\ve, H.B., Albatross, C . .11., Swan, C.M., or PWeatta. C.11. Call Ad· Sitter 161, 60-4300. ~ bra. Be A TNvel Agent IDJmtf~. 8amet Travel ScOOola 10lll1 Talbert Ave. P'V. P.O. Box 120l).1.5il, Costa lllsal2l52S. PSYCIDC BP.ADD acADVlSER <n4>S27-3406 . SllW755 .W.W..tect. 7075 ....................... -------SCIAMUTS ANSWERS ' ................ Anta.ttHm a.ch Q)cnbined Adult Choirs present: llEATER HE! Beheld -FauJt- Woman -TUrgid - Wl'MfOU'I' You can't tUe it with )QI but just llY to travel wrrHOUTiL FOUND: Small whM poo- dle mix, 4/1, 19th at Ptac:mtla. Cl(. MZ-9160; a...aevs. FOUND: rem. terrier mix, blk/wbt. blk. flea calW" vie. Edinier/Spr- ()irnpeninn., homemaker. driver, avail u live·tn. ~ traveled. ~ucated. .. llZ'Z WmdoW Cleaning Plbmpt Service call T7$4Sl6 Secmary-Probate Ad- mmktnd.or" willing tem- p:nril.y to perform re- <Jndudinl 3-sC'reeD iDldale 4(2. ,.,-D>O, slide presoenbtiOn) lated lunct.icaa " do own typmg.~ Hllp W..ted 7100 ....................... S••~ April 6 ~~ ~:~;~ ~ 6:00P .. Feb. 2l.J..llM772 at H;.Jf;gto • -FOUND--:-Col-W-.e-She--p-mix-. •Accoum•-•m·,----•ac• Mostly rust color Ill . ACCTS llC/ ..._.Scllclal W&tdl! Fe Coty t.be. cou.ECT10MS ..,.. tap. ~i:m ..... _ PARTTllllE MJND: Retriever Shep We need aomecme wWr a (EWi~ Wekome) DU. Blonde II. Lab Shep minimbl al f IDODtbe ·------mix blk at tan Fem. llClld AIR • CciUecUom .......... ~ Beach ADimaJ ~wMWW.to IJOO ............... ==::-m AIR Is I ............ ·--·-·· POUND: Fem. black Lab ........ 8CCOUDlial Jll'C>' Flllll llS •FIE£ cal mix. Vlc. Warner & cedure1, la be ex- Goldaawat. H.B. Red perieeteel wltb pboDe eoO.r. ICHlll win. Wiil wort miD "' tr 1110 ....................... »aboarapwtreek. nu 11 • perFUIMlDt poa1. tian. Good PQ 6 Dice PUGPIANT? Cartn1. 'AocWias .,., ....,.,., eoumeting • Plelle call fer •ppoillt· '41-1671 rtlenal. Abortion. adop-meal: ~~~~~~~-~~·-t_....,.,~~M7~-25G~ ~;::.:1:::::l War,.....• Pitt Call C°'9l.... ~tc:."Q..' Ca· Aal••l Autataace * tlWnt • ~ ~ Waeca Collt ~-.ma.~• aero.au~ ~ m 1Wo RGlld. ,._.. lillta Pllt Call PU t.4W ..._ ...._ ,~~~~~~~ lpecW Pala BoWa• ....... WUlclo......_l-~lm.'21-lllS Letal. Coafl4fatta11•-!lem•---· t DVll. P.O. 8os aau, ACCOUMTll8 i. .. t. Op I rl1•I· M.&.-. Q,m ll&WAD. .... .,.. ...... -------aire.u.t ...-tait aarr•aacl•• w I •• --~..-..! clla .... 1., HO· HO. IPilWUALl.&ADDIOS ........ _... t. ~-~.,~=-..J..' ----1 ........ ..U,'tk'd.. ••:u '":JrdtMt • .,. ...... 111$ ~ ~· u.r: 5J.i~ °' s. oa.a.o a.a, ..... ,,., •w . Dl&ann &ao.&Yllle Olm. •• ,.... .... ~-. ....... • 1111 --------Alff1 .... __ ••• I . o.c. All•OIT ~...._.._ LOR: 1111111 .... .., ~.~ WmoTTHOllL Hit • ••• ,., • II. llr~ * •Necpwt<~.-Dr ••••1•rt. • Vh. lpeetalh •• la Jlls•""t; D•wat••• B . B . Pu F '11 k I =Opplr-s• ._ADt._ ........ , ..... ,enzo. -- ADt •GSTIA11YI ASSISTANT lmmed. opClDiDc few a - eenenced Corporate SecnUry wit)) x.blt typ- ing 6 orgaolullonal aw. • aood phone m.&D• oen. afuat be able to tM.e didaticm • compoee letters. Good workiJla CUJdL • beDefb.. Call P&miet5•~ AIMITISll SllES n. DaUJ Piiot ..... u fl I ., .. opmjac (Of' 8 ••le1per1on w ltb ....,. ... dia}QJ ad- VetUalal experleaee. a-CSod aalar:r. com-a' , _ .. ..,., ... fr. ...... s-s-.......... ll'CMllt = ...... far •S--~ .... bllicm. Call focappnintnwd lllmcml llM.Y PIUIT *AMl1** START Mdl•SSS TODAY!!! Tbe Daily PUat eeeda • per91111 for our Clulified Adverti1in1 Depart- ment. TIM peraoa •• -* lhould bave ..._or telepbone ulu e&· pedence, be able JO t.ype 45wpm (electric), have a paaant penoa.ality • esQo1 workinl •itb a re-~..=-~. ~ ~ iDchldiq medlcal, deDt.al, Ille lD· aunnce, credit uoion, de. Salary PLUS com· a*-kln! Plemecall for tawmew Pes WdliltJ Dept. M2-43Z1. eat. m OIAMGI COAST DAILYPILOT saow. Bay SL Col&allela EquJ ()pportmdly EmploJer Alit. maaaaer. Matue caipeto•neae•..., Ila. Cll M.a&er 11.GI, ~ ....... • • I I ..... C&.8 ~ . &attllt•t ,,.,. •• , •. '* 1'-"1• M, ...... ftrW MC_.. ... d•U ... 2 Yean U. Ta t ' 'n ' --.Ga • ..,.rtne.. ___.TRrd ...., "' t:fttlleat MHfit. • cwat•er pa1 Joh • wiarttN ........... b-_... ..-.. P"1rntd ac. Viejo aru. Oal1 en•lroa ... t ia O.C. .-... ............. A1rDort eomp&a. Ell· cc'.,.,,. Dilled appb. ceUeet p.;r, Maefila. a.u ...... m.-. cw. ,.. .ch'Me-nemt --------S.S.W.Mcr. HOWAIDQ n•t Daft. Qmll Stl. NEWPORT BEACH Some note dept. u - perteoce w°"'4 be de- sirable. Ubi&edOLUIOl'llia Bank ao.A Newport Cnter Dr. Newport Beacb ~ E..O.E. cmlEIS UTDTEM llA.RKf:I"S ··~ DOW nalJable ror f time A.uiatam ....... cm 2Dd 6Jnt abifts. No e&perieac• nee. We trabl. Advaoce- ment opportWlity for UWM ....... podicw to U.~0 Jler bour If qaalified. For more in· (Ol'1Do8timl • i.otavle•. ~ to store U7, 111 Del Mar, C-ta ..... Gl·MZL WW lD\en'\eW llondaJ \bna Friday froallam to-- °"*' D01HI -PllCIS OBTJOU DOWNt Wlc:MtH&P Plildw.-., . ,...p.,. NEVf!llAP'EE ~1av..-Pa1 WIMm) ..a... a.ta,... •u1M1 It s.. ...... .>om the teem ol pro- h=ieal ~ .. O~VPiLOT ., ... a.. .. rot Jahroetlo••t marteUa) eo. hi -&-IV_l:_U----0-.-1-1.-.-r-1 ~h•!,J• of literature twrr1 maU~ 111odlllt1ato...-mhc. dutlH . Full _..,.., lrattJ IDOS'1lilal be De fl U . A _p p lJ to mW aAtnooa. Call M :30paa. lllS Etldp. 914'1%1 meot, 2I05 Barranca, DllflaS = llra. Copln OlecbrC.b, -IIIZ lilm or women 25 yn • older. ltncnir the eoul adal. Net SllO a week or more. Oran1e CoHt YeUow Cab. moo llt. Herrmann, Fouotaln Valley. (No ol Slater betwn Newbope at P.Uebd> IRVINE 7sz..fell ~~~~~~~~1~~~~~~~~ £.0.E.. 11 /F ~' 'c •.111 it) Girl Friday. teq. gd. --------f\rm aoc.t.ecS near ocean memory, math aptitude, aau Part time • tW.I time ~ant. p&lt time • ., 101. Apply 7·Elevu Store, lOl1 W. Baker. C.11. Clerk Typist. Small ......... Irvine offi ce call Naoey *"3DCZ. a..EBX 6 XEROX OOPlEll OPERA TOR Part-ti.me. Ul.-.S c:oe.AMY •llllMTATIYI ...... plnGD Deeded to represent establlsbed irow\nc co. Great "9- ~ 175-ZlOl COllPANION ._ Dder\J womaa Sffks mlddle ..-woman to ahr bome • dnnMltk dutiel. Noo- aaiobr. Salary. M aaa. YW;o.-..»n baa~for FIT cypu:ll. l"ey, acctg. " at a limited number of to.a proc. belpfuJ. Fut PIT. <Duna1 scbool paced NB business. bn. >poaiticw!c. WW traul. a»SlOOO mo.~ Earn wtule you lea.m. 13.25/br. to start or more fer~· l.020 W. 17th.St.~. aJCnJCIAM 2-S yrs comm 'I upr. req. t•A Dectnc: ~11178 GUARDS Full ar part time. AD areas . U nifo rms f~. Agea 21 or ower. ReCired wdcome . No expeneoce nee.. App- ly Uoivenal ProtA!ctlon Service. 1226 W. 5lh Street. Santa Alla. In· B •I I 18 LAI terview hours ~ 12 & H na ••aAM Mon thnl Fri. ll1nimu.m l yean H · per1ence requ1 red. HAl.RSTYLIST·S15 cbr Jllecbcal company. Ex· lae.. oew salon. N. B. Ast ceileal bmdJia • wort for Don or Dan 152-2211e inc c:ond lt1ons. Only ue...-yu• ..... u.. aedonl permanart ,....__ __... ~ need apply Far lL maintenance • Olll~Sll.Jll30. demi-up. This is as-day .-------•t a weet paaauon w/fu1J a>. bendltl. Must have vahcf ________ ,California Drivers ~ Oppor Employer o..trudk& ..... male. --------· .. ..a Mmdl lltoZ. "'1rJ: Tll·M . Lic:enae. Apply in prnon: PENNYSAVE.R, 1660 Placentia, C.11. Mm.-Pn.94 u.•Y M.tD•m Tllia ••:r co•e•ra ,.._.,. uee nacmal • ' r a 'v al lllillmU'tal •P'c••• ...... · ... a.lt'1 h le .. waat to eara btwD DI»-~ wlr. We bffe pos#Lrww oPeD aDd • complete t:ralailll insrun. u JOU a.re tired of maklo1 ...,....,..,..or..., inc in • .utorm. eaU to- -for an barriew. We beiieft ... is DO '-'rier, tu \blil knowtedp 1a tbe keJ to saccem. For u ln· ...... call55e "LIA BEAUTICIAN -Ex per. 1barp , pro1reaalve CMIDl1t1 I CA REE OP · POtmJNl1US AVAIL. POR l:IP. Df.SIGNl!BS 6 DllAPTSllEM. ALL PHASES or LAf'fD D&V. la PUBLIC WOllKS PBOIECTS. SPIC1AL NEED J'Oa WATEll SYST&KS 6: HYDRAULIC DESIGNERS W/COll· PUTEJl EXP. R.G.B. P.:NeiR. INC. 97.ml Qal1eal ACC4TS PAY Aal Cl9S needecL Call for la--------- t.erriew. w/Kentln HB. Oertcal ta.XII cn-un: n~ l'lf/SQHt SffVICI s .. 1\ ' coou Immed. birio1. Bal. fWi .&a. ~IW for ~ .OOUNI'ER KELP wanted for llidw.le .• Cleaners. a.1.1-...SU.. COUMTllH8J' l'\all or p /time. Dry Clean1n1 plant, N 8 ~ We bave immed. open· a-.. for Warebou:se A.'9embly Tramees Factory n:EJOBS· PAID WEEKLY DMNE E.OE .....a.•teA&. Trmnee. full lime. wtth nrwnum ol olf"ice ell· per. reqqnd.. ...., F1oor service. Nr. OC Airpmt. 11·1b. tam-t:30 pn. will trUo. ~1413 Food prep 6 aaochrich maker. No experie~e HOSTESS f\Ul & part time. A\)'pty 10 person. No pbone ca.I.ls.. Jolly Racer. 400 s. a.st Hwy. Lag. 8ch.. SECUITY We are 8fldiDC a reliable penaD to ...,... fla:ible (swinl 6: 1ra•e1ard ablftt > hours. Law en· bcemem or security e~ peneoce belplu.L ~ e 1tcelleat company benefits. Apply 9am-noao. lfon·Fri, Penom- oel MAmOTT HOT&.. IOO Newport Center Dr Newpalt.Jteacb F.quaJ Oppor Employer needed. naible boW's. ~-~~~~~~ Appl1 in person . Houru:fiemen Wen&ed to .....,.11 T.-race. 2115 wart &Ir Jaaice'a R.c.- Belllill. ea.ta 11... sedJ Aon 's, bra t-t. n.. P'ri.175-2514 1'alJ time polliticm in our ~111r-••~tt 8-dlr' ed dept. bn llGD ~ t.bru rr1 t -5. tele· at M./$4.soufer br __ t mas aalea. nqs IDOd ....._ Wi train. ruu apelliD1, 1rammar 6: 6 puUime. Advan~ penmanship. 1tmt e11Jof meat opp. Muat ~ne meetial the pabllc. App-•-~ __ ... _,_• ___ _ lJ Peaoyaanr. IMO Houtec:leanln1 neede~ flaoMtla. C.lll. · w/mot.el cleanl'I u - G ••• r • I 0 r f I c • . ,.-e •. ~12 s d1I wt. P11cbqJ01lcal 1roup sa.t .. ,..1ar .... _.. llrilM ,._&Ir ROVB&CLEANERS -~loal•t poelUoe. put-time or fwl-tlme: 11i11t bt pad= WW o. u.., 8aart lmme4. tnlrl .. dD 'I II Top H . t71·1Ht ot" .. dlcal luuuaace. .-i . , ... .au. ... Bin we srow a*1a. .,... ..... , PotlH011• miOallleriht.ana&al nra. -.. ta eo.u .... LapuBlada,Sl ~ ... ft&c,.Wtnlo. AJ1pl7 1NO N••Port lltd. Cll. or lmt I.Am· ••~aTwo. --------Bouekeeper-Matur. os1'a&AL orr1c• ,_.. .. won wbdt • Ol&L -Kutt type. 11i111c1a11 la cbrt• Of Rece,ttoa dutlH, wll lM•ahdll Jlut· --........ -. - Jllaitort1d''l'OUtes, NUa- bl e, truatwortby •n· dlvlduals . Ow n tnuaJpbone. 511.2730 ~MAM MACHINIST Expenct101 ao&eooid mte co. reqW-. Journeyman Macb.inillt II' IT. Abt lity Lo read bluepri.ots, Ht. upe. la,y«ta, operate lat.bes. lftUs Is boring machines. grioden. Good benefits. work.iog cood. Salary open. Apply 8am-4pm. S R Engineering. 834 Production Pt .• N. 8. Ladaes. 21 le over. ea.m S200 • $5-00Jmo. plus more. PIT dlat.. blhld prod. We llelp. $Jl.a603 LIADMAM PnM-eqw. ID produc· tiaD eeramie e.ut.ln.I Is glulo1. Spaolsb J a.gliab desirable. Good CJllPO't. 97NIOO ____ , UG.U. SICUTARY For Newport Beach Law afice. MUil have JtlnL skill&. must be self-startin& le have ability to work under pressure. Salary commensurate w/quallflcations . Call 644-9UIO. lJquor aion, full time • part lime, retired or eeml retlred. Apply ln per•on only . 22007 Bubard at Baaolag, RB.. Aat for Paul. Lii am YA.ID MAM S...ap:. WUl tnlo. Full 6 or p/Ume. Call for IPPl-59a'11 ~••orra Eqw~...-....m1· ~ r;,r, r::,a~~~~·~~ operate drl ll-prea1, llltbe. mW. mltc. odd· j ob• It clean-up lo macblne abop. Good benefitl/worklng cond. s.1ary open~lam-4Pm-SR 1. 83t Production ., N . 8. MACHINIST Prodaactioa lathe. E4r. mhdmum Syn. Top pay "t.eftta. Call 540-5208 llAID Plev1rt wofttnl coodi· tiom. P/tlme. Inquire witbla Tb• Inn At IAtma. Z1l Nortb Cout ""7. Lquna Beach. MAIDS. $4.50-15.00 br. f\&D 6 part tlme, own tnmp..OCS. fTS.2101 ., MOTOR ROUTE lmmedi"te opportWlity for pert::Ume eam.ings. 1be Dally Pilot bas a motor route available in \be Sou&b Laguna area. DeU very, afternoons. Monday thru Friday. mornings Saturday II &mday. No moathly door collections. Earn•oes about $500 per moolb gro11 . R e liabl e tnmsport.atioa and 1maU cub deposit required. Call "2·4321, Foster Ouellet. for detaila. ~ PASTE-UP mEl8l1I with at leMt 1 year H · perteoce. preferably newspaper. Excellent ~ bme!i.U. Apply ~9AM c1r6 PM. Monday t.bna Friday ~COAST OAILYPILOT llOW.19ySt. CodaM9M .... 0,,a ,_., lttyla,er . USES AIDES Training prog r am available tor Cert. Nuraea Aide. Good salary. 7-3 or 11-1. t\ill or p/Ume. Meaa Verde Qm\'el.lbp. NURSES AIDES - Ne.led (GI' PM ab.ill in CllD'f. tap. Good work· lnl eoada. Xlllt. bne w/IM. Appl1 Beverly Manor, MO Victoria, C.ll. PART TIME EVEJINGS . Enterprillo1 adults. ow:r 21 wtt.b Dynamic. Adventurous penionalities. who elUoY worklo1 •ltb and iidi•lltilll yoal.ba ... iD to 11. M.00 br Lo st.art. S100 a ... poteatial. Phme sc.4IZ1 Ext. 250 bftwtlm2and8 P.M. A,gC FOR LAURIE E..O.E.. Party Con s ultant / Counter Penioa. full- ti.me includin& Sat. App- ly 20ZS Newport Blvd, C.M. P~TE-UP ~ With at least 1 year ea· perience, preferably ~r. Excellent bedef"d.a. AoPly between 9AM & e!>M, ~~~~ C.AMCll COAIT DAILYN.01' . now.MYST. COSTA.-A .... °"'.,.,.. h1ld1 en. dwllenPal pllitioll for Plf'IOD • l l yr uper. Some com- pW!r' aper. deslrab&e. Olll Sb1rte1 a1 S.-3''11 or l8ld .-.ume to CoatlneD- tal Drilling U.S .. PO Box 88,NptBcb,~ Real EatAW Sales STdT 90o/o COt .. •SSK>M WE OFTER * Npt.-Meaa Boud llembenb.lp •Irvine Board MLS ·~ * ComparTermlaal *New Wkhl wb COG· fennce room. kitcben faci!We9 6 more Low--*bb (ee CAIL TODAY ! I ... a. ,..,. ..• 117-4436 Real~es People needed In Sunset Beach ore. top commluvon. Call Bud Hyams t7 I 4t 146-SIOZ SWITCHIOAID Setftfary p tUme. Call OPHA TOI. WILL tllwnluD • ipm. 1IAIK '41-1565< •zrn ' ... _ .......... We'U have 1 fine aelectJon of Oak. Englltb, French, etc. hl'tial Ult; l'al>ulcu 10 pc Mt Pm.ch fonnal din rm Mt. Oak atdeboardt w / m l rrou. oak •tack bootrtua. oak NC'NUl')'.I, round • IQU&r. oak.. tbla. on roll top dftkt. 1hls-capUJJu dttk. oak hill IH~ • oak hall trtta, "(Hbatand1. dreuen •lmlrron. 10 pc walnut ltln rm aet. oak eommc>ff. rrench chr1. rrench beds. player ptano.. pocket watchft. eo pc Mt Noritalct dlonerwart. country French hunters cabinet. wall " mantle cloek1. Tlfrany type lamp!I. several P'«e& ot aood _period furniture. Iota 0( glaaa It brir-a·brtc. prua many Items ol llM quality too numerous to II.at. ,. ..... w ..... 12 --t. IPM. 8*r's AICtiln 14100 Paramount Blvd. Paramount. Ca. (213) 531·1524 AuC'tioneer Dean Baker W 'M 1005 -~&~ 7100 ¢& --···· ..................................... 1a.9'HOMI "°"" ......... tableW\b 5 llUe appta lor repa. cWn. Mult see to ap- Nee ale, Id a&lby + pred.IU.~ boe•. ull for appt. •1CTWUDda *"'•:a• 1010 ....................... TELEX OPEJlATOR WASHER• DRYER A tradl.01 fl rm i n flSforbotb ~"POl't Beach, needa can m.a2 ~~~~:;!. ~= l.econdlUooed Kirby 1:JO&o5:JO pm. Ma tbnl ftC\llmJ c1eaDer wi&.b ac-M .,..._ call A.aaeUe ~ STS. _..., lt...all. G.E. Side x aide. Z2 cf. •11L SICY• reta. AlmoDcl. Almost Now blriq telepbooe new. UH, 7&0-to7t, MIC'l'etarie9 for a new ....; ... .;;..;;._ ... ....;_; _____ _ coocept In au wen 01 w cu ft Coldlp IJ'OllWnle ==-~~ retrt1, w/top freeaer • ..me wkada •. T7JQ1: Wl'7 pod coo4. $U$. Uwpm req'd. Maa1 _ ... _uor ______ _ e•ployee benefits Wuber, dryer • dis· avaUable. -'Salary: hwaataer. A·l coad. -lmD to aan f tU.me' ...,.. lao ••• aecordiac to -~.;;.,;; _____ _ ,.,... plllllJW. You .w •»du 10%0 be ~ to ....., ...................... . l....,tant bu. Need UW. P1a Sdrwi.DD 10. .-..-a1 ~. • -. .utlllD• moa. aao. ---. .,,..,.... • crineea -..48 ........ w-~UCl;.::::..:::..;..;.....;... __ ~~- OalllllaD. · fti man, 2 a-k Mea'• cn&sers. M6471 E.O.E. Sdrwtma Blank Pbantom 11\AIM'EI: -l"\I U·Ume. ARIO m penon. Poat.al lnst•nt Pren 29110 Harbor Blvd. Ste C. C M.~ WELDER -E.xper. lD TIG, 1u 6 tubtn1 fabricat.iao. X1ot. aalary based on eaper. o..ume avail. m.- W-*.t "-~ tnvel Mn'ice needs telepbone .ettdari•. Uctet d• liYa1ea. area manqera. No aper ..... '5/br+. SA 5G 7157. •Sdnrinn Paatber. Both art&. Rees. SJ5. 7874 (2) 3t" 1D1peed bikes,~ llG-1713 1035 ....................... P9'si.ao cat. pure bred. llO.&oeoocf~-• 546-~ ca.,. 1040 . .................... . ~Pups.AXC. a.ms> are. M/F'. Pet Ir a bow . Pvt pl y . 213197·~ alt 6 pm. Cocker Spulel pups, AKC. m time for Easter. S2D>.197·a:m. EAST& IUGoUPUPS AKC. tn-coiored.. Adora· Ilk! mo. 110-S1J0. M. SpU •papers. Must sell. SlOO. Eva S66-I02'1 ~ Spaniels. AXC ~ ~ blood.b.ne. mo.~ eves. 9!ab Tm A.KC 4 moath:! ok1. mn nl~ femaJe. $400. or mk olr. 790-lqf 4 Gc*Sea Retriever pupa, AKC. aoo. see parents. &U-4517. 831-5.319 I045 ....................... RalJllk •/neat cage. • Acceuaries. ~aft.SPM. ~ black loq-haired M. l 'h:7T Cat. Neutered. bas 1bot1. Gentle . 8.9-lm BHutlful female cat. Persian 6 Siamese. ~ • dedawed. Jn. cbr ODIJ. No other pet& otdlildtc. ~ .....,, Fnle bun· ny Ii ca•e to a &ood bome.112-7215. Scottl•l t•rrler. Pure tnecl. 11. Free to IOOd Yard penoa for Equip. bome. Loveiq. 8G·'73:S4 Rental Store. Some ........ 1050 awctwnkal •xperie~ ... -•• .. •••••••••••••• .--.ry. 40 br . ..a. I BUY Saturdays. required . ** * * . lWled ... All. M$«IO Good Uled hnaltw-e • Mu. ~·· OJllwW..U -• a «SD.Liar Yoa "' , ... , .... ..," ... ,............................ NAITlltS AUCTION ~.~.\ .. ' ..... ~· .... ~ ....... AHJ.9621 .......... ___ _ """"' ..,.,..., ,.... • 0 1 llll 1N Mii ........................ .. W.Alll"lO .UV: · .,....._10ma11 ,.~.9mt ·- '-~------- "M hrd blO. VI. lo ... ..son.a. A.JC, au. a. tr. AMJJlll ...... &ape, .J--.~ •• ii.,.. Alt • • wbda • ._. .... 11'1J .... -ZSUCI~. llblt(-) ..,,...,.. ...... ,uab Doell •f•ee reotal, N1wpa11. U» to zr bo9l. MO mo. 6ll·tltllt or ..... ,._..,(IDPllL) '72 Ford 8qpef v-. '77--air (-1.:Z) ,.,.~"--'77-·~· <199X&> ..... "17mt.pU11> 'T1 -2+2. ..... elec. -'•All/I'll c.a.., A/C, .... , .... . A1111'111..a.1,... ca. aor. ••· *'1.,.,., ..,trtr, ICT_,. •'--'M'M Bruce Fatr race rig, ...... DDS..........,., cm "' ..... im. ....... ________ , "nllla.I ( . ) '73 Dodlt alul .. lo ml. "JIDIA. ~ Rllllala, .,.. Id. ccnd. ,.... ) m.se.w.. ,.-~·) iHllA .... ~ Jl9 a.., Subartr.a. ~ ..,. ........ ( ... ) ton. auto., SJJOO/OBO. '?IS&\ Sta <in.I> ~VWllm ....... , ~ ..,. ...... (Q2M) ---.--'IOM '11M£. Jllfect ('Ii tttoo MNW5 t7ZS ....................... htilerlormanoe k•t oomtortable cruising Int layout-Ordered by customer w1flnanc;1al problems, his $4,000 dep. apptys to new buyer-Nwpt Harbor slip avalH~ 15 yr. fin ava i l to qualltled buyer. 673-&400, 646-8955, 9-5. .; ... i.;.-"---·-.. C lea tlJO --------C1eiM Sw1 •••• to t ........ 9140 -................ ..... W-.4 t5to ______ .:..___ ---·-••-•••• 'e lbrd Wooctie, ,.t,ored. ---•••••••••••• 761'1AT IM_,ADSl'm '3,000 miles. ~•peed. ....,{ffllth. ( .. ) ,_ ... 28-M ~ Ill.ODO; 'eJP«dWoocUe, WEPAYTOPDOUJJl IDGPllit. O> Street teaa1 restored mint coad. fortap med cus-roretp.. lf711MWl2• 9len'a "/\a tlllerior. • speed, Mml'OCJI. air cc..t .. ~. alloys •• 12 mo. wanuty. (31172). w/pUtea. Lia new. 5oo Si!D.OOO..l'l'Wl81 dommtlcs or clauics. U mll.. Xia&. CODd.. • S350 ~MG TD rea1.on!d 10l&r car b mra cie&n, SJttl JIMMAllMO YO&DW .... .. cb. '45-7'74 eves ,.taftRST! ~-........ ,., ... ..:.~ .. .:..,,. lrmer""'"'. .:· .. JmJ DAcB .BLVD. "'° rer. '14 llaaerata. ~-....................... =Tl, llaka ofr .. "' •0.-..c:..ty lf711MWJJCI F)ord •/blue ~-• ...... IWllOOI. alrcomd.., Ulp9 deck. auo,. • • 12 DD. •••Mtt. (149). HUHl'INGTCN BEAOI MJ.JOOO W SPORT Cpe. a.c.&ly reblt, uplaolatered 6: paiialed. Z5mpc.. $UOO or bmtalr ...... CXJliN Dlndor tromboee w1U1 c:aM. !!Kelleat COD-Chris Crall. 19:56 20' .HoU· dition. SlOO. 675-8Q5Z after d •1 · Sl.500. flPll.. l m.»tO Estate/Gara1e Sale : G\atar, TUamlne F3'$ SlOOllrm ~ Office .... .. I''• ... IOIS ....................... Aprtl !th. 9am. 10631 El Toro. F.V.,Slat.er/Ward 1--------Sbarplu boad copier IDdl sna. doea letter. liesal Garage Sale Sat. April S. Mirw u.i,__ sz copies, xlnt coad. S U r f b o a r d I , 2 U11iforma S1S e~ 1 Sl4QO. meDO :::~=.'· blku, ~·=:a~ OJpy madnne, 311 VQC Anatree. 2321 TultiD warn only • few.times by m. lite mw. sno. Call 1Ge7 ---------I ablClent DW"N. ~ (TW)8D.4DO Model home furnlahtnp • aft&. Lamps. i.bles. bedroom, ________ ,. set. couch._a1ctures. .. .. •••••••• .. ••••••••• HunL Hubour. C213) Ro1en SU!rllo1 silver BABY DWARF BUN- :D2-1.931 eves, pvt pty. service for I + mru. NIES. •each or • pr, Best oiler. Tilfaoy mem-_51&-Sl.5t_......;_ _____ _ SaL only. 17681 Loyola, bership. S»Q.64. (work: Euter Bwmies, loving lrv. (Culverdale). Furn., Tl'IMllD) Jllarto. --..... , _ ......... ,_ _ '77 Sanaer Plckleforlt tf,ydro. lh ... New paint. New cpt. new en,. Klrh perfonnance. ~ cu m. a HP a.vy. Dynoa out ta 6:5() bp. 714 J2.U...3885 17h' Sid Boat. 1.981. Pat· LeraoD Pi.t-boUom. V. Drive. $2,500/0 BO. ~ i8 Formula Tbunderblrd zr. anty 200 hours . ss pbane, beJt ~ outrig- gers. w/or wit.bout trlr. ffi4~T1Q7. 8oltao Whaler Sport 15 S(lip. or oew, all extras. New Ur. Bestofrthls wk. ~ appliances, bouaehold rn:u:u .....,.. ... ._, .... it.ems.. Prise Won. Orf ro•d ~ 1977 23' Mako 11 B. ch1Jd'1 tun car. 15 mpg. ,.._ & n..-IOfl t .. New Fedders Air Cood. -val•-__ ,, for -.... _...,.... u r n • e y , e q u 1 p . .. ..., -. ..... --·-··-·········· Sl.3.000/080. 173-9363 J..whl. Schwl.D.ll elect. 131-0ll7 Yamaha studio piano. '79 21 , 0 , __ _.._ V-2l• tric. Squan D electric --------New $2.200 -1.SVU "' surface meter box. 20 Dal"'°'* for wte doc, • -~· ~-2JOOHP Mere multi-breakers. S48-70U. M>. lhtfy lkpeed bike, 0 /8 + UMP tro11Jn1 3112WallaceAve. C.M. l5ll. Black ti wbite COD· GEii electric or1an. IDllC«. llany xtru. lluat aola'IV,doem'twartbut Slilmlbltolr.Gameabow see to apprec. Sac SVPER SALE-Oran1e, a. .... ea1*1et. 11ab --81-84 ...._ •-• Easter Wknd 10·5, .... ICT-1111 ,.._ _ ____ ,. _____ _ Fn/Sat!Sun. 6 aolas, 1 ~=-••• bide-a-bed, mapje poster cru ml'STAllPS se.-... .... ._, bed, dnr/mlrror/nJpt PR.JZ.PA.CK.ET uuuueu---·-•• Q... tOIO stand. cbelt. tbl, ..., .... ()pa> 40 ...., calla from ---··--pbaao CIOIDbo. reclioen. lllllt Mil Bacquet Clab at .,_ Also w our wide •DIMACJJ'.ao' BOATS: dubdn,.,.... tall din. Irvine couple m em· Hlec:tioa at •llCHopbil• 4/12mo..plwprepeW window AC, dis.hes . bersblp. Call eves: dlllc&.Atlanticll.uaic"5 fnmlS19/mo.lncludiq clothes, truck tares, '18).UllO E.mbSLCJI ll!p.-...n•~ mile:. t&esm. All Furn top ---· -----BuatitW ZS" RCA color ClODd. 673-9'S'7 2005 W. Wheel chair ti walker. 'IV, 2 yr wniQ, free cfe. ..... W , ~ Onuap, 2 bib Sblrd)o. LUte new. Rec. liwry.~.lt&-179 --·••••••••••••• ao. ol Olapma.n. 2 bib $140, botb for $225. ·e. Ludera ta, Z5ft. vun W.of Malo, No. of ~ 25''1.mithCGllO&eclrTV. bul-1, allp ID NB, Fashion Sq.Top --qualit:J---lumisblngs----. Gd woniq cood. $75. bu at 11 u I. 14 0 O o . Hones 1060 Rare 1-of-a -kind anti-545-J.214 aft Spm. Fae. _ .. _.,_10. _____ _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ques, palotings, ac-s.ale: Phone llate. Elec. CAL JD. 06d but sound.. in Brand new circle Y cesaoliea, lncld SCin =lv°!!.c:.bine W . allp. Pvt pt7. '3250. western saddle, S32S. bruaOrlmtalftgure, un-1--.;;:...__;-=:::.._ ___ ~ Call 631-0208 ~ Oriental manUe ar-25" ColorT. v. Sl.31 _ ____:. _____ _ Mam1•--~1065 rangemeat •Marge ONEYEAR 1::~;'!,~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Caraon calm ll6ln sol• & WARRANTY w/newaail. 4IM4T18 f\tll sa.ze canopy bd, comp cbn & much more. Wed.-6GS340 shams. curtaina: '!bun • Fri. 10a.m-Spm. •-,...----l-.-~--.... ---3>' H-211. lnbd, wind vane, gr·een c heck 2JI Sbo&l Dr. (Jasaiine ............ es...,.~. UAenew 6'2" bd rm. X1nt. cood. Creek> CdM. Loaded SI 00 s;M,,.500. m. '1884. . --------848.7252 Westbend w• te r I ess Ladies consignment shop. rookware. 20pc set. ~ Rdaxed. ecooomlcal -.... & ~ pnce sale. Still lo box. "Second Time Around ". f:qliF lllt Del&ila 851 -01.29 "32 32Dd Street. Lido. _. ........... •••••• • • • G1111.. 9010 ....................... &-and new 16' Hobie Cat. Grey ponto o n s w /maroon strl pes, D Ix sails.. New trlr. S2.900. CalJ all 7PM. S7S-4888 *** ~way bite. Jawa. 2 valve, 2 speed trao.a. m.mer. sproc.Ut.a, etc. ss-ma Kawaaki KZ 200 lloO IDJ. Mint cond. smo. ~1C20 aft.. 6. 1N'1 ScbwlD.a Whiner. coqilde. orilinaJ. SJl.7W74 ....................... lt79 00061414 D 150 rtQOP Advl'otur~r model Loeded l.oc. auto. trans . Wt. au-coocl.. off road wbee:ta • tires. Never re- gistered. . .lea t.b.ao 700 aa.! <am.>. $1411 THEODORE ROBINS FORD :.1060 HARBOR Bl VO CO!.TA Ml!iA b-l"J 0010 Ewa tnde. good cood. •• 4-wttl dn~ .. Jeep brdlop tor VW But ln IOOd shape. 67~·6342 , 2131457-n s. Mab-"-s.S./ ...,/Slow.,. 9160 i8 Ford u4. Superub -......... ••••••••• PS, PB. sbell, 2·t.one. •We Real• XlDL cond. 11.JOOIOBO. • Yoqr Motor Home-lllllt aell. Paae Dave: TcpStoJ"OHU bmdlta tm-1111.. Wedo-W-.DC19-fne -,-.-PWd--Bnlaeo---302--V-~. Iba ll'J2.full refl. OU.'a RV Raa1a mo, p/s, l /C, DWl1 De'*' -......... pa.rta. ~ ..... 13.115 --. 7JA11d.ri, e-vea 493-79"1 RENT 22 ft. lu. mtr. c.a-.&.. t.m.; Illa. I; aelr-<XJDt. "150.. ............ _ 4X4, mo 1w...m...... ~ tan: 111111o... till wbl., PS/PB, air. rec. 1u. a.BAA. I P.11. MS-mt 770tW'rd -.....sm. down., take O'NJ' P•Y· mmta.ltl-tl'12nes. '715 GllC "' ton, Lock ,. bullB. 29,000 ma S4.500 RV /boet Rlr'qe yanis. 34 1G-31m: 866-187 br. accesa. Prt. resMi. NB HbL Ad ai&&er' t30 .. Scout 4 wbl dr, JQC VI. MB-GD03C hrs.. 4spd, PS. PB. l'emo'r•bie bdlp, dual , .. ta.Db. T...a... T,....a ti 70 moo.. N.B. m-.-....................... 11 ' GRASSHOPPER TnJcfD f5'0 ea....., TraUer. Sleeps ...................... . 4. can be pulled trtth ~ct c.ar or truck. A W'DiD1 lncluded. Like new. 8G-5747 17' Camping Trailer ror rftlt.. S.en u:p for summer ~now' '1S Prowler. se lr ·cont•ln~d . refrigerator, stove. oven Oeao and l.D good coodJ. tlell. Has an eu y list hitch. SC7..Jl82 1979TRUCK QE•JUHCE! We ltill bave aome new 1979 truckl lo stock. n-a.tic redUC'l.icoa I SAVE NOW! COMHEll CHEVROLET .%.'111.•rl••r Hh d c ., ~I'\ \1 t--'iA 546--1200. lt7SMAZl>A PtCICUP Free physlc•I exam. Headaches, neck, shoulder, b•ck p•ins. <All Doctor Dee. S)HlZJ ·~ .. / TfNJ' TRLR.. 115' Jayco. 9070 9p&. 8. X1nL cond Off er. ....................... -~-------- Hu walk· bl ~m~r wrth 4 !lpeed tram., CU..wtle tape &r mas wbeels ( lDTl.803 l. Moving out of state. sale. All furn must IO· Couch & loveseat, Ponderosa Ptne end tbJs, coffee tbla, c:oucb tbl, butcher blk dinnete, 2 chn, Drexel Cen.,-lgn dreuer & dsk, twin mattress & box spr· tng. Attractive yellow bdrm furn. w /wacker bdbrda. au-& mlm>r. Retrig. Lmpe, tea cart & soon.~. llrcb bookcase. colonial $6S. Staodina lamp, Danish $30. Bushnell CUSL comp. Sx2S $35. $7-7961. 25' Tremol1no trl CHobie T,......,_ ""'tr t I IO Mow o.ty Sl I tS MlltAa.i MilDA Zl!iO Harbor Bl. C M All*ll nc. wbL qn. size from Peru. $300/offer. Janet, 642-S5!M Jiiwllry L 1070 ....................... Pure silk ldmoooe. over- Sbtfed deco chairs, abort 1 pj/diH•ond ring, 35 fur coat. Old Glory sfmes, lid. S800/0BO. 1 4N-9020 752 S. Coast ::::~,,~r:~r1 ~:~t~ ,_1..,~1;...·Lq--=;,..Bcb ____ _ ...::SZI0:;:;..:../:....:080...;.._;,_' 59~-•-• ___ 1 Bally pinball machine. IDGlllSTCMH PRICF.S Alao queenslse • PAID: GOLD-SU.VER-ldaldm waterbeda. Call U.S. OOINS: Gold clus ~afters. WHETHB BUYING or SELLING TM1 l1 Yow DAILY PILOT IOATMART Toplac.,_.od cal 642-5678. rinp-mena $4.S, ladles S!O. WW _, pl rinp. 'tftltdm. teeth. tte. Allo buylDI Sterllnc WANTED: SILVER I~~=~===~ DC1l.ABS. Private par- ty. t'1HlJO, eves 673-JD '""U*I nc:t/ s... f020 silverware • Jewell'J, Jlll(-Dreekt'a/~~ U.S. SllY8r dollars • tat ._r 1112.. 1l5. m. cm., WW pick-up. call 128, 127. Will buy or ror DaU7 quo&e: Direct tnde. ~ or QiDec:t. -.en. PYt ---------1 R;y, BB. MovlDc u ~ st., must ...:..::~=------sell: Cc*Jr' 1V, comer W&ated: pkt " '""" beds • coffee fbl. cam.. l)iemcede, .tai· Debm ware, miac. ITi· ia1. c:all9dlblel, etc.~ Sat, IAll·IPll. 2100 pnbed • pwebued, PetsllGD Way (S., tbe cula -er OD duty . ._.a.rt.)C.11. ., . .,..1 m.- ....................... CUSTOM MAllME , IMTIRIORS ~int. refurb, POWER6SAILBOATS V-Bert.b. Sette. CodqJit cuab. sms We aln doc~ cn.-.•wooc1-We coma toyou-<all for P'R&E EITlllATE. ..... I I I I You can be a i WINNER J•lt by ._..,., u yoar name and addreu and by wa&dalng for yoar name In tbe c:lautllecl 1ds of &be Dally Pllo&. ~:lr~ft7-t!lu:rm! an .., .,......., DaDJMit ••. ..,......,·c.e.· ... ,CA..- I . I . . . . . . . conversion>. W /45' .......... •••-•••••••• Balboa mooring. great I'd>' H.D. flatbed trailer Never UleCl. Must aeU. toe. IZO,OOO. ~. Sl'1001080.Ml-T1U. nea. ts Your Pro(t!$l>10n HOME REPAIRS? Allto Serrice. ,... ln\ccet1M.1 9400 ....................... MEW PARTS&SERVICE HOURS Open7a.m. 'tll6p.m. ~ Uaru Ji"riday Ooaed S.L 6 Sun SADD'HACIC FOttD ZMOS. llalD, Sula Ana Al tbeCGnwol Warner '45-5700 1971FOltD RAHaaOGT AW>. trans • alr rond . pwr windows. stereo tape & rallye whceb (d)tl) $4411 THEODORE ROBINS FORD 10(•0 1-lARBOA BIVO CO~TA MHA <'>'17 0010 IM you know you can pl.ace a classified ad in the DaJ.ly Pilot Servlce Dlrectory for a whole moolh for .. mue u S'l.03 per ~y'.' For more lnlormaUoo, call 6Gli111 ___ .1_4_6_7_0_70 ___ 1 "10 fbrd "' F.ZO camper speeial. auto .• P /8 , AIC. ------------------... All/Fii uu .• wbt. spgb r1ms. air ahocb. ckml \anb. Sharp . xlnt. mtth. SZ500 ..... J. "11 F-150 Ford. PIS, AIC. !i1DO ml ltuat aeU. e200 IM7-4171 '73 El OuldDo nma IQOC!. Good :~¥· Sl~tOO. •MID '71 QIEVY ~PSlDE P/U. Sll·Hrado. Drlt 1reen,~••D lnter. .v.a. &Dl Xlra eleaa. all JJm TM&·Ull ... tl71 .. , ................. ... THFOOOIH ROBINS FOR D ' ' ~ " t.: ' '1 ' , 1 ~ ... I •,A /' : ~ ' I azs lla.rbcir IUvd. COE» A llESA 979-250J <in l SeU Yoar Car ~ c:aPHIMW PAYS TOP DOLLAR For Cle.n Used Imports Call M1U or Don ll5-ll71 WAMl'ED!!! Lat~ model I 1977 or ~I VW Camper Would pref er a pop-top or Westfall• model wtucb bu low miles & 15 dean' Ple.aae caJ..I (714 ) 7-0-Sl; ti oo answer, P'l.EME keep trying' WANTED! Late model 1'oyot.u and Vo lvo1 . Call u .. Y!!! .. ............. . c.......-. " U4-tJOJ • S40..U67 PORSCHES WANTED - Allow Ill t.be oppot tunlty t.o aamader·t.be putt~ or t:J"ede.m ol your de.u Por8cDe.. Check wllb Us Today! Tep Ollar Paid Far y OW' Car! JOt4MSON & SOM u.1• ... ,arr 282115 Harbor Blvd. O:llt.a Mesa S4l)..56:JO Alllioa.•' rt.cl ....................... 9707 IOY CA1Ya IMW l.MOJUDboreeao.d NEWPORT BEACH 640 6444 ~THI ~TIMfi IMWIUYB! ~· ·~··, "rt 32U 4 apd. ( 11.fT'K.J ) "rt JD mo. (941' JA l "Jll314 apd. (721WR F > '71 Jill &lllo Ul4 ll '71l314 apd. ICAUW l "11Jll4sp1. 18'T.IVDI I '77 '3DCS1 <21 I 4'T2T AR> ltl0'1 tBIMOW! SAYIOM LAST NW 79'1 .. sroca SADOl.EBMX YAU.EV OIPOltTS am lllarpert~ Pn-y. IOSSION VIr.J O ll 1-.2040 495-4"4' QOS.WM>AYS 77-..Wl2CI DIM.AC\JLATE' Call fCK pu\JcWars 12.84.5 E Li I $71'5 IOawmtAM voucsw ..... 7'llO Weatm.ms.t« A .. 1DWFm1Mt.r ~ml CS.TMO IOIMdA1&t•1 .& ~N Beadi Blvd l.AHABRA ........................ (S Ml No ol SA Fwy I C714J52J..5l33 Sw:xs.y by Appt . I t71 AUDI 5000 Tan w ttan anterior , ~~.lo nu .snrf .Ac. AutomatJc tra n!t . ..1 r p S p 8 b t cond.6alloys.l ln2I . . rown an $15'5 IW7-3550 aft. 5 • wtnd.s 90YCAIYIRIMW BMW D LR LEASING u.oJ.-... Road AU. MAKES ~ n>c:1oe> NEWPORT BEACH avail. Doro Ccwp 875--7018 640 6444 i8Audl SIOOO. 9>0. Clean. 37,000 Ill, rum l.lke oe111 EYery option. 544-0'T!M f'tJr l&le. lW1l Auch lOOLS lDW mUea&e. 1.9 25 mpg SID 9-0»4 '712 ....................... FOltTHI D15Cml •tATIMG- IMW IUYmll *flD.OWMB»• •WI• "rt Siii Opd .. CIHTKJ l '771:8.w>. <94TJAl "JU311Upd. (721WRf) iam auto. <*1) '71m 4 spd. 1.azAUW l '71 DU¢ (17JV'DJ) '77 llOC& (l) < C72T AR I 17 BMW 3211 4 sp~ed . AM t f'M ameu.e. swi.roo1 ''Well above averag~ rar " (S16VYZ) -~UST A.Ill INT.L 171411-630.5079 Between 8 ~ p m Call~ Jf\er b Ask for Tim "11 BMW 2002 , Ill r. sun rf A M . f'M <.:ass • red metallic Xlnt cond RIO. l-.s2M'7V7 '72 BMW Bnarla. Top cood. Must sell thl1 ftnd. Best otter Ml.-:30 wk.~W7eves CGp4 '715 ••••••••••••••••••••••• i i Clpn ~nrf. "72 n.a ml ov.erlld cam ~. call 67$-5 I.SS aft 5 "11Clpn. JLJnt cood. lo m1. new pa101. new tares. ~~ 9720 . ..................... . "15 Plat Spyder GKm1. New top. lroat upboi. 6: tires. 13,300 ne10. S3157,~7118 971.7 ..................... ~. 1978 Accord LX. burg\m· ~. x.l.ot.. cond.. map, rec. pa. 115115. 1182-84 16 CIVIC • llJllllld.. y eUow w /black liltertor. "Bum IOOO- ,,_ lllPGI" <nallEI[) $2915 AUSTAJI INT'L C71411-6l0-5079 Bthcwl:JIMp.m. Call -..-z a.ft.er 6 Aatfornm.. ........ t7JO ....................... JA<WARS XJG....XJ1%1A • JUS CIJu&1es Mlllt CIDkws aYailable for t.m""edlaite deiiwt'Y. TIST DtaYI ONE TODAY!!! "i;_;;) • .._.._1- 29125 JUrbar Blvd. COSTA MESA 979-2503 t7l4 ....................... • "'TtGJ-U.A • Peiect body & tnlenor! S port wh ~els. mell r ulo usl y main wned.. $4350. 494-61.SS ......... 9731 ••••••••••••••••••••••• miracle mazda 2150~11Ttl Coda Meta 645-5700 13 Rotary runs good Very d ean Must seU Sll.'iO 0 80 962-3706 'II M.UDA RX7 llue w /$ speed, a.ar coo- drboning. .tr map. Llke bnocl new. 5,000 miles. (21151) $8195 AUSTA.11 INT'L C7I4119'JO..S07t Betweenl:JIMp.m. Call sa-GllZ after 6 Aakfornm.. 1'7tMAZDA U7COUPI GS mockl wttJI 5 speed tram.. • All I nr stereo 15074481. w., ...... ....., hlUCUMAJDA. ZU1D Harbor IU .• C.M. 645-1700 Mw=•· .. 9740 ....................... ml. lllrf. All uuu. ......... .. -. ·: ii 1 .. "II m C: m.c.dc: IUD -~~-"'"11' ...... raor. 11»1• t ,,.. .uea. ooiiiiiat ¥0&.\fO ~~ ...... , .... , '11 MIDL. air, atk, AMI N. 1M &IC1· .-0. --.,. ......... coad. auto ltau, AC, SllOO n..-.- Mlau..4 • Hat Wa1H. H .tOO ..... Poww-....... 1 ...... , • c.d/. root net-. A•IPll 1t•rt4' 'T1 lltrclll'J lloHru. t'M&o, enlU• coottol, .... ll T. I cyl. 11oek cuttom Wbffll, Jade MllllOMNIO wood paael. Low Greto Me\alllc wltb WOlll ....... MlcWn Ure. '72 llu.tu1 p/a, p/b, ::1':.!ert'~P~= •·rMI •1TCM All/I'll •tereo. ta415: auto, 1ood c ond. below .... -.... ., llt7 --rw1.. •· n.-. '1t Black w/black lo· ----------· _;...• -..:...:....;•·-~:.____ ...._, POot. MMm Ext . ...-. Alr, alloys, CB ttmta I ttsz 'M•ll• ttlS _2l0_. ------ radio. 111,500/0BO ....................... -............ ., ••• io Pb'flloutb P\&r)' Jll:ot ....,. Im POID ..,, Vim Wqoo, mafted mectiankaJ coad 0 lfast ...,.. .,...., t-••~ , .. 2103 .._,.,.. aa... Call , ya ll5tlll ___ .;......;;;;..,;;....;;_;;....._ ........... !,!••••······ ~•••••••• .. •••!!•'•~ A MlllGADt 'TS Impala. •... , •~ ~ _.._ ll1lll coed, •,llO mi. n1V-•, -Y Allll., -~ ............ '11 '1t Corv. T-top, fully MUST.-M ::.,• J0' quick ule MIJ.. e.totrertabs t.bi1 equipped, w/1poilen, V.. au&omaUe traoa., crut .'b.~· ::Z:: wtmd 7'10-91.12 a.IUPll . __.. .._.. bome. ~"1 • llPOlt wllee&a. a256l. Aak for llarcla. '7S DUiler e-cyl, auto, --------1 0.panl4 lO Hiii ''It ·10 ens 1portataUc. 'm. *"-u.a.r .. &o ocl.1. aom• ens. wk. -~-~ W$11tCraJIZ1wpcl, Mew=>· · n791 '11 CullaH Supreme, p /1 , c lean, lo/m i. _ _. -a-..-..., ........ ~ $1.200. ~7907 ...,_. •• MADA -....... eond..SMOO 1* __. .._. 'Tf~ --. alr, MW tins, ZS mi., All/JM cau. ~ ... ~ 'l'1 CU-0. Xlalt ccmd.. t6a45 mo Hartlar IL. C.11. ___ l_4l_l.;_7C~--r..llec 9'61 •m..•MllMCG911. ::An·~· Orl1 ........ ..,.. '78 .._.1 • ,...... •~-..._.. ,_ llillst aee. Beat offer. ._. 6'& &1, __,, 1U Olll 551•te01 mi. very n.iee. usoo. ....., ~ ff .. " UM700 ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• :::'9-··-••••••••;:': ----· ___ ..... '79 CuUau Supreme, ·m FIREBIRD 1 owner, km~--· -~ ftwllt.•·--1111 ~ tH. llua& ----_._............ lllll.Beltotr.. ~~.-i .. --··--·~· _.... Allc>Avallab6e .U..11* blUr, SNIU'., kl' h dale dellvef')' ! "" ••••••••••••••••••••••• AllJN cw., Dmt ..U. Jlll'7 ..._.. .... wbiae, See U8 btb'9 YoU buy 197' CAOl 1 •C mtM>.,. sJat cmd. JUGO miles. TODAY!!! .......... .. '9 •SL. YfltY llllup. 1DM91. · ~ White oo wh ite local --.__._. 2 ....... ..o • · · w/"""11Jr001, leat.ber Ir ...... -...,.., 'T1 9....-Tar1a. Fully -·· 1bl ..._, olfw. m.as --..._. __.. .. , ooo evet')' poH e option . ._.... AUa .,._._ .a • · Leu tbu 1,000 miles "JO -SEL darlr ....... _ __,_______ now prqecl. Cao u-~ illUl'. Xb:lt. cmd. •'6'C,...ICM• 2125HarborBlvd.. raoae flnanc i nc. -.S00.4'7.sm Vtl7deaa.17$-1IM OOBl'AllESA (140.BXT). Must sell thia weekend ! Ask. for Mr. '71 IM--ml. CID rebk.. 979•2503 Kelly. Call 842·4046 eQI., Xoa.I•. air dam, -Yi-1-_;,_-~~.;:;...._-<home> or 142·0010 4 dnGr W/plllflW s&eeriq 111a11A all, new clatdl. CQW II no (..t). • ~ air ocmdMk-· ..... ,080. Must Hll. • ..................... . ... Ollie__.. TIUs car ~ ?4 KAMIA "78 Sedao de Ville, $51116 la im,poulble to dllt· ------~· -,A,.l cood. am/fm \.ape, in1alab from n ew. !WM tUB. blffk/black, c.w.rtillle! peddedtop. Loaded. Call tmCWC))W. aunJf. air, beautiful. 