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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1980-06-05 - Orange Coast Pilotf ) .. e Curve' II ' . Cuban Refugees Freeway Killer Arriving Here Vietim Believed To Open Hands To Be LA ~Youth THURSDAY AFTERNOON, JUNES, 1980 VOL n,, NO. U1, • ICCTH*I, I.I ~AOH 180..eHere Help Awaits Cuban Exiles By JODI CADENHEAD Of .... o.My ..... MMf The first wave of Cuban refugees trickled into Orange County early today -weary. homeless and hopeful after endufing weeks or hunger and high seas to flee their homeland. News that the 18 refugees would be arriving from Florida to live in Orange County reached Cuban communi· ty groups Wednesday afternoon. They are t.be Cuban refugees destined for Orange County and more are expected to arrive today and in the coming weeks, authorities said. SPOKESMEN FOR THE Cuban Association and the Cuban Assistance League in Orange County said that they had been storingJood, clothing and furniture for more than a month in anticipation that refugees would be 'arriving here. Nooe of the 18 Cubans have relatives living in Orange County and many left families behind. Manuel Vallandres, bis wife, Norma and their 8-year· old daughter, Gladys, were among tho first arrivals seek· iog asylum at the Peruvian embassy in Cuba. They lived for 12 days at the embassy surviving the sickness and salvaging the scarce small packages of food that the United States shipped in every day, explained v allandres. "In' WIFE WANTED TO leave. It was too much hunger and too much sickness," said the truck drlver. "We squeezed the juice from leaves of orange trees to live." He said that be hopes to find a job soon. "I wanl Uber ty and a place to settle my famil,y." be said. ,. Anxious families from the Los Angeles area crowded Los Angeles International Airport terminal aeetin& the familiar faces of relatives that many had not seen since Castro came to power lwo decades qo. Orlando Tallon of Hun'tincton Part fou&ht back tears as be embraeed the son be left ill Cuba 10 years ago. "rr8 BEEN A VEBY TDamLE time," he said. "But it's wonderful to see him again." While f amilles from Loe Aqeles wept and embraced, rehlgees destined for Orange County gathered qaletly to leave for the Cuban Club lD Orange, where a temporary shelter WU prepared. • 0 1 COtJU)~ SlJPPO&T tbe 1yatem anymore," said Dario Duvercet. who worted bl Cube u u accouatadt and interpreter. "Kost ol the Yoanc people are dluatiafled." 1'be former Nadonal Leque bueba1J player aald that be would be ,.-ateful for Ul1 wort. ~n't one Yet .. ~...,..... MANGLED WAECkAGE OFTOUA BUS FROM TEXAS AFT£R PLUNGE KILLED AT LEAST 20 Vehk:te Cereened Oft 1luk:tde Curve' After tta Brau. Apparently Felled, Poke Sey Tour Bus Crash KillS 20 I Vehi,c/,e Careens Off 'Suicide Curve' . Oavi5 said the bua wu north· bound down a steep hlJI of the two-lane Arkansas Hlahway 1. a scenic route:-lt traveled alon1 a ditch on the ritbl aide ol the highway for more than 200 feet, then hit a culvert and veered otf the road. landin• noee down ln ruaed terrain 50 feet below the shoulder ol the blab way. he •aid. three or four passengers were thrown out of the bus. At least four \ft1'e found on the highway. Davia said the driver, who hu not been ldetltUied, WBI amoq the deed. A nearby resident beard the crash and alerted authorities. Elmer Dunn. 41. of Grand Prairie, TexH, was amon1 tboae who received minor In· juries. Counter System Absolved By DAVID KtJTZMANN Of_o.t,_,_ Co mputer obsta na<'' and ballot m.Jxups an<i riot th<> county's new Sl 5 malhon '~ co unt 1 n It sys t l' "' • • rc-rt'sponstblt' for foulup."' •1\t<'h huve delnyt'd fmnl n't.ums f'r<tm Tuesda) ·s ballotina. offtC'tal~ sa id today. ln fa<'t, ele<'taom~ <"ht<"f Sh1rtc>~ ~uton :u.act she-~till ~·•M '\ ~ tam wMn th\• results of t~"O prc- \· t n c t~ In Annhtlm 11nd Fullerton would be tabulated. mcun~ Oruna<' County would lik t'ly be th'' last county In Callfonua to lllbulule flm1l n'· s uits. Despltt> th<' deluys, whkh could be the lon11cst In n!C<'nt t'Ounty htstory. bolh obacrvcl'l' and omc1als defended the performance or the Martel Voto Countirt11 System. saylna It was blameless for problems plaauinR elecllon returns hore. M rt. Deaton aaid her office was qwte aallafied wllh the 80 new mac:hines, Into which were fed the results of volln1 In 2.061 precinct.a tbrou1bout the county .• <See DEIA \'8, Pa1e .U> Coast Weather Fair tonl1bt throu1b Friday except for late evenlD1 and early mom· ln1 cloudtneu, Lowa tonlcht • at the beaches and 55 lnland. ~I.Iha Fri· day mid «II to mid 'JOI. Slaying Victim Known? Keith Hopper, a apokaman for Ceotn1 Tuu trailwaya in Dallu, s aid the bua waa chart.end by Mn. R. W. Ja~ of lJ°Vtn8, Tex. The tourlaU ap- parently '"bad no aUlllaUoo wtth any orcaabed ~p." He said be was ridtn1 on the left aide ot tbe bus. toward the rear. and w11 almost ulMp when the bul ran off the road on a curve. Tbe wtndowt were knocked out from the impact of the cnab: Danrt •aid tt.ltJt the beck .. of the le.It, then II.kl to tM tlocw and crawled out a window. State poltce 11ld tbe p&IMlllftW were all from the Dalluarea. Some victims 1tUI were tupped under t.be bul &Del IW'· nMmdinl timber four bOQn after the ··ectaenL flopper decJJned ~mment on ltate police repona that the bra It a fa.I.led. •Davia satd the driver and PIUH DETAILS COUlVlY 'JOBS' Tod11'1 Dally PUol details Oran1• County Job opportuntt.tea and emploJmerrt coftcflUons in a U·pa1e ma1ni:'M. "Jobi " • He Hid one aide of the bm wu demoUahed. There wu DO fire. The accident occurred ~Y before J a .m. one mJle IOUlh 'ot J11per Autldttia aald identlfltadon of the female vlct1m1 wu dtf • flcult bec1use P\l.r'HI wen .m, t.ered tn the wreckl••· ( BUS. P11e U> I t ;U KY l'!LOT .:_. 1'flelalgan Madam · Pags Brothel '!JUS SAULT Ir& llAaJS <AP> -ftl ..... 'fiW fl Uil Great LIMI 1J1rt .... -'t MY ... ..., ... -.......... 1Ul11 arucr. -. n '. ... .._ .... ,_ .... , tl"Olll ... •t• :rr • ..,, ·.PJ~.:. .. lllll .. .. 1 •• ~ -w ....... .,.. •• -..rt· •• ~ twtc. a mGl6 to ha .. ewer her proaUtutee' ln· come tu• "It'• UM ft.I'll lame we've to'· ..-.. o1 ...... womn&o...- te wl''*"*"' \U•, aM 19 tar ......... ll Nll"°"8l1.·· Mid IJrl Qaloft. ~laor for tbe depar1mml'1 llllelllleftff Wilt. "Mow ".,. hope lo ll'Y Uala la other.,...·· "W• have a ndwr un~ue ud unu1ual 1ltullon here. • con· ced.. Polle• Chief l!!dwud Edwardson The lax caae1 bea•n wlth Soviet 'Attack' False Man11 .. WASHINGTON (AP) -U.S. military offldab lncreued the alert ol strater1c nuclear bOm~ en and missiles brteny Tues· day when a computer problem caused a false alarm indicating a multiple Soviet missile attack, the Pent.qon said today. A quick check of a variety of sensors in the complex warning system, including satellites, con· '10' Wears 7BShoes . SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -What &iie shoe does a perfect .. 10 .. wear? Well. the secret is out. Bo Derek. star of the mm "10," bought two pairs or size 7B shoes at a Joseph M agnin s pecially store here, drawing :. crowd when she entered the store Wednesday The mm star charged the open-toed beige and white shoes. Frotrt Pag.-. I I :·DELAYS •.• Election officials contend. just as they had predicted. that the . machine processed all ballots by 2:30 a .m. Wednesday. It is at this point. however. the problems began to emerge. Mrs. Deat.oo said that when computer tapes bearing the elec· lion results were fed into the county 's main computer in downtown Santa Ana for a printout, 38 preclnct. would not go lb rough. "We don t know why," she said For 36 of those precincts. the information was transferred on· to new tapes and fed successful· . ly into the Computer Sciences Corporation computers In the county's finance building in the . Civic Center These returns were eventually added into the cumulative vote count by late Wednesday morn· in" Mrs. Deaton said il wasn't known if the problem waa in the main computer system or with the Registrar of Voters com· • puter equipment at another &oca Uon In Santa Ana ~ Po6tical Rivals . In Friendly Chat PALM fiPRINOS cAPI -W1lh the &.pubUun prHldenU•I nomination ln h•• pod.ft, R.oo•ld &.a.-olenn.d e t!l)UfiM)' Nit today wfth ..,, old POhtluf n nl, form• Pr•tdent t'lereld Ford E•rti•r, Vord d ac l•rf!d rt..•a• too cor1Mrv•Uva tl) win the prw1&Mn,.y, but fanaUy en dorted n.111n IHt week A• f'ord aide dHuabe4 l1Ui1y '1 planMd meeUnt u an oceQtoo tor part)' unity DAIL Y PILOT T&IJJll 1 RI (n4>1MM91 Cllat ........... ....,. ~-0.--- firmed within three minutes lhal no Soviet missiles had been launched and the alert waa re- laxed. officials said. No bombers were launched, although engines were started, the Pentagon said. There was in· creased communication with missile crews but no weapons were prepared ror launch. Neither President Carter nor Defense Secretary Harold Brown was notified, the Pen· tagon said, but the White House Situation 'loom. which deals with international crises. "was aware or the possible threat while it was being evaluated." It was the second false alert or this type since November. Both resulted from problems at the ~ Antllia __. ...,_,edft Command headquarters at Colorado Springs. Colo. However. officials said the "technical problem in a com· puter" early Tuesday apparent· ly did not occur under the same conditioos as the Nov. 9 false alarm. In that incident, a test tape simulating an attack was fed into the NORAD computer and because of an apparent m e chanical malfunction was transmitted to other military commands and federal agen· cies. The Pentagon said the latest fal se alarm is being i n · v ·stigaled. The false alarm Tuesday in· dicated Soviet launching or both intercontinental ballis tic mis· siles and submarine-launched missiles against the United Stales. officials said. Senior officers In the Pen· tagon's Military Command Center. the Strategic Air Com· mand Headquarters in Omaha. Neb. NORAD conferred swiftly. "As a precaution, and in ac· cordance with standard pro- cedures. certain Strategic Air Command aircraft and com. maod control aircrart were brought to a higher state of readiness," the Pentagon said in a statement. The only plane to take off was an unarmed command and con· trol aircraft from Hawaii. of. ficials said. •'There was no change in over· all U.S. defense posture and. after an evaluation, all systems were returned to normal," the Pentagon said ·'The compu~er technical problems are now being assessed to determine correcelve action." A portlon of the nation'• 510 e.. 52andf'B.111atrateitcbom~ en are alway• kept on 1round alert and the natloo'• 1,0M In· t.erc~ b11UaUc mlalllft btMCI in the United Stat.ea l1ao are In 1 bigb st.ate of ree.diMH so they can react quickly In event o( 1 Sovlat au.acll Th.e Pentagon uad U S air de fense squadrooli were not •lert· ~d during the bnef penod of con· cern Su.ch f1ght.ers are int.ended tn ttefend North Americ a u&AUflfit bomber auark The General Accounlln1 Ot· ft "a, an lnn1ti1atlve arm of Congress, and some membeni ot Con11ress have said there are weakne111ea in the computer sy1ta~ that play • key role in th• muJUbilUon dollar w•mlna apperakll. ·VD Test Kits Said Faulty WAlmNOTON <AP) -A Ralph Nad•t·lfflllaled health 'r::l cbarMd today that new b .. lllla dellp.cl to detec!t ....,.... la .OIMft 1bould be tu.. olt U.. market blc:a\M tbQ ~too many falM NIUlt..- Tb• Publlc CtUHn Health Re1t1rcb Group 1ald tb• manufaeturera' own 1tudle1 1taow .... wtui. tbe blood -mar ...._.. ao perc•t to ao perfflll ol IM wom• toNIDld could baff .,...... .... " only 2 C-aewa11J would nave the .... .,.... Ulat tbit ~::'In:· Mmlalltnticln pollce ra di on four btot.bell near tbe Sault Ste. Marle lblp- pln1 locu ln o.tember 1m. The Treaaury Department u1ed recordl Htud from Ma. Brand'• ~ to nJeulate bu •rot• annuaJ lnt0me at between seo.ooo anc1 ns.ooo. Th y told her how much they thou&bl t he owed. She hired an accountant and made the de· partment a counteroffer. Ma. Brud beean wlthbold1n1 Income tu from her employees' waeea 1b wMkl aao. The de· partment and the state 1ttomey 1eneral'1 office have flied 1 123.000 tu clalm a1alnlt one ot Ma. Brand'• compeUton. Claxton Hld Ma. Brand payt taxes ot IUO to 1150 per month band on an 1vera1e dally waee of S50 for each prostltute. He said Ma. Brand's staff varies from three to six women. Some CMM,,,_..,.._ SID SOFFER PAESEHTS HIS CASE ATOP CAR He Tuma Tiger In Fight With City Over Pink C.ddle Vintage Car Back At Mesa's Expen.se By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 011.,. D•ltf ru .. i~tt Vintage Cadillac car buff Sid So ffe r has h is pank . 1962 Eldorado back today after the city of Costa Mesa. which had it towed away May 9, relented and agreed to pay $123.50 an ac· cumulated impound fees. The city bad to swallow an ad· ditionaJ charge for towing the Newport Beach raconteur's beloved buggy back to 900 Arbor St . Thursday where it was seized. after he refused to pick it up hamself and drive al home. "I told them 1 · d just rather they put it right back where it belonged." says the bearded owner of temporarily boarded· uJS Sid's Blue Beet, a Newport Beach restaurant-niptclub dal· ing back some 20 years. The trials and tribulations may not be over, be suggested today, because the older model Cadillac, one o( 18 he owns as in· veatmmt.s, came back to him Thursday afternoon with an ex· Carter Eyes 'Trial Plan' For Hostages BOSTON <AP> -The Carter odminlatratlon i• revlewln1 a plan caWns for I.be American hoet~ee in Iran to be releued after 10me of them are put on trial a.a 1pte., the Bolton Olobe re po~ today. Whlta Hou.It official• ere war; of the pt'OPOled scheme, but are explortne It tbrou1h third partlet, tho new1paper aa1d. There wu no Immediate com· ment from the White Home oo KHOmlNI IAYS CARTIR A •ROUQHNl!CK'-Aa the newspaP« report. The Globe q~ dlplo~ 10Urc• u taYlnl that the In· nlan plan calla for the releue ol mo.at ol tbe boltal•, a 0 lb0w" trial ol lbe ••band(ul" remalDJ.DI for allepd espionale ud tbm the f reelnl of these people. The newspaper did not .., when tbLI releue could occur. lt aald tbe millt.anta JloictlDI tbe baalq• an worTMd tlilat after the meue. tbe C..tral r. t•IUPDN Aa•ncr .. mt1bl re· taU1te by p&cklne off Ute mW· wt leaden one by Giie. •• lntermedlart•.,.. uldna fof a11uruce1 tbat lf a deal la worUd out. tbe UDIMd ..._ wlll not ID .n. tlM 111Wtut1. tra he says 1l didn't ha\'e before -a big. ugl~ crunch down the passenger side ··1·m happy as hell." quips Soffer, who contends the caty of Costa Mesa acted illegally and employed a 72·hour parking law he maintains bas been found Wl- constitutional in seizing bis '62 Cadillac. Soffer is scheduled to ap· pear in. U.S. District Court in Los Angeles July 22 ror trial of his 1978 suit against the city over the towing of three Cadillacs UD· der that same law. He is seeking $1 00.000 in punitive and general damages charging deprivation or has civil rights and the process of law ancf believes he will be up- held by the rourt. "They are 100 p e rcent wrong," be says or lhe city and its contention of justification m the towing away of his cars and. the arksome 72-bour parkina ban under which he was cited. Tbu.nday's action by the city marks the aecond time It baa re- leased SoUer's aelzed can. tow· ins them home and picked up the towtq and impound fees owed Harbor Towin1 Company. "I 'm lhrou1h playln1 Mr. Nice Guy," now , Soffer declared. ....... :.~.:: ~--.-at aBa•ad t.brM 1 a":1]• '° marMt dlie &ell klll 4' 11. • Tbe HWlpaper 41.aot• •· n1med American olftctala M aayllll tbere ii DO lip tMl tM A1at0llab Rubotlab Kbometal woald IPPIW• 8111 bmt11t .... , ............. \ earn up to llOO ~day. . II•. Brand, wbom Claxton described u a friendly and lika· ble middle·•eed woman, was ..le1lUm:aa.ely out ol town for a couple ot weeks'' and could not be reached for comment, said Edwatdloo. Edwardlon said there are only "about 2Yl" bawdy houses in the towp of 15.000 now, compared t.o • !I hip ot 23 in 1963 before nearb1 Killer Facts Sought ByDELOBESBROOKSIRWIN OttM o.lfy "'-'' .... City and county law enforce· menl officers are doing a good job in coordinating their search for the Freeway Killer , and a Hiiiside Strangler·hke task rorce isn't needed. Supervisor Ptuhp Anthony saad Wednesday. Formation of a task force at first seemed to Anthony "like it may be the answer" to solving about 41 appare ntly connected murders. the Firs t Di strict supervisor said. But Anthony told fe llow supervisors he rejected the idea or calling ror a task force aft.er talking to Orange County Sheriff Brad Gates. ·'The shenff assured me there 1s excellent coord ination between ha s .office and the cities ," Anthony said Supervisors ms tead decided to urge the public lo come forward with 11\formatlon about the kill· an gs. In addition. an overall fund should be established to reward purveyors of informalJon lead· 1ng to the aJTeSl and conviction or the slaye r or slayers. they said. The Freeway Killer •• ~lieved lo have strangled or suffocated about -41 youn1 mm whose bodies have been found a I o n g he a v i l y t r a v e I ed roadways. Bodies have beetl found in rour Southern California counties Anthony saad he hrst con· !'1dered asking for a ta'>k force along the lines of the lhlls1de Str a ngler ID\ est1gttl1on erfort v. hale talkmg to a reporter al an election rught part) But he said he scuttled the adea after rett1V1ng Gates' as· surances that there a lready ts suff1 c1ent coordaoalion among the police agencies involved. Anthony said the shenff told him the real problem an fmd.JnJ! the killer was "lack of good e\ 1den~ and leads to rollov. .. Suspect Held In Slaying A 23-year-old Wilmmgton man has been arrested in the f'eb 16 murder of Westminster resident Carol Fi.llbach. also 23. The woman's badly beaten body was round noatang m a fl ood control channel along Hoover Street between Trask Avenue and Garden Grove Boulevard. Westminster police reported that Lawrence 0 . Adair bas been charged with fll"St degree murder. Klaebeloe Air Fore• a.N eloMd. Th• new revenue prObebb' won't prove a boon to a .-. la a flnaaclal bind, 11ld llmr>' Krt1ner of the departaMDt'• •peclal invellllaUOD dlvt.ioa. ••1·m n°' 1ure llleblaaa la replet• with .brothel• . , • It would be very 1maJI. But bla "' large, lf they're there. we're go. ing to collect them," Kramer said. BUS •• The bus was chartered by Cen· tral Texas TraUways of Waco, T e xa s. and left Dallas on Wednesday for a four-day holiday in Missouri and Arkansas. of· ftiet,...ullll The bus landed in a rocky. tree rovered ravine about three- fourths mile above the Buffalo River. The site, known locally as "suicide curve." has been the location of many fatal traffic ac· cadents. Nearby, the s tate Highway and Trans porta tion Department 1s constructing an emergency ramp consisting of deep gravel. The ramp is in- tended to allow drivers traveling down the extremely steep hill to slow their vehicles when they go out of control. Dunn s aid the lour was scheduled lo tra vel lo Branson, Mo.. Wednesday night and re- main there through Thursday night He s aid the bus was de· la yed in Queen Wilhe lmina State Park Lodge in northwest Arlinsas (or aboul five hours Wednesday because of a faulty fuel pump D UAR aald the. &ou.r was to go lo Eurfka. Ark .. just ~die II.ate line. on Frtay to • 'P••""' play. 'the s e'edale eall~ for the &ourlsta !!'r~have a o~·nipt l&Gpo_. rTJDa~ln Ro1ers, Arlt., lD the estretDe fl<>r\t.wet;t part of ~:~.rewning to I ~ 'Nostalgia' CAMRRIDG.E, Mass. <AP l - f'o rme r Secre ta r y of State C> rus R. Vance, who quit to pro- te<>l the attempt to rescue the hohtali(~ in Iran. today warned of .. a dangerous new nostalgla ·· for a time when American mahtary power could handle any foreign threat. The nostalgia s weeping the linited States. he s aid. 1s "a longing for earlier days when the world seemed. at least in retrospect, to have been a more orde rly place in whicb American power could, alone. preserve that order·· Without referring s pecifically to Iran. Vance said, "The new nostal1t1a lead!. us to simplistic solutions and go-it-alone ii · lusaons, diverting our energies from the struggle to shape c hange in constructive direc- tions . It is self.indulgent non· sense. bound to lead us into er· ror. if not disaster." Bombing Claimed WASHINGTON <AP) -A Croatian nationalist group on Wednesday claimed "full responsibility" for Tuesday's pre-dawn bombing of a Yugoslav· ian diplomat's.house here. ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JUNES, 1980 Added Jet Flights Cited as BrtrtV M~aaL& .... Deil'I ........ An inereue '" co•m~at jet I fll1ht• out of John Wayne Airport eoukl lead to a b1iher ( divorce rate. an b1treaae ln , cblld beattna and teamlnc p~ f Jem• •lnOl'lt children. Such are some of the concerns a sroup of Newport Beach homeowners are aslrlna county officiais to consider as they eye poulblt expanalon of lhe airport . Clarence Turner. prealdenl ol the Martoen Commuollf Aa· aoelation, alao contend• that chan.-at the airport could re- 1ul\ In hip lnddencea of mental exhausUon and a ceneral feelln& of deapalr. In a letler to the director of the county's Environmental Management Agency, Turner reque.ted tbat competent IOdaJ aclentllta be blred to study tbe effect.a airport e:xpanalon will have on tbe Newport oelshborttood. Nolle from jet fiitbts Jeariq ~obn Wayne Airport affect.a homes in Dover Shores, the Baycrest area, and Westcliff as well as Santa Ana Helabt.a. Tbe Federal Aviation Ad· ministration has ordered the airport open to more carriers. Residents contend \his means more dally nights and more oolae. The county baa hired VTN ConaoUdated ol lnine to deYelop a master plan for tbe airport aod to prepare environmental document.a reJaUng to a1rport noise and flllure land uaea sur· rounding the airfleld. The document.a are expected Computer Error Blamed to be compleUd by mid·July. Among the altemativea, VTN plannen have proposed that the county either ·buy homes from reaidenta and help them relocate or bankroll eoundprooflng lm· provements in homes. But the study, and future en· vironmental studies to come, are directed only at the Santa Ana Height.a area and not at the Newport Beach neighborhoods. N TWENTY-FIVE CENTS Trlab BuUer, a VTN consult· ant, said only Santa Ana Heipta lies in the critical area -the area where jet nolae reaches the as decibel level. She explained that VTN in· tends to find ways to reduce noise to shrink this crillcal area. • move she contends will also help noiae·we.ary Newport resi· dent.a. Vote Snafu Located o.ify"91....,,..... THE VA' ' ADAAE8 FAlllL Y HEADS FOR NeW LIFE Cuban Refulff• Manuef, Nonu and Oledp, a Cuban RefUiees Arrive in County By JODI CADENHEAD Of•Dalty ......... The first wave of Cuban refugees trickled into Orange County early today -weary. homeless and hopeful after enduring weeks or hunger and high seas to nee their homeland. News that the 18 refugees would be arriving from Florida to hve in Orange County reached Cuban communi· ty groups Wednesday afternoon. They are the Cuban refugees destined fo r Orange County and more arc expeded to arrive today and in the coming weeks. authorities said. By DA vtO KUTZMANN 01 tlW O.lly ~lklt St•tl Co mputer obstinHcy and ballot m1xups and not the county's new Sl.5 million vote counting system were n •s pons1ble for foulup:. which have delayed final return:. from T ue:.<1.i.y :. llallolanl:. o((icials suid today Jn fact. l'il'l'l1ons chie f Shirley Deaton suad sht• still wasn ·t cer· tuan \\hen the results of two pre· cincls 1n Anaheim and Fullerton -would be tabulated. meaning Orange County would likely be the last county in California to tabulate final re· suits. Despite the delays, which ' could be the longest in recent county tustory. both observers a nd officials defended the performance of the Martel Vote Counting System. saying It was blameless for problems plaguing election returns here. Mrs. Deaton said her office was quite satisfied with the 90 new machines. into which were fed the results of volinC in 2,081 precincts throughout the coonty .. Elect.ion officials contend. Just Freeway Killer Victim Identified The body of the latest victim of the so-called Freeway Killer has been tentatively identified by Huntington Beach police m· vestigators as a Los Angeles County youth The victim. whose body was found dumped behind a Mobil SPOKESMEN FOR THE Cuban Association and the service station m south·central Cuban Assistance League m Orange County said that they Huntington Beac h Tuesday had been stonng food . clothing and furniture for more than morningl re~rtedly was rec· a month in antic1pat1on that refugees would be arriving ognized oy his parents from a here. None of the 18 Cubans have relatives living in photograph s upplied by Hunt· Orange County and many left families behind. ington Beach police Manuel Vallandres. his wife, Norma and their 8-year Detective Sgt Luis Ochoa said old daughter, Gladys, were among tho first arnvals seek· the boy's name would not be re· ing asylum at the Peruvian embassy in Cuba. leased until positive idenllfica· They lived for 12 days at lhe embassy surviving the lion is made by his parents. sickness and salvaging the scarce small packages of food probably later today. that the United States shipped in t!Very day. explained Sgt. Ochoa said the victim's Valhtndres. parents. who hvc in Riverside County. had informed police that "MY WIFE WANTED TO leave. It was too much their son was missing. He had hunger and too muctt sickness," sa1d the truck driver. "We been li vlng in Loa Angeles squeezed the juice from leaves of orange trees to live." Co4nty. He said that he hopes to flnd a job soon. "I want Uber· The officer said ldentlflcation ty and a place to settle my family," he said. eliminates the poesiblllty that. Anxious famUles from the Los Angeles _,-ea crowded the young man wu the victim of Los Angeles lntematlonaJ Airport terminal seeking the a possible kJdnapplog repotted familiar faces of relatives that many had not seen since May 27 in Garden Grove. Castro came to power two decades a10. Ochoe aaid police plan to talk Orlando Tallon of HunUngton Park fou1ht back tears with acquaintancea of the boy tn as they had predicted. that the machine processed all ballots.by 2 30 a m. Wedn~day. It is at this point. however. the problems began to emerge Mrs . Deaton said that when computer t~pes bearing the elec t1on results were fed into the county·s main computer in downtown Santil Ana fo r a printout. 38 precincts would not go through. .. We don t know why... she said F'or 36 of those precincts. the anformatJOn was trani.ferred on· 'Leave /tie Alo1ae' T his duck was asleep on one leg beside Balboa Island's Grand Canal until a photographer came along Wednes· day with one of those noisy motor·drive cameras. The duck gave the photographer a dirty look. then went back to sleep. It really has two legs. but needs only one for sleeping. Tour Bus Plunges In Ravine; 20 Die as be embraced the son he left in Cuba 10 yean •10. effort.I to learn hla acUvlUa before bla death. JASPER. Arlr. <AP> -A tour Som e victim s still were 0 Jl"8 8£EN A 'VERY TEBIUBLE time," he aald. bus rrom Texu wtlb 33 aboard trapped under the bus and sur· "But tt'• wonderful to lee him qain." He 1aid it l1 not known at this careened off a "1ulclde curve.. roundina Umber four hours aft.er While famillea from Los Angeles wept and embraced. Ume wbeCher the youn11ter bad and plunaed 50 feet down a the accident. refu1ees destined for Orance County aathered quieUy to been hitchb.lklna before the Incl· rocky ravine in a mountainous Davis saJd the bus was north· leave for the Cuban Club in Orange, where a temporary dent. Many other victims In a area of oorthem Arkamas to-bound down a steep hill of the 1helter was prepared. s trinc of homosexual-related day. kJlllna at least 20. two.lane Arkan.su Hiabway 7. a to new tapes and fed successful - ly into the Computer Sciences Corporation computers in the county's finance building in the Civic Center These returns were eventually added mto the cumulative vote CSee DELAYS. Page A2> 40Seeking Planners' TUX> Seats Two Newport Beach planning commissioners whose terms are set to expire thh month are be· ing challenged by 38 other appli cant.a hoping· for a commission &eat. Commiuion's Chairman PauJ Balali.a and Helm McLaughlin are 'a.aking ~ City Council to give them second four-year terms. The two commission seats become vacant June 30, but. because of conflicting vacation plana of counciJ members, the aeata won't be filled untJJ JuJy 14. Balalls and Mrs. McLaughlin will be allowed to serve until that date. The lengthy list of applicants. said City Clerk Doris George. is about the normal turnout when commission vacancies come up. She said the record was set several years ago when 54 persons submiued applications In addition to Balalis and Mrs Ml'Laughlln. lhf' foll owin~ persons have applied for ap 1101ntment to the comm1ss1on James Humphrey Jr . Patricia Gibbs. Jerry King, Theodore Reynolds. Wesley Taylor. Barry Williams. Laird Holloway. Bruce Stuart and Patr icia Eichenhofer. William Dohr . Richard F'urtaw. Frederick Moore. Don Herzog. Robert Esch bach. Robert Brockman. Virginia Fouts. Danie\ Brigham Jr .. Thomas Edwards and Hans Hegna. J ames Leland d e Boom. Ronald Duncan. Joseph Mesh!, John Heffernan, Louis Herson. Robert Ashton, Robert Blckner. Andrew Ceavatta. Margaret Colzani and Judith Cooper . Hal Foub, Robert Hippe, Kurt Kupfennan, Paul Lesaler, Ken· neth Montgotnery. Donald Peterson. Elizabeth Robinson, C hris topher Rouff. Davld Shores. Robert Hopkins and Margot Slrlllin8. Coast ... slaylnp were lut seen hJtcbbik· "tn 27 yean with the state scenic route. It traveled •Jona a .. , OOVLDN'T SUPP01lT the ayatem anymore," •aid Jnc. police. It's the wont I've ever ditch on the rtgbt side ol the Weather Dado Duveraet. wbo worked ln Cuba u an accountant and seen.·· said Capt. Billy Bob highway for more than 200 feet, Fair tonlCbl throuah . interpreter. "Moat of lhe YOUDI people are dluatlafled.'' Oavla, commander of TnM>p I o1 then hit a culvert and veered off Friday exce l for late 1'befonnerNaUoqat~lll~.Rlil!.ltllll..Rllll1t.lll1SLJ~L-.--.f.-~~r,...i.-.~··~:.1rt ... 0-~·~.~~il ... ~tfn~~11m"' .... ...J'~~~ .. '-'4A~s~k~·an••·~·~.~.saiLt•~··a...1ee'O~~~~~•~c&~'--~'bb••~n>ad~~~~~~~~~~~-t~~§misr"'i.iiirtirni~mi=it"--1t------'"1t be would be '1'ate"1J for an . v ;J v Q Harriaon. rutaed ternln so leet below \he orn· Al the retuaees ahullled into a walUnt van, Albert ·•it looked •11 thouch the •houlderotthehiahway, besaid. tni c oudin~u . Lows = .. wboee..wile WU unable to eet into the Peruvian Board of PB·S brakes apparenUy had Called... Keith Hopper. • eJ)Okesman ~J·:: :~.~;:.ac;~ y, asked report.en lf there wu anf w~y to Jet her Oavla said. for Central Texas Trailwaya ln kDow1thatbewuaUrt1bt. . Frank Wlae. admlnlslrator ol Dallu. utd the bua wu daymid«Mtomid70I. • Dr. Norman E. WataoG, Chan· the Boone Cou.ntf ffospltal at chartered by Mn. R. W. Jacobs cellor of tbe Cout Community Harrllon, aald 13 were ir..ted of Irvine, Tex. TM tourilU ap-INSIDE Te8A Y Coll• ....... .,.... ··~ to UN &hue roe lnjurief. One w,.. Uated parently "had DO allUlaUon wttb JS.member Soft"llAI board ol ln ~rtdcu :!Uoo. Tb• COl)dl. any ortmlHd poup. •' the Publlc BroedcuUn1 Serviee Uon of the en wu not Im· Hopper declined to comment CPIS>. COM11t1111of•1t1U. medha(ely av able: on state POUce reportl \hat the Ht'OU the United Sta tee. St ate police s a Id th~ brakes Called. Wataoo. one ol rour newly pa11enten were all from lhe Davl1 aald the driver and elected lay ptt 90M to U.. board. Dallu erea. .U.ree or four pauen1en were wtU aene for a tlar•••fHt thrown out of tho bua. At least period and wW be Ulloid to (our were found on the hl1hw1y. Ybo•!1"~-~~-!l.'~~lpbf lb• •• l'flLlfi. DET,,4.ILS Oavla uld tM,,,drlver. who.bas ...... ...-....... •-lliP not bftn ldentlned, waa amop1 erDIDI board la baHd ~ln l'nllfVPY ''OBS' lh• dead. w., ....... D.C. · ~1 .1• ·A nearby resident heard tbe " Tlae ...._. dl8&iiet owna and Today's Dally PUot d~t•tls. crub 4nd alerted a uLborlUM. °""llill1KOCS.TV. Cll PHI '°· Or .. 1• OcMmtr job opPottunJUM Elmer Dunn, I 61, or Orand • PM lflllate .... • tbt ¥d emp&o_!,rn •• ~.cond ••• ~lU0tona •• , ln 1 Pralrlt, T4UlH, wu aaaoo1 • ....., ii Otlt•'Wlil C111111 ~ -=--_ _ tboao who received mlDor la. Iii R '5 PM18111dl. · Jurlea. ~------ . SID O.Wy f'tl9I S"9ft ,._ SOFFER PRESENTS HIS CASE ATOP CAA He Tume Tlgef In Fight With Ctty Over Pfnk Caddle Flap Foments Soffer Still Suing Mesa By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of llW o.lfw> "'*SC.ff Vintage Cadillac car buff Sid Soffer has his pink. 1962 Eldorado back today after the city of Costa Mesa, which had rt lowed away May 9, relented and agr eed to pay $123.50 10 ac- cumulated imPound fees. T he city had to swallow an ad· dilionaJ charge for towing the Newport Beach raconteur's beloved buggy back to 900 Arbor St . Wednesday where it was seized. after he refused to pick it up hunself and drive it home. "I told them I'd just rather they put it right back where it belong(!d ," says the bearded owner or te mPorartly boarded- up Sid's Blue Beet, a Newport Beach restaurant-nightclub dat- ing back some 20 years. The trials and tribulations may not be over. he suggested today. because the older model Cadillac, one of 18 he owns as In- vestments, came back to tum Wednesday artemoon with an ex· tra h e says it didn't have before 1 -a big, ugly crunch down Ure passenger side. "I 'm happy as hell.' quips Soffer. who contend!> the city or Costa Mesa acted illegally and employed a 72-hour parking law he maintains has been found un- constitutional in seizing his '62 Cadillac. Soffer is scheduled to ap- pear in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles July 22 for trial of his )978 suit against the city over the towing or three Cadillacs Un· der that same law. He ls s eeking $100,000 In Judge Faces punitive {Ind ~eneral damages c harging de priva tion or has civil rights and the process of law ancf believes he -will be up- held' by the court. ·'They are 100 percent wrong," h~ says of the city and its contention of justification in the towing away of his cars and the irksome 72-hour parking· ban under which he was cited. Wednesday's action by the city marks Ute second time IL bas re· ~eased Soffer's seized cars, tow- ing them home and picked up the towing and imp(>und fees owed Harbor Towing Company. ~·1•m through playing Mr. N ace Guy,". now, Soffer declared. He bad been scheduled for a hearing Wednesday before City Manager Fred Sorsabal on bis contentions the city was In viola- tion in the May 9 ticketing and . towing of the car. which was or- dered by a young police cadet on parking control duty. Throughout the Soffer versus the city of Costa Mesa epaaodes over the past two years, the city has steadfastly declined to com- ment on legal aspects of the matter. City officials have agreed .on each occasion to pay the costs nor mally paid by the car's owner on advice or the city at- torney. There bave been three city attorneys since the first towing incident. City Manager Fred Sorsabal informed Soffer in a letter he says, that since the city ls re- turning his Cadillac there la no need now for a further heartna. Soffer disagrees. DEl~YSi •• C-t lllr ... WeOr11m1 ,.,,... ·::z· ~=. _ .. ....... ..., ... ri 3~~~,, ... --=-··· .. ·= Uoa ta Ana. TH.........,.'scomc:wu Uied &o tr...r. &IM I 1111 ,.._ IUltl Pf'OC•ed by the Kart.el m1t~•putoac..,....to maanetlc .__ wblcll 11111 CIC oo•puten......,....w ... for •Utna ......... ol ~. 41We luN hope to un.ra...a the problem," th e election superviaor aaJd. BeCIUH tbe cowrty bed no prevlou nperteace wttb I.be Mertel maclilnee -ta use for the flnt ume in Oranae Coant.1 -It bu beeome more diftlcalt to track dOWl\ tbe problem. of. rlcl1lluld. ln the case of two ~ pn- clncts--atW UDtalUed u ~ tbia mornln1-problems were of another nature. In Anaheim, for ~. ~ wrong ba1Jots were sent to a pre- cinct with 447 registered voters, officials aald. Of that total, 231 voted Tues· day. However. instead of eating ballots for candidates in the Tlst Assembly District as they ahould have, the voters were given ballots for the 68tb '5- sem bly Dtstrlct. This means tbe voters in the West Anabelm preelncta will not have their votes counted in partisan races for which they shouldn't have been vottna in the first place. The votes they cast for Judges. presldentiaJ candidates and U.S. Senate candidates would be tallied because tbeae were ooun· tywide races. Mrs. Deaton said the mis· take-and subsequent canceled votes-would not alter the out· come ol any races. The foulup was apparently caused by a computer auiplng the wrona ballot cards to the Anaheim precinct. Benton Vejach, foreman ol the Orange County Grand Jury and an election observer, said It was his impression the Martel vote counth1g machine.a performed well but that computer problems were probably the result ol try. ing to wed new systems for the first time. The result, Vejach said, wu that the two didn't mesh well. Vejach, who was amoag five observers from the grand jury at the Registrar of Voters office on election night, said he expect- ed the computer related prob- lems to be solved by the next countywlde election in No- vember. The Mar.el machines are in use in othu area sucb u 1\alaa County. Oklahoma, Tesaa and another southern states, Registrar of Voters Al OllOll said. POiitical Rivals ) 1n· Friendly Chat PALM SPRINGS <AP>-Wlth the Republican presidential nomlnaUon in his pocket. Ronald Rea18(l planned a courtesy visit today wttb an old poUUcal rival, former Prealdent Gerald Fores. · Vote Runoff He says be wants to hear the city admit its alleged guilt, u be contends next month's federal court trial in Los Angeles wUl establish beyond a doubt. Earlier, Ford declared Reagan too cooaervative to wtn the presidency, but ftnllly en· dorsed Reagan last week. A Ford aide described today's planned meetinl as an occuioo for party unfty. . • .. . • ' • . . ~ • • . I • I I I • • . It was incorrecUy reported in Wednesday's Daily Pilot that North Orange County Municipal Court Judge Jame. Wright Cook was elected to a Superior Court judgeship in Tuesday's elec- tions. Judge Cook fell one-half percentage point short or gain· in& a majority vote in a field or six candidates for the poeitioo bein& vacated by Judge Le1iter Van Tatenbove. Cook will face a November runoff contest witb Susanne Cur· rie Lewi.I, a Los An&eles County deputy district attorney who re- sides in Miaslon Viejo. Of tbe 369,116 votes counted, Cook received 104.,019 and Mrs. Lewis, 63,250. ' DAILY PILOT . : ~ .......... (714)...., f Cl••••• ......... MMl1I .. . ~=-~er== ~tiii~·-.~t\:M._~ . ~T~~~~.:-: , ... I'• ....... ,, ,,,... .. :.::. ... ,, ...,...,., ... ....._.. . Soffer is a frequent visitor at the Orange County public law library ~--JVST BREAKING----..... Late itema /rom toda11'• world Clftd ~ ~ ckNlopn lld1, lsmeli TroOps A.tlack Guerrillas in Lebanon TEL AVIV, Isr ael CAP) -Israeli troops attacked Paleatln· ian ((uerrilla 1>96itions in Southern Lebanon today, tM lltb an· niversary of the start of the 1961 Middle Eut wu. Tbroulbou& Israel, troops were on full alert. The military command announced that an Jaraell foree struck the Port of Sidon durin& the mornln1 and ltillld a number of guerrillas. An army spokesman declined to couiment on • :C. trom Beirut that Israeli missile boat.I fired rockets et• be col· fee house near Sidon, killln8 one Lebanese clvtllan aad W'OUIMS· inl three. The IS?'aeil attack wu almed at detA!rrlnl 1'*'1'tlla atteeb on Lsrael and prevent.tn1 the auerrWu from ar1ul•'n1 1uob ac- tions, the spokesman aaid. &u T.z •UI •eelf ae Cflrfn-.. ~ .. .. ...,,.. ...... ".~· ...... Surlin' on ilae Miid Skyler Tegland, 14, of Laguna Niguel, takes a wet ride aboard his windsurfer at Dana Point Harbor. He was on the water Wednesday after school, catching some good breezes. He 's been windsurfing about a year. Female U.S. Agent Slain in LA Holdup LOS ANGELES tAP' -An apparently coincidental holdup- sbootina bas resulted in the first death in the line of duty or a woman Secret Service agent, the Secret Service s&Jd today. Agent Julie Y. Cross. 26, who bad been with the Se<:ret Service less than a year and bad Just tranalerred to Los An&eles last week after her inJtiaJ trainlna, was shot to death -apparenUy wltb her s hotgun -aa s he staked out a suspected coun- terfeit operation Wednesday in Westchester. near Los Angeles I nternaUonal Airport Her partner , Larry Bulman, was not injured Special A&ent Larry Sheafe. who is in charge or the Los Angeles Secret Service ornce. told a news conference today that the Secret Service ls offer- ing a $25,000 reward for anyone who supplies Information lead-ing to the arrest and conviclloo of her killers. Sheaf' said Agents Crou a.od Bulman were sitting In their car when two men. about 30·35 years old, approached the m and de· manded money. Bulman told them they were law officers, and one or the robbers ntppanUy replied that be was a lawman too. Sheafe said. "There's oo doubt in my mind t hey knew who the agents were." Sbeafe aa1d. But be added he la coavinced the robbery attempt bad no con- nection with the counterfeitin& operaUoo. "It appears that lheae two black males almply were at· tempting to commit an armed robbery oo a male and female seated lo 1 car on a dark street," Sbeafe aaid. There were several wltoenee, includlni resldeota ol the apart- ment buU•tly which wu w:ader' -,, ............ SLAIN NEAR LA AIRPORT U.S. Agent Jule Cro .. surveillance Sheafe said they beard the s ho t s but didn't s pecify ~t they saw. He said one of the bandits reached mto the car and grabbed Agent Cross' shotgun. and ap- parently she was killed with her weapon. However. he said. an autopsy would have to be con· ducted to be gure. One bandit pointed a .357- magnum revolver at Bulman. and the agent began to struggle with him. At that Point, the other would-be robber grabbed the shotgun. Because of the acume. Bulman was unawa~ of what was happening to A.lent erou. Sheafe said. Bulman was knocked to the pavement during the strucgle, then was stunned by a •botlun blast that went off near bla bead, Sbeafeuld. Th• new ownen ol tbe former W.,tan Whit. JlouM are 1NUU poopen, a l"'OUP of bachelon contend ln a suit flied after tbeJr planned wln1·dln1 WH can- celed. Who'• Who Baebelon lnterna- Uoraal'• IUlt, ftled Wedwdl)' in Orance County 8Upertor Court, alle1es the owners broke a May 8 aareement to allow the party this Frtday nllht at La Casa Paciflca, a -president Richard Nixon'• former seaside vlDa In San Cleineote. Tbe suit seeks to force the OWIMl'S to allow the party to 10 on u scheduled and clalms can· cellatlon would cause the Marina del Rey group to lose prorlt.1, due1 and reputaUoo. Named defendants in the auit a r e Do nald Ko ll, George Argyros and Gavin Herbert. who Curchaaed the estate shortly efore Nixon moved to New York, as well as two 1roupa that lease or rent the seulde home for tours and parties. There wu no Immediate ex- planation for the cancellation of the party. Service Set For Lily Call ~ .. Of Newport Funeral services for long-time NewPort Beach restdent and fts· h1ng enthusiast Lily Call are scheduled for Friday at 10 a.m. at the Pacific View Mortuary. Burial Is set to follow at Pacific View Memorial Part. Friends of the 87-year·old NewPort resident, who passed away last Monday, said she was the winner or several hundred fishing trophies. The Newport woman reported- ly told friends once that her proudest moment came at the age of 82 when she landed a 532-pound marlin. She ls survived by her son Richard Call or Washington gran~ughter Ariane Swonge; of Idaho and three great. grandchildren. Earth Gulps Desert I.and KERMIT, Texas <AP> - Oil men scurried to drain storage tan ks and reroute pipes as a growmg slnkhole 2SO yards long s wallowed huge chunks or desert near th1a southwest Texas town. Workers from Petro LeWls Co. spent Wednesday trying to plug an . oil well and divert pipes while .slabt'I of earth fell into the ya wning chasm Just several hundred yards away. •'This just makes us sick ... said a foreman for the Denver-bued oil company. 'Annie' Presented Al Newport School Students at Mariners Elemen- tary School In Newport Beach are 1tqiq tbelr last preseata· tion ol the ibow "Ann.le" tonigbt at 1 o'clock in tbe school multlpurpoae room. 2100 Mariners Drive. Tbe show is open to the public. ' " !byr!dlr. Jun! 5, 1"9 DAIL 'f PILOT A.1 Kho1neini Scolds Ca1·ten: Commando Raid Called Cause for Trial . .. " • SJ TM AIMclaW Pnll A7ato1lab RuboUo Kbometn1 eall•d President Carter 1 •• rouabneek" and said he lhouJd be trfed for attempt.ins to tree the U U .8. boltat•· who spent their 115tb day In captivity t.ochty. The Amerl~au· Jailen reltereated the bostqes should be tried aa a plea if t.be deposed shah la not re- turned. Hu.adndl ol thousand.a ol peo- ple marched throuth the ltrfttl or Tehran today to mark tbe 17th aanivenary ot a bloody uprising agalnat the former sbab. ·. Will lwo Jima Vets Return tv Scene? Khomeini, who led the re- bellion and was jailed, then ex· iled, when It failed. addressed the nation over Tehran radio Wednesday. He refernd to the aborted U.S. hostage rescue mission ol April 2S and said: "When a roughneck says, 'I wUI intervene in another coun- try' -and be has intervened -~ well, this is a crime ror which he s hould be tried. Carter should be tried by the world's courts." By STEVE MITCHELL °' .. o.tly ...... ,...,. The U .S. government was m ore than willing to drop them off on the tiny island 35 years ago -free or charge. But now that a group or World War II veterans wants to return to Iwo Jima for a reunion, they've run into more obstacles than they did on the four-day climb up Mr. Suribachi. LagWla Beach attorney John Downer, who was a company commander with the 5th Marine Division when he waded ashore Feb. 19, 194.5, says at least 50 lwo Jima veterans will take orr for Japan next week. Whether !hey'll get to make a side trip to the battle-scarred rock 650 miles south or Japan de· pends on how much red tape Downer can cul between here and Washington, D.C. •·As far as we're concerned, we're going, even though the Japanese say the trip to Iwo is chancy," Downer said, raking bis hands through bis thinning hair. The 70-year-old veteran has been working on the 35th reunion • or U.S. and Japanese forces on Iwo Jlma for the past two years. Up until a few months ago, he had 170 Marines and GI veterans signed up for the trip, which was to culminate with a meeting ol veterans atop Mt. SurJbacbi June lL The problem ls, only military transports land on the desolate island. which has little to offer commercial travelers except a U.S. Coast Guard facility and a Auto Workers Re-elect Chief In Anaheim Surrounded by welt-wishers and the hoopla or a national political convention, Douglas A Fraser was re-elected to a second run term as president or the 1.5-million-member United Auto Workers union in Anaheim Wednesday. The 3,003 delegates also elect ed by acclamation Raymond E. Majerus, director of the union's Milwaukee region, secretary· treasurer to succeed the veteran Emil Mazey, who is retiring. The entire 26-member ex- ecutive board, which consists of union orrlcers and regional directors, was up ror re-election. Tbe election or a secretary- treaaurer and three new vice presidents made it the bl11est turnover in the leadership of the nation's second-largest union slMe lta foundlna lo the 1930s. Japanese naval detachment. Now the Air Force tells Downer they can only fly retired military personnel, and then on· ly on a space available basis. This despite the fact that the Air Force provided transporta Aion in 1970 for the 25th an· niversary ceremonies on Jwo. "It's just apathy," Downer says. "Last time lin 1970> it was the State Depatrtment that held things up. ·'They thought there would be resentment from the Japanese -but they were the friendliest people in the world. ··But the government finally relented." Downer thought he had the problem solved this time when the Japanese Self Defense Force offered to ferry the Americans to the island along with their own veterans. "But they backed oU," Downer said. ''They said if the U.S. government isn't interested enough in the reunion to provide a pfane, then neither were they." So It's back lo Washington with the plea, and Downer is on the phone most of the da) con· tacting senators in the Capitol. "We've got a Senate resolution that's just sitting on tSenator Edward> Kennedy's des k," Downer said. The resolution would des· lgnate next week's reunion of American and Japanese veterans on lwo Jima as a Na- tional Historic Event. As such, President Carter could declare an executive order ordering the Air Force in Yakota, Japan, to airlift the American veterans to the Island. •'Hell. we're willing to relm· burse the government," DOwner said. "We don't want a free ride." he said, noting the veterans are paying $2,200 for the trip" Downer said the Sena t e Judiciary Committee resolution is shy just six signatures that would move it onto the Senate floor. "He's been on the phone with congressmen ror the past few days asking them to walk acro5s the street and sign the resolution on Kennedy's desk. "The president says he'll sign it if it gets congressional ap- proval," Downer said. But without Senate approval, Downer says it's doubtful the president would act on his own. The retired Marine has even had his Japanese counterpart check with charteresl airlines to see ii something can be worked out. "I'll find a way to get us over there, or I'd better start swim- ming and not come back," he chuckled. The revolutionary leader also attacked the Soviet role in Afghanistan. The revolutionary regime has condemned. the SO- viet incursion there and has threatened military aid to Afghan Moslem rebels if the Ru ss ian forces are not withdrawn. Ayatollah Mohammad BeheshU, head or the Justice Ministry and one or the most powerful Iranian leaders, told a crowd at Shahr-e-Kord, a town near the central Iranian city ol Isfahan, that Carter's election depends on the outcome of the hostage crtsl.s. He suggested tbe U.S. presi· dent is "sending group after group" to try and get the lra- n i an l eader s . He did not elaborate. But he seemed to be referring to the American com· mando raid which some Iranian newspapers have sug- gested was aimed at getting Ira· nlan leaders as well as rescuing hostages In the cities or Hamadan and Jourghan, 12 more persons were executed for drug offenses, the latest of dozens shot in recent weeks for similar crimes in the country's drive against drug smuggling. The militant students who have held the American Em- bassy ln Tehran since Nov. 4 is- sued a statement over Tehran Saddkback Seu $1,000 Builder Fee New home builders will have to pay about $1,000 more for every house they sell within the boundaries or the Saddleback Valley Unified School District under action taken Wednesday by Orange County supervisors. That charge, like most development permit fees, probably will end up being paid for out of homebuyers' pockets, officials said. But school district officials said that without tbe ree lncome, school children moving into new developments in Laguna IID.ls, Mission Viejo and El Toro won't have cl~rooma. Ttie district will be the third district in Orange County to collect fees rrom developers to pay for portable classrooms to ease overcrowding. The agreement signed by supervl1ors ln a 4-1 yote mandates that bullders must agree to pay the fee before they can be issued county bu.lldlng permits. Supervisor Philip Anthony dlaaented. . pUa14:"'°'*9 OD top to catcb the lm'I l'.Qa, enft 11111 , ... 11 m.p.la. ... aver ... dlWdeotur-. radlo and ~ Khomeini ln m1rki111 the anniversary of tbe rebelllon a1atnat the deposed Sb1h Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, ln exUe ln EIYPt. Khomeini was arrett.ed and MOteoced to death followtnc the lMa uprlllne. but wu later ex· lied to Iraq. In January 1979 Khomeini's revolution finally unseated the lhah. ''The nation wUl expose the crimes committed by U.S. leaders against Iran by putting on trial the splea who are now hostages in the hands of the peo- ple. unless this so-called de· render or human rights, this criminal Carter, returns the de· posed shah and hls plundered wealth," the mUltanta' brO.ad· caat said. ..U thla la done. ·the MaJ111 (parllament) depUties wUf lake othel' decisions on: the hostages' rate." Khomeini haa sald the fate of the hoatagea rests in the hands of the new Iranian Parliament which la not expected to debate the issue wiut late summer lnaaate E~ecutkmers . Riot Causes Outlined :~ SANTA FE, N .M. <AP) -Al 3 a.en. oo Feb. 2. inmates at tbe New Mexico state PeniteoUary and the guards they held hostage could hear a pleading voice from tbe basement or Cellblock 3. . "It wasn't me; I didn't do it," the man cried in Spanlsh. Archie Martinez was k:Uled by the prtsooers and "was probably the first to die in the riot" that would claim the lives of 33 In· mates by the time the 36-hour takeover ended al the max- i m u m-securlty Institution southeast or Santa Fe. The account of his death ap· pears ln a 130-page report on the Feb. 2·3 riot released today by Attorney General J ef f Bingaman outlining events before, during and after one of the bloodiest riots in U S penal history. Based on hundreds of in· terviews, the report told of an "execution squad" of prisoners who tortured and klUed fellow inmates and described the hous· ing or dangerous prisoners who instigated the not in an open dormitory The report presents facts about the riot. not conclus1oos or recommendations, Bingaman said in a cover letter to Gov. Bruce King and the New Mexico Legislature. which direded ham to investigate the causes of the riot. A second phase or the In · vestigation, already under way "will address the overall condi· -. lions at the penitentiary and its satellite institutions." A second report will make recommeoda· lions ror change in correctional administration, policies and facilities. At mid-evening Feb. l , the re· port said. a group or Inmates In Dormitory E·2 began drinking some home-brewed liquor. It said that by 10:30 p.m . "they were drunk and angry and talk· ing loudly about talung over the place. The men finally agr~ that two of them would position themselves in the two single beds nearest the door and attack it when the officers opened it for the closing of the day room " The inmates breached the prison control center and were able to release Cellblock J's 86 inmates. considered by pnson staff "to include the most dangerous. troublesome and an· corrigible pnsoners an the an· st1tut1on." The assault then began on Cellblock 4, a protective urut for "inmates who are considered an· formants or 'smtches.' those who are known or suspected to be c hild killers o r child molesters and weak or passtve inmates who are subJect to homosexual attack by other in· mates." the report said. Four correction a l o Hi cers were overpowered in E-2 about t :30 a.m. on Feb. 2 and m06l Cellblock 3 inmates had been freed by 3 a .m . ••Just after dawn~ rampaging inmates, shouting 'Kill the snitches, finally cut through the Cellblock 4 grill with ·an acetylene Lorch," the report said. "Groups or violent inmates . . went from cell to cell . . designating tbelr victims while wailing ror a cutting crew, to torch open the panel used to:un· lock the cells. "Some impatient killers thtew nammable liquids into locked cells and onto inmates marked for destruction, and then ignited them," the report said. "When the cells were opened, the ram· paging inmates dragged many of their Cellblock 4 victims out and s tabbed, tortured, bludgeoned, burned, hanged and hacked them apart. Victims were thrown from upstairs tiers to the basement floor. where many of the bodies were found." A metal r0<1 was forced through the head of one inmate and another prisoner was beheaded. A group of inmates was observed burn mg with a blow torch the face of a pnsoner they had pinned to the floor. The report does not identify any inmates. Prison authorities had r e- ceived warnings of impending trouble up to a month before the riot, the investigation round. -On Jan. 11 , prison psychologist Marc Omer reported inmates were plaMing to take hostages and homemade firearms and ammunition were being hidden in E -2, the report said. A shakedown inspection of E -2 turned up nothing. Beautiful living begins here ... \viU1 an exciting border print sPfa and ht~"l.nious \ eh·et chairs. At special sayings! 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Cou.nt.y dote not yet have final, ottlclal ntwm. Bu& I ..... ,...,.,,.....,... put came recmu, wben 1M lnlDI 0... Oommatt.y Auoclltklll came before our HPlt ....,.. .. ODutal Coaunllalon ln seeldq a permit to build a coupleof t.mll eourta. NOW mYINS OOVS 18 a little printe eommunity next door to S..ald .., .. the QPeOUt extremity ol Luuna Beach. n. MGDle tben wlll!Ud privacy and tbey 1ot lt by· bui.lclinl tWr on~. curbs and autten maQY decades qo. It fiooa&aoa a poetqe-1tampabed beach. Nowtbel"llfnMlas part. When tbe tmnla court permit came up, the Coutal Commiaaiaa'1 eucutlve cllnetor Mel Carpenter, in 1rand 1esture, recomm..-ded appfO\lal. Oh, there wu one UtUe eondillon. That wu. that the Ufld.eodoped Publk Beoch Jud Upcooat of Little 1"11M Cow Irvine Cove people give the state a five-foot wide footpath down through tbe private commwtity to the beach, so visitors would have public access. THE MARVELOUS THING about this Is that this would have been govemment coofiscaUoo of private property on the grandest scafe, so open and dlre<:t. Right.out there with aJI the cards oa the table. No ann-lwi.sUng here in a smoke-fllled back room. No private ..tune s secre tly bummed. No clandestine maneuverings. You want aomethlng from the Coastal Commission? 1ben you be ready to give something, buddy. As it developed in the end, the commission rejected the property confiscation on an 8 to 1 vote with ooe absent, Chairman Rutb Galanter abstabi.iJlg and Commiaaiooer Ernani Bernardi voting no, apparently favortnc the footpath. THE IRONY HERE IS that bad the footpath been de manded and obtained in the name of you and m e, the people, we wouldn't have any place to park to visit Jrvine Cove Beach. 1be commission staff apparenUy j ust doesn't know ita geography very well. Meanwhile, just upcoast of Irvine Cove, s t ate government is even now preparing to open up public beaches at El Morro, Crystal Cove, Scotchman's Cove and all points bet ween Laguna Beach and Corona del Mar. AND AGAIN, THE STATE is going to ha ve a m onumental task of providing beach visitor parking, restrooms, policing, lifeguards and other support facilities. None exist now. So why would the Coastal Commlaaioa staff want to zero in on the little poataae-atamp beach at Irvine Cove as a . target? YOU filure ltout. The people wbollvelbere are ratber well off, you lmow Slayer Saves SeH Georgia Convict Renews Appeala An.ANTA tAP) -Jack Pott.I 1aHd hhnMff from the eJiectric Wir wttb an esecutloD-eve de· clltoa to,.... bll appub, aay· inl be'd Jearued a coadem.ned mu could me pubUc.lty to help other prilOIMr'I. Pott.. 85, who flred bl.I at- tomeya tut (all and said he was rady to die. announced bis de- c11lon to appeal Wednnday even.lq, Jwt 15 bou.n before he WH to be executed a• the Geor1la State Prison near Reldlville. U.S. Dl8Talcr Juqe William C. O'Kdley of Atlanta granted an Indefinite 1tay of execution un.til Potta' appeal could be beard. Earlier Wednesday. O'Kelley and an appeals court lll New Orleans bad rejected a ppeals by others ln Pot.ta' behalf. Tbe con· Beat• ToU Fa.r Troops Patrolling Tornado Wreckage GRAND ISLAND, Neb. CAP> -More National Guard troops arrived toda~to help police guard·against looting ln thls sll1cken Plains city where at least four people were kUled and about 700 homes and businesses were splintered by tornadoes. Finl reports said 3S were killed. Federal assistance was oo the way with President Carter declaring it a dlauter area while estimates of the damage con- tinued to escalate. POLICE &EPOaTED POua person.a were arrested during the night, including two for loot.lq, one for violaUng a curfew and another ':::s~t in• restricted area. But tanl City AUOrney Bill Shrefner said it was a rel- ativelyquletnigbland the lootiog~aaconslderedminor. At least four people were killed and nearly 200 people were an· jured -at least four critically -when u many u seven twiner.; tore throug.b the city of 40,000 residents during a three·hour penod Tuesday night. The body of one teen-age girl was blown nearly a block. · CITY OFFICIALS SAID today emergency teams had complet- ed a house-to-house search but more than 70 people were still unac· counted for. After making aerial surveys, federal emergency om c1al.s sa1a 940 houses were either tot.ally destroyed or suffered maJor damage. A~t 700 structures, including more than SO businesses, we re destroyedordamagedtot.bententofbelncurunhabltable The contin1ent of National Guard troops helpfog guard the city was doubled to 1.50 Wednesday night and another 90 arrived today .. NOBODY llEALL Y KNOWS bow many dealba there are.·· said Gov. Charles Thone, who Inspected the devastaUon by helicopter. Estimates of the death toll Wednesday reached as high as 35, but Thone later said the final tally would be lower tban ex· peeled. "I've never 1een anything like it," said Danford Stout. who huddled with his family in a cellar as the twist.er reduced bis home to splinters. "You know. J ain't much of a cburch·goer . but l still believe in the good Lord and I prayed when we were down an that basement.'' President Carter declared Hall County, which includes Grand Island. a disaster area, openi111 t.be way to low-mtenst loan~ to clUzena and businesses. MUCH OF THE CITY remained without power and water pressure today. City Public Works Director Bob Olsen said Jt would take "three or four days to restore aome of the power, but it will be weeks before it can be completely restored." And federal health officials auaeated Grand lsl.and residents boil all drinking water . demaed wu to hAH clMd at 10:• LID. toclQ. Tbe ~ l•mebld ....... could delQ lda eucudm foil two yean ... ..,... Ukl. POI IS. PAaNG twin deatb aenteocn for tbe kldaaDDlna and murder of 24·1•a-r··ola Michael Pri1R ID lla1. Im. Nd fired bla lawyen lalt fall Miii Hid be WU ready to die. When bis mother •lilted Wedneeday aftemooo, PoUa aUll WU reeolved to die &Dd bll 181t wordl to her were, "GoodbJe mother. I'll see you in beavm.," sbesaid. But at 7 p.m ., aft.er houri ol pleading by his brother Miii a former Jeirlfriend, be chanced bis mind, Just 15 boun before be. was to be executed at t.be Georsia State Prisoonea.r Beidavtlle. ".JACKIE POI IS la not afraid to dle," said a atatemeat wrtu.eo by anU-death penalty lawyers and signed by Pottl. "Hla new rell1loua faith CCalbollclsm> convinced him that he could be ol uabtance to other people," tbe statement said. ''He dlsco•eftd tbat he could uae the media attention that bad focused on blm to publld.J.e tbe lnbuman and UD· constttuUona:I condWom 1IDder which all t.be tamales of the G eoraia State Prtloo at Reidsville have suffered." Priest's mother. Mary, was furiom wt.en a.be &earned from a television report that POUi bad won a stay of execuUoa. ••WRY DOESN-r be Juat set it over with! He bu played witb us -everybody -for five years." the suburban AUanta hairdresser said. "You know w bat I think of wben I see tbe uxea taken out of my paycheck e very week! I'm helptn1 to s~ port the man wbo killed my son." HOO ST. WEBBURGH, England CAP> -Declar- mg that oo one Ls too okl to mart'J, If.year~ Elsie Burteoabaw walked down the aisle wttb an ~Ye&r· oid bridegroom tocby. After the weddml at the parish churcb in thi.I Kent County villaae, population 2,000 , Elsie's new h us ba nd, J ohn Gatton, told reporters: "We just want the companiooabip for the rest of our lives ... He said for seven years Elsie has walked a half· mile to his bouae for • daa· ly visit and now that woo 't be necesaa.ry. NATION I WORLD Jazz pianist William "Count" Basie, 75, i s wheeled from a Chicago "hospital by his wife, Katy. Basie was treated for a viral infection and fathzue. Deng to Quit Vice Premier Post in China PEKING (AP>-Deng Xiao- ping, the 7&-year-old mainspring o f China's latest great leap forward, aaid today he plans to reatp aa senior vice premier sometime lD Au~t. but will re· lain three other poets, including the all-important Job of deputy Communist Party boss, until 1985. "I want to live a little longer," s aid the s prightly Deng, explaining bis decis ion to shed some or hi s r e. sponsibilities. •H e a l so sai d h e feared that by 1985 his mind would not be as active as it D41'9G is today. Deng first disclosed plans to quit as vace premier in an ex· elusive interview with The As- sociated Press tn April. He added tbe August target date at a rare news conference today with the National Coolerence of Editorial Writ.era, which was opened to U.S. corre1poodents:. ;)30 Ton1adoes Reported Damage Widespread in IV.Dakota; No Injuries Let• ntoht •M • .,.,, mornlnt C-.. ......... felr ~ FrlcM,. CNst4lf""" mlcl .... -.. ,,,..... .,..._ "'H l'DI.. IOw SJ, Wl!Nr, ti. e1 .. ...,..,...,.._.... ...... .... _ ............ ..,..._ ... _ .. ._ .......... ., ....... °'*4' wet.,.., ...... ._ -tS tlNtl wltti dll<re-. -..... -..... "''"' ... ,,....,.1 ..... cl•ltd•, 114Mrwl•••· f'•lr ....... Ntt• .......,., .... ( ....... -..... lw .......,.. 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There is no substitute for courteous service the moment you need it- and We•tcli/I Plaza has it/ ' • ct1on Cost Real Estate hitePests atrr TBE N•OCUnc aovernor, and environmental * * * * * * * * * * * * JarvU Aims at Public Pensions ' LOS ANGELES (AP) -Howard Jarvia. aeeminl undaunted' by the crmbiQg defeat of b.b Income tu cut proposal, ·~ b1s next initiative will seek t.o Hmtt public pemlona -and be might aim another one at eoven1ment spendlna. ··1 am not going to take any rest whatsoever as long as I'm alive," the 78-year.oJd leader of the tax revolt -a movement wboH status ia iD doubt after Tuesday's election -said in an in· terview Wednesday. "I want to pass another amendment. I want to put a chain around the politicians' necks so they can't bankrupt the public.·' Jarvis' mood seemed to have changed since Tuesday night, when be bitterly promiud to "shove it up the ears" of public employee un· ions for leading the successful opposltion to his Juvn Proposition 9 income tax reduction. He paid a backhand c~mpliment Wedne~day to public employee groups, saying they • ran a very, very well·planned and a very good cam~. despite the fact that for tbe most part it was totally dishonest." Propo&Uon 9 would have cut state income tu rates iD ball and reduced state revenues by more thap $4 billion a year. . It got only 39 percent of the statewide vote and didn't carry a single county. The election came Jess than two years after the overwhelming passage of the Proposition 13 property tax cut that made the squat, bull· voiced Jarvis a celebrity. Jarvis said his next initiative ia still being drafted and might be ready to aubmil to the state for circulation in a couple of months. He said it would limit the pension of future public employees to ··somewhere near" the amounts drawn by comparable workers m private industry. "Nobody knows how much deficit there is in the pension fund but it's in the hundreds of millions.'' Jarvis said. "ll will have to be paid, and because they can't pay it on the property \ax and can't raise tbe s4Jes. tax, lb~ only al~aUve Is the income tax." ·Asbestos Firm Freed of Damages LOS ANGELES (AP> -A Superior Court judge bas ruted that it would be inappropriate for a jury that awarded $1.2 million in general damages to a worker wbo allegedly suffered asbestosis to also levy punitive damages ( ) agains t the a s bes tos manufacturers. SI'ATE The .jury had been scheduled to begin the punitive damage phase of the case Wednesday, but Judge Earl F. Riley said before the proceed.ings got under way tbat be felt a punitive award would be wrong S1 .ffillfett A•kftl hi Draall Sllic SAN DIEGO (AP) -The family of a San Diego man bas flied a $7 million wrongful death suit fl"OWin3 out of a Poli.ab jetliner crash dial left 87 persons dead lut March, lndudina a U.S. boxing team. Yrenio .. Junior" Robles, 40, was ooe of tbe boxiq coaebes wbo ·died in the fiery crash oear the Warsaw airport. Tbelawsutt was filed in federa• court by Robles' former wife Margaret Ojeda of National City. l'eiiar-routtd S~laoel OK•d he LA c. ...... LOS ANGELES tAP> -Despite objections from the American Civil Liberties Union, a Superior Court judge bas approved a Board of Education plan to relieve overcrowding by nmninl some schools year·round. School attorney Peter James said the ruling Wednesday by Judge Paul Egly, Laguna Beach, means the plan could go into er· feet at some elementary and junior htgh schools July 7. lt'oma• R•~ af B••~ tor Eldni• SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -Five men burst into a home for the elderly, pistol-whipped them and raped a 67·year-old blind woman before fleeing with about $100, police said. "Every time you think you've seen it all, aometblng like this happens," Capt. Joseph Lonlan said Wednesday. WELOSTWAR My family .