4 speed. Low miles. Art-.3371 or64$-'12S3 1'11:•1 atf a&-4511aftel'I. lllamond (W ) '1'1 Cad. SetiUe, FULLY · Mlll'DINT'L a.lla-.,a 975' S4fl5 LOADED. gray. woo. '714H"'»I07t ---••••••-••-• I09 WITHAM MYst sell. 67$-IMO ~ys. a.ta-l:llMp.m. •1 DEAlER IN US.A. YOLKSWAW "16 Seville. very clean. ~~~' Im ROY · 'ltOOin~.!'~ Ave. must sell soon. $5900. ,__. u-. CARVER 8!1S-'JSUw&.,. f&.'18IO Ca l Dy a 964 · l 7U . "72 118 2mSE. 4.S. good ROUS·ROV ewia/wtmds ta.sm cood, A /C, All/Fil IMtJam.,... ?5 YW '78 Seville. 4 dr, auto s&eno, mult adl. Aft 6,1\L----'~ a-..o COM'f•1at 1 ,_._ mcm ...,... 4S.000 miles, l&ereO •itb trans. VDY top, pwr . ..,... ClOSlO SUMOAYS. ... _ (JZIXZR) d .xtras.. Exe(' car in top '80 JOOD Manila beige, s hampoo. s unroof, 300mi. S24 ,SOO.P .P . 496-5587 ...._. oood. 32.000 mj. Sll.200 7'aou.5IOYCE S4995 549-8811. ext 601 . Roa SILYB SHADOW JIM MAllMO McA.Ltster, 8::ll am to ! $67,900 VOIJCSWAa&f pm. Downey S&l,. 32.0C UNDERUOOMJ. 1.87UBEACHBLVD. _Bri.stol __ ._C_M ___ _ 'Tl 210E metallic brn. Ast for Mr. Walker HUNI'INGTON BEACH i6 Seville, beautiful Blk Sunrf, s tereo cass. RtEEWAY MADA 142-2000 78Kmi. Good cond. 701SK.nottAve,8.P. Blk. Loaded w/R.R. s11 .~oo. 957·9303dys. ?l4-S22-8750. 35604· '78 SCJROCCO gnll. Top cood. S7695 998-3352 e ves&wknds. 4 speed, Sunroof. 16.000 Car phone optJonal PP --------S... 9762 actual mllea . Pearl 6734311 ...cio 9742 -••••••••••••••••••• metallic. Mus t See• ,77--.,_-1-1----- ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• '79 SUbaru u• wgu. xlnl (lSBUZUl ;xvi e Xlnl cond Mew 1979 cond SS.650. 810. ·c all $5995 Loaded . ss25-0 D ys 752·7733, eves ~LS Meis & MIDCiETs tMl--3C87 eves IOI WITHAM · in stock for immediate TOfda 9765 VOU<SWA4Htif CdV 75. Loaded. Lo/mi. I detiftt)'! See US before -·•••••-•••••••••••• 7«l0 Westminster Ave o wnr. Best Offer )'Oil~ '76 Celica ST AM/FM in Westminster s:i'l-02oo. 832.a9 TODAY!!! t*.enO cass. New tires, 81&7S6l 638-7880 '71 Eldo, all power. veey xlnt. eon d . $4,500. l•-------•I clean. m1.11l see. ~·7068 -~'· •159 Havinl uouble selling aft. 6 pm. keep trying. '7S Cell ca GT. fully )'OUr car! Try us! Paid "-for or not ! As k for "76 oxville. all options, -"'--. new t i.res, xlnl .... ........... ( ...... ...,,.._c_ .,.. .. .,..._ Fr-ank Marino or Tom uu• ,.......,.. roo . cream 2925Hartor8lvd. mod. $UOO. 866--0143 or Ai.kin w/tan top & lthr int. COSTA MESA M-71315 Sl'IO. 562.00Sl '79•2503 "74 Corona. Malit 11. Lo '77 Seville. Loaded mi. air, AM/FM. auto, Lo/mi. Best offer. Tl MG llldlet 34X..mi. 2 coven, AM/FM, luggage rack. $3.8DO. 714-M0-5528 aft.6Pll S22:5Q.. pp 963-6li65 ~1 '74 Celi ca, automatic. S23)0. Rum xlnt 790-8620 9744 ~-------....................... ?lMfH~T Classic Sport Coupe. LMl year. Excellent COD· <Woo. (SMI) -------DO YOU OFFER A SERVICE? snts IOSWITHAM YOLUWMMM 7DWesrt .......... An. inW.tmtmter Ut tJae public know with an ad in the Daily Pik>t Service DlrectorY. It can ClOll JOU -Wile .. 12.03 per day. For more in· b'm9tion ad eomp&ele nU8 caU go.5Sf8. 81&7151 G-7880 ...... Used We're Overstocked With Previously Owned BMWs! WI MUST llDUC' OUA USID CAI IMYIMTORY TO MAii IOOM JOit ICOMIUa ftAOMMS! USED BMW SALE! A PIW IXAMPUIS •.• •79 521i 4 speed. •r. sunroof. leather. allows "Showroom." (0256) • '71 l20i 4 speed. 2<l.OOO mi le s. AM /FM. fog light s. (239UKH) Very nice! • '11 SlOi 4 speed. sunroof. stereo. alloys. low mites. mint concU (017~1 • '77 J20I 4 apeed. air. ltereo 111P8. alloys. LO ADED ! Immaculate! C2iMSXEl S14,500 $8,995! S9,995! •73 J.0csc...- 4 apeed, air. at8"90. ~Mtoys.. MINT.II Cv.mrrn) -Classic! DOM"f MISS THIS,_. •90US OfPOITUMffY TO OWN A -..WAT nml MMTASnc IA.._SI . . Th is offer Thru 415/80 ·c1ma1Mw . ~·.:::..--83;5-3171 V.ikswapn 11711 IUCHl&.VO. ......... IMclt 14~2000 ,..,, vw Ul8IT 4 cyl.. automatic trans. "AM I FM ster eo w/eaaeette (7SJ'Y\J ). "9wCW,$4St5 t•M:&.I MAZDA me>Hatbor Bl .. C.M. MS-5700 '78 VW cut.om ftjy1era camper, apotless, slpt 5, AC. stereo tape. reg eas. (714) CM-9830. ~- "16 VW bug, lo mi., new radials. FM stereo. ml()/080. 640-96T1 afl. 4. "12 vw Sqbk, good cond. stereo, $1900/besl ofr. 75&-9t10, 644-1784 ·m VW nms lllot. clean. Sl850 or bsi ofr. 754·S300 dys; SIM-3628 ev 'iO VW Sqrbt, en1 shot. 1919 Seville. 7500 miles. unmac. cond. Loaded VU\YI slml'OOI. rea 1 wi rt' wh eels . AM /FM cassette. 644·~ ---c 9917 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1977 CHEftOLIT. CAMAIO Nloe 6 cyl. eecoomy car wi automatlc trans .• pwr. steeriq. air cood. & more oplloos ! Low milies too! t3MWQT >. OHLYS4491 HOWAID a.. ... t DoYe It Quail Sta. NEWPORT BEACH lll-0555 1979 CA.MARO 6 cyl., auto. trans.. pwr. s t .. AM/FM s te reo cassette. rallye wheels &. less than 6000 miles. (518\'HF) $54'1 THEODORE ROBINS FORD 1060 •iAASOA IHllO COSTA Mt'>A 0°1·, 0010 ~ u;r· 3 2eo00 = a.no11t ·n20 er.. cow ••• .. •••••-••••••••••••• $150 ea. Aft 7:30PM. tm CHIYIOLIT lMMOZ7, teo-'7183 . MAI*' WAeOM "71 vw Squareback good Nice COllditlOD ! Lea• cond. Get good mpg. t1Wl •.ooo miles• just Auto trans. A1klng right for the family! tz.OQO. Oall ~ (5MSP'R). 7J s.,tr-...... CM.Y S2ttl Slm> 55'·5996 HOWAID CM91olet '615 VW ready for restor· ing. New Urea, eng, oeeds elect wiring. Best offer. eves only. 960--54!09 '65 Sq. Ntw intr/ex· ..... ltl radials. Xlnt nmmac. Slm,--1 'll12 vw ... Allto, air, ... oril ad, ... eaod. llm/llltafr,.., "'11 SCllOCCO ....,..., air c.oe41Uon. all OJ •hHl•, stereo ca.ette. (IZ'TRKB> Mtf I JIMMAl9f() VOLISWAMM ll7U B&Aat BLVD. RUHl'INOTON Bl!ACB Dove • Quall Sta. NEWPORT BEACH ll:MIH s&UsflUT! We bave a IDOod aelec· tioa ol N&Vf • USED a.rol.ut CONNELL C.HEVROLCT ~-1 I • ' ... ., ..... 1 1nn ....... O...,tull ....... lib ..... SM-'1111 lfttPM. .. a., Mr. kJI. ilnt ..... ~.•---to btlltvt. llu1l .. u. 7'10ad. ea.2000 ................ .... ,.. 9772 cmL -. Call bafcn J ._.. ................. _ ... __ .. _1111 _______ • • 1'74 CHlftOUf MOMTICAILO Qqle. ID MINT CIODdl· liao. loeded wtt.b options 6 LOW coiJeace. lluat aee to app reciate! (.Jm(YG). OM.YS27fl HOWAID Cllirf• oilt Dove A: Quail SU. NEWPORT BUCH llJ.OSSI Q1,.._ t9Z5 ....................... 1978 Volare Wagon AM/'111 Stereo. Many mra Qll50. tomt C: tt ,.. HJO ....................... Impart Dealer Has NO need for a tt77 UMCOl.H MAn'fCOUPI c.tlef' .... Loaded with extras 6 ba a low mil e•. (111RNE). ' PRICED TO SELL FAST!!! *ACLIMAJDA 2150 HA1bor Bl •• C.M. 645-5700 ttJ2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • COllVETTES! . lmmedlat.e mventory re duction SALE! Big stock. sacnf'ICllCP.. All excellent Vettes. loaded. auto. tram . etc! ACT FAST• l9'14 ( l.5iZ1.:HO I o.ly $6391 l.975 < 6'50N BT I Olly $6591 1975 (No.61771 °'*""' l!rnl ( l.92POP I °'* $7191 197'8 (No. 41181 I o.11 S75tl 19'T7 (No. 6312> cw, Sl4tl 1978 (17ST'L()) o.ly '''" 1!'78 (No. 919) ~ o.1y sma 1979 ('1Jt vco ) o.ly $11.ltl 1979 <No. 8792 l Olllw SI 1,391 lB> (~. 7495) New CWw $14,ltl HllKI <~. J!M.5 ) New cw, $14.491 Leasi n g and 100 ~ fmancmg avallable on 8'Jlll'O¥ed credit I 13 mos .• U ,000 miles ex. tmcled ~ iocludied with i6s and fat.er. a MIO value at oo utna charge! ·1m1101D "NSTA"' 4HtlA a..-.-r ui.rtor, • ...... Cl'aal.. air coad.., ..,._ 6 alum . .m.11. U91UYPI . $4211 THEO DORE llOBINS FORD JUbU HARBOR (ll'o(O CO'>TA Ml!>A b"-1 0010 .. T·bird, nma dt. MW brks, alte~tr le bat· tf't)'. Very depeodablie, bdy in td sbJape! IDt dot. Come test dnve 1t! IK>Otbsi ofr. 847-1.Jd Ford '71 Panto Squire wagon. wood·1ra1n " white.$3700. a.3577 "72 LTD WCD Clean " n111a good. Tr1r brtcb. 9501080 ISU10S "11 Granada. blue. 4 dr. AC, lo mi. xint cood, avail S.l. s:MOO/reas olT ~ Re plica 1931 F ord <Replicar> Roadste r Ye llo w & bill . 302 Mustang en~. AM 1fM stereo AJr. beat Rum ble :.eat . UOOnu Sl4 • .SOO n4-~.2l3-~ '78 T-81.l'd Town Landau Meta!Jir brown Camel \elvet P S. P B. pwr lor ks '& tr unit A C. A.MJFM cass Tiit wh.l. radials. crs . Loi m1 SS.800/080. 840·4890 days. 49f.881.0ievea 'Ill Wgo 4-d r. loaded Auto trans. PtS, P 1B 8·pass . S85010BO 541>-5975 '7l LTD 2-dr. xlnt cond • orig. owner. S98.S 494-9683 ------ ....................... UMoln Versailles. ·79 Olampagne edition. 8000 mi. S13.SOO. 640-7130 Mwcwt HSO ••••••••••••••••••••••• IS Mon.arch Glua 4.dr. xlol. oond. A C. 4 i.pkrs stereo Dependable. e<m. tran5 12.650., Hm ~l..,. wk 133-3$51 1--------To place your meua.ce belontbe rudin« public. pboQe Dally Pilot HOWAllD Qrff .. l~~a~..,~·Oed..~~--~5178~~ Dove ls Quail Sta. I - NEWPORT BEACH ('n mi. So. of Jobn Wayne Airport , off MaiCArUNr. back or Vic· toria Statio n Rmlaunnl> 7t 4/lll-0555 aren eood lbru Tues .. +NO Aldos,UMd •••••••••••••••••••••• To Place your .. Fast Result" Servire Directory ad .. Call Now 642·5'71 ht. JZJ •••••••••••••••••••••• NABERS AUTO CENTER 1421 IM8 ~T .. COSTA MISA NOTHING OVER $ • • • ' •• ~A~~ ••••••••••• 54499 Full Power. factotY 81( cond . AM/FM 5'8'90 8 treck t8'>e. tilt Wheel. cruite control. CabnOlet 100. leather 9')111 pwr. seats & custom Wheels. Sharp! {010MTX). ?I CADILAC S 1899 S8AM DI VILLI ...... .. Full power. factory air cond .. tilt whlet: lt..-.c> . ~ toP & all oriQlnal. Low. low me .... (0320U). '7t POM'l'IAC - LI MANS WMOM ••••• ~4 999 Safan. Full POWW. flCtOtY air cond.. AM/FM stenK>. tllt wheel. crut• concf'OI. -.... lugpoe rack a ontv ~.ooo ~-( 7aeWFf(). ms Ford MUitan&, IOOd -.v.a. lJmpc city, 23 like new. Sl,800. -t-all on aw hwy, stereo. tape, $31.3884 eves . ....__.. I NU power-+ er. cntrl, -------- IQ.OlllZ t4Mltl &Jot c.lODd.. x.lot buy, nu FB 'Tl Fonnula 33M ml. '17 Hardtop. 11.efW. IOOd Urea, tl175. Dy ..-1, Like new. ~.ooo. Pvt . aand. ? or trade. ~w.sn 1..;;..PY.-._· -._s_m_evea_=-·-- m.25.Z2 '79 Cullan Supreme '7'1 Flreblrd E1prit, All/Fii 1lereo, air, ti.by blue. $3300/080. 4IB.JQ54 • Mlllt.. IOOd emdition, I>lieMi. Brwn. metallic . mat tell 11500. Dys Camei doth lnta'. 4ir. =.w.·1741, eve;J'' ltnda PB, • PS. Gauee ~~ _ peckqe. AM/FM. New '71 Grand PrU LJ, auper Hine ~m ldl! Goodyear Tiempo quiet" romfortahle. 41 a-tfiedadsdostwtU. Radaals.22,000ml.tl.OOO. K mi. AM/FM, air, 22 ~. °"" .ee.t.ofter. ~ ~·.~.-: ....... !~ ~·-~.-: ....... !~ ~-~ ....... !~ ' FUll CASH PRICE 36 pavmen's of S85 3 t Pnce 13988. Sates tu S240.'8. 1., tolal down. Doc tee $20 OMV SM APR 17 62 Def omt pnce S5'486 16 ISer-4651) ,Stk 3-USl B~ND NEW '80 BRON.CO 4x4 VALUE-PACKED SALE 57999 Over Three Million Dollars Worth of NeW Cars & Trucks In Stock Now! ,.... .. ___ ,....._ .......... ~. . S~TtoNS;-• PAGes TWENTY-FIVE CENTS l 'Bost~g~ rransfer Delayed Again a ......... ee 4 Candidates Air Opinions Ne.rt ~adoy VOfNS an lhml· sngton B~h will ae~ct three m.em· bers o/ tMir s~·mem~ city council. There are J2 candidates. Foll.owing a~ brie/ looka at four o/ the candidate1 together with their views on current municipal iuue1. Similar pro~s of the esght other candidates appeared in the Dally Pilot earlier thu week. Ratb Fla.ley, who was appoint· ed to Cill a vacancy on the City Council last May, is the only woroan in the field of 12 can· didates. The 55-year-old Mrs. Finley has served on the Huntington Beach Plan- n t n g Com - mission five years, was president of the Hunt - ington Beach and Orange County L e agu e of W o me n Voters and ~•NLlfY was on the 1978· 79 Orange Coun- ty Grand Jury. She is a graduate Qf Barnard College in New York where she majored in English and attended business school. Following are her views on - some city issues: P~ t: She says it will pass but that she probably wUl vote against it. . She says she is not as afraid as some about its effects.but that it requires solid planning now to come to grips with problems that will come later. She also declares that there is a need to study city operations. I "There are probably things that are being done in certain ways because they always have been. We need to ferret these out and ask if there is a more cost effective way." CETA Problems: She !ays that the CETA federal job train· ing program should have been more closely watched. ·'The re was an assumption that it was being watched by the Orange County Manpower Com· mission, but the city shouJd have had a cl06er monitbring role. "We allowed it to become autonomous and this is the kind of thing that can happen to federal programs." Downtown Area: She says de- velopment has been held back because private enterprise has not been informed by the city on what it can or can't do in the area. "There n~ds to be a def- inition." She says that, before there is an)' plan, there must be a meshing of concerns that ha ve an interest in the area. MoVJ: Mrs. Finley says she ex~cts to spend about $9,500 on her campaign. Forty-nine-year-old Jobn V•lendno lists his occupations as a public relations official and as an employee or McDonnell Douglas in quality control. He is married and bas a daughter and two grandchild· ren. He bas Uved in Hunt· ington Beach and Anaheim for the past 1.5 years. Jle said bis experiences have taught him bow to .. &e~ the job VM.aMTttlH) d.one and UW is why be should be elected. .l'ollowin& are bis views on ~e ol the iasuea: Pr.,..ttt. t: He aay1 tb.e cqat·cuttinl measure will pus ud that be la probably lo favor of lt altbou(b it depends on bow Utlnp 9"bandled. FAASlarta~ WASHINGTON <AP) -1be Fe4eral A vtatioD Admlniltra· U., reedlnl to what tt called ''Nrioul ~" by a Pan Amertea AlrUne. pUot, NJd lt would be11n today a "com· ~h-IYe lnve1tlaaUoo" oo the r.1~-Am operatet and main· . Iii ... Tbe plJGC. clt.t4 • number ol eoitne abutdowna on 747• chit to fuel ahona1ee. , He says local government can make up some or the deficit by imposing a charge on trash col- lection. He also declares that waste and duplication can be cut, but that there is none in the police a nd fire departments and they shouldn't be touched. CETA Problems: He says al- leged mis management in federal job training programs was the result of bad m anage- ment. ·'Somebody s hould have stopped it." "If I was on the City Council 1 would know what went wrong in every department. That's the kind of guy I am -nosey." Downtown Area: He calls con- ditions a shame and says that lots or people share the blame for aUowing part of tbe city to dete riorate. "You can almost see some of the buildings falling apart. It's a wonder they doo 't start fl fire." Valentino believes that better inspectioo would have helped. He says he would like to see the downtown developed in such a way that it would benefit from the tourist business. Staie Beacla: He says a city t.akeover would be okay if it is profitable. "But if it costs money and services, no.·· Moaey: He bas collected S&,000 for campaign. He says be plans to '1ave a llUle left over for a victory dinner ---- Bratt Greer, 54, is a tblrd generatlon Huntlngt.oo Beach res- ident who bas been an intema· tionaJ machine tool consultant for the past 20 years. He was appointed to the Hunt· ington Beacb Planning Com· mission late last year and was active in the Goth.ard S treet Jn - d u s tr i a J League -an or ganization ur g ing in · du s trial growth in the City. • GH .. Greer maintains many impor-tant city decisions are being in- rtuenced by s pecial interes t (See VIEWS, Page A2> ~Close Good Friday Most banks along the Orange Coast wiU close their doors from noon or 1 p.m. on Good Friday, bank officials said today. .; County and city offices will re- main open ror bu.siness as usual, along with county and city libraries and the Orange County Dump, acconliog to authorities. Savings and loan institutions vary on operating hours oo the sacred holiday, some closing at noon or 1 p.m., and reopening al 3 p.m. and some not opening at all Friday afternoon. A call to the individual branch can be made to determine when to con- duct business. WASHINGTON <AP) -An assistant general counsel for Yale University serves "as a dislncent.ive to marriage and an incentive to cohabitation" and should be chan1ed. Lynda Sandi Moeracbbaecber alao said the so-called "mar· riale penalty" wu eocouractnl divorce and creatlq a reason for women to remain out of the labor force. Sbe r:ff ~ the simplest - and la res t -means of abolllblnl tbe mani ... penalty would be to have ~oae me lndivtdual returDI .... only one lncoaM tu rate ached.ale. AltboQab tbla woGld solve the problem, lbe aald, tom• ~m· mentators feel lt abould not be adopted becau.e taxpayen are flmtUar wlth tbe current •>'•teal. But a he added . ''When familiarity with complexltlea ' ,. Carter's Respoilse Weighed BULLETIN By Tbe Auocla&ed Prea lraa's raJl•C Revolatloaary CoudJ ILu delayed a -..... on caklac castody of th American hostages untU Presl· dent Carter darlfles lab reepoue to coadllloaa set by lraalaa leaders,. Forelcn Minister Sadegb Gllo&baadela said today. By The Assocla&ed Press M iii tan ts holding American hos tages inside the occupied U.S. Embassy in Tehran said to- day they are ready to tum their captives over to the ruling Revolutionary Council if re- quested. The transfer could come Saturday. two council members said. Iranian President Abolhassan Bani·Sadr, interviewed on American television. s aid Presi· dent Carter met his demands for the government to take control of the hostages, and that he would ask the council to make a decision later in the day. A spokesman for the militants told Canadian Press in Tehran: "We will accept any decision that t.be Revolutionary Council takes because it is the highest body int.be country which is sup- ported by Ayatollah RuhoUah Khomeini." leader oC the revoJu. lion. Tbe militants had relied on <See JllAN, Page "2) Rink Worker Anest,ed, in WSafeHeist A Huntington Beach·man, wbo told police last month he was threatened by three shotgun- armed men who robbed a .Foun- tain Valley skating rink where he was working, was arrested himself Thursday as a suspected participant ln the crime. Two other men also have been jailed on burglary and grand theft charges in connedioa with the incident , police said. Fountain Valley Police Det.ec· live Larry Griswold unraveled the chain of events this way: On March 18 , Thomas P. Stephanos, 32. of Huntington Beach, was doing nighttime con- atru·ction work alone at the Fountain VaJJey Skating Center. 9105 Recreation Circle. while the business was closed. Stepha.nos told police that he was surprised by three blker- type men, all beating shotguns. who entered the rink al 3:30 a .m. He said the men pushed him to the floor and then re- moved an office safe with a dolly. 'l'be intruders put the safe, containing about $2, 700, into a blue van and fled, Stepbanos told police. On March 19, Fountain VaJley police arrested Clyde Newton, 24, or Cypress. and Mart Alan Anguish, ro, of Midway City, in connection with tbe alleged armed robbery. preventl a return to Calmeas and simplicity, all hope for tu re· form ls lo8t." •'The couple ls not a proper entity or tax unit; the in· dlvlduala earning the Income are proper tax unttl. No com· pellinl reaaoa exlltl to force one wage earner and two waae eunena to pay tbe uact same tax simply becauae what they have ln common ta havina said'ldo.'" The. marrlage penalt{, re1ultl becaute income earned 1 work· 101 C°"*9 who aN married la added totetber, puttiq tbem ln a hither tax bracket and la· er.at~ their tu ... 'De HIM couple, not marrl':'d would tUe separate tttuma a thelr ln· come would be taxed at a tower rate. The w:r aod. Meua Cominlt- tee, whJ wrltAta tb• nation's tax laws, heard Weda11day ~ .. o.llY ...... Sutt,...... COPTER WRECK -Beacbgoers Mark James, Jim English and Darren. K epner (from left) vie w the crumpled piece of helicopter that crashed in the ocean off Huntington Beach Saturday. Diver s ar e. trying to r aise the r e mains of the chopper which. they belie ve , contains the body of one of two victims . Salvaging Of C.Opter Under Way A salvage crew was expected to raise a crumpled oil company helicopter today from ocean waters off HUDUogton Beach where lt aettled at'ler crashina Last Saturday. Orange Count y harbor patrolmen expected to fi.nd the body of 26-year-old Jeff Moon - one of two Amlnoil USA employeee killed in the crub in tbe wrectaee. · Authorities have been searching for Moon's body sin« the copter nose-dived into the water as il wa.s beading for an oil company drilling platform about three rnHea off the coasL The body of Gary Lee Rohwe r. 49, of Lake Elsinore, was re- covered by patrolmen after it was found floating ne-ar the wreckage. Rohwer w as p\loting the helicopter at the time or the crash. Investigato rs s aid an un- derwatet search team hired by Arninoil located the main por· tion of the helicopter late Wed· nesday. Pieces of the helicopter -in- cluding a seat, the rotor blades and the engine -also were found near the s u"ken wreckage, authorities said. Once the bod y of the helicopter is brought to the SW'· face a sheriffs spokesman said. it ~Ill be hauled to nearby Sunset Aquatic Park where FAA investigators will attempt to de· termlne the cause of the acci· dent. Witnesses to the accident claim the copter dipped toward the ocean, jerked back up and then dropped into the water. Authorities sa1d the craft sank before rescue boata could reach tbe scene. rrom a Maryland cou&le who twice divorced each o er and twice remarried before rtnally endinS tbelr marriage to alalply live tocetber. Aa1e1a and Daric:t Boyter Hid the reaon had nothint to do with romance. They were JIMt •ulna money at Income tu time. The Boyter• are amona a arowlnc nwnber ot Americana wbo are clladalnlafn m= to aYOld a proviakJD feeler tu I•• tlult tax.el wcnia, knobs• asad wtM a& a biaber nle. The Bou9e committee, wlialdl =. heartap oa the .. _.. 1=-::"W~wu tol one woman hit rtance declded aaalnat marrtap beca111• of the bl1ber tu ... AnodMr coupt. marri.ct a.b to i•v• UHiir ~hltd a le1lU1'\1te lrth Cf!rt.lllc.te and others, like ' AlealaCase Jailhome Ethics Ciwd in Testimony By DAVID JCUTZ•A.NN Qt -o.ty "69* -It was a jailbouse code or ethics which led to an Orange County inm.ate's testimOQYWed- nesday against murder defen- dant Rodney Alcala. P~ witness Michael Herrera, a fortnef" heroin user Hmtington ~Struekby Auto, Critical A 29-year -old Huntrngton Beac.h motorcycle officer ts m <'rthcal condition today with he ad injuries afte r he was broadsided by a motorist who failed to stop for a red light, police said. Officer John Suttle, a rive- year veteran of the police force. was on duty at the llme o< the 10 .36 p.m accident at lhe corner of Golden West St.reel and Ed· mger Avenue He --was taken to Huntington Jntercommunity Hospital where he is in the antens1ve care umt. authorities said. Pohce said the motonst sped from lhe scene of the accident and abandoned his r ed van several block s a w ay . In · vesligators sajd they are still searcb.ingfort.besusped. SutUe reportedly was clipped on the side or the head by a rear- view mirror attached to the out- side of the van. Police said SutUe was wearing a recently issued motorcycle helmet designed to cover more or the bead than helmets pre- viously \1$ed. Several officers s~culated that Suttle's injuries could have been worse had he been wearing the older protective gear. the Boyters, divorced to lower their tax bill. The issue was brouebt to at· tention ol the public last October when the Internal Revenue Service toot the Boyten to U.S. Tax Court to arsue tbat tbelr divorces and remar~ were a "&ham transactlon." case is peadina. Tbe &;ten. from EUlott Qty. Md., earn about S»iOOO each u rederal emploI.4:8, They told tbe commltt" t J ba•• H¥ed ..... '15;• .. t.uw MW' 8'le peat five nan-bf ·di¥ordnl to ' take advantaae of lower tax rates for aiQal• penom. " ( Mk you, ls t.bJ.a the ltfnd of bellavtor you wet to Pt'O~? ·• the Bo,un aaked rbetortcalJy. The Carter •dmlnlatr:atlOft • .,. no, but om~tab told ~ comm\uee they h1nn't decided what to do •bout the dilemma. " and pushet", said he wrote down statemept.s Alcala· made to him Lil connection witb the disap- pearance and murd'r of Robm Samsoe last June becausl' the case involved a child. ..People in institutrons feef a certain hostility toward child mole.ters and rapists," Herrera said. Alcala. a . of Monterey Parle. is charged with the abduction and sla,ying of Miss Samsoe, 12. or Hunting(On Beach. The prosecution in the case has relied on test.lmooy the past rew days of jailhouse informers who were with AJcala when he was taken into cus tody a t Orange County J ail last sum- mer. Herrera . who testified Wed nesday that Alcala admitted ab d u c ting a nd beat ing Miss Samsoe unconscious, said in- m ates look down on prisoners being held for crimes against children. He s ai d he had bis o wn personaJ "code of ethics" as far as children were concerned and he admitted j.bat the nature of the cha r ges aga inst Alcala bothered him. Because he has li ved in in· stitut1oos most or his life, he said, the ho5tility toward rapists and child molesters becomes in- grained among inmates. Under questioning by both prosecutor Richard Farnell and defense attorney John Barnett, Herrera denied be had been promised any sr;iecial deals or breaks for his tesli mony. Free on bail accused of viola- tion or probation . He rrera testified Wednesday that Alcala told him during jailhouse con- versations bow he lured Miss Samsoe into his c ar at the seashore in Huntington Beach. <See ALCALA, Page .U> Coast Weather ~ • Partly cloudy late night •' I and early morning, ·but ... mosUy sunny and a little •! warmer throuf.b Friday .. Lows tonight n the 40s. t Highs Friday 64 at the J beaches aad 72 lnlaod. . 1 IN81HT8D_.Y A1'0fta CMOMr GCM Atl(rv, still atea~ ooer Uw ltf'Uce ~ bolebalJ ,,...,..., IOJIS f/ it 1 WO~ up to him, he'd coll Off tlw umon. Ste Sport•. Page BJ. IMlell =::.-.:::: AU ........... Ma Q AMUMln C3 ............. M ...... .......U ., ........ ., .. "'"'" ., .... ~ Al ........... ~ AM "•ti..t..... ltA &:'""' C:.tt NlllC....._ ... ,, IC• ate~ I M eten...i .,, 11.......... I • DNtll.._.. A,........_. ,.,, ·~ ..., a .. l'!I • ....... 14 I lttM4 .. ~ CWW..W ..... M -• a • ~ • Hf . : ~~&M -41.GlaW,-A~ AP)-A firil~~lllilflll~~l!Mt~·:Wtll-=~·· U utunl I• ...., Ml lldd Pt~ ii"" on· utunt au to lta~larlMl Aawteaa ~ .... ••'4 a pule 11 tbt ftnl atep Lowud cuttina ovtT Jlli*. tbe oftldal Ataenu ,...._ -.nl~ aald t.oda)'. back .on ,cwemment. Ke maht· ~b. the atate-owaed oU ucS 1u company, aald It wu talDJ current COWlCU membera pr• ........ toatldue lll "IOO mlllm cubic fee\·a-day deliveries have dooe a poor Job or to &l PlllO Co. ol You•-•"'-kA..l of ......... pri llr.&mlinln• dt.1 •rvieM. tu.ally iii l'ffdMd. -ao ....,. -1 ~ta\'er ce •vn· <:ETA .,.._,,.,: Greer Wet But BJ P810 ~ u w Dot bMo able to obtaln tbat tor years he bat been IUI· oettHM')' a~ from tM vs. 0.partment ol En~rl)', ~ct olU,. WlJ the clty'1 federal tbe D4tWI apncy wd. Job traJnlnf proaram has bttn run Bl• .... .,..... ·'The clty hu a very NEW YOU (,\P) -£x.iled Ru.Nian oovtUlt Alnander laC'kadaiaiul approach W.ard Solshen!U1fl U.. crlt.lclud UM Un.It.Id &at .. f« ecllll\aaJDa "the handlloa the taxpayer's m&iey. RUNlM .,..,,a.·· wl\b the So"IMt 1y1tem that domlnlllt• tbtm. There were warnin•s a loog He aaid ta a '1·P*I• article ln Forelp time 110 that the CETA pro- Alfaln ... ,,, ... \bat that ll a serioua errw aram waa Solne wrong." 1lmllar to •4~1 a man with hll lllneu •• Do...._. Area: He said a big It •• at leaat tho 1ffCJOd Ume tb\a yur brother attitude by the city has tbal Sohhealtayn a devoted anU-communlat •tymled ~owntowo redevelop- wbo llvea ln Hclu1lon ln V•l'mont, baa ment. pleaded lD wrtt.lna that Americ&n1 acparate "Rilhl now it's a mini-slum in their m.lnda the Sovlet ~a.em and ltl area. 1be Ume bas come to Jet leadera, and the people who are ruled by that the individual property owners ayat.em. come up with a pJan and let the " NEVADA TEST SITE, Nev. (AP) An underground nuclear tat wu conducted today by the Department of Energy at the Nevada Test Site. The test -code·named Uptauer -was detonated about !1388 feet below the surface of Yucca Flat. A spokesman said uie test wuin the 20-to·lSO ldloton range. · ............... BRISTOL, England (AP> -Twenty-one police officers and nine other persons 'were Injured in fl&hUog between police and hundreds of immigrant blacks, authorities sald today. Police said 21 persena were arrested. buUdincs were bumed. sbops looted and cars wrecked. S••• Pretest T•rfltl!t CAIRO, Egypt (AP> -Some s.ooo fundamentalist Moslem students demonstrated against Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and the presence of the deposed sbah in Egypt at a rally today on the campus of a local university in the Egyptian towo of Assyut. No violence was reported. Bta t!GWraq C'llC OK.'4 WASHINGTON (AP) -Hastening to finish work on a balanced 1981 budget , the Senate Budget Committee today voled 5 percent across·the·board cut in the federal bureaucracy. On an 11·6 vote, the committee approved the $2.S billion cut proposed by Sen. James Exon. 0 -Neb. The cut would apply to all administrative functions o{ the rederal government. 2 lllo~ a .. i~ Freed BOGOTA. Columbia <AP> -Guernllas who s1elzed the Dominican Embassy fi ve weeks ago during a reception today freed two more of the 27 diplomats and others they had held. The names were not announced immediately by the authOrities. <Related Photo Page A3. > TrainWreek , Toxic Fulnes Sena 45 k> Hospital govemmeo.t then figure out bow lt can help." Bead T&keonr: Greer said he la WOn'ied the city may try to charc4' user fees if lt takes over the state strand. "If the city can handle it more efficiently tMll I'm all for it, but I don't want to see kids charged just for going to the beacb.1' •oeey: He intends to spend about $4,000 on his council cam· paign. Cfaarlea Soafb <pronounced Row> is an administrative assls· tant for the City of Norwalk. He ls 31, married, has three children and has resided in Hun· tington Beach five years. He holds a masters degree in public administration from Cal State Long Beach. Rough c laims that- t here 1s a leadership and manage· ment crisis in the city and that Sl .5 mi 11100 1n waste could llOClc»t be cut without e liminating employ~s . Following are his views on some of the issues . Proposition 9: He believes the measure will pass. He supports 1t and doesn't believe it will. have a detrimental effect because of. a projected increase in oil revenues. He likes the proposit1otP because it will force an evalua· tton of programs and priorities, he says. He also declares the city can economize by contraeUog out for services with private industry which he says Ln some cases can be 35-40 percent less expensive at least one person had breathed CETA Problems: He blames { • ..._.,..ji,M._.o.;~Lt...Al!IW.:a.t ...... IO.'.... .............. -=.....;.&&.:c....-:;.;.:..:;~~.w:.~.;;..;J..~~~ -- Deity ... _., ~0'0-. In case you hadn't neticed, it's e lection lime in most cities along the Orange Coast . This collection of signs touting various can· didates for municipal office in Huntjngton Beach attest.a to that. Cluster of signs is on heavily traveled Warner Avenue at Canyon Lane near Meadowlark Alrport. Election is next Tuesday. Proficiency Tests ~ting Subject < I Fountain Valley School Dis· trict trustees are expected to learn tonight about tests ad· ministered to identify students who have fallen below district st andards in reading, writing a nd arithmetic. The board's regular meeting will begin at 7:30 p.m . with a 45·minute panel presentation on local proliclency testing. Members or the panel will be Dr. Ruben Ingram. assistant superintendent for educational services; Dr. Dale RuaseU, a Los Angeles County educational consultant: Dr. Marc Ecker. pr&ncipal of Fulton S<:bool . and Barbara Moran, a Fulton teacher. Proficiency tests are designed to discover whether stude~ts have mutered basic readu\g, language and math skills. 1 ·...,der recent state legislation, stl ll.°) will not be able to graduate from high school, beginning in 1981 . unless they have passed sut'h u ams The state also ha!> ordered t hat elementary schools must administer such test!'>. beginning this year. Proficiency testing at this level, however, is not U5ed to determine whether a student will be• promoted to the next grade level "lt·s used as an early warning system in elementary schools." Or. Ingram explained. He said such tests will pinpoint students• whO need extra bel,t long before they reach high school This year, Fountain Valley tested students in grades five, six. seven and eight -twice as much t.estin& a.s was required by the state. Results are still bei.oe analyzed. lC a student has failed to meet the district's minimum surn• dards. a conference will be ar· ranged for the child's parents, teacher and principal, with the aim of corredui& the weakness. In so m ~. districts , parent c:ooperauon has been difficult to 01>tam. but Ingram said he ex· pects stroni part1c1pallon by Fountain Valley parents . Ingram s aid Fountain Valley ha ~ ~l'l n•la\lvely high stan· dards. but be noted that 1\ is 1m· possible to compare FountJain \'alley with neighboring ~hool d1Mncts because each dm.nct develops its own tesu and st.an · dards Biker Broke Knievel Taken to Court No Link Seen in Poi.soning SAN DIEGO <AP) -Sao Diego police do not believe the same person wbo was involved in lhe weekend cyanide poisoning of food items in l WO local Safeway supermarkets is responsible for a similar occur· rence in the Riverside County community of Palm Desert. San Diego detectives went to Palm Desert to confer with s heriff's deputies and FBI agents but all conclud~d the Palm Desert incident Monday was the work of another in· dividual, authorities announced Wednesday. Meanwhile. in Beaverton, Ore .. police said Wednesday that an anonymous caller two w~k~ ago said he put cyamde in a Jar of pickles 1n a market and de manded lho05ands or dollar.. in diamonds The ca.se was i;1m1lar to th1· two here. rn wtueh the' "Poison Gang" demanded 50 to 100 dia mond' in l:'xchange for end· 1ng the e 1ttort1on. A Jar of pickles and bottle or tenyak1 '>auce were found to be heavily laced wtth cyanide. Beaverton Police Chier Don :-.:e well said a trace of cyanide was found March 22 in a jar o( pickles at a Fred Meyer Inc. market. SOMERVILLE. Mass. <AP> - Toxic fumes billowed from a chemical tank car that split' open in a tram wreck today. sending 4.5 people to the hospital and forcing the evacuation of at least 2,000 others . enough of the gas to be admiUed problems in the fe deral job to the hospital However. most· t raining program on the MIAMI <API -Oaredcv1l Evel Knievel faces a were given oxygen, showers and t e r~inallon of, the internal Sl00 .. 000 damage s uit over :l yacht that h(.' says he Sus~t H e ld In Burglary Officials said 30 people were taken to Somerville Hospital, while ·15 others were taken to Massachusetts General Hospital an nearby Boston. Al Massachusetts Genera!, spokesman Martin Bander said FVBurglar Gets Jewelry Jewelry valued at $1,200 was reported taken in a burglary Wednesday at the home of Fred Aaron Dodson on El Plano Avenue f1l Fountain Vaitey. police said. . The burglars entered the con· dominium by lifting a sliding g lass door orr its tracks sometime between 8:30 a .m . and 4:30 p.m .. police said. The stolen jewelry included five gold chains, three gold rings, an enameled Egyp\ian cross, a silver necklace with a jade ~ndant and two silver chains. DAILY PILOT T ... 0<-~ o.lly "'""-whll -" " (__,,,._...._,,_,_.., .... 0<-Coftl _, ...... C-Y _, ... ... ,~ ..-• .,.....-v.o ........... ...,..,. ,.,.._., ... (.Ml• -_, _,., "--•••<111/F"lu"tlftt VeHty, ""'"*· l.a9\tn• =~s:i~..:!'.