-cl to ba¥e a wait problem. We tbougbt that the "Y to get a good deal on airfare W8I to wai, around for a month. Then we disooYered Continental~ new Super Saver fares. They really take off the dollars. And it's fast and easy. Just make reservatiom and buy your round trip Uckel 7 days in advance. The farther you fly the more you save. ContioentaJ's new Super Savers~ work on·tbe weekend. Without costing excra. And with ContincntaJ's fabulous inffight lel'Vice.)IOU won't feel like you're on a diaoount 6R at all. Now tbat-«vestarcedsa: it\lwd toS&Op. Jn (act. tbe whole family hid a wonderful time oa Y8C8tion. we're planning another ·--~~~.._.,.... ..... c. ... w. ........... VAC.AllON It OtU7 MYS. trip \tim CaRincntal'sSuper Savers. They'd wort for you. wo. Ju.u caU your travel agenc or Continental. Seats are limited. So don't put it off any longer. Lose .,.ne wait with ContinenraJ. If your Dad's an English Leather man. we've got a twice- terrific gift idea. With any $5 purchase of English Leather, a famous cattoonlst will draw your caricature In just one minute. Now, Dtld can have his favorite cologne and your picture to remember you by. IDHlure would lpul' •Pvtmettt construetioil wblle ~=~ "reasonable eoattoll.'' lt aot oaly 35 pettat of the vote and (ailed to:O CUT)' •lin81eCOWltY • ~ .: ••Rent.en have arrived u a fotee iD Callloraia cs. : declared tenant lobbytat Stepbea Hopenft, Wbo tbe No-·· on·lO ca;n,&iaJCD ln Northern California. • He tenant Jui~ would renew propoula f« a "renters• · bill of rtcbtt." incl 1 protec:tioa aaatmt erictlom without cause. · Similar proposals have been defeated repeatedly la the Legislature. TllE DAY AJ..80 PROVIDED a mu.sure of vindication for U · tivlat Tom Hayden, focus of a ftnal-week attack by real estate . groups wt» port.rayed him .. the aumt.er force behind the : NO-OD·lO. I "It wa • lnmadoul vidory (or renters, wbo I hope will ; become effedl" u a political force iD California," Hayden said as : a statement. "I_,. ft will be the beginninc of meetinp between #) renters' organizaUoM and buUden to see what we can do in com· : moo on the whole queaUon of aJ'fordable housing." • ------------~~--------------------------~-· . .... .,..... Dirine .Joh Some look for water. some oil, some gold. But Tom Hannon. a Monterey Pacific Telephone employee, uses copper divining rods to locate Jost underground cables. He learned .. witching art, .. he says, from an oJd cowboy in Big Sur Mountains. .... Tbe ~I ol a propoeed Newport Beach or· dln~ allmd at reduclAI t.be eta ol bom .. ln Corona d•l Mir i9 lll'Ob9bly belt U1ultrat.ed by Uti Clty Council'• rttent. au mpta to adopt tt. · Alter monlba ot Nvlew, lhe counclJ took three 1t1bl at approYtnc tbe oi'dtftance. Wltb 1lx of aeven council mt'm ra prnent. all three failed But the votln• comblllaUon1 produ~ tell th story Council membe •bo rarely aaree on Hythlna. let alone . vol tolelMr. uddenty were leeina ere to ey . On the ftrat try. Cow\cilman P1u Hummel asked his rollt>(l(l to reduce the amount of bulldable apac~ al· lowed for duplex . Council members Ruthelyn Plumm~r und Donald Strauss concurred. Mayor Jackie Heather and council colJeagues Evelyn Hart and PhlUp MaurernlxedtbemoUon. The next uttempt to move thjngs along cam e when Mrs Hart proposed that thlrd·stories on residential con· struchon be banned. This time Mn;. Heather. Hummel and Strauss voted against the motion. · Finally came the motion to introduce the con· trove'"SiaJ ordinance as it read. Hummel. Maurer and Mrs. Hartpressedtheir"no" but· tons. Jn a nuts.bell. the ordinance calls for single·family homes to be constructed at no more than 1.5 times the buildable area of a lot. On duplexes, the ordinances would allow developers 1.75 times the buUdable space. The only somewhat comparable ordinance in ~ewport. Beach is the one restricting both single family ho mes and duplexes on Balboa Island to 1.5 times the build· able space . . The_ ordinance finally was continued until July 14 at which lime all of the council members. including John Cox. will try again. Keep Up Bay Pressure An agreement recently signed between Orange Coun- ty and slate officials could lead to the first major cleanup effort in the Upper Newport Bay. One of the persons who worked hardest for the agree· ment. Newport Beach Assemblywoman Marian Bergeson. called the pact a "landmark" move. It probably was. But at was still just round one. ; Mrs . Bergeson now is urging her constituents to keep ~the pressure on state officials to make sure that they live u p to their promises The agreement. among other things. calls for the state Fish and Game officials to unveil a plan next Sep· tember for dredging the rapidly clogging bay. Fa sh and Game currently has S700.000 to spend on d eaning the b ay but experts predict at least l\\ ll"<.' that much could be needed to do a thorough job. Abo. to m ake sure that the bay doesn't fill back up :.iga m. a permanent cauh-basin probably will have to be constructed. No money has yet been set <.1side for this project. Citizen!> concerned about the upper bay should count on kt•eping an eye on Fish and Game officials lo make ~urc they hold up their end or the agreement. and on scheduh.' Patience Might Pay Newport Beach City Council me mbers could be walk- jng straight into a lawsuit with last week's approval or a he\\ city law banning the salt-of drug paraphernalia to minor~ That":-. what C1l) Attorney Hugh Coffin told council m e mbers before they voted on the ordinance. which also "111 prohibit shop owners from displaying drug devices where they can be vie wed by minors . Coffin noted that paraphernalia laws have a poor courthouse track record in Los Angeles and Orange coun· ties. A Westminster law similar to Newport's recently was struck down after being challenged in court. A new assembly bilJ, written by Santa Monica As· iiemblyman Melvin Levine and co-authored by Hunt- ington Beach Assemblyman Dennis Mangers, could save cities such as Newport. Beach some of the headaches and legal expenses their ordinances may bring them. ; The bill. AB 2'4.2, bans the sale of drug devices to tninors on a statewide basis. The bill currently is before 'he Senate. : Although thinking behind the city paraphernalia or· ~nance appears sound and may well be needed, it could that cities s uch as Newport Beach should have Uowed the lead of Costa Mesa. Costa Mesa council members agreed to set aside a proposed drug device law in hope that the assembly bill would settle the problem. A little patience. in Ws case, could end up paying off. • ()pinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Dally Pilot Other views expresse<l on this page are those of their authors and frt1sts Reader comment is invited. Address The Daily Pilot. P 0 Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321. Boyd/Contest ByLM.BOYD Rare ls the writer who gets paid Sl.2.000 per word. But Mrs. Deborah Schnelder of M tnneapoll1, Minn., may achieve p.at diaUnctlon. She won a contest beet 1n 1958 by descrtbina Plymouth can ln ::lb wordl. Her prize was $500 a uionth for.Ure. 1be Ule ex· a.eclancy expetta fi1ur~ .,_e'll collect 1300.000, ln lfme. A penau1n can swtm a lot faster than a salmon. bear In mind. Nobody knows wbetber Greenland ls one island or 1everal. Q. How many 1llver bullets did the Lone Ranaer shoot duriof bis career on rad.lo and TV? Try that one . friend-o. A. Exactly 1.2,SM, air Amona lholle comesttbl• )'OU couldn't aet eully dur· In• World War JI was tapioca. It comes from Br u 11 's .CJ! 1 fJU'..L It laJ11-TtiarllJie veaetaUon from which tbe BruJUan1 ~ake their 1uahol. And they're 1otna at lt lull 1eal• rtlbt now. Taptoca •taln may be hard to come by. says our Cblef ~cal.Or. ·Am.ncan lndlana appear to r•maln unlmpro11ed by the re.port that Wlntton CbarcllUI WU part C ......... tbrou1b •n American IJ'.lridmotber. Robert N W.-CS IPubllihtr Thutaday. June 4 , UllO SOviets Ignore Ma.ndatory Vote Accord.In& to the lalc1t pubUc opinion P.Ol1•. many Am~rtcan1 .re 10 iflHnchanted with the llkely Democratic and RepubUcan candidates for preal· dent thatt they'd we lcomt a chance to vote for "None of the Above" Utb November. Indeed. this diagrunUement amon1 tbe electorate 111 the matn thins Rep John Anderbon has going for him Oddly enough. the same pro blem exb.ts m the Soviet t.:mon. where~ SO· cu lied elec toral procei.s leaves tht· \Oll•rb no choice when they file Into the polhnR boothi. t o "elect" the onl) c.in didates on the ballot And yet. uccord1ng to America's Kremlin·watcheri.. disenchanted Russians s till manage to ··vote with their f~t" by staying home on Election Day. This has also been con· Mailbox rtrmed by a Soviet derector who wH once u high offlchtl ol the politburo THE OEFECl'Oll, who used 10 be a Communist Party s upervilor for several election districts. told my associates Vicki Warren and Dale Van Atta how widespread the pr actice \US. '"In aU the dl1tr1ct.a that I s upervised. as well as In dib· t ri cts "'here the real results "'ere known to me ... he said . .. bet ween 15 and 20 percent or the voters declared their U0\4111· mgness to vole ·· lfo\4 many actually pc.'rsist U\ the ir intention to boycott "the spurious election process ii. not known F\rst or all, it'a against the h1"A for Soviet c1frzens to ab stain from voting Commun1M Partv activist.s are saddled with the fob or getting people lo tht.- PollS for the formal endorsement of part) candidates THE SOVIET party hach have hsts of all voters In their d1striclb. and check otr each ont> ab the vote as cast. Those who ,, '' t I·\ don 'l lhow up ue vllated durtna the day Deapite thi1 heavyhanded c harade, our Soviet 1ource1 estimate that more than 60 million voters about a third of the adult population -refused to vote for the official Com· munlst Party candldute In elec tions of the mJd-1970!> Tbls was. the sources said. a way of ex- presalng oppoellion lo the gov- ernment There could be other reasoni.. though. Soviet elections are held '' n S u n d a y:. . a n d a I o t of RusMans use their day off to gel drunk. according lo a Stall' Department sour~e THE Tlll"E num~~ of So,·iet <'1tlzens who vote or. morP. Im portanUy. the num~r who don't vote -never reac hes the b1gshots in the Kremlin Party bureaucrats, fearful of losing their Jobs. "'systematically falsify'" the fi~ures on voter turnout . &<'cording t o our hOurces. Not long ago. one Kremlin of. fic1al had the t emerity to sug· gest tbal more than one can· ' \ ' ' \ \ . '' I \' '• \ I \ . ~ dldatt: b~ 'ouered to the "'votera." Later, a .noo· CommunJst 80Cla1 oraaolutJon quietly netded 11 candidate for the Soviet Parliament. Jual b quietly, he wu forced to droi> out. t,AMINE IN CAMBODIA: Con· tradiclin1 recent opllmlallc n e ws reports. Central In· lelligence Agency analysts pre· diet that continuing famine i• a virtuul certainty in Cambodia. "Only deaths and emlaralion can decrease the number of peo· pie to be fod ."' th'l' CIA report notes And 1t makes clear thut there 1~ not enou~h food to go <i round. After a promising start hu.t fall. the International relief ef· fort in CamboOia lb in danger of collapsing. as fundtt dry up and the attention of the great powers turns to other areas of cr isis. Meimwhile. the Cambodiam.· cupboard is bare. ··Food stocks are v1rtuallv exhausted," tht.- CI A reporti; '"No significant amounts of food will be avalla· ble from crops grown in Kam· puchea 1 Camhodla I until next December.·· THE CIA PlJTS the problem stttrkly: Almoet 750,000 metric tons or food and seed ar.- needed. The current crop will provide 56.000 tons at be11t. Even with the combined relief efforu of the Soviet \>loc· and Western agen cit·s. t h ert> will be a shortfall of about 200.000 toru; 1>f rood and 60.000 tons of seed. Even a 26.000-ton 8hortfall, the CIA notes. would "lower the calori<' value of an average ra· tion bt!low the starvation level ·· And even that ~rim estimate lib!.Um~ a distribution system that wou ld pro v ide an .. averagt'·· ration In fact. al' 1-rJrding to u secrt•t 14\ udy. the ,,·~tem 1i-a :-hamblei. and 1hl-· t nbutton ha:--all but rf'.iscd .\PT ACROSYM : Thi• St JI• Department ·.., \'1l'lnam·Lllui-. Cambodia nff11·t• ha.., \I.on J .. u rdont<' n1rknum1.· 1n Fo~'l.I' l'\t•llum Bt.•1.·u u:-1· of 11:. apµan.:nf I\ unt•nchn1.1 <111.·1 of rt1"''"tcr. tlw \ t.C offln : .., kno\411 a.., tht· l)f fin• of \ t:r) Loo;t C JU~t·~ Don't Blame Judges for Defects • ID Law To the Editor I have "ork<•d w1th1n our county's court system for almoi.t 20 yeurs and believe th.it I am therefore qualified to comment 011 at least ont' aspect of jud1e1<1I clet•l1oru;. I h.iv<.· nt·vcr <lont-,,, tn this manner before: and do .... o now only because 1 feel lhc.tl s trongl y that our JUdl(e:. themselves. have been mt:.· judged by those who contend that they are too lenient in their dealinp wtth criminals. An ever-Increasing crime ratl' and a growing dis regard for society's means of trying to con trol the conduct or each other our laws. a re cited as l><.·lnR direct results or this lenienc) And It is not unreasonable to draw this conclusion if indeed our judges could righteously be held solely responsible for the inherent weaknesses in our system that affords the criminal something less in the wa:r of punishment than we believe ··nts the crime ·· Jl struck me early in my marshaling career tbut only the innocent come .into our courts seeking Justice. Justice. or course. is about the last thing that the guilty want. They want out. Th~ want off. They want acquittal. dismissal or anything else they can manage to get that Is c heaper than the going pr1 ce r egularly charged for the cnme that brings tbem there. And in this country. they have plenty of expert help at hand to get I.Mm what they want. rr they can't pay foe it, then we furnish 1t for free. SOME OF It doean 't co:.t anything al all. ll 's already there ln tbe form or ambiguous lows. protective precedents, confoundedly complex In · terpretatlons and frequently frust.ratln, t~hnlcallUes ;-all of which mUJt be religiously ob- served at all at.qes or the pro· ceedJnp, commendna wltb the Initial lnvesUaation and ~t Virtually any lrregularlty along the Une wtll invariably serve to compromlH a caae to the bentnt ol the accuaed. But. un· lea• the publlc la thorouply f amlUar with all elements ol a ~ &Dd au~nt 1hwelop menta, It too often condemns the Judae when the cr1mlnal fall• to receive h1a Just desertl. "Sotne fool Juda turned hJm looee'' we Mar. when actually tbe JudJle had no <:ho!ce ln the matter. In fact. Juda have been held to blame In such cases when. In truth. It Wll 1 jury who arrived al lht d1aapPe>lnUn1 decl1lon. Som<-propoee s.o ''throw the nee al• out" wlt1t the hope end/or apertaUon that In dolnl IO we wW brio• about u I mPl"OW-' ml•nt 1n tht' 1udJ<·1al ~cheme of t h1n~~ But tJke m~ '4 ord for 1t. h.ibcd on h(•a\ ~ ex1x1!.ure and ex pt.'r&l'n<.·l• 1l "Aon't "A ork that v.a~ hl'("LIU"t' \.\\.~ would s1m pl ~ bl' l'P pl:tl'lllJZ tht:m with other mo1rt<il" v.ho . ltlVl'n th l· nn·umbtanct'b as they exist. '4111 lw lawfully bound to perform th<.> ,,.,.. ful chore in Cbsentialh the ... a m c fa!--hion al'I tho~e who art• no\4 r har ~t·d "Alth lh t· n•!-1ponMb1lat~ and \4 ho. in m) nt'\4 :.md <l!-1 tht· record.a will .. ho" handlt' 1t extreme!) "ell DONE. RHEA Man>hul. Oranse COWlt> Rf"adfMfl \f"rd• To the E.ditor. I think It ls terrible with aJI tht• waste m educational pro· ~ra ms at all levels that SpeclaJ Hea ding has been dropped because of ··tack of funds:· I have written to the Board of Education as follows ··1 was informed the other day Special Readlna had been dropped. .. My son has had sever e physical a nd eye problems \I, hich slowed his development. H<' has made great success In the Special ReadJog program. "Why cut tb1s program when there are so many classes at all lt>vels which are unnecessary! At lhe high school level. drama and sewtn1. to name just two. Even if a girl sews she has to read well to follow a pattern. · · 1 reali1e funds are a prob- 1 em . but In our modem society read.'.ng is a necessity. not a lu~­ ur~ MARY PETERSON D•I ••fl• .91 ulr To the Editor. Paul Harvey has been one of my favorite commentators for many yean. But I dittn't know until reading his May 28 column about country music ln tbe Dally Pilot tbat we grew up ln the same area .and. apparently. s hated mutual lnterHlt H youth1. Nor did I realize tbat he Puneh l'an. on occa1uon. be an ex trem1st I v. u~ born 67 ) eur~ a>-10 1n l:>OUth'4~bl ~h~wura I enJV)t.'<1 "'hill bill~·· and other kandi-of mu.1c. and lu;tcned r~gularl~ to rudio K\'00 in TuliJ '4h1ch ht mentaom."<i Alw. Jl> J bo> grov. ing mto manhood tn a narro.,. and bigoted reh~ious ennron· ment. t was taught that we ·)!ood'" peoplt> :.hould . hk<· O!> trieht•s. bury ou r ht•4d:. in the !>and and preknd thut '"'x did not c\lst I "'ab ""'are in those da) b that some ol the beautiful ballads which f most enjoyed were banned from radio play because they were deemed. by whom I never knew. to be sexua lly sug· gestive and therefore too "'dJr· ty " for public broadcas ts Believe It or not. the Joplin. Mis· souri radio station (WMBH?I once mused to allow the band I was playina In to brol.dcast Uve from its little studio "The Sweetheart of Sigma Chi" for that reason' PERHAPS. in tbe minds of some, the pendulum ls today awtnainl too far ln tbe opposite dlrecUon. But one thl"-ta cer· lain: The vast majority ol us are no longer trying to pretend that sex does not exist. And I. for one, believe that ls a po1iUve step In the right direction. When we start teaching that aex is good and ~ally wonderful, when associated with love. un- derstanding a nd adult responsibility. I believe we will be well on our way to "aettlng there." Such enlightened th.Ink· Inf ls '°'11 overdue. now have the lime to llsteo to a areat deal of radio lncludJ.na "country music" about which Harvey wrote. Not once have I heard a 90na broadca1t whlch I would deacrlbe aa "porno· 1raphtc:· <I consider myael/ qualllled to make a Judamenl In that are• ~•uae of tome aqualntaoceahip with porn u it haa been depleted in movle1 and ln ma1uirw such as Hustler.> Thlt leads me to the lnescapa· bl~ condu:.11111 th~1t rn} ultl rnt.•ncl h.is tndl'l'll bunt'<! hi :. hl'<id tn tl1t sand WILLIA~! COHKRELI, lt.f!f!P lhf! ('"'" T ~1 lht' Ed1t"r Th11. lellt>r IS p~rtu1111n l( ,,, )Our May 29 art1c:lt·. · C..i 1 ah·st""' ·, thtnk thul Bru<·e Uoµpini.t ~huuld t!O ancl take a hop' 111:-. idea 1s nu~! /\nd what ·!> mon ·. Heisler Parlt 1s kno"n a-. a Wild Life Sanctuar), not for t·ats to ).to and kill tbe squlrrelts. nor do \.H' in Laguna Beach want theM· cats running around. ft 's bad enough when we get stray dogs on our lawn. and leave ~Ir trade mark behind. if tbe cats come a-running, we'll have more trade marks. It's also nice to take a walk m the part. and aee the squirrels. and other life. And as long a:. one doesn't entice them . ltht' squirrels> they will do no harm to anyone. So if you wouldn t mind passing a Uttle message to City Manager, Mr. Robert Wynn. don't bother! Keep your stra~ call. MRS. SYLVIA WOODHOUSE COHE!\ a .... re~ ,.."' To the Editor· I applaud you tor your efforts to expoee lbe inconsiderate peo. pie Pa.rtinc ln the handicapped parking spaces. ~However. it would be even more satisfying to the public, beaidft lnowlna the Uceruie plate of the ca-r, that the violator wu t.beo contacted by the =" auO.OriUee and give,.... a au Ual nne. H anyone haa the time, perh•pe an •111cle adjacent to the picture. mlabt advi.e the publlc bow we could usltt or be aure these "better than thou peo· pie'' do ln fact "pay their dues" fortbetrlnconslderaUon. I GO ro Oclaons Market near· ly every day •nd Invariably someone In their fancy sports car i. parted ln the handicapped parking apace and It truly irks me. ---How..oan-t:he pubti~ ~trtl ..... :Kr'---~ sist ! "there should be some way to stop the cqnUnual dlsrqard of the reserved apace&. Jr the tables were \urned and they were \h., handicapped, they would probably iscream their heads oft RUTH ANN psPlC-1{ • 1'ore ThaD Corruption Behind Revolutio:Ds The JreveaUve mtdlcine e.tlllool ......,.adoaal attain ll ................. Nll &o ...... do• •t 1'••• '"another ~ Jnn•· ms.uc11 r: . _ ~ Arabta, but ~ thHt efrortl -.... to avold ••another Iran" or •·••other Vletum".,. fu\Ue. Jran, Uk• every other place on the &lobe, ls U8lque. Neverthele11, th• Art Happ memoey " American oma. and bullMllnMll beLna lOeHdu of tbtrt baa CIUatd If• preh..._ tba' tM tame .nu happen lD Utat otber •re•t oU pro- duelnl country. Saudi Arabia. ff nee a laudable concern ~ Americana btbavt tbemselv .. eo tbat they ann'tkleked out •IUl· IN UNE WITH Ult. .on ol prevtntlve poUUcal medlct.ne waa 1 headllne In U.. New Yarlr Tlmes. the cl<>eesl we come to u oftlclal or1an of the Ameriun eatabllshment. wblcb declared. 11U.I . Aldll .. , CornipUoo la TVeet to a.di StablUty." The article -.neatb Hid that ......................... •Met • ...,.c· J>ayment.9 over the ....... ofta ln .W.Uoe of lad _. Aeerieu lawa.'' a fact wMdl ~ lead to a coqp d'ttal llr .....uu.t bave·nota. If tM .... Arabian govern· m..i .... la danger or belne ovtrtbrowa by tta righteously ucrr ddMM, ln what peril is t.be atat.e" New Jersey? Or New Yortl Qt1 CIC' a dozen other states wber. bmMlstf ln sovernment aeema to be the exception. To Spend, o r Not to Spend? wat(:hlnl Mr. Mlller on the eve- ning newt tell us that consumer credit bu)'inl was destroying America and only hJtb interest. Decade by decade for mon tban a century. OW' larcnl clty bN teen ae1nd•I after acandll ex· poaed. all to no elf •et and potlUvely without kind~ ln· aurrfftioNry fervor. • IT WOVLD TAKE more tban not passing money under tbe ta· ble to have kept tbe Sbab in bualness. At the mlnlmwn. we'd have bad to guarantine the GOUD· try against any west.em political ideas conceived after n• and the fall ol Louis XVI. The Sb.ah could have been u wtae 8Ml &ood as Old Kine Colet but that qierry old soul would nave bad the chuckles kicked out ol him, too. if he'd tried to be a ruling heredltary monarch In the W&n· ln1 years of the 20tb century. The only kings left in the world wbo sit on stable thrones are those without power. If western countries are toln& lo invite the youth bf Iran and Arabia to study in tbelr uni· venitles and 10 bact home con· tamlnated by our ldeaa. these 1tudenta may return home demo- erata or authoritarian Marx· f.lta, «whatever, but they won't be monarchist.a. Tbe beet way to keep ruling kln111n u.es. countries on tbelr thrOMe ia to buy little oil from them. Invariably, when they are 1wamped with huge oil rev· enues. they spend the money, whether corruptly or not maltes no difference. oo au the goodJes which are the hallmark of technologically advanced aocietia. ADVANCED technology and the social organJiation needed to employ it or enjoy it brings dis· rupt,on and change. Here in America, in Japan, in Germany, everywhere that the new technology bas become domi· nant, the older ways have had to change ai the family level as well aa the' national orie. We rec· ognize that by referring lo the Industrial Revolution, although we are prone to think of the revolutionary part of the term u a figure of speech. It wasn't ~ it was hap~c: the violence was real. Some socJeUes made the sw\lchover from tbe older culture. the agrlcultural era to the prnent, with relatJvely little revolutionary turbulence. Nol any of them made It with none. Thus, the profit.a from the oil we buy are the seed material for the upheaval.a we fear. PREDICl'ING revolutions 'is as exact a science as prtdlctin1 volcano eruptions. As to pre· venting what we can't predict, forget it. What we can do is keep our noses clean and our profiles low. We can act properly and In· visibly, so that when the govern· ment is toppled, we're not con- nected with lt ln the minds oC the topplers. •Barring members or the George Ill Society, it's the oil we want: not the king. • 'Gueu how much I paid for our dinner," said my wonderful wife, GlYnda. pl\lnking down a modest sized bag of sroceries on the kite~ table. plain !d. "Or maybe. the day before yesterday. Anyway, Mr. Miiler now l!ll)'S consumers have 'done their jobs' and It's lime for us 'lo go back to normal con· sumer behavior.' Before we all 10 bankrupt." ratescouldaaveusall.'' --------------------------------------:--.. Let's see, $34.12?" I said hopefully, few Glynda bu always been a pra(a. cientspender. "No, $1.03," s he said triumphanUy. "I do hope you like cabbage and chlcken backs. I had to walk across town-lo save four cents a head on the cabbage and three cents a pound on ... " I h astily clapped my hand over her mouth. "Hush!" I whispered. "Do you want our secretary or the treasury, G. William Miller. to bear you?" "HAVE YOU gone crazy?" she inquired. pushing my hand aside. "Mr. Miller. himself. is urging all patriotic American consumers to stop spending money and save every penny they can to help curb inflation." "That was last week," I ex· "OK." said Glynda dutifully. "But what's normal consumer behavior?" "Just hop a cab to the butcher s hop." I said, "and pick up a couple of lamb chops." · • lf you say so,·' she said. "Could l have $50?'' "Where would I get $50'>" I said. "Don't you know there's a recession on-?" "WELL, HOW can I spend more money lC wc don't have any more money'>" she asked. "Return to normal consumer behavior," I said, "and put the lamb chops on your Master Charge." "I can't," she said. bowing her head. I s queezed her s houlders. "Mr. Miller would want you to, believe me.'· 1 said. "I know." she confessed, "but I cut my Master Charge card in half last week while "Well, glue it back together," I aald. "Mr. Miller is now ex · corialinl the banks ror being too slow in reducing Interest rates in order to stimulate consumer credit spending." "I don't know." said Glynda. applytna the Quik-Stik glue. "ll 1eems if we have money, we shouldn't buy what we can af. ford. But if we haven't any money, then we should buy what we can't afford." I couldn't help but give her a hug. "I just knew you'd come to understand normal consumer behavior," I said proudly. "WELL, l'LL do my part to gel us as deeply in debt as humanly possible." she vowed gamely. "But what will happen to us then?" "Don't worry, that will cure the recession ." I said. "So next week we'll be rich and able not t.o buy a lot ol things we can af. ford." "Hand me the scissors." said Glynda thoughtfully ~·YOUR DAD DESERV~S the BEST from Hickory Farm.a of Ohio~ Father's Day is e 15th. 1 lb. R EF ST1CK'9 summer sa~e. two 1 oz. Goudas, 8 ~. Edam Stick, 8 oz. Medium Cheddar Stlcic, tour 2 oz. cneese soreaas. s oz. smokY <smokecs cheese ban, 71h oz. Hot Pec:>e>er Cheese, 10 oz. Port Wine cneese. 71h 01. CheeSe ·n Ham, 6 oz. Jar of sweet-HOt Mustard, 1 oz. 'Jar Of HOl'Set"adtsn sauce 1 Strawberry eont>ons. $35.98 iuan-ld dll!YefV d\arve If 9'llOOeO Tex as Spread 1 ID BEEF STICK' Summer sausage, s oz. smoky <smoked cneese Dan 8 oz. Edam Stick. 12 oz. Miid MIOgef Longnorn, 7 oz. Plaln Gouda, n~ oz ICOPPELZAK• cneese & StrawDerry eonDons. 521.98 '*" ~ Oeltverv tn¥Ve tt ShlppeO 1 It>. BEEF STICK• summer SIUSIQe, s oz. smolcV 1smoked cneese ban. 1 oz. Pfaln Gouda. 6 oz. Jar of sweet-HOt Mustara ... two 2 oz. Cheese S&:>reads, Lii' oval waten • Strawt>«rv Bonbons. $15.98 OM OuanntMd ~ d\llrgl If SNOOeCI Pbde - 5 oz.SAFAR1t11SUmmer sausaoe. e oz. Mtdfum • 01t0dar St$Ck, two 2 oz. CheeSe soreadS, 4 oz. CH8mu1 Cneese,Lll' OVal Wafers' Sb-= lonf>Ons. S8. 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Ask about our many rt4dy .. to·use programs. a-10M · IA DMSION OF TANOV COfll~ATION Reg. 369.95 Moll llerft.S -------el10 •vt•IMIM et AA!dtO Sh.S ' 0.etefe. 'loot! '°' thte •111" "" '°"' nt10hbCKhoo4l .. ------• .. "Mr Clayton •ya he didn't mind when you lot the mall· ordtt cowboy hat, but he f~ll that things are out of hand .. -\. ·! ~·6-nR•• /fll•fl• •••ew ••tter• ~:: DEAR PAT: This may sound like a dumb , " question. but wbat does the Orange County ·• "Public Admini~atm"·Guardian" do? I wq goln& ~ through aJI the llstlngs under the county Ruman : ; Services Agency as part of a school assignment ~~ and I must admit J've never heard or the Public •• Administrator. ~i K.L .• Costa Mesa : • This is a "low·profUe" county department ~; because It touches the Uves of a relaUvely small ·~ number of people. By state law, Ute Pabllc Ad· mi11istralor la charged wltb the reapoaalbWty of administering estates ol persou •bo laave died when there la no execalor or admlaJstralor ap· pointed by a court. Usually W. occurs w•en a court determines &bat • decedent has ao known heirs. The PublJc Guardian ts appointed by the court to act as guardian or conservator for a person legally Incapable of admlnlatratlng bis/ber affairs and assets and therefore vuJnerable lo ex· ploitation. The individual may be an older persoo, a chJld wtch no Immediate relatives, or a person with dJmln1sbed mental capacity. f'luOrP11«-ntt a nlaf"f"ly Ll91tt DEAR PAT; I've heard thal il takes less elec tricity to operate Ourorescent lights than incandes- cent buJbs. How much less? B.K .. Costa Mesa Fluorescent lamps save electrklty bttauae they provide more light per watt tbaa lacandes· cent bulbs. so a lower wall fluorescent lamp can be u~ lo ~t as much Ugbt as a higher watt in· candesceot buJb. For example, a 40-watt nuor,s. cent lamp gives off 80 lumens (~eastare ol Upo oer watt and a 60-watt Incandescent bulb gives off only J4.7 lumens per wall. The 40·watt nuoresce11t lamp wouJd save about J40 watts of electrtdty'over a seven-hour period. Wada Care Sa.,e• E'lrepreoll•9 DEAR PAT: What's lhe best way lo wash my new baby's pajamas lo keep them n ame retar· dant? ls tt true tbat you shouldn't.use bleach~ S.E .• Newport Beach CbJortM ble•dl • llOt reeo•mended, but tt can be ued .. name-retardaal fabrtu mad& wtth maa·mlde nben. aacla as nyloll, pelyester and SEF mod11eryUe BIR don't me clllortM bleub on name·retardut CGtion became ll .rn decrease U.e erfecUveneas of the finish. Don't use 90ap lo wHb &bis clotMD& bttause It forma a scum that buUda up oo the fabric and decreases name-retardant properties. Instead, use a pbOlpbate detergent, or II you prefer non- pbosplaate de&ercents for ecological reasons, use do•ble the recommended amount of a beavy·duty llquld cletet'gent, such as All, Wisk. Era and Dysaamo. Always use a water softener, such as Catgon or Boru. If the water la laard In your area or U you uae a noa·pboapbate detergent. Do not nse fabric softener. Warm-wateT washl.ng, low-beat drying and no lroa.lag also are recommended. lldwad P•ffl •• Barie TaJte• DEAR PAT: I received my tax refund check. ' but it was for less thH I expected. I also eot a notice suaUng tbat a portJon Of my federal refund had been applied lo a previous year's tax Uabillty What does all or this mean? P.J .. Laguna Beach U yoq bave uy upald taxes from prevlou years aad are especiltl1 a refad for Wa year, &Jae ••paid &11es wtU aatomaUeally M aabtratced - (l'om yov rd•d, accordlq to llt8. If you es· MCW ref_. ls larcer ~ tbe ••out of y"r hack ta:itn, '" *Ill reeeln a clilffll for tbe cltf. fernce. . ft8eoen .... , 01'er•e•• Gift DEAR PAT: I recently Hnt nowen to a faml· ly ln J:urope 8J a thank you for their bosptt.allty oa -ftt)'-fteenl· vi1\t. Someaoe told me·t.hal -certain nowen abould be tent only for fuaerala, and I wonder lt l'OMI were cornet. • , C.T.. b01 Fill up your wardrobe! .... ..... .... '"., ...,,., .. ._ ---c:-1n .. m.-n .-....c-~---1n49-.-, ~--~-(11 .. *- ''Have --~o..... --------~ -c--.ee---..--.--- • cn .. tn•tt ~~ 1n .. ..,.,., '" .. - The $75. off Suit Spectac'-'lai 4 Days only! · Thursday • Friday Saturfl&y • Sul'.lday That's right! Buy any suit at regulor price from our entire st9C1< and then deduct $75 off the second suit you purchase regardless of the price (even if it's on sale). Choose from over 26,000 suits. Names like Cricketeer, YSL, · Geoffrey Beene, Palm Beach and other famous brands. harris &frank , ...... t•\A4 ... ...,,..,,. _.......,.( ..... ~,..,, your savings ••• and· eat it tool'' Take a friend out to dinner and we will help you pick up the tab ... four times Open any type SAVINGS ACCOUNT for $500 or more at ~ny one of our Orange County Offices and receive. 4 certificates wqrth a total of $20 In fine din- ing at select Orange County Restaurants* and A colorfully illustrated 80 page .. Guide to Fine Restaurants:' lncludea complete menus and prices, covering Los Angeles. Orange County and Palm Springs. Present customers are eligible to participate in this special offer by adding $500 or more to an existing account or a new account EARN TOP RATE ON SAVINGS DOUARS Golden State Sanwa Bank offers a full range of plans for any size savings program -and they all pay you the maximum interest rate albwed by law. Regular Paubook Savings Sliver Unlng Paeabook Account 2~ Year Savings CertJftcates Time Certlflcates of Depoett Individual Retirement Account 6-Month Money Market C.rttftcate, $10,000 Minimum Maturities 90 days or over are subject to substantial penalty for early withdrawal. Come in or Call. Our New Accounts representative will gladly explain our many aavinp plans and other services. This offer avallable only at Orange County Offlcea tbrough July 10, 1980. .. . Fottr tor the Fann ,. :? • • · These Costa Mesa High School students · were honored for excellence of their a1ricultural projects. From left are Rick Hale. Dave Barrett. Melody Burkhard and James Dalebout. They were honored by Security Pacific Bank during Orange County banquet for outstanding Future Farmers of America .. Signups Set at OC€ eo.ta lleea, r of t ~ lloDon !f ... 1:.1:°' polnm.t. wlll bl coallluete41 ... ta t:F = =-::. to 11. l9d ,.,,,. 11 to lf. 1'be ~ 01n sed by San Di•Jo will be .,_ 1:30 a.m. to 'I p.m. for walk•ln ~.but wm dole at state Uaiwnlty'1 Alum-.a p.m> Jee ta. nt ud Alaodat• u tbe Neart1 500 clallee wW be offered out1taadia1 1910 In tbe summer Mta._ namlaa from 1raduat• of tbe uni· lune 18 to Aq. I , coUec• oftlelaJa ver1Jt1'1 1eolo1y de· utd. Putment. DAILY PILOT STOREWIDE FLOOR SAMPL:E CLEARANCE Every Item In the Store Marked Down 15%-50% OFF .. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Including special orders . . ... ! ·Canal Foes Organizing $250,000 Soughl for Northern Campaign SACRAMENTO <AP> -A group of Northern Californians say lhey plan to raise $250,000 for a campaign to defeat the Penpheral Canal. , Sen. John Nejedly, R-Walnut Creek. a leader : of the group, acknowledged they can't stop a bill to authorize the canal to take Sacramento River water around the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta for exPOrt south. AT A CAPITOL NEWS conference Wednes- day. NejedJy noted there is no mooey in the canal authorization bill, $8200, which is advancing through the Legislature. appear before groups in Southern California and elsewhere to educate the people about the canal and the state water pro1ect. NE.IEDLY CLAIMED mE CANAL IS being built, despite the damage he said it will do to the ecology of the Delta, to benefit large landown~ In the San Joaquin Valley and Southern California. He said if Southern Californians knew the facts. they would oppose the canal. featuring such lines as Henredon, Baker, Thomasville, Century, American of Martinsville , Albright Zimmerman, John Wid- dicomb, Weiman, Bau, Hekman, Knob Creek, Stone Phillips, Marge Carson, Royal Coach , Debu Flair, Master Craft , Frederick Cooper, Marbro and many other fine manufacturers. 1727 Westcliff Drive, Newport Beach 646-1678 Open 9-5:30 ao..ct Sunday•• Evenlnge by Appointment He said his group's campaign will be aimed at defeating any future proposal lo finance the con- structicn. Nejedly said t.be aroup will finance speakers to Ebsen Ass_isting . ! Hearing Service Appearing with Nejedly were supervisors Eric Hasseltlne and Sunne McPea.k or Contra Costa County; Supervisor Dan Walsh of Humboldt Coun-· ty : Assemblymen Dan Boatwright, D-Concord. a nd Douglas Bosco, D·Occidental, and Dale Rlsling, chairman of the Hoopa Valley Indian tribe. Boatwright estimated the waler projects pro- p05ed in S8200 would eventually cost SZ2 billion, and the waler costs would amount to Sl,000 per household in Southern California. DICK METTEER The voice ol veteran a.ct.or Buddy Ebsen. the star of the television series ''Barnaby Jones," is being used to introduce the Dial-A-Hearing test. a new sentce in Orange County. 1be ttlst is offered by the Providence Speech and Hearing Center and is funded by the Kiwanis Club ol Greater Anaheim. 1bo6e who dial 633-EARS will hear an in- troduc:Uoo and explanation of the test by Ebsen. followed by a series of multi-frequency tones directed to each ear. Those unsuccessfully com· pleting the test are asked to repeat the call in a few days. Ir the subsequent test also goes un· sat.i5factocily, the caller is advised to see a physi· ' cian or contact the Providence Center. The screening test is de.signed for persons of all aees and is available 24 rours a day · S. Lagunan Appointed '!.. T b o m a s M . for the three military llcl>ooalcl. son or Mr. academies on the basis and llrs. James T . or academic acbieve- llcDonald of South meot, extracurricular Lacuna. has received an activities and athletic appomtmmt to the Air ability. Poree Academy at Colondo Springs, Colo., N~ Named according to Rep. Robert E . Badham C ft. Newport Beach). McDonald, who at- teaded Laguna High $ehool. was one or 40 men and women nominated by Badham Carla Jean Parter of Costa Mesa has been awarded a bachelor of science degree in nu.rs- in g by Crelgbton University, Omaha. Neb. ... -· FINE FURNITURE AND INTERIOR DESIG~ •' At Neiman-Marcus, June is bustin' out all over! With savings of 50% and more on selected fashions and accessories .. W In the Couture Salon. Trigere reversible raincoat, was 160.00, NOW 80 .00 . W In Galleria. Cotton T-shirt dresses, were 48.00 to 66.00. NOW 24.00 to 33.00. Seersuc~erstripe shirtdress, was 64.00 , NOW 32 00. W In Juniors. Jacketsundress, was 56.00. NOW28.00 . W In Lingerie. Terry dress, was 28.00, NOW 14.00. Zip-front robe, was 44.00, NOW 22.00. W In Accessories. Belts, were 18.00, NOW 4.00. Scarves, were 92.00, NOW 25.00. Small leather goods,~ 24.50, NOW 12.25. Fashion jewelry, was 25.00 toA0.00, NOW 12.50 to 20.00. W The Man's Store. Bomber jacket, was 165.00, NOW 50°/o off . • • o o A ' .. '"' -·-;-~ .................. ordn. please Hills, open 10 to 6; N·M Newport Belcft, open 1Q to 8; Mon .. Thurs., Fri., 10 to 9'1Nt now opef) Slnlly 12., 5. •• wm.s ,.,. aovn. ,... u. fau· •~ oa Saluntaya, SuniQY aervlce pre- senUy la oftered oa Oft11 .. route, 1 It.aft re- port ukl. Tbe trwit diltrl~t ordered that the dlree regular routes operatlaa · U.g P'alnlew Road. Adama Avenue and Vlctorta Slreet add Sunday rum on July 13 and 20 to beef up service to the falrarounds. Help SollfJfaf.. Action Eyed For Disabled The Orange County Human RelaUona Com· mission ls seeking candidates for a planning com· mltt.ee for the United NatJons "1981 lntemational Year ol the Disabled." Brenda Premo, human relations com- . miiuloner, said tbe committee will be known as -tbe Action Committee Concerned with Equal Services <ACCESS>. "'lbe task of ACCES.5 will be to identify the cw-rent accomplishments, needs and problems as- soeiated with Oreae County's disabled," and to make the public aware of those accomplishments and needs, abe said. : The Human Relations Commission's Ad Hoc ~mmittee on the Dllabled, of which Ms. Premo is · -chairman, plans to recommend a slate of 20 can- . .didat.es (15 votiJl& members and five alternates> for review and approval by the Orange County Board of Supervlaon. ~CCESS membership will be made up of dis abloo and non-disabled persons with experience in fields including education, employment, housing, community services, recreation, mobility, com- munications, legislation, and medical and technical advances, the Human Relations Com· • mission said Those who wisb to be ~dered for ACCES.5 membership may submit a one or two-page writ· ten statement before June 15 explaining tbeir in· terest in the project and describing their ex· perience. It should M-maUed to HRC Ad Hoc Com· mlttee on the Disabled, Ulm N. Broadway, Santa Ana • For additional information, call James 1 Sancbn at 83f-4796 or ('.ommituUooer Premo at 898-9571 Signups Taken To Asthm.a Camp If The Amencan Lung Association of Orange Coon· ty is accepting applications for its eighth annual summer camp for asthmatics JUiy 14-20. 'l'im Geddes. a spokesman for the association, said the Southern California Asthmatic Medical Waters UCI Fete Speaker Assemblywoman M~xine Waters, D·Los An1eles. will deliver the ~keynote addresa at the fourth annual UC Irvine JSlack Awards Banquet Friday Her address. ••Black Students in the 19809," is scheduled during the banquet, at 8 p.m . tn the Registry Hotel. Irvine. Program (SCAMP> camp provides a one· week experience in the San Bernardino Moun· talna for asthmatic bpys and girls, t thrOugb 14. Supervislon is provided by volunteer pbyalelans, nuraes and respiratory therapists. The deadline for ap- pUc atioos ia June 16. The cost for the camp is $30. Special arrange. ments will be made with those who are unable to pay. For details. contact the Lung AaM>ciation at 1717 N. Broadway, Santa An a , t elephone 835· LUNG The banquet is held annuaJly to recognize the achievement.I or out· llegree won atandinl black students -· faculty and staff al UCI. Catherine Phillips of Awards for the 1979-80 113 Via Vella, Newport academic year wlU be Beach, has reeeived a 11ven to 1raduatlng .bachelor ol arta degree ,Ir seniora, outstandlni in economics from Lake t:f graduate and under· Forest CoJlege, Lake > araduate students and Forest, lll. She ls a outatandiq faculb' and graduate of Newport ataff members. Harbor IUgb School. The banquet is aponaond by Ma. Ebony and Gentlemen, UCI campua orpnlutiona. Ce11M2-H71. P\al • few word• lo work fOl' ••••uW Food l•IHIH Will eGMiDM to ~... prtft .... .,. afftald to all .,...ery aw.. .. 1to,.. m ...u.. ~lUd ...... of Or==· tJ, ~ ""'""°"' Uw . ........,... ........... .... old ofttln1tet manda•taa IDdlvtdull.Y fl'tMd ..... for ....... , .. in unln- ........... y aNU. TllS -..•n 11NANDICKJS ae· tkm w• • victory for couumer ad· voe.._ wllO lnlllted that llrioes oo ladlvldual Item• 1bould not be Hcrtnc.d to computerized acumen at man.t ebeckata.nda. Supervbon ftnt enacted the or· cllnance earlier in the year abortly after atate laws mandatln1 In· divklual pnc. tacs on lroceJ'Y it.ems esplred. AND Dr.&PITE THE ln.slateoce of some aupermarket operators that continuation 'bf item prlclng would force srocery prices up, the or· dlnance will remain in effect fOC' at leaat anotber year. It means that market shoppers will continue to be able to match package prices to what la rung up on cash re- gisters. Supervlaors did give the market operators some breathing room. That came when it was agreed that> each market chain could opente one market in unincorporated Orange Wttie laaor:"•·· -. o81hecos1: When we say it pays to insulate, we mean 1t If you insulate your attic to the R-19 standard. we'll send you a check for $50. That's if you have an independent contrac tor do the jab or you do it yourself. If the Gas Company does it, we'll take $50 off your insulation bill ORANGE COUNTY Cowtt;y .,.... without prtc.a betnl al· llxed to lteml. TllAT Q)NCBlllON eome1 u a NSWt of Cbe operators' eciateatloa that 1boppen are Dot eoeffroed about. computer MUitlve mastdal oa poeery ltema NPlaelDt .,. ...... price tap. Customen' reactlom to allda • test store In lllUion Viejo bu been .. out- standinc," a Ralph'a aupennarket executive told aupervl8ors. Since Baipb'a be1an leavinl off price tap in lbe lli&aion Viejo store. ·•Our sale• ba ve increased slcnificantly comll8red to other stores," said Jan Charles Gray, vice president ~the company. BUT SBES&Y BAV•, a coaswner advocate, said she bad 1,400 signatures gathered from shoppers outside the same store who wanted price tap Put back on the poc!elies. SUMllEll ... TIIOWT,_. 141001* ... Cllll .•• m.,., .. .. She said aDother s.ooo penom bave signed similar petitions tb.rou8bout • Orange County. --- Ad-Sitter saves you time and money by taking messages from people responding to your Doily · Pilot ~tied od. Coll 642-5678 for details. DAILY PILOT wne ~ law cast ftnencl1..,: We'll lend you the money you need to insulate your attic. at 8% annual percentage rate. And it doesn't matter 1f you do the 1ob we do 1t or you hire ctn mdepen· dent oontractor. When you consider how iugh interest rates are these days. this mcred1bly low rate show s ho w important we f~I insulation 1s / . _____ .,._ ....... ~ ....... - ' . tune er-.::.':!.. YOlll' 9 • Niis. lnsulabng your home When all is sai<;i and can make your ltf e less done, the real reason taxing The Federal to insulate is to save Government tlunks natural gas. That's great insulation 1s important. for Cabforrua. The less too So 1t allows a 15%~nergy you use to heat tax credit of 'up to $3(J) and/or cool your home, of the cost of atuc insula-the less money you t1on That should be an s pend on gas and --attractive mcenbve electric bills. And that's .. for anybody great for you. So what are you waiting for? For more information see an insulation con- tractor or c.all us toll-free at 1-800-252-9090. (From area code 209 call oollect 213- 689-3334.) I I I ,,• .~ .. It I • II I l I "' lfin~?eeerved parking for the handicapped atanda in front of van parked at Estan ffll't Scbool, and same symbol is painted on parking space van occupies. But OI. license No. 8S 549 W parked there anyway. Van carried no sign or permit ¥eating it belonged at the Costa Mesa site. . Water Needs Asses ed Clemente Ponden Reneiml of DH~ San Clement. cu expect to buy teu water from oat.aide IOUrcet U money to construct a pipeline I• allocated in tbe 1980.al budcet. Clty water and sewer olftclall are aaJd.nf for Sl00.000 to build a line between tbe clty'• well located at San Lull a~y Pm and tbe reaervolr ln IOUlb San Clemente. A TOl'AL 01' S50.000 w• al- located ln lut year'• bud1et for tbe drilliq proJect. The well wu taken out of service several yean ago after blgh salt levels were recorded in the water samples. The well formerly serviced tbe San Onofre nuclear plant only. City offaciala DOW propose to drill deeper to reach a lower water table and better water. John White, tbe eily's superin- tendent ol water and sewers. said a PiPeline was needed so the water could be run through tbe city filtration pl~t: ''THE WATER WU not filtered in tbepast,'' White said. "lnonler to use the water it must be treated." He cited signlflcant increases in costs from buying water from tbe-ll*°POUtaa ..... Dlltrtct. City ICanaaer Geor1e Caravalbo'a prellllllnary budget Jlau an apected ao percent rate lncreae durtq tbe next year. Looldna toward future water oeedl, Caravalbo bu uked for ST5,000 '°n:J'.!°' preparation ol a water }>Ian for the city to relate tuQare 9eeds for sewer, water and 1torm drains to eaUmated development. Gener81 Plan Ov.nge Eyed An amendment to the Irvine general plan tbat would allow in- d ua trial development near Walnut Vlllage •change from agricultural to eommercial the ZOl1iq on 11 acres ol Northwood land will be considered ton•Pt by tbe city's Planning CommisslGn. Tbe Irvine City Council will make a final ruling on the amendment after planners con- sider the matter. The Pla nning Commission meets at 7:30 p.m. in the Irvine City Council Chambers, 17200 Jamboree Road. Irvine . 0 WS ••OULD make sure thlnp JIU....,. and drainl are in pUee--=are ready to ' move ID," ear.. aald. ..IdealJy we lbould take a few \ tbouaand doUan tnd UM it to plan what fadlida are needed, allowinl tbe at.a.ff to do a better job." He said the master plan abould be prepared by outalde con1ultant1, .. rather than b.iriq a battery ol planners." Councilman WUllam llecham a~ded. '1'bere ls not enougb IWf to handle CW'ftllt projects, not to mention pillng on even mpre ol a - load." COUNCILllAN aoa£aT Um· bert aareed wttb tbe muter plan appl'NCb uytn1. ..Tbere is no evjdeoce that I can see the city bu ever eneaged ln any eom· prebenalve planning of any kind." Caravalho said in the next 10 years the city's population could increase to S0,000 or 60,000. "We are at a crossroad ln this com- m unity," be said. cau u2-se11. Put • ,.,, word• to work for . . • 1' ·-------------------" l Atf: ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~l:ets ·s "'•'\' ... ~ '• t 'h D1'ibled Driver BERKELEY <AP> -Linda Stone is looking for a little mot~ blue yonder in tbe city or Berkeley. Tbe 31-yea,r-old handicapped woman, wbo ran up more tho $900 in parking tickets. gets around just ftne in her wheel chair, but when it comes to parking her car she says there are not enough "blue" parking zones for the handicapped. IN FACT, THE CITY ONLY bas 20 or the specially designated parking spaces for han- dicapped drivers, and not everyone wants to park ln front of the Re volutionary Bookstore, for exam- ple With no blue spaces on lbe main downtown commercial ,4lreets where she shops and none in the major mdnicipal parting lots, she was forced to park in resttjcted and campus parking lots. net- ting 44 parkini tic.kets \lnce late 1978 MUNICIPAL -OOIJ&T IUDGE CASOL Brosnahan reduced. ber $905 in parting fines to $114 when she W.at to court. .. I agree ~you,.~ almply aren't enough , blue spaces," \be jucJ1e said ... But ln the future, it you can. stick to meten..'' ~mmerfun ScfJOOl-on the-Maire Nearty 600 s1udents a dt¥V will go to class rlght-<>n- th&-mall In Huntington Center thru the summer. than 30 different classes ball age OrOOPS K thru 12. uition s 11 to s 15 per 3 weetc ccorse. Registration ll'Yto and dass 9Chedules evetlable at center coort between penney·s and See·a. •1'80 .. N-~C- SAVE s1 omcE A YEAR SA¥1•1 • RCA CM.OR TY'SI 11 ... .,..,_ OalDr Cotll'Cll ..... OOIOt _.. ............ ...---·-•4-"-~ _ .............. - • ': .. toe Cofttru llColor T...,.. ____ _ _ ... .....,.._ __ -- . .._ °"" a.---~-.--.. -.... ••CAS-~---..a-----·------.. ~--0.. '00 ~ -----...-C-trOf -oo _ .... .. ____. ...... .. --- • elKtil-CO*l..-1 ~lt • Q ·------- _ .. ___ _ ---.. -• lllCA 1 e fte rop·eft•<••"f .,.-. ... --"""''°'- .. ---. ... ··. --. • -, r V,\ f\JI ,\ \I '\" \ T f( , I . <l( 1 lH ; I I ( •' ~~ ... ).. •• ·= .. .... . · :i ... .· •• ' .. . . Thia 8iro allirt ollen a true blend· i• of craftamanlhip and cJusJc atyllq with ahoukler epauleta and flap breut pocketa accented with natural born tiuttona. The eoft natural flben of OOUon adapt to any temperature tor alJ season comfort. becoming softer and more enjoyable to wear with each laundering. Available in blue. orf white. pink, ind yellow. $28.50 . • . • . . . . . . . . . · . . , .· . . Restaurant and Cocktail Lounge . ' . • ' .... $13.95 I ~ Served with SQup du Jour. rice pUaf or baked potato. Vegetable de Gardiner. SUNDAY CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH I I :30 to 2:30 On-the-mall at South Coast Plaza near the Carousel on the First Level. For reservations call: ~22. ................................... : ... ~~-63 v-of Community Serwlce (11Z7-1910I .. .. .t!:JHE COSTA MESA -NEWPORT HARBOR LIONS CLUB ~~~ * p............ *-~ ··· * lb S!a A..i ~ ilf FISHFRY ~~~ & CARNIVAL ••• ..... ... .... ·:· =·= _., ... .... .. ,. .. .•, ... ..... * FRIDAY, SATIJRDAY AND SUNDAY * JUNE 8-7-8, 1-* * * UONSPARK 18th Ind NewPOrt 81Yd. ·: :: :; -. ·-· :· GIANT PARADE SATURDAY, 10:30 A.M. =~ PARADE ROUTE -on Harbof Boulnant -From Wilson, south to 19th StrHt, West to Anah11m South, M>Uth to Lions Park. . -. -. . . . . SCHEDULE OF EVENTS fAIDAY, JUNE 6 • • . • • F111h D1nnet1 -11.., M<V1n9 • • • . • Cam1vll -Aldft & Gam• oPeft ••. Enten. .. -t "The Bellwettt.s" · · · · · • • , • • . o...,.,nt for Prtu. lw1nftiftt tidlets must be prnentJ *** • SATURDAY, JUN£ 7 ::.0:00 AM .••• C.rnivll Aides• Oelftft °'"" •lO::IOAM .•.....• , .l1ont01entP•eil• :lt:OO noon •.... Fith Olnne~ ·•tart _..,int • «:oo,.. .... ...,. Allr•tdt C.t st• In'-"' •)IOON , , ........• Dr.-lntf1WPf'IH1 :-I•....._ tldlep ""'"be p_,0 ·' ... ~1SN •••.. , •.•. DiDrothv-'oo-.t • )cOO f'M • • • · • . • • • • • Otewint for ~•tts :.. t•-lnt tldltta must be ,,_,I .f'M f'M • • • • 1 •• • • • Plue Ahyltlm Bend :t;oo f'M • , • . .•• Dr-lne for Color TV end • .. otht• Pfl.cw •: Cwtnn•"t t1dcet1 must be Pf-ti .... ·-1 :-•!• .. ••• ... .... .-. . --•*'• _ .. i_t *** SUliil.DAY.JUNl.I -... PRIZES • • • PRIZES • •• PRIZES GRAND PllZE. 1-OLDSMOBILE OMEGA with MJtom.tlc trMsmltlioft · heater GM X-bodv Presented in COOPlfltlon wittt Unlnnlty Oldsmobile of Costa,...._ (winner Med not be .,,_.,ti *** MANY OTHER PRIZES indudtng a COLOR TV (wlnni"11 tickets mutt be pretent fOf 111 prizes uc:ept the Otd• mobdel *** OUTSTANDING ITAGE ATIRACTIONS ***** BABY CONTEST All con.-.,.. -.t • ...... ,. ...... I ... on ,_ I ; ,..., • ._ ...,. en Mly 1t. I ... 01tw. lide of ttl• IMet fOf "'"'* dt"e...1 . ***** DON'T MIM -tt. he eve --fer Oleucomt 9ftd tM ""'_..,wetloft d._., i., tN UnlwwNtY Of Catlfomi•. """"' ***** t • "Ne llewen. 1W ..... '" wut .. c. tllak ,... ...... .. pt~piltyc:iMtdeeee." 'Ladg Killers' Detroit Death ·Toll Mo11nts · DETROIT (AP> -Homicide detectives have widened the "lady k1llers" murder probe, adding two names to the lilt of victims and reportlne that as many u flve men may be respomlble for the alaylnp of 1.S women on Detroit streets the past year. The !DOit recent victim, Unda Kootetro, 27. was round strangled in the driveway beside her home. Twenty.four boun earllw and less than two miles away, a 7-year-old boy found the body of Rosemary Frazier, 28, who bad been raped and strangled. DETROIT POUCE SAY THE PESSON wbo killed Miss Monteiro probably wu not the same one who killed Mln Frulw. Miu Moot.elro wu not sexually assaulted, police wd . They wefe two of 11 female victlma slain this year and included in the lnvestteatioo. Over the weekend, police alfted tbrouch files of unsolved bomlddes aJ)d added the names ol Cynthia Henry and Peggy Ann Pochmara. Mlaa Henry, 20, was strangled June 28, 197'9. just before reaching the porch of a 'male friend's home. Police found her purse lying open and they say robbery may have been the motive. Mias Pocbmara, 22, was smothered to death, but neither raped nor robbed, while approacbine the home of a friend in northwest Detroit In the early·moming houn Oct. 8. .. WE HAVE TWO DISl'INCT CATEGORIES or killings," Homicide lmpector Robert Hislop said. "In ooe, we've got women wbo are being at· tacked as they leave their cars late at night. And in the aecood, womea are belq picked up oCf the street or attacked oa the strelt. "One lndiviclual killed more tbm cme. maybe two or three, but we're certain there are other murderers. 'Ibere could be three, four or even five men responsible." A week before the two latest s layiogs. Ernestine Smith, a 34-year-old deaf· mute. was stabbed to death while walling for a bus. "What malcea these cases so difficult," Hislop said, "is that the killen are opportunists That means there's usually little likelihood or a connec· tion between the killers and the victims.•· THE ONLY PATrERN IS THAT the women were young, between 20 and 34; they were out alone late at night; and their bodies were round outdoors iD residential areu. Nine of the women were straneled. two stabbed, one shot and one suffocated, according to police reports. Police refuse to provide a breakdown, but say some ol the women were raped while others were left fully clotbed and not snually molested. And only IOIDe of the victims were robbed . At least four of the vlctlml bad reeorda u pro· atitutes, Hislop said . "'!bat's a risk for pl"Oltitutes oa the street. 'Ibey don't know what kind ot john (customer> they're eotng with. But mOlt of the women weren't proetltutes. They bad joba or wen out aocially. and probably weren't even aware they were beinC followed." IN THE 11 SIA TINGS TID8 year lncluded in the probe, seven bodies wen found oa the city's West Side and four found Oil the Eat Side. "I know that women are 1enerally uptet about the altuatloo," said Mary Dryoyqe, an orsantur of Detroit's Women·Tak•Badr.-tbe-Nllbt lfOUp. ·'There are an escalattq number ot temiom 1D the city and they're beiD.I tal•11Ut oo women." She attributed the tea8oa9 to unemployment in the city. whicb bit UU percent la AprtL ,.,.,. Oil Spills Increase CAMBRIDGE, Maaa. CAP) -More than 328 millioa 1allom of oU were lolt Jut year in 1pllla and fires that a1lo left 250 pencm dead or mlu.lq and ldl1ed more than 50,000 btrdl and 210,000 ft.ab, a report says. Tbe oU lost -moat of lt in three tanker cruJM., a tank ~ and a well blo.-t-wu 51 percent men tbu wu Jolt ID 1171. •CC!Ofdlna to the Oil Spill 1DteW1enee Report publlahed by the Center for Short·Uv.d Pbeoomee. The e«tter 1ald ltl flndlnp were "tbe most comprehensive llltlnl of spill data available in a pubUc document. .. s~ru~!!! $299 • Crispy Fish • 2 Tasty Shrimp • 2 Tender Scallops • Fresh Cole Slaw • Crunchy Hushpupples •Golden Fryes ~rjOiinSilver~fJ SEAFOOD SHOPPES 3095 Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA (Just South of Saft °'9110 fwJ., ~From feclCO) DAIVE-THR 8SMCE Av.ILABCI: •ch.,cTY ._ .... ..,.. . t' nk•Jt••d ...... ,,NOW 5 159'5 A.l.070 ...SILft .......... ..,.. ........... s1 OtS COLOR TV AND STEREO THEATRE 1800 .. ' LOCAL ' -.,, .......... Tie.,..••~ Bert Parts, ditched by Ml11 America pageant after 25 years, will emcee Miss YOW\I lnterna· lional contest Aug 17 in Manila. FIOod Volunteers Cited hy Red Cross 1'11• Orq County Red CroN hu booOred M Or~e CoHl N9Jct.nt.a •bO VO.untaril' aul1led vlcUma ol floodiDI ln February. ~•woman Ilario Mlballc aald th• Red Croll 1tMltered aso l*>Pl and provtcMd a,eoo meala, 1pnclln1 •·• tor diauter relief duri.ftl the Oranp Count.y noodlnl that be1an Feb. 13 Volunteers honored were: P'to• Cotta MeH: Edi• EUJot . Maryon P'eriuaon. Oeo.rae Madsen. Patricia M ich elena and Joy Wtlllama Fro• Foaatata Valley: Ruth Barker, JudJe Bond. Dave Braunlich. Tony Brewster. Uu CummlDI. Earle Grandison, Christine Johnston. Llnda Kelley. Cheryl Ken· dr1ck and Michael Starbuck. From HuaUa1ton Beecla; Don Chadd, Jim Engle. Roger and Diane Foley , Jackie Healey, Pat Crtvter. o.rtt renen1a and Robert Wat.l!Go. O'Bri ,.,.. llal ... c,: Katen en and Jobn Rtpeebo. Pre• W••l•l•Uer : Carol Beuacbleln, Bob Dennla. Mary Lou Meekl 1reM Nlln. Mary Romero. Keith Sou\hworlh. Carl Leon St.ep1'ou, Sblrley Strada and A.A. Watt.a. Onion Wine Leaves Maker Lo ly •1 an CHOOSE FROM OVER 90 OffERENT ne irii STYlES AM> COVERS ~ STOCK FOR SOUTH HAVEN. Mich. <AP> -tlNiDfATEDELJVERY. When al comes to wine, J ohn SAVE 2c.33• OFF MFG. SUGGESTED Coleman knows his onions. >r • Features 100'1 of SIMMONS Firm AdjustoReste coh. comfort. abft QUffted IUfflCll, ~: toundat-- Laguna Group Cited Kawolewsld Joan Mason. Harry eMontague. Tonia Morales. Bill and Louise Moraan. Lois Raguse. In a tearless. tongue·ln·cheek PRICES. ALSO AVAlABLE W /BEAUTYREST. ceremony at hls tiny Vendramino L~----------.:._ _____ .J. __________________ ""'."".,!~:!::!:~~=I Winery near Paw Paw. Coleman pre· sented his first bottle or onion wine to Jon and Lynn Ross. Karen Stein, Rochelle Stein and George Thyden. From Irvine; Shelley Jenan, Diana Nuttmann, John Radjik, Donald Wilson and Tonya Yata. From Laguna Beach: M arvln and Elva Ashford, Betty Briesbie, T he Laguna Beach· Darlene Brokaw, Rebecca Cham. based California Voter berlaln, Lorna Cohen. 0 r o up ha s be en Alice Dawson, Marie Onorato. awarded a Nation a l Gwen Flather, Alyce and Walter Lt. Gov. James Brickley. "You can't Imagine crushing 400 pounds of onions." Coleman told Brickley. "It was a week before anyone would come near me." Coleman explained to the governor that the wine was for cooking, not drinking and quipped: ''You wouldn't want to drink it on your first date.·· Mean while. the wine m aker 1s working on his next projects - garlic. cucumbC'r and lettuce wines You th Citizen s h 1 P Frazee. Marlly Ghere. Award from Senior Laura Hoity, Jessica Jokobs. Go The New York McCallum. BEAUnREST® SAVllGS IOW! SAYE s29 •• s100:: (When you make your selection prior to June 1st) &holaslic Magazine. Marlon Kanour. Gloria Lewyn. Anna Won't Ape SOUTH magazine honors 100 Helen MacLean, Vance Men· do ? lllEllATE high school citizenshi p denhall, Adrian Mesa. Mark Onorato, Over Free 11U FRIE projects throughout the Talhe Parnsh. ~I ~tefi u .s. a nd the Laguna LOIS Rennie. Lou Riddler. Judy NEW ORLEANS (AP>,_ Scottie, a DELIVERY eep s Beach group was the on· Wander, Liz Webs ter. Covey Wills. J5().pound gorilla. has spent most of IN ly one in California to Virginia Winston. his life in a IO.foot by 20-foot cage receivetheaward.• Margaret Wright and Marianne and the sudden luxury of his new. ORANGE 3161 HARBOR BLVD.•COSTAMESA•PH. 545 -7168 Californi a Voter Wright. open.air digs at the Audubon Park o.w--"'~s..a...o,_ ST We Feature the Complete Lmeof Simmon• leautrren. Group. a non ·prof1t From Newport Beach: Keith zoo apparently are taking some COUNTY STORI HOURS: Mon. aftd frf. 10.1. Tue.-n-..10.-. Set. 1d.1. kft.12·5 educational organiza. Glorfield, Dorothea MacMillan. June getting used to. ~ lion, works in high Shuler and Pat Thomas. The zoo's S2 million World of ~ All models in Stoel< for immBdiate dellllef)'. school ci~~ cla~~ ~ From~Oemen~: Pat Ayer.Joe Prim~~ -whkh ~atu~ la~e. !~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ become active and Harvey, Karoline Koester. opened with speeches, music and J m otivate stude nts to Broski, Bickford Gray, Joyce open compounds rather than cages. ----I responsible voters J .O. Mc llraith, Jean Merricle. gaily colored balloons. -~~ \1. uo,11 T h e gro u p w as Marvel Murrey and Arthur Palmer. But Scottie spent the day in a cave · INFORMS '"the honored for its voter ---~F~ro~m~S~a~n~J~u~a~n~C~a~p~l~st~r~ano~:~J~o~a~n~c~u~t~in:t:o~th:e~s:ide::,:o:f~h:is~n~e~w:....:.:ho:m::_e·~---~-----------===-..... ======================================================== message, writte n by high school interns and appearing in the state department of Educ&· Uon curriculum report, the National Citizen Education bulletin a nd other newsletters and journals. It states "The most valuable real estat.e ln California is the voting booth." The program 1s direct· ed by Dt!nny Fre1denrich. Two Orange Coast res· dents have received achelor's degrees rrom ti a r e m o n l M e n · s ollege. Derek Werner, son of r . and M rs. Ray erner of Costa Mesa. Eas awarded a degree n economics and ac· ounting. ~'Lore Alford Frost III, on of Mr. a nd Mrs. ore A. Frost Jr. of ewporl Beach . re· eived a degree in anagemenl and rngineering. EXTRA SPECIAL! SNAP IT UP! • MARKET BASKET WESTCUFF PLAZA 12-pc. DRIVE SOCKET SET a·.aa Contact Lenses Eyewear Styltng Dr. Lou Elder Refrad1no Pre:ocr101no OPTOMETRIST 642-0720 1124 Irvine Ave. Newport, Beach SAVE 70c TAB, COKE 1 JI., or SPRITE •• e P•k. 12 oz. C•n• Your Dad Deserves The Best. WE MAIL GIFT PAICS! ff iclctW ferm FASHION WESTCLIFF PLAZA IS LAND ''" 1 ,..._ "•••OOftlle•c" 647-08 T? ft-1-~ ""°"Wtod l•f Tll\A l folttll ~' 1•9S.0 MllSun IM> S.. t•e S.... 1•) Anlfion'I ~­ SHOE SERVICE .,.... .... ...,,... CJ fat•l1.W ..... .... w.,.,. ... ....... .. .. ... . 1' .. £raftsl"'•Ple'• Market ., IOYCS L &&NNSDY Dear le,cie: I a• a ..... ... .............. ,-.n ... . .... ..... fain. ........... . wlalela •••• wlll lae Ute aeat l•eraU"f -G.C.,Ntw81 ......... Publldty may be 1pane about the estimated e,ooo crafta faln and shows held each year and indeed their quality ll Wllveo. The best 10WUS for locatlq shows are crafts publications. Craft HorUGDI. publllbed by tlle American Craft.I Coundl, Uata upcomJna lbows as a recW.ar feature. Tbe macazifte is available oo newutanda or by mem· bersblp-sut.cription from the council at 22 W. S5th St., New York, N.Y. 10019. THE caAFl'8 aEPOaT. a month- 1 y newspaper of ••marketing, manqement and money fOf' craft profesQonals, .. also bu an extensive roster ol upcomioa abows. C4.REERS SlstJ Oraa1e Coelt • crown from a aatberhl• with eo con· ·eon... aUcleiata ,,_, tributon who lo 1M IO&d $11,000 la tbe Or.,. COlllt .,_ warn to an event with 500 exhl~ were awarded ..... 1ro11 1a1e1 of $3 m1lllon and 32,wu bersbl&» iD Mu Alpba visiton. Theta, tbe natloaal Sedeatrom believes the key to mathematic• honor noteworthy shows ls a 1trict Jury pro-society. cess. For last year's Rhinebeck New members in· event. more than 2.000 appllcanta, elude: who submitted four slldea each, were ..::=~:.:_Mk-''· screetled by a JW'y of profeuional .,,_ c.... ..... , T._.. A. cra,.----le •.-. awrw o ...... 09wl M. ._,_..,, • 8•11,..tt, Mefti I. Qwl ......... Michael Scott, the SeatUe-based · J-T.06rtl. editorolThe Craft.a Report, suggests J!':': :-. <::-,~ ~m'i. that amwers to t.bese questioos are Eo......,, s.• 1e. ,..,..._..,_ quality clues: u 111 r. Ool'aMz, K.-. o. ~.n. IC•Y L.. Gu"*rMft• TIMettty It. -18111E SHOW well established? ":io~=... e.o-. u . Those that have been around year ._. .. •· i.-, ...,...,.. c. -.cy, alte ood -·-..... "· ........... r year are g uic:..o. F,.., MmllM. K.etJ '-.,...,,.., -Who sponsors the show? Many or Cyfttlll• L . M c Oona Id. ~··· the belt are backed by well·known ~~.~~C,::~,. G. crafts organiutJoos. "Cast a critical ,._, .... ,,. ~ G • .....,_, 8f11 That•s what the sian says at the Santa Monica Airport. The pilot of the light plane, gliding over the sign, is probably wondering ii be is approaching a bo6pital zone or if he is supposed to shut off his engine and just float to the runway. A book, "1980 Craft Worker's Market," gives wld6' coverage to shows, as well as other places to sell your crafts. The reference is published by Writer's Di1est Books, 9933 Alliance Road, Cincinnati, Ohio 4~2. eye at shows that come through town "1:::;:~:;.:n-.i::..c M. ""'"° with no particular credentials," he th.-o · ...,.,.: c.n NODC Trlil: advises. v~;;::e-P M. T1'drM a. o..., -ls the show juried? 'By whom? v11 -o.vio10.W1<•-'. Since summertime equals the boli· Frfll!I.....,.. v.....,, c~ A. d k period ( Cl-M llffon:ll T. Oltlbli9. Mef'llr 8 . ay season as a pea or f'.,.••iilll'<Tonv s......., Et1c "· "'' Taxpayers Plan Recall Since the caliber or shows can vary from a casuaJ lawn aoclal to a high quality, active marketplace. bow can you distingui.sh? crafts sales, flndi:ng good shows can •-r . be C ... .,.;al to tidina you over during 11• ... MM Hw Ton, '"'°"' V• Mu • ,.._. ·-Ton -'""'" M.i Nu Ton. the bard·worktng -but financially F.-. 1 s ...,.., K9fttl t . lean -fall and spring months O.Jton. Ao11tt1 $. Fltt-•ld. o.ron • L LIM«urn, S....,.. T. McJl//IN.,.'f, READER SERVICE: Want a tom~ WW of ~ Crofta Rqorl ~'.' Send «J ~ in damps plua a """""~, ult~ malling label to Joyce W•YM T. NMIM. , ...... °" ....,.,.,, J911 '-.. ~ -lMT'Y 0. Wood. ,,,_.......,..._.., .. ~o. City-challenged Tax C,ut A.n!fers Citizens CAaOL 8EDEST•o•. president of American Craft Enterprises, direct.a tbe annual Nortbeut Craft Fair, popularly known as tbe Rhinebeck Fair. Tbls event bas Lam Knnedr/ at 80% 1560, O>ata Meta 9205. AM for "Crofta." II-. Qwi. O. 8urmwf -l)ouolft R Py19, From W • I I : Vonv S. Stllm CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas <AP> -The Corpus Christi Tax- payers Asaoclation, angered by the city's court challenge ol its aucceaalul tax-cutting measure, is off on a campaign to recall the mayor and six council members. Arguing that city officials have no business opposing the will of the people, the 400· member association is t.rytna to oust the offending olficebolders. In an effort to force the city's first recall election, the assocta- tio~ i&<-aUempting to collect, by June 12. tbe signatures of nearly 9,400 reciltered voters. 