~~~ -.:·:~~ "°''>Nfle .i.,.t I• •I no Weol h y IV#I. P 0 .... ,...c..,.......c.i--n.a. _ .. _ --· ... --, ..... c.w, Yic.l'Y-·--.. ~ -!C-r•-,...... ........... .......... ~-OIMMM.~ Mc-..P.-........................... """~ -..Ot-~r•• ttllftttMtoft .. Mfl Olflct INJ .. ecto......_. i.i.n..,._ .. .,o ... ,....-.. omc.1 .._ _.,. *' ... CMll Hltl>Wff c..441-Qt""" ,.., ti-• T.....,M(714)MMl%1 a..tlftM Advet11 .. MUf71 ,_ _oir-(ioojoifyOO"MMlll ... ... 1120 =:ic :. a:=. ~fr'....t':.= ....... , 9f •• ,.~,.\· ,..,.." '"•' " ==::..:.' ,_ •I perml u ltll Of !:1=..!'-;'~~:rJ. .. .:.::,~~ ~:: ~n~'!.=:::;,:19;:::•~.lt _,,.,, , ' I ' a variety of tests auditor aff d . Police ordered the Tobin . Rough claims the internal can t • or to buy though he fixed it up b) adding ;1 Fountain VJlley police arrest Bridge across the Mystic River auditor's storm wam10gs about teak deck._ carpeting a nd extra bedroom m irror s. ed a North Caroltna man We<l closed as the fumes s pread into the program w4'.r e ignored Transit Charter Inc contends Knie\'el's am · ne!>dcty and charged him with Boston.Thebridgeisoneofthe beforehewasterm111a~ed . provements damaged the 116-foot yacht and he burglaru1ng a local home major routes connecting Boston He say.s .he wot.!ld hke to see broke a contract to buy it. The company convinced a earlier m the day with its northern suburbs. the position reinstated. He feder_aJ judge Tuesd ay that the motorcycle stuntman Officer Chns Kielich said he Officials said the gas. iden· blames the cei:A snafu 00 3 was liable for any damage to the vessel. heard a radio report concerning t1fied as phosphorus trichloride. lack of leadership and c~mpe· JU(fge William Hoeveler set a hearing this month a S.30 p.m. burglary at the home causes irritation of the eyes and Le~t.man~gement by th~ city ad· to .determine the extent of damage to •a..e yacht or John K. Miller. 10053 Los lungs, while those who get cm1lm1strat1on and the City Coun· K I Ul! CabaUos St. A. man reportedly nu~ve says he c hartered in mid· 1977 to take his massive d?ses face possib~e Dowatown: He would like to famtly to moto.rc_ycle races in Daytona Beach. had entered Mille r's home liver and kidney damage. It is see refurbishment of entire I d K through a closed garage door used to make water treatmen~ coastal area to improve sales . n a epositi~n. nievel said the $50.000 he s pent a nd bad ned with a port.able ch~micals. tax revenues. m yacht renovations plus~the.costs of several speed. radio. "It's going to be going on for a He says the maximum height bo~ts. two Lear Jets, two· motorcycles and two jet Kielich spotted a suspicious very long time," said Willis for high rise buildmgs should be s kts "broke me financially. It put me in debt to the person near the crime sce.n,e and Greene. the acting SomeTVille 11 stories. lune of.$4 million. I just ne\'e r recovered... . arrested Ernest Ray Finch, 35, fire chief. "There's nothing we Beacb Takeover: He says he's ~evel . also. faces a mull&· million-dollar j udg· described as a transient from can do to. st.Op the gas. The only cautious about the city taking on ment m C~orrua and an Internal Revenue Service D urh am. N · C · Fin c b was thing we can do once it's stopped any more responsibilities that property lien ror $L6 million. an attorney said. ch a r ged w Ith r es id en ti a I leaking is to throw some dirt on could jeopardize other essential burglary and was taken to the trench." services. Orange County Jail. Awhlte,fugnc~~~c~~ Motty: He plans ~ s~~-----------------------------~~~~~~---~ ing gas drifted toward Cam· $4,000 on campai1tn. bridge and was evident al least a mile away from the crash sc!ene on the BostOn & Maine Railroad track. Railroad employees, wearing gas masks . used three payloaders to dig a trench beside the tracks to capture the leaking chemical before il v apori.zed. fn. P.,,e AJ IRAN •.. Khomeini's support to "'ltefy an attempt by Bani-Sadr last month to take custody of the Americans. Bani-Sadr, speaking to CBS and NBC News, said the Revolu· tiooary Council would decide on the liming of the transfer. and that an Iranian Parliament to HOSTAGES HAVE VAAIEP CAREERS -Be meet th1J summer would settle the fate of the Americana. He said be received a mes.Jace from Carter on Wednesday which met hts conditions, but did not elaborate . "A.a far u lam eoncerned, the United States bu now met \be condiUob for the Revolutionary Oouncil to tu-e control of the hoataaes." Bani.Sadr said ln the CBS lnteTView. Sababl Hid he and anocl>er council member. Haahami Rafu.Qjanl, a.re permanent 10· betweem 14 d.llcutslon.a involv· tn9t the council and the mlUtaA&a. Fr9mP.,,eAI ALCALA •.. He said the murder defendant told the girl he wanted to take pictures or her for a magazine, that it wouldn't take Jong aod that he would pay her. When she agreed to go along, Alcala placed her lO·speed bicycle in the back of his small Oat.sun and . they drove off, Herrera said Alcala told bim. Whe n the cblld became frightened arftl wanted out ol the car, Herrera said. Alcala told him he began slapping her. "I asked him how many limes he hit her. He said, 'I don't know,'" the witness tesuned. •'He told me he slapped the a.- out of her and she passed out." Herrera said be also uked Alcala during the August, Un9, conversations H be s hot or stabbed Mias Samsoe and be aaid he didn't. He said the defendant told him the child's bicycle would never be found, t.bat be bad left tt at a store with the worcJ "thrltl" in the title. However, another witness lo t he cue, Anyelo Bou1oa. manaaer of a tbrltl store 14 El Moote, tesUfied later Wednet· day that a yellow 10-1peed bicy· cle almUar to Mls~ Samsoe's bad been left at bis .. ~re on June 20, th~ day the l\ltle &lrl dbap· p«tared. /) 3 styles to choose from: oxford, brown or maple . ( Newport Surf and Sport 1 I I I I Maln l to,. 222• Newport Blvd. Newpor1 BHch 175-7114 8to,. 2 210\11 Marin• Ave . ee1tio. ••tend 17~7121 Sion J I S-"' C:oest "-• I Costa W.M I 64t-Ol2l I '-'.1 $ 00 with this coupon Expires April 3~, 1980 \ ----------------------..-.------~ . ~'• Crime spree Amo• Wone . ............. -~ .... ---......,_.. OAu.ANO ~PJ -. It' u 0141 otbert t-..n.ct UMy wet. bappy and atary-U.1. nll·~ ~ID '"meet ..U·~•UNI. bff. a.& Diil Moon llrl&Mn .... But Ua1aP weat tour, tint for ..... , ....... • ...._ • • ......._ DaYid, UMlil w K....U.. la ml. -W Ml..._ 11at•n• '° 4llMi Davld WM ~rid.lid Of wa'81UM a _. U.. .._.to W. la fftlla aa _. police oftkw, a. .,..,t tlM nat ftve of tll• •ont crh•• •t>UH lD ,..,.. • Deuel Vocadonal lnltltute 1n catUGnLa Wlt.orJ. · Tracy. " 8efwe U.U. w.i. ftpl•W, David u4l k...tb lloon Md comlDkted a total ol 1)2 ,..__, lac=• •· bJa 11u11'dlr. ala fapee.• ud ~aUnp -all lD a apaa ol two mont.M bl ""· n WAI A aocJIY Um• Ourint a eoaJUlal Yialt ba reportedb attacktd hit wll and t.heQ UHd hit two-year· old dauibte:r u a 1hleld wKen 1uardt aimed a\ blm. • TV Birating .. lnjuiaction Ask.ea LOS ANGELES <AP) -Tbe llnt Repl tow.-ct pouJ· ba. Mtabltlbmct ol ....... polieJ to .. tM ...,.,. lnl p&ne, Of NJ ~ mp+ bawe . .._ ~ in federal court ben. U.S. Dlltrtet Coart .._ Lawt.,...1'. LJdkk took D• der comideratloe Wtd....tay a NQ'Qllt bJ die Dltiola'' laraeat pay TV eomp&DJ, NatloDal Sobaerlptlon Televtlion, for a prellm1DU7 tnJ~ to ltoS> U. ptrat· inl of it. sipala. PiraUnc pay televtak>n stcnall ud MllJ.nf equjpmeat to decode the scrambled signals if pvwiJlc u pay television spreads acrop t.be countl'y, and tMre appears to be no federal law cl~arl7 prabibWq the ~ce. A famlly frleod testlfled \ba\ Davld't behavior '"med to cha.Die ~ + ---. markedly after bl• releaae from .-... ., ~ •P NATIONAL. WRICH OPDATD the ON TV aublcrtp. tlon service, baa ftled auit aptmt lrf'eral lotal eleetronie sbopa and i.nd.lvidual• alletedly Involved la plratlnt stcnala in ao effort to have the eourta establid fecleral guidelines. ON TV charges a IDOGWy fee of about $20 to Ill 250,000 aub9criben in SoutMrn CaJllorn.la. ## ...... DAVID 11a•a-nt A Jury found them guilty of all those crimes, and Wedneaday sen· tenced David, 27. to lhe state's aas chamber. Kenneth, 21, was ordered to prison for We without possibility of parole. But according to their parents. Mr. and ·Mrs . Eldridge Moore, the brothers were raised ln a secure re· ligious family of seven children A minister testified that the brothers were well-behaved as yOUDJSters, even singing in a church choir, and prison ln tm. and that be became disenchanled with aoelety. Shortly alter Davld wu releued, Kenneth was Jailed tor a series of auto bur1Lartes. Upon bla release ln Construction goes on at Matson Navigation Company's computer-assisted overhead container handling system (lbwer right) at its Port of Los Angeles terminal while ship loading and unloading goes on a l dockside. July of 1978, he joloed his older ======================== brother and be1an the rampage that included 218 robberies, slx rapes, and Me Ki p , . the·fatal shooting of Eileen Rogers n eep ee •ng and her dau'1tter. Laura Muhlen-., brucb. THROUGHOUT THEIR siJt-week trial. David and Kenneth seemed un- concerned about their rate. At one point they slouched in their chairs and grjnned while a 66-year-old woman told how she was raped at gunpoint The Moores chatted during the 30 minutes 1t took to read the verdicts. They were found guilty on all counts FREMONT CAPl -Suburban housew1ves who have flocked to a Fremont night <'lub to watch male strippers got some good news as the City Coun<'il adopted a law requinng use permits for future strip parlors -but not existing ones. "They s imply couldn't pass a law stopping our guys from dancmg m their short~. unless they wanted to look awful silly ... said promokr Danny Zezzo • The new law was the weakest of four proposals the council con s1dered Tuesday night Judge Lydick postponed an Immediate deeiaioo on the firm's injunction request. sayiDJ be wanted more tlme to st11dy the fuuy f#ws 1ovenWic the lntercept:Joa and deeod· ing of the signala wit.bout pa,ytnc a fee. Lydick appeal"ed to be cauUous in bis approach to lbe ease, noting that "l'm being ulled to eslablllh a national pollcy." HE SAID HE COULD not find in bis research any basis for the establlahment of a private ri1bt protect.in( the pay TV signal and said be was reluctant to create o..ie. He said the key quesUoo was not his inlerpretaUoo of the laws , but what wu the coQgreSSiooal intent. Attomey Arthur Greenberg, representing ON TV, said. "'What's at stake is a majorCalilomia industry, which pro- vides a service and employment. "If the court denies this injunction it becomes an in· v1tat1on to these compames to advertise and sell their de· vices " Airless Tire Works Flats No Problem LOS ANGELES (AP) -If you've ever been stranded on a rainy night changing a flat tire: take heart. The Dunlop Tire Co. says it has come up with a tire that not only would get you home safely if it goes flat, but would get you all the way across the country without even causing your car to weave or your wheel to be dented. Dunlop spokesman David Cole said a test car arrived in Los Angeles from Boston on Wednesday. driving all the way with one of its steel· belted radials without air. Cole contended the feat was ac- com plisbed by using a system made up of both the tire and the wheel on which it was mounted. The Ure sidewall is specially de- signed to lock onto the special rim and a loss of air pressure locks it on even more, so the tire can't come off the wheel Before s tarting the trip on March 24, Dunlop engineers tried to flatten the tire by drilling a hole in the sell-sealing tire. But that didn't work. Cole said, and the tire's valve stem had to be removed to let out the air pressure. Spa_ce Probe 'Dies' Viking I .ander 2 Mars .t\rtif act PASADENA (AP) -After a 3~­ year search for We on Mars, one of two space probes bas run out of energy and died , the National Aeronautics and Space Administra- tion says. "Now it will just sit there as an artifact on the surface of Mars for centuries to come," space agency s pokesman Bristow said Wednesday of Viking Lan~r 2. But he added that its twin, Viking Lander 1. is still operating oo the planet's-surface and "we eiq>ed it to go on into the decade or the 1{8)5." .. ..,.. •Lear11l•9' SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. says he's glad to be home alter learning the voters "didn't feel I was ready to be presi- dent. , "Every effort is a learning ex- perience." said Brown upon bis re- turn to the state from Wisconsin Wednesday night after folding his bid for the Democratic presidential nomination. Brown finished third in the Wisconsin primary. DeetalsS.11glt• LOS ANGELES <AP> -A count) supervisor who criticized a colleague whose aide gave confessed Hillside Strangler Kenneth Bianchi a cowtty windshield decal is trying now to re- cover three stickers s he issued. Supervisor Yvonne Brathwaite Burke admitted Wednesday s he authorized three decals for a San Pedro bail bondsman a11d is having difficulty getting them back. a • (_BRl_E_Fs ___ J ~ .,.., f'efte•tn• SAN FRANCISCO CAPl -Leaders of the homosexual community have denounced Mayor Dianne Feinstein for naming a heterosexual to a seat traditionally held by gays on the Board of Permit Appeals . Th e mayor appointed Louis Giraudo to the post he ld by gay representatives for the past rive years. The board, a key local govern· ment agency. decides on appeals of permit applications after they have been considered by the city•s plan ning, fire and police commissions and the Central Permit Bureau. SAN DIEGO CAP ) -Property owners alrea~y told they suffered almQJ>t $2 million in airport noise damage have waited too ·long to col· leet on their claims, a jury says. The fmal word, however, will come from Superior Court Judge Carlos A. Cazares within the next 20 days. He said earlier that a five-year statute or limitations governs the case. The damage must have begun by Nov. 30, 1968. and the lawsuits filed by Nov 30, 1'73, the jurors said Wednesday. But the suits were all brought alter July 1975. I .. SFA s Storewide . .., Post-Easter Clearance ... ' with 20% tO 50% ·off Original Prices* Now find terrific savings on great selections of fashion s from: Designer Dresses1 Evening Apparel, Coat.sand Suit.s Better Dresses 'SFAbulous and 'SFAntastic Coats and Suits. Sportswear, Dresses Designer and Better Sportswear, Sport Separates, Active Sportswear Sportcoats, Suits, Sportdresses Sportswear, Dresses. Coats. Ra inwear for Juniors in Right On' Robes, Sleepwear and Loungewear Maternity Collect ions Infants' and Toddlers: Girls' and Boys sizes 4 to 6X, Girls' sizes 7 co 74 Spot for Teen Apparel. Blouse Collections Fashion Jewelry, Sw iss Watches, CuJtured Pearls . Women s Shoes Belts, Scarves, Ir-shirts Handbag Collections ... ' • S.tb filth A~nue at Sooth Co.ist Pl.1za. JlJJ Bmrol Sltt'E'f. Costa ~. Opeo Monddy through Saturday. from 10 A.M. to 9.JO P.M. , ... I _......,... -atJ' . l teatalnthe ,Aprile~a..c cttr~ Tb Dally Pllot hu lattrvtew.d t.M eUMbdaleil, beard tbem at cacHd• fonilDI Md watched many ID aotloe ln variOul '°"'muntt1 roae.. ,...,_ candldat•. ln our view, offer \he bett·roundtd • ~uaUfthtlGN for office. TMJ aN: -Ruth Tir>.ley -Jack ltelb' -W• B&nnlster Mns. F\nlay wu appolnted to the City Council taM May lo fUl a vac~cy. Her l)Crfonrtaoce there and ln OYe yeart on the Plan· nlne Commlulon 1bowa that &be la lodependent, does a , areal deal ol bom work and dedda Luu f altl.Y on their merll. T Kelly l a newcomer to the city p0UUcal 1eeoe but be has v1tahty ancs a 1par1t uiat could Deneitt clt.Y operallons. He also 1f ve$ the impression that he tr.uly caret about the welfare or HWlllnaton Beach's citizens, rich ond poor. Wes Bannister seema a good choice for the third seat. tie 1s hard-working and would bring a buslness·like ap- proach to city matters. Several other candidates seem to be well qualified, narticularly CharJes Rough and Han-y Budds. But for balance. we believe that the interests of Hunt· • ington Beach would be best served by electing Mrs. Finley, Kelly and Bannist.er. · Keep Clerk, Treasurer Two other Huntington Beach posts will be decided in Tuesday's elections -the offices of city clerk and city treasurer. The Daily Pilot believes the incumbents. City Clerk Alicia Wentworth and City Treasurer War ren Hall, should be kept in office. In the treasurer's race, Hall is facing a strong and thought-provoking challenge from Tom Livengood, who <Jlso is a sound candidate. B,uL Hall has performed zealously and has gone about the business of dealing with t he city's money in a conscientious manner. He and Mrs. Wentworth, who appears to be facing. on· ly token opposition, merit re-election. Fonntain Valley Choice I Based on interviews, background and performance, two of Fountain Valley's City Council candidates appear to be the most qualified for office in Tuesday's election: -Barbara Brown ' -John McKnight Mrs. Brown, long active in community activities, stands out in particular. She has shown that she 1s knowledgeable about city issues and is capable in dealing with them. Moreover, s he is a strong advocate o{ openness in government and promises to work toward that goal. ' McKnight is a member of the Planning Commissio~ a nd has paid his dues in civic involvement. He is qualified to hold office. This is not to be construed that incu~nt Marv Adler, who is seeking his third term, is not qualified ror l'lection. But Adler has been on the council eight years ;,ind. ba"'1ng unusual circumstances. the Daily Pilot feels that is Jong e nough ror a city councilman to serve. • Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists Reader comment 1s invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Phone (714) 642·4321 Boyd/Philatelists By L.M. BOYD Serious stamp collectors have a personal charac· ten stic in common -they tend to show up right on time for appointments. Or so says a New York psychiatrist who made a s tudy or those philatelists. No explanation or how their promptn~ re· !ates lo their hobby is of· fered. But this doctor says his findings came from Car more than merely the visits of stamp collectors to his own office. He says he re· searched the appointment patterns or a broad sampling of such collectors to learn they were exceedingly punctual in almost all situa· lions. Q . "What's an 'analog watch'?" A. A watch with bands. The old-timey kind. As opposed to a digital watch. Nothing new about electric vehicles. British dairies have Dear Gloomy Gus G a•oline won't b e cbe•l*' boqbt b1 the Iller Instead o tbe ealloa, but lt may mw you re,ret tbe Ume you spent u a kid lurninl t be old 111tem of meaaartmmta. D.11. been using electric trucks for more than 30 years. Q. "What was the name of the cat in that 1961 movie 'Break.fast at Tiffany's'?" A. "Cat." ~ appointments in YngoSlavia a r e routinely scheduled for 7 a.m. Q . How big can a cockroach grow under ideal roach conditions? A. Biggest of record was six inches long. A dental lab technician named John Kelly of New York raised the beut in a big bottle. Fed it plua, sandwich bits, lunch left· overs. Unidentified co· workers of Kelly killed the thing before he bad a chance to find out bow large it would finally get. That annoyed him greatly. Q. What's correct for that highbrow word for rurt -co- quet or coquette? A. Coquet. male. Coquette, fe male. Or so shows the bi1 book at band. Never beard a rurtatioUs man referred to u .a coquet, however. And never bope to. Riabt or wronc. coquetry bas lon1 been a woman'• word. You kno• what old Winthrop aald: "A woman without co- quetry .... imiJ*t .. ,eomed bet1lf wttboul mmtard. • tt'• aid about the Gemtal wom• that abe't forever a "ltudent, quick to reapoDd to new notloal. Sbe tnd.a to learn qulekly, but becaUM 1be'1 ao buay dolns that thln1. lbe'• lDclilMd to forcet • lot. too. Coatrary to .... p=r.:.:. ...... aot a • Her bud II o .. rtJ a.y. Or 10 claim tM atar,_... -- • • WAIBDIO'l'OM -'JM _,,.,.. ... ., .. c:a ...... populattoa ,,., 1arvl••d Pol Pot'• . ................. ...,_. dlr .. MIU"9 rMbDe "°"' IA J~.WU tt1 lhe '9ielD&BHH mill..,... ~ to eonftden. dal ........ Ndlwi by UM State o.p ....... . 'ftae .... ,. frolQ U.S. Am· bu1edot Monon Abramowtta tn Thailand tell of murder, rape and tbeft o f 1nteroa· tlonal food tuppllH by \be oecupyinl Vietnamese troope. Tbelr harsh treat· ment bas so alienated the native Khmer population that the puppet Heng Samrin govern· ment can keep its tenuous bold oo the country only by the naked milltary force of Its Vietnamese masters. Mailbox J'rom npona of int.mewen diapatdled c.o ntwe camp1 oe tbt Tbal·Camboc11a• border, A bramowlla ba1 advlud 8euNry of State CY1UI Vance tbat "rape aad robbery by p A VN CVletDallleH) 1oldJel"I are unlformly reported . . . from all pane Oii ICampu.cbea (CamboclUI>." • BVBN OFFICIALS of the Qulslln& SoYemment bave been fleetnc their flomeland io droves, Abramowlti reports. .. Their dedeloo to escape (for ) eventual resettlement ln <other> coa.ntrtes la baaed on the oom· moo perception that Ille under the Vietnamese ls intolerable." states ooe cable. ll cites the twm motivatinJ facton u .. dread of a repressive Commuoist re· glme" and the ''ubiquitous threat of starvation ·· As historic ethnic enemies of the Cambodians. the Viet· namese have oo qualms about Robert N. W./PubUsher S.~ra K,.lbldt/e ..... steallna food from the 1\ar'Vln1 natlvet. Ono man ln· blood· atain.ed trousers deaerlbed to an. inurvtewer bow the Vletnamete bad ambu1bed Mm and bl• friends ... He still bad some rtce only because the Vietnameao already bad stolen more than they could CUT)' from bis murdered companiom," one cable relates. ble relates. ACCOllDING TO tbe refugees, the Vietnamese dlltrlbute relief supplies of rice by day .. in the presence o f international workers. then confiscate (It) after tbe workers depart the scene." or replace at wath com Some SoVlet-supplted com "a.a still clngging one warehouse . . but tS so unappealing that only the mo5t hungry wall eat at ... the cable reports. Abramowitz has also provided evidence to support continued claims tbat the Vietnamese are actually sh1ppmg foreign nee supplies intended ror Cambodia back to tbelr own eounh'J. A m1Utlamu WU quoted ln one cablt: "ff• •• ., two careo bar1e1 arrive from Vtetnam wltb com. Aftel' unloadlft1, one ol the barges wa& filled with rlc•, whJdl be rlatmed beaded for Vletnam." Other wltneasea Included a woman who "said abe bad twice aeen Vietnamese load rice on barces al night, then bead for Vietnam,·· and "a former his- tory professor (wbo> claimed that be saw two trucu loaded with rice head . . . toward Viet· nam.•· AN AMERICAN scholar, Stephen Beder. wu quotecLat length by th~ ambassador, who described his observations as a ..solid, penetr.aling look" at .Cambodia. Heder wrote: .. Well-organized te ams of Vietnamese troops ... con· s umed some of (Cambodia's home.grown) rice themselves. provided some of It to their closest collaborators, sold some of it on the black markets i.n the urban centers . and sent some or at back to Vietnagi, officially or unofCic1aUy.'' The few Cambodians who cooperate with the conquerors get several pounds of edible rice a month. but ordmary peasants often get only r ed corn or "small. broken rice from Viet· nam which they said made them vomit." one cable reports. Rehef medical supplies are also peddled on the black market. their foreign origin clearly 1dent1fiable. ~bramowilz reponed Off1c1als or the puppet regime are believed to be prof· 1teerangon the antemaliq,nal relier supplies. Footnote· The cables. though deta1llng the diversion of foreign ·a id. confirm that many of the suppla~ do find their way to the Cambod i an populace . Abramow1lz told Vance that the reltel effort must continue 1f fam1no 1s to be averted. And ).ourcec"> told my associate Les Whitten that Cambodian aid will .,ur v1\e Pre:,1dent Carter's budget cut:.. Move National Park §outh for 'Free' Land? To the Editor: The proposal to try and buy 19,000 acres in South Orange County from the ocean to the San Diego Freeway for $76 million cannot be done at that price. Tius as only $4 ,000 per acre. and such land m Orange Co unty has not sold for that re- cently. But don't Jlive up hope for a park -just move .. it down the coast 6"'2 miles and use U.S.· owned land -purchase price zero. How to do this., Convert less than 11'7th, or 17 ,000 acres or th~ northerly end or Camp Pendleton to a park. Add this to existing San Onofre State Beach of 3,158 acres and you have 20,158 acre11 and you still have our $76 mUlaon. THE A.BOVE new location for free also avoids all the followmg bad points about the proposed Orange County location : 1. ~ re.al land coat iJ prob- ably $380 million ($20,000 per acre), and why spend that huge sum when there ls U.S.-0wned land 6~ miles south? 2. ll wiU remove 19,000 acres from the tu rolls, thereby raia· inl •veryonct ei.e·s taxes. 3. It will eliminate ·~idential locati«ll. and supporting busi· neasea ror 225,000 persona, and all Jobi therein forever. 4. ll will prohibit forever all tbe hundreds of thousands or jobs in constructing residences and bullnesaes oo 19,000 acres. 5. The taxes the 19,000 de· veloped acres ril produce are Jost lorever 6. Tbe U.S. already owns 125,000 acres at Camp Pendleton wblcb 1J only 6~ miles clown the coast and the U.S. Marines do oot uae, or need, anywbe~.nea.r all of that 125,000 acres -they •ould oot ams 17,000 acres, and would llil1 have 108.000 acres to operateoo. N.H. SMEDEGAARD .., ...... .... To the Dtltor: If lt weren't to piWul, I should h•. ve a aood tauah at SuDerVllor Edlloa lliller"a ·uraina lUchard O 'N•UJ to retl&n u 1tate n.moeraUc 'llalnnan. BaUler than ofter tbe people of b1I cU.g. trtct a ooa.ttiv• approach to their needl, be WaltM lM tu~' mouy oa baru1utn1 an Im· 11lDed "POiitical m1chlDe" led bJ O'Neill and ln.olYiDC Just about eYSJ elect.id offtclal in tbe coaaty, bod> put and pna· •t. lll•Mnb. dear Edilan, a .. ( couple or s uggestaoo:. are in order First. the c;upervisor's pos1t1on 1s a non pohUC'al pos1t1on. ~e don 't care to which party a can· d1date belongs as long as he get~ the best JOb done for has con.stat· uents. Second. to dred~e up dtrt on personaht1C!'i of the past may land you m hotter water than an· ticlpated. along with your bud· dies Fonda. Hayden and Moon· beam Brown. Many proud veterans have not for~otten your service record and I sincerely hope your opponent bnngs 1t to the attention o( the voters, loud· ly and clearly! HARRY W. \llITl' 8naetU11 To tbe Editor: Pleue clariJy for roe these sentences in the March 25 editorial. "Retirees Target or Tax Proposal." · 1t states, "Ret.lrees under the age of 65 cannot collect Social Secu~y if they make wages 1n excess of $3,270 a year. Al age 65 that eam.i.ng limit eoes up to $5,ooo.·· My underl\anding Is that specified levels o( earuine re- duce the amount a retiree can collect, while earning above mulmum but does not cut l\ off entirely. Am l Wl"OOI? ANNABELLE QUIGLEY The rmdt'r u corrttl. I I G rtttrtt eonu more than CM spea/wd maz· imum, Sodal Stcvrlt11 ~nu "' Ille a""'*"' of II /or toeh ~ a- tra 12 ecmwd an wtlhlwld 1IUjl tlw ezceu amowat ii reeooeNd. £c:ti&01' A .-eieler9 To tbe Editor: Referrlna to the recent ex· chance of COfT'eSpondence. ln the Pilot, (March 18 and 23 ) I don't think Mn. Parker I.I coof\lled at all. Rather lt ia Dr. Gani.IGD. l would vote for J anti 11 U l didn't receive anytblq In re-turn. II It 1ccomplt1be1 the alnate J>W'POM of maklni eov· ernmn ecooombe and rouo. a tiChl butf&et, we will all benefit ln the Jona nm. Oovemment "fat," contrary lo whit Ga.rriton states, 11, ln· deed, ple ntiful. There are tbou1anda of txampl11, but I would du three: TBE OOVE&NO&~ 1b9mtff rat. ii borrendoal. Anyone ln bu...... wttb that IOC1 ol at· tendanee NeOrd would be wt ol a job. Y«. bla pay, StTI per claJ, - goes on 11.nd on JJ1d un Th~ JUOge C dU~hl ~ro~1n~ martJuana plan~ in h1' homt• h<.ts d1squahftt•d h1m-,elf from the bench. but ht!) ~u b-.tanUdl pay Jt<>es on and on and on There 1.:. an in:.truc:tor dl Long Beal.'h StBte working his ranaJ St'mester He 1s not retiring, but gom(.? on to other things Ap· parent!), he has a<:c umulated ··sick days, ' wh1C'h ht' 1o; dc·· term med t.o take since he will be paid for them only 1r taken. I jtuess be does not even have to call in since the only "ay the students know ~ helher or not lbere wtll be class those days as to go. wait. and 1{ he does not show up. leave to do other Uungs until the.tr next class These types of "fat '' must be removed And when at as done. maybe tbe governor a nd has stooge4' won't be so quack to d4!- ny a Dow Cbem1cdl or a Stand· ard 011 opportunities to butld, provide JObs and pay taxes m this state And m:lybe we. the people will look more toward what we can do ror oursetves rather than leave at to 3 gaggle or pohltcaJ backs. Vote for Propos1l.lon 9·• You bet I will! J W. REID ... lllp•ft'9 To the Editor: The Daily Pilot recently ran a story about a mysterious. foul odor on the new Oranae Cowl· ty Transit buses. Neither their maintenance crews nor t he Orange County Health cootrol inspectors can discover the sourceoltbea~b. Tbe answer ls obvious~ '.lbose 65 bUMW were, by California law, to have been equipped -1\.b lifts for the b&Ddicapped, but were Dot. A lot of people, in and out of Oran,. County, have lltu. bus amweta. into which UMJ are atlckina plna ! YVONNE BAGSTAD Dt>mocra~ were excluded. The latter was not a .. publ.Jc forum. · but a meeting of a privat1· orgclll1zat1on. As such 1t has tht• n J?ht to choose those who 3),!rcc ~ll h Re put:lican ph iloso ph y. thus o nl y RepublJcdn candidates were lll· \-ltt!d. NO CA~DIDATE endorse· ments were given. No candidate endorsements were asked for. 1'he reforc. no' party patronage or machine politics were in· volved. The purpose of these Republican women·s groups ts to develop pohl.lcal awareness a mong women; to s upport Republican principles at all levels of government; and to en· courage their members to take an acuve part and an interest in the pracllce of democracy. Before Mr. Murphine plays at poht1cal report.mg, he should be s ure or his facts. DOROTHY CLINCH To the F.dltor: Our thanks to the Costa Me$a fire crew ror saving our home and belongings at 2919 El· lesmere Ave . on Tuesday, March 18. Tbe response to our call was immediate. The men's acllona, though seeminaly ef· fortless. were s o well · coordinated. Not only did they prevent the fin rrom &Ultin& the attic. but their care and ex· pertlse kept the destruction of penooal ..-openy and clean-up to an absolute mini•um. In addition, they returned that evenlna to follow-up tbe fire and even tar· papered the exposed area to preveGt further water damage from tbe rain.a. It's a real comfort tO know that our are~ protected by such an effl. den( nre Department. M an af'tertboulbt, anyone in bJs rt&ht mind ever baviq been aubjeded to an experience IUcb as a rool bu.rDlq over hia bead wouldn't have to weiab the direction ol hit vote oa a pro- l*)tJoo IUCh aa Jarvl1' Pl'opoei· \ion l3t GERRY CORSO If•• • T'••PI·-· To the Editor: Tom M~ne tn bl• column • .. Playlftl Politi~" (lhrcb 25), Uttn-1 from ~·ore wlcome. aeem1 to be dollll Jutt that. He Tlw right to COftdnH i.u,,., to /ii 1ccu1es the Mea1 Verde space or elimMGS• U&tt ii r«Mn>ed. R~ublican Women of "endora· IAtttr• of JOO .uordl "'in. au be lna' ' cmdldates for noa·part.laan otvn prt'/nrnce. AU Ice,_.,. tlllUlf hi· offtces. of ••macbJne ~UtJcs" cl..U dQnofure Oftd mai"'9f ...,."' and ••party pat.nma1e.' of COO· "'. bul names ma11 bt. "*""*a re- ductina a "forum" for c\ty COW\· QMlt •f ndffCWN ~taClllPlll'• l ell cudldate• from whlcb Po«JwtoW.ol ei..,........_ ( .............. y ...... . ~.~•· CAP> -ftli'e .. • ...._. .. ,.. ........ ~ .......... ..... • tM t.IJ·t•be '-'' ....... ~at JlfOrfolll o.....an ·ta1,. • Ta.• lat doea eoatal• •• l•••Mtor. a ale1~11.,1 ... a It.Im ot Mat a .._. ...U DluUo ..... « ' •. ta Wik* ......... .,.. ferW&llii.., ---~· IT A.UO BOLDS TBS BOPU of •••1 .om•Md OMD •llilo waot to be matMrl ud faUileri. ad tM ,._. ot eocae who m.uioa tM ooqsiq ot • .. Brave New Workl ... The baultal •• stale appnwa1 to build lht lab Jan. a. ir.o ... th.I i.ur. a •IM*••an for · &uaern ~ lledlcal Scbool, wbole doC'ton ru tbe itUaio, actDowJNied. "ft• lab la lD operatm: • The lab la t.be flrst of ita kind in tbe United stales md bu aheady ea.med Norfolk a certain ootortet.y. Oa tbe door tot.be office of the hospital'• public rel.ations direeto!' la a bumper sticker read· 111.g: "Norfolklam Do It in a Diah. •• AM OIUGINAL SBVBN COUPLES were AC· cepted for tbe prosram, out ol tbouaa.nda who ap. plied. 1bere were 2.500 couples on lbe Initial wait· iq lilt; the day after lbe lab got atate approval, 300 more called. NO BABIES OR TEST TUBES Dr. Jeck Rary end.Petit Dtah PAUL RYCKOFF INCUMBENT , J 1 Old fashiored, romantic dinner-dancing is back in style. ... and lhc Grand Portage now offers you :an l"\'cning to <.ompete with your favorite: mt.mot")'. So'1 unkling dinner music, tlq¢11 candlc:ht table scttl~. tht-gra.odeor of tlammg tablcsidc cookay. 1ne uJtlmaldy dancc:abtc: Dick 11owe11 Trio b reuurect "" .......... Thur..day throug'1 Sarutday 7 to 12. and soft pl.ano odlcr aau~ SEAFOOD CONNOISSEURS Thur..cia)'. Friday. Saturday ask f0< our "flyrn~ ~ .. dinner f~h M2.lM l~ten. oysters. dams. ftov.'1"1 in from Bc>Mon. Dispbccd Escmqs, rtjoiccl x ~REGISl'RY · An unspeclfled number of women have gone throueb the process of in vitro fertlllutlon, in which an egg is surgically removed from a n.r ....,.." •• .,.. , -r••·• 1-1.-- woman's ovary, fertilized with her husband's =============~====!.l----------------------------------­ .....,..,,.,,, ..... ~ 1:100 So.At\ .. y f r-. 8-_,., ITU184 sperm in the petri dish and transferred to the woman's t&enas. The bolpital bu. not aaid, and will not say, if successful pregnancies have been achieved. Mediea{ school spokesman Vernon Jones said the clinlc'a doeton, led by lbe busband·and·wife team of Howard and Georgeanna Jones want to "ableld the ladies" from disturbances that couJd c:IUrupt the hormone level.5 crucial for succesaruJ implantationa. TBB PATl&NTS ARE WOMEN WHOSE Fallopian tubes,.lbe conduits from ovary to uterus, are misslq or lrrepuably blocked. Jones described the process as sort of a "Fallopian tube bypass. We're providing the passage. It's sort of lllce a helicopter picking up c•rgo -the egg -in one place and putting it in a.QOther." He aaid the clinic should be able to treat about 50 women a year. The procedure costs about $4,000. Blue-Cross of Virginia bas said it will not pay the costs. The women see in vitro fertiliuUon as their tut chance to bear children. But others aee it as the rirst step toward something unsafe and im- moral. OPPONENTS OF THE PROCEDURE have three main complaints: that It bas not been tested enough; that fertilized eggs, which some consider the beginning or lire, will be destroyed if not de- veloping properly; and that defective embryos will be aborted. Tber say they a lso fear that in vitro fertilization will lead to production -out of the womb -of genetically controlled babies, as described in Aldous Huxley's "Brave New World." The Tidewater chapter of the anti.abortion Virginia Society for Human Life failed in its at· tempt to get state Attorney General Marshall Cole~an to seek an injunction against the clinic. Norfolk businessman Charles Dean, chapter president, said the group plans further legal action, partly on the grounds the state review was not done properly. 