10 per· cent of the city's total. THE CONTaOVEBSY over Proposition 14. an initiative limiting property tax increases, has shaken this prosperous Gulf Coast city ef 240,000, wher~ politics is normally a quiet af. fair. Some have gone so far as to Graad Ole Opr:) Oldest Radio Show . , To Lose Listeriers NAS~LLE. Tenn. <AP> -Hundreds of thousands of persons wlll no longer be able to listen to the Grand Ole Opry on radio because the Federal Communications Commission is fiddllo' around witb· regulations. an official says. Len Hensel. vice president and general manager of WSM. wbicb broadcast.s the 54-year~ld coun- try music abow. said an FCC de· cialoo will cut into the number of persons a hie to listen to tbe Opry. THE FCC. IN effect, decided to restrict the power of WSM to • 750 miles. This will cut into WSM 's reach because its 50,000-waU signal now stretches to Canada. J "This will cut out hundreds of thousands of persons in Canada and they are big country music· •fans.'' Hensel said. "Plus we'll , lose halt ol Minnesota and New rYorlt." ' The Opry ls the world's oldest continuous radio show. Regular performers on the show include Roy Acuff. llDown u •-uie kine of country music," Minnie Pearl, Ronnie Milsap, Porter Wagoner, Marty Robbins, Hank Snow, Barbara Mandrell, .Ernest Tubb and others. HENSEL COULD not estimate bow many listen to the ()pry. which is broadcast every Friday and Saturday ni.iht and present· ed before a live audience of 4,400. He said WSM could petition the FCC for a rehearing, challenge the decision in court or seek congressional action. The target date for the new re1ulaUon, be said. is December 1982. When t.he FCC said it was stu-dying the proposal more than a year ago, Opry officials asked country mual~ fans to write to the FCC to wotest. More than 4 ,000 letters were sent. THE FCC LIMITED the broadcast range of 25 powerful clear channel \tations whose radio •llnala c!OUld traYlll up to 2,000 miles. ceive high quality pro1ram· min~. it's a shame to lose that dience will still be protected Uu:ougbout the West Coast, but now we may not get as far as the Dakotas or Kansas." miracle." said Jim Wesley, vice president and general manager of KFI. HOW~VEa, WESLEY does not anlicipate much of a change in the station's programming or advertisln& revenues because the bulk ol the station's audience ls located in a six-county area surrounding Los Angeles. ••FnmkJy we are pleased the FCC chose to protect us to this extent.•• said Wesley. "Our au- Clear-channel status first was assigned to a select number of AM stations by the federal gov- ernment in 19.28 to provide in· terference-free radio service over large areas at night -es- sentially to reach rural areas and small towns that did not have radiostati~. KFI, WIOCB WAS started in 1922 by Earle C. Anthony, a Southern California automobile dealer, was one of the first sta- tions to be granted clear channel status. Over t.be years. the FCC re· duced clear stations from 40 to 25 channels, Wesley said. "In tbe early days," he added. "radio was a hobby and an in· formal means of entertalning a group of people. After World War II. radio shifted from a medium tbat entertains a group of people to a medium that pro- vides ·one-to-one service. It la now more of a companJoaahJp medium. There is more local service by radio stations too ... say they fear it could "tear this community wide open ... But neither side is about to back down. "P~tion 14 is the will of the people. an order from the taxpayers to the City C<Mmcil that we are tired of big tax in- creases," said Taxpayers As· sociation President Lewis Lovelace, who blames the council for tbeturmoil. ••1T IS unconstitu- tional. It is clear conflict with state law, and it's going to hurt the city economically,'· countered City Councilman David Diaz, who said the association leaders are hurting the city. "Their highly Irresponsible actle>ruJ are setting the city back five to 10 years in progress. They are using inflammatory tactics to get the people out in arms." he said. . Eveo if the association SUC• ceeda in gathering enougb slg· natures to force a recall elec- Uon. Mayor Luther Jones said. ··1 don't think it can be sue· cessrul. I think there will be enough informed voters in Corpus Cbruti, if it gets to that stage, to stop it. I don't think they want that group to take over the city." .. Six Cit,ed 30 UCI Students By Bank Named to Society On Essays 'l1lirty UC Irvine stu- 6Receive Redlands Degrees denu from t.be Orange Senio.rs from six Coaat area bave bffo Newport-Mesa bigb selected to membership in Phi Beta Kappa, the D.a~ honor IOclety. Six Orange Coast resi-dents were among U. 260 students awardd d.eerees by the Univeni· schools have been awarded scholarships of $200 each from California First Bank. The six wrote winning essays in a contest sponsored by the bank. Servke Unit Seu Three j\miors and 21 senionJ were aelected 00 ty of Redlands at C?m· tbe baa1a of academic mencement ceremomes. ncellence. and breadth :J The 1raduates in-f ...._. __ , in t. ·~tuded· 0 sc._.. Y t.el"j!S UD• "'°"' Cott• Mn.: J•tt~ te. aventty officials aaid. c;'""· B«MW ot Artt, Hhtor.,; s ...... 8. s.on. ~Of ~ The recipients of the El tto• scholanshJps are Eileen ec R Honored Juoion are < .. M1< .. outtM.wit1tdkC1nc11on. Breu La1nar Reed of ~:0..:0.~'~=·~: .~~ Coat a Mesa . Sally 1 .. r ... 11-,.1«10ns-«-1a.. Brody, Estancia High School; Clay Godfrey, Newport Mesa Evening High School: Christine Kelly. ea.ta Mesa High School ; Sonia Reineraton, McNally Hi1tb School : Mark Sit I an1ky, t:oron a oe t Mar Hiah School, and Julie Wahlstedt, Newport Harbor Higb School. The students were asked to write an essay explaining "'Wh y I Should Exercise my The Orange County Community Develop· ment ~11. Inc. is ac· cepting peutions from candidates who seek Elizabeth Stewart of "•~~.:_~!;.·~·~ !~,~ Irvine and Leo Chun•· <omm.,n1u11w d•'IOrdtn. • ' • I" rom L•9un• Nlou<'I: Jodi Mang Young of Hunt-c.,,.,.,.... s..n. e-11e• ot .,. .. l.tngton Beach. ..,.,,,..,...110 • l"rom N_.t 8eK I>: P _ _. Honored seruors are: ICftiOl>I 8 vlh, 8•<1>•10<' of Arn, -•OIOQy election to the council's ,,,_. c.... °"' .._, ic-u. board of directors June ~~;:::ic1no..w-.. 19 F, .... C•••• M•u · s .. i ...... . Ell.-O.U. '--DI-. Plr- CDC lpOOSOrS various -. ---•oc1w pr'ograms for senior ,,,..., "-··" v .... ., s._.. -......~ cituens . preschool ,,,.., _......., e.«11· c .... childttn. alcobolics, and v-~ -°"" ~ other community mem· "':'.:::-..._. P-. ,._ °'"""· bers. P•tr~·• .,... ~··· c,,, .. ".,.. T .. ~ of •'--SI" "eats J<><•«n. 0ou91~ R•<,,.rd ic-. IU'OCIC' Uft:' A .. J••" E -c..n-.. ·~ _..,, Honors Won Rigbt to Vote." allocated 'to represen--· J-LA9 ~ u.r • .,,.. tatJves ol tbe poor will :::;.·~~.-, Deborah Thorson of Fountain Valley, a,n e ducation major at California Lutheran College, 1bousand Oaks. rece ived departmental honors at the college~• annual honors coovoca· WHAT PllOPOSmON 14 does be filled in tbe June 19 "r..,.-'41119, ic~~ is trim the property tax rate elec:Uon. ic-::.., ......,. .._ ... E--.i ---------- lion. from '74 to 68 cents per $100 r_._ Degr Petit)ons ro.~ can· -~.~~~. evaluation, reduce the max-~ ee didacyC"DlUSl be SUb• (»Ori• llleal•r• N•WllOVM, -~ ....... ""1c-.r imum rate from $2.50 to 68 Donald James Ctrt· milted no later than Fri· ,,,_. s.-.. c w ... ...,.. cents and limit annual increases t e r , 3240 Minnesota day, a CDC spollesman l~_.~..in.: St«t • ._ ..... . in property appraiaals to 6 per-Ave., Costa Mesa, has said. ...~ cent. received tbe bachelor of CDC ls located at 1440 ,,, .......... , ....... J..,, .. City leaders campaigned scie nce degre e rrom E . First St .• Santa Ana. ""~':.'":~11 ... cerem ony Is against the amendment, but it Fort Lewis College, For more information ---... .., -'"""*" .. •·• passed 10,049 to 7,405 in an April Durango, Col. call 5C'7..,L ~ ..!. ~"".' ".._Arb vw.., 5 municipal election. On May 22. --------------------------------------after the City Council voted ~2 in favOf' ol tbe action, tbe city filed a lawsuit agatnat all tax-payers, residents, property owners and penoo.s claiming a financial interest in Corpus Christi. Clinic Set For Smokers A stop smoking clinic begins Monday at South Cout Medical Center for tho9e who want to kick the habit. The cl.us will be held Monday and Wednesday evenin1s from 7 to9. The program is sponsored by the Oraqe County Unit ol the American Cancer Society, and participants will meet in small group sesalom led by trained volunteers. For more informaUoo, call the South La1una facl lily at 499-1311, or the .All\,ericao Cancer Society at. 752-8600. Learn Something New. Everyqay. One d these stations ts KPI, a Los Anfeles ataUon wblch wu one of the oriainaJ clear-channel 1taUona in the United States. "When you think t.bil'a penon can hold a pocket radio 1D 101De remote place in Kontana and re- Hole Trtlth I From complete news of your community .to reports of world events, you'll find words and It Was Tire, Not Dri11er pictures to make life mor.e ···--·-....... .. , ·Jory Duty Anyone? llOfft'Pi.ILID. Y\. <AP>'-Tbe Judie needed aame ~ -80 the dleriff Miil out to Norm's Deat. ~ ltendln1 lD Ii.De ln the Montpelier delkwrrea found~ IUddenly diverted ~the It.reel to Wubinlton County Superior A sbol1qe ot jwwa camed JUd&e Tbomu Hayes to clte a seldom·uaed law that allows the coUrt to solicit Juron from the street. Sheriffs loeki.ag for 13 additiomaJ prospective jW"Ol'S found aeveraJ standing lD line at Norm's. PAC91CYWW 1•K"llH PMJr C.."'Y Mam*Y a.... 3500 ~View onw. .... OOftBHch .... 2100 MIC a I Cll MOllTUADS L.IQune BellCh 484-9'15 UclunaHilla 78&0933 S..Ji.-.CIJ' lt•IO -.1111 - Demit Nectees Auto Repair Per•nit Taken ,,.. .... ol Calll....aa .... •••abd tM ,.. ~--ol. • &la Clemeat.e auto repair dealer for ~ ..w·•· tbe --ol.. probe•ion lm· ,_.. llr tM 8unau of Aadomotlve Repalr. ,,. .nm WU tak• _ ... IUebard Lee kMftlld. oww ol Ulle Saa Otmente Auw CeMer OD N_. l:l C.•iM Real ACICOaDING 'IO atJ&EAtJ ell1ef Robert Wleoa, Sdldle&d UDlawtully CCIDduct.ed buslnesa wttlilout a valid reailtr•tlon. Wical npl•lned that Sc:bofteld'a rqistratico bad bias revoked lD lt'11 for a1leCedlY faillq to honor equlpmeat 1uarantees and becaUH 'Of numeroua customer complain&.s of nbst1ndard work However, tbe auapeuion wu later beld back and Scbofteld ~laced oa two years probaUoo. Wiem aakl the tiom ol. the probaUcm lncluded a 30-da,y suapmaloo of Sdd{eld's relistratioo starting Dec. 1, tm and tbe poetlnc of a sign to notify cmtomera ol the suspeoaloa. WIENS SAID AN tJNDE&CIOVE& car was seat to Scbofield'• abop durin& the auspemioo period and be repaired the car ID violatioa of the order. 1be San Clemente auto dealer ls abo charged with twice concealing the sign that was to notify cuatomers his re.Ostratioo bad been suspended. Scbofield said that be was appealing the sus· pension. and that be dfd not want to comment oo the matter until bls side had been beard in court. "Ouldllf.,,.... 1• GOURMET MARKET 11recl., trame Jaiut Dea't '-let te daedl wttll • • .,.. ....-free taome dellffl')' Rnlee. MORNING FRESH PRODUCE nm o1111e &e.-- Large Swed Blq Cbenlell .. Large Bawallaa Papaya . .Tk lb. .. Ikea. PRIME le TOP CHOICE BEEF ·-et ftll • .. fS .. tk prU., ,erfecUee BY POPULAR DEMAND! Deluey•a Bome-Carecl, Fat·f ree Corned Bed Brtake&a .....••....... 1.98 lb. Leaa Gramld Beef cground hourly I ..•. 1.49 lb. 'S DELANEY. BROS. SEAFOOD PaBllll 8••4Dlli .•............ · .... ,5.11 lb. 'peat lo t.1--b-q or bn>fl -b95le with lflnOO butter 1 P~elfle aed Supper .............. 1.11 lb. Crab a...., fally eeoked .......... 1.11 lb. _ UQUOR DEPARTMENT Delaney's Private Label Chablis or Via ~ 1750 m11i I.It Bolla WIBes -ValpoliceUa, Soave, Bose <750mil1 reg. 4 8> •••••••• 3.81 Bel A.rt.re. Vineyards 1150 mil1 Cabernet Saavtgnon or Oaardmlllay treg. 6 ~1 •••••••••••••••• $.1.tS Scoresby Scotch I Fifth I 5 S5 . . . . . . . 1qt.1 6.38 I ;\JI liqllOf pri~ de DCM IDt'lllCko ta ~ I Open Daily 9-t, Cloeed Sanday 2920 Newport Blvd .• Newport Beach 673-5520 ~ z 7 pc. Wood HMdle ~ Sawdllritlet ~. #$W7 3.88 C.:-C°"" ::t«F.a (Nol .,,_.., 29.88 •••atw1*"9a,c. 'lfi·ome ........ '25t2 239.88 I T1111-#D 1.• STMI-~11.11 ITOll-._,. 12.U IT1111-#1T1t.ll 12Ton-:mr 21..a 4'._., P.V.C. T .. #t!O ... v c. ~ 24.88 15.88 5.88 ~ H.P. Grtnder 44.88 ~H.P.~ 68.88 17.88 - Hecbftr Blades #"9Cl2 II, 2' 0tS2 TMOI 15e ea. .......................... _ __....,.. ............. _. . ........... _,... ........................................... .... __. ...... -.................... .. ......... .__....,....,... ...... ...._ . .. .. .. _. ................. --..... ""Marmaduke cou6d talk, l'H bet he'd say 'FEA FOFUM.'" SHOE MOON MULLINS MISS PEACH K~LLY S"c~OO L- ScJMMEi I'M ArzTHt..« ~~­ro w~e A SWM\EIC JOS. S~ll~~ :~.';;'~''J ~ ~ "'c, ....... ...__. .. _ THE FAMILY CIRCUS "Can I go outsiQe for a couple of whiles?'' DENNIS THE MENACE -P,:{U-•. '·S PUNKY WINKIRIEAN by Ftrd & Tom Jolmon WW, AT l.EAST IMEY I.EFT ~14T AFTER DINNER... by Mell Lazarius I 'D LOVE TO BE A TIN SOLDIER ))))))))))) 'JHAT'S lRlJE. ! I'U. 1EU. ~ IAJAAT ••• MBE'STil~~I FL"1H6 AI.£ ~N6 AillJ55 Dnm fW(E ON A TKOOP lRAIN- ~' ~ FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE DR. SMOCK HeY, 1"HIS Pll..L-IS e>IG E:NOLJC:SH "fO CHOKS A HORSe, FR et).' ,..HeY'Re NO""r FOR HORSE:S! "fHeY'Re FOR PeOP&..e .' b'f Gus Arrio&a I by Lynn Jot.mDll I'll. f\\14fft5 BE F6E TOm\D~ -ntEH- by George Lemont NOW He!Re's ANo-n-.eR L-l'L,.. l"fe!M 1'P &..IKt! iO SHOW YA ••• TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE I by Tom K. Ryan ~ '8Mlft>le 1 Cut 49 er..:n 8 NA -50 lnblMt lfllr· 10~ ~ 14 C..,. Breton 54 ~·· IL~ CAiC*l1Y: 15 &ger 2 words 18 F~ eoaf 57 e.n...e 17 ....,.... city 51 o.m.n part 14 ~ 58 Seed coet 20 ... d•ldlll80~ 21 awge 11 Min'•'**• 22 Polr'llld ,..,.. 23.........., 82 Conndlct 25 s..... s:s Scoff 21 SlllUl-DOWN dlewlr'I city 1 Lill'*r 30 ~Ned 2 Hoty man 31~: 3S.tie.n 2words 4T ..... 12 Thie* '°'IP 6 ~ -- 13 .... clll ·~ MOl9'.,_,. 1~ 31 v.nu.t .... ..,.. 18~ tQlilf 38 Raw '-"'*'= 49The9nd Nb. 41-Hl&lte 10Bf UC..~ 11-C81W 44 --• Sen: 12 ..,... "*" W» 13 BlropeM 45 T.... 1t Hindu C-. 41 o.m.i dty 21 8'* Nb. -1 11 olo•• o o I • c ••• • • il ·-• 0 • • u ••• • l lo.It•• • • • l • 0 . It ... •.:Jc e I f I •• 0 UI I ' I al• 1 8 I •• plol I •• 0 I 0 I t tl-• . ' •• I I el• . ' u•--1r• •• •• •• l.t.I "• I ·-· .. ,, .t •• ,. r.r. e •I • • .--·---r• r• r;. , ~ rt e I ' u .. ' t • .. '-· . ' • el I • '• . . ·-··· . .. • r. 'I I •• . ·-· . c r( •I• • l I I . ·--··l . ~ m a SPECIAL 2 FOR 18.00. V-Necklfne Tlllhh11 In l . JellyS..Colon ·ather up.., armful of delicious flavors. Grape, cinnamon red, lemon yellow, kelly green, mango, jade green orchid or white in the collection. All have the new V-neckline, ca~ sleeves and a slim fit in soft cotton ! J and#polyester. S·M-L sizes. ! . t Accessor .... i es_""""!"'-,- ·~ g n n .. Home Pickup POa THOSE WHO WISH TO donate to Goodwill. the a1enc1 will malatal• 1taUou ~ area wbere m "tedem wW _. load and stve doaan a tu.....Uble,. cetpt. LoeM.,,_ ot tbe attended atttionl are: Ccllta .... -17tb and Santa Ana Streeta. f'ounlejn Valley -Brooktmnt 8tnet at Ed• lD1erAY92ue. H1111tiqtm Beach -Main Street at Beacb 8oWeYard; ~unt Street mt Ada.ma A~ue; and Warner' Avenue at Golden Weltatreet. Lacuna Beach -Boat CaQJm CeD&el'. Pad.fte Coast Hlghway at Boat Canyon 1'o9d. Laguna Hills -Leisure World Met.bodlat Church, Moulton Parkway at El Toro Road. Laguna Niguel -Crown Valley Partway at Alicia Parkwa~. South Laguna -30822 Soutb Cout Hlebwa1 Death for Rapists Nixed in Thailand BANGKOK, Thailand (AP> -The Cabinet has rejected a bill calling for the death penalty tor rapists but agreed to impose harsher sentences tor sexual crimes, a government spokesman said. Contributing to the bill's de feat, the spokesman said. was fear it would' lead rapists to murder their victims. Rape·murder cases were up 28 percent in Thailand last year. Police Raid Tanrwry COLOMBO. Sri Lanka CAP> -Police raided a crocodile skin tannery and selled 205 skins that had been c ured or we re beln1 processed, •· authorities said. Crocodile huntinl la prohibited ~ and the export of crocodile skins is me1al. ~ Dad's ;n the social swffn. .. wrth Polo. From Ralph Lauren-one of the more essential esS(>f)t1als o f the season The classic swim trunk. m soft pure cotton In assorted so/ids and ~t11pe\, for S to XL. Give Dad one of each. at least' Solid~. 28 50 the palf. Str1pes, 1 J2 the palf In Men's Active Sportswear Collect1ons-where we arc all the things you are on father'~ lune 15th \otith ( OdSI Pl.JIJ. , I JI Bristol C.tr('f•t ( <Xld "-ft~ SYDNEY HARRIS -mtxes his .. philosophical dissertatJons with quizzes and thumbnail observations to keep i'"liiiilli"' ... ,..""' .. readers on thetr toes. The skins were bought for about $50 each and would have been worth many times that amount L---=-----------'-----1111Mlllll on Western markets, police said. "I believe in sunny skies, -r--------WESTMINSTER MALL--------. tail winds and Fashion Island!' '" ,.,. Balsa Ave. & Edwards, Westminster INVITES YOU TO MEET GARY PATTER?ON • Fashio n Island is my kind of place. Where else can I enjoy so many sllops geared to my lifestyle plus a great ctioice of depart- ment stores? Or receive personal attention from sales people I've known for years? Or find stores treated to fresh flowers and lovely interiors and other spedal touches? Why do 1 believe in .. Fashion Island? Because Fashion Island believes In me. I { , From Vanity Fair. 8.99 Reg. 10.50 Satin and lace bras. Decolletage underwire bra of nylon/Lycra"' spandex. White or beige. #75-278, A. B, C. 15.99. Reg. 18.50 Tulip9 control panties. Garterless with reinforcement Beige nylon/Lycra,. spandex. #44-013. S, M, L, XL All, in Daytime Unger1e, 430 Bra and Body Fashions, 450 .... ;,· "· / . ..;;"'' ~-· ........ ~ ~ ' I . . ,. . Actor Yqqng Treated 10CK ISLAND, ILL. <AP> -Actor loblrt Y .._ u Or. llattut. Welby •Pftt yean .. .._ paU...tl, ii betni treat.cl f« ••mtnleal depnukm," actOl'Cllat to ........ DI'• Sduardo Rleaurte Hid tbe ailment, enMd "1 a a.a ol a b6o8en1c am1oe. makea Yo-. ....... "'dAllUtted. deeelera&ed. joylea, ............. '!'bl 1J.1t1Hkl act« entered tbe Fr..aiC• Medical Cater on Saturday and alto ll bem, trMted f« b1P blood pn11ure. IUeaurw Mid Yoaq, belt Iman for b1a roles la televJ1lOD'a "Marcus Welby, 11.D."' and .. , ...... XllOW8 Best," wu trMted for tbe ume eondlU• ln Af.r::, aqd returned wben be re· cop1-1 •'tbla e e within bimaelt. •• . .. , ....... ,.,, ........ OBBKAllllEROAUi.. Wett IUJ. Gen. R. Dean,,~. a....., <AP> -nu. UQy navartu 1l1tant ucret•l'f of def..,. = wldda .... Naed • famed mWtary perlCIDDll DObc7. 1 "8'1 10 ~.,.far em. Ule B'eal B'rttb A.llU·MuU11199 ' llCl off a P.map °""" ....... lnformlal the J ...... tbat tM mWtuT stop promotlnl • tbat tbe Peotqoa orc1ered tM:f tbe ~ wtthla lta r-.. mllltary to stop promodnl .. An armed fOl'Ce9 boycott ol tbe toun to tbe Oberammer1a11 P&a1. '1A7 wtU baYe no effect oa Ude 1ear'1 .......... ,d vUl••• 1pokesman OSTLBa SAID AN Am•rtc~D GerUrd Oltler, "'beeaae tbe U.S. J ewilb dele1attoo tbat •l•lted Arm-7...,.. up all Ucketa for the Oberammer1au In May a"'M'UDCed 11t • llay 21 performance and we played the time It woud ask the U.S. Army to a full 6cMIH that day... to refrain from promotlna the play· OSTLEa SAID ABOUT 4, 700 aoldien saw the play lut month ••and tbey loved it. More perfonn•nces for the mWtary were not scheduled, anyway." . Rabbi Marc Tanenbaum of tbe American Jewiab Committee charged tben that oaly .. coemeUc changes" bad been made to tbe tndl· Uonal play and that the praentation "remaina anti·SemiUc propaaanda." "I am very optlmiltle that be will be able to take over qalD." Hld tbe doctor. Fiery Greet actresa· politician Melina Mercouri claimed in· juries after sbe was involved lo clash between Athens police and dem· onstrators protest· ing sewage prob· lems. Tbe Pentacoo order st.ems from complalnta that tbe drama, depictJ.ng the life and cruclfwon of Cui.st, ia . anti-Semitic. It has been performed by local residents since tbe village was spared from bubonic plape in Because it ii performed only once a decade. tbe play bu become a ma- jor European tourist attraction and tickets are aenerally sold out well ln advaooe. YOUQI, accompaoled by bis wife, la expected to remain lD tbe boepltal three to five weeb. 1834. ; l I \ \ \ 9.19 Reg. 11.50 B, C Vassar9tte lace bras. Uflderwire bra in Antrorr nyton/ sparKJex. Wt-i1te or nude, #4324. o. no. Reg. s12, 9.59 ,. .. ~...,/.. .. , '\ -. -· •-. ._ ~>.-.... ~ . -. .. -!~~-7-'.· '~ .... ~' .. '·' "\ \ \ ~ . -I I·· ,. 6 f Of 9.99 Reg. 2.50 ea. St. Eve hipsters. All cotton hipster. White. beK]e. pink. pale blue green peach. #2200. S. M. L. 4 f Or 7.49 Reg. 2.25 ea. Jodilynn nylon bikinis. 5, 6, 7 White, black, beige, silver. pale blue, navy, rose, pink, lilac, peacock, sea green. # 1983. 9.99 Reg. 12.50 B, C Uly of France sport bras. Seamless sport bra in white cotton and polyester. # 1703. 0, Reg. 13.50, 10.99 "' .. .. f --.... .,< ,J ."" I ..... .: ,:f' ~ / ' ':' , ' 6 for 9.99 Reg. 2.50 ea. St. Eve bikinis. All cotton blkm1. White, beKJe pnk. pale bloo, green. peach. #2116, S. M, L. 4 for 7.49 Reg. 2.25 ea. Jodilynn nylon hipsters. 5, 6, 7 White, blacl<, beige. silver, pale blue, navy, rose, pink, lilac, {J88COCk. sea green. #1984. 4 f Of• 7.99 Reg. 2.50 ea. 4 f Of 7.99 Reg. 2.50 ea . __ _..._ ___ ..,... ---~ ·~----. -Jodl/ynn-Rylon IJrltlls:" 7 • ,..:... -· --.totJHynn nyt0tnmg b/ldnl& ~"6, . .......----. White, black. beige, silver, ps./e White, black. befge, silver, pe!il- blue, navy, rose, pin/(, lee, blua, navy, rose, pink. lilac, pea.cock, sea geen. #1985. peaOOCX. see green. #1960 . . BulOck's South Coast Pfazs, 3333 Bristol, S.M. (714) 556-0611. Shop Mon.-Frl. 1Q-9:30, Slit. 1().6, SCI>. 12-6. /JUJIOCl(a Mia/on Viejo, Mission Viejo Mall, (714) 495-3111. Shop 1!fon.-Frl. 10-9, Sat. 1().6, Sun. 12·5. \, llH: •Steclca •BllllMU •Movlel •TelevlSloll I ... .._.. the An .... eeq_ulrW plLcbft " Dave IAmaMIP fJ'Om 'l'Woeto UM otha day. '· TM Glib~ la •blch dQ tbla WMk wW be Nolan Ryan. Rod Canw. Brtan DoWntni ana Cbria~. break WI ann. · !""' ~ from paat b1*1')>, It will probably ' be 1 after be plt~bu a OM·hlt abutout ror bll flrat v ctory 1n an Ansel \D\lform. nu year the •torJ baa been tbe same. with dllablln1 lQJurtes to •as.-oowntnc. Dan l'ord, Don Baylor, Dave Frost and otben. A.NABDll 8POaTS peycboloctat Michael Marcau. auapecta that the Ansell' rub of in· Juries la more than Juat bad luck. He theorize. that aome ol the players may put so much pres· sure on themselves that they develop a sub- conaeloua wilh to 1et burt. Dne aua. 10U will Neall. m« a almUar t fate. IA hla ftl"lt 1J at-batl u an Anltl he 1ot MTen blta (.aD aven••>, but the lut bit came mommta 111\er be bad fouled a piteb of! bia ankle, ca..J.n1 a fracture whlcb waan't dla covered unW after the 1ame. •SNTION TBS WO&D "Jinx" and Ilana,... Jim Fre101I wUl try to rip your Jqular vein out. He doesn't believe in Jinxes and be doesn't want you taltin& about them, _lat t:t•hould cut, uh, well, a hex on his team. , year the Ancell won the West despite i 47 in.Juries, moet or them to key personnel like "I'd have to talk to all tbe players and coaches to get a firm underatancttn1. but baaed on what I do know. l would bave to conclude that pres.sure has a ireat deal to do with their injuries," Margolies says. "Taite the case or Joe Rudi. He comes lo, balled as a great athlete. and is expected to do wonders," Marcolles says. "By ceWng injured eacb year, he is able to lake that pressure off." THE SURF'S PETER WALL DEFENDS AGAINST MINNESOTA'S ACE NTSOELENGOE. Dodgers Knuekle Under . Hough Replaces Hooton and Reds Win i • , LOS ANGELES (AP) - · Charlie Hough went lo spring 1 traininl with the notion that be s would be considered for a posi· I lion in the Los Angeles Dodgers' 1tarting rotation. The veteran knuckleballer opened the season in the bullpen, however, and was ineffe<:Uve. But Wednesday nll1\l, be finally got his start when Burt Hooton came up lame only moments before the Dodgers' 1ame with , the Cincinnati Reds. '! IT WAS BOUGH who was the J victim of Ray Knight's three-run 1 ~ homer lD the third inning that ' 1ave tbe Reds the 5·2 lead and I they were able to han1 on to de· 1 feat Loe Anietes 5-4 and salvage • one game 1D tbe tbrefi·lame , j Hrlet. t Kn18ht also bad a double and a, I l1n1le for the Reda. 8otb clubs are Idle today as ' Loe Anaeles holds a two.game !lead over Cincinnati a nd HoustGD in the National League Weal . ~ who bu bad shoulder probliml in the put, aald be felt 1 • a sharp pain after tbrowine HTeral warmup pitcbea in the ~~ me the wroo1 way and I couJdD't throw-after that," said Hootoo, wboee next start la in queation ... I've had It before. It'• ~aerious.·· llOtJGB MID ID BAD only 10 • 15 mlnutee to warm up. but ......_ "That'• pleaty of time. I edt make a bll deal out of tbe W•~• preparation U1Wl1· . ... Ill I pitched pretty well, ... tbe aeeptlCJD of tM OM b9d ~ waa the one to Knieht, .. A '-le bummer of a Dttdl, a f•ltball down tbe mfddle," .... _ .... aplalnecl. qrMd H1lal, "It W ........ rlibt OY• tbe , ........... .. -•ltoucWlt.'' Hough took the loss, his third without a victory. Paul Moskau. 4·0. the second of four Cincinnati pitchers. earned the win. Los Angeles had numerous op- portunities, getting runners on base in ever y inning. but stranded 12 -including six in scoring position. After the Dodgers took a 2·1 leird in the bottom or the second on run-scoring singles by Hough and Dave Lopes, the Reds went in front to stay in the third. Ken Griffey singled in the tying run, George Foster walked and, with two out, Knight hit his sixth homeroftheseason. The Dodgers got four or their 14 hits in tbe fourth inning, plus a walk. but managed only one run . on Lopes' infield single. Rudy Law scored Lopes with a single in the sixth inning to pull the Dodgers to within a run. But they stranded runners at first and second in the eighth inning. and a runner at second in the ninth. The Reds return to Riverfront Stadium where they host San Diego Friday night in the first of a four-game series. The Dodgers are in Atlanta Friday night to meet the Braves in the start oC a three-game set that opens a nine-game road trip. Lloyd in Finals Ruzici French Open Foe PARIS (AP> -Chris Evert faulted and ran up agalnat some Lloyd came from a setdown to fine forehands rrom the 18-year. defeat Hana Mandllkova or . old Czech,. and the set went to a Ciechoelovakia 6-7, 6-2, 6-2 lo a tiebreaker. fierce heatwave today and reach Ruzlci trailed 3-4 and was the final or the French Open love-30 m her service in the fint tennis championships. set, but abe served an ace and In the other semifinal. wonetJhtpololainarow.Jtwu VI rginla Ruzlcl of Romania t.be tumlnl point of the match. downed Australian left-badder "I had to win that same Dianne From.boll% 7·8, 8·1. because in that beat I don't think Lloyd, the defendln1 cham-I could have fought for another pion, la aiming to win the pres-two aet1," the dark·baired Ueloua clay court tiUe for the Romani• said. fourth time and la favorite for FrombollJ, who com ea from t.be fint prize oU'2,000. Sydney, said she didb 't notice She ~ her 33l'd stralibt tht beat. vi,etory on...clQ aDd 1'er. l*b..-''l..JUl&..love4.U...OV~W1.-.~i...- out of 158 matehes on 1ucb a 1v. Auatrallan aald. _ lace, in deteatfne the Cnch pl. · Rudd lauthed and comment· Temperatures In the aun· ed1 ••J don't lhlnk either or us baked bowl of the center court at wH ae fut u usual, or blt wit.b Roland Garroa atadluin were the usual power. ll waa very around 100 deareea and put a hot." .. 1traln on~ •layers. · · • · In 'lrriday'.a men'• aemlhrials Lloyd drop,_d her flnt defndlnc champton BJon Bor1 1ervlce In the ~ Ud tralleCI meeta Harold Solomon and Jf m. 0-3, bat bn*• badr twtff and my · Connors phry1 Vita• went to &-5. But then abe double OeruJalU.. OAJLY PILOT .. . · •UGOUES 8'1'tE88B8 that netlber Rudi nor any of the Olber Ancela are deliberately try. inc to break bones so they won't have to play. .. In tact, I'm sure they aren't even aware of it. It's totally ln their aubconacloua," the paycbologjat aay1. momentarily loses that body awareness an athlete needs." Margolies theorizes. "His focus or attention wasn't on bis own body, and it led to a broken ankle.·• In other words, the aubcomcloua mind perceives a problem -undue pressure to excel -and it solves that problem by aettin8 the body up for an incapacitating injury. U Joe Rudi baa a damaaed Achilles tendon, no one expect.a him to bit homers. The pressure is orr. and the subconscious mind relaxes. know- ing it has performed a job well dooe. Injuries and pressure can create a vicious drcle. according· to Mareoliea. Such may be the cueofDon Baylor. "With other players out with Injuries. Baylor feels an extra burden on himself to perform." Margolies says. "He fight.a off bis own na1ucin«i pains, and pretty soon they become aggravated and tum into major in· juries." "Another way pressure can cause injuries is by creating a lapse in focus or coocentra· lion," Margolies says. ALTHOUGH BE IS a specialist lo sports psychology, Margolies isn't affiliated with the Angels and all bis opinions are simply untested theories. ''TAKE BRIAN DOWNING'S case. He is trying too hard lo live up to last year 's statistics. and while making a tag play at the plate, he But he believes the day isn't far off when each professional team employs a psychologist <See CUNNINGHAM, Page BZ> Kicks Fal~ 1-0 Tunnel Has Hinch's Ret11rn No Light Gives Surf Lift ByCURTSEEDEN Of -OMty l'IMI Staff The sickening feeling of the ligaments m the back or lu.s leg s napping as h1s knee rotalec:t 15 months ago 1s somethmg Jim Hinch would hke lo forget. Nor will he forget his first starting assignment on the SOC· cer field since that lime Wednes- day night as his California Surf tea mmates nipped the Min- nesota Klcks. 1-0 for a third con· secutlve NASL victory before 7 .868 fans at Anaheim Stadium. ••1 HAD FORGO'ITEN how to play." Hinch says. "It's just in· describable bow I feel about gel· ting back. I've worked for 15 months. I fell I owed the club for standing by me." Player·Coach Peter Wall did just that and even went so far as to name Hinch the Surf's asais· tant coach durtne the Indoor season. Since Hinch injured hla leg back on \fa~h 2. im in an ex- hibition game with Vancouver, he has undergone three opera· lions, the first two producing no positive results. Finally, be un· derwent s urgery for a tendon transfer and after many mootb.s of arduous therapy, Jim Hinch has returned. And at 6·3. 195 pounds. the lanky forward should provide an added threat lo the Surf's front line along with Craig Allen and Laurie Abrahams. IT WAS ABRAHAMS' shot at 77 : 10 which eluded Minnesota goalkeeper Tino Lettieri and boosted the Surf over the .500 m ar k in the NASL 's American tWesl Conference for the first time since early in the season . Al 8-7, the Surf now takes 10 days orr before traveling up the freeway to Pasadena for a game with the Los Angeles Aztecs. "I think I'll need those 10 days to recover," Hinch quips. After ~ettlnJ four shots on goal through nearly 85 minutes o( play. Hinch suffered some nuJd leg cramps and was replaced by Axel Neumann. .. How can you be tired when you had IS months off?·· J(>ked WaJlafterthegame. Hinch signed witb the Surf in 1979 and managed lo get several exhibition games under his belt before iojunng his leg in the contest with Vancouver. WHILE playing for the Los Angeles Skyhawlts in 1976, he was the American Soccer League's most valuable player and top goal producer. He also earned all-star plaudits in 1977 but sat out tbe 78 season because or contractual difficulties. The long layoff didn't seem to hurt him. His four shots tied him with Abrahams for most in tbe game by a Surf player, and a couple ot difficult scissor ticb. In which be ticta the ball O¥er his head while facing away from the goal. tested both hla lq aod Kicks &'O&lkftl>el' Lettieri. "Jimmy did exceptionally well. When you take into aeco..mt all he's gone lhroug.h, be really excelled tonight." WaJI adds. "I'm sure be·s going to create some problems with his height. 1 ·~ glad l stuck with Jimmy I beheve he ean do something m this league and I wanted lo give h1 m that chance." Wall says. HINCH'S SOLID EFFORT once again demons trates the ability ofthe Surfbench whachhas had to respond to the call since in· juries have sidelined lop scorer Steve Moyers. veteran Wolfgang Suhnholz. Steve Feeney and Johann Scharmann. Because of the difficulty or scheduling around the Angels at Anaheim. the Surf has had to play 15 games already. wtule most teams in the league have played an averaize or 10. - For Angels TORONTO (AP) -Bob Davis. a member of the much- m a lagned Toronto catching corps, continues lo go about do· mg what he does best. A 28-year-old veteran of seven seasons m the major leagues, Davis is a fine handler of young pitchers and t.hat'6 the basic rea- son he finds himself with the Blue Jays. NEVER KNOWN TO BE much or a hitte r, Davis sur· pnsed even himself Wednesday naght when he cracked a two-run home run in the seventh inning as the Blue Jays dum~ AngelsS.2. • It was Davis's second homer or the season -the first time he's ever done that in the majon; -and was just the fourth or his big·league career. The two runs batted in raised his season total to six, four shy or the personal best he managed in 1977 with San Diego. .. , was wondering when my next RBI would be," the soft· spoken catcher said after the game. But batting last In the order doesn't help matters. "I don't get very many shots (at driving in runs)." be said. ''You don't often have many guys on base when you come up m the run th position.'' DAVIS AND FELLOW catcher Ernie Whitt have had their problems at the plate all season. Davis carried a .236 bat- ting average into the game and Whitt a .222 mark. They've also experienced trouble with speedy baserunners, who have an an- noying habit of stealing bases. But winning pitcher Jim Clan· cy will vouch for Davis's value as a handier of pitchers. .. He called a great game tonight. I'll tell you," Clancy said after scattering five hits to run his rerord lo 4·3. "I began to tare and they were gettin.c on my <See ANGEL'-. Page BZl -·· Soviet& Fw Bjg Deelia•e In Toariun at Olympim rr..AP~ MO COW -Moaeow Mayor Vladlmlr Prom~ Mid toctar that about '7&,000 foretp touriltl .,.. u1Mded at tbe M01cow Summer Olym~ 1W\lllc1nt decw trom prevloua Soviet tM ataa. S&M•k\N' at a newa CGnferenff, Promy1lov 11ve no ex· planaUcn or hi• flaure. which doee not lnclud• athletea and otrlclala. PNvloua Soviet e10mate1 havt apokeo about 2'0.000 fcntp tourtata. Senior Sovlot tourt1m otnctal1 Hid in Apr1l that tourism 11t lh MOleOw Games would be a auccess despite some rotll\ lrtes' plana to boycott lhe Olymplca over Soviet military &n· volvement in Afghanistan They told a news conference Apnl 18 that sales or Olym· pie toura were good ln Spain. France and Italy. that there was no slgn of 1 significant reduction an Bntisb tounst.s and that Scandinav1an reservations were boldang stable But o(f1cials have indicated U S. tourists could number a~ few as 3.000 to 4,000. compared to an original plan for 15,000 to 20.000 v1s1tors before the United States pulled out of the Games Before West Germany decided May 15 to boy('()tt the Games. about 10.000 We!.t German tourists had been ex peeled. ------q.,i~ al dw Da11 -------. Mn YOltX -lhaeb'Dlot of UM N.w York Ill y,._, .. bat taken over the .. ad ln vottn1 for the at.on.op po1lUoft on the American Le1,ue All Slit e,..,.. lo rte WU allDOUDCed today. ~ Midi • •ltnder edl• over Rick Burleson ot Bolton wttb ••to m.m for I.be ... Sos abortltope. Th• Anpll' Fr'9d PIUk, lut w"k'a leeder, la th1rd 1t 311,511. Robin Yowtt ol MllweuUe O'l'O,•> and lut year'a ~ RoY SmaUeJ ol Mlnn•ata (111,M),.,. nmaJq foarth fifth lo tM cbelt reee oa tM AD Star ballot. ,,_..,a n¥0lvbul door ln Ol*'ltloa at MCGDd baH. Tbe An••ll' Mby Grieb lloldl the wt.tn1 lud with 302,108 to 191.135 for MUwaube'a Paul lloHtor. Grtcb wu t.be starter lo ltTe. f~ Rod Carew ln ltTS. Tbe AnielJ C1rew at ftnt b&le "malna the t.op vot.e- 1•tter wttb 538,500. Kan.au Clty'a Geor1e Brett leads at third baae wltb W.391 to 221,326 for Grai1 NeUles of the New York Y ankeee. ln the ouUleld. the leaden are Bolton teammates Fred Lynn, (438,534) and J im Rice <350~>. and Renie JacklOO ot the Yankees <33>.2-88>. Carlton Fisk of Boston Is the leadilll catcher with 417,415 to 295,208 for Darrell Porter of Kan.su City. -----lltuehH Te4'aw ----- On this date in baseball in 1974: The Cleveland lndial\S were forced to forfeit their game to the Texas Rangers when thousands of unrul> fans swarmed over the field during a Beer Night promo Uon at Municipal Stadium. The game was Ued 5-5 i.n lb< ninth Inning during the time of the forfeiture ~pffdt Ga•e Takt-• 73 Hour• FREMONT, Ohio -A Fremont high school team has claimed a place in the Guinness Book or II World Records after a 73-hour slow-pitch sortbalJ game that included 330 innings and 1,200 runs Junior student.a from St. Joseph High School racked up 73 hours. five minutes in the game that began at 6 p.m. Friday and ended Sunday at 7:05 p.m. 8ERJCglJn' -Na.. Ormse Cout --..... ldlool ........ wt1l ...... --' for .... cbamp'i wtdp P'rlday lo tbe CO' two-day meet at tbe U~ventty of Calitoml,a wttb Polly Plumtl' of Unlftnllt;J Hltb accorded tbe best ebanee ot • vtetory in tbe women! 1 i.eoo.meter nm. From all af P••rance1, Plumer'• cbie competition 1bou.Jd come from tbe,Soutbern Section in tbe penon ot Bonnle McGllDCbeJ ol Pountaln Valley. They ran one-two lut week lD the Maten quallfytq meet at Cerritos and tbe times rec«ded are the best in the state this year. Botb are sophomores. PLUllD WON IN 4:48.51 and McGlincbey was •econd In 4:49.42 wttb two other Soutbem Section qualifiers recording mark.a below any otben in the state. Edison Higb's Jon Buller placed third in the Masters' 3.200-meter nm and could im- prove on that mark in the state meet. All five Southern Sectioo quallftln have nm fut.er tUD aayoae elae in tbe 1tate tb.ll ...... Anotbtr poealbillty for a vie· tory ii San Clemente'• that put star, .lim Doebrinl wbo bu a bat effort of M-111tle tb1I MllOll. That mark ii a1lo beat ln tbe atate alt.bough be WU UDl.bla to equal It lut week and bad to Nl- tle for aecond place. Otbera to qualify from tbe Orance Cout area all in the women's competition, lndude Rennie Durrand (Laauna Beach> ln the 800; Annabelle Vlllaneuva <Fount.al.o Valley> in the 3,3)0; San Clemente's Diane Clements ln the shot put; Tracy Hanlon (Edl1on> in tbe low hurdles; and Jaio Tsai <Conlml del Mar> in the 1001 jump. The 1,600 could be a real battle to the flnlsb tlpe between Plumer and McGllncbey. ''I KNEW SHE <McGliocheyl had a good kick and that I had to go all out to win." Plumer said after last week's race. Veteran driver Tom Sneva after moving from a 33rd starti,ng position and finishing second for the third time In the last four years ln the Indianapolis SOO·mile race: "It doesn't seem to matter where I start. l guess the best I'm going to flnlsh is in second place ... The previous slow pitch endurance record or 72 hours. three seconds was set by U S Navy players stationed in Singapore over a three·day period in 1977. according to the Guinness book. The game here was witnessed as required by Guinness officials. CUNNINGHAM COLUMN. • • C'arftoH BatJ#I• Rt-~ord ,,. lfl·2 P ete Boie singled in two key runs and Philadelphia beat Pittsburgh. 4-3, Wednesday II night as left-hander Steve Carlton won his 10th game. Carlton stretched his league-leading record to 10-2. scattering seven hits . . . Kea Reitz led orr the 10th inning with his fourth home run of the season, lifting St. Louis and veteran left-bander Jim lhat to a 1-0 victory over the Meta ... AIMlre Dawsoo belted a.three-run homer to snap a seventh-inning tie and Gary Carter followed with a solo blast t.o support the nine-hit pitching or Steve Rogen as Mon· treat defeated the Cubs. 8-1 ... Home • runs by CluU Chambliss, Brian A.uelat1Jle. Bill NUoroday and ~ea Babbanl led Atlanta to a 7·2 victo over San Fran· cisco ... Rafael Lan estoy capped a three-run Houston nin inning with an RBI single as the Astros came from behind to beat San Diego. 4·3 . . . Swing· Ing the hottest bat in the Am erican C.ULTOM League. ~ge Brett drove in four runs with two singles and his third home run in three games. powering Kansas City to a 9-3 victory over the Yankees ... Detroit's John Wockenfuu belled a disputed three-run homer to back Milt WUcos's five-hit pitching as the Tigers defeated Seattle. 8·2. Mariner left fielder Dan Meyer, a pro· duct of Mater Dei High, protested that Wockenfuss' homer had hooked foul . . . Robln Yoant's suicide squeeze In the eighth ioning scored PaaJ Molitor from third to give Milwaukee a 3-2 victory ovec Baltimore ... Toby Harrah. Mike Har,rove and Cliff Jotaason homered and three Cleveland pitchers scattered six bits as tbe Indians down Oakland, ~ • • . tidulrd 0.-fired a three-bitter and LaMar Muoe drilled his second homer run of the niS}tt to lead the White Sox to a 5-1 victory over Texas and a tplit of their doubleheader. Riehle Zisk got three hits in the opener as Sparky Lyle earned bis fifth save . . Boston at Minnesota was postponed due to rain In addition, some $9,500 in pledges were collected to finance the school's senior class trip next year . l11Mr#on Capharr• .'1C1\1l D~afldon UCLA's Mark Aadersoa, competing in hls first decathlon since last December. rolled up 7,893 • points and easily won the punishing 10-event com· petition Wednesday night at the NCAA track and field championships at Austin. Tex. . . . Bntish televLSlon wi~l not screen coverage or the Moscow Olympics dunng pnme evening viewinJl hours ... Utah Jazz officials re mained tight-Upped about the future of suspended forward krnard IUD' after a judge fined him and placed ham on two years probation for sex-related offenses . . . Frank St. Maraftlle bas resigned as an asst.tant coach for the Loi. Angeles Kings. Personal reasons were given for his decision ... Assistant coach Cllack Daly of the Philadelphia 76ers has rejected offers to be head coach or the Detroit Pistons and the San Antonio Spurs. and will negotiate to extend his contract in Philadelphia . . Alan Merrick, a veteran de render who appeared in 112 games over four seasons with Minnesota. has signed a one-year contract with the Lo!. Angeles Aztecs ... The International Olympic Committee 1i. going to investigate the question of banning confi rmed drug takinJl athletes from future Olympic Games .. , Tryout camps for prospective NBA rererees will be held this month in New York. Chicago and Los Angeles The Los Angele'> location has yet to be determined . . . Four jockey" wen· hospitalized when one horse fell and three others toppled over the animal in a 61..'l·furlong race at Longacres race track in Re nton, Wash. The mounts were not seriously m1ured. but aJI riders suffered broken bones . . The British Museum went ahe ad today with the opening or an exhibition celebrating the ancient Olympic Games, despite the controversy s urrounding the Summer Games in Moscow. T~~Radlo TV : Noeventsscheduled. RADIO: Noeventsscheduled to work alongside the team trainer and doctor. "l do believe the techniques I wse could help prevent some of the injuries the Angela have been experiencing," Margolies says "I don't mean I could take them to the World Series, but psychological techniques have abown concluslvely tbat they can improve performance. ·'They can prevent certain m- jurtes. and players comin1 back from injuries can come back faster and stronger." Margolies says. •AaGOUES CALLS bis COO· suiting ft.rm lnnenports, and be has ·worked wllb pro and amateur bowlers. racquetball players , soccer players and track athletes. Former UC Irvine dttathlet.e Mauricio Bardales got pro· feuioruu help from Margolies m his bid ror the U.S. Olympic team "Some say that mental condJ. tioning i.s 7S percent of sport. but l believe it can run u bigb as 90 percent ... Margolies says .. The Soviet Union. Eas t Germany aod a few other Euro· peao nations are far ah~ad of WI in using sports psychology. "Right now t.bett are very few sports psycbok>gists in the t,lrut. ed States who work with teams." Margolies says. "But I believe it's a thing of tbe future Within 5-10 years. there won't be ·a major professional team in the country without a psychologist or corusultanl. · · Are you listening, Buzzle Bavasi" f 'ront Page Bl ANGELS ... fastball. so Bob got me to go to my slider more." Davis' homer gave Clancy a 5--0 lead to work with and Otto Ve lez added a two-run shot, his 1 llh homer of the season, in the seventh off Frank Tanana, in his first relief appearance this season. TORONTO HAD TAKEN a 2-0 fi rst-inning lead on a two-run 5ingle by John Mayberry. Al Woods greeted reliever Chris Knupp with a double to lead off the Toronto fifth and scored the sixth Blue Jays r un on Roy Howell's single The Angels' two runs came in the sixth on a sacrifice fly by Carney Lansford and a run· scoring double by Joe Rudi. "Clancy just pitched a great ball game .·· said Angels Manager J i m Fregosi. "I thought we played pretty well the first two games of the series. although we certainly gave the one away the night before ·· West, Abdul-Jabbar Visit Catnp Kareem Abdul·Jabbar, the NBA's Most Valuable Player and a key figure In the Lakers' world cbamploosbip this season, wlll be among the guest Instruc- tors at • non-profit youth basket- ball camp in Westminster July 7·26. High, the non-sectarian camp or· fen low-cost instruction for boys between the grades of five and 10 and girls between the eighth and 12th grade Cl F champion Inglewood High team. BE OUR GUE Held joinUy 1t Blessed Sacra- meoi School and Westminster Former Laker great Jerry West will a lso make an ap· pearance at the day camp, along with Vince Combs, coach of the Area coaches who have agreed to help the instruct.ors in· elude Dave Brown <Fountain Valley), Jerry DeBusk (Newport Harbor>, Jim Harris <Ocean View>. and Roy Miller <Huntington Beach). Baseball Standings BARWICK DATSUN AJIEUCAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE Wet*Dtvla ... WatDtYbloa w L Pct. GB w L Pct. GB KanauCity 29 20 .592 Dod'en 30 20 .600 Cb le ago 27 24 .529 3 Houston 27 21 .563 2 ( ~ Oakland 25 25 .500 ·~ Cincinnati 28 22 .560 2 Texas 24 25 .490 5 San Diego 24 27 .471 6~ Seattle 24 26 .480 5~ Atlanta 20 27 .426 8~ A••ela 20 27 .426 8 San Francisco 21 29 .420 9 DOMl JIU .mt•f Miooesota 19 30 .388 10 East Dtvt.loa Eut Dtvlaloe Pittsburgh 28 19 .596 New York 30 18 .625 Montreal 24 20 .545 2~ TEST DllVE Milwaukee 26 21 .553 3~ Philadelphia 24 21 .533 3 Toronto 24 23 .511 5~ Chicago 21 23 .477 5~ DATSUN OF Cleveland 24 24 .500 6 New York 19 26 .422 8 YOUR CHOICE Botton 23 25 .479 7 St. LouiJJ 18 29 .383 10 IAIWICK WILL BalUmore 23 26 .489 7~ ........ , .. "- Detroit 21 25 .457 8 Clnc:llWICJ S, ~ • GIVIYOUTHE .lllleflt• 7, a..i l'rentfl<O J .......... ~ MonlrMI I, CJllc.eoo I SHllT OFF HIS Pltil-pllle •. Pl-Qfl 2 TtteMot,._....1 St. UMl!l I, IMw Y-O. 10 IMl"9• IACK Teae1 .. 1,CNQe1•S HOUllOft •, Sere 0!990 J Mllw ... I, Mtlmore 1 T.......-10-COMllMFOI ,._.... .. 0.~J Chiu.o 11..M'P -Ml el Mloftr•el I~ °" ............... ~''·" YOUl .. 11 KM-Otyt, ..... Y_.. J St. Louis ClllMlel,·11 et H9W Yet-''°"" M l. .....,. .. ...._.....;r.-:, rtlft " T·....-r& Ti ...... <MIJ .-.,...,... Ter.-, ........... oMI et~ a-................ DIMOllDI •71, l'I ~-~ l(e-City 0.-.t •SI et Tt1•H (Jef*IM SMO-..• .... M l,1'1 sc.a..ui. .............. ()My...,....., ... SM Olelt • QIKll'IN(I .......,..._ Pl~ll .... YOtll a.ltlftweet ..... Cltke9D•lllll ........ ,...,. ..... Ollcelit 5-f'f'Mdtc.eft ...... OeW•IC• W *tt " T...-........ l( ..... Clty .. ,_ ...... a.a.. ... YWll ...... IS GIVING AWAY 1,000 FOR OPENING GAME TO KICK-OFF PROFESSIONAL SPORTS IN NEWPORT BEACH Pt<:• uO If >v' T •• 1$ Now Ar FREE NEWPORT BEACH BREAKERS OPEN THEIR SEASON AGAINST THE IRVINE REBELS ON FRIDAY, JUNE 8TH, AT 8:00 P.M . You ve got to see 1t to believe •t' The speed of Mckey the skill of soccer. ' the high scoring action of basketball. all combined into •. ._,. ... ~~"'!!.tev~r;p!t~~:~ > SPE~OS~ER. • A game so fast. so Intense. that shots on goal are made evory 40 seconds For Mor• Information. C&ll (714) 762·2424 \ On the Way to a Title Mark Anderson of UCLA clears the final hurdle in the 110-meter event of the de- cathlon Wednesdav at Austin. Texas An - derson amassed a total of 7 ,893 points to win the NCAA cha mpionship Droke Leads Volleyball All-stars Miami Eliminated For the second straight year t.be North baa prevailed over the South in the annual Orange County All·star game at El Toro High. 'Clutch Cargo' Delivers for Cal Coach Charlie Brande's North unit coasted to a 15-4, 15-8, 8-15. 15-8 victory Wednesday night and Newport Harbor Hlgh's Kevin Droke was voted the eame's MVP. DROKE WENT to tbe line lo serve at the inatch 's closest juncture and won nine straight points to secure the victory. He also scored 11 kills on 13 at- tempts at t.tie net. When Droke went back to serve in that fourth game, the North had just lost 15·8 and was trailing 8·6. a s the South threatened to even the match at two games apiece. Estancia's Kent Smith also played a key role in the North's victory, as did teammate Dan Vrebalovich, who handled most or the setting duties. Bruce Caldwell <Newport Ha rbor) provided a solid force at the net with his blocking, while the North got s trong performances from Braden Bodner (Capistrano V.alley) and Chris Vansell <San Clemente) AN F.STIMATED crowd of 400 watched the clash of Orange County's finest volleyball talent, and the bleachers were heavily stocked with college scouts and coaches OMAHA CAP> -His team· m a tes at the Unive rsity of California call Tom Colburn "Clutch Cargo." At the College World Series We dnesday ni g ht, Colburn showed why he has earned the name THE SENIOR CATCHER smacked a two-run homer an the eighth inning to tae the score and California went on lo ehmtnatc Miami4-3. A throwin g e rror gave California, 44·22, the victory and set up a showdown with Pacific Ten Conference rival Arizon a tonight. The loser of that game goes home. The wanner will play Hawaii. 60-17, for the NCAA hlle Friday night. Arizona. 43·21, stayed alive hy handing Hawaii its first loss of the series. 6-4 in 11-mmngs. tn Wednes day night's secon d game. "H it was the eighth or ninth inning. in a clutch situation. I'd give my right arm to have either Colburn or Greg Zunino up to bat." California Coach Bob Milano said "We're lucky. Colburn 1s good in the clutch." Teammat e Lyl e Brackenridge, "We call him <Colburn> Clutch Cargo after u cartoon character. He really Henbit Wins Epsom Derby comes through when we need ham " CALIFORNIA TRAILED Miami J 1 and the Hurricanes~ ace pitcher. Neal Heaton. 18-4. was working on a s 1x -h1tter through seven innings. But Jeff Ronk walked to lead orr the eighth and Colburn tagged a 3 I pitch from Heaton ov<>r thl' 370-root mark an left- c~ntcr U.S. Stars Battle NBA INGLEWOOD -The 1980 U.S. Olympic basketball team and the NBA All-star team open their best ·of-rive Gold Medal Series at the Forum June 16. The competition 1s replacing the Olympic games In Moscow for the 1980 team of top amateur cagers. Lakers Norm Nixon and M 1chael Cooper are among the NBA All-stars Laker coaches Paul Westbead and Pat Raley wUI dire<:t the NBA stars in the series which resumes June 18 in Phoenix. continues to Seattle June 20, Ne w York June 22 and In· dianapoUs on June 23. EPSOM, England <AP> -HenbitJ a U.S.·bred racehorse, won the 201st running or the Epsom Derby and $387 ,022 for his owner, but fractured a bone in tu. root and will not race again-this season. 6•t'ite9 flll'N S1a11t"' t'4x,,. 0()t')f tCMt llOI• NNIHI VOUt A'"•) lEASE BMW 1980 320i Cypress green. 5 speed. stereo cassette. tog lamps. 111r cond .. alloy t l ms. Veterinary surgeons announced the injury well alter the race, Britain's richest classic and one of the world's moet prestigious nat races. The colt veered sharply t.o the right after tak- inl the lead from Rankin inside the last quarter- mlle ol the race. It appeared that was when the in- jury was suffered. ORANGE COUNTY COLLEO'!OBAJIA CiUN SHOW ••••&•llMTMANIYll JUNe 71h & llh, 1llO _ IU.Y~~'ILL .. • .IUqJ. -v ~'au t Aii:iS ON SALE FMtunl'IQ Ovna-Antique I Modem Ammo -War Aellce & Sufplua tndlatt Mlfect•-Ruo• I Jewelry -Coln• 8 Foot Exhibit Tabin 100 00 For Both Otvt • rt11u.11. c .... .,....,4.s1.oe • 1""911 Wiil AftMlllll .... tA.M;TO ... P.M.lowMIA\'S ...-1COUMTYM11MOtN»S ... MOllCRPAWUOKW.10 ..... tiiA ....... e-. ..... '-11••"4 ..... ,,. ... "'""" C09TAMUA841·1289 ........... - ltltllOll N.I0495-0401 ,..,c-c:..i--1 .... ~ llNry .. A..-, 11'-wy I pinstripes (71503911 . s253~~ 1980 528i Ascot grey. lull power and' air cond . etc. (8780871 S336~! ' • U• Oii _,_ -41 -......... ._.a .. ~-~ "-l* •1tWOJ' t.>4o~!IO" tt.00. TOlll ,_,,,..,," •n U_ol II ........,. tooewlf ............... .. --· LIAlll AfAl.Aal OM6Hlt71Ht II~ McUl£N lac. ~IMW ~ 12Z.S3JJ HIM. ...... L. ....... WI llWtaMOUMCM.LI ,. .... Millionaire. Flashback:. Bun Was Srreceaaful; Nassi, Maloof Weren't CORONADO <AP> -Three mllllonatrea purcha1ed team• In the Natlonal Ba1ketball Auoctatlon • year 110. For .Jerry Bu11, h.1a rookie aeuon waa a dream come tne: for Sam Na11l and Geor1e Maloof, the dream was marred by def eat. BUM' Loi An1elea Lakera won 90 1ames dW'· Ing the rqular seuon, then peaked during the playoff• and beat Philadelphia ln an exdting six- 1ame final aeries to win their fint champtonablp since mz. BUT N"881'8 INDIANA PACEU had a losing season and failed to make the playoff•. and Maloof'• Houston Rockets could do no better than .500 ln the regular seuon and then an ipM>ll1nious rour-aame playoff sweep at the hands of the 'Bost.on Celtics. Buss, friendly and likeable with a doctorate in chemiltry and a suble of starlets and centerfolds for dates, wu very much a part of the Lakers' cbamp6oosbip season. ''There were many keys t.o our tuccesa. and I think the fint wu our new owner," said Lakers center Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, who had one of his best all·around se.asona and captured the sixth most valuable player award of tu. 11 -year career. ·'He came in and showed us that he would do whatever it takes t.o make us a winner. spend as much money as nttesaary, and that made a big difference." Buss says it was money well spent ''EVERY DAY THAT GOES BY, this thing sinks in more." he said during a break at the NBA Board of Governors meeting earlier this week. "I can't tell you how much I've enjoyed It. When so many people tell you you've made them happy, you're bound to experie nce a great hiab." It's been quite a year for Busa, wbo made hi& • c~0 •, ~ IT'S HAPPElllll II MISSION Vl~O 7 ._ ~"'~ SUPER SAVI• IOWI .,,.. 0 ~ .~5;j·; MISSION VIEJO IMPORTS mt1•1M1t"1rf. 11Ht•1111.1m1a1.11• fortune ln real estate and a year aco abeUed «it M7.6 million -In cUh. no leu -to purcbaM (he Laker1. bockey'1 Los Ati1eles Kings, the Fonmt ln Inglewood and various properUes from Jack K'nt Cooke. "I used t.o be just another guy who loved sports. Now 1 can Just call up somebody Uke Muhammad All and say, 'Let's go t.o dinner.' lt's amazing, it really is. "People come up t.o me all the Ume and say, 'Wow, I wish I could llve your life for just a week.' I think about It once In awhlle and I have to admit,, I do have a pretty good thing going.·· BUSS EVEN OWNS llAllKET SQUAaE Arena in Indianapolis, where Nusi's Pacers go through their paces. Nasal, another California millionaire, paid several visits to Indiana during the season and did not like what he saw as the Pacers stumbled to a 37·•5 record and once again failed t.o make the playoffs. So Monday Nassa announced that Bobby Leonard. Indiana·a coach and general manager for the past 12 years, was being let go and that Jack McKinney, who started last season as coach or Buss' Lakers before suffering serious injuries in a bicycle accident. would coach the Pacers next year. "We were losing, so I felt we had to make some changes," said Nass!. ''I saw during tM season that there were increasing conflicts between the coach and the office staff, and that could not continue. So I did what I felt had to be done and made the change." MALOOF, ON THE OTHER HAND, decided not to make major changes in the Houston Rockets' even though the club failed to live up to expecta· tlons. The Rockets won 47 games in 1979 but dropped off to a 41·41 mark laat season, then got clobbered by Bost.on in the playoffs . • ONE-FIRST PRIZE-$1000.00 GRAND PRIZE SHOPPING SPREE TWO-SECOND PRIZES-$250.00 SHOPPING SPREES FIVE-THIRD PRIZES-$100.00 SHOPPING SPREES If you haven't stopped by a partic· ipating dealer to see all the incredible Black & Decker WORKMATES' he has on display, you could be overlooking your chance to win a 81000 Grand Prize Shopping Spree in his store. Just read the slogan that you find on display along with our complete Une of Black & Decker WORKMATES'. Then fill in the missing words to the slogan, "The Incredible WORKMATE ' works and and " as it appears on your entry coupon. Then send it to us. You and your nei~bors have an excellent chance to Win the S 1000 Grand Prize or any one of the 8250 Second· Prize or S 100 Third·Prize Shopping ~prees. Thaes because we're only awanung prizes to participants from your metropolitan area. So find out what a rewarding experience it can be just to see all of our Black & Decker WORKMATES'. And enter The Incredible WORKMATE' Sweepstakes. BLACK &.DECJS.ER WORKMATE' SWEEPSTAKES OFFICIAL RULES I. To entCT. ffll out Ult' official entry blank or oo • 3" x5• card. .end your complete name and llddresa to WORKMAT~· SWttJ>Alak6 PO. 8oJI 83. New York. y . 10048 You mu.t HU In the mlnln11 worda to the !llogan In onkr 10 be dl&lble. If you cannoc flod • dbplay with lhf' compkte 11ot1111. aend a 11tamped. lldf ildcli"elHled mvetope 10 WOR.KMAT!' PO Boa IQ525 Lo«ll l•taod City. N.Y. 11101 J Enter a~ olttn ... vou hk<' All"''"~ n111"t bl' ma1kd wpara1cJy illld mu-.1 ~ r~f'l\l'd by .June-Ill. 19!+0 ln<>rdntobt'ell1tlbl<' l PnLc-<,1n111urc-I Grand l'n1r s 1000 Shoppinl( Spree. 2 ~­ •md PnLC"of a t-.'.l50Shovplnlt '>p~nnd ~Third Prb:o.ol a RIOO ShopplnJl '>µrtt I\ mcn·hiu1d1,,. crl'dlt will be l'laue<I In the win· nrr' name 111 tht' wtnn<'r'I c-hokf' ol "11)' pan lctpaltnlt Hl.tck"' Dt't'k« dC"alf'r I hC"r<' 1• no 'lub-.111u1lon ot prize" pt'm1111t'tl .111<1 "''111n<'.'r. .trt' 11111ob1t11n:l 111 n-d<'<"fll lhr1r µrl1c-lor Al()Ck & 0..-1·kr r pmduct" Th(' ri"drmp1lnnv.1h1r11I thr prilN 1-. ba~ upon the· pan 111PJI 1n1t dc-'1t'r' "<'111111( pnct' lor the-m<"rch1U1d1!>e ~l«'IC°d I Wtnnc-r-. "'"bf' '<'IN'll"ll 111 r.u1d11m dr.iwtnl(' lrom t'llch of lhr ~c-n t7t lllalk ~ [);'( ker (U ~A 1. In< .. mo1rkMtnl(c1t1e<, Imm dll entnt'" ..,·uh thr l(ll"rfft llll"\lot'r'I, under lhl" ""P<'rv"111n ul \la,.c-n K.uir lnr .u1 lnd.-pc-ndc-nt Jlldl(ln,qor1111mw11on 11.ho,1· dt't'l""on' .ire-Im.LI \\ lnnt'r" will bf' n•KHINI by mail All pnL<'' "'ill bt ""'.udf'd Onlv u ni" pn.tc-pc-r lo1Jrnlv All tdJlc--.drr lhr ,......,poe..,b1l11 \ ul 1 he-pnzl"wmnl'r Odd' n l w111n1n11 arr drpC'fldt'IH upon numbt'r nl tnlnc-.. rttMvt'd \\ 111nrr., "''" h<-requ1rrd tn !ll~n an aU1a.v11 ul l"hR1bll11y lllld rein~ 5 S~lU<'"'opnnnaJt l't"t1<1C'11l'l(lfWA OR C'I'\ AZ t'XCCJ>I <'mploy~ol Bht<'k Ill Ottkt'r ll '>A I. Inc 11 .. ""b"d111ne ... and alfah"l...,. .td\ en1~1nl(•1Jt'nc1M prtnl and prnd11c11tm •&At"flcac.. Mardm Kane. Inc and lllt'lr lmmc-dJJtt' lam1lie't ~""ttpi.lakt"> \'Old •·h<'ft'ver prohibited b)• law All ll'deraJ and ~ate regulations •PJ>IY 6 f'or •nnnr l"i 11'11 . -.end• 'll&mped. "it'lf addrn..cd envelope to lllac k & On:kl"r WORKMATE· Wanner"' PO Box 266. New York. N Y 10046 7 NO PURCHA~E NECESSARY ·-------------------~ I TlleBlack&Ottkt'r lnc~lblrWORKMATE' Swcq>1>takea I I Tuenltt. llll In the blank" IMls'lfn" word~ may be found on tht' I Black & Dttkn WORK MAT!:' dl,ploy a t any p11rtlcfp11lln& I Oe&ltt'• r "Tht' lnc~lble WORK MAT~· works and I I ~ail you·~ completed rorm to: I I Black& Decker WORKMATE' Swccps~es I I P.O. Box 83. New York, NY 10046 I I N~e I I Addre&s I I City I . I Stat Zip_ •• _ I I ...._America 1aaa a I J'::!J... tt naclMe foc' IAaek I ~Blacks.Os I. L--·•••••••••• ••••• ~ Awallabte et tMM OLIE'S HOMI CENTERS: Awelletlle Ill "'-" BUILOElt'I IEM'°"IUMS: ,.. tt20 W..emtnetet Awe. Garden arov. 2144 w. Uftootn AH. Anahefm SAN HRNA.ROINO 2U7 N. 11en'a Wey Ian~ '50 a. Mountain An. 11200 9rooldturec Ave. Uplend Fo..ntatn ~ • ..... ~ ·-1·~· ~ ---• 8470 W. UMoln Ave. ~~An. .......... 1111 .. CNpnwn Aw.. Of•• . "!VIMIDI 009l!!JY ... v ... ._... ""· .......... ORA.._ COUNTY 2221 w. La ttabf• 81vd. La Habra 24tl I . Chapma. Ave. ,.. ....... 11121nfMA~ Tuatln 1Ma L ICM9la 4n . Of•• UN llEftNARDtNO 221 foothltl Blvd. Uplend t 700 I . HlgMand aan~ TIM'Mllot. J¥M I, •• OUTDOORS I BOATING Albacore <::ouid Hit COMING OPF 4 vaay POO• •howinl lut year, die ...,....ttablti v .. 1bondl ot UM brtney deep, an IWJ tM mo.t talked about 1ame flab that swim AD ow ~al waten. TradlUoeally t.be peak ot the lonlftn MUOO taku place 1n A\IJ'\&ll, but lut year the 1borte.ned aeuon saw Ute flab peak and disappear before the month ol A\ll'Ult. There were a couple of years when the albacore produced "plunker" type an1Un1 and then broke looee ln Oetober, when there weren't even a handful of fishermen Interested 1n golnt out aftertbeloq·ftnned\una. Mike Ward ol An1Jer's Center in Newport Beach, expects loolfim will be cau1bt this year but isn't quite au.re as to bow far out an1Jers will have to travel to intercept &his migration of tuna. OUTDOORS Ward feels that each year the longf"LDS seem to sw· ing farther o(f the Southland coast, but closer to northern shores off Morro Bay on up to British Columbia. '-Ward further added, that local commercial fis· herman Buz Person beaded out to the Midway Islands in the Pacific, where large commercial boats are pulling between 200 and 300 longfins per day on )lp, Aceording to reports from the Oeet of intemlticJaal boats working this area, there are fi1b everywhere. Vn'EJlAN SKIPPER and owner of Davey's Locker, Phil Tozer, is taking a "Hope Springs Eternal" outlook on the prospects for this season. Tozer says that each year we seem to be a llWe disappointed in the albacore fishing, but always look to the next season as bringing back the good old days of the 50's and 60's. Toi.er feels that with the current change in the water temperature our chances of a good seasoo are better now than they were a few months ago when the water temperature was running at least five degrees above normal. Tozer added that this warm water did make for excellent angling during the winter months for bis fleet or sportfishers run· ning out of Newport ha}'bor. Bue Bucannan. manufacturer of the bot "Clone" type albacore and marlin lures, feels that we might be in for a very good longfin season. The <'Urrent water temperature on the outside is ideal for bringing the fish into local waters. If our pollu· tion problems don't present a stumbling block, albacore could be caught regularly this season off the 60 Mile Bank and the three Spot, with an out· side chance that they might even make an inside sweep. THE FACI' THE YELLOWS have not staged a wide open bite at the Coronado due to cold water currents is a potentially good indication that Jongfins might come closer this year than during the past few seasons. Bait conditions are good with a mixture of pinheads and hook bait available at mQSt landings. Let's hope that albacore do come close this year, what with rising fuel costs the trip on sportfisbers and charter boats isn't going to get any less expensive. Currently boats running re· gular trips to the outer islands are not having a s ur-charge for fuel but this could be a reality dur· ing the summer months if sportfishers are re· quired to nm 80 to 120 miles for albacore. San Diego based boats are packaging two to five day mini-long range trips to take advantage of fish that are too far off shore to make daily runs. These longer trips greatly improve anglers chances of getting into some red bot fishing and in· crease the number of angling hours for greatly im. proved catches. Information on mini-long range trips can be obtained by calling Fisherman's Landing in San Diego at (714) 222-0391. Bahia Corinthian Has Busy Slate Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club wm have the busiest schedule this weekend with an invitational one-design regatta on outside courses and the quart.er finals for the United States Yacht Racin1 Union's O'Day Trophy for singlehanded sailors. The latter will be sailed on courses inside tbe bay. Plrl>Q6e of the one-design regatta -which also imludes racing-cruiai.ng type yachts -is to broaden the opportunity for one-design class rac- ing among active production neets. FLEITS INVITED to attend include the CF·37, Ertcsoo-35, Etcbells·22, Soling and sUJ. tana-20. E1eb fleet will receive an indlvldual start in each of lbree races to be sailed. There will be two races ~Saturday and one on Sunday. Entries for the re1atta will be received at BCYC no lat~r than 10 a .m. Saturday. A skippers m~ will ._,held at 9 a .m. Attendanoe ls not re· quired as the 1Deeting'1 purpose ls to acquaint vis· itlllC tki~ ~th local race cooditions. Jn other loQal acUon: . Voyaaers lacht Club will conduct the fourth race of lts l\umpbrey Bo1art Serles for taerfonnance lhndlcap Raci.nl Fleet yachts on s.tuntay, MbN Yec:b~b and Newport Harbor Yacht Chlb wUI Cl MM Ir efforts to host the Ltdo-14 Fleet I ebampiou S.turday and Sunday. ~ Bay acht Club wU1 eonduct an Oft,...... llf'IOIJY t ace to Oceamide Saturday Mde.da1. 1 l.D Gtber areu 01 the Soothe"' r .. 111-1 .. y Ultllil ~~ -·~~ ·"tuANn,.ut- Howard L. Handy Muther Deal Called BeSt Ever I I JNDIANAPOLIS -lllck lludMr ol Lacuna Beach lt u oPUmllUc u lie bu ever blea about hl1 ride ln a new cb••PIO"INfa:ar for Jatll Lui ot La.-. IWll on tM n. ot MU•IUUe race su.nctay. '"!'bl.all the belt clul 1 ever bad," Muther aa1d by tel~ f\"Om lodlanapolil uua '"'*· "I'm ln the cal' to •t.1 llDd we'll be l'UDllina t.be Nit ot UMt curcuit tbll •WIUIMI'. Tbe,. an to more r-. ud we hope to I« well uP ln tbe po&nt atandblll.'' Muil.-and tbe Lani car bad UMtr than of problems at locUanapolll. MUTMe• ~ NTTY Duriftl a practice lap Just prior to quallfyine. the car apun out and didn't mate it to the trtala oc the race. "We found out that the front roll bar bad broken.,'' Muther says. "But we didn't find it unW we pulled the car apart after the race. "I tbou&bt it wu probably my fault that the car spun out at Indy until we found the broken roll bar. But Jack bu stayed with me all tbe way and bu told me I would be driving the rest of the circuit WI summer. "Ma.ybe lt'I a &ood thin& we didn't let back out on the track or we m1cht bave luid a more serious problem. We were the nut car lD 1lne wbea rain canceled the final few hours ot quaJ.lfy. lng on t.be final day. Enaine problema cost the team a chance at qualllyiq on the firat weekend. "lie'• really great and the best owner I have been booked up with anytime." The Pocono race 11 aet for June 22 and ls the second ol thNe 500-mile events on the cham· plonabip circulL The tbJrd and finaJ one ls on Sun· day of Labor Day wedlaMI at Ontario. * * * "At that time. we were cussing the rain but now we're blessing it because of what mlJbt have happened. WHEN TBE NASCA• circuit returns to "Yes, Indy ia the bl& one and we bated to mlss it but I ~ W.Ogs turned out ri&bt for us. We'll drive this car·,t Milwaukee then we'll have a new Penske PC7 to Nil at Pocono lrl the 500-mlle race. Riverside Sunday for the Warner Hodgdon 400 stock car race, tut year's rookie of tbe year Dale Earnbardt will be amoq the favorites. Earnhardt sat oo the pole for this race a year ago and finll.bed second in the Wmst.on Western 500 in January. He la the current point leader on the orking ArounO The Clock For\Ou! Some advertising messages are fleet~ Ing ••. they're seen or heard for a few seconds •.. and then they are gone. It's not that way when you advertise In classified. Your message, In print, can be read and re-read ... any time of the day or night. When you're looking for results, look to classified. One phone call put• your ad In print and It keeps on working for you ... right around the clock! Ifs easy. Just call 642-5678 and a friendly ad-visor will help you write an effective sales message. And, your credit Is good with us. We'll bill you. Just call t NASCAR circuit but there an tboee who 1ay be l has grown too fut and ll turnlns aiainlt b1I fam. 1 Rlaht or WTOnl, Earnhardt ll lookinl forward to bis return to Rlvenlde ... I've adapted well to the road coune and we've IOt aood equipment and a lood team. We've cot lt all woridn& weU." 1 Earnhardt will be Jo1nec1 by Richard Petty, Cale Yarborou1h and all the real or the top NASCAR driven in Sunday's race. • • • ONE OF THE TOP SPECl'ATOS event.a of the aeason will be coming up 1bortlY al the Los Ansel~ Coliseum. It is the off.road cbamplonshlp • gran pri.x produced by Mickey Tbompeon. The event will be held June 20-21 and will also have a spectacular motorcycle distance Jumping attraction. . Gary Wells will attempt to break his own dia· tance record of 176-4V.. when he files off a 40-foot ramp constructed of wood Just inside the main archway of the Coliseum perlstyle. He is expectea t.o land on the downhill portion of the off-road track, falling the equivalent of a five-story build· ing. He'll be performing the feat without the aid of wings, parachutes, hang.gliding devices or any ex· traordinary assistance. Wells will be attempting several "firsts" with the jump, Including an attempt to establish a motorcycle-flying record without aid of a parachute or any kind of kite assistance. ..... -.................. _.._.,,.f"" •• ,.. ... ~ q .... ~.June 5, 1'MIO DAILY PILOT B:J- JJ s 7 s 1c9ra., ...... C.11'Clnnatl 014 -~ , ...... A...... 010 101 000--4 OP-Clncl-1 2. lol AnoeJ" I l06- C1Mi-.tl S, UK AnQ9!ff U 18-8- Gtr••Y. II Smitl•. 