8111' DOCl'ORS INVOl.VED WITH the clinic claim the rears are unfounded. They said that the procedure bas been carried oul safely in England -where Louise Brown, the world's flJ"Sl "test.tube baby" was born in 1978 - and Ausl.rali~ that abortions will be neither more nor less avaiJable to clinic patients than lo other pregnant women, and that they have no inte'htion of mass producing human beings. Dr. Jack Rary, the EVMS scientist who runs the lab, said fertilization is attempted on only one egg at a time. Rary is responsible ror checking to see ii an egg is contained in the fluid removed from the woman. for setting up the egg for fertilization and I~ d etermining if.fertilization bas taken place. BllT BE NOTED THAT DOCTORS do not make the final determination whether the egg is good -able to be fertilized. '"l'be sperm know which eggs are good," he said. "We don't have to make that decision." . If fertilization does take place in a petri dish, usually wit.bin 12 hours. lbe fertlli%ed egg is in· Cfb&ted for another 36 hours and then transferred to the uterus. : That's about the same time span an egg fertilized naturally would take to travel down to tHe uterus and implant itself, Rary said. . . • RUY SAQ> BE KNEW THE clinic wouldn't receive unanimous approval, "but I bad no idea t.liere would be that much opposition." "I guess I'm looting at it differently, that we'd tnaly be helping people who couldn't have babies," he said. Rary said be bas invited some opponents to visit the lab but none bu accepted. "I'd be willing to show them," he said . "I've gOt not.bins to hide." ··_Firefighter Is Nun ." SEA CLIFF, N.Y. (AP> -'The first woman volunteer member of the· Sea Cliff Fire Department is a nun, Sister Mary Sophia. The Fire Council cleared tbe membenbip of the bilblJ trained nun. Flre ·Chief Edwin Neice said that Slater Sophia. a a.year.old nurse at St. Cb..rlstopber'a Home. was the ftnt woman to apply for •job wftb -............ ftn clepar\IDlllt 00 Loaa lalwl ;,. I ---RESIDENTS ARISE mrE NO ON D Bob Sflml \ OURGUMMNJll TOSMAU INVESTORS. NOOlllWIUMYYOUMORIOllA 30MON'l'H MONIY *"'Olln. 12.000% 12•935% Rates effective Aprll 1 through Aprll 30 . $1 oo minimum deposit . 30 month term. IMPORTANT: Yfeldt.,. oredieled on• fMJoflllle 3615/360-day ClClf'nSM8tlon facu. Vletdl lndlcllld are y.ar¥ ~"left tn lhe ~tor one,,... er....11~ dllly and pMI quWt~. Funds depoellied by tw 10ltl of the monlh wn from the 1at oOhe monch H left untJI ~·ind . .,_,... r-...n tor~ wtlhll a 1'. We guarantee it. No one ~ill pay you more on guaranteed. Plus convenience in savings wtth insured savings. Imperial Savings pays the high-hours that serve you best. Come in today to your est rates that federal regulations allow. Higher convenient lm~rfal Savings office. than any bank.. Meet the fast and friendly people at Imperial. The highest annual yields for ~r savings ... • -01mPERIAL SAVlnGS AND tOAN ASSOCIATION ··~ ~,~ ~ \ • -- . ~ '" -t ~ ... ... ... •• •• ..... .... .... ~ ~ ~ ., ~ '· ., •• "• ., J. ~1 • • •• ... •• :.-. . •, ...... ... . ·= .--r • \_ t ~ .. ... £•It Vletl•1 . Mother Seeks Son's~y HUNTSVILLE. Ala. (AP) -The gravemarter ls simple enough. But lbe spa~ i~maru contains no erave, and the epitaph is bitter. "Jerry Bibb Ballsok. Born Sept. 8, 195S. Murdered 1n Guyana Nov. lB, um. Buried in Oakland, Cal., May, 1979. Damn Lbe State DepL" BAUSOK"S BODY IS NOT ms. Indeed, be ID8)' not even be dead. But his mother, Marjorie Balbok, is convinced her son, bis wile and his step-child died in lbe horror of Lbe Peoples Temple man murder-suicide at Jonestown, Guyana, and ordered Lbe tombstone placed ln the (amlly p&ot. Mrs. Balisok, a widow and a retired boeJ>ita.1 W()l'ker, is obsessed by a Ufe magazine pboto- g:rapb or some of . lbe more lban 900 bodies at Jonestown. She believes the photo, wblcb appeared two months after the atrocity, shows her son's body lying next lo that of his wife, Debbie, and her 5-year-old soo. J ames Kindred. . • • "I have tried in every way to have my son's body returned to me for burial," she aaid. "I have insurance policies of all kinds that I cannot cub in until I have a death certificate or a ~rtificate of presumed death." FBI AGENT DICK MAU OF Huntsville i.s searching for Balisot for other reasons. Balisok was indicted three years ago by a federal grand jury in Birmingham on a cflarge of writing bad cbe<:ks. He never stood trial and Jen town two weeks before he was indicted. A federal warrant charges him with unlawful fight lo avoid prosecution. ''I'd like to catch this one," Marx said. Col. 'William Cowan, a military pathologist who examined tile bodies, said none was .. anywhere close" to being Ba.llaok. Cowan said that Mrs. Balisok apparently cannot be convinced of thaL ANO'nlER TASK FORCE OFFICIAL, Reid Clark, said dental X-rays were taken of all or the bodjes at Jonestown. He said be also bad the Life photo enlarged .fO times. "I defy anyone to sav that's him (Balisok)." Mrs. Balisok said she sent the Task Force an X-r ay of her son's hip as well a.a bis dental charts. A steel pin had been placed in one hip to repair an injury from a motorcycle accident, and Mrs. Balisok tried in vain to get officials to perform complete X·rays on the bodies. Clark said many of the bodies were too decom· posed to permit such an undert.aking. LASI' SPRING, 248 UNIDENTIFIED bodies or cult members were buried in Everp-een Cemetery at Oakland. At. 1east 20 were adults. and Mrs. Balisot believes Jerry's and Debbie's were among them. Sen. Howell Heflin, D-Ala .• wrote to Mrs. Balisok about her son's disappearance: "Ap· parently, the State Department and the FBI have investigated your son's case and these agencies are thoroughly convinced that your son never left the United States." "That's all they know -nothing," said Mrs. Balisok. She said her son telephoned his lawyer from San Juan, Puerto Rico, a year before the Jonestown incident. She said she found out Jerry and bis family bad been in the Bahamas when she got an Afnerican Express bill for almost $10,000 worth of gooda and services her son had charged on her caret "RE WAS A ROTl'EN KID," said American Express investigator J. Barron Daniel of AUanta. Daniel said Baliaok disappeared about Sep· tem ber W18, after mating the charges in the Bahamas. Before then. Daniel said, be made .. a lot of charges at motels and bote1a in Miami." Bali.sok'a attorney, Charles King of Huntsvme, said. "For me not to bear from him in any way for this length of time is unusual. He may be in prison in a fomp country. Something b.aa happened to blm." Mrs. BalilOlr, who alao bu ooe older son, laid she last saw lerry in late 1J77. She aaid bl.a troubles stemmed from a time ol Ulneu 1n 1975, when be was severely sunburned during a motorcycle race in Tennetsee. Ile 1uffered bl~ fenrs for weeks after the rae and wu Hentually bospitallaed, she said. Re never retllnled to fresbmall cl111e1 at Alabama MM Univenity. SD BAD> 888 BELIEVES BB went to G•yana because "there weren't only cultilta there, bat fuptivee, too.•• Tbea, abaklng ber bead over Jerry, abe added, 0 he wun't mucb ol a pencm, but be wu mJ son." Clean Coats Ordered WASBINGTON (AP) -Tbe Atrieulture Department bu decided to require "clean, white frocks" for federal meat 1radera and tbeh' npeniaorJ. 1be propoul to require tbe weartq of eleu. wblte oater coat.I Oil tbe Job .... been unaer rntew •ee October. omcta.11 wbo unounted tbe .... dlloa Mid meat araden. 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M. 7 . - - ORANGE COUNTY, CA~IFOANtA · Ye •rHe•etow• Dal ly News11a .. r TW-ENTY-Ft VE CENTS -~ostage Transfer D-e~ayed Again • 'l'roin flits Dwellin Hoose Railroaded LOS ANGELES <AP) -A two-story apartment building being towed across railroad tracks wu rammed by a slow- movin& fl'eigbt train today, and pieces of tbe building were str~wn for hundreds of yards, authorities said. One man sprained his ankle •hen he saw the train coming and jumped orr the top or the building. The man, an employee of the Chester Seay House Mov- ing Corp. of South Gate, had been making sure telephone and power lines were kept clear or the rooftop. "We understand that the mov· 1ng company had aotten permission to cross the tracks,'' said Northeast Division police Lt Rick Wahler. "They have to c heck ahead, and were given clearance to cross at that time. Then, whHe the apartment house was straddling the track, the train came through." He said the 2: 15 a .m., crash wtear Figueroa Street in the Highland Park Se<!lion was be· ing investigated as a tramc ac- cident. No damage estimate was available. Police Sgt. Paul Hermann said the building was moving slowly across the tracks near Figueroa Street when the crossing arms Biker Broke Knievel Taken to Co urt MIAMI (AP) -Daredevil Evel Knievel faces a $100,000 damage suit over a yacht that he says he can't afford to buy though he fixed it up by adding a teak deck. carpeting and extra bedroom mirrors. Transit Charter Inc. contends Knievel's im- provements damaged the 116-foot yacht and he broke a contract to buy it. The company convinced a federal judge Tuesday that the motorcycle stuntman was liable for any damage to the vessel. Judge William Hoeveler set a bearing this month to determine the extent of damage to the yacht Knievel says be chartered in mid· tm to take his f amilY t.o motorcycle races in Daytona Beach. In a deposition. Knievel said the SS0,000 he spent in yacht renovations plus the costs of several speed- boats, two Lear jets, two motorcycles and two jet skis "broke me financially. It put me in debt to the tune of $4 million. I just never recovered." . Knievel also faces a multi-million-dollar judg· ment in California and an Internal Revenue Service property lien for $1 .6 million. an attorney said. Tax Rate Schedule Oianges Pushed WASHINGTON CAP) -An assistant general counsel for Yale University serves "as a disincentive to marriage and an incentive to cohabitation" and should be changed. Lynda Sands Moerschbaecher also said the so-called "mar- riage penalty" was encouraging divorce and creating a reason for women to remain out or the labor force. She suggested the simplest - an d fa i,.r e St -m e a n S 0 r abolishing the marriage penalty would be to have everyone file individual returns and use only one income tax rate schedule. Alt.bough this would solve the problem, she said, some com- mentators feel it should not be ad9pt.ed because taxpayers are familiar with the current s7stem. But she added, ··when familiarity with complexities prevents a return to fairness and simplicity, all hope for t.ax re-rorm is Joel. .• Co ast We a t •er Partly cloudy late night and early morning, but mostly sunny and a little warmer throaab Friday .. Lows ton.ilbt fn the 408. HlebJ Friday 64 at the beaches ad 12 inland. IN811tE TODAY A~ OMNT Gne AWFJI, •fill ~ over the .trlkt bsl baHboU ~·· «iyt f/ ft ~ up to Mm. he'd call off the H01CM. Sa Sportt, POllt Bl. ·'The couple is not a proper entity or tax unit ; the in· dividuals earning the income <See DIVORCE, Page AZ> Sniper Fires On Deputies; HUlingOut ROWLAND HEIGHTS (AP) - A sniper opened fire on a group of construction workers and sheriff's deputies today before SWAT and other special teams convl!rged on a house where they believed the man was bid· ing, deputies said. Workers reported bullets started whistling past them about 8:30 a.m. al a construction site on South Brea Canyon Road in this San Gabriel Valley com· m unity 25 miles ea at of downtown Los Angeles, said Los Angeles County sheriff's Sgt. J aclt Anderson. Three patrol cars from the Ci· ty o! Industry sheriff's staUon were also fired on when they at· rived at the scene, Anderson said. · There were no injuries, but one deputy_ said a round may have st.rock bis radio car.· California Hllhway Patrol of· ficers were calJed in to seal off the area at Brea Canyon Road at· Coltma Road and the Orange Freeway. Anderson said a man carrying a .22-callber rifie bad been seen earlier sbootin1 at blackbirds in the vicinity of the conatruct.lon site. One witness reported seeing the man dude toto lbe 1ara1e of a boUM Just west of tbe <lCIO· 1truction alte. The ma wu DOt lmmediatety identifted. DeSJUt.lea tried to contact him by telephone, Andenoo 1aid. More Cover age AddlUonal south Or1n1e Coun· ty coverafe appears today on Pace Ml>. came down. One arm came down behind the bullding and the other hit the side of the 1>uildinB and broke. The train's engineer told police. "I came around the curve and there was a building across the tracks. I put on the brakes, but there was nothing else I coukt do." By the time the train screeched to a stop, pieces or the building were scattered along more than a third of a mlle or track. Lt. Wahler said the train was moving at 15 mph when the brakes were applied. Guard Gets Wild Ride On Whale All•t•e:r 8eldl SAN PEDRO (AP> - Lifeguards have rreed a 30-foot gray whale that was tangled in a fisherman's net a half-mile orr Cabrillo Beach -but not before the giant creature took one or bis rescuers on a wild ride. Los Angeles County Lifeguard Lt. John Lorentzen said he watched from the lifeguard vessel Cabrlllo Watcb aa his partner, Shelly Butler, cut the whale loose from a bundle of rope wrapped around its tail during Wed.ne9day'a 15-mlnute rescue operation off Los Angeles. Mount St. Helens erupts through a heavy cloud layer this morning, sending smoke. ash and ice chunks into the air. The volcano, located 45 miles northeast of Portland, has been actlVe since March 27. <Related story page A4. > Butler, 35, who dooned a wet s uit and scuba tank, was dragged as deep as 30·feet below the surface as he tried to cut the rope off about slx feet from the tail or the whale as it thrashed about trying to free itself. Jailhouse Ethics Ciood in Testimony ·'He started a pretty violent kicking action that J wanted no part of." Butler said. "I didn't want to scar e him or scare myself. I just wanted to finish the job." Lorentzen. scanning the sur- r ace fQ.r bubbles frotn his partner's air tank, s aid be was afraid the whale would entangle Butler in the ropes and drag him out to sea. "I didn't want to Jose the spot I was cutting on. so I just held onto the i::ope." said Butler. ·'There were limes it was pretty violent." The fisherman who owned the net, Vito Russo, 26. o f San Pedro. was philosophical about the loss or his $30,000 gill net. ·'I made only $25 this morn- ing," said Russo. "I got only seven halibut. It's survival, man -tough life." Russo was also quick to point out bow lucky the whale was to have nm into a lifeguard, not a fisherman. "With all this going on about saving whales , if it was somebody else they would have killed him," be said. Gill nets, which are st.retcbed between anchors and huoys like a tennis net strung across the · ocean Door, catch the gills of fish which can't back out or the netting. It was a jailbouse code of ethics which led to an Orange County inmate's testimony Wed · nesday against murder defen- dant Rodney Alcala Prosecution witness Mi chael Herrera. a former heroin user and pusher. said he wrote down statements Alcala made to him in connection with the disap- pearance and murder of Robin Samsoe last June because the case involved a child ··People in institutions feel a certain hostility toward child molesters and rapists." Herrera said. A le ala. 36. or Monterey Park. 1s charged with the abduct.Jon and slaying of Miss Samsoe. 12. or Huntington Beach. The prosecution in the case has relied on testimony the past few days of Ja1lhouse informers who were with Alcala when he was taken into c ustody at Orange County Jail last sum· mer Herrera, who testified Wed- nesday that Alcala admitted ab- ducting and beating Miss Samsoe unconscious, s aid in· mates look down on prisoners being held for crimes against children. H e s aid he had hi s own personaJ "code of ethics .. as far as children were concerned and be admitted that the nature of the charges against Alcala bothered him Because he bas lived in tn· stitutions most or his life. he said, the hostility toward rapist.& and child moleste rs becomes to· grained among inmates. Under questioning b y both prosecutor Richard Farnell and defense attorney John Barnett. Herrera denied he had been promised any :.pec1al deaJs or breaks for tus testtmooy Free on ba1I accused of viola t ion or probation . He rrera tesufled Wednesday that Alcala told lllm during jailhouse con· vers alloas bow he lured Miss Sam soe into his car at the seashore in Hunllngton Beach <Stt ALCALA. Page A.%> Japan Nuke Plant Closed TOKYO (AP> -An abnormal dro p in r~actor water levels a utomatically s hut down a nuclear pow e r plant in southwest Japan today. causmg a slight danger or radiation leakage outside the facility. an off1 c1al said. The shutdown of the Japan Atomic Power Co in Tsuruga. 211 miles west of Tokyo, came as water levels were found 39 inches lower than usual in the boiling-water reactor. apparent· ly due to malfunctioning water supply systems, the official s~d. The plant resumed operations Ma~h 29, two days after shut· Ung down automatically when a valve fail ed to function normally Attendant Killer Guilty Slaying at OC Ga.ti Station Brings Verdict BJ DAVID KUTZllAN in the rear bed of a pickup t:ntck. 0t .. o.tt1,_...., Bice bid Jumped into the truck An Orance county Superior aa it sped away from bi.I Texaco Court Jury convicted Lee station when the occupants McKen.De Brazell of flrat degree dldn'l pay ror 110 wonh of murder today in the sbotJUD aasollne-:l!{:= °!&!!~~ ~:.:sf: Proa~cuUon witnesses bad last Aueull in Westmlnlfer said 1l WU BrueU who drove As Br...U, 21. ot La Habra, the truck to a vacanl lot ln aad deleDM attoney !Ucha.rd Weatmtnstert lol out and ahot Bonner stood to bear the verdict -Bf ce ln tbe need at near polat in Superior Court Judce Kenneth blank ranee. La•'• COW'troll!! ID.aplMn of Braiell WU arrai.ct lbe HIM both BraieU'1 f Uy and Bice'• day by Hunllngton Beach police f amlly wepl. B aaeU. showed no a1 be drove the blood·aplau.ed emoUon ., the verdict was reed. truck. ~ Juveolles had bMll Bruell was accused of sbc)ot. wltb Bruell ln tbe truck and OM inc Blee laet Au1u1t H tbe of tbem wu a ko protecuUon 11rnce.1t.1Uon owner croutebed witness. Deputy District Attorney Paul Meyer said BnueU could face trom 25 years to life in prison. Brazell could be eligible for parole after serving 15 years of that sentence. Sentenclna is scheduled May 2 in Judge Lae's court. Meyer hid characterised the slaylq of Bice as a "very eold, very callous" act. Bice. 47, of Anaheim had made budllnea early last aum- mer u be1na the flrat man COD· vlcl'td ot vioiaUne at.ate aasoUne resulaUOna. Blee had been re- qulrtnc patrons to make phone reservations to buy aasollne d11r- ln1 the tm ru 1horu1e. I Carter's Response Weighed By The Auocla&ed Press Iran's ruling Revolutionary Council has delayed a decision on taking custody or the American host.ages until Presi- dent Carter c larifies his response to lraman demands, Foreign Minister Sadegh GboUnadeh said today. President Abolhassan Bani- Sadr. in American television in· terviews this morning, said he was satisfied with Carter's posi· lion and would propose the coun· cil votetorequestcustodyoftheSO Americans, now in their 152nd day as captives ms1de the oc- cupied U S. Embassy Bani-Sadr was also quoted by Tehran radio as saying m an ABC News inte rview that Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini will make the fanaJ decision on a propo5aJ to transfer custody oft he American hostages. G hotbza<len. aske<J wnen ne expected Carter's res ponse. HOSTAGES HAVE ~ VARIED CAREERS -86 s aid: "I hope within a couple or days ·· ··we have to have some more information oo the precls:e posi- tion of the United States con- cerning the ·statements which were made by Mr. Bani·Sadr." Gbotbz.adeb said as he pushed through a mob of report.era and cameramen after a council meeting. He did not s pecify what clanficat1on wa:. needed, but Bani-Sadr's conditions called for a U.S. pledge ol testraint. The peltpooelbent came hours after a 1potes1D*D for the mm- tant s holding 50 Americans boatage inside the U.S. Embassy said they are willing to hand over the hostages to the Revolu· tionary Council if requested. Tehran radio. quoting an ABC News intervtew ~th Bam-Sadr, said any council decision 'would have to be referred to Khomeuu. ·'The issue has been reported to the imam 1Khomeini l It will be raised again today after dis· cuss100 m the Revolution Coun· cll ,What 1s certain 1s that nothing will be done without tus approval." Bani-Sadr was quot- ed as saymg Khomemi backed the milltants last month when they ballted at a request by Bani-Sadr-to transfer custody of the hostages. A militant spokesman, con· t acted by The Associated. Press by telephone from Nicosia, said: "We have not received any re· quests. We don't want to deliver the spy nest (embassy). When they make a decision. we will act." He refused to elaborate. Earlie r , another militant spokesman told Canadian Press m Tehran: "We will accept any decision that the Revolutionary Council takes because it is the highest body in the country which is supported by Ay.atollab Ruhollah Khomeini." Bani-Sadr. speaking to CBS and NBC News. said the Revolu- tionary Council would decide on the timing of the trans fer. and that an Iranian Parliament to meet th.ls summer would settle the fate of the Americans. He s aid he received a message from Carter on Wednesday which met his conditions. but did not elaborate. .. As far as J am concerned. the United States has now met the condition for the Revolutionary Council to take control of the <See l&AN. Page U) Benks Closed Good Friday Most banks along the Orange Coast wm doee their doors from noon or 1 p.m. on Good f'riday. bank officials said today. County and city offices will re· main 01>eft for bus1neas u usual. along with county and city libraries and the O'tante County Dump, accordlng"to authorities. Savinp and loan institutions vary on ~raUnc boun on ~ sacred holiday, some closlna Ill noon or l p.m .• and reopenr 11 at 3 p.m . and some not openi . at all Friday afternoon. A t to the lndl'ridual branch can be made to ctet.rmine when to COO· duet bultneu. • • ""'"" NEVADA TEST SITE, Nev IAP > -An underaround nuclear test was conducted today by the Department of Energy al the Nevada Test Site. The test -code-named Llptauer -was <Lelonated about 11368 feet below the surface of Yucca Flat. A spokes man said tne test was in the 20-to-150 kiloton range -.C.U.E .. la11d BRISTOL, England <AP> -Twenty-one pohce officers and nine other persons were mJured in fighting between poUce and hundreds of immigrant blacks. authorities said today. Police said 21 persons were arrested, buildings were burned, shops looted and ca rs wrecked s-lat Pretest Tarpi CAIRO. Egypt CAP) -Some 5,000 fundamentalist Moslem students demonstrated against Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and the presence of the deposed shah in Egypt at a rally today on the campus of a local university in the Egyptian town of Assyut No violence was reported 2 Mott B••t~ Freed BOGOTA, Columbia (A P > Guerrillas who s1elzed . the Dominican Embassy five weeks ago during a reception today freed two more of the 27 diplomats and others they had held. The names were not announced immediately by the aulhonties t Re lated Photo Page A3.) GotlamR Gorged Cars inch toward Manhattan over the Queensborough Bridge this morning while s ubway tracks a re devoid of trains on the third day of New York City's transit s trike . The Long Island Rail Road is running again, but union of· ficials have threatened another strike Monday if a con· tract agreement isn 't reached . . "•'*••u"**f..unt eoN the *' M wlMild to take -~"'=,~m·-= ... , ....... .., ... ~~ rta4..to al ~eel IMr ~•Pted cycle lll &; back ol b1I amall Dataun and they drove off. Hernra aald Alcala told him. Wben Cb• cblld became rtt1hi.ect apd want.eel CM&l ot tbe car, Herrwa sakt. Alcala told him be beau alapplnc btr . •• 1 asked hlm bOw many times he hit her. He aald, 'l don't know,' " lbe wllnell teaWled. "Ho I.Old me he alapped Lbe s- oul of her and IM paned out." Herrera aald be abo uked Alcala dW'inl tbe Au1uat. lt'll, converaaUona lf be abot or at ebbed M1aa Samsoe and be said bedldn't. He laid the dflenda.nt told him lbe cblld's bJcycle would never be found. that be bad left it at a at.ore wtth the word "thrift" in tbt tltJe. l1•dlle Trallie C'ollidoa However. another witness in the cue, Aoyelo Bouzos . menaaer of a thrill store in El Monte, tesW1ed late.r Wedoes· day that a yellow 10.speed bic)" cle slmillr to Miu Samsoe'a Mid been left at b1a store on June 20, the d,.y the little 1trl d.lsap- pearecl. . Bour.oe said be soJd the bicycle later in lbe month and could not find the receipt with the buyer's name. O range County paramedics carry Walter A. Sapp, 60. of Laguna Niguel away from a W e dnesda y traffic collision on Irvine Center Drive at Valencia Avenue in Irvine. In the other car. pa ra medics had to use the "Jaws of Life" to free Mary Greco. 65. of · lrvme. Sapp and Mrs. Greco were hsted in fair condition today in Saddleback Com· munity Hos pital. Kae Pompei, 65. of Irvine. Mrs. Greco's passenger. was treat· ed and re leased from t~ hospital. Jurors in the case spent a s hort time Wednesday outside the courthouse ln Santa Ana walcb.lng .,.untington Beach de· tecUves place a simUar bike in the back or Alcala 's small foreign car to show it could be done. ~oyeeHeld ln$244,000 F.mbezzlement A Santa Ana woman was ar· rested t1i'ls morning by Newport Beach detectives who allege she e mbezzled $244 .000 from the Newport Beach-based Health ln- dustrit•s Inc . parent company of J a<'k LaLa n nc's Europea n Health Spas. Louise Gerh a rdt, 46, was booked into cit y Jail on a "'a r· rant charging he r with six counts of grand theft. She was 1mmed1ately released on her own recognizance According to Detective Ken Smith. Mn. Gerhardt worlted in the accounting department or Health Industries, Inc The detective alleged that over a period of two years she -.et up a dumm) ad vertising firm to wh ich checks were 5ent, usu:Ally in SJ0.000 amounts He said officials of the firm located at 610 Newport Cent.er Drive became i.usp1cious of the advert1s1ng firm whe n Mrs Gerh<i rdt recently wrote 1t a check for $114.000 Smith said about Sl12.000 of the missing $244,000 bas been located In addition, Mrs . Gerhardt was named in a suit filed this week in Orange County Superior Court by her former employers who are trying lo recover the missing funds. ,.,,... Pege A I .IRAN ••• hosta1ea." BanJ-Sadr said 1n the CBS inlervlew. Sahab1 said he and another coun c il me mber . Hoas ha m1 Rarsan1am. a re permanent go. betweens 10 dJScussiorui mvolv· mi;t the council and tbe militants K anl s aid that Khomeini would setUe a ny differences that might arise between the council and .the militants Khomeini gene rally has backed the m•li · tants. who demand the return of ousted Shah Mohammed Reza P ahla\; and bis wealth to Iran as the priC'e of the ho!>lage!> · freedom The shah. re<-uperatmg from re moval of his cancerou:. spleen 1n a Cairo hospital. \\l as vu.1ted today b> Egyptian President Anwar Sadc1t. who reiterated ttu• form<'r monarch would be -.ta) 1ni.: in F:~ypt p<•rmanently ~Spar/a Shooting? C HEYENNE , Wyo (A p I Something JUSl sna pped when the record s now in this Plains city grew by another 16 inches, police sa>. .tohn McCarty. 61. was cha rged Wednesda) with agg ravated a ssault and battery with a deadly weapon in the wounding of his neighbor. 51 year-old K e ith P e trie. a s th e ~easoo's total s no wfall reached 116 mcbes ·'They appare ntly dis· agret"d ov~r the way one ollNI the soow 1n the str(>(>t "'ht>n he ~hov e l t-d ht' "'alk. ·said Pollett Lt J im Barker ,...,._P_,,rAI DIVORCE •.. a re proper tax un1lb ;>o;o com pelhng reason exists to force one wage earner and two wage earners to pay the exact sam~ tax simply because what th~y ha \t' 1n commo n 1s having ~aid 'ldo · .. Tht-marncsge penalty result~ beC'au:>e income earned bv ~ork ing coup!~ .,,, ho are marned I' <idded together putting them in J h igher tax bracket and 1n credsmg thE'1r t ues The same C'Ouple 1r not marned. v.ould filt- 'tpardte returns und their in rom,• \1•ould be taxed at a lov.t•r ralf' Thl' \\a\~ and Means Commit· tet'. wh1C'h wnt<.'!> 1 ht• nation -. tax laws. hear d Wednesda\ from a ~aryland couple whO twice dJvorced each other and '"'ice remarried before hnally ending their m arriage to s1mpl} h ve together T.~-!-L-Ci"ty ._ ..,__.1 Angela and David Boyter said JeTf,{;111.1 ~ -r-the reason bad notbmg to do A rewa rd for the safe return v.1th romance T hey were JU.St IF/.Ork Be,gj_..,.a of Rona ld To lleson Jr .. 10. ~1~·eing money a t income tax W« ~ ... •so has been offe r ed an West Covina, and his father 15 The Boyters are a mong a TEL AVIV, Israel <AP> begging fnends of a parolee growing number of AmencaM Work began on the site of a new who are disdaininc marriage to J ewish village near Jericho in sought in the abduction lo avoid a provision in federal tax the Jordan River valley today lead him to the boy "even if law lbat taxes wor1dn& husbands Police See No link in Poisonings SAN DIEGO <APl -San Diego police do not beLieve the !'lctmtt pen.on who wai. mvo1ved 1n the weekend cyanide poisoning or rood items In two local S afe way s upe rma rk et!> 1:. re!>pon:.1ble for a s1m1lar occur- rence in the Riverside County com mwuty or Palm Desert. San Diego detectives went to Palm Desert to confe r with !>her1 ff'!> d eput1 e~ a nd FBI aRCntl> but all concluded the Palm Ocs<'rt incident Monday v. u~ tht> wor k or another 1n d1\o1dual aulhontiei, announc.c1! Wt>dn~ar Meanwh ile , 1n Bt•a\erton. Ure . police ~a1d Wednesday th<tt an anonymous caller two week.s ago said he put cyanide in a Jar or pickles 10 a market and de· manded thousands of dollars m diamond:. T he c~ W3.!> similar to the t'<to here. Ln wtuch the "Poison Ga ng .. demanded 50 to 100 diamond.-. in excha nge for end- ing the extortion A J3r of wckles and bottlt• of ten yak1 -iauC't' "'"rt' found tn ht> ht>av1ly IJl l'tl "'tlh <'\ Jn1d1· fl<'J \ t·rton Police Chier Don ""'~"II said a tr act> or cyanide v. J" fOW\d March 22 1n a Jar or µ1 do.le-. at J !-'red ~kyN lne mJrkt•I II<' ... aid offlc1als did not ann11unC'1' the incident <.'arher bt-cau:.e .. there was no need to .ti arm the public.·· In the Palm Desert case, a man pho ne d the Safeway ma rket and 1dentJfied himself as the same person who poisoned t WO rood items at the San Diego -.tores The caller warned that a bottle of salad dressing was poisoned and demanded a large Jmounl of dJamonds and cash be delivered late Monday. Law enforcement officers in R 1' ers1de County said the FBI took over the case a nd met the cxtortiorust's dem and. but the suspect got nervous at the drop !>Ile and fled. a nd in Jerusalem about SOO he's dead .. and wwes at a biaber r ate. right wi ng demonstrators called ---------------=-:.:..::.....;...;...:...::.:...=..::..=..::::::.:..:...:..:....------------------ on Pnme Minu;ter Menachem Be gan to cancel bis upcoming s ummit meeting with President Carter and annex the Israeli· occupied West Ba.o.k. After a day of West Banlt UD· r es t . m eanwhi le , Israeli authorities began inveatigating allegations that a prominent PalesUnlan nationalist incited anti-Israel actions. a military s pokesman said. WEARE 00 OftANG£ COAST DAILY PILOT Tre..t Coatln•es 3 styles to choose from: oxford, brown or maple. ·-.. -_...,. __ _ Jtoa C-Vo<f ... _, _ 0._ .. "'"--·-..... n:::...~ a.-M.'--Mdoll't "·-'°lltlll...C ,,........,. f.tl""" TJIJpfloM (114)MHIZ'I Holiday Visitors Quiet in Newport City officials confirmed today what bas been obvious all week -there are no hordes of Bal Week celebrants mll bebavlnl eo masse ln Newport Beach. (Related story Pa1e A3). "It's been quJet. Very, very quiet," commented police 51t. Joe Lambert. "We don't bave any extra un.lta worldn1 and Just from what I've seeo, we b.ann't had any increuea tn arresta. •• Tbe days of Bal Week Wiien tbouauds of teena1en would • ducend on Newport ended mon than a decide 110. ~ quiet on the street• ind be,ch of Newport ts testhnooy to Ulat. Llleparda eald tbey•ve bad some sizeable beach crowds, but few rescues and no problems with sunbathers. The beach crowds are avera1· ing 1U1htly more than 15,000 people until Tuesday when hip winds and cold temperatures 1ent beach visttora home by noon, old Lt. Lotan Lockabe)'. / "We'w been baller tn.iD1nl aome new IUardl for summer than we have with the beach uowdt," be 1U4. Botb Lambnt and Loctabe)t Hid tbeJ Gpect CDON MOD&. to lbow up Oft!' tM ~encl ''If trouble bill, it'll come tbl1 Vteekend," Lambert Hid. Newport Surf and Sport Melftllor• 2224 .... '°"Blvd. He-..ort .. Kt. 11 .. m .. ' ltor• 2 21~Ma~fte AH . ...... l•l•nd ln-712' s ..... J ~C...tfltaa c., ........ 641.0fU with this ··coupon Expires April 30, 1980 I Bad n WAI A •OCKY Um•. Du.rtq • eooJUPI vlltt be ~ attacked hta trlfe aod lheD Ul4"l bit two-year· old dauabt« u a ahltld when parda aimed at bim. LOS ANGSLD (AP) -Tbe ftnt ~ DQMl· blt..eet•NlfhnMDt ol a ........ poliey to dMt ....... in• piraey ol P81 teltvllkla llpU ba•e &.-. ID f ecMral court heft. U.S. Dtatrtet Court Juda. Lawaeoce T. LJdk,k toall uo-der ~ w...a.1 a ,....._ bJ tbt ..u.·1 lar1Ht P•r TV company, National Subscription Tele.WOO, for 1 prelimlDary iQJUDCticlll to It.op tM ptral· IDI of lta alpiala. Ptnltlne pay t.eleviakm lilnall and ·:n.i. equJ~t to decode tbe acrambled alpala la I I u pay teleri.aioa qnadl acrou tbe couatry. and tllere appean to be no federal law clearly pnbibtUDI tbe practice. NAftONAL, OPDATES tbe ON TV aublerip-.. , ......... Uon service, ault qai.Dlt M't'Wal local eledl'ollic 1bop1 and duals alleaedlJ lnwlved In piraUn1 A family friend teatifled tb. at Davld'1 bebavhv '"med to cha.ale ••I d --.. markedly after bi• release from ....-. .. ~ P priaon ln ltT'l, and that be became dllenchanted with toelety. Sbortly after David wu releued, Kenneth wu jailed for a aeries of i;uto burclliria. Upoo his release ln Construction goes on at Matson Navigation Company's computer-assisted overhead container handling system (lower riJht) at its Port of Los Angeles terminal while shlp loading and unloading goes on at dockside. sl&nall ID effort to have the coartl esllblilb federal guide TV cb.araea a moot.bly fee of about S2JO to Its 250,000 I riben iD Sou1bern California. J Lydick postponed an Immediate declnon on the JuJy of 1'71, be Joined his older========================= brother and began the rampqe that firm's injunction request. aaytq be wanted more lime to study the fuuy laws governllii the lntercepUon and deeod· ing of the alpal.s without pa)'lna a fee. .,,_ DAVID ••-•TM A jury found them 1uUty or all those crimes, and Wednesday sen- tenced David, 27, to the state's gu chamber. Kenneth, 21, was ordered to prilon for We without possibility of parole. Included 26 robberies, aix rapee, and Me lbe falal shoot.LDg of Eileen Rogers n and her daughter, Laura Mublen· bruch. Keep Peeling Lydick appeared to be cautious in hil approach to the case, oottng that "I'm being asked to eatabliab a national policy." But according to their parents, Mr and Mrs. Eldridge Moore, the brothers were raised in a ~ure re- ligious famUy of seven cblJd.ren. A minister t.estlfied that the brothers were well-behaved as youngsters, even singing in a church choir, and 'FR80UOHOUT THEIR six-week trial. David and Kenneth seemed un- concerned about their fate At one point they slouched m their chairs a nd grinned while a 66-year-old woman told how she was raped al gunpoint. The Moores chatted during the 30 minutes 1t took to read the verdicts. They were found guilty on all counts. Airless Tire lt'erks Flats No Problem LOS ANGELES CAP> -U you've ever been stranded on a rainy night changing a flat tire, take heart. The Dunlop Tire Co. says it has come up with a tire that not ooly would get yqu home safely lf it goes flat, but would get you all the way across the country without even causing your car to weave or your wheel to be dented. Dunlop spokesman David Cole said a test car arrived in Los Angeles from Boston on Wednesday, driving all the way with one of its sleel- beJled radials without air. Cole contende<t the feat was ac- complished by using a system made up of both the tire and the wheel on wblcb it was mounted. The Ure sidewall ls specially d~ signed to lock onto the special rim and a lou of air pressure locks it oo even more, so the tire can't come off the wheel Before starting the trip on March 24, Dunlop engineers tried to flallen the tire by drilling a bole in the sell-sealing tire. But that didn't work, Cole said, and the tire's valve stem had to be removed lo let out the air pressure. Space Probe 'Dks' Viking lander 2 Mars Artifact PASADENA (A P) -Aft.er a 3'h· year search for life on Mars, on~ of two space probes bas run out of energy and died, the National Aeronautics and Space Administra- tion says. "Now it will just sit there as an artifact on the surface of Mars for centuries to come," space agency spokesman Bristow said Wednesday or Vlk:ing Lander 2. But he added that its twin, VUting Lander l. is still operating on the planet's surface and "we expect it to go OD into the decade of the 1980s." Bt...,.. •Lefarwj .. ' SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. says he's glad lo be home after learning the voters "djdo't feel I was ready to be presi- dent. ''Every effort. is a learning ex- perience," said 'Brown upOn b1s re- l urn to the state from Wisconsin Wednesday night after folding bis bid for the Democratic presidential nomination. Brown finished third in the Wisconsin primary. ~ ........ LOS ANGELES CAP) -A count) supervilor who criticized a colleague whose aide gave confessed Hillside Strangler Kenneth Bianchi a county windshield Ciecal is trying now to re· cover three stickers she issued. Supervisor Yvonne Brathwaite Burke admitted Wednesday she authorized three decals for a San Pedro bail bondsman and is having difficulty getting them back. · ( ___ BRl_E_Fs_J 6-Bkut Fria•tri11 SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Leaders or the homosexual community have denounced Mayor Dianne Fein.stein fQr naming a heterosexual lo a seal traditionally held by gays on lbe Board of Permit Appeals. The mayor appointed Louis Giraudo to the post held by gay representatives for the past rive years. The board, a key locaJ govern· ment agenc)", decides on appeaJs of permit applications after they have been considered by the city's plan· ning, fire and police C!"ommissions and the Central Permit Bureau. 0-... Deiall Co•tlfl SAN DIEGO CAP> -Property owners already told they suffered almost $2 million in airport noise damage have waited too long to col- lect on their claims, a jury says. The final word, however , will come from Superior Court Judge Carlos A. Cazares within the next 20 days. He said earlier that a five-year statute of limitations governs the case. The damage must have begun by Nov. 30, 1968, and the lawsuits filed by Nov 30, tm, the jurors said Wednesday. But the suits were all brought after July 1975. 'Z/€-tJ&S~~ """'~ Cbtlti4H- I .. ~i#ef.lt~ • • CJt,rll/, J!1¥ Ulim IJV«Uit".Y~~ qoob p~1~AY ApruL~,, 7:30pm St,TAl#df/:I~~ C/tiudtt $ '1 vt Ci" ii' 0 . for z"f~(l/5.-t1~1" , I• ! . .. FREMONT CAP) -Suburban hoo.sewives who have flocked to a Fremoot night club to watch male stnppers got some &ood news as the City Council adopted a law requiring use permits for future strip parlors -but not existing ones. RE SAID RE COULD oot find in his research any basis for the establiabment of a private right proteeting Lbe pay TV signal and said be was reluctant to create o~. He said the key question was oot bis interpretation of tlle laws. but what wa.s the congressional intent. Attorney Arthur Greenber1. ~presenUng ON TV. said. "They simply couldn't pass a law stopptllg our guys from dancing in their shorts, unless they wanted LO look awful s1Hy," said promoter Danny'l.czzo. "What's at st.ate i.& a major California industry, which pro· v1des a service and employment. "Uthe court denies this injunction il becomes an in- v1Lallon to these companies to advertise and sell their de· vices." The new law was the weakest or four proposals t~ council con· s1dered Tuesday night. .. • SFA s Stbrewide Post-Easter C /earance ... with 20·% ·to 50% off Original Prices* Now find terrific sa¥ings on great selections of fashions from: Designer Dresses, Evening Apparel, Coats and Suits Better Dresses 'SfAbulous and 'SFAnt.astlcCoats and Swts, Sportswea r, Dresses Designer and Better Sportswear; Sport Separates, Active Sportswear Sportcoats, Swts, Sportdresses Sportswear, Dresses, Coats, Rainwear for Juniors in Right On1 Robes, Sleepwear and Loungewear Maternity Col/ect1ons Infants' and Toddlers; Girls' and Boys' sizes 4 to 6X, Girls' sizes 7 to 1-l Spot for Teens Apparel. Blouse Collections Fashion Jewelry, Swiss Watches, Cultured Pearls Women s Shoes Belts, Scarves, J:.shirts Handbag Collections Sdks Fifth Avenue dt South Coast Plaza. 3133 Bristo( Street. Co.st• ~­~" Monday )hrough 5.iturday. from 10 A.M. to 9:JO P.M. 1 I . '4• • Juvenile Criine Rise . Councilman William Vardoulis. at the urging of Irvine residents. has asked the chief of police to give the City Council a report on the juvenile crime problem in the city Such a report would be valuable -. if local residents will contact the chief and tell him or problems they have encountered and what they would do to resolve them. Vardoulis and other council members say that they have received letters from residents complaining that vandalism and other juvenile crime is on the rise. Some residents have reported that an influx of youngsters fron;i other cities has caused some of the juvenile problems. Police know that juvenile crime is on the rise, but they aren't sure of the exact extent of the problem. because many juvenile crimes go unreported. Police'41o know, however, that the number of juvenile arrests in 1979 were 41 percent greater than the previous year. These arrests were primarily for burglaries. petty thefts. dnJg offenses and liquor violations. More specific data would help. Citizens could assist by writing the police about juvenile crime they have encountered and possibly suggesting workable remedies. Junk Food Study An Irvine Unified School District committee is pre- paring to address the subject of junk food. School trustees have indicated that such a committee is necessary in order to. review existing and pending legislation on junk food in schools. The committee will also look into just the exact definition of junk food. It may seem that the committee has been entrusted with a rather academic topic. but in reality they have an important job ahead of them. The issue of junk food involves more than children's nutrition. The serving of certain types or food can jeopardize a school's receipt of state and federal funds . It would be a shame if a school lost fundinf! because it was not aware that it was violatmg a federal or state regulation by serving a certain type or food. It seems prope r that the trustees have empowered a committee to look at the issue. In this way the school d is- trict can stay one step ahead of Junk food legislation. • Opinions expressed in the space above <t{e those of the Daily Pilot Other views expressed on this page are fhose ol their authors and artists Reader comment 1s invited Address The Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321. Boyd/Philatelists ByL.M. BOYD · Serious stamp collectors have a personal charac- teristic in common -they tend to show up right on time ror appointments. Or so says a New York psychiatrist who made a s tudy or those philatelists. No explanation or bow their promptness re- lates lo their hobby is or- rered. But this doctor says his findings came from far more ti.an merely the visits of stamp collectors to bis own office. He says he re- sea rcbed the appointment patterns or a broad sampling of such collectors to learn they were exceedingly punctual in almost au situa- tions. Business appointments in Yugoslavia are routinely scheduled for 7 a.m. Dear Gloomy Gus Gaaoltne won't be cheaper bc>Qibt "1 the liter instead o the gallon, but It may mate you rec:ret the Ume you spent as a kid learnlq the old 1y1tem of measurementa. ~ D.11. oi-~--.-... Mitt r,...,,,, •119 .. ... __..... ....... ,,..... .. .. =:~-:..-=-'=/" ...... . Nothing new about electric vehicles. British dairies have been using electric trucks for more thar>30 years. Q . How big can a cockroach grow under ideal roach conditions? A. Biggest of record was six inches long. A dental lab technician named John Kelly of New York raised t:be beast in a big bottle. Fed it pizza, sandwich bits, lunch left- overs. Unidentlried co-workers or Kelly killed the thing before he had a chance lo find out bow large it would finally get. That annoyed him greatly. Q . What's correct for that highbrow word for rurt -co- quet or coquette? A. Coquet, male. Coquette, female. Or so shows the big book at hand. Never beard a tlirtatious man referred lo as a coquet, however. And neve·r hope to. Right or wrong, coquetry bas long been a woman's word. You know what old Winthrop aald: "A woman without co- guetry is_. lnllpid U COl"DfJd beef wttbout m~. •• It'• aatd about the Gemini woman that 1be'1 forever a atud.• qulct to reapoQd to new notlom. She tendl to learn quickly. but bttaUM sbe'1 10 buo dotq tbat tbln1. llM'1 lDcl1Ded lo forpt • Jot. too. Contrary to • pearance, 1he'1 not abtelltmlnded. Her head ii oftl'ly buly. Or IO claim tbe 1ta.r•uen. . . •••-·• • •• .,., ••. wl r6...,U.t•••' ~i1;iiiiirmiii-="ft~;fi;;-1,.;;,:om~r:.,.:;;:~:;:.,;-.:o1;:11a&er~=in.~ .. ::.,:-, maUac food from the ttarvmc back to tlllh' on. comatr1. diaPICrtd to nf1lllM eampe OD aatlvet. One man la blood· A mllllamu wa ..... lia --"•-ftai..C.•Mitaa ...,., ltatned trow.enl daertbed to U OH cable! ••ffe MW two ceqo • •••• Abram6wlh baa ad'llud lntftYlewer bow the Vl.U.am•t b1r1• arrive fhHD Vlecaam Mailbox see...., of ..._ CJrU Vuce bad ambushed .blm and Illa wltb corD. After Wl)oedJn&. .... tbat "rape and robbuy by frt'1ld8. ''He atlll had aome rice of the t.rsee wu ftl&ecl --. PAVN <Vt..._m .. e> aoldten only because tbe Vletnamete rtce, wb1cb be claimed heeded are uaUormly reported . . . alreaclybadatolenmorethantbey for Vletum." from all parta of K.amP'*Cbea could can'1 from his mutdeted <Cambodia).'' ~."ooecablerelatea. Other wilneaM9 l.Delucted a ,.....-me ,..Jatel. woman wbo "laid 1be bad twice SYSN OFFICIALS of tbe ,..Jatel. lffD Vletiwnese load nee OD Qmaliq pwn.ment bave been ACC:OaDING TO the refugees, bar1ea a~. nijht ... tben bead for fleela1 tbelr homeland ln the Vletnameae dlatrlbute relief <"Vietnam, and a former bla-~roves, Abramowlta reportt. auppUe. '11 rice by day "in the tory professor <who) elalmed 'Thell' deelalon to •cape (for> preaence of international that be aaw two trucks ~ eventual reaeWement ln <other> worken. then cooflacate OU with ~ bead · · • toward vtet- counutea is baaed oa tbe com-after the workers depart the nam. moo perceptioo that Hie under Kene." or replace It with corn. tbe Viet.name. la intolerable," Some Sovtet-auppUed corn "Ls AN A•EalCAN acbolar. states one·cable. It cltea the twin still cJoceina one warehouse . . . Stepbea lieder, wu quoted at motlvatin& factors~ "dread of but la ao unappealln1 that only lenftb by the ambauador, who a repressive Communlat re-tbt most lumgry wUI eat It," the descrlbeCI bis obeervaUom u a lime" and the "ublquUoua cable reporta. "aolld, penetratlnr I~" at threat of starvatloa." Abramowitz bas also provided Cambodia. Heder wrote: As blstoric ethn.lc eneml-of evldence to support continued "Well·oraanlaed tea a of ..... claJma that the Vietnamese are Vletnameae troopa . . . oa-tbe Cambodians. the Viet-actually shipping foreign rice aus:ned some of (Cam a's nameee have no qualms about aupplleS inta>decf for Cambodia home.grown> rice tbemaelve9, provided some of It to their closest collaborators, aold some of it on the black marketa in the urban Cle01ers, and sent 10me of it back lo Vietnam, officially or unofficially." The few Cambodians who cooperate with the conquerors get several pounds of edible rice a month. but ordinary peasants ofteo get only red corn or "amall, broken rice from Viet- nam which they said made them vomit." ooe cable reporta. .. Relief medical supplies are also peddled on the black market, tbeir foreign origin clearly identifiable. Abramowitz reported. Officials of the puppet regime are believed to be prof- iteering oo lbe internaUooal relief supplies. Footnote: The cables, though detailing the divenioh of foreign aid. confirm that many of the supp!Jes do find thetr way to the Ca mb odia n populace . Abramowitz told Vance that the rehef effort must continue af famane ia to be averted. And sources told my associate Les Whitten that Cambodian aid will s urvive President Carter's budget cuts. Move National Park South for 'Free' Land? To tbe Editor· The proposal to try and buy 19.000 acres In South Orange County from the ocean to the San Diego Freeway for $76 million cannot be done at that price. This 1s only $4,000 per acre, and such land in Orange County bas not sold for that re· cently. . But don't ~1ve up hope for a paYk -just move it down the coast 6"'2 miles and use U.S.- owned land -purchase price zero. How to do ttus-> Convert leas than U7th. or 17,000 acres or tbe northe rly end of Camp Pendleton lo a park. Add t.blS to existing San Onofre State Beach of 3 ,158 acres and you have 20,158 acres and you still have our $76 million. THIE ABOVE new location for free also avoids all the following bad points about the proposed Orange County locatton : 1. The real land cost is prob- ably S380 million C$20,000 per acre), and why spend that huge s um when there is t1.S.-0wned land 6\.i miles south? 2. It will remove 19,000 acres from the tAx rolls. thereby rais· ing everyone else's tAxes . 3. It will eliminate residential locations. and s upporting busl- neasea foe 225,000 persons, and all Jobs therein forever. 4. It will prohibit forever all the hundreds of thousands of jobs in constructing residences and busioeasea on 19,000 acres. 5. The taxes the 19,000 de- veloped acres wtll produce are loat forever 6. The U.S. already owns 125,000 acres at Camp Pendleton wbicb is only 6\.i miles down the &oaat and the U.S. Marines do bo\ use, or need, anywhere near all of that 125,000 acres -they would not miss 17 ,000 acres, ud · would aWl have 108,000 acres to operate on N.H. SMEDEGAARD l'n• ••asu•er To the F.dltor: Ult weren't to pitiful, I abould have a IOOd laulh at SuoentlN' Edlaoa lliller'1 ur1t.n1 lUcbard O'Nelll to real1n aa state DemoeraUe chairman. Rather than otrer the people of Ida dll· trlct a Polltive QPl"NCb to tbtlr aeedl, be ... tbe tupt.yen' moaey on llar~:;a lm-•llaed '"pelltieal .. led b1 O'Neill and fDYOITtal J~ about ..., eleeted olftdal ln the ~. both pat and prel• ent. M41M11k1, dear EdJlon, a couple of s uggestions are an order First, the supervisor's position is a non.political position , we don't care to wh1ch party a can- didate belong~ as long as he gets the best job done for hts consl.Jt uents. Second. lo dred~e up dtrt on personalities of the past may land you in hotter water than an-ticipated. along with your bud- dies Fonda. Hayden and Moon· beam Brown . Many proud veterans have not forgotten your service record and 1 s mcerel)' hope your opponent brings it to the attention or the voters. loud· ly and clearly• HARRY W. WITT Be11ellC• To the Editor: Please clarify for me these sentences in the March 25 editorial , "Retirees Target of Tax Proposal " It states, "Retirees under the age of 65 cannot collect Social Security if they make wages in excess or S3.Z70 a year At age 65 that earning limit goes up lo SS.000." My understanding is that specified levels or earning re- duce the amount a retiree can collect, while earning above maximum but does not cut it off entirely. Am I wrong-> ANNABELLE QUIGLEY The MJdn' u C01nd I{ a mirft Nnu mort' thaft thit tpttl/ied maz. rmum. Soc1Gl Sectmt11 brlwfiU m the amollftt of IJ /or each cwrv ez. tro 12 eamed o~ aMIM.eld wdil U.. nceu amounl ii recootTed. Edilor. A \'ece fer 9 . To the Editor: Referrin1 to the recent ex- cbance '11 correspondence ln the Pilot. <March 18 and 23) I don't thlnk Mrs. Parker ls eonfUled at aJl. Rather lt la Dr. Garrtaon. t would vote for J arvil D if I didn't rettiV'e anytblnc ln re- turn. Ir lt accompllsbe1 tbe 1in1le pul'1)0le' ol maklnc aov-' eroment economize and follow a Uabt budpt, we will all beneflt ln the lane run. Government "fat," contr8J7 to what Garruoo states. ii, in· deed, plentiful. Thert are thoutandl of examples, but r would cite three: TBS GOV&aNOa'9 abeentee rate la bonendoUI. AD.yGM In bual.Deu with that IOrt of at. tndance record would bt Giit of a Job. Yet, b1I pay, $115 per ltay, ~oesonandon and on The JU<lge c-aughl growing marijuana plant., in has home has d1squahf1cd himself from the bench. but ht~ substant.Jal pay ~005 on and on and on There 1s an instructor a t Long Beach State v.orkin~ his hnaJ semester He is not ret1nng. but ~om~ 01'.l to other things Ap- parenll}. he has accumulated ··sick days."' which he 1s de tcrm1ned to take since he will be paid for them only 1( taken I guess he d~s not even ha\'e to call in s10ce the only way Uie students know v. hether or not there wtll be class those days 1s to go, wrul. and 1r he does not show up. leave to do other Uungs until their next rlass - These types of "fat" mu.st be removed. And when 1t as done. maybe the governor and his stooges won't be so quick to de· ny a Dow Cbem1ral or a Stand· ard 011 opportunities lo bwld. provide Jobs and pay taxes m this state And maybe we. the people. will look more toward what we can do for ourselves rather Ulan lea VC tl lo a gaggle or polit.Jcal hacks Vote for Propos1t1on 9'.' You bet I v.111' J W. REID ... •••ft'fl To the F.d.itor · Tbe Daily Pilot recently ran a story about a mysterious. foul odor oo the new Orange Coun- ty Transit buses. Neither their maintenance crews nor the Orange County Health control Inspectors can d iscover the sourceoftbestencb. The answer la obvious. Tboee 6S buses were, by California law,· to bave been equipped with lifts for the baodlcapped, but were not. A 1ot of people, in and out ol Oran1e County, have llttJe bus amuleta, into wbJcb tbey ate sUckinC pins I YVONNE BAGSTAD . Net• 'Pe111 ' To the Editor: Tom Murpblne ln hl1 column "Playtnc Polltk1" <March 2S), seems to be dol.QC Just that. He aceu1ea the lle1a Verde Republican Women of "eodon- lnl'' CUMtidatet for non·partisan omces, ol "machine poUUcs:· and ''Pllt1 pet.ton.,•." ol ~ ducUns a ''fonam" for clty coun- c 11 candldatea from wblch Democrats were excluded. The latter was not a "public forum." but a meeting of a private orgaru1atton. As such 1t has the nght to choose ~ who agree with R e publican p hil osop h y. thus onl y Repub!Jcan candJdates were in- vited. NO CANDIDATE e ndorse- ments were given. No candidate endorsements were asked for. Therefore . no party patronage or machine politics were in- volved. The purpose of these Republican women s groups as to develop pohllcal a wareness among women: to s upport Republican principles at all lev~ls of government: and lo en- courage their members to t.a.Jte an active part and an interest in the practice or democracy .• Berore Mr. Murphine plays at political reportine. be should be sure oC his facts. DOROTHY CLINCH Fire 8elp To the Editor: Our lhank.s lo the Costa Mesa fire crew for saving our home and belongings at 2919 El- lesmere Ave. on Tuesday, March 18. The response lo our call was immediate. Tbe men's actions, though seemingly ef- f or ties s, were so well · coordinated. Not only did .they prevent the fire from gutting the attic. but their care and ex- pertise kept the delttuctioo of personal property and clean-up to an absolute rginimum. In ldd.ltJoo. they returned that evenLnc lo follow-up the fire and even tar-papered tbe exposed area lo prevent further water damqe from tbe ra.lna. It's a real comfort to know that our area la protected by such an effi. cient Fire Depa.rtmenL As an afterthought, anyone in his risbt mind ever bavlna been subjected to an e.xpertence such aa a roo1 burnlna over bla bead wouldn't have to welsh tbe direction '11 bJI vote oa a pro. po1itJon aueb u .larvil' Proposi- UOCl 13! GERRYCOBSO • Lfttrr1 from f'fOllJnt ore 10dcotM. f1w rigltt to condnM """' to /ft epoct, M dimiftatc Ubel " rntrl*f. Ldttrt of JOI toOfdl or ._ IOiU t>. ~pr'f~t. AU l«tft'IW....-fii: clwk ~ .. ,. -"'°""" ....... . blll mwnea moat H ~ °" r• qw• •t IUf ffrint '"'°" u apportld. Podf'11 wtll "°' ,,. pubfWM!d_ ---------- 7 I VOL. 13, NO. ~ 3 SECTIONS, .. PAG&S 'Hostage Transf~r Delayed Again Train . Hits Dwelling , ·· House Railroaded LOS ANGELES <AP> -A two·atory apartment buildina being towed ,tcross railroad tracu waa rammed by a slow- moving frelebt train today, and pieces of the building were strewn for hundreds or yards, authorities said. One man sprained his ankle w.hen he saw the train coming and jumped orr the top or the building. The man, an employee of the Chester Seay House Mov- ing Corp. of Soulb Gale, bad been making sure telephone and Power lines were kept clear of the rooftop. "We understand that the mov· OlleAged JO 1ng company had eotten perrolasion to cross the t:rtcb," said Northeast Divtsloo ·police Lt. Rick Wahler. "They have to check ahead, and were &lven clearance to cross at that Ume. Theo, while the apartment house was straddling the track, the train came through." He said tbe 2 : 15 a.m., crash near Figueroa Street in the Highland Park section was be· ing investigated as a traffic ac· cident. No damage estimate was available. Police Sgt. Paul Hermann said the building was moving slowly across the tracks near Figueroa Street when the crossing arms 4 Youths Sought In ROhbery Try v San Clemente police are in· veaUgating an attempted rob- bery or a market Jate Wedne5- day in which four suspects -in· cludJng a boy whq looked about 10 years old -escaped empty. Mnded. •Police reports were sketchy, bwt employees at Albertaon's IC•~.C. eGl2 Nodb l!1 Camillo lleal, said three of tbe four yoangaten entered the market shortly after 9 p.m. One of the teen-agers ap- parenUy picked up a bottle ol li· q1I01'. 'but ... CODfr'Onted bJ a 111.arket cl«1l wb9 _.red tum to put the bottle baet CID the Cable Break C.11s Coast Phone Service General Telephone Co. customers in South Laguna and Laguna Beach had problems Wednesday because of an under· ground cable break in Santa Ana. John Black, manager of the Laguna Beach exchange, said all incoming and outgoing calls In the South Laguna 499-prefix area were disrupted. There were also problems for some of the c ustomers in Laguna Beach with the 494 and 497 prefixes. Some did not re- ceive incomin~ or outgoing calls, Black said. He said in all three prefixes local calls could be made - South Laguna could phone Laauna Beach. Black said the service area bas about 28,000 telephones. sh'elf. The boy, about 16 years of a,e. returned the liqUQr, then pulled a large hUPting knife and threalefted the derk with tbe weapon. The clerk ordered tbe tnife-wielding youngster to get out, and the boy Oed, a1oQi with bis two COIDPI!~ w of wtiDm appeared to be J9,..,. old. A fourth ~uspect was seen in the car by witnesses, and a customer o~ed the license plate ol the amen,..... fonlp car u tt sped fnaa the parting lot. Camp Pendleton mUltary police aaid to.day they belJeve they have fod'nd -the vehicle ln· voJved in the market incident. · San Clemente police said to- day they will continue their in· vestigatioo of the attempted rob- bery. Item Pricing Vpheklin UlpiAtmno By JOHN NEEDHAM Ol U. o.ity pttet SWft Supermarket items will con· tinue to be individually marked in San Juan Capistrano follow· ing Wednesday night's City Council decision to pass an or· dinance forbidding onJy shelf pricing. Mayor Kenneth Friess said many older and disabled peoplet would be severely inconve· nienced if items were shelf· priced. came down. One arm came down beblnd the buildina and the other hit the side of Ute build.inc and broke. The train's engineer told police, "I came around the curve and there was a bulldine across the tracks. I put on the brakes. but there was oothl.ng else I could do." By the time the train screeched to a stop, pieces of the building were scattered along more than a third of a mile of track. Lt. Wahler said the train was moving at 15 mph when the brakes were applied. Guard Gets Wild Ride On Whale. SAN PEDRO (AP) Lifeguards have freed a 30-foot gray whale that was tangled in a fisherman's net a haJf·mlle off CabrWo Beach -but not before the giant cruture toot ooe of bis feleQel"I OD a wild ride. Los .Angeles County Llfepard Lt. John Lorentaen said b• w atcbed from the Uleaunl YeaseJ C.klllo Watdl aa h.la partner, Sbel1y Butler, cut the wbaJe looee from a bundle of rope wrapped around iLs tail duriq WedD48da1's 15-mlnute reacue 09eratlon off Loa Ancel-. Bvtlet', 15, who doa8ed a wet suit and scuba lant, waa dra11ed • deep as 30 feet below the surface u be tried to cut the rope off about six feet from the tail of the whale as it thrashed about trying to free itself. "He started a pretty violent kicking action that I wanted no part of," Butler said. "I didn't want to scare him or scare myself, f just wanted to flDish the job." Lorentzen, scanning the sur· face for bubbles from bis partner's air tan.It, said be was afraid the whale would entangle Butler in the ropes and drag him out to sea. ·'I didn't want to Jose the spot I was cutting on, so I just held onto the rope," said Butler. "There were times it was pretty violent.·· The f&Bherman who owned the net. Vito Russo, 26, of San Pedro, was philosophical about the loss of his $30,000 gill net. "I made only $25 thls mom· ing,'' said Russo. "I got only seven halibut. It'• au.rvi\tal, man -tough We." Cara incb toward Manhattan over the Queensborougb Bridge this morning while subway tracks are devoid of trains on the third day of New York City's transit stnke. The Long Island Rail Road is running agam, but uruon of· ficials bave threatened another strike Monct..y if a con· tract acreement Isn't reached. Oemente Man Asks Vacancy Vote Bill A San Clemente man has aski!d tbe City Council to establlsh an ordinance that would require that vacancies in elective Offices be Cilled by a vote or the electorate. Wednesday. councal members, in their last meeting before the April 8 municipal election. beard Bob Flynn of San Clemente ask that the ordinance be initiated. Flynn said the request was based on a January. 1979 ~all election by San Clementeans. who voted 5,472 "for the right to vote'' to fill the vacancies as op- posed to S8S for appointment. Mayor Roy Hamm said that 1( the City Council "gives away the right to decide on bow to replace an elected official it is giving away an important part o( its powers.'' "No situation is like another ... he said . add.mg that 1t depends on various factors. mcludrng how long a term remains when a post is vacated, as to whether an a ppomtment or elecl.lon would be appropnate. He also men· Honed election cost. Hamm. who subm itted bis formal resagnahon Wednesday. effeclJve Apnl 15. LO thf'councll. saad 1( an election LO fill his pool were to be held in November the interim penod would last for months. Flynn replied that an interim council member could be ap· pointed. The councal set a public hear· mg on the matter for its April 16 meeting Council members have 30 days to decide whether to appoint a successor or call a special elec· hon to fill Hamm's post. Carter's ~ Response Weighed BULLETIN By fte Aaaeeia&ed Presa Ira•'• ndlag aevola&leeary Condi w delQed a dedl6ea ea talrlag eastody of Uae Amerte.aa hoaa'es aatU Preal· dent Carter clarifies laia re1poue to coadJtlons set by I ranian leaden, Forel&n Mi•later Sadegll Gbotbaadeh Hid today. By Tiie Auocla&ed Press Militants holding American hostages insade the occupied U.S. Embassy in Tehran said to- day they are ready to turn their captives over to the ruling Revolutionary Council if re· quested. The transfer could come Saturday. two council members said lraruan President Abolhassan Bani-Sadr, anlerv1ewed on American television, said Presi· dent Carter met his demands for the g09e.mment to take control HO~AGES HAVE VARIED CAREERS -86 of the hostages, and that be would ast the C0W1cil to make a decision later in the day. A spokesman for the militants told Canadian Press in Tehran: ··we will accept any dttislon that the Revolutionary Council takes because It ia the highest body in the country which is sup- ported by Ayatollah Ruhollah Kbomemi." leader of the revolu· Uon. Tbe militanta bad relied OD Khomeini's support to defy an altemfll bJ Bani-Sadr last month to tate custody or the Amerieans. Bani-Sadr, speaking to CBS and NBC News, said the Revolu· tionary Council would decide on lbe timing or the transfer. and that an lraman Parhament lo <See IRAN, Page A21 Banks Close CoodFriday Most banks along the Orange Co ast will close their doors from noon or 1 p m on Good Friday, bank officials said today. County and city offices wilJ re· mam open for busmess as usual. along walh county and city libraries and the Orange County Dump, according to authorities Savings and loan institutions vary on operalulg hours on the> sacred holiday. some closing at noon or l p.m .. and reopening at 3 p. m. and some not opening at all Friday anernoon. A call to the individual branch can be made to determine when to con· duct business. The outage began about 10 a.m . A Pacific Telephone Co. ere..,,. broke a cable in Santa Ana, it was reported and water got into it. The cabie was dried out with hot air blowers several hours later and service was restored, it was reported. "We have to look at the: psychological fact.ors to con· sumers rather than the con· <See PRICING, Pase A%) Dog 'Litter' NowaCrime lnStin]uan Growth Big Issue • m Clemente Coast Weather Partly cloudy late Di&ht and early morning, but mosUy sunny and a little warmer throuah Friday. Lows tGnlpt in the 40s. Hilb• Friday .64 at the beaches and 72 inland. IN811tE .... ~ y A.U oeawr Gae Ald'1f, tfiU ~.., Uw.,,. .. ,,.. .... ,,.,., ... fl. _, •to lltm, M'd ca.a off the ...... s. Sport•. Page Bl. ..... ) Acting on what Mayor Keo· neth Friess referred to as "a messy item," tbe San Juan Capistrano City Councll ~ an· ordinance Wednesday n!qWr· ing dog owners to remove the "litter" their dog leaves beblnd. Councilman Gary Hausdorfer said the action wu imposslble to enforce and only satisfied the emotions of irate cit.lJens. "It just won't work," Hau.sdorfer said, "Dou can't read.·~ Councif ma11 J amea Thorpe aald the ordinance would require indltidual reeponalblUty. 'Hfbil ii a ma.tor problem," be aa1d. "Thia ac:lion will live DeODle tbe qecesaary . leverage {o protect their property." He -added that the ordlnanee would stve cbUdren a cleaner environment to play and p.reYent confroatiltlclne Mlween propert1 ownen and dot ownen. I Mme Cover88e Addil&oeal south Oranae Coult· ty ~e appean tOday on Pa1e1ta. BJ DON CHAPMAN Ol .. o.tfy ........... Anticipated residential de· velopmeat in San Clemente. a city which bas been beset with six recall attempts in the past two years, ia dominaline the campaign for two seats oo the City Council. All ftve candidates in the April 8 electioo have stated that they oppose unrestricted lfOwtb in tbe city. • And, while erowth bu been a key issue, all five a1ao dlaclalm any polltioaJ ties with de· velopen aeeldng to build some 8,000 bomel on three ranches in t.be city. Development ol the 5,000 acres of land 011 Vl1beek Ranch, Forater Ra11cb, and Reeves Rueb would nearly double tbe city's population in tbe nut 15 yean. Three of the current eomdl memben will not be on the...,, councll reaardlesa of the out· come ol the eleetlon, and ooe ol the remalnlng two members facea a lune 3 recall electiaa. Mayor Roy Hamm, target of a ,, recall campalcn. be1un ln. Marcb, later that month AD· DOUD~ bit lnttDt.lon to nllip from the council April u . Al10, Councllalen Edward Kalsched and Richard AbJman are not seeking re-election, thus leaving Counc'llman Roy Hurlbut conceivably the veteran member come June. Hurlbut, appointed earlier this year to replace the late Coun· cilwoman Myrtis Wagner, who died Jan. 12, bas been on the council for just two months. CouncUwoman Karoline Koester, who flnlahd Just a.bead of Hurlbut in the 1979 election, faces a June 3 recall election. 1n the current elecUoo. can· ditlatea Bernie Allen, a San Clemente attorney; Bob Llm· berg, a planning commiukloer and retired bmineaaman; Bill M~bam, a teacher and former plannine comm"""Mf; Hobert Ru1ln, a aenrit.1 pant; ad Bill Wqner. a dock manufac- turer. are seeking places on the council. Benle A.Uea. 39, bu beee a resident of San Clemente since 1968. A former president of the San Clemente Chamber of Com· merce, Allen aald be ls in ravor of "manated growth." "My theory ls that unless we do something to mana1e the growth, then the state and · federal government will do (COO· trol) the development for us,'' said AUen. He aaid he had "been accused of beinl pro development, IM.ll I'm a realllt. It'• loil\C to bap-~n, but we should contn>l lt." rn order to overtome~aJ problems in tbe JJIO'•. AJ. len, Uae cll:J eouJd dev pro- .,.~ that are "cle money • makers," such as a golf course in conjunction with develop· meot. ' Bob u..era. 58, said while he bas served on the planning com- mission. the panel bad studied various growth management plans and found that they were t different due to individual leml!. and objectives of each ·•we have to assess where we're going in terms of growth and our ability to support it," he said. "Once tbe aaseaameot is made, then we can determine exacUy what we can pro\'ide and what tbe community does want." Umbers said. He said 1rith the numbe~ol ap- (See SAN a.B•SNTS. Pase 2> ., KrliMl Tiiksn to Court •r.ML000 11 A~(APl -DandlvU Evel Kl»evel fac• a Con Ethics· (ltOO in • • ...... ault °"" I yaallt tllat be llYI be ._'t'..,... to buy thouab he fixed it up b,>-•ddin&..a ..,.._..;;.