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Wockenluu i.1 A -"·S66 ••v••• •, v •"'"' J N .. • York 111 000 000 l S 0 K•nw• City 0.0 110 00• • 17 o T"nt ~rot U I /INY t•I ""o Cerone O•t•\ t•J ~rttn ""° W•th•n W M•,.tin 11 l Toant 4 J HR K•n••U C•tY Brett "' • 11.134 f'llUT GAME 11-n 4, WlllU So• l ,...... 000 030 100 ' 17 0 (l\l(AQO 000 100 010 ) • , Me<11<ll. LYie Ill ena S....O~r9 Barrio.. Wortl\em Ill ena Foley W -Me<11cl\. S l L B•rroo.. It HFl•-Tt .... ZIS• 1101 C n•<.•go. L John>On 111 SEO»IO GAME -te Sta S, 11-n I Tu.. 000 100 ~ I 3 I (l\1ca90 000 102 Ota S 10 0 Flaj\ICh 0.vonf' t•I M>0 ~r9 Dot'°" •no ll•mm W Dot_. • 1 l -Fl•1wcl\ 0 I A 1•.000 Top 10 ,_ ... 1 ... , •att• AMIElllCAH LEAGUE G A8 II H !'cl Mohtor, M11w.,1<" 4' 1'9 41 '7 lS4 8umt><v. Bt111..-. 4 17' l4 t l "1 ,_,, Mltwaut<ee "3 174 JS .. lSI Mol•ntl"O, ~ • IOS •• » )£J L•ndr.-. Minn 4 l'CI 1' •j l42 Remy, &orion J9 147 14 50 J«> v ..... 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Moflt•HI, 11, O.rwy, Dlillwl, It: Kl....-. CN~.10. Hendrltk, $1, LMlit, IO. ........... Schm id!, Phlla~IP"I•, 44, Oarny, O•~tert, 4J; H•nclrlc-. St lou1t , 37 M<9 rlel*. l'fWl-lpNa, lS, $Mltlll, ~ u. ""*I IS DecW-1 •• .,. .... "'~· .. I; ·-· ~ t ·I; W•lc", D••t•rt, 6·1, C•rlton, P111t-lpl\lt, 1~1. Jtc~. Pltt.OUrlJfl, S-1. Srurtpy s... Ot4t9D, S-1. e1 .... Stn Fr•l'C•SCO, 1·1 B•MHn, Montrffl, • t AU-stlt Ballotlna AMaalCAN L•AOUll C*llW t C•rl'°" l'llk. 8o&ton, 41 7,f lS 1 O•ntll Porter. K-.sClty, 195.M J. .... 0-. l"I, A ....... ISIAll. •.Jim~ .. TU•S un.081 s Lant•"•"'"" Oetr011. 101.)41 • Rtn Ceron., N•• York .... HJ I Rock OemP•O . Ba111mort U •16 a 8u1C11 WyMQer, MlnnHOI•. ll.~s "'"" .... I. llM Ctnw, C:..1-.W•, ta.Sot 1 c.<1 Yutrrem\1ll, Bol!O<\, Jlt,OU l Co<ll CoOl!tr Mllw•ullu IU 011 f Ju .. T--.-_11, 11,JSI. S Wiiii. Alk-. IC•n••• C•IY. 71.073. 6 Bruce 8o<hle S.et tit, •• l'IO I ECIOI• Murr•Y. S•lllmore. 4S. 111 8 . .>ohn Mayi.rry, TorCHHo 0 ,•11 S«Mfh .. t. ,_., O,kll, a-11. Jn,, .. 1 Paul Motllor. Mll•tukM tft :US J Jerry Remy. 8o>t0ft, llt ,MO ' Frenll Whit•. IC•nws C•· fy 11•.0 7 S Wiiii. Ranclotllh Ntw Yor• 11) .,, t Lou W?ltt•••• Oetro•I ~)II 1 Ou•"" Ku111e• C~velM>O • s.I I Julio Cruz. S.•tllt. II ,019. Tlllnl8aM I c;_.~ 8ro11, Kenw• C•IY. JH.~ 2 Gr•IO N•ltltoi. N.-Vor1l. 71'.»t ). c .... , uut-. .-_is_ 116,l40. ' BUOCI• eeu. h•"· 10,116 S Rltl\•• Ht-r, 0.1,..,.1. 1111u • Butel\ Hoel1on. 8o>1on •OJ 11s 1 Oo"9 O.C•ncn B .. tomon , IO S., t T00y H•rr•I\. Cle,...I.,,., 51.3$7 _...., I Bucky o.nt, N..., Yoo , 134,691 1 Rick Burlt\O<l, !'lo.ton. 115,7)1 ). ,.,... -. •"l•lt, tU,,.L ' FIOC>1n Yount, Mllwtu•M 110,0JI s Roy SmtlltY, MlnnoOI• 1111,<Wt • A Jan T ••mmtll, Oetroll, tOJ ti 1 7 Allrt<IO Griffin Tol"Onto. l'.JSl I IC••o G<lr<lt. Btlllmore. 51.•~ • o..tfleM I Freel L ...... ~Ion. "16,s.l< 7 Jim Rk t. Boston. JS0.1loll 3 Flt>IKI•• J•<1l""' N•w York 310,,... 4. 0... hylor. An .. ll. t ... JM ~ Sorto Lllruno. M1lweu•tt lll ... J • 8rn OoilYIP, Mllwwll .... IJl.•17 I Wtlllp Wit'°" IC•nw• Coty, 110,m . I Sttvt Kemo O.troot, 170,l14 • K.-i S•ni;ii.ton. S•ll•more. 111.116 10 Gorman Thomes, Mllwtull"· ltt 616 11. OH f'-. ....... \IZ,m. t7 At C~. 0.ll"Olt, 10..Jll tJ. NIJ<key Rl.,.rt, h~ 104,"'6. " LOU Ptnlell•. New Yor-. 104.lll. lS. OwlQlll Evans. Boston. tl, 160. 16 Miki HargrOYe, C,. ... ,_. 92,°". Coflege Sc:orH WO•LOH•tEI latOPlloMal C•tllontl• '· Mi...i J I Mlem• •llm•ntltdl Arli-4, Hawt41•111 lnnlf>IPI ,...._-.o.- Ca llforNan ,,.,,_,. - .. (;# Loe Ala mfto1 dl*HDAY'I •HULTS 117111 .. D_...,... __ ~I Finl rte• -""'" Form tH•rtl. 11 •. 'IO • a.o Llttte Miu Lu Lu ICle•IH•t J 00, 170. w....-~(~I.,. u ••tcle <•IOI paid UO.ID. $a<oftd r---~ IHtrll, U 00 I Jt. '10. ~ fl'ilture 1ear-..1, •.GO. 1 '° Jeh 0.-tlcn Btr IMv,..I. $ toO Tl\lrd ,.,.. -Oollt ....... I 0.-1 I) 60, 6 CIO, • 60. L*O'I AllQel t TrN \llfl l, 6 IO, s 10. Lmwll Alemedetl• IH•ro. t 40 t<ourlfl rte• s.monl,. IWerdl, ,,.., J 10 2 Cl. 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E • o<ooeo c~rl. uo u eJLe<te 17..JI peld '" '°· Sl •th rac e -Mttlt• Svr9eon <0.1.--.,..1. 7111. J IO, l fll. Et T~ tS,_,,,....,I, 4t0. 1M , .-W. tPll>C .... I. 1 ':.vanttl •tc• ~ f'lnat<.o IS--1. I 60. 4 .0. 3 fl) CMd ~ IM<Ctrronl • a.o. J.JO. Mldel SI.-. IHawto l. J.O U tit< .. I t~I pel<I ltl 00 I! IOhlh rac e -Gr••I lady NI IV•ltfllY*fel. U•. U 11, J fO ~ 0.C..11 , ........... uo. 2 .. : ~ °"" IMc CarrOftl 1 tO U •••U• IJ.tl paid W...00 Hlntll rtu -SN't • ~ IM<Ctrrtftl, 4.0, JJO, UO; S.-...,.,, l.,_...elltrl, 4 40, J 60, ......, Y-Couf'M IH-i.yl, J.00. u ••K1t '"''paid .. '°· A ttaftOall<,e -... .J71 • lurf.......,c• lc9'9"9 ..... Ml........ 0 -Ctlli.nMA 0 1-1 S."" ~I tMl-.ottl 1. Mt.,.... ICalllornltl I . Sl>Otl -MlftNtot• IS, C•tlfornlt 16, Fovtl -Ml""''°'' Ii. Ca tlfernl• tJ. OHMdet -Ml,.,....U J, Cellflwfllt o. Cor'Nf11kJu -~ 1, ca,_., S< .. 1,.. t Ctllfonll•. Aiw.,..mt . n IO <Ctllltll .. ,_,_,..,, NASL NATIONAL CC*'••IHCE S.-.OI""* C.0-l W•llllnqlon Aoct.e'lt.., Toronto Tutw 0.11 .. AU•nt• M1,.,•o01• W L Of' GA.,. .... • J ,. •t n n ,710 111t n I \ .. II 10 Cl 4 ~ IS .. 14 JI Cetotnt OIOfltl .. , ) " I S " • • •• ' t •S ..... _... Ohttt•• 17 11 ~ " I) 4) 1J 13 ]I JO t7 lo S.•nt• 11 I ,. I n ._ l.O. A~tft o • 11 II II ,, V•n<-S 1 It 11 13 "3 Po<tl-• I .. 1' I\ ~ AMERICAN COHFElllNCI 1! ........ Dlw1.- F or1 l.-rdtlt '·'"~ 84y N•w EnQl- W l 0 1' GA ... "°" • • 1S 11 11 11 t I 11 I• 71 .. I I 10 JS '1 •I l f ll1110 11 Pfit•l.0.1~• (Pu<•90 Me-mpn1\ ()cii>tro•t S.."1 .... " 0·"?0 EOMonlon ~" JO\,f' (.eifttr-.. Otv•t,i• tr. J 11 11 11 II I ' 10 11 11 I• I I IS 11 U )l 11 111110 29 ~Ot••t1 .. ..,.,.,.,. ~ I\ JI I) .. I • I ) 1\ •O 00 ) ¥ ,, )1 11 1' S·• OCM"h .,. ...... ~" 'D' ...... .no °"" OOf'lu\ POI"' for •"•'• OOtl \COt~d wlff'\ • m4111mwn of thrM °"' ~""" No Donv\ ?O""' • .,. •••f'Otd f0t o~·m• Ot VlOOto.,,,t 90•'' -.Uytk ., .. Swrl t Mo,_,.,t4 O All ... •• 1 "°'"""" W•~l'Wnql'Of'\ l Pt'h1..oiP•on•• I ut CM"""O\ 1 H.._. f nQl•na S..•tll• 1 E O""°"ton 0 Ror ,.f"\t .. J !Mn-Joy I fA ~n O•evo ' V•""'OYwr c-,_,., c;...,.. O.tro•t •t T0tonto " T •mpe .. , •I 14ou\ton n ~ort ~.t lu•w " Ff9nCft Open , .... ..,., W.DttetoAY'1 •l!WLU -·°""'·"-~ B•llC• ___ ,.. Terouy oel - McH•n\M•P"'I -N•,,_· 6 1 tel • .,. _,_ ~ ............. *'· ...... SIN! .. Hef111 ~ '4, .. J; lrl• G«lfrW •tv1 • ...,,,_, fief. f'rtnelKO Gollztlff.IH LUU, 1 ... t-1; Victor ,._.,.H-Pf!Aat cNI, Vli.s ~tltl~rad Slolla, t-J, tsf, .................... ~ '"-~ ... ..,... v111..,.., clef H&flt ~..._, •• _,. Tom-Ya, 1~, U , t-2; l(all>f ~...,..,._ Slftllll def Mlmt J-.·&ttt't S4ow, .. 2, U , M TOOAY"I aetuLTS _.. . ._. .... ,...... Cllrls E-1 Llo'fd *f . ....._ Mtftdlllu,,.a, .. 7. t-2. ·~ Vlrtllftla Aurlcl cNI. Ol-FrttnllOltl, , ..... t: o,... Court T04tme1Mnt , .................... 1 .. ONUOAY"l•HULH ...... ~.--~ 01(.lr S4oUIOft ... 9,_, Orewatl, .. ,, M , Oennll Rel"°" .. ,,_ Uoo;d, t-J, t-J, P•t OuPre Wf, Nk k .,._, .. 1. M , •oteoe T ...... r clef. --JM~ HI retlr.O ·-.., •l~I. Tun Wll-lton 6*1. Don Watt, .. ,, t-l; $1tn Smit,, def. 0tYid Lloyd, ..... H ,t-3 W-t Sec_.·-Sl""I" K•U Ltlhtm Clef N1nt Siano, ..... t. s... eeri..r def. Kar111 ~ t-1, t-t CoHt A.tee ~HUhl LAGUNA IEACH MEN LtwNetT--1•1eoau,....0ot1 c ....... 1 A F l1ghl 1 Alea MllcMll, •\ E FllOl\t I Joe vi-tJ C Ftl9fll -t M•rtln Rum. me• •S 0 FllQM I <!lei Jull•n Coole, Wotll•m StenQrr. t s E F11gfll -I w,.,.,.. !.mill\ .., Misc. Wednelday'1 TtanNctlona 8.4S«8ALL AME•tCANLfA6UE TORO"ITO Bl.UE JAYS Purch .. td .... tontt •<t of M11te 8•r low, oUchtr, from Strecui.e of Ille "'"''"ntl~• Le~uet 8ASKIT8Al l N•b9M -k-11 AU«•~t- "1£W JERSEY NET'> S•ontd Eao-< J_, c...-.. u T AH JAll N•......, K•~ Seo ••<t prw \.O.ftl tor ~nf"MJ oo.r•ltOin-\ f'OOTaALL ... _,_IL .. _ NE W YORK J ETS Stoned Uu• Jo""'o" and Jerry Holm~'· atten''"' tt•<'-' Scott Cotto " ,,.,,.,,., J O"" F..oorc,,.... u~~t'r<..,ftt Jim lf\11 .. t QU.'0 E •n Gooc:Jn'\M't CWfM\1.,.. ltf'lt"'ain JO"n "•tlJ.,n~c •.,., -..oe rec.-1ver ~ !Koll R-1 _,.., !>AN ~FIANC1S.CO riEFI!> Fl•INMCI 6ol> M•r t1n (,or<tf C,,.,,,no, O•._. Morton \t4P'Vf \t•w•r-1 .,., Aoc.'1 M~*~1n\, 11nebac .. ..-, HOCICEY --IHtcMYLe-HAll TR)qO WHALERS -Announced the ot•r•m.,,. ~ Got"O•t Howe~ rirgnt •lno. ..-tO nt"""' n.m <IOrtctor ~ P'•'l'fr .,..,,.,_.,..,, LOS ANGELES ttlNGS -Announuo .,,. .-..\'9fttl-ol F•-SI Mt.viii.. ""'""' COA<ll SOCCI!• _.._.__~ LOS ANGELES AZTECS -\•onecl At., Merrtcti, ~r C:OUAOI! G RANO CAN YON COLLEGE -An -.Ad ,,. r•ir-Of Otw Braiell, --•<Cl8<11. MC>fCT.AHA -_..,IN '"'9"'1""' ol M-1 Citot. -lrtcll CQACll TENNESSEE -N• ... •d 9111 Peu -'-""""'" Y ALE -H•med MtlOI• M11ldoon _ .• _.._, _..,,_.cbKll. Yaehtsmen Aetive . Bill PEARL'S A tlantic, Pacific R aces Set By ALMON LOCKABEY DllllY ...... 8Ntlet ........ National and international yachtsmen will keep both the Pacific and AUantlc busy this month with major events scheduled from coast to coast and involving many Southland :;ailors. · · The competition involves every- t bing from one-design cbam pionshlps lo major offshore events. On the non-competition front. the National Safety Council is observing NaUonal Sale Boating Week with the local Power Squadrons and Coast Guard Auxiliary units participating. The observance is now in progress and will end Sunday with Balboa Power Squadron conducting a col- orful boat parade throughout the Harbor area. COLLEGIATE SAILORS will be busy OD three fronts with the national women's championship just con- chliied at Ann Arbor. Mich. Starling Saturday the Intercollegiate Sh1glebanded championships will be salted al the U .S. Coast Guard Academy, New London, Conn. and Crom J\Ule 1(),18 the collegiate dinghy sailors will be competing for the Noos Trophy. and tbe team racers ~ for the Wood Trophy at Cambridge, Mass. Orange Coast College and USC are both candJdates for top awards in all of the intercollegiate events. The U.S. Yacht racing Union championships for women sailors are scheduled 24·28 at She ridan Shore Yacht Club, Wilmette. 111. The sini;tle- BOATING handed S8.Jlors will be competing for the Mertz Trophy and the double- handed crews for the fa med Adams Trophy. The Pacific Ocean will be alive with sailboats this month with three major races starting to Hawaii. Two of the races are starting within a few hours of each other from San Fran- cisco on June 15. Scheduled for an e arly start is the Single-handed Transpac with 52 yachts headed for the island of Kuaai. A few hours later nearly 50 fully-crewed yachts will also start for Kuaai. On June 28 nearly 100 yachts will take off from Victoria, B.C. for the island of Maui. This race Is co- sponsored by the Royal Vancouver Yacht Club or British Columbla and the Labaina Yacht Club. SEA6iSKI NE W PORT "FITNESS PLUS" GYMS BIRTHDAY CELEBRATION Thu rs., Fri. & Sat., June 5th, 6th ·& 7th BILL PEARL BILL PEARL. 4-tlmee Mr. UniV9ne. h11 personally trained and coached more Mr. America and Mr Universe wlnnen than anyone elee In the world. 8111 Pe-1 OMl;ned exete11e programe for the Astronauts. and ha tnllned numerous champion athletes and WOf1d record holders. * Help celebrate Bill Pearl's birthday and receive a free 1 week membersh ip in either club. * Also win a free 1 year membership * No obligation to join & no contracts. * Qualify for a free drawing by clipping coupon below ana returning to box at club. * Winner will also receive 1 months' supply of Bill Pearl's Instant Protein-free. * Visit the friendliest clubs in Southern :lifocnia COUPOn~ Address City .. Zip Phone ........... . Deposit at your local club SNCIAlmM9M Betlnnlnfl. ~ ~·nc.d Bodybulldlf'Q Training Programs for ell Sports Wtlaht Gelnlng -RedUclnQ Optf rmA"n Fttnets ConcHtlon1no complete Nutrttlonel Guld.tn« Provramt for LadlM Reducing Proataf!tl .. r Jt ·-Business .. 2 Mutual S&L's Plan Merger T.,, mutual 1n6q19 and loan auodaUooa bavt announced U..1 plao to -... theU-....., lato 1 ntw nrm to bt ad· quartend ln Newpon 8e1cb wftl{ cnon lhao Jt bllllon lo aa ta and .0 bt-eMb oftlft9 ln SouUMrn C.Womla, • Pldnc ,. ... al Savlnas • Loan Aaan •• Loi Anplfl, and Santa Fe Federal ~•Lou AIM .. San Bema.rd1no, aaid thlJ w le tMy are aeekU., 1pprovel from I.he FoderaJ Home Loin Bank Board for UMlr mu,.r, to be completed by the tnd olUM ytar. TU NEW na• WIU. keep lhe name Paclnc Federal and will mov Ill tlOrpOrate headquarters to Newport Beach, company oCflclaJa said At lb aamt Umo It wW keep ill re1tonaI ad· mlnlatraUve office• In Hollywood, San Bemardlno and Co.t• Mesa Santa Fe Federal has more than S'TOO million m assets and 23 branch olflcea in San Bemardlno. Riverside and San Dieao coun· llH Paclftc Federal hu m> mUllon In uaet.a and 17 offtces in Los An1elee and Orana• counUea. Joe O. Baker. president ol Paclllc Federal, will become chairman ol lhe new 11eocl1Uon. V me Potter, presl~t ol Santa Fe Federal. will beeome pre· 11ldent or the new Orm. •net Bob Johnaoo, executive vice president of Santa Fe. will hold the aame UUe In the mer1ed firm. PAClnC FEDE&AL OPEMTES two aervtce corporations: Puclfk Corp. formerly ffollyfed Inc., a home developer ln Los Anaeles and Ventura counties, and Paclfic Insurance Services lnc • a joint·venture developer and fuJJ.aervlce Insurance com· pany Santa Fe Federal is half owner of Data Une. Los Angeles. which it said la the nation's largest savings and loan computer data company, serving more than 50 Western savings uaoclations. First-time Home Buyers Hurt WASHJNGTON <AP> -Sharp inflation in the costs of buying a home is having Its primary effect on first·time home buyers. an extensive survey has shown. gram because those buyers can use the higher value of the old home in affording a new ooe. Repurchasers took an average of almost $31.000 an equity out of their homes and used two-thirds of that as downpayment on unother home. the study found. Median prices were $58.000 last year. up from $44.000 two years earlter, the report thia week by the U.S. League of Savings Associations said. THE REPORT, ENTIThED "Home Ownership: Coping With Inflation," was based on more than 14.000 conventional mortgage loons that were randomly selected from savings associations ar ross the nation. These higher prlces significantly reduced the percentage or first-time home buyers. but had little effect on the ability of re· purchasers to buy homes. The over -all market was strong. the re· port said, but only 18 percent of home buyers last year wer<' purchasing their first home. This compares to 36 percent found in a similar survey in 1977. Other findings or the study included : An increasing percentage of home buyers are abandoning thl' ruJe or thumb that consumers should spend no more than one· fourth of their income for housing. Nearly 46 percent of home bu) t>rs tn 1979 went past t.bi.s traditional guideline. compared to 38 pt.>rcent two years earlier. ·•1Nf1ATION HAS A particularly damaging impact on the housing market," the report said. "What emerges is a situation in which the buyer must race higher home price, downpayments and monthly housing expenses. whlle at the same time experiencing a restricted flow ol mortgage credit. Inflation thereby produces a particularly distressing en· vironment for first·time home buyers." it said. Mote than half of the homes bought were purchased by fam11tes Wlth two incomes. -A typical home buyer must budget $550 for monthly bouslng l"tpellst'S. up 37 percent from $400 tn two years. San Francist'o is the urban area with the highest housmg t•o,b . ~ ADJ!eles was second and Washington.D C .. th1rd . For buye rs who already own a home. the situation 1s far less COMMENCEMENT TIME A N E N O AND A BEGINNING By Terry Gront, R. Ph. Although the month of June marks the end of the ref(ular school year. it 1s also th<' beginning or a whole new life for th(' many young people v. ho will be graduatu1g. We can't help but think ol all the new pharmacists just finishing their formal education and starting their ('aret-rs in eam e&t. It brings back thou"hts or our ov. n gr aduation and the time that ha& lapsed smrt.• ~1 any ch:ini;?t•i. and rww d1 1.covt•r 1t.•1. a r <' COn!>tanth O('c·unng 1n the field of ml-d•cme but one thing rc•mu1 ns the same. we apprl'<'intc thl' chance to !>l'rve you 'YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you need a medicine. l'ick up y o ur pre11cription if shopping nearby. or we will deliver promptly without extra charge. A great many p eople ,entrust ull with their prescriptions. May we comf>()Und yours ? 'AH UDO PHARMACY fn.Dehwy J51 ........ ~ ............... '42·1 180 S t a t e OKs Ste am Facility SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -A new 110.000· kilowatt geothermal steam power plant has been approved by the state Public Utilities Com mission. The PUC issued a certificate of public con· venience to Pacific Gas & Electric for im· mediate construction of the eastern Sonoma County unit. which will generate power enough to serve a city or 100.000. the utility said. Thirteen units are already in production in the region. Others are already being built. COLLECTORS CORNER ·Ra re COins & Stamps GOLD & SILVER Prlcea for 6-5-80 Gold Clolel611.!0 Sil....,. Cl. IU d K ,._, '-""' Maple Le .. , 1ooeor-, 50Pe-tO"ll.Sll-~ ..., --.... --· -W7t SMI• m1• "'°' '*' c:.Mtwar.-..-.. (114) 558 U50 South Cont Plau VIII~ ........ _ .. t--.. .... c-....... McDonnell Douglas Corp., Huntington Beach. has been awarded a $1 million cOntract by the Na· tional Aeronautics and Space Administration for a one· year design deflnttion study of a 25-kilowatt or· biting power syste m to support the space agency 's shuttle program. An astronautics team at the Huntington plant has been studytng the power system concept for more than two years. Much of the solar power technology involved is denved from that originally used in Skylab. built by the firm in the early 1970's. A SS. l million contract for the design phase of the U.S. Department or Energy's small communi· ty solar thermal power expenment program bas been awared to Ford Aerospace 6 Commalca· tlona Corp.'• Aeronutrontc Division. Newport . Beach. The program. onginally contracted to the Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Pasadena. by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration will pro· vide one Megawatt solar power station to a small community ultltty applicant. Joyce Mme, Fountain Valley, is media director at Lenac, Warford, Stone, Inc:., Newport Beach. K1m Sandenoa is vice presi· dent, office administration, Western Pacific Financial Corp., Newport Beach. Darlene Graff i s in· vestment counselor for Newport Equity Fands, Newport Beach . She is a resident or Costa Mesa Oil Find A id .. ' . , , ~· /' . --'~·,~' ... ·.~ ............ · An employee for the Mallory Unit of Emhart Corp. in New York City strings laminated conductor cable on a rod prior to insertion into a new oil spill detection system. The accordion shaped cable conducts the signals from sensing units. either on the surf ace or 100 feet underground. report· mg the presence of oil on ground water. The system is ex· peeled to reduce the cost of 011 cleanup. Over Th~ Count_.r HAsou-. IJp• a11d Doemu UpPcJ,.t ' Up a.t • Up •1.7 Up 12.I Up 20.0 Up _., Up ~ Up JIU Up 11.2 Up ~I Up n.a Up IS"• UP n.e Up "-1 Up U.l Up 14.l Up IJ.& Up 1.1.._ Up 13.1 Up "3.0 Up 12.• U11 IM Vt> "1 Up 11. Up 11. Up tl.\ Up It\ OffPn.M.i Off u.s . Off IU Off U .l Off Ml.O Off .t.i Off '' Off ... Off .a.o Off .1.J Off -'.S Off '·' Off ,,,.. Off .. . Off ... . Off .. . Off .... , Off .. , Off u Off 4.1 ()ff .S.t Off u Oft n Oft s.• Off ~· Off J;• °" ,. WANTED DIAMONDS • GOLD Cl:Ddy Owem, Newport Beach. is advertising account coordinator for Cochrane Ch.-. Uvbtgltoe Ii Company, lac., Irvine MUTUA L FUND S JewelS by Joeept'I pulChases dlamondll, gem- stones. gotd 8f)d 111\!er from private indlvlduals and estates. Careful examination and evalua- tlOO by our •xP81'1S Highest p00e9 paid. 10-9 daily. Sat. 10-3. Cio.ed Sunday. Phone today. A1k for Betty Grace Of Doug Kennedy. • TIW>lllOH OI mnt roa OVt• eo YlAM df:W~LS by JOS~Pll SOulh C09lt Collla ...... S4CMIOll ·sso.ooo to ssoo.ooo INCOME PROPERTY Sf.cONDS. ........ ...,, .. v--.. ...... •C1 cnrrcW .•. ... .... WUllam H. Rodewald is vice president. sales, Floor Enpneera and Coaatruc1.on, be., Irvine. Heritage Bank, Anaheim, and CaUforala Coaatal Bank, San Diego, have mergered, accord· ing to announcement from officials or each firm. The merger calh for issuance of nine·tentb.s or a share or Heritage Bank common stock for each issued and outstanding share or California Coastal Bank common stock. Heritage, with total useta reported at $127 million aa of April 30, bas five Orange County offices Including branches in Newport Beach and Irvine. Corporate Peuloa F_..., lac., baa moved from Newport Beach to 1T1G Sky Park Blvd .. Irvine. The farm 1peclaliies in investment trust deed11. Callforala Pint Bau bas· announced a caah dividend ol rT cent.a per abare for the aecond quarter ol 1Jl80. The cash payment wW be made July 11to1hare holders of record June 13 . Computers and their use ln small businesses and homes will be featured at~ computer faire from l to 4 p.m . Saturday at Geldft Welt Cellele, Huntlnaton Beacb. The event la slated at tbe col· leie center and ls open totbepubUc .. Bnce Ollee ls vice PNI· ident·man•aer of the Newport Beach oMce ot Bertta1e Bal*, Anaheim. •••part Gea eral l ac. trvlne, builder of realdeotl&i end lndu1trial property and manulactuer/diltrlbutor ol pre- ouoee butlt concrete and metal Dreplac:et, hu reported preUmlnary revenuet for lh• year ended Karch $1 were S2'7,390,000 com· pared \o 121,oee,ooo ror the comp.,..ble year lq 1171. -....---·--·-·- t ' :ml ~lrAll .... J ~ , .. ,.,,..,.,. , .... u ~ t.AO. ="'·.A 4 ~'1fUO •. """" 1 • ...._,. ''""°·· =r .IOltS twt • ,.,. ,,, f::. =:.ts.~ A8rcl pf 1.47 •. ------------------------ TRANSACTIONS Ttvldly. Jurw &. 1980 N DAILY P1LOT • 1 ltlaJor Deal Railroad Merger Almost UDnoticed By MILTON MOt'lllOWITZ Ot ................ A tunny thlnt happened a couple of weeks •10. One of the blgest mercen in U.S. bualoeu h.l.ltory wu an· oounced-and everyone yawned. Thia mercer would unite in oae corporate caboose tw~ of tbe tarsest railroad companlea in the natton : Chlcago- based Santa Fe lndu.a&rlea and San Franclsco·based Southem Paclftc (SP>. Santa Fe operates lbe famous Atcblloo, Topeka and Santa Fe railroad over 12,200 miles of track stretching from Chicago &o the Gulf of Mexico and the Pacific Coast. Tbe SP operates trainl over some 13,000 miles of track, comlqg down from Portl~, Ore.. t.o Loa Angeles and moving across the southwest t.o New Orleans. IN lt'J't THE SP took in SZ.6 billion, the Santa Fe $2.S billion. Those are pretty big numbers, but the marrtage announcement caused no great 1tirrin11 amon1 the populace. lt commanded some Page 1 bead.lines, and it made the Wal~r Cronkite news show. However. the reac· tion was generally ho-hum. Reporters who lnterv1ewed SP employees ln San Fran· cisco found them apathetic. Investors seemed unexcited too. On the day before the merger was announced. Sant.a ' Fe's stock was selling at SSS.75 a share on the New York Stock Ex- change . Southern Pacific's was selling at S39 In the next few days SP was hammered down to S33 and Santa Money Tree Fe fell to S52. A "plague on both your houses" appeared to be WaU Street's response to this proposed amalgamation. THERE WEREN'T EVEN any fiery thunderbolts fired out of Washington. D.C To be sure, the merger has to be approved by the Interstate Commerce Commission and that's hkely to take years -but no government of- ficial rushed to the microphones to denounce the combma· tion. And consumer advocates were notably quiet As for the man and woman an the street, when you think about it. wh y s hould they be exercised over -or e\-en interested m -the merger or Southern Pacific with Santa Fe" The railroad was once a central force in American life Now at h~ rtteded from the view or most of us. We know they're out there -once an a while you're stuck at a railroad crossing -but we're not quite sure what they're do mg WHAT THEY'RE mostly doing is hauling freight cars. lumber. chemic als. coal, com. fruits, vegetables and other commod1t1es The people who should really be con-· cerned about this merger are the shippers. . Tbe SP and the Sante Fe operate parallel routes through the West. and they claim the merger will result ln .· greater effic1enc1es. Will It -or wtll it bring the kind of · control that results in higher prices because a shipper has oo other choice'> Both of these companies are, of course, much more than railroads these days Thank.a to the gift or land they . got from the U.S government, they're major owners of tlmber and mineral resources. Tbe SP controls 3 7 million acres, much of it in Califorrua. where they own 2 percent of the state's land s urface Santa Fe owns 654.000 acres of timberland in eastern Texas and soutbwestem Louisiana. Santa Fe pumps 4.S,000 barrels of 0 11 a day SP sends oil through pipelines. BO'l'1I COMPANIES A.llE in the trucking business . SP as. m fact. the nation's l2t.h largest trucker. And Santa Fe is not far behind. SP owns t.be nation's lar1est titlP in- surance company, Ticor Sant.a Fe owns a big SOii Belt buaJdlng contractor. Robert E. McKee And the SP operates via microwave a long-distance telephone service -"Sprint" -thaf com- petes wtth the Bell system So these two bag railroad·based companies are active on a lot of fronts. One other thing they have in common is this : each has next to nolhang to do with the lowly con- sumer . The only ronsumer business len here is a 47-mile com· muter run that the SP operates between San Francisco and San Jose And as far as the SP is concerned. the less said about that. the better. They have been trying desperately for many years to s lough it Disney Chief Named BURBANK <AP> -Ronald W Miller. son-in -law of the late Wall Disney and head of movies and television operations. is new president of Walt Disney Productions Miller. 46. a former professional footba ll player, suc· ceeds E Cardon Walker, 63. who remains chief execultve officer and becomes chairman Donn Tatum, 66, moves from chairman or the board to chairman of the executive committee, a new post. Gold, Metal Quotations By Th A.a90d1&ed Press Selected world gold prices today: Loodoa: morning fixint S581 .50. up Sl0.00: atlemoon . 'lxing 1581.75. up SlO ~. closing SS87. Parts: afternoon fixing $583.30, up SlO. 79. Frankfmt: Closed ror holiday. ,• Zurich: SS79.00 bld, up $6.00: $584.00 aaked. New York: Handy fr Harman mld-morntn11581.75, up SlO.~. New York: Engolhard selling price mid-morning" $581. 75, up $10.25. New Yoft: Engelhard fabricated 1old mid·moming SGQ2.ll. up $10.25 . • * * NEW YORK (AP) -Handy " Hannan •liver tu:1so: up to.S>. Enaelbard sUve:r $15.100, up 90.50, f abrlcated IUVe(' lle.S38, u.p IO.m * * * NEW YORK CAP) -Spot DOllfem>UI metal prices to day: I ' TeletUfon· • IL.m'f'Ne 00/lll#Nitr ; ..... TO 'fOUfll HIAL.TH uol·Ta:. THI MN1'1 IUNCH °'98 Md .... di •• left In Clher09 at ltle ,_. GI IN 0. Wft9l'I MQ ~ CerOI ~ OUI lor "'9 ~ -~N#OIOH ffed ..... thel L8mOnt .• B r eaklng A aeag AIT~ dt-~ Clll9lom. •• ludla-untN he,_, wMlll~ Jamie Lee Curtis helps Gil Gerard break out of an interplanetary jail on "Buck Rogers in the 25th Century" tonight at 8 on NBC, Channel 4. • l.08 AHQQ.EI Ctrt MUSIC~ The till flnelist1 1n lhtl ennual l A City MU9iC Compelltlon pertof"m, ano rec.Ive their float renkloge. CD OVEAEAIY Ouffl comeolen Dick 7:00.~:v:~ N8CNEW8 HAPPY DAYS~ JoelM oet• mot• 9lleile- ment tllen etMI counled on when etMI --611 OU1 to • Red ()eyft PIW1Y I A8CNEW8 Cl) JOKER'S W1l.D • M 0A0 8°H Ol8r1es ._,,_ herOoC Pfos>Or1k>nt eher revtv!OQ a <lying pa11enl With ,_, m~ • THE BENNY Htt..L SHOW Bonny c:elebfe1es his 9'th bot'1hdey In the hOIO<tet aurrounoed by bNullful nu<-~ MACNEJL I LEHRER REPORT 7:301J THE OOHO SHOW D IN IEAAOi ~­ .. Auetrellen Uf'O." i t!I FACI! THE MUSIC MATCH a.AME THE 8UUJVAH8 De,,. and Gt-dlSCUS8 the pHI relet1on1"1p between Meggie 81'1d hlmMll. Johll ~ h19 1Ubject8 end the 2nd AJF WIN be e«lt 0Yer1418S soon tD AU. IH THE fAMll Y OION leele like a "dumb blonde" when llA1ke lgnOfW '"" '°' "' . 'ltllel-lecluet" ltiend II) 0000 TIMES Altet J J wins ltoe loUe<y he 11 laced with 1WO gun- tOllOQ tneml>erl ol 8 girls' i!no fD MACN£lt. I L9fAER ~T ~ NEW8CHECt< P.M. MAO.AZIHE An H\tl!N-wtlh the reel doctor behind TV 1 • M·A0S 0 H" eno "Tr8C>Pl!f John. M D " • -.tail to an Artzon• •lonCtl lor mentally 11.'tatded lldulll Chaa n«-1 l..btin 9• 1J KNXT ICBS) Los Anqel11'> D KNBC (NBC) Los Anqelu'> D KTLA find ) Los Ange las 0 KABC TV (ABC) Lo'> Anqt•ff·, ()) KFMB (CB~l SJn Diego 0 KHJ TV (Ind) Los Anqt!ll'!> (1}I KCST (ABC1 San 01f'QO .., KTIV I Ind I LO'> Anq1•IHC, g) KCOP TV (Ind I Los Anqehi<, fD KCET·"TV (PBS) Los Anq11le'> G KOCE·TV cPBS) Huntington Beach .. 8:00 • (I) TI4t! WA&. TONI John egonlZM O'>M ltud)i'- IOO tor hie ~lllttld high ICtlool diploma, wt1h Mery Etten IHme 8 IN.on !Tom• Ndcwoodl ~lent. (RI D llUCt< AOO£AS ~ THE 25TH CENTURY 8uck po.-.. • coowicl to cat ch • vtc1out epac.e ·ICll~) • * '' "The Dion Brotr.. tn" ( 197•) Stacy KMCh. Freoe•tc Forreal Two btOll>efl Med Weel In S4Ml<Ch ol mote 9JlCltlng hllM 11 out!-(2 hn I G lm MOAK a MINOY MOfl! • apKed-out Ir terld E•.00. 18111 IOf • wedcy me11r m••d (Oeorgte Engell (Al G MOVIE • • * llAr Lucl<y" 1 llM3t CM)' Grant 1.M-Day A P' olel9oOn8I gembler t8"' 1n io.... Wflfl I girl el a Cl\et· tty~ ..... he .. tty1ng to r-• bankroll by opere11no gembhng tat>IM l:i> IW'a I CD PM MA0AZtNE m niEDflEAM M£RCHAHT8 Hollywood lludlO Cht61 Johnny E~ enc111noera h1a miwttege by rom&ne•"il c1n old name wh1ilt <1 t1iian- c1111 conok>metete ''"" to ~11 ~ pow« 10 1116 molK>n pteture lndu11ry (Pilrt 21 l!D 21TONIGHT Host s.,...,, Froeomen Jvttrey Kaye r900t11 on '-'lh cat• lor unoocu- Odds on 'Dallas' Greek Tabs Kristen or Cliff NASHVILLE. Tenn CAP> - Krist.en Shepard or Chff Barnes shot J . R 1n the telev1s1on series, '"Dallas " You can lay odds on 1l. So says Jimmy the Greek, who did just that, the Nashville Banner re · ported. HE'S BrmNG 4·1 that Knsten. J . R.'s slst.er·ln-law and former ml.5· treas. or Barnes, hLs brother-in-law, will emerge aa J .R.'a murderer when t.be aeries resumes on CBS in t.be fall. Since t.be show ended Its season March 21, viewers have been apeculatina who shot J .R. And the New York Post said last week that it was Dusty Farlow who s hot and wounded Jllm. But tbe Nevada odd.amaker, who said he talked with a CBS official. thinks Dusty is only a 200· 1 shot. THE BANNER further quoted hlm as saying there 1s only a 20-1 chance that J.R dies anyway in that the show rouldn 't sustain his loss. Jimmy the Greek was giving 5-1 odds on Alan Beam, a lawyer and protege of J .R.; Sue Ellen Ewing, J .R.'s wife and Dus ty Farlow'a lov· er: and Vaughn Leland, a banker and J .R.'s ruined business associate. Al 6-1 is Betty Lou Stone. a woman from Beam's past. Bobby Ewing was 300-1 "because brothers don't shoot brothers" and J .R.'a mother rated 500-1 because, J immy the Greek opined, "mot.hen ju.st don't shoot their children ... I akers Special Slated ''Your Champions. t.be Los Angeles Lakers." a two-hour special saluting the NBA champions and host.eel by Chick Heam and Kelt.h Erickson wlll be telecast on KHJ-TV Monday from 8 to 10 p.m. over Channel 9. Appearing aa special guest.a will be the atan of the Lakers -the first six players, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. Magic Johnson. J l m Chones. Jamaal Wilkes, Norm Nixon and Mike Cooper. Also appearing on the pro- gram will be the two coaches, Paul Westhead and Pal Riley, and special commentary from Dr. Jerry Bun, lbe owner of the Los Angeles LUen and the Los Annlea Kings, pro· feaalonal ice hockey team. - ............... 1.-A ~ • IM9IO..n40DOl1 Ol.,MtnN9 -.fal .... w..... ....... ......... -.-i """ ""° ...,.,..,.. .,._.,.~.t~· ....... ~ ...... ow tor the llllng Go"9t· -~'"' e OMOt. IUNaTT ""'~ 8'11te "Wrong Number " ·~-NlgM," "1'1141 R•clt•I." "Vecuum lallemln." • IU..,.,.... .JOllNW. "I l,000,000,000,000 FO' O.lenM" 8111 Moyere tepcl(t• OI\ .--de'>~ltl In welOO'l8 MdlilOIOgy end ~ Senetoq San Hum .,., GeryHa1 ..... ~ "e-1 Md Ywl"' ._.(I) MANMY JOMa Wtlille 8llenclng a~ tlcl 11-4 In whldl ttMt daughter of ..... II-tend • oornoetino. 8emebY IPOll , .... ~deed­ In ttle ~owd (R) 8 NICMOYlf • * ~ "Aml1eur Nlgltl At The Olide a.. Ntd Giii • ( 1979) Vietor Fr91\Cll. LouiN l.lth8n\. A \lerlety ol people .,. drewn togMt!er wtlle U.tng per1 In .,, emet-l8l9nl con- .... al • oountry roed- houee (R) • 111 8AAHEY MIU.ER Hal Unden end the,_. ol the CMt Pav lrlbute IO tfMI .... JacK Soo. .no Por· Ir~ DetectW. Yemana. with ctlp. trom -iou. ec>i- IOdee,... ~in. (CCI (RI • MSNOAIFAN QI!) OlO HOUeEWOAK8 Bob Call8han deecr1bel Georgian eiid Fedet•I •cNlecture and ehowl • we18!Pf00( wood flllet 9'.11>8 9~T~ Bllrt>w• J-and Sh86<• lry 10 get 8dly 0,-de OU1 ol ht• oee>r...ion oYW • io.t io... i,y -uno "'"' ~ wttl't a blond date • THE RIOKT£OU8 AP9\..f.S ··poont Ot v--Redal ·-•1 Sher-. High mount 011MQ u.e ~· 11WWllga11on Into the 11.ab- bfnO of the -lant Pfln- c.pal m STARBOAAO "Brenda &tnon And For- fl'Yer Danon'" 10:00 1J Cl) DAU.AS Ell1t> leetne th111 h« 1M>t1 Gary " b&e* In Dallas 9'ld planning to remarry Lucy ' mothe< Valene tRI DG NEWS o am 20120 g) NIGHT GAll£RV · Hatred l>tlto Oeetll" A auccea.1111 -n•no tt'ftm btgtn wnting al>OUI t'-t IM!Yentur• wtl/'I a gor1llL 'How To Cl.We The Com- mon Vamp.re'' Two - Jack Soo, who played Detective Yemana on "Barney Miller" until his de· a th las t year, is eulogized with clips from variou s episodes of the show in a special episode tonight at 8 on ABC, Channel 7. Package now tnetuc:tet: 1WO. ex1aa. 3 ·&O's. 16 • waltett. and'· Color romatt Ct)ann• 'The perflct COior Poftrlll ............ """'It ..... I( nwt lllee. Ind In• -..Yof..,.. ............... No .. ~ ~ ""graupe. ,... ....... Wtfaction =°' ....... .......,NfUndld. .w1o1111.