~~.._Cl ...... ~~.....,.....,.....,~~~~~-4t•1•9'WctMt~;· earpet:Jn1 ancf fttra bedroom mirrors .. :. .... '9':•,.. or ~ · Traiiltt Charter Inc. cootenda Knievel's· im· Testimo:Dy: _ ... NEVADA TEST SITE, Nev. (AP> -An Uftder1round nuclear test wu conducted today by the Department ol Enerat at the Nevada Test Site. The test -code-named Ll)>tauer -was detonated about ~L368 feet below the surrace of Yucca Flat. A apokesman said uie test was in the 20·to·l50 kiloton ranae. ..... E .... ttd . BRISTOL, England <AP> -Twenty-one police officers aod nine other pe_rson~ were injured in fltbtin& between police and hu.ndreds of 1mm1grant blacks, autboritiea said today. Police said 21 persons were arrested. bu.lld.ings were burned. abops looted and cars wrecked. S••m Prete.t T•,.,,et CAIRO, Egypt (AP) -Some 5,000 fundamentalist Moslem students demonstrated against Eeyptian President Anwar Sadat and the presence of the deposed shah in Egypt at a rally today on the campus of a local university in the Egyptian town or Assyut. No violence was reported. ,..,....ra~AJ SAN CLEMENTE ••. plication~ for ronstruction ap· µroved. c1nd jcrted impact of ~late revenue cuts, projected "we ha ve reason to examine the '>1tuat1on." The road ~yst#m 1~ already impacted due to recent growth a nd traHic coming to San Clemente from out of town, he said. BW Mecham, 33, 1s a teacher in the Saddleback Unified School District and has been active in l he Saddleback Valley Educators Association While a planning comm1ss1oner. he said. he worked to ensure that "future development was consistent with the needs of the present commuruty ·'I ha~e from the beginning of my campaign been advocating the development of a growth management plan 1n the city, similar to those ln San Juan Capistrano and certain other cities." He said the limit on growth should be according to the city's ability to absorb the growth and furnish, at present levels or bet· ter. existing services to both new and old portions of the city If the development is all-Owed 1t should be required to pay its own way, Mecham said. Kohen Bula, 42, has said that be bas relied on publicity to get his message across due to a lack of funds to pay for it. He said tbe development iaSue has been discussed "almost con· stantly.. and that he was at- tempting to focus concern on current San Clemente residents, particularly the "downtrodden " He has urged development of the city's tourist base and de· velopment of low cost housing to help "stabilize the rental situa· lion." How much growth the city can handle, he said, depends on lbe ORANOECQUT LISC DAILY PILOT impact that growth would bring A growth management plan should be considered, he said due to a threat or overtaxed city facilities. Bill Wagner, 60, the husband of the late Mrs. Wagner has said be would "work to regain citizens' control or our city from the developers." ··Development should not be allo~ed at all 1f it is going to pu01sh or cause a hurt to the present residents or our city," hes a1d ·' i am not speakmg of a total moratorium on building for lbat would be 01:1t of the question My argument 1s for slow, sensible. growth compared to the ram pant growth allowed by and ap- proved by, the majority or our recent Ci ty Council members " said Wagner. ' He said the city cannot handle more people with its current facilities. '·At the present time our sewer is at capacity and break· ing down ," he said, adding that the intersection of Ayenidas Pico and Presidio would be Im · pacted with more traffic. No incumbents are running for council seats and there has been a lack of bitterness m the otherwise intense fight for elec· lion. The candidates have md1cated they are trying to reach the voters through door-to-door ef· torts. telephone calls. flyers. newspaper ads. coffee klatches, and candidate forums. One candidate, Allen, said he had used a l'adio advertisement as well. In a three-way race for City Treasurer , candidates are Leonard Marks, 48, a college professor a nd corporation treasurer, Howard Mushett, 52, former City Councilman, who owns bis own business; and Charles Fox, an appraiser. Mushett was recalled from the council in May of la.al year along with two other council members. In one of the three meaaures on the ballot in San Clemente, voters will decide whether they want to have an appointed City Treasurer. If they pass the measure, Proposition c; whoever wins the election for Ci· ty Treasurer will not serve ln of- fice. Proposition A asks voters whether '2.75 million in (ederal, sta~ and local IU tu money sboula be uaed to wtden El Camino Re,i. Proposlt.lon B propo1e1 that five councUmamc votlna dlltrtcta be esta blished. Botll of the-. meaauree are ad~ votes to lhe Clty Coun· ell. . There are 15,867 San Clemen· tMn• •llelble to vote in the elec:- Uon , acaordln• to tbe City Cler k •a oftlee. • 1n • ~al -.u. to fill Uaree ~tl Matt a . 1••r .,o, 10me .a ....-.t Of Ute voters tWned °" In .u.. et.etion no •'1Motee bilWa ... dbtrttu-M. Al ot • ..... ltl Ud been ~t>uted~ ....... ,,. ..... ...... ! ... ,'-'''"'>' • pro"9aA t. provementa damaaed the ll&·loot yacht anct he .. tabti.U a tourllt and :.Yillton broke a contract to buy It. Tbe company convinced a bureau we.&dl WCMIW M , Nd f eder11at Judie Tuesday that the motorcycle stuntman by dl[_ '9d tax ru.dl. wu able for any damage to the veuel. ... ~.:S~ u..,.=a to Jwiae WlWam Hoeveler set a heartng thla month lo,. A8MI Jr. ud Bob IOefer etermlne the extent Of dama1e to the yacht urs• th.at tile b'\ana•, wblcb Knltvel says he chart.end in mid-1977 to take-hb ~ollld bl f-.secl wtth one bait o1 f amlly to motorcycle races in Daytona Beach tb• ~t1·a tranalw occ~~Y 1 ln a depoelti~, Knievel said the $50,000 he spent tu <bed tu) tunda. be aCIOpCed n yacht renovahC?ns plus the costs of several 8__._ ln 1111, the ~ collected boat.$, two Lear Jets, two motorcycles and t~t A':,':!f:::C:,•t.batia~~.: skis "broke .~e fuu~nciall&'. It put me in debt to Jie budlited tor~~ tune of_$4 million. I Just never recovered.". ttema, but otttdala noc.ed that ~evel . also_ faces a multi-million-dollar jud1· rtiure dou not include staff m ent tn California and an Internal Revenue Service Ume &bat ll •pent 00 tourist r.. property lien for $1.6 million, an attorney said. lat-4matten A mea and Kiefer proposed , ... P-.,e .4 J that half ol lhe bed tu revenues from U,. previous year LotaJ be PRICING R d"lrnated for any liven year's UUNG. • • tourist bureau operaUoa ·•we hope the council Wm tate the •UJ,l•Uon to heart." said A mes. 'The money is there. It ta suppoted to be spent for that purpo.e." The San Clemente Chamber of Comme~ has not for the past elaht )'Hra received bed t.ax runda from lhe city. It ls fuoded by members and rund raisers. The \ax money goes into the Cll)' 's aeneral rund and the bud1eted items for tourist relat· ed expenditures for 1979-80 have Included various holiday decora- tion 1 , supplies, utilities, a newsletter, cleanup, and parade expenses. . In addition, said official.a, Ume 1s spent by police fire, marine safety, and recreation depart- ment employees on tourist. related events and matters. F inance Director Mite McNamara estimated that at least the $75,000 in revenue goes toward tourist-related expen· di tu res. ,,,._ P.,,e A J IRAN .•. meet this summer would settle the fate of the Americans. He said he received a message trom Carter oo Wednesday which met his conditions. but did not elaborate. "As far as I am concerned, the United States hu now met the condlUoo for the Revolutionary Council to take control of. the hostages," Bani-Sadr said in the CBS intuView. Sababi said be and another co uncil member, Hasbami RafsanJaru. are permanent go. bet weens m discussions involv· IOI'? the council and the militants. Kan1 s aid that Khomeini would settle any differences that m 1ght arise bet ween the council and the militants. Khomeini generally has backed the mili· ta nts. who demand the return of ousted Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi and his wealth to Iran as the pnce of the hostages' freedom. Recre ational Parking Ban Approved An ordinance prob1bitiog owners of recreational vehicles boats and trailers from parlting them on pubhc streets was ap- proved in a 3·2.vote by San Juan Ca pistrano councilmen Wednes· day night. Parking vehicles more than 84 • inches wide will no longer be al· lowed. In add1t1on. no non. motorized vehicle may be parked at any time Councilmen James Thorpe and Lawrence Buchheim arf'Jed against the measure, saying there had not been enoueh eom· plaints to warrant passing the ordinance. "Thia is the kind or law we don't need," Thorpe said. "It u - s umea everyone is guilty if they even own such a vehicle." He said the ordinance COD· stituted a "wholesale ban on recreational vehicles" and oo ~bat baais he could not support ll. Buchbelm wd be had recent· ly driven through four nearby cities and bad seen recreational vehicles parted ln the streeta of each one. ·'They were not botbertn1 anyone and no ooe wu com· plaining to my lmowled&e " be 11td. "I believe the Jaw ta'~ Pf'OPJ'llte." venience of the 1rocers " be supermarkets could moderate said. "This seems espe~ially inflation and save consumers true since it does not appear that . money. any savlnp will be passed on to Allee Sym&D.Ski of the Orange the coosumtts. •· County Consumer's Coalition. Friess added that many peo-said people wanted and de· pie were unable to travel to manded clearly readable prices another store lo their communi· on grocery it~ms. ty and it wa.s necessary to coo-·'I feel senior citizens would be tinue item pricing in communJty moat severely affected ll it.em stores. ....,. priclnc is atopped," Mrs . Supermarket owners have ... Symanski said. "This makes argued that with the installaUon them question their ablllty to of ~omputeriud price scanners fend for themselves." they would save money by not Mrs. Symanski also said the tndividually marking each item. market owners' contention that Instead they would mark prices customers could eet back at only oo the sbeU. them by sboppiPI at a compel· Jan Grey. representing the ing store was DOl reallatic. Grocery Association, said with "When they say to shop with the inception of computer scan-your feet and simply go to ners having employees mart another store they don't take in· items "was hlte having a to account seniors and people fireman on a diesel train... who don't drive. Clearly they He said that about 25 perttnt ~~~~t consider them at all." she of the total store items were Th ... , already sbelf-p d "P 1 e OrUJnance prov1de"S for nee · eop e fines up to SSOO and a county J&il are us~d to the sbeH-price term of six-months ror non· system m the produce aisle on li deli items and many in otner comp ance Council members areas," Grey said agreed that .store personnel ~hould be given a warning He added that doing away before ;m y pumt1vc a ction 1i. with item-pncmg was one way taken Capo Homeowners Eye Zone Change A bout 20 Capistrano Beach homeowners who protested a re- quest for a z.ooe cbuge on a blufftop parcel. had mlxed re· act ions Wednesday to the Orange County supervisors' de· c1sion ·'We consider 1l a minus that they approved the mull1-u01t concept in the area. which would set a precedent for other de· velopers ... s aid Mite Reed. president of the Caplstr ano Beach Commlmity Association ··But we saw as a victory the fact that they limited the number of units to 17." Reed added. Reed was referring to the supervisors· decision to grant the new owner of a 2 2 acre parcel on Via Canoo a zone change to allow him to build condominiums in an area made up primarily of d uplexes and s ingle·fam ily homes. In a 4·1 vote, with Supervisor Edison Mill e r dissenting, superv1S0rs said the owner could build condominiums on the blurftop parcel, but only 17 of them. rather than the 27 the owner hopt'dfor WE ARE In addition, Supervisor Thomas Riley. whose district LD· eludes Capistrano Beach. lacked on a reqw.rement that a study of the soils in the area be sub- mitted before any const.ructJoo plans were approved. Armed with pellllons signed by more than 150 res1dents, lhe Capistrano Beac:-h homeo-.'tlers present,ed supervl.SOrs w1l.h a list of con~rns . about the develop· ment. including claims that Via Canon·. closed recently by county 0Hic1als because of storm·caused damage. 1s p~ ently substandard and not like ly to bear up under the add1 t1onal traffic. The terrain surrounding the proposed project is too unstable for a multi-family unit The in stability was mcreased by the rainstorms in February and March. they said. Schools, sewer systems and other services would be over burdened by the influx o< new residents. But County Environmental Management Agency st.aft mem· bers· said steps had been or would be taken to relieve the problems c1ted by tbe homeowners. 3 styles to choose from: oxford, brown or maple. 87 DAVID &UTZ•ANN .................. . It w.u a jaUbou.H code of ethic• which led to an Oranp · County Inmate'• tettJmony w-. nea~t murder dlfeo-dant Alcala. P wttnea Mlcba.t .. Henva a former be~ user and puabe;, aald be wrote c1owsa·' ~tatementa Alcala made to blm an connection with the diaap- pearance and murder of Robin Samsoe last June because the caae involved a child. ''People ln lnaUlutloos feel a 0 certain hostility toward cbild m~lesten and rapists," Herrera said. . Alcala, 36, of Monterey Part, as ebarcect with the abduct.ion and alaytq of Ml.ls Samaoe 12 of Huntingt.On Beach. • ' The prosecution an the cue has relied on testimony the past few days of jallbouae Informers who were with Alcala when he was taken Into custody at Orange County Jail laat sum- mer. Herrera, who testlried Wed· neaday that Alcala admitted at>-· ducting and beating Mias Samsoe unconscious. said in- mates look down on prisoaers being held for crimes against children. He said he had bis own personal "code of eth1cs" as tar• a.s children were concerned and he admitted ltlat the nature of the charges against Alcala bothered him Because be has lived in In· st1tutions most or his life, he said, the hostility toward rapists a nd child molest.en becomes ln· grained among inmates. Under questioning by both prosecut.oc Richard Farnell and defense auomey John Bi.rnett. Herrera denied he had been promised any special deals or breaks for bis testimony Free on bail accused of viola· t 1on of probation . Herrera tesllf1t'd Wednesday that AJcaJa told him dunng Ja1lhouse con· "'.er~at.Jon..c; how he lured Miss Sam ~<Jt~ into hts car al the '>ea.shore in Hunt.mgton Beach: He said the murder defendant told the &irl he wanted to take piclW"el ol ~r for a ma1•ane that it wouldn't take Joa, and that be would .,_, her. SC Ponde r s Two-block Trading Cor e Rt>presentat1ve!> of the San C'lt'mente Chambe r of Com- ffil'r<'~ are spearheading an ef. fort to create a parkmg and trade chslnct which would in· C'lude aJI businesses lD a two block section of Avenida Del Mar and a section of El Camino Real The chamber task force, in· r I ud1ng merchants Sergio Puente. John Edwards a nd Stu R~ an 1s ~e<·i-ing signatures on a pet1t1on for a City Council hear· ing on the proposal. The city would have to provide about $12,000 in funds for park· ing and business promotion of the ftnns in the district. Financ· ing for the district would come through an increase in the busi- ness license fees of the firms within the district, the chamber representatives said 00 ••ma's Mayor Wim Endonemenl8 1 The Luuna Beadl Tupayen ' A11oeiatTon and tbe La1una Beach POlice Emplo1eea Al· toclaUon •ve endoned lll10I' J adc McDowell ln b.ll bid tor a . second ,.,._year term on tbe Ct· ty Council. Newport Surf and Sport ...... ltof• 2224 Newport l t¥d. Newport l eactl ns.m• 'Store 2 21CM Marine Ave. l elboa t9'and en-ran s .... , s....c .... ...... c .... ...... '41·0523 with this coupon Expires April 30 I 1980 The ~ orguJ.aaUon cited McDowell for bll ''coDllDued wort • blbalf of la• ..,. .. meat." I 'I I .......... .__... ·-· ............ 1V~ating Youth Gon ~~~~~~~~~.._y~.~~ OAKLA!'4D (AP> -lt'1 M 11&4 ~Injunction-Asked.- •'°'7 -buDJ', "11·~ ..... k* '° w .... tM .............. e-. cloeeD 't S.wlw a W....., ::J°:o.ddiJll -...... bMD ..... to· dNt.& ud tM Cl&llM' to lite ta ....... .. of tbe wont crime ''"'' In Ca Wonda lllltOlj. Betcn U.y wer. ftnWwd, David and K.llllDMh lloore bad committed • tot•l ot m f•aont•. laeludlna • ttou~ ble m.-, alx rapee, roM!eri• and beaUnp -all In a apu ol two monU. lD ltTI. AP..._ OAVIO Ka ..... TM A Jury found them guilty of all those crimes, and Wednesday sen- tenced David, 27, to the slate's gas chamber. Kenneth, 21, was ordered to prlaoo for life without possibility of parole. But according to their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Eldr ld'e Moore, the brothers were raise<\ ln a secure re- ligious family of seven children. A minister testified that the brothers were well-behaved as youngsters, even singing in a church choir, and ot•en ..in.d 0.., ••re bappy and IMmed WllJ·adJUSled, Bu1 u.JaP went aovr. flnt for D•Yid, llaei for keno.th. In 1911. David WM caevld.M of .... uh.llta • polke omo.r. He lpttR t.bl nnt 11¥9 yean at Dwel VoeaUonaJ IAIUtute La Tracy. n WAI A IOCllY time. Durtna a conJu1a1 vllit be reportedly attacked h.11 wile and then uaed b1a two-year. old dauahler •• a lbJeld when ru•rds al med at lUm. A family friend teatlfled that David'• behavior aeemed to cbaqe p. d --~p markedly aner hla release frQm .., • .. ~ ..... prlaon ln 1m. and lbat he becalbe Construction goes on at Mat.so~ Navigation Company's dlaenchaoted with society. Shortly alter David waa released. computer-assisted overhead container handling system Kenneth wu jailed for a sen ea of <lower right) at its Port of Los Angeles terminal while .auto burglaries. Upon bis release in ship loading and unloadiJtk goes on at dockside . July of 1978, h e joined bis older========================= brother and beaan the rampage that included 26 robberies, aix rapes, and ~ Ki p 1 • the fatal shooting or Eileen ao1ers R · eep ee • n H and her daughter , Laur.a Muhlen-.,~~ brpch. · THROUGHOUT THEIR six-week trial, David and Kenneth seemed UD· concerned about their rate. Al one point they slouched in their chairs and grinned while a 66-year·old woman told how she was raped at gunpoint. The Moores chatted during the 30 minutes It took to read the verdicts. They were found guilty on all counts. FREMONT CAP > -Suburban housewives who have flocked to a Fremont night club to watch male strippers got some good news a s the City Council adopted a law requiring use permits for future strip parlors -but not existing ones. "They simply couldn 't pass a law stopping our guys from dancing in their shorts. unless they wanted to look awful silly ... said promoter Danny Zeno. . The new law was the weakest of four proposals the council con sidered Tuesday night. ~ LOS ANGELES CAP> -TM ftnl ~anl pout. ble ettabjllhJDent ot ~:::•I polje1 to U. ._ ...... inl piracy ot pay te aJcaala bave tam lD federal eourt here. "" U.S. Dtstrict Court J udie Lawreo.c. T. L)'diek toc>IE a - der consideration Weda.eaday a req..t b7 t.bl nation's lar1eat pay TV company, National Sub1crlptlon Televiaion, for a prellmtoary lnjunetkJa to ltop the pirat-ing of its lig:nab. PiratiDc pay television Stoa.la and tel.UDI equipment to decode the scr ambled alpala i1 1ro•iD1 u pay televiaioo spruda acroa tbe country, and tllere appean to be no federal law clearly pniblbitiq tbe praetlce. NA'l10NAL. WBICB OPDATD Ute ON TV aublcrtp- tion service, bu filed suit aplmt aevera1 k>cal electronic shops and individuals alle1edly involved in piratlDc signals in an effort to have the courts establiah federal guidelines. ON TV charces • monthly fee of about $20 to its 250,000 subscribers in Southern Calllora.ia. Judge Lydick postponed an Immediate decision oo the firm's i.Qjunctioo request, saying be wanted more time to study the fuuy laws governin1 the interception and decod- mg of the signals without paying a fee. Lydick appeared to be cautious in bis approach to the case, noting that "I'm being asked to establish a national policy." BE SAID HE COULD not find in bis reseattb any basis for the establishment of a private right protecting the pay TV signal and said be was reluctant to create one. He said the key question was not his interpretation of the laws. but what wu the congressional intent. Attorney Arthur Greenberg, representing ON TV. said. "What's at stake ls a major California Industry, which pro- vides a service add employment. "U the court denies this injunction it becomes an in· vitation to these companies to advertise and sell their de· vices " Airless Titt! 1t'erks Flats No Problem LOS ANGELES CAP> -It you'ye evei"been stranded on a rainy night changing a flat tire, take heart. The Dunlop Tire Co. says it bas come up with a tire that not only would gel you home s afely if it goes flat, but wouid get you all the way across the country without even causing your car to weave or your wheel to be dented. Dunlop spokesman David Cole said a test car arrived in Los Angeles from Boston on Wednesday, driving all the way with one or its steel- belled radials without air. Cole contended the feat was ac- complished by uslng a system made up of both the tire and the wheel on which it was mounted. The tire sidewall is specially de- signed to lock onto the special rim and a loss of air pressure locks it on even more, so the tire can't come off ' the wheel Before starting the trip on March 24, Dunlop engineers tried to flatten the tire by drilling a bole in the self-sealing tire. But that didn't work. Cole said. and the tire's valve stem had to be removed to let out the air pressure. Space Probe 'Dies' Viking 1.ande r 2 Mars Artifact PASADENA lAP) -After a 3"'2· year search for life on Mars, one of two space probes has run out of en e r gy end d'1ed. the Nationa l Aeronautics and Space Administra- tion says. "Now it will just sit there as an a rtifact on the surface of Mars for centuries to come," s pace agency spokesman Bristow said Wednesday or Viking Lander 2. But be added that its twin, Viking Lander 1, is still operating on the planet's surface and "we expect it to go on into the decade ol the 1980s ... ....,. •L.ear11i•g' SAN FRANCISCO (AP > -Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. says he's glad to be home after learning the voters "didn't feel I was ready to be presi· dent. "Every effort is a learning ex· perience, .. said Brown upon his r~­ turn to the s tate from Wisconsin Wednesday night after folding his bid for the Dem ocr atic presidential nomination. Brown finished third in the Wisconsin primary. ~ ....... LOS ANGELES (AP) -A county supervisor who criticized a colleague whose aide gave confessed Hillside Strangler Kenneth Bianchi a county windshield decal is trying now to re - cover three stickers she issued. Supervisor Yvonne Brathwaite Bur ke admitted Wednesday she authorized three decals for a San Pedro bail bondsman and ls having difficulty getting them back. A> : ......... ~ ....... : .. • < ( ___ BRl_E_Fs_) Gap Bkui Fn•••n• SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -Leaders or the homosexual community have denounced Mayor Dianne Feinstein for naming a heterosexual to a seat traditionally held by gays on the Board of Permit Appeals. The mayor appointed Louis Giraudo to the post h eld by gay representatives for t~e pas t five years. The board, a key local govern- ment agency. decides on appeals of permit applications after they have been considered by the cit y's plan- ning, fire and police commissions and the Central Permit Bureau. Oaima Delatf c ••• '" SAN DIEGO CAP) -Property owners already told they s uffered almost $2 million in airport noise damage have wailed too long to col- lect on their claims, a jury says. The final word, however , will come from Superior Court Judge Carlos A. Cazares within the next 20 days. He said earlier that a five-year statute or limitations governs the case. The damage must have begun by Nov. 30, 1968, and the lawsuits riled by Nov 30, 1973, lbe jurors said Wednesday. But the suits were aJI brought after July 1975. for z"fn~Df5-1?~1" • . SFA 5 Storewide Post-Easter C Jearance ... with 20% to 50% off Original Prices * Now find terrific savings on great selections of fashions from: Designer Dresses, Evening Apparel, Coats and Suits Better Dresses 'SFAbulous and 'SFAntast1c Coats and Swts, Sportswear, Dresses Designer and Better Sportswear, Sport Separates, Adive Sportswear Sportcoats, Suits, Sportdresse~ Sportswear, D resses, Coa ts, Ramwear for Juniors tn Right On' Robes, Sleepwear and Loungewear Matern ity Collections Infants' and Toddlers: Ctrls' and Boys' sizes 4 to 6X, Girls ' sizes 7 to 14 Spot for Teens Apparel. Blouse Coll~t1ons Fashion Jewelry, Swiss Watches, Cultured Pearls Womens Shoes Belts, Scarves, T-shirts Handbag Collections Sale$ Fifth AVt'nue at South Coast Plaza. JJJJ Bristol Street, Costa ~ . Open Mond~y through Saturda y. from 10 A.M. ro 9:JO P.M • ... , C ~ Beach voten Mxt T\Mlday will "Mlecl two il1CoimoU ... 1teftlnm.afiekhf~tane will aliOitea a city dertc Md a rity t.reuurer. B..ect Oil performlDCel at ca.DdJdates' fonama. back· , growld. clvlo eontrlbuUou and atabWty, Ute D&tty PUot bell ve. lbe belt cbolctia are: .. SaU,y Bell rue, U\(umbeet counc:Uwoman. Nell Fib~trick, plannlnl commtuklner and cor· porate manaS". -Fran elhardt ror city treuurer. former bual· · ne a drrlia:Ultra or -V ma RoWn1er, b•C\lmbent cl\)' cter\c. Mrs. Bellerue. a four.year c:ouncU member and former &>lannin1 eomm•winMr, hH an est.abUlhed record in vat.Int for bsUM that canNm the cltJ1em of LIJuna Beach raUa~r lbaa deftlopera and apeclal Interest • grou,pe. She aupporta a ratl~ for development of Luauna Canyon, one that w .., recnatloqa( uses pre· dominate. while paytna oll the • million debt to the · former owners ol Sycunor• Hllll. Al pre.Sent. her plan in· eludes oonstrucUun of 300 homes on El Toro Road and the hope for $2 million irom the purchase of tbe National Urban Park. Fitzpatrick holds similar beUef s reaarding the future .of LagWla Beach. As a plannlng commissioner, he has s hown a grasp of the complexities of ioning and general plans . As a business executive, he is knowledgeable in fiscal and budget matters. For the city treasurer post Fran Engelhardt would re· rnain independent of the City Council and cit~ administrators in investing city money. The 30-year bus1· ness administrator does not consider the Job that of an honorary post. She vows to work full time as guardian of the city's resources. Verna Rollinger is running unopposed for another four-year term as city clerk. Probably the reason she is unopposed is that she is competent at her job. San OeJDente Ch.;ice Two freshman council members will be elected to the embattled San Clemente City Council Tuesday. Five candidates are running.· In making recommendations for those council seats, the Daily Pilot carefully considered the outcome or such a n election on the political balance of the panel. We recommend· -Bill Mecha m , a former planning commissioner and teacher . He would closely scrutinize development in the hills behind San Cle mente a nd insure current residents do not suffe r from traffic congestion, lack of sewa~e facilities and police and fire protection. -Robert Limberg. current planning commissioner · ;.ind retired businessman. is more conservative in tone. but appears to be independent and able to work toward resolving the endless conflicts of previous councils. He is <Jlso knowledgeable in the general plan process and the intricacies of a budget. On San Clemente ballot measures. we recommend: -Yes on Proposition A, which calls for a $2.75 million plan to widen EJ Camino Real through town. Funding wouJd com e from federal, state and·local gas tax money. -No on Propos ition B. which proposes five councilmanic voting districts be established. -No on Proposition C. which would make the city treasurer's office an appointive post. The Da ily Pilot also recommends voters e lect Leona rd Marks as city treasurer because of his ex· penence as a corporate treasurer and his background as a t<~acher of public finance courses San Jnan: lnc11mbents San Juan Capis trano voters Tuesday will select two council members from a field of seven. • The Daily Pilot recommends : -Kenneth Priess, incumbent mayor and high school t eacher. -Lawrence Buchheim, incumbent councilman and rancher. Friess, a four-year councilman. has been a strong s upporter of the general plan. but has s hown a willing· ness to compromise He led a city contingent in a battle to save the ~1d_geli~e above the city from development. Buchheim. a life-long San Juan Capistrano resident bas brought balance and thoroughness to his job. One of the hallmarks or the small town atmosphere which San Juan Capistrano prides itself on is attention to individual problems as well as those facing the communi· ty at large. Both incumbents take time to talk to citizens, allow public debate in council chambers and do their .homework before making decisions. • Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views expressed on 1h1s page are those of their authors and artists, Reader comment 1s 1nv1ted. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321 . Boyd/Philatelists ByL.M.BOYD Serious stamp collectors have a personal charac· teristic in common -they tend to show up right on time ror appointments. Or so says a New York psychiatrist who made a study or those philatelists. No explanation or how their promptness re· lates to their bobby ls of· rered. But this doctor says his findings came from ftlr more than merely the visits of stamp collectors to his own office. He says be re· searched the appointment patterns of a broad sampling of such collect.ors to learn they were exceedingly punctual in almost all sllua· ~ODS. Dear Gloomy Gus Gasoline won't be cheaper bought by lbe liter instead of the gallon, but lt may make you regret the time you spent u a kld leamlna thfl old system or measurements. • "litotbing new about electric 1 vehicles. British dairies have been using electric trucks for more than 30 years. .-D.M. .. ' It's said about the Gemini woman tlult 11he'11 forev«-r n student, quick to rel\:iond tri new notlnn~. Stll' t(•n1l'l tu learn qukkly, h~I hl t• • .11 .. she's so busy dotn[! th.ti thtn1. ahe'a lnCUned to roq;tt a lcU, too. Contrary to ap. pearance, 1he'1 not abtentmlnded. Her heed .is OY•rb bul)'. Or IO claim tbl ......... WAllllNOTON -fte .,,,,,.,.,. aq ., ..., cua•••• Ntllat'-tii. at ••r•h•cl Pol Pot'• •••-Nl9 II CIODUlndlli m· der .._....._ Nalme lleptlA :.i::::,.•1 Ua• v1:'::.r.4.'n~ Ual ,..._ -:.~ bJ U.. State D ........ TIMt.· •• .,.. trom u.& Am.. Mii .... Monon Ablamowtu ID nallud t.U of murder, rape and theft of lnterna· tlonal food 1upplie1 by the Ottlq>)'lnt Vietnamese trOOPI. Their harsh treat· moot has so alienated the naUve Khmer population that the puppet Heng Samrin govern· .ment can keep its tenuous bold on the country only by the naked mllltary force of it.s Vietnamese masters. I Mailbox From reporta of U.t«vlewen ctl•pattMd to ~M Hmpt Oft the Thal-Cam Ian border. Abramowltl laa1 advlHd Secretary of St.It. C7naa Vance that "rape and robbery by PAV N ( Vlet11amue) aoldlert are unlfor"ly reported ... from aU part.I of Kampu•a <Cambodla). •• EVEN OFFICIALS of the Qul•Unc eovemmeot bave been fleetn1 their homeland In droves. Abramowlti reports. "Their elect.ion to escape (for> eventual resettlement ln (other> countries Is baaed on the com· mon pereeptioo t.bat Ille under lbe Vietnamese ls intolerable." states ooe cable. It cites t.be twin molJvating fact.ors u .. dread or a represa1ve Communist re· gilne" and the "ubiquitous threat or starvation .. As historic ethnic enemies of the Cambodians. the Viel· namese have no qualms about at•aljq food rrom the •tarvtoc natives. one man in blood· atalned trouaen dacrtbed to an lntervtewer bow the Vietn•Dleff had ambu1hed him and bl1 frtenda. "He still had some rtce only becau•e the Vletoamese already had stolen more than they could carry from his murdered companions." one cable relates. ble relates. ACOOaDING TO the refugees, the Vietnamese distnbute relief supplies of rice by day "in the presence of international workers.. then confiscate Cit> after the workers depart the scene." or replace it with c.rn. Some Soviet·suppUed com .. 1s still clogging one warehouse but is so unappealing that only the most hungry will eat at," Lhe cable reports Abramowitz has also provided evidence to support contmued claims Lhat the Vietnamese are actually shlpi>lng foreign nee supplies intended for Cambodia . ba~k to t.betr °"" country. A mWUamu wu q.-.. in one c.ble: 1'He 11w two carso bar1u arrive from Vl•tnam with ~. Alter unloadtnc. one of I.he bar1ea waa filled with rice. whJch he claimed beaded for Vietnam." Other wltnea1ea included a woman who "Hid ahe bad twice seen Vietnamese load rice oo baraes at night, then bead for Vietnam." and "a former his· tory professor Cwbo> claimed that he saw two trucks lo.sed with rice bead ... toward Viet· nam.' AN AMERICAN scholar, Stephen Heeler, was qaoted at length by the ambassador, who descnbed his observaUona u a "solid, penetrating look" at CambodJa. Heder wrote : "Well-organized teams of Vietnamese troops ... con· sumed some of <Cambodia's home.grown> rice themselves, provided some or it to their closest collaborators, sold some or at on the black markets in the urban centers. and sent some of 1t back to Vietnam. officially or unomc1ally ... The few Cambodians who cooperate with the conquerors get several pounds or edible ri ce a month. but ordinary peasants often get only r ed corn or .. small. broken rice from Viet· nam which they said made them vomit." one cable reports. Reher medical s upplies are a l~o peddled on the black market. thei r foreign origin ('learly 1denllhable. Abramowitz reported Offk1als of the puppet regime a re believed to be prof· 11E>eri ng on the international relief ~upphe!> f''ootnote· The cables, though detailing the d1vers1on of foreign a id. confi rm that many of the '>UPPhE's do find their way lo the Cambodia n populac e . Abramowitz told Vance that the relief effort must continue 1f famine 1:. lo be averted. And -------• :.ources told my associate Les Whitten that Cambodian aid will 5urv1ve Pres ident Carter's budget cuts. Move National Park South for 'Free' Land? To the Editor: The proposal to try and buy 19,000 a cres in South Orange County from the ocean to the San Diego Freeway for $76 m1lhon cannot be done at that price. This is only $4,000 per acre. and s.uch land in Orange County has not sold for that re· cently, But don't ~ive up hope for a park -just move it down the coast 61h miles and use U.S.· owned land -purchase price zero. How to do this? Convert less than If 7th, or 17 .000 acres of the northerly end or Ca mp Pendleton to a park. Add th.is to existing San Onorre State Beach of 3,158 acres and you have 20,158 acres and you still have our $76 million. THE ABOVE new location ror free also avoids all the following bad points about the proposed Orange County location: 1. The real land cost is prob- ably $380 million ($20,000 per acre), and why spend that huge sum when there is U.S.-0wned land 6'h miles south? 2, It will remove 19,000 acres from the tax rolls. thereby rais· ing everyone else's taxes. · 3. It wUI eliminate residenliat- locationa, and supporting busi· nesses for 225,000 persoM, and all Jot. therein forever. 4. It will prohibit rorever all the hundreds or thous ands or Jobs in constructing residences and businesses on 19,000 acres. S. The taxes the 19,000 de· veloped acres will produce are lost lorever 6. The U.S. already owns 12S,OOO acres at Camp Pendleton which b only 6'h miles down the coast and the U.S. Marines do not use, or need, anywhere near all of that 12.S.000 acres -the7 .,ould not miss 17,000 acres, and would still have 108,000 acres to operate on. N.H. SMEDEGAABD lleperCl .. IJ•fetr To the Edit.or: Steve MU.chell'1 article on the front pa,e or last Friday's Daily Pilot shows biased reportln1 In . rel(3rrl to compatr.n contribu· tloM f<'r t.apuna· Oeacb 's city t n• ''< I c•le<-tlr '· Ile dcsct'ibes N1•l I 1'"1 t zp l\trlck as "top, lil><!nd"!/' a deroaatory "bun word'• lael8 dayt and oae which · does not till t.be whole truth. ID tblc=acei u lM leut· k.DOWD te. t ....... l"U· IOD&lll• Uaet Mr. P'ltapatrtck .., Dlld to aptGd more tban the others But until the orric1al tabulatJon has been made arter lbe election. the "top spender .. cannot be finally determined WHAT IS much more 1moor tant. but not headlined by 'Mr Mitchell, 1s the fact that Mr Fitzpatrick '1as received twice the contributions of any other candidate. And, even more ln· teresting. more tharf half or these have come from our loeal Laguna artists. Our adisllc community is one or Laguna's mainstays. part or our heritage a nd our life blood. Our artists enrich our Lives and help make Laguna the special place 1t 1s And, why are the other can- didates' contributions referred to as campaign funds and Mr. Fitzpatrick's as a "war chest "? JoumalisUc ethics require ob- Jectivily and imparl.Jahly m re· porting. SUSAN MOZINGO .