-.. • T ..... DaP °"'!-JuM: wr "':'9 .': ":' . OM.Ye 11 AM · IN IUNDAY: 11 AM · I N . Vy to ...... ..,,..,. tcw•Wlle -~,,.... -ouro LfldlCIO'• ~ n..tfe Of Hl09rwv The Nlgerltlll lrOUl)e ~ Duro Lldlpo·e ~ al ''OtNI IC.olo. •• a lllU9iGlll ,,,,,,,. ffOl'll ... toldore °' the Yorube attnc; -. l~..wlOHICK tt>;IO • ~ MM'Tll"llCI THIATM "Diet ... 002(' Encoul· llQed by Ne~"'-· bal detlat• with -of England • ,_, "'°"""'*'' po1t11<11en1. Dttt••I• ~to eland kw Plri .. rnanl (Pelt t ol 4)(CC)(R) ... WA~'I ,..., "Srt Lanka S•cond Thought• In The l'*d World ' 8el\ Wettanb9rG IMll• &1 l..9'61• to ln¥eee>· 08 ... polrtlQI ""'*"'*" tNI could he"9 ¥11.111 wnpll· C8tiOn1 kw oltl8' Ttwd WorldnaUOM 11•188(1)0 NEWS NEWl. YWED OAMI MOVll! * e Why WOUid """'10l'A Went lo K• A HIC8 Oot1 Liile You?·' t 19681 Eve IWIZI. ~ 811(.tC WtWe on ...cation_ • ~girl • lltC'lttn!Md by lerf1ty>ng enamcxe on her lit• (2 Iva I .THfOOOCOUl'U felU1 plant I -PflM bwthdey Plf1Y tor Oecar wl!o toa thH blrthd•Y part• II) TH! IENH\' H4U SHOW e.tiny'1 Frenctl IMllOf't -full of IM PfomtM ol t1ee11 In "°'' • PIAHt8TI 0# TH! AMENCAS Piano ertllll from North, South Ind Cenltlll ,.,.,.,.,,. ~ penorm the wor~ 1 01 8' .,,,.,,., l.Jn1. DeCuM y. Get..-n end othen 11:30 II Cl) TH£ ~of Geor!1"• pall lhtMl-10 t81f ... I"' .-....on In 0.0.0'I a do.-·I unle8a he~ uo .,..,, IOtne c-. (RI O T~ C.U.t hOel Joel> R,_" Gu.fl Ablgall Ven 8ul.,, Mac Oe'M 0 DA TINO GAME JO HN DARLING ~ TUBE TOPPERS KJU G 8:00 -"Mr. Lucky." Cary Grant It.an ln the 1948 movie that tn.. spired the TV series, playlnc • gambler with Laraine Day co.starring. NBC e 9 : 00 -"Amateur Night at the Dixie Bar and Grill." A country roadhouse ls the scene for tb1a TV movie about a homegrown talent contest. CBS 9 12: 00 -"Mogambo." Clark Gable, Ava Gardner and Grace Kelly are a volatile triangle in this movie drama set in the African jungle. 19 A8CN!W9 HOGAH'I HfAOO ~ ~ 10 ,,._,.. cacxureo oeiw• kw an i.ncierground aganl, bu1 ,,.. llfant go .-ry ., on~ Mh g9te I jOC> at e """9tV wh••• -CONTROL eo->t ..... ~~ --~MC .... 1 t'..6CI 8 0 CHAN.IFS AHOE.L8 The ""09ll 8"~ IO ....,. !tie ... ol • OO'f pro whO ·~ to Mthdr-"°"' competltiOn dMl>f .. •te>eeled '"*"Pt8 on ,,., Ille (R) -~- 12;()0 9 Cl) CU LAn MOYIE • •• '"Mooemt>o ( 1954) Clari< ~. Ave Geroner. W'*I a ~borl OV..· -, ... In ~ -'th the ..,19 ol .. -ioir-con- ""ta "'* (AJ 8 TWIUOHT ZONE A OU--lor rwe ......... tr.at i... ouerr, M.a weaoy ~~ollt'(J .. MISSK)H: ~ f he IOf'met OC181or ol • Cert'-' -.,,ci "',,.._ to h••• ha1tuc1n•to• f ,.,.,,,. .. pat1 of • ptot ~bytnelMF • TOMMY OC>OflEA tan ~ry, 1enow~ Englllfl ac:IOf, ,oone Tommy ....1.Mrytketefl • CY'AU8 VANCE'S fMEWIU. ~ -o-d Cyrue Vence mMiee hlS 11ra1 '"8IO' addr-IW» '" fMlgnallOfl t2:aO. MOYIE * * "Ou•d1tcan11 ~" '19741 Dow- menlar., Hatteled by l.allllt Nlel.... f()t(:ft of nature~·· tor the IOlllae of manlund, u ~kn· treled In e _._ o1 World Wer M '*" CllP9 ( t tv ~ 55 '""'I ., MOVE • • • .., ,,. ee-.. Sono" I t953) Kethryn <N..,.an. Gordon .,_ac:AM A P<OIM· '°' leeda • douCle lite ..... ,,. nl()lt.. • group 10 ~ en ..,,, 1u •t> leader (2h~ I 1:00 D TOWOAAOW C.ues11 1portac;eate1a Wefner Wott. Sht~n ~ 8'11 Curr., tind 1.., Wfll09I IRi 0 9 llAAETTA &.!@ti• ...,ns "••t • C11t ~ 08flQ ••~to It• ,,. Ir lllNI Ch4f1oe I A I • MAWNCK NI outs-....... 'to .............. _ ..... 9a11UPllll IOll· •, -~ ··~~'$ ( t9'3) I.all f tllTW'. ""°"" Young. Alter lollng ,_ ~ ... dl"9 .,,., • ~ -pr"9nde IO l»Wt ,__ (1 lw .. 30mW\.) !:001 = • •'Ai ....... ....,.. C tH5) Dana AnM-.. pip. L.uie. 1:101• Hl!W8 2:21 Hl!W8 J:.llO MOVll! *** "OS.S ·• (IMe) Alan Ledd, Gereld"'9 f"lQe'liO. • MOY1I ..... "Acllorl In At..,..- (1944) George ~ Vlrgtnle Br~. ., MOYIE * • "The Str8"Q11 D1i101 Of Adolf Hiner'. (llMe) 0.. londergutd. Ludw4g Donath ~-MOYE • e * "Thlnga To eo.r." (19341) Rrtmond ~. Aalpfl Rlcherdlon. 3:46. MOY1I • ... "Devol On WheeM" I t!M7) Oerryt Hlc*men, Nor_, Neeh •:OOD MOV1£ * e '.Ir "Interlude" (T957) June AlfylOn, Roeeeno Braui 4:268 NEWS 4:308 MOVIE **"~And A-r' (1957) Jack Wflml/ft, ~ le8tl Herrilon. • NEWS t •rid•tl''• Dat1i Im# .tfo"W. ~AflfRHOON­ t2::00 IJ * e 'h "Yankee Paf\e" 1195•1 Jell Chend'9r. Rr>ond• FlerNog •••• "The f oun1aln- 1"!ad" '1~91 Gary c:ooi-. P•t•oaaNNI ., ••• "But Not f()f ... !! .. 11959) CWtt Oeb68. ltlll Pe'"- 3.30 0 ••• "0-0ey, The 5t~th °'June ' ( 195e) A<*- .... leylor. Ric18d TOdp. by Armstrong & Batiuk Four LA Emm ys KOCE a Big Winner • KOCE. Channel 50. garnered four Los Angeles area Emmy awards al the Academy of Televhuon Arts and Sc1en<'es' 32nd annual ceremony at the Century Plaza Hotel. KOCE'a winning entries in- cluded: -Jere Willer ln t.he category of "Individual Achievement -Beal News Feature'· for his work on a "NeWKbeck" feature "Swallows. DoUars end Medi• Return to Capistrano · · -Terry D. Nelson in the category ol "Individual Achieve- ment -F.diton" for his work on .. ..... IUIU 0r,,. '31 0)40 _. ... 1- ci....GtM.-4401 ::WJ.':IUU ~~---..... _.., .. C-ltMt .,.....,., ___ .._....,. -~~ ....... .... " ........ --•!11)46."11 -........ Or .. * 1'0n "'To Say I Am'" "The Magic of 011 Pamt· ing" m the category of "lnstruc· tsonal Programs" -Car role El lerbe. producer. Donald O. Gerdts. exec=utJve producer. "Debut" in the category of "Children, Youth Programs -Sp~<'ta ls" Harry Ratner, Sylvia Kunin , producers; C. Paul Corbin. executive pro- ducer. Actress Signs for 1V HOLLYWOOD CAP> -Ac· tress Mare Winningham , who has appeared in four ABC television movies 1n the past seven months. bas bffn signed lo a deveJopmenl agreement to appear in two more movies for the network. She recently starred in "Off the MlDDefiOla Stnp," which was written for her after her pe r (or man c e l n •'Amber Waves ·• HOW l_tLAYING ACADEMY AWARD WINNER lettFotelgn Language Fiim 1979 .... lllll&llf_ .. •E-•cC•P._•,•P ~-. -t ~ 41.. "1 ' 1, .i l .. :.~Mes"' Huntington· Unveil Comedks • A ...... ti Oru111 Coa&7 pnmMr• -boda • tM ................... u. •n¢"1M Ulll ···--IM Ollla ..... a.so ....,_, •• .... u.. tt.t· • ...... 9-tta ...,.... Mft tM carWll -tWr : ......... , .. eea-. w. "' '•,..,.du lllebt. • ~-Al CJaMa 11 ... tM aeaneuc. la ·Jt.u Slmoa'• : ·~ Ullniia ......... ftnt Of.~ ftood ; ~loal , ..... the ~ ...... ,, .......... dttuit. : , fte It $' ... ·--.,.. will ......... tbe "' ' ........... latte ·•11orve °""· c•llln. llatkUCDT. by a910a111y811d.1oemCM..-. ••CAUPO&NIA IHJl'l'S'' U tile l&lb ID· nl...,...,. ptod..Uoe ror tM o.u Ill•• '"°"' and la be&Da . .._ b7 Pall Tambellini. resident dll"ft- &ol' ol U. Civic Playbouff tnee lll formauon The • • I.bow la ~ of four aepant. M1meata. ln .. -..oMq vlalton to a po&b Loa An1eles hotel trom •"Rew York, PbUdlpbJa, Landon and Ct\lca10 The New Yon auesta are Lou Farah and Ted JS.norr, with Clark Bunon and Betay Hewett play lnl UM Pbiladelphlana ln a sequence with Joyce SveMOD. Beth Titus and Gree Brown are the Lon· donera in tbe t.hlrd scene. while Miss Farah, Mias Tlhta, Knorr and Burson return ror the Chicago • .liDale. Performances of "California Swte" will be given Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30 through June 28 <with June 14 sold oul) in the Civic Playhouse on t.be Oranae County Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa. Reservations 754·St59. AT HUNTINGTON BEACH, Kenneth Karp from the cast of the playhouse's "Laura" is direct· ing "Mrs . Markham," which features Carrie Mowery io her second title role or the season at the tbea.er. John Szura, Lance Danks, Gail Reyburn and Bob Hicks also take principal assignments • Completing the Huntington cast are Grace Shaw. Genni Klein, Roger Mills and Debra Avery. The comedy will run Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30 through July 12 at the playhouse. in the Seaclirr Village shopping center on Main Street at Yorktown Avenue. Huntington Beach. Reserva- tions 847-4465. -Director Scott Fired Frolll Film HATTIESBURG. Miss. <APJ -Academy Award winning actor George C. Scott has been fired as director or a made-for-television movie ;tbout baseball great Leroy "Satchel" Paige. Stanley Rubin. producer of the ABC Television network movie "Don't Look Back." said he was replacing Scott and assistant directors Charles Washburn and Ray Roman Intermission Tom Titus Wlndln1 up their retpective ena•••menta t.bu weekend an "8utterru .. Are Free" at tbe Harle· quln ~ Pla1bouM ud .. TM Glqvbnad Lady" at the Saddlebacll Valley Community Theater. llAltVEY LEVINE 18 d1rectin1 "Buu.erflles" wllb Tom White and Dlano Robin In tbe leading rolel; F'lnal Ptt(ormances will be toni&ht tb.rouqb Sunday at varyina curtain times at the Harlequin, ~3 S Harbor Blvd . just north or Costa Mesa.· Reservations 979-SSll Noreen Farley is "The Gingerbread Lady" at Saddleback under the direcUon ot Eileen Flabbach with Jane Nieh. Allen Stone and Stephanie Wolfe an key supporting roles. Closinl performances will be given Friday and Sal~ at 8 p.m. in the theater 2574l·C Obrero St., Mission Viejo. Reserva· lions 770-0381or830·9252. CON'11NUING ON STAGE along the Oran1e Coast are: -"Ladyhouse Blues" at South Coast Repertory, 655 Town Genter Drive, Coeta Mesa t 957""°33). Performances nightly except Mondays ._...,._ ALL THAT JAZZ (R) ••-••-1•11 WINDS OF CHANGE (PG) .... Lrnt.E DARLINGS ... _,,. "MEATBALLS" .... ·up IN SMOKE" I IS· U Wblt 1 _,ID sbrt 11111& H1 Bill MURRAY. ,.... ~ ··-.. ·-1...i .. -;.--==:.: ~ 1:t•l1l:C!£4!:[ij .......... 'WA Btu ~.?9 ~3.JY .. IL.ACK STAWOM .. CGJ "APOCALYPSE NOW .. CRJ ,_ I .. THE EMPIRE IPOt STRIKES BACK" -NO,UMI- . ' Rubin said Scott was fared because of differences of perspective about the picture. He would not elaborate or re- lease the names of the new director and assistants. Scott was not immediately available for comment. .a.·a ICIVTll COAIT Cose.~ ,.617• 1 . . scon Shooting began here on May 21 and was to be completed in two more weeks. Production was at a standstill but a pro- duction assistant said filming is expected to re- s ume soon. The assist.ant said probably an additional week would be necessary to complete the two-hour film . expected to be shown on the ABC network during the World Series. Bing Crosby Ho01e Now Alunnll House SPOKANE. Wash. CAP> -The childhood home of the late Bang Crosby is about to become Gonzaga University's Crosky AJumnj House. The 67-year-old white woodframe structure was purchased by the university for $60.000 from the heirs of Mr. and Mrs C P. Haggins. who bought the home in 1936 for S3.500 MARTIN PUJOLAR, assoc1at1on director. said alumni bought Sl8.000 worth of bncks recenUy to enclose a courtyard in back of the home. Each brick. carrying the name of a donor. will sell for $300 .. But the most important reason 1s the need to preserve that which was so intimately linked to the early life of Gonzaga's most famous alumnus -Ban g Crosby." said Roland A Hernges, im- m ediate past president of the association CROSB\' ATTENDED Gonzaga High School and Gonzaga University from 1914 to 1924. The Rev Arthur Dussault. university vice pre· s ident and historian, said some recent Crosby memorabilia may be located in the alumni center. J 1 , 1 J J UllHllOS' UOOUIAC« Et Toro~·~ llWA191' FOMTA* u.un ~cun~"' V.t....., &J<i 1 ~ UIWMel' C*IU WUT WH!mlnsltw '91 393~ UIC-llAU 0rl"9' 6.JT O~ ••au1•m• We\ll!IOftS .... ~ 6181 "Goodies ••• " Recipes, new Ideas, menus and local food ads Wednesdays in the DAILY PILOT ''LADY & nm ftAMr ~ R. .,__ ODOIAU" IGI "TH£ GONG SHOW" "WHICH WAY ISUP?" 1111 "APOCALYPSE 0NOW" "BOYS IN COMPANY C" "'" "THI HOU. YWOOD KMIG+fn"lll "SllATITOWH USA" M.4--,. ..... _,. a..a-•J-·--- EVERY THURSDAY· FRIDAY · SATURDAY May 29 -June 21 Neil Si mon's ... "THE GI NGERBREAD LADY .. Directed by Louise van Vlanen Ticket•: S..50 Students & Sf. Cttlr•n• $3.00 CURTAIN -1:30 P.M. NEWPORT THEATRE ARTS CENTER 2501 Cliff Ortve Group S.le1 & lntorm•tk>n -'7~3143 r ' Oki fdshioned,romantic dinner-dancing is back in style. . . .. and the: Grand Porutte now ofJcr5 >,iu ao ~nfC to '-~t' with )'QUr ftlvorit(: mcm<>c')'. Soft tlnk.11,.dlnncr musk. t'k-pnc candlcllt table tm.1~ thc: ~r ol flaming tlbl~kk rnc>kn)·. The ulUmatcty <lance-able OKi Puwell 'llio b fe11urcd Ttlunda)' Uu•oqh Satu~J '7 \0 11. and toll pbno otha ~ SEAFOOI:> CONNOISSEURS ~ ~ ~ • IOrour ·~ 1..ab8ttt" dlnnn fresh Maine ~ OJllm. nmm lri frOm 80Muf\. Ot!lptacc:d ~tmm1.. rtjolct'' - ' .4 ' at 8 with weekend maUnea at 2:30. tJuouO Jun• u . -"So Lon1 . Stanl•Y" at Sebutian'• West Dln· ner PlaybouM. 140 Aven.lda Ptco. San Cl•mate c 492·"50>. Performances nilbUy t'llcepl Moodaya a l varying curtain tJmes throup Julye. -·•The 'Fant.utlcltl" at the Lapna Moulton Playbowle 808 La1un. Canyon Road. LafUOa BeMja <4N-0743). Performanea Tuaday1 through Saturdaya at 8:30 unUJ Juo.t 14. -''THE GINGE&B&EAD Lady" at the Newport Theater Arts Cent.er. 2S01 CUR Drive, Newport Beach ( 675·3143>. Performances Thursdays through Saturda.ya at 8:30 unUJ June 21. -"The House or Blue Leaves" by the Newport Harbor Actors 'lbeater at the Monte Vis· ta School, 390 Monte Vista St., Costa Mesa ( 673·5115). Performances Thursdays through Saturdays at 8:~ unUJ June 14. PUllUC NOTICE "~aUSt .. •11 ~ITATS-.NT , ... ,.,_,,.. C)ef\Oft\ .,. Ooll\9 ....., __ TH f Ml IUHWOftK S 4J10 C:.... =.Of•w. •ZIO, __, IH«ll, C. Oelfld At\, Mertl". V10i Nu.,1•. MIM-VielO. C. fMI Wttll.,.. ff ~. 1• Ctll"HI Tr• '--· ·-· c.. tt11) J-J, H1!19n. 21221 f•--·· LA9Yn• H~. C. ~77 Tiii\ OU~> I\ C-t.O Dt • _ .. __ _ 0-tOM M¥ttft Tll1t __ , *" tilld •1111 ,,.. C:-lf C...... OI ()rtn91 C.OU..ty on M•f 11, 1'80 ,,, .. , P\ooll-0.-. C.0.>I 0 .. 1, PolOI AM• 1'. JUM s. n. 1•. ,.., m1 eo PUBUC NOTICE l'ICT1T10US IWSllll!H ~l?AT .. UNT T.,. '°''-',,. -~· ••• "°'"' bt.n.tf"llf't\ M # .. L LIMIT ED. 1011 W•ll•<~ """ A emw 6o\ew ,.,,,.,,,.,. "2.Zb SitOQ•r l (Uf'\l'Uf\OP\•m 1011 W •ll•<"' Apt A (O't1• M t-,• , ... IO< .... ~Jo Mth C.-~ 11<0 •ltl Str"t 0ow ... f c:.lrfof'N• 001•1 l -~ cio-n..v ~1.0 ttlt St•Ht. 0o-M'f C.lttO'nt~ iao?•, Tru\ """"''"°''\ '' conOU<tff o_, • lll'P"tt.0 o.t"tf'IHVUD floqo-• l C "''""'<l""m r~., "'•t*"'""' .. ..,, ' tfll'(f .... ," ,,... I~.:;,'*" OI 0U"91' (O..nl'"" M•> "' Jf111 PUDh\l't@d Or...-.oir (o..-.t O••ft' Pu(u ~n"1~·1~ ~ P UBLIC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE . "'cnTI«n au111t•1J , NAMll ITA T'E.MallT , T ... IOl'-"'t ~-· •re ..... bu.iMHH R & 0 OAT.A, ,_, SH WllCll Le ,.., Hlll'tlflVIOn lle«ll, c.llfell'f'I• .,... ' lte..-~ ...,, S.• •1tcl\ L•,,.. Hunltllqlon a.ec11. C.llforN• .,... °""""" ~. ,..,., S.• llt11c11 L•"•· Hunt1"9'on a..c11. C.lllOtnl• .,... Tiit\ llv\o,..U I• CDftdu<l..:I tty • ...... ,__,,Ille> "-~" Tiii\ --..... lll@d '"'''" , ... C.....ly Clet1' 01 Or-C.....C• ""AA•y u.1• "U7tJI Publl.-0r*'Olt C°'"" O••ty Piiot -· IS. 22. ~. J-~. •'80 ''.!' ,,,. PUBLIC NOTICE lllCTtTIOUS aUSINlH NAME STATEMENT Tft# fOtlO#tnQ '"''"°" l\ dOU'\9 0U'H t'lfl'H<t'- (,l f .. N '> AUIOM O ll \ll llEPAtA 11JI CrOOOy Wy , w•tt fl 'wnl• AM CA '1100 (,ttnn E'-' Wtlll .. •U, •ll IJlh • e. H ""' •l'Q'I°" s.."',. '" n .... t ,,,\ OV\t"tS.i> t\ <ondu<ft"O b Y •n •fl 01.-101.1•• (·~£ w 111 • .,.,,s fr'h\ 'l•l~t ••\ l1lfld Wtl9't ,,... rot.tn•• (.t .. ,_ or Otanqe C"v"l • \Jf~ Aprtt )0 t""8Q FtJ70« Puott ""'d Or~ (a..\t Oot•I• P t M.v tt J""~) 11 19 l'ltO 11~• "'' PUBLIC NOTICE . ~----------- Fllt11S Pub1o"rwoo 0r4f'f"O" C.O.\t O•ll'-' P''"' ,.Jr ... ~·-,, "" Jur"«) •1 '~-11U; ~ Pu~ ·~"'"1 Or~ 'n...•I C" r ~'· ot .,. .. ,1 n,. JllfW"\ ,.., Pl"BLIC !litOTICE "C'TIT10U) aU\tNllS .,..,,.I STATl,.,.INT PUBLIC NOTICt: N-4n " SUl'flllC)lt COUllT OF TOif \T•Tl OF CAl.•~llNt• 1'011 H•t COUNTf OF Oll•l'ICE NO A IG:.1111 "0TICE 0" ll'ITENTION TO SELL .. EAL l'llOt'IEltTY AT ""'Y"Tf SALE PQOJ:tTOVf~f trQlllO ~ ttr1..1no tn '"" f\t1'11,. ut MAA•O frrllf 4 Slli;lt• (, • FQ.rt41H'I Vatl"• ( •• torthct I tt [ l. l f y Otc~ ... ...,.q '77'0I Mt:.t•f* •\ ~ QtV'fi'\. ttwt '\Ube"'( I I-r~i«:~ l ... (~t 1"1'1') -, .. ,.. H) COf"tf rrndt°' Oy thP •CIOV'f" f"f"ltU"""' 8ru""' ~u G • F-ounl••" "'"*' •, \voti-1•01 ~ on Jw.~ •• 1490 0" (-.. +10'""•• .,,.. I '""''••f1., w.tn•f' tfte tlmt" •liOw"' l>• ,,.,, bwv:,,...\ •\ conou<:t..O b• •n '" 1 1"' '""' wndf'' ,. onf'CI •' ~" d•v~.-t '"1r,~tr•tor of MAlltl()frlll A Klllf '\ '~'"' l (anaUllf'•f a-<••...-d w uf ,.,., •• pr-1v•l• ~·~ t "'' , •• ,......,., -~ f•I"° •1tf'I fN-f~ htQ ..... t M'ld ~t Mt ~ddp' Ot1 • • (.ourit. C.._n of Or..._ (OW\'t• O"' M•v 1..,m, M\iO tOAOOtOft• ner•1~tlf'r .,, .. 1> ·~ t•OIW"<I. eu 't9M t•tl• ~ 1ntrr"1 ·• "'~-"""RtOlol A KEl.LEV, OP<••....i •I P\11>'1\IW'd Or .. (MO 0 •1t'f P i'ol ..,.. 11m• of,.,... G!1•1" M"'Cf •U ftQht. t1lff' ,.., t\ n Jiit Jl\.l'W>' • .., I ttnd l"ffll'P\t lhttf I~ I \t•t~ ~ t ______ __.1u1C.'llO ..iw•,•O 1n ..oo.uon '" th.41 ot o-(...o.Hll PUBLIC NOTICE 41 '""' ,,,,,., °' rwr elf'•'"· ,,. ,,.. ,. •• pr -,1>',.h •oc•t.O tn tf'M C uni.,. ,.., __ _ __ Io,...~.~,-.°' C.h•o··..,"· (ontme>f'I•· "'CT•TIOUS austNlU •no•n •• 11t01 """'"'o Cou•t. Fov" NA#t: STATEMfflll'T ···" "'•"•• (.Al!ft).f"ntA ... no ••0•11 .. ,..., ........... Pifr'°"' •\ 00U'9 t:M.l"l• 1•w:,•l»d001 E•J\tbitt ... Wh•<" .... •I M-\t •\ f<M~ ~r•tn.,,,, "'~ .t ~· f'Mtrf-,,)t YOUP OWN \Pf ( ., Pt A( t £XOil81T • •"''O H A Ul\CV ft(.H Y COM PA•Cfl I l<'' 10.. O'f T'A<' flrriln M E PCtAL '"Tf AIOlt\ J IU E 71~) '" ll'w C1•y of FOUf'IAon \1~11• v A H ••• • .,_.,.VP (0""'• ,..,,. (OVl'lh of ()r"'"'Of' ~U CJif'r N .. r, t• G•t•tot..-.• ._,. , ~Of'd '" Sook JOI PdOf'' J to o ,,, O...w 0 '"""'' QOO ~· l-•,_ C'hJ'!>••Y Of M.1'C•ll~ M~. '"I~ CO'O"• Ot• ~' C••·f0t,,1d t?•?S Ot'·C • flf f'twf> C°"""ttl' RKorOl"r of '••Cl '"''' ~.n•u '' tonovo.a D• .,, 1n (011ii1ftt , 11!1111111111•111"'"' dn•-OU..I "f \f AV•Nr u~ TIJ I t-4l C AA""' ~o' ""• I roR ... f Pf'~ .11 ,,.. o.t' .. ""a'"", '"' \t•t~f *""' '14"° ..,.,,,., '"'' I "'•d'04. •'~ .4nd m11'W'roM' "'~ct'• 1 I (OV"''' (._n Of 0--M'iOP C.OVl'll• °"' M•, ,,...,,,.,n MV1,,...,""no.i-r4'f,.. ttl\t~n< • 10 1• \(W) •~lll't r-•n..., ,,,_ ''"'~ .. 1111111H\QUI '"'°' ~l)llh r qn1 • f'1 rtt~ .. ,..,,. PutHtv.d ()'~ (0-'*>I D••t• P·k)t P.&R(~t_ 1 A ,..,..,.._,.rl.., .,41-r '~.1 ,.~~...!.~4«1 ;·o~~,""•nt t''9' l.Ol'\A f'4 &NJ ( ~•'W PUBLIC NOTICE ,;.":'.:'-!~·.~~~~.,"~·':':.1~"1-!0' .. , C"UfO('~•· ..... tf')lf'ff't: r 0..., 1.tf .. t10"' I 'IC'TITIOUS IUSIHf\S r ''" •"h CC>f\01t~·H"i\ •~ q._, .. NA.ME STAtEMl'.Nf I ''Of" r.-orl:lftO CktO()ltr fl ''' •"fl'>., I tn 1ooow•no c-.. \Of\ ... oo•nci t'v·, '01&1 o~ &iU ot OU•t.1\\I At"(orch ..,,,, M ~ A A~•~ fQ(Q(Ql("Q,W.f:!l:tfN~• '-"' .. fdi•'"'''°*''•~ t-00"' S.14" IOO o o 8o• n9l(i Co t• AA.-..,. ••'1fltd •" ..,,_, ,..,.,,,rtbrtow , ...... ,.,,,t1 1 (.A tii1'11t A \')O( ••ht>" tof' tfW' rOf'T\mon UW .. t\it S()(.IAfE:S wt4i loi..n ...,....,.,,,. Or1wt I 0-1\.(r bf"d ...... p•"""'' r '\.Mil°"' M\'3 --.....;..-==-:-:==---+--::X::l..l.l:IC~c..;~:,._---1 ~'.0.tt-t• A M(Bttn 10. Sc:"Cl*l •~1n¥mr,.1mt....,.0¥rf'rwr,o•Lot"'"~rt Pl• U,,_f 1• ,._•oort 8fl~t<" (Af T ••t< r II\\ Miid tn •nw-ot~" Tr'' 1 ""THI IMMOA'l'AL BACHEt.OR" IN.I _,_, .... .. intr~-• KRAM«A'. -ll'OI "NORMA "Al" Nn• •lfftrfMI ...,.int .,~ J 'fllt!l\·C:f\ f"•1 bt<ornt •nn••.,O ·~~It ' ,,.,, ~,_,.., ... Ott•nq. l'W'H11J(.f"'<l Ow mo, .. tu11, ~· °"' '" Hw W td O.C1 ... ,, ~ 11\01<1~• I ''°"....,.,,,.,,n,jfttrrr-ff"rrtltdlo ~f"'f0t"1'1(" A M< 8r .. ,.. PA.tt:(l Ii.. l A rr'ft,,,()t--Ht •D "Ol)l.;' h ff'llt'\ ,,.,.,,.,....,1 'filt'tt t lf'O *'''°' ttv ,..,.., I tr¥ l01 OI"' ''°'""'° " PAt( I (ourtt,(l,,.,,l.OffOt'•"QIP (OUl'\l•OrtM•v nrrfl'ot •" ,,_.,. f18UAO.,_ frl40f.'H l/ •'JIO ><0 M (0W .. Ell~ •'>~OC Alll'" 1'=1ASJS l ~C •• OO"-Of"Of1f <oroorAltOt\ ,,,., • ...., P110••\l"lilr'G Or~ Co.~f O"Jy P 1 ()t f'lwn.f'r of ttv> '~ 4'r•41\ .,. •• ~ J-\ 11 •• •oeo 1!01 SUBJECT TO PUBLIC NOTICE lltCTITIOUS IUSINISS NAME STATlMlllT t c. .. ,...,., ,.nd SOW<tU (OIJ•lh l .... ..,tor,,.. f·\C•t .,..., 1•n 1u3 J G~h. tono1t1on\ '9'\'''' hot'!... rf'"\ollf'V••'°"' hOf'lf\ r Qnh ct ... .,.""' .. ~h~lWaftfl\.Of"i3 !HIS COH\IEY•NCE •• "'-~l\d Trtt foltowtnQ Ott'tOA ., OCHn.Q °"'' 41<t•Plfid dnd w.o ,. •• u. ""' N n·f'lr ,...,, ., •SSOC•• I fi 0 A£ P"OOU( TtOHi _ C:-, Oflw Suil• 111 N""pon 8Ncll C .. •-• 'l1IWO A rl-C Dino.,,.,., ll C-T '" l•,... .... .,. C..htCN"fttoa ... ,,, "'" -,, (--.. ., •" .. O•v-1 -c o...-.... Tlltl \U--flied Wltll t ... C-lf Cleft OI Or-C-y on May ···- <l''""'f'd ._ llW Cown..,i. Cond• ''°"~ •ftO ~Htrl(ftof't\ •I'd 'ftef••f\q ,,_. .. WfT'lllftti Mt tortl't '" t~t (f'J l•*n 0.Ct•retlon OI eo-B, C-tloort~ •M A .. tr'(ti-'"'°'-Oci-r o, 1t11 '" 8aotl IOJU P-...... ....0 • 0.Clwet-... A-eel_, •KO<IH'CI 1)(-r h , ~1'7 on S-IOllt. P- 113 ell OI Or Oflt< .. I Re<Of'ch. -ti. cownenu. --o!llOl>t. rltlftl,, •9'tn, tloru e•wment\, r•t•r••tlon' ~•fl" eM twroens tMr•lft tOfl "'l1UI lt•MCI. --'"" of wlllell ••• Pul>fl,,,.. Or ... CMM Delly Piiot, ~O't •~Y ~·1..i 1ty r• J-~. 12. ~.a._ ... J~t0 ffUl\Ce H "'°""'Mt~ ftt<Ptll If'"'" PUBUC NOTICE "tCTtTIOUt IUStlt•Q ltAMe ITATSMa•T T"-........ __,,._,....,.._ ......... llfATM•MlCff ~AINTING, .. 1 w '"" ....... °""' ..... CetlMnll• "'11 ~-............,-.,m­ :':: ~ Cai. .... c.i.....,. flllt~ll~hen lft· lllv~ p . ,,.._..... Tll" ..__.,. -fl ... -.. C..-ly ~ .. Ot ..... C:-ty ... J-J··-,,, ... ~'--ar..., c-Delly ~lloe. ,,_ s. , .. "· .. Pl>4ll PUBLIC NOTICE T"9 -rt -..Cl 10 Curr.ft! 1610, <.,,....ntS. '°""'''°"' , .. lfoct-.. r P Mn<ellOn\, """'-"""' o4 '"'t't, •nO .. ,.,..._, ol recoro 11 '""' T ... -'<t I~ 10 ... .old Ofl Ml ' •• I•" 119111. ......... llU. 8 •tb Dr....,.. -llWI-.. ""' ~rty .... must ... lft ••llltot - •Ill .. N<elftG •t l'" otllu ut $Mtilltf'9. SllellNrd ~ Ounci." •1 """"'' .. Yid "*"41111lf.W ••• ltQO Do.., St....._ S...• llS, ~ h .oc11 CjMllO'~ -.o ...... ,, ..... ~ .. ~. DU1M1011e11> ot 11b noca enc1 11e10.... ...... lftO toel4 .... tM -1)' ........... Oft ..... ........ ,,,. --As ''· (-Dr -· ctsll-Ntl<'"'t. .... l_.,,, .. , •U(" tr•clll .... ~•Ill• to tlle lift• ~ --.. tM .... lor CWrt, S OI V.--Ww ~~y -....... <enlf ... <N(•. -'"' IMllMU llD • ...W ell uirtflt!NI ...... .... 9f IM ~-°""'1. hAeC... ~Ii. ~--.... me!•·-· ... --,.-tCT-,-nou--,-,-us-,,.-.-.. ---•::=:.-::=:11i1-=.:·::.~.: .....ITATaMaNT fN ........... ""°" 1, ~ lllill• Pl'*"d .... llW Mt• ff <'""'9 OI MU H ,_, ....... Pf'tV .. tlMI IWl\t IW CL TA 0.... fltlCI "9f~y MaNIU W.CIM."D CO .. IGOI f'lle ....,...11, ,..,_. IM ,,.,.. Mtrlll ley ,,,....,, l•IM41 I llelMI, • rt,ed.., ......... ..,. ltf tnlty C.01~.... flf •ft"*"~ ........ . J•-" o.rm1..,, "'' N«tll l>etM"~t. 19 .. , ~,... ............ c.ltf«llle '"....,Ii ... ...,. t*1 ,. __ _ '"'' ....,..._,. c.fllllUC ... ltf ... "'· .... ..,.. ....... ~•110 • ou ... tl•ldWI Oil J-H OerMft'J ...We. ...... Tiii• ....,_ -11 ... •lltl ._ ..... -.... C-tyO..•~~, .. .._., :. .. -- 11.1•. ......., ..... ~ ... , ... ,~---"'911 .... ()' .... CINel o..,. ...... ...... Or-.. 0.-Ollly ... ... Mey'9,.-f.11.M,,_ ~ -'-S.1:'1*... . ..... • • J90anmM llOU.~ <AP> -tndrtwtld n n. ..... ~-..... t ..... ..., .. ,. "I 'atr .,,.~.._. 11111 • • t• Ol1mJle ... •'e ...... -.. .. ... •• .t&Ma.tall''•naA ..... _.._.la1w1.telMm.....,ldllaW ~:. ':~i. Am.=:-::::.;:-..=.:: ...... a._. .... ,. Mid-.. er.... swim· ...., ,.... _. .nu. • ac.rdM bee* '°" aatmoe -...a. ··~ca." NOW •• 8AI CO·AVTllOaSD wltll Or. ....... Oleeto ''Tbe Artbridl SHrctM Book .•• "Al 1'0U know, .._.,.. lt DO C'1IN ,_. artlu1U1, 0 Ctabbe oplalna, "ao ~ haft ... med to Uve ~lt.h lt.. Ana mUlJ do -m mW.Ion tn tbe world, 90 1PlWon tn the Uftlted Slat.. ''MOit people wbo 1et artlu1tla live up on••· •rclte. ·1 can't do t.bat. · they '-Y· But they don't re1Uy tno. uaW tbey've tried." CllA.Ua CAllB RBIE from hit home ln Arhon1 to help Hll the book, al10 to r•· mlDlace about Ml C'Olorful movie career. Larry "Buster" Crabbe waa on• ot thole athletes dratted by the IUm llucUoe In the 1t3Qs to wear Jolnclotha in Junlle and latand adventures. Amona the others : Johnny Welumuller, Glenn llorria, Herman Brix (Bruce Ben.nett>. All took t.um ptaytns Tanan, Crabbe be1nt Tanan No. 7. "I liinecl a eontract with Paramount that paid me 1100 a week the lin t year. 1150 the second year, $200 the third year," he recalled. "I apenl more time olf the lot than I did on. Paramount was makln& more money by loanint me out than they 41111 ~I==-;_~~"="'-~ _.ll;,=I . i:.~!..~~~=- ' (. .... .., ....... 49'-1!>14 .... -u... .. -. '"' LONG llOIU !SI .~ .............. "COAL MINER 'S DAUGHTER" r-. ..._ "'· 1=-• .. ~z:eo...·-· .... "ALL THAT JAZX' ,_,.... "'-1 , .... ...,._,, 2:1--~ "CHAPTER TWO" ''llEA T1lAL.LS" ........... '°="' unu••••••• ..M£ila'" a&••--.. Now a 8trapphag -72 .. paid .. 0.. ,..,. I found out UMy collect.Id tu .• ,..,_... ...... cu•• •DAUD 'l'&\T be Clft1J made OM A,......, "IUlll ol tM J ....... n. Nit ..... ......... ""* -"0181M •• t.bt &lDt ot the Mov .. : 1 ... tllle...., ol tM 81riala." a.tall, DOW ~=tum bulb, we,.. "WE KNOC'ltaD OJ'P U chapters In five to tis •teka, and didn't allow fOf' mucb dram.Uc 11tUl. Some aay lbat my ac:t.lq l'OM to the poiDt ol incompetence IDd tllee lntilecf off." "llub'Oordon" remlim \be most memorable of tbt Hl'lalt, aild Crabbe cndlU three elemeot.: 1. The lmulnatJve 1peclaJ etreeta : 2. tbe ortamal coocepta cl ....U.t Ales Raymond: 3. CM 1uperb vlUaley ol Charla Mlddletm a 111.ns the llercl· lea . • IM .._ atnU ol wood rum mattu. PNcluc'4ld -UO&·ftated and W.lbect telMdtaael, ~rib ....... on latu.rday met...._ a c at \be end o1,.ch chapter. "I llUlde nlM U..m, men than an)'OM elte In talklH," Crabbe boHted "Oftly WUUam Delmond m.idl mON -10 tUtnt Hrlalt. I did Wff •J1• OOi'doinl.' t~ ''Tanana,• a 'Buck Ro1en; olw • Ptret• of the Hlab Seu.' ·Red Barry' ancl 'Sea Hound' Crabbe reeentJy retu.mea to actlns wtt.b a cameo to the TV "Buck Roten." and be wu hop-"''to pl1y the father lrl the new Dino DiLaUl'elltb epic "fi1ub Gordon." t the master mixer Extra large 20..quart bag of Vlgoro Polling Mix. superb medium tor growing Indoor and outdoor Polled plants Reg. 2 95 1'' let 'em drink water t,t"x75' nylon remforoeo garden nose stays flexible 1n all weather conch- tions. Brus couplings. From Tru· Test. Reg. 17 49 1488 ~( exi.dtllepow• to n..t your n11d1 60 ft 1e/2 ~ cMy extenllOfl COfd brings powef to tools. lawn equip-"*"· etc. Reg 13 99 SANTA ANA Son Dte9() frwy. "But DlLaurent.1.s didn't want t.be father in the picture." •aid Crabbe. ••After what happened wit.b hit remakes ol 'Klng Kont' and 'The Hurricane,· maybe rm lucky." --111!1"'81 PICnlC punch .•. or any other favortte plcn~ beWr .. Pump-type Jug la tn.- Met9d and 1plltpt'oof. Super WO-eapeotty to Ntlafy the lhkate of the~ gang. Keepa hot drtnks hoC and cotd drink• cold. ~.1 ... 99 ............ ....... 8'rong reelltenC rubber pfunger and •mootl'I wooden h•ndle. Puth. ~ actloft. stA· diameter. AIQ.1.711 HOLLYWOOD (AP.> -Oar1 Colemu •f NBC'1 .. DUf're•& ltroktt" matff lllt t.be•trieal ....te ..-t In "A Guy eo.Jd ~ killed OUt Tbln.'' =~. Tbe mofte. DOW ftliia • Inf ID Clalea10. aNo 1tar1 llaur••Jl StapJICGa. IOdt•tl LaM· beck, Lita Ellbacber. Herb l"..delmab. Norman Fell and Bill R.....U. ........... ATAT72 8--Cntbbe lt'• about a ~ boy who baa a speciaJ power to make people rtcb. UterlOf l f)red latex glOM Hou9e & Trim pelnt trom Glidden. Goes on with ..... Chalk res111ant finlah, QUIClc-drying Reg. 18 59 --~ spndlt on the house Glidden S!>'ed House Paint ooea on ea54ty. dries qutekty. Durable flat hnisn. resists bhaters and peeling. Easy watef cle&n·UP Reg. 15.49 . . and your leaves. lawn debfls. trasn and morel Good hee'.twei0'1t platic trun can llnera. Pkg. of 24. 32· gal sae 341 •••w:ft out the ..... fad Handy Oii 1111er wrench milk .. r~- 1ng your Old Oil 1111« ... Y and lea rneeey.t T&4. Aeg.89" 10911 . • - 0.lly ~~ ........... ~ 0'0..11 Approximately 10,000 dogs and cats are bom every hour in the United States. One in 10 finds a home. ·Pets In the I 1·Labor8tory Eliminating sale of dogs and cats for medical research is the aim of • the Society Against Vivisection. By MICHAEL PASKEVJQI Of•o.itJ .......... Emotioos nm high on the sub- ject or vivisection, the use of live animals for sdenWic research. .. I don't think people should live with the fear that their pet will end up as part or an expen- ment," says Costa Mesan Judy Stricker. A member of the Society Against Vivi.section, her aim is to end the Orange County Apimal Shelter's sale of dogs and cats for medical research. Among the institutions that buy the animals -$10 for dogs, M for cats -is the UC Irvine li(ecUcal Center. DR. STANLEY Van den Noort, dean or UC Medical School, is Oil the other aide or the lasue, claiming the experiments carried out at th~ achool are both humane and essential to healthier lives for humans. He a1ao is leas than enthused with the material used by the antl-vtvisectlonists in making their case for excessive cruelly. ••Host ol it is 20 years old," he said. Amons the evidence are ~or dogs "about to be baked to de a th i n a microwave oven" and cat.a un· detlOinl stress tests with elec· trodes implanted into their ex· po9ed bralns. In 19'19, more than 40,000 stray or unwanted dop and cat.a were lod&ed at the county animal sltelter, accordtna to Robert Halaht. acttnadlrector. llore than 8 .000 of the pets were "redeemed" from death or s ale for r esearch by their owner s. Many othets were ado13~ by new owner::. Fewer than 650 animals were sold for research. Haight said. That figure is cons ide rably lower than the total for 197S-'76 when 2,"36 dogs and cats were sold to laboratories. A PRIME REASON for the decrease was a county or· dinance that eliminated sheller sales to labs not sanctioned by the, American Association for Accreditation of Labor atory Animal Care. This cut the number of potential buyers from 11 labs to three. UCl's research lab is accredit· ed as one that ensures humane treatment of its animals. Dr. Van den Noort says his facility also undergoes twice annual checks by the U.S Department or Agriculture. AMONG 111E MORE vigorous arguments put forth by the anlJ- vivisectionists is that pets. in· telligent and used to the loving company of humans. should not be subjected to the shock of find· lng themselves in a laboratory for expe.rimentation. The pro-animal people have fewer qualms about dogs and cats that are bred in "colonies" by researchers solely for that ·purpose. Besides lack of space for a col ony at UCI, 'Dr. Van den Noort estimates that it would cost up to $300 per animal to raise them. He refutes Ms. Stricker's claim that these costa could be cov e red via federal grant money. "The cost or medical re- search la climbing," said Van den Noort, "and the grants aren't gettina any bigger. ••IT WOULD COST us an extra $500,000to raise them (at UCI >." he added. ••For the entire UC system, It would cost S3 million. That's an official figure." Mort lmpc>rtant, 1ald Van den Noort, la that colony-raised anlmala are not u benefidal to scientists. •"Jbey don't develop the same tlnd of 1pont.aneous d.lle.,.. un the animala from the pound," be •ald. UCJ ofOclab refute to buy animal• from independent breeden. •"'IbeJ don't take very &ood tan of tbelr animals," said van den Noort. u tbi abelter WU DO loa,ter able to provide tbe uni"Mraity with reHarcb aubJecta -fore· IDI purdaue from lndepeodent IOW'CfS -Vu dell Noort tC cllct.ed a rapid lncreaN ID .,,.op and catl. The boUom lJDe view from the medical aide ii that experlmenta witb doo and eat.a mutt coo. t.&nue. What VM den Noort eaUI a "atandard knowledl•" bu been achieved on the functloo· lngs of the animals from past ex- periments. THE RESULTS have been mt!dlcal breakthroughs in the treatment of epilepsy and mulU· pie sclerosis because of brain re- search on cats. "Most of what we know about human body funcUon. child de- velopment and suralcal tech- niques comes primarily from the study ol anlmm." stated a letter from the Medical Reaearcb M· aoeiaUonof Callfomia. Experimentation on doas led to the nm heart bypass opera. lions u well u in~tial heart and kidney transplants. Reaearchers now are ualn1 canines for experlmenta on smoklnl and luna cancer and to 1tud1 the lonaevlt1 of new paeeaaait.s. At tJCI. medial ,_.ardlln eapert...,t OD apprulmate17 JOO call Ud ISO cloo ==-· More U... '7 ,000 mlee t,000 rat.a an 1.-cl for aperl THE AMlllAL aESOV&CB Center, 1upervtHd by Wayne Kirby IDd pbyiklanl, boldl llt.- U. of the horror chamber lmaf• !.~~~' tbe ant • Kon Ila a Japltal, the fadli· ~ MLC•'"' a l4ftb fOOcD. IUl'- (8ee PETS, Pase C2> Locally, the Animal Adoption Rescue League responds to 150 - calls a day from people with unwant- ed or unhealthy pets. 81 llJCllAEL PAS&EVIOI Of•o.lt'f ........... To say that relatlon1 are "atreadul" between the county shelter and Animal Adoption and Rescue IJeague la "an un- derstatement," according to an aide to Supervisor Harriett Wied«. The pro.animal group, cloeely aligned with the Society Against Vivilection, has taken part in demonstrations at the Orange County Animal Shelter. <See re-lated story). Each evening, volunteer mem· bers of the league stand guard at the rear of the shelter. THERE, THEY WATCH over the blllS where dead arumals are placed by the shelter or dropped orr by the public. Sometimes. says Lea gue President Kathy Galloway, the animals dumped into the bi.n by tbe public are severely inJured, but slJU alive. Volunteers talte these animals to veterinanans whe r e they are humanely destroyed. The league,· a non-profit or· gan1zalion, also operates its own • rescue truck. responding to an estimated 1.50 calls a day from people with injured or unwanted pets Healthy pet<> are placed an '-Olunt.ttrs' homes unW they are adopted. lf ever. · In many ways the league com· petes Wlth the county shelter, but officials on both sides agree on a crucial point -the need Co spay or neuter peta. AN E81111ATED 10,000 pap- pies and ldUem are born every hour in the United Stata. Only one in 10 ftnda a home. Low-east 1paytni cllnlca are not bard to flDcf. Information on them la available from the coon. ty shelter or the Animal Adop- tion and Rescue Lea1ue (826-Q78). Sterillied anlmab generally are more healthy than tboee that aren't. 'Ibey are less prone to diseases later in ure, 1tay closer to home and are less inclined to fight. expert.a say. Because of the booming pet population, Mrs. Galloway says her aroup is overwhelmed by daily deliveries. More than 100 dogs and cats are picked up by the league each day, with only 20 or so adopted by the public. "Terrible odds, huh!" she said. AND rrs NOT IUST mixed· breed cats and mutts that are picked up as strays or turned over by owners