-ec•~~kr To the Editor: If it weren't so p1t1ful. I should have a good laugh at Supervisor Edison Miller·s urging Richard O'Neill to r esign as s tate Democratic chairman. Rather than offer the people of his dis· trict a positive approach to their needs, he wastes the taxpayers· money on haranaulng an im · agined "political machine" led by O'Neill and lnvolvtng just about every elected official In the county. both past and pres- ent. Methinks. dear Edison, a couple of su11esllons are In order. First, the supervisor's position ls a non·politicaJ position; we don't care to which party a can· • dldate belonp as long a1 he aets the belt Job done ror his cooatil· uedt.a. Secoad. to dredae up dirt on penoaallUes of the past m~ " laqa ~ in hotter water than an· Ucapated. aloni with your bQd. dies Fonda, Hayden and Moon· beam Brown. Many proud veterana have not roraotten YoW' service record and I sincerely hope your opponent brtnaa it to the attention of the voters. loud· ly and dearly! HARRY W, wrrr Elton• La•dabr.c, To the Edit.or: Tbe editorial poalUon of the Dally Pttot ...ould hopefully sup- port the po1IUon ol tht m~t1 of an entire community, llllell'1· ty In aovernment and tbe cillHDI. rl1bt to bODHl repreaentaUon. On Ma.rcb 11 I ' you r ed1 tori a I -;ta l E'S San C'l<'mente has had enou~h r<'Cdll act1 v1ty and ha rd!) "'111 benefit fro m one more ,. When d .. velope,._ art' "'Jilin~ to s pend lh OU5J nds o f dollar-.. fur sophisticated profo5s1onal out of town goons to financiall y O\!'r whelm our cit) and takE' O\l'r local government. we "ould hope the press would c;tand up for the local c1t1Zen Your ed1tonal adv1se5 us that this 1s ··tegal. · · Legal -ye::.. however. what about the legalll}' of their methods. and what 1t can do to a city., The Registrar of Voters ruled that hundreds or recall signatures were obtamed by people not permitted b) law to sohc1t signatures. e g not reg 1stered voters. not residents of San Clemente. not of age. etc These signatures we re stJll ac· cepted by the City Cleric THE financial reports for on<' developer·s local front or~an1za tion "Citizens for Responsible Government .. listed non·ex1sllng addresses for payments. pay ments to a.t lea.st one business without a business license. etc . We have witnessed the de · veloper·backed councilpersons refuse public hearings ror the building of thousands or new houses. We have had a major Canadian·based develo~ do over a million dollars of grading our hills without a permit and our city manager then taking the job as their vice president. Not one person lo San Clemente wants a recall or en· Joys the lOflg bard work without financial reward working to pro- tect our city against those that arrogantly refuse to pe rmit public bearings and refuse to represent the interest or the en- tire community. The citizens o( San Clemente sbouJd be laUded for their efforts to gain honest representation, and their strua· ale qalnsl money bun1ry pollU· clans willing to sell their city for financial or pollUcal aain. HOWARD F. MUSHETJ' Councilman <Recalled) ..-0eee..,,....e1 To the Editor: Election time has come to Laauna Beach and u ·expected, Quotes ·•Freedom of the prus 11 the staff of life for any vlLal do- mot.racy.·• W'*U WWIW A mmca.. L.oqft' Giid polUicol ...., ' false and misleading statements are betng circulated about the t·and1dates. It 1s almost enough to make a person wish that we did not have lo have elections! I am not an "observer" of all Laguna &>ach City Council hap· pening,s and I was intrigued re· cently lo learn that some can· d1dates Bellerue and Fitzpatrick. I think -were try. mg to unseat Mayor McDowell on the bas is that he is pro· development and will hand over our hillsides to the subdividers. FROM MV recollection of what has happened in the last two years this did not seem ac· curate so I did a little checking. Guess what? I found that in the past three years the Laguna Beac h City Councll has con· s1de red only three requests for s ubdivision. or these reqµests, two were turned down complete· ly and one was approved for OD· ly six homes! This sure doesn't sound like handing the town over to the developers to me. Along this line, I seem to re· member th e "mi dnight downzoning caper," as the newspapers called It then, that occurred when the previous city council, before Dawson, Baglin and Kelly Boyd were elected. when we had Bellerue and Sweeny and Johnson running thin1s their own way. decided to change the z.oning on a lot of properly in Laguna Beach. The council chambers were empty of people because it was so late and the only ones to witness the action were ne wspaper re- porters. Thank God for the newspapers or we might never have known what really took place. Although Bellerue may open.bi talk in lofty terms about keeping lb~ developers out. now al least those who would like to try to de- velop fel the benefit of a public heartni before they get turned down. When Bellerue and her crowd had their way bow wu their, little hatchet Job on proper. ty owners done? Jn an empty council chamber without ff vine the people who owned the prop. erty a chance to offer any kind of statement. Is this the dem- o c r a tl c action that we cherish? CRAIG JOHNSON • .,... .,...., N.-..--c-.... ..... c-•WJ ..._.......,,., u.... .......... ....... .......................... C4111111 ....... CA tt• ~ c.11f1 ff tw ,.._. ... ..................... _. ... _...,... .. ............ _ ... .._ ..... .. ltlCiMN ... _, ................... .... <In-'? II • , t I • ' ; ' ~ ' . ;; ~ ~ , ( • .. . • I 1 I 1 t .. -------------------------~---:_ ___ , __________ _ ~----------............ ...-..---..-., I AN OUGINAL SEVEN C011PLES were ac· c~~ for the program, out ol thousand.a wbo ap-p~. There were 2,500 couples on the lnltial wait· ing list; the day after the lab 1ot state approval, 300 more called. An unspecified number of women have &one through the process of in vitro ferWization, in which an e11 la aur1ically removed from a woman's ovary, fertilized with her husband's sperm in the petri dish and transferred to the woman'• uterus. The hospital bas not said, and will nots~. ii successlul PftlDaDcies have been achieved. Medical scllool spokesman Vernon Jones said th~ clinic's doctors, led by the busband·and·wile team ol Howard and Georgeanna Jones, want to "shield the ladies" from disturbances that ewld disrupt the bonnooe levels c.ruclal for successful implantatiooa. THE PATIENTS AaE WOMEN WHOSE Fallopian tubes, the conduits from ovary to uterus, are misaiaa or irreparably blocbd. Jones described the P.rocess u sort of a "Fallopian tube bypaaa. We're providing the passage. It's sort of like a helicopter plclrin~ up • cargo -the egg -in one place and puttiJll it in another." He said the clinic should be able to treat about 50 women a year. The procedure costs about $4,000. Blue.Cross of Virginia bas said it will not pay the costs. The women see in vitro fertilization as their last chance to bear children. But others see it as tne fll'lt step toward something unsafe and lm· moral. OPPONENTS· OF THE PROCEDUBE have three main complaints: that it bas not been tested enough; that fertilized eggs, which some consider the beginoiDg of life, will be destroyed if not de- veloping property; and that defective embryos will be aborted. They say they a lso. fear that in vitro . fertilization will lead to production -out of the womb -of genetically controlled babies, as described in Aldous Huxley's "Brave New World." The Tidewater chapter of the anli·abortion Viriioia Society for Human Llfe failed in its at· tempt to get state Attorney General Marshall Coleman to seek an injunction against the clinic. Norfolk businessman Charles Dean, chapter president, said tbe group plans further legal actlon, partly on the ground.I the state review was not done properly. BUT DOCl'ORS INVOLVED WITH the clinic claim the fears are unfounded. They said that the procedure baa been carried out safely ln England -where Louise Brown. the world's first .. test-tube baby" was born in 1978 - and Auatrall~_, that abortions will be neither more not leu avauable to clinic patients than tb other P!'f Pant women, and that they have no intention of mass producing human beings. Dr. Jaci. Rary, the EVMS scientist who nms the lab, said fertilization is attempted on only one ea at a lime. Rary is responsible for checking to see if an •II is contained in the fluid removed from the wdman. for setting up the eu for fertilization and for de~ 1f ferlilizatioo bu taken place. . BU'I' BB NOTED THAT oocroas do not make the ftDal determinatiml whether the ea is 1ood -able to be fertilized. "The sperm know which eggs are 10Qd.'' be sald. "We don't have to make that d~ision." If fertlllzation does take place in a petri dish, usually within 12 hours, the fertilized egg is in· cubat.ed for another 36 hours and then transferred to the uterus .. That's about ·the same time span an egg fertilized naturally would take to travel down to the uterus and implant itself, Rary said. RABY SAID BE KNEW mE clinic wouldn't receive unanimous approval, "but I bad no idea tbere would be that much opposition." "I pea I'm 1°'*108 at it differeaUy, that we'd tnaly be be1plq people wbo couldn't bave babies," be said. Rary uld be llu Invited some opponentl to $it the lab but nooe baa accepted. "rd be wlllinl to show them," be said. "I've cot DOtbiQI to hide." Firefighter Is Nun SEA CLIFF, N.Y. (AP) -The first woman •olunteer member of the Sea Cliff Fire De~ ls a nunl. Slater Maq Sopb.la. Tbe nre CoaDcu cleared the membenbip of die bl81Y trained nun. Fire-Cblef Edwtd Neice aald that Sliter ~ a •,ear-old nune at 8t. ~r·s J!ltme, w• tllll tint woman to applf tor a Job with !IP J.00.memW ftre deparUnent Oil Lone bland. j. • ...,. __ .. . -. ·--.--.... NO BABIES OR TEST TUBES Dr. Jack Rary and Petri Dtah PAUL RYCKOFF INCUMBENT , ........... x Old fashioned, romantic dinner-dancing is back in style. ... and the Grand Poculc now o«ers you an a~ to compct'C with your &Yorite memory. Soft tinkliog dinoc:r auic, elegant andldit table ~· thr grandeur d flaming tabk:sidc coolc.ay. The ultlnmcly dallCcabic Dick PowdJ Trio is featured · 1but5day throu8b Saturday 7 lO ~and 50ft piano odlcr' ~ SEAFOOD CONNOISSEURS ~REGISTRY 18800 MacAn:hur 8oulcv.ud ( 71-4 ) 7Fi2""17 Thr.._. ...... ,_l ...... ~ . . INSUR~\) OUR GUMMllTll ro SMAI.& INVIS'IOllS. NOONEMUMYYOUMORIOllA 30MOlllHMONIY MMlflT .ACCOUNT. 12• % -12.935% un · -y+•p Rates effective Aprll 1 through Aprll 30. $100 minimum deposit. 30 month term. uaoRTANT: Yilldl ... C:: on• f8YOrllble 386138().day~ factor. Y5etdt lnclcllNd.,. yeerlv wringl II l9ft k1 .. 80CQR tor oneyw . .,..... la~ dtlJ/it Ind S*d ~. dlpCIAl-by the 10lh Of ttw monlh 9lfT1 from the 11t oC the month If l9ft until qulrtl(a end . .,_... NdudlOn tor-.ty Wltd•& ... We guarantee it. No one will pay you more on guaranteed. Plus convenience in savfngs with Insured savrngs. lm~r1al Savings pays the high-hours that serve you best. Come in today to your eat rates that federal regulations allow. Higher convenient Imperial Savings office. , than ~bank.. . . Meet the fast and friendly people at lmp8rlal. The highest annual yields for your savings • ~ . 01mPERIRI SAVlnGS AND LOAN ASSOCIA-f.JON .. -~ ~IW ~ Colt.a u.11, South eo.t Pim Town c.nw-331 o Bristol Street (714) 540-7591 Newpo'18••ch -3368 Via Udo (714) 673-3130 · Nnrport Centlr-550 Newport center Drive (714) 844-1481 .1 t I • .. !" ,• ~ 4 • .. .. "" ~ -. .... .. -: ... : .. ~ . '.J ... ... •• ...; -. :~ 7· .. .. _:."': .,. .. ·-· ..... :ii ~ ::: .•. .... These egrets are just one of 179 bird spec1es th a t h ave b ee n ide ntified in lrvm e's S an J oaqum Ma r sh , located along Campus Driv e b e tw ee n J a mbor ee Boulevard and Unive rs ity Drive . The 202-acre m arsh is l ocat e d o n Pac ific Flyway and serves as a home for local and visiting bi rds. ,--'-:--_B_oUll._.,.. ing, Par.king . Gain • t ,, • J' Re1tonal coa1tal com· mlN--. lla¥e approwed a low· COit MDior dtllllD llouaJ.q pro. Jtet f« ~ 8Hcb, laUCUDi tb• project for provldhl• af. fordable boUllnl and •ddlUonal parkla1 ln tbe con1e1tad dcnnatown. And tboqb the eommlNioa actloa ll Viewed u eood MWI by La1ana Beach officl&ll, there 1till remalDI a coafUet betweeo the city and• developer choMn for CODltructioo of the mulU· level project. COABTAL COMM18810N£1l8 OU. week approved the city's ap- pllcatlon for tbe three-level senior ctllz.en housing project, which would ail atop a 191-apace parking structure to be built at 475 Qlenneyre St., near the city's downtown. The parcel upon which the project would sit Is a munJcipal parkln1 lot. and were the project to be completed, the city would gain 70 park:iJla spaces. Atop the parking structure would be constructed 73 sub· sldlied senior citizen housing un· its. uld la• NaUud tbe lntual etU~ltel nre too low wben be Ukld two coatndon to pr'OYide coet ftfUlW late Wt jear. Thole ftRnl came In at tt.1 mlWoo a Sl.3 million, nclud· ln1 comwtaat aad arcbltect'a feet. Tbe city baa '415,000 la com· Pressarlag VA. mtt.Dlty d•••lopmut snal fund•, •Joa• wltb noe,• ·~ parklol ln·U•u moa•1 •'!« "40,000 la met« '"'8.... . . But chy otrleta 1114 dlef. not want to UM all of tbe .._ venu• for tbe ltnaeture ID tM' aftermetb of Prop. U IOd U.' uncertalntle1 ot Prop. t . ·-t . ;~ ' I • County Holds Back · On Veterans Cent~r. ByDELOaESBaOOKSIRWIN Of .. o.lty ...... IUff Orange County Supervisors bave declined to put up any moaey lot local counseling centers for Vietnam vet.era.DI, sayln1 they want to pressure the federal government into plckJng up t.be tab. In a 3-2 vote. supervtson rejected a request by Supervilor Ed1soQ Miller to allocate $41 ,000 for a "storefront" counsellne center in Orange County. INSTEAD, THEY establl.shed a committee to. draw up a pro- posal for such a center to pre· s ent to the Veterao a Administration for possible funding next year. Yachtsman Dead at 74 Better Late ·Than Never B UT THE C ITV is s till negotiating with Windsor Pacific Development Co.:a Los An&f'Jes based firm selec~ last.year by the federal Howilng and Urban Development Agency as the low bidder for the senior housing project. At that time. the developer s aid it could construct the structure for S754.000 • M tiler had intended that the money go to a Los An gele•· ba-sed group that would support a counseling program until federal dollars.could be secured. Miller said $41 .000 was a small amount to spend on veterans with emotional problems related lo their war experiences. Ray Purdy, a longtime rai· dent o( Costa Mesa and one ol the oldest members of the Transpacific Yacht Club, died last Saturday at bis home. He was 74 years old and bad been in ill bealtb for some time. Mr. Purdy sailed in the 1.947 Transpac race to Honolulu. He was a longtime e mployee or Lido Shipyard where be was COD· s1dered an expert on rigging. He worked at the shipyard store fr()m 195S unlJI 1962 and again from 1965 to 1971 when he re- tired. Former NB Councils, CofC'ers Thanked But revised figures presented by company officials to the Caty Council in February showed the cost would more hke ly be in the range of $1.3 to $1.9 million - more than double the proposal presented to federal officials. "THIS THING h as been st ud ied since last October," Milter said. "No a mount of pressure J.S going to bnng an an y more money in here faster. . By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of tlle o.11, ,., ... s .... Newport Beach busjnessman Paul Salata got tired of hearing bow previous city council mem· bers and the chamber of com· merce have made a mess of the city. So on April F'ool's Da y, he in· vited all the ex mem bers of the City Coun cil that he could find to lunch. RE ALSO INVITED all the ex presidents o r the Ne wport Harbor Area Chamber of Com· merce to join them. The point. he explained at the lunch. which attracted abovt 50 people. was to show the former officials and business leaders that there are a "few people in this town that th.ink that what you d1d wasn't bad alte r all." Satat.a's remark was a dig at the election campaigns being wa ged by inc umbe nts Paul Ryckoff and Ray Williams. THERE WAS NO o ve r t campaigning for their oppo- n ent~. but there were some gen eral t houghts s hared by Sa l a t a a nd m as t e r o r cere monies Les Steffensen. Steffensen. a long-time city resident. was on hand to in· trod uce the forme r counc il m e m be r s who atte nded the lunch at the Ba lboa Bay Club. ·'T hi s rs stric tly non· political,'' he told the audience. "I'm a ki nd. gentle old man and there 'U be nothing but kindness here." ··setter get o ut the Band· Aids." came a stage whisper from the audJence. FORMER COUNCIL me m· bers on hand to be ribbed by UCLA Researeh Fossil's Age Said 3.5 Billion Years LOS ANGELES CAP) -A cabbage-shaped rock from Australia apparenUy holds the oldest fossils ever found -~e remains or bac· teria that hved 31h billion years ago, says a sc1eot1st working at UCLA. "I'm confident it's a good fossil structure." said Malcolm R Walter of the Australian Bureau of Mineral Resources. "It 1s the earliest convincing evidence or life ." r THE EVIDENCE IN the rock is a series of thin, wavy layers piled one atop the other like a stack of wrinkled pancakes. Each layer , Walter said in an in· ierview, represents a colony of organisms that lived and died barely a billion years after the 1!111'th was formed. He said the bacteria were "fairly complex, consisting of a chain of cells organized into a thread-like filament.·• The discovery. a report on which has been accepted for publication in some future issue FV Burglar leaves Eatery Fmpty Handed An 8'ile burglar broke into a Fountain Valley r estaura nt tbls week by removing a rooftop air vent and lowertnc himself via a garden hose, but tbe intruder apparently wu leu resourceful about finding some loot. Police aald that once lnslcl4! Coco'• Famous Hamburgers, 1l3IO Brootbunt St., the burllar forced bla way into tbe mana1er'1 ontce but wu unable to open a safe. Th• lnt.ruder IM'ok• a cabinet door beneath a nth reclater and attempted tQ open a dcm-ette machine, bUt e•ent: Jett with no Joot, ,.Uee . Tbe tu1ped etcaped tbrouJb IM roof. vent, ltavln1 behlnd fUO wvrtlt of dama1e, police ...... ' ~r the British journa l Nature, w..as made during a continuing is .month project that brought 15 researchers from four countries ~ogether at UC:LA to sear~h fC?r the origins of life. The proJect as headed by UCLA's J . William Scbopf. WALT E R SA ID THE Australian fossil doesn't answer the question of when lire first ap· peared on Earth. It's just not possible to ex- trapolate back to when lire might have begun," he said. The fossil evidence of life a lready bad been firmly established back to about 2.3 billion years. Some researchers have cited evidence at 3.4 billion years, althougb_ that .conclusion !! <!~Ii'!~. - In September, University of Marylan<I researchers an- nounced tbat chemical tests on · the oldest known rocks -3.8 billion-year-old fragments found in Greenland -indlca~ the presence of Ille. WALTE• SAID PAaT ol that worlt wu done by members of the UCLA team and "there is some questioo about bow to ln· terpret it." But, be aaid" "we've eome to a firm conclualon" about the 3~·bUlloo-year-old rock found in the northwest corner of the state of Western AuatraUa. The dome- Uke formation ta atlc>ot M lDahel htab and 18 iDcbes on a aide. Now found on dry land, lt wu under w1teT when aucceulve coloaiee ol ba~rla were build· lDf~ an DO ontened c.111 wlthto the atn_aetu~. '' Walter 11td. It ... coaftnDed •• a '-11 ''by tbt fact that there are 1UDJ moden1 ltnletur'e9 of UM NDM type ind tbtre are alto Jiil.iD ... ,... ........... .. Steffensen were Milan Dostal, Lucille Kuehn. Pete Barrett. Richard CrouJ , Ed Hirth, Doreen Mars hall. Dee Cook . Bob Shelton, Don Higbie . Dora Hill and Francis Horvath. Retiring Council member Don Mcinnis was a lso included on the roster of ex-councilmen. "We may not always have agreed with one another." Stef· fensen said of the 91 council m embers who've served the city over lbe past 74 years, "but we never questioned one another's sincerity. ·'The people wbo have served on our city council have helped m ake Newport Beach a prime residential community and an important financial center. It is an ideal place in which to live. work and play.'' SALATA HAD A FEW gifts for the former council members -bicentennial ballpoint pens, copies of 1931 newspaper ads for Lido Isle property and re· solutions of gr atitude for their service from the present city counctl. E~ch of the resolutions of gratitude bore a large stamp mark : "Rejected 5·2," in another swipe at the present city council majority . COUNCIL MEMBERS at that time voted unanimously to ~ase ne gotiations witb Winds or Pacific, but last month agreed to allow the city manager and com- pany officials attempt to work out an agreement. C ity planning direct o r Marlene Roth said Wednesday the coastal commission endorse· menl ls good.news. "We're still worklnl oo 1\be a1reement with Windsor and hope we will have aomeWng to report to the City CouncLl by April 15." she said. "The fact the coastal rom mission has approved the pro· ject JS one more milestone that has been accomplis hed We'd like to proceed with the proJect so that at a lime we come to a satisractory agre eme nt with Windsor. ther e will be no more delays," she sa1d A I though supervisors agrttd local CO\D\Seling centers for the veter ans are needed, the board ·majority sided with Chairman 1tlllph Clark when he said. "It should be a federal agency handling these problems. As long as we're getting the job done. they will tum their backs on us" He wa s wide l y known througho ut the yacb tin& rraternity and was a paid skip- per aboard Al Barbee's yacht. Zoe 8, for many years. He is survived only by bis mother or the Costa Mesa borne. Funeral arrangements an be- in g handled by the Neptune society. Interviews Slated For 1V Game Show Persons rnterested in parucipal.lng m 1.be ~levisioo game sbow ''Hollywood Squa res" w1U be mterv1ewed tlus month al tbe Festival of Arts Forum Theatre, 6SO Laguna Canyoa Road, Lacuna Beach. They should be at the theater betwttn 9 a m . and 6 p.m . April 16 to talk WJth representatives of Lhe sbow. Participants must be 11 or older and must not be a member or any theatncal union. Wellare Screening· Pays Off CLOSED EASTER SUNDAY FREE PARKING In noting all the campaign c riti cis m directed at past coun cil members, Salata asked, "If our city is so bad then why are the campaign platforms <of Ryckoff and Williams I to keep it a~ 1t ii,?" Health Fair Scheduled in Soulh Laguna LOS ANGELES <AP) -Almost 3 percent of the applications filed for welfare in Los Angeles County last year came from Aliens who ad- mitted to case workers that they were in the country illegally. ac- cording to an mternal Department of Public Social Services Report. SALE The third annual South Coast Medical Center Health Fair. a free screening project for resi· dents of South Onnge County, will be held Sunday, April 20, from 10 a .m. to 4 p.m. The fair will be held at the Mi!dica l Center. 31872 Coast Highway in South Laguna. It is sponsored by KN BC, the Or ange County Chapter of tbe Am e rican Red Cross, the Hospital Council of Southern California and South CoHt Medical Center . The service will be offered to all persooa 18 and older. McDowell, Ri1J88 The report to welfare chier Ed Tanya es li mated the scl'ffriinl process saved the coun· ty $36.7 million that would bave been given to the illegal aliens 1n one year. The report found that 18. 725 penona were de- nied welfare on the basil of their Ule1al atatua because ot a acreenhac procea1 that requlre1 nonciti.lem to 11" Pf'OOI they have JeaaI ltatul or fill out a form cbecked by tbe 1am11..-.uoa aod NaturallJatloo Sentce. Wm Endonemenb The report wd Uaat ..... ol ~ people ,... Laauna Beach Mayor Jack fUHd to ftll oGt tlle l•· McDowell and candidate Stnen mllratioo nferraJ' 101'm Rt11a have been endorsed for ancJ U. otben JUlt ... election by Lacuna Factt, a mltted tbelr tlle1al le c t ·flndln I or ••nhatton status wit.bout retanal. founded in l.W12. The endchemeatl for the two candidates nmntne ID tbe April•. p-.-.. A----..led City Council eleetJon were mMe ...,. waru pubUc ln tbe or1anlaaUon1 OAKLAND (AP) new1i.u.r. · T.. Ba • R I raet1 alto endorud Dr. p• 1 ,.r.. •P Emest Late, the appolJUcl ID· TraHlt Dl1trlct ba CUUlbeat treuarer. ::.:.: ~ G . • ~ of•~tn• E\' .4. A.~• "" .4. tb• dont.on OUlud ana. TM eciatraet WWl't COYER POUnCS to c. Onraa • Co., wblcb wu one of ftve DAILY PILOT eompen&ea bldd.lna for ---r MALIBU LOW VOLTAGE OUTDOOR LIGHTING Set Include• 6 llgtlta wtth 4 coeot *'•"·cord end tlmef. E.Hy to ln- ataH ••• ufe, eoonom~I opetalb\. •LV2006T 7388 NEW! POOL SUPPLY uramHT , POOL ... 2 29 CHLORINE · MOWOltf• ~ COMT-Do It,........ Md NMf T ... Kil• • c ......... CIMMrl • . REG. $119.99 LOMA 32-GAU.OH TRASH CANS Wiit!,,,...~ ... ----..... REGULAR 18.99 5" HewLowp,tc.f • 1371 • 1381 IGLOO PLAYMATE ....... ~ ...... 18 -· .. 0... .... ·eMytoclNft. ~ 1399 · 50' GARDEN HOSE OSCILATING SPRINKLER ........................ ~ =~0--4--; .. ~,. ..,,.,., . ctlPUTI IErf. Fii •rT·YllUELF llHlllHll INllllH tmal J : ( . WlaMn and 1oee,., whoopen •ad -...pen lhey•,. all ••· e-~ al CO.la M • Cl~ Hall T\letclaY DiChL ' Every two 1•1n ror lhe pqt deHde, City Cl rk tu n Pbln· De)' bu llort °' pla}'ed hoat to the candidates _.lnl council ..,.u ucb election y ar Thia year la no dUf rent Tbe UsUn~ cbarta are prepared, t.he telephones a r e ~t't up, the workers are ready thanks lO a .........._ " dr7 run OU monaln1 -and UM projfft« la all aet to nuh the latest ~ total• u they 1n phoned lnto the city clerk'• of· flee AR r the PolJI clOle Tuelday at T p.Jn &.be nJne men runnlna ror three elty council 1eata Wa • year .,.. ,.cted to aather wit.b friendl imd famUI In the bl1 t'OUnt'iJ chamber Just off Mra Pbh1ney'1 offlce. T he first reports from precinct inspectors will beain filtertna in Mount St . Helens erupts through a heavy cloud layer this morning, sending smoke . ash and ice chunks into the a ir. The volcano, located 45 miles northeast of Portland. has been active since March 27. <Related s tory page A4.) Tax Rate Schedule WASHINGTON CAP> An a ssistant gener a l coun!>e l for Ya le University serves "as a disincentive to marriage a nd an incentive to cohabitation" and should be changed Lynda Sil.'\dS Moerschbaecher also said the so-called "mar Sniper Fires On Deputies; HUlingOut . . ROWLAND HEIGHTS <AP> - A sniper opened fire on a group of construction workers a nd '-.•berifrs deputies today before \'SW AT and other specia l teams converged on a house where they believed the man was hid· inl, deputies said. Worker s r ep or ted bulle t s started whistling past them -bout 8:30 a .m. at a construction 1lte on South Brea Canyon Road ia this San Gabriel Valley com· munity 25 miles e a s t of downtown Los Angeles, said Los Angeles County s he riff's Sgt. .Jack Anderson. Three pat.tot cars from the Ci· ty of Industry sheriff's station 9ere also fired on when they &r· rived at the scene , Anderson laid. Tbere were no injuries, but one deputy said a round m ay •ve struck his radio car. Calltornla Highway Patrol of· ftcera were called in to seal off ~e area at Brea Canyon Road at Collma Road and the Orange Preeway. • Andenoo said a man carrying I a .22·callber rifle bad been seen : earlier aboot!U at blackbirds in ' tbe vldnity of the construction ! lite. Ooe wttneu rep>rted seeing \Jae m• duct into the praae of a. llome jult west of tbe con- IU'UeUon 1lte. Tbe man was not Immediately 1111enUfted. De=es tried to contact him ~~~ ADderlGD aald. raage penalty" was encouraging divorce and creating a reason fo r women to remain out of the labor force. She suggested the simplest a nd faires t -mean s of abolishing the ma r riage penalty would be to have eve ryone file individual returns and use only one income tax rate schedule Although this would solve the problem, she said, some com- mentators feel it should not be adopted because taxpayers a re fami liar with th e curren t system B u t s h e a dded . "Wh e n familiarity with com plexities prevents a return to fairness and simplicity, aWhope for tax re form is lost." ·'The couple is not a proper e ntity or tax un it ; the in· dividuals earning the income are proper tax units. No com· pelling reason exists to force one wage e a rner and two wage earners to pay the exact same tax simply because wh.at they have in common is having said 'ldo."' The marriage penalty results because income earned by work· ing couples who are married is added toge~er, putting lhem in a higher tax bracket and in· creasing their taxes. The same couple, i( not married, would file • separ ate returns and their in· come would be taxed at a lower r ate. The Ways and Means Commit· tee, which writes the nation's tax laws, beard Wednesday from a Maryland couple wbo twice divorced each other and twice remarried before finally endlng thelr marriage to simply live together. Angela and David Boyter said the reason had nothing to do with romance. They were just aavin1 money at income tax time. The Boyters are amon1 a growing number ol Americana wbo are disdainin1 marrta1e to avoid a proviaion In federal tu law that taxes worklna busbanda aqd wtVfl 8t a hlP.r rate. .. 1bout '7:'5 p.m .• M1. Pbinney apeculat.. The numben will be poeted on accumulated·lolll precinct chart.a and then ruabed to t.be projector to keep everyone up to th• mlnut.e on bow th1np are eo- in1 in the race. ''You'll bear some wboopa and yella every time it 's posted," say1 Ml. Phinney who bu been preparing ballots, precinct maps and the myriad details required for the city election since last December. By 1:45 p.m. all the precincts should be ln, she predict.I. That's the way it'• gone durln' the four previous elections. ·'The last precincts to come In will be the ones wbo didn't read the Uist:ructiooa and 1ot mixed up," she says with a chuckle • She recalls one year when all the workers in one precinct sat down lO a full-eourse dinner m tbe home where the polls were located before beginning to count ballots. "We couldn't figure out what was takin1 the m so long," she remembers. "We finally called them Ul>." The cit~ clerk anticipates that about 30 ipercent of the 40,200 real.stered to vote will turn out Tuesday sometime between 7 a.m. and 7 p.m. Only 23 percent showed up al ~ booths two years ago, Ms. Phinney notes. ~o presidential election bangs on Tuesday's votin1. she says. but excitement is expected to run pretty hi&h al City Hall. There'U be three whoopers for s ure, and proba bly nine moa nens sometime around JO p.m. if the election runs without a bitch, she says Meuns hopmg to keep tabs on the race themselves. can call MS.. Pbinney's office -754-5133 -~ere a battery of phones have ~ installed for election 01ght Narmco Monitored For Toxic Gases ' . . \ l\fesans Battle Company By JERRY CLAUSEN Of -O.lty ~ ... St.ft A criminal complaint charg- ing that Costa Mesa's Narmco Materials Inc. is operating a nuisance may be riled with the Orange County District At- torney, aQ air quality official said late Wednesday. A I Danzig. enforcement supervisor for· the South" Coast Air Quality Mangagement Dis· trict told residents that his in· vestigator s had secured l~ signed complaints from l>ersons livtog near the plastics plan located. at Victoria and Maple Streets. Danzig received signatures from an additional 17 residents who said they . too, would sign complaints for invesgitators scheduled to m ove i nto the neighborhood again later this month. Nearly 30 Narmco area resi· dents met with Danzig at a session late Wednesday staged by members of the loosely knit Che mical Action Neighborhood Association. m any of whom question whether they are being poisoned by toxic fumes from the plant. CANA was formed by west side residents fo r "mutual de- fense" of Narmco neighbors who claim they "live in fear " of the possibility lhat exothermic reac· lions at the plant "will again spe w forth toxic gases into our air ." said spokeswoman Kathy Lam bert. CANA ha.s been joined by the Ca mpai g n f o r Econ o m i c Democracy, the group led by ac· tress .J ane F o nd a a nd her husband Tom Hayden. in their battle against Nar mco, which a lready has been scheduled to move its manufa cturing opera· t1ons to Anaheim next year When residents alleged Wed- nesday that Narmco is cutting back on operations while the van monitors the air, Danzig prom· lsed he would attempt to get a u t horizatio n for a longe r monitoring term. Results of t he air-quality test. Dan zig s aid, would,....be con- side red in filing a n y action against the plastics firm . However. he said, test resuJts would not be required in a pos· sible nuisancl! complaint filed beca use of odors coming from the plant. Pressed with questions relat· ing health problems to possible fu mes coming from the plant in daily operations , Danzig de· <See TOXIC, Pa1e Al) Banks Cwse Good Friday Moat banks along the Orapge Coast will clOM their doon from noon or 1 p.m. on Good Friday, bank olflclala said today. County and city offices wlll re- ma In open .for bu.alneaa as uaual, alone with county and city Ubraries and the Oran1e County Dump, accordln1 lO autborttles. Savtnca and loan lnatlt\l&lont vary on operatiD~ houra on the .11cred holiday. tome clo.ma at noon or 1 p. m., and reopenlftl at 3 r. m. and eome not openlnJ at al Friday afternoon. A call to the lndiY1dual branch can be made to determine when to coe- duct bmlDlm. o..ty-SUH,._ AIR MONfTORING VAN PARKED NEAA,ffARMCO MATERIALS PLANT IN COSTA MESA Reaktenta 'LMng In Fear' That West Side Facility WUI UnleHh Toxic Gases Apartments Railroaded · Train Slams Into Moving Housing l lnit LOS ANG ELES IA P > A two-story apa rt ment building being towed across railroad tr acks wal ram med by a slow moving freight tram today, and pieces of lht' build ing we re strewn for hundred!> or yards. authon t1es said One man sprained his ankle when he saw the tram coming a nd jumped off the top of the buildmg. The man. an employee of the Chester Seay House Mov ing Corp of South Gate . had been ma.lung s ure telephone and power lmes were kept clear or the rooftop "We understand that the mov SJ.O Gas Hassle 1 n ~ compa n )o' had ~ott e n perm1ss1on to cros1> the track~. said Northeast D1 v1s1on P.Ollt<' Lt Rick Wahle r "The) have to check ahead . and "A e re j:!t\'en clearance to eros..-. at t hat u mc· Then. while the apartment hou:-.<• wa!:> straddling the track. the tram came through .. He :.aid the 2.15 a m . crash h e ar Figue roa Street in the Highland Park section wru; be m~ investigated a-. a traffic ac <·ident :"o dJmaRe <''-l1mal<' "A a~ aYa1lable Police Sgt Paul Hermann said the bu1ldmi: °" c1s mo\'mg slow!~ Jcross the tracks near Figueroa Street when the crossing arm" t•a mt' do"An Ont' Jrm cam ... down behind the building Lind the olhl•r hi t th1• "'d" of lht• butl d1nj:! and hrokt· T h 1.• t r u 1 n ' t' n e 1 n t• 1.· r le\ I rt pol1<·t• I tumt• <1rou nd the ru n 1.· J nd th1.•n• v.:i-. .1 building J1.•ro ...... th1.· track-. I put on thl' brakt'~. bu' tht•n• wa-. nQth1ng e I '-t.' I <·ould do R ' I h t' t 1 tn t• I h • l r J 1 n ~creeched to J :.top, p•t•cn of lhl' bu1 ld &nJ? °" l'rl' -.callt>red ulnnl! mun• than • third n f 1 mil, 11f tr ad, Lt Wahler '•lie! l ht 1 rain v. ,., mo\ tn J? a1 15 mph "'hen th1• brakl'~ "-l're applied 1ito Unchanged R ELG KA D E Y l• I! o" I 1 v 1 a c AP l Doctor-. reported loda\ that gravely tll Prcs1dt'l'll Jo~•fl Broz Tito "'a:. s ho"'1n11 n(' 1m provement desp1t1.· trc:>r men1 for Station Operator Slayer Convicted /l~n undescnbed infection th ... t , l a:. causing ,1 high ft vcr By DAVlD KUTZMAN Ol .. DMl ....... J ..... An Orange County Superior Cou rt j ury co nvicted Lee McKenzie Brazell of fi rst degree murder today In the shot gun slaying of Garden Grove service station operator George Bice last August in Westmlnsrer. As Brazell. 22, of La Habra . and defenu attorney Richard Bonner stood to bear ~verdict in Superior Court Judi ennet.b Lae's courtroom, me ben o( both Bruell's family and Blce's family wept. Brazell showed no emotion aa the verdict WIS read. Bruell wu accused of 1hoot- ln1 Bice last Au1uat as l.be aervlce •tatloo owner crouched in the rear bed of a pickup truck. Bice bad jumped into the truck as it aped away from bl• Texaco ttaUon wbeo tbt occupants dido 't pay for SlO wortla of 1aaoliDe. Ptoaecutlon wltneaHa bad said it was Braaell who drove the truck to a vacant lot ln Wea•mtmt.rbe'= out and lbot Bice in the at near ~ blank ..... Brazell was arrested the same day by Huntington Beach police as he drove the blood·splattered truck TWo Juveniles had been with Brazell in the truck and one of them was a key prose<:ullon · witness. Oeputy-Distn ct Attorney Paul Meyer said BnueU could face from 25 years to life an prison. Braiell could be eligible for parole 4/ter serving 15 years of that sentence Sentencing is scheduled May a in Judge Lae's · court. Meyer had characterised the slaying of Bice as a "very cold, very callous" act. Blee, 47. oC Anaheim h aii made headlines early last sum· mer as being the first man con· vlcted of violating state gasoline retulatk>M. Bice bad been re· quJrinl patrons to mate pbone rt1ervatioal to bU)' gasollne d.ur· int the um au sbortaae. Oaher Coverage Olbtr Harbor Area coveraae appearia tQday on Pa1e A20. , Or::~J -. C'oa~• \\'enth..,.r P artly cloudy lat ~ night and ear ly morning but mostly sunny and ;1 little warmer through Fl"1d:>y • LOW'5 tonight '" tht .tO~ High s F riday 6-& '' tilt beaches and n m!ond INSIDE TODAY AngeLs ~r GeM AtdTV •fill steomtnQ over IM 11r,,1u1 bl/ ba.wball p4ayen . IG!J~ •f •t toa.t up to film. he d co!! off the s~ Su Sportt, Page a: ..... ' , ... ,, <· ~•~T••• NEVADA TEST SITE. Nev. <AP> An under1round nuclear test wu conducted today by the Department of Energy al the Nevada T•sl Site. The test code·named Liptauer -was detonated about 1 388 feet below the surface of Yucca Flat. A spokesman said the test was In the 20-to·l50 kiloton range . _, ... E .. la•fl BRISTOL, England <AP> -Tw~nty-one police officers and nine other persons were injured in fifhting between polic~ and hundreds of immigrant blacks, authorities said today Police said 21 persons were arrested, buildings w.ere burned. shops looted and cars wrecked. 8..,., ,.,..tat T•r,,et CAIRO. Egypt (AP) -Some s,ooo fundamentalist Moslem s tudents demonstrated against Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and the presence of the deposed shah in Enpt at a rally today on the campus of a local university in the Egyptian town of Aasyut. No violence was reported. • Z Mere B•t,..a 'reefl BOGOTA Columbia CAP> -Guerrillas who siebed the Dominican Embassy five weeks ago during a reception today freed two more of the 27 diplomats and others they had held. The names were not announced immediately by the authorities. c Related Photo Page A3.) ,....,P9ffeAJ - 10XIC GASES •.• rerred and suggested the groups· meet with County health of- ficials. CED member Joe Libertelli reviewed a health survey taken by his organization in the • neighborhoods surrounding the plant. He said the survey, conducted with a lilt of questions compiled by Interested CANA memben. was anawered by 118 bouaeholds in the neighborhoods composed or single family homes and apartments. The s urvey. h e claimed, s howed that 50 percent of the residents m the homes suffered "serious" health ailments, rang· mg from a combination or con· slant sore throat , headaches and nausea to live r ailments, kidney disease and cancer Some 20 p e rc e nt or the households, he stud. indicated less severe disorders while JO percent considered themselves "healthy.'' He said his statistics indicate that the residents in homes im mediately downwind of Narmco record the worst health his· tories. Some 70 percent or the people indicated serious illnesses, 15 percent s uggested "minor" tr· rltation and 15 percent said they were in good health. he re - ported. tionable noise at the plann' ~ He said reports that his firm 1s cutting bacls production while air testing is under way are "un· true." Stemmler s aid he couldn't speak to the health problems al· leged by CED. "I'd really have to see data and the basis for the survey." he said. He added, however. that the health or employees working daily at the plant is .. as normal as you'd find in every day occur- rences.·· Train Crash Cause Sought LAKEVIEW, NC <A P > Railroad officials sear ched to day for the reason an Amtrak train carrying 300 people passed a warning signal and smas'hed into a n oncoming freight. toss,ng 10 passenger cars orr the track No one was killed a nd there were no serious injuries in the accident, which occurred in the North Carolina Saodhills early Wednesday as fog s hrouded a bend in the track Hid: "I hope wtthlo a eoupM of -~... -eamerameo aft.r a · coue 1 . " . -,..,.._ JailhoU8e Code Led Witness It was a Jailhouse code of ethics wttlch led to ao Orange County anmate's testimony Wed· neaday against murder defen· dant ~ey Alcala. Prosecution witness Mlchuel Herrera, a former heroin user und pusher. said he wrote down statements Alcala made to him in • connection with the dlsac· pearance and murder of Rob n Samsoe last June because the case involved a child. "Prople In institutions feel a certain hostility toward child molesters and rapists," Herrera said . Alcala. 36, or Monterey Pc.rk. is char~ with the abduction and s la ng of Miss Samsoe, 12, of Hun gton Beach. The proseeullon In the case has relied on tes timony the past few days of jailbou.se Informers w>-o were with Alcala when he ' was taken into custody at , f>range County JalJ last Sum· mer. Herrera, who testified Wed· nesday that Alcala admitted ab- ducting and beating Miu Sam soe unconscious, said in· males look down on prisoners being held for crimes against children. He said he had his own personal "code or ethics" as far as c hildren were concerned and he admitted thet the nature or t h e charges agains t Alcala bothered hjm. -wr11a..-io11nt-.om1 mare lnlormauon m t.bl predH PGll· HOaTACIU llAft VAJlllP CAMIM-M Uon ot t.bt United Stat.I con· ttrs:tlnl t!M 1tat.ment1 wtllcih were made by Mr. Banl·Sedr.'' Ohotbudth Hid u M putlMd lbroup a mob of report.. and .,..~ Because he has lived in in · s titutions most of his life, he said, the hostility toward rapists and chlJd molesters becomes in· grained among inmates. Under questioning by both prosecutor Richard Farnell and defense attorney John Barnett. Herrera denied he had been promised any special deals or Ca rs inch toward Manhattan over the Queensborough Bridge this mo rning while -.u bway tracks are devoid of trams on th<.' third day of N<.·" York Caty's transit strike The Long l!>land Rall Road •~running again. but umon of ficials havC' threatened another 5tnkc ~1onday 1£ a con tract agreement isn 't reached ----------breaks rorhis testimony Free on bail accused or v1ola- t ton of pro bation . He rrera lC!>l1hed Wednesday that Alcala told · him during Jatlhouse con- versations how he lured Mis s Samsoe into h is car at t he '>l·ashorc• in Huntington Beach lie said the murder detendant Costa Mesa Pioneer Rose Mellott Dies told the girl he wanted to take Funeral <,t•rvict·~ ror Hose A pictures of her for a magazine.& Mellott. 71. a 51 year n·s1dent or lhal it wouldn 't take long and Costa Mesa who died Tuesday. that he would pay her. When she will be held Friday 10 Santa agreed to go along, Alcala Ana placed her 10-speed bicycle in M M II h -...1 h the back of his s mall Datsun and rs c Ott, w 0 movtru wit her parents to Costa Mesa in they drove orr. He rrera 'l>aid 1929. married local carpenter Al cala told him Homer Mellott and rearc-d two When the c hild became children in thl' growing com frightened and wanted out -:>f the munity. d1t'd of pneumonia m a car . Herrera said, Alcala told Riven.ide hospital him he began slapping her. She and he r husband built "I asked him how many times their fir.it home on what now 1s he hit her He said, 'I don't Harbor Boulevard The house know.· ·· the witness testified stood where the Tres Amigos "He told me he slapped the s-restaurant is now at the K·Mart out or her and s he passed ouL" s h o PP Ing PI a za . a ram 11 y ~Us ~1ellott ~orkt·d dl tht-old Costa r.tt'!\a P06l Office at 17th St rL·t>t and Orange A veunue In th<> l:1te 1930s and early 40s and ldlt•r wa!> emplo)ed b> Mesa Consol.tdated Water 01stnct un t1l she retired in 1974 She 1s survived by her l>On, Ph11l1p o r CO !>l a Me s a . 3 da ughter Mrs Carolyn J ayne!> of R1 ve r s 1d e. and four ~randchHdren Services are scbeduJed for 3 p m Fnday at Wa verly Church. 1700 £_ Frurhaven. Ave .. Santa Ana Private interment 1s to follow at Fa.irhaven Memorial •Hrt•nd~_!lot 1peclfy 11.~,t •• c--wuwa..w .................. called"' a U.S ....... of Nltra&nt. The,_, .,meet came bows atwr • .,._mm for the ml11· t•nt1 boldlnc 50 Americana hottap lnlJde lhe U.S. EmbMty Hid u..y are wilUn1 to hand onr UM hottases to the Revolu- tionary Council If requested. No Link Seen in PoUoning SAN 011'!00 (AP) -San D~io pol1ce do not believe the ume penon who wu involved In the weekend cyanide poisoning ()( food ltema In two local Safeway aC.permarket.J is rNpontlble for a similar 6c'cur· rsnu In the Riverside County Ct>mmunity of Palm Deaert. Kan Diego detectl ves went lo Palm Otaert t o confe r with .,,ertff'• deputies and FBI AUnh but all concluded the Palm u.-.ert incident Monday • u thf! ... ork or another in- 1'l v1dwiJ authontin announced Welf~y .Mt>anwhlle, 1n Be averton. '''" "°'ice aaad Wednesday that .an .tntJf'lytn<IUS caller two weeks •(t> a.kt be put cyanide in a Jar <'If pickles In a market and dt'~ maod«t t.housands of dollars 1n d1amonda The cue was similar to the two here, in which lhe · · Polson Gang " d e manded 50 to 100 diamonds in eJtchange for end 1ng the e xto rtion A Jar of pickles and bottle of tenyak1 sauce were found to be heavily laced wtth cyanide. Beaverton Police Chief Don Newell said a trace or cyanidP was found March 22 in a jar of pickles at a Fred Meyer Inc market He said officials did not anno unce the incident earlier because "there was no need to alarm the public.·· In the Palm Desert case, a man phoned the Safeway m.irkct and 1dentJfied h1mseU as the same person who polSOOed l wo food it.ems at the San Diego stores The caller warned that a bottle or salad dressing was poisoned and demanded a large dmount or diamonds and cash be delivered late Monday. l..1 ~ 1·nforc l'mcnt 0CC1cer:; in H1H•r)1d1• l'ount> !-a~d the FRI took over lhl• case and met tht' <'\tOrttoru st·~ dl'm and . but thE' c;u!o>pe<'l ~ot nervou~ at the' drop 'Ill' and fled M e.mv.h1ll!. San Diego police 'aid they were beginning to get pra nk · ca lls from youngsters l'l'ho1ng tbt-• threats and arrested t wo 16 y('ar old juveniles for making calls to Safeway stores 1n Po'4ay and Rancho Bernardo. Both we r e re leased in their parents' custody. Authoriti e"> a re seeking Richard Q Williams. 46, of Winchester. in the Palm Desert case W11l1ams wai. acquitled or a po1sorung charge in a Sun City Safe'4JY market incident la!>t M ay CED members stressed they would meet again with CANA members next week lo seek an investigation by the Orange County Health Department. 'lbieves Loot Home 11:' College Park -Burglar5 forced open a win· dow in a Costa Mesa home and made off with about Sl ,750 1n cash and belongings late Tues . day, police report He rrera said he also as ked spokesmao said Alcala dunng the ~ugu~. ~. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Park. Santa Ana Rober( Stemmle r, general manager or the controversial plastics plant, said this morning that a member or his firm at· tended Wednesday night's session. He said he still is trying to meet with residents to pinpoint complaints and already has taken action to reduce objec· ORANGE COAST c DAILY PILOT :~.=:..<::..=..~:....~~ . .:; Or-~ ............. c.._, s..--=·~:r:,:-__,~"'.":.::.= lt•cttll1HAl•t1t Yel_l•f• tr• "• L .. wn• ~ .... ,..... c-t A ....... ...-.i-i..." ...,.__....,._.......,, .. , ... ~ C'':\::'.::.: ~=.·:.:."'--"·0 _,,. .... __ ..__ --•.c.rtoor v ... ..,~,--.,--,_._ ... , .. ":..A. ... -::- 0....11.'-._..,,._ AMlll""4 ................. Taken from the College Park home of Eric H. Kolker, were stereo components, a color television set. a microwave oven and about $150 in coins kept In a gallon jar. according to police reports. conversations if he shot or stabbed M 1ss Sa msoe and he said he didn't He said the defendant told him the c hild's bicycle would never be found, that he had left it at a store with the word "lhrin" in the title. BoUZ01 said he sold the bicycle later in the month and could not find the receipt with the buyer's na me -Biker Broke Knievel Taken to Court MIAMl (AP> -Daredevil Evel Knievel faces a $100,000 damage suit over a yacht that be says be can't afford to buy though he fixed it up by adding a teak deck, carpeting and extra bedroom mirrors. Transit Charter Inc-. contends Knievel's im· provements damaged the 116.foot yacht and he broke a contract to buy it. The company convinced a federal judge Tuesday that the motA>rcr.cle stuntman was liable for any damage to the vesse . Judge William Hoeveler set a heartnt this month to determine the extent of dama1e to the yacht Knievel says be chartered in mid· Um to take bis f am Uy to motorcycle races in Daytona Beach. In a dePo1it100, Knievel •#id the $50,000 be spent in yacht renovaUona plua the coata of several 1peed. , boats, 'two Lear Jet.a, two motorcycles and two Jet skis "broke me financially. It put me in debt to t'he tune of M million. I Jmt never recovered .... Knlnel allo faces a multi-million-dollar Juda· ment in Callfornla and an Internal Revenue Servtce property lien for $1.8 mlllloo, an attorney 1aJd. ~----------...... ·•~,----------, WE ARE ·~-'$ 00 DOUBLE $HIPPE .. ~ I on Speny '••l•n 3 styles to choose from: oxford, brown or maple. Newport Surf and Sport t I I I I I ,. Makt ltore 2Z24 Newport llvd. Ne•pettaHch 171-7174 ltor• 2 :no~ Mertn• Ave. 8etbo• t•l•nd 17).712t VIS4' s ..... 1 I Sowftt Co.at Ptne I Coste~.. ( 641 ·0U3 I I I with this coupon Expires ·April 30, 1980 ..... OAVtO ... ...,,. A Jury found tbem •: oi all those crimes, and Wedn y Mn· tenced David, 27, to the 1ta"9'1 1u chamber. Kenneth, 21, wu ordered to prtaon for We without pouibillty of> parole. But accordin1 to tbe1r parent.a, Mr. and Mrs. Eldridge Moore, th~ brothers were raised in a secure re· ligious family of •even children. A minister tesUfied tbal the brothers were well-behaved as YOWlJlters1 even 1inaln1 ln a cburcb choir, ana ft WAI A MCKY tlmL Durt111 a eo.u..a --... .........., auaei.t b1' wile .... tMD ..... ~ &wq-19at· old d......_., a lhltld when iuarU atm..t•Mm. • A f a-.01 fr I tad tHUfled that 0Hkt'I blUrior ... mtJ4 to Cba.qe .... ft -AD., •• · marllecllJt afttt hta retuae from ., 11.e'p Srtloa ba im. and ~ tM became Construction goes on at Matson Navigation Company's ~~aa:.cJ wu releued~ computer-assisted overhead container bandllne system Kenneth wN JaUtd fOf' a aeriea of Clower right) at its Por:t' of Los Angeles terminal while auto ~ariel. Upon hi• releue ln ship loading and unloading goes on at dockside. July cl 117t, be joined his older =======================:: brother and be1an the rampaae that induded 218 robbertea. •hr rapes. and Me tbe fatal lhootlnl of Eileen Rogers n and her dau1bter. Laura Muhlen· Keep Peeling brucb. ) THaOVGllOVT THEO six-week trial, David and Keueth seemed Wl· concerned about their fate. At one point they slouched in their chairs and grinned while a 66-year old woman told how s he was raped at gunpoint. The Moores chatted during the 30 minutes it took to read the verdicts. They were found guilty oo all counts. FREMONT <AP> -~uburban housewives who have flocked to a Fremont night club lO watch male strippers got some &ood news as the City Council adopted a law requiring use permits for futUtt strip parlors -but not existmg ones. "They simply couldn't pass a law stopping our euys from dancing in their shorts, unless they wanted to look awful silly," saad promoter Danny Zezzo The new law was the weakest or four proposals the councal con side red Tuesday night. LOI c:oa.u (AP) -.. lala:s• .. ........ .••. ~· ...... . ID• t&ne1 al P97 tllnfsfDD ..... ..... t..:cT. ,.,.. OlllllltlMift. u.a. Dlltrlet c.ourt 1~ Lawrw. T. Lldk* "* ... der ~ W~ a·'::'" w IM ....._., lar1e1t P•J TV eompaa)'L.~~!:~~~ l•kertptlOD Tele ..... IOI' a pn!imiauj UQacuaa lb llGp u.ie ...... 1n1otb&1pa1a. Plnlilll P97 talntlloa ...... -~ ..... ·-• to decode tbe teramblecl llpala 11 I u ,.1 tal..uba IPNadl aer'OM tM eomtaJ, u.r...,,..... to be no federal law elearly ~UM pndlee. NA1'0NAL.1noca OPDAUI U. ON TV =re lion service, bu llled suit qalmt ...-al local • c 1boP1 and lncHvtdual1 allqedlJ la't'Olftd ID p= 1lpala lD an effort to baYe UM eourta eatablllb f 1uldel.lnllll. ON TV cbus• a IDOlllWJ '"of about• to ill 2!50,000 aublcrtben lD SOadbern cautornla. .Judie Lydick postpoDed a lmmedla"9 decllion oa the farm '1 Utjunc:Uoa req&Mat, aaytq be wanted more Ume to study the fuuy laws govemhi1 the interception and decod· inl of tbe sienall without pa)'ina a fee. Lydick appeared to be cautious lD bll approacb to tbe case, DOtini that "I'm betoc uked to establllb a naUooal policy.'' RE 8AID BE COlJLD not fmd in bi.a research any basil for the establilbmeat cl a priva"9 rt1bt protedine the pay TV signal and aaid be wu relDCtaot to create one. He said the key question waa not bis lnt.erpretaUon of the laws. but what wu t.be eoqreulona1 intent. Attorney Arthur Greenbera. representing ON TV. said, "What's at stake is a major·Callfornla industry, which pro- vides a service and employmenL "Uthe court denies lhia uuuncUon it becomes an ln· vitatlon to these companlea to advertiae and aell their de· vices." · Airlf:a Tire W'erks Flats No Problem L-OS ANGELES (AP) -If you've ever been stranded. on a rainy night changing a flat tire, take heart. The Dunlop Tire Co. says it bas come up with a tire tbat not ooly would get you home safely ll it goes nat, but would get you all the way across the country without even causing your car to weave or your wheel to be dented. Dunlop spokesman David Cole said a test car arrived ln Los Angeles from Boston on Wednesday, driving all the way with one of its steel- belted radials without air. Cole contended the feat was ac· compllsbed by using a system made up of both the tire and the wheel on which it was mounted. The tire sidewall is specially de· signed to lock onto the special rim and a loss of air pressure locks it on even more, so the tire can't come off the wheel Before starting the trip on March 24, Dunlop engineers tned to flatten the tire by drilling a bole in the self-se.aling tire. But that didn't work, Cole said, and the tire's vaJve ste m had t.o be removed to let out the air pressure. Space Probe 'Dies' Viking Lander 2 Mars Artifact PASADENA (AP) -After a 31h· year search for life on Mars, one or two space probes baa run out of e nergy and died . the Nationa l Aeronautics and Space Administra· lion s ays. ··Now it wm just sit there as an a rtifact on the surface or Mars ror centuries to come ... ~ace agency spokesman Bristow said Wedn~day of Viking Lander 2. But he added tha t ils twin, Vi.king Lander 1, is still operating on the planet's surface and •·we expect it to go on into the decade of the 1980s." ....... 'Lear11i11,,, SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. says he's glad lo be home after learning the voters ''didn't feel I was ready l9 be presi· dent. "Every effort is a learning ex· perience," said Brown upon bis re· turn to the state from Wisconsin w ednesday night after folding his bid for the Democratic presidential nomination. Brown finished third in the Wisconsin primary. ........... LOS ANGELES <AP> -A county superviaor who criticized a colleague whose aide gave confessed Hillside Strangler Kenneth Bianchi a £0WllY y.'indsbleld decal is trying no""° re- cover three stickers she issued. Supe"isor Yvonne Brathwaite Burke admitted Wednesday she authorized three decals for a San Pedro bail bondsman and 11 having difficulty eettlng them back . . . . ( ___ Blll_E_Fs_J Gap ai..t Fftll•tef11 SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -Leaders or the homosexual community have denounced Mayor Dianne Feinstein for naming a heterosexual to a seat traditionally held by gays on the Board of Permit Appeals. The mayor appointed Louis Giraudo to the post tield by gay rep.esentallves for the past five years. The board, a key locaJ govern· ment agency, decides on appeals or permit applications after they have been considered by the city's plan· ning, fire and police commlssion3 and the Central Permit Bureau. SAN DIEGO CAP) -Property owners already told they suffered almost $2 million in airport noise damage have waited too long to col- lect on their claims, a jury says. The final word, however, will come from Superior Court Judge Carlos A. Cazares within the next 20 days. He said earlier that a five-year statute of nmltatlons governs the case. The damage must have begun by Nov."30, 1968, and the lawsuits filed by Nov 30. 1973, the jurors said Wednesday. But the suits were all brought after July 1975. Sf As Store.wide Post-Easter C Jearance ... with 20% to 50% .. off . Original Prices* .. Now find terrific savings on great selections of fashions from : Designer Dresses, Evening Apparel. Coa ts and Suits Better Dresses 'SFA bulous and 'SFAntast1c Coats and Swts, Sportswear, Dresses • Designer and Better Sportswear. Sport Separates, Active Sports wear Sportcoa ts, Swt.s, Sportdresses Sportswear, Dresses, Coats, Rainwear for Juniors in Right On' Robe,>, Sleepwear and Loungewear Maternity Collections Infants' and Toddlers; Cirls' and Boys' sizes 4 to 6X, Cirls' sizes 7 to 14 Spot for Teem Apparel. Blouse Collections Fashion Jewelry, Swiss Watches, Cultured Pearls Womens Shoes Belts, ScarveS: T-shirts Handbag Collections 5.>ks Filth A\ft?nue at South Coast Plaza. JJJJ Bristol Stlfft, CoUi Meu. Open Monday throuah Saturday. from 10 A.M. to 9:JO P.M. Road Work Helps Motorists wh ose daily routine takes them through the busy intersection of 16th Street and Superior A venue in Costa Mesa are getting places on time much more often these days. Street widening at that point in the congested com· mer cial·industrial district is completed a nd traffic signals began their function of regulating an average da~· Jy flow of 15,730 vehicles this week. Rains delayed completion of the two·phase project which will serve the bustling region that produces every· thing from boats to heavy machinery and tiny electronic components , far better than the ol<l two·lane strip and wooden stop signs that existed until last fall. . You've had the good news , so now. as Costa Mesa As· sociate Civil Engineer Larry Arruda wryly puts it, for the bad news Widening of the remainde r of Superior Avenue coastward to the Newport Bea ch city limit. also from an existing two to four lanes, is due to begin in-July, just at the height of the beach traffic season. However, that chore. a $150,000 cooperative venture wi th the county. is scheduled to take far less time -and what a total improvement the finished widening job will be • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment 1s 1nv1ted. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321 Boyd/Philatelists By L.M. BOYD Serious s tamp collectors have a personal c hara c- teristic in common -they tend to show up right on time for a ppointments. Or so says a New York psychiatrist who made a study or those philatelists. No explanation of how their promptness re- lates to their ho~by is of· fered. But this doctor says his findings ~ame from far more than merely the visits ,J of stamp collectors to his own office. He says he re· searched the appointment patterns or a broad sampling of such collectors to learn t hey we r e exceediogly punctual in almost all situa· ing them "audible cinem ~." Nothing new about electric vehicles. British dairies have been using electric trucks for more than 30 years. Q. "What was the name of the cal in that 1961 movie 'Breakfast at Tiffany's~?·• A. "CaL" Business appointments in Yugosla via are routinely scheduled for 7 a.m. Q . H o w big can a cockroach grow under ideal roach conditions? " lions. A. Biggest of record was six inches long. A dental lab lectinician named John Kelly of New York raised the beast in a big bottle. Fed it pizza, sandwich bits, lunch le ft- ov e r s. Unidentified co-workers of Kelly killed the thing before he had a chance to find out how large it would finally get. That annoyed him greatly. • Q. "What's an 'analog , watch'?" A. A watch with hands. The old-timey kind. As opposed to a digital watch. Are you old enough ever to have referred to the early talking motion pictures as "talkies"? If so, pleue note, about the Ume you were do- ing so, the British were call- Dear Gloo.my Gus Gasoline won't be cheaper boulht b7 the liter Instead of the iallon, but lt may make ~u rqret' the time you spent as a kid learnin1 \be old aystem of meuurement.a. D.M. Q. What's correct for that highbrow word for rurt -co- quet or coquette? A. Coquet, male. Coquette, fem~e. so shows the big book d. Never beard a ru man referred to as a coquet, however. And never hope to. Right or wrong, coquetry bas Iona been a woman's word. You· know wbat old Winthrop said : "A woman without ~ quetry la u inl1pi4l u corned beef without mualud." 1t•1 Mid about the Gemini woman that lbe'1 forever a 1tudent. quick to ,...pond to new noUona. She tenda to learn quickly, but beeaUM •he'• 10 busy dolns that tbln1. she'• ~liaed to for1tt .. lot. too. Contrary to ap- pear• !1C;.e1 1be '1 not a.,..,,.,,,,.,_, U.r bead 11 ov•rlY bull'. Or ao cJalm tbe ......-.. Mailbox --,..~--~aa.:illl*U "' aaa.ninr.. dlt,_tclMd IO i'elUI .. cam .. Oil th Thl·Cambocllaa bonier, Abramow1t1 llaaa. advlHd ~N&ary ol aat. CJnll Vuc. tbat 0 ra,. and robNry by PAVN <Vlelaam ... ) aoldlera are uniformly reported ... from all parta ol Kampucbaa <Cam bodlA>." EVEN ornCIALI of the QWIUAI lflHmment bave been fleeing their homeland In droves, Abramowib report.a. '"Their declllon to escape <for> eventual resettlea:aeat in <Cltber> countries la baaed oo the com- mon percept.loo tbat life under tbe Vietnamese la Intolerable," states one cable. It cites the twin motivating factors as ''drud of al repressive Communist re-gime .. and the "ubiquitous threat of starvation." As historic ethnic enemies of the Cambodians. the Viet· nam.ese have no qualms about -- S.rblre Krtlblc •taalill&~ tM fiLln1Da natlvea. One man In blood· ital.Md tlOUMn deleribld to an lataniewer bow the VieeaameM bad ambushed him and hi• lrit11da. "Ke still bad aome rice qply because the Vietnamese already bad stolen more than they could carry ftom b.IJ murdered companlona,"onecablerelates. ble re!Mes. ACCO&DING TO the refugees, the Vietnamese diatrtbute relief supplies of rice by day "in the presence of international workers. then conliscate <It> after the workers depart the scene.•· or replace it with com. Sopie Soviet·supplied com "ls stfll clogging one warehouse . . . but is so unappealing that only the moet hungry will eat 1t," the cable reports. Abramowiu has also provided evidence to support contmued claims that the Vietnamese are actually shipQinE foreign rice supplies intended for Cambodia "' <. -~-~.----.--.-­A mllltlaman wu quiiUd bi Oll8 cable: ''Ke 1aw two ~ bar1ea arrtn troa:a. Vtetaam with corn. Aft.er \ID1oa4hlc, cme ot the .,.,.,.. wu ruled with rlce, which bo clah.ned beaded for vretnam." · Other witno11e1 ineluded a woman who .... td the bad twice aeen Vietnamese ao.d nee on bargea at night. then bHd for Vietnam," and "a former bi.1.- tory professor (who) claimed that be saw two trucks lo9ded with rice bead • . • toward Vi.t- oa m." AN A•EalCAN scholar, Stephen Beder. wu quoted at length by the ambusador •• wbo. described bi.I observatiOlll u a "solid. penetratin1 look" at Cambodia. Heder wrote: "Well-organ ized teams of · Vietnamese troops ... con· s umed some of <Cambodia's bome·grown) rice themselves, provided some of It to their closest collaborators, sold some of it on the black markets ln the urban· centers, and sent some of it back to Vietnam, officially or unofficially.·• The few Cambodians who cooperate wilb the conquerors get several pounds of edible rice a month. but ordj.nary peasants ofte n get only red corn or "small, broken rice from. Viet- nam which they said made them vomit." one cable reports. Reuer medical supplies are a lso peddle d on the black market. the ir foreign or igin clearly identifiable, Abramowitz reported Officials of the puppet regime are believed to be pror- 1 tee rmg oo the i ntema lion al relief s upplies. Footnote: The cables, though detailing the diversion of foreign aid. confirm that many of the s upplies do fin 1r way to the Ca m b o d populace . Abra mo Id Vance that the re lief effort must continue if ramme as to be averted. And sources told my associate Les Wh itten that Cambodian aid will su rvive Preside nt Carter's budget cuts. Move National Park South for 'Free' Land? To the F.d.itor: The proposal to try and buy 19,000 acres in South Orange County from the ocean to the San Diego Freeway for $76 million cannot be done at that price. This is only $4,000 per acre. and such land in Orange County has not sold for that re· cenlly. But don't give up hope for a park -just move it down the coast 6'h miles and use U.S.· owned land -purchase price zero. How to do this? Convert less than 1/7lh, or 17,000 acres of the northerly e nd of Camp Pendleton to a park. Add this to existing San Onofre State Beach of 3, 158 acres and you have 20,158 acres and you still have our $76 million. THE ABOVE new location for free also avoids all the following bad points about the proposed Orange County location: 1. 11le real land cost is prob- ably S380 million ($20,000 per a cre). and why spend that huge sum when there is U.S.-owned land 6'h miles south? 2. ll will remove 19,000 acres from the tax rolls, thereby rais· ing everyone else's taxes. 3. ll will eliminate residential locations, and supporting busi· neaaes for 225,000 persons, and all jobs therein forever. 4. It will prohibit forever all the hundreds of thousands of Jobs in constructing residences and businesses oo 19,000 acres. 5. The taxes the 19,000 de· veloped acres will produce are lost f~ver. 6. Tbe U.S. already owns 125,000 acres at Camp Pendleton which is only 6~ miles down tbe coaat and the U.S. Marines do not u.ae, or need, anywhere near all of th.at 125,000 acres -they * would not miss 17 ,000 acres, and would at1ll have 108,000 acrfJI to operate on. N.H. SMEDEGAAIU> 8ertdM• To the Editor: Pleaae ct.artty for me tbele aenteaces tn tile llareb 25 edltortal, "BeUreet Tar1et ol Taz Propoeal." It 1tat41e, ''R.ure. under UM ••• al • cannot collect SoelaJ 8Kartt¥ tt they make wasee ln HHll "'$S,2'70 a 1ear. At ... 85 that Mr'DIDC limit 1oee up to .. ..... ~deratandlni la that ·~ ...... ol •arn.l.DI re-ftff .. ......, a nd.rM cu cou.et. wMJe eanJq aboYe maximum but does not cul it orr entirely. Am I wronR? ANNABELLE QUIGLE Y TM reodn u correct If o rtt1rtt earns moTe than tM ~C1/~ maz. 1mum , SoclOl ~cunty ~/its rn the amount of $1 for each e«ry ez. tra $2 earned ore wtthhl!ld unhJ the e:ice.aa omounl as rec~red Editor. A'l'r11eA~•• To the Editor Finally! A refreshing note un- to struggling Americaqa ... A Roy Sakioka; a hard working. pub1icity s hunning , h umble. once rejected and totally embar· rassed true American. God bless him. And a special thank you to the Daily Pilot for bringing a tired. over-taxed community this story. E Pluribus Unum EDWARD T. GRANEY ...... ,erw To the r.ditor : Tbe Dally Pilot recently ran a story about a mysterious. foul odor on the new Orange Coun· ty Transit buses . Neither their maintenance c rews nor the Orange County Health control ins pectors can discover the sourceofthestench. The answer is obvious. 1bose 65 buses were, by California law, to have been equJpped with lifts for the handicapped, but were not. A lot of people, in and out ol Orange County, have UWe bus amulets. Into which they are a tick.in& pins! YVONNE BAGSl'AD A ~eteler• To the Editor: Reft.rrlDI to ~cent ex· cha.ale o( corre.s ce in the Pilot, (Karch 18 and 23) I don't thlnk Mn. Parker la contUMd at all. Rather lt la Dr. Garriloa. I would vote for J arvll 0 ll J dJdn't receive anytb1ot ln N · turn. u it accompll1lle1 the 11n,1e parpoH of matini IOV- ernmd eeooocnlse and follow a U.bt budaet. •• will all baeflt ln the loaC run. Govemment "fat... contrary to what Garrison stata, LI, in- deed, plentiful. There a re thou1andl of eumple•, but I would cite three: THE GOV&&NO&'S ablebtee rate la bocTendou.a. Anyone ln buineel wttb tbat IOrt al at- teedaace record would be out ol a JOb Yet. tus pa}. $175 PN d3~. goes on and on and on The Judge caught g rowing marijuana plants in his home has d1squahf1ed h1mst·lf from lhe bench. but hi s s ub!.t.mual pay goes on and on and on There ts an mstrUl'tOr al Long Beach State workm~ his hnal semester He is not relmng. bul going on to other thmJ!s 1\p parently, he has accumulated "sack days." which he 1s de termined to take sUlce he \A tU be paid for the m onl y 1f takC'n 1 guess he does not even havE.' to call m sinct> the only way the students know whethe r or not there wtll be class those day'> 1s to go. wait. and •If he does not show up. leave LO do other things unt1l the1r next class. These types or "fat" must be removed And when 1t 1s done m a ybe the governor and his stooRes won't be so qu1clt to de· ny a Dow Chemical or a Stand· ard 0 11 opportum t1es to bw ld. provide JOb5 and pay taxes 10 this state And maybe we. the people. will look more towa rd wh at we can do for ourselves rather than leave 1t to a gaggle of pohtJcal hacks. Vote for Proposition 9" You bet I will' 1 J .W.REIO Net • 'Ferf181' To the Editor: Tom Murphine in rus column "Playing Politics" (March 25), seems to be dQing just that. He accuses the Mesa Verde Republican Women or "endors· ing" candJdates for non-partisan offices, or "machine politics" and "party patronage," ol coo· ducUng a "forum" for city COUD· cil candidates from which ...~ .. I • Democrats were excluded. T he latter was not a "public forum." but a meeting of a private organization. A s such it has the n ght to choose those who a~ree wit h R e publ i ca rt p h1lo so iih y, thu s o nl y Republican candidates were in· '1ted. NO CANDIDATE endorse- ments were given. No candidate endorsements were as ked for. Therefore. no party patronage or machine politics were in· volved The purpose of these Republtcan women s groups 1s to develop political awareness a mong women ; lo s upport Re publica n principles at a ll leve ls oC government; and to en· ~ourage their members to take an active pa rt and an interest in the practice of democracy. Before Mr. Murphine plays at political reporting, he should be sure of his facts. DOROTHY CLINCH Ff~8elp To the Editor: Our thanks to the Costa Mesa fire crew for saving our home and belongings at 2919 El. l~smere Ave. on Tuesd ay, March 18. The response to our call was immediate. The men's actions, though see.min1ly ef. forlle ss. were so well- coordinat.ed. Not only did they prevent the fire from gutting the attic, but their care and ex- pertise kept the destruction of personal property and clean·up to an absolute minimum. In addition, they returned that evening to follow-up the ftre and even tar·papered the exposed area to prevent further waler damage from the rains. It's a real comfort to know tbat our area is protected by such an elfi- cient Fire Department. As an aft.ert.bougbt, anyooe in his ri&bt mind ever bavtq been subjected to an experience sucb as a root buminl over hi.I bead wouldn't have to welJb the directkln ol bis vote on • pro. position such u Jal'Yia' PropQIJ. tloo 131 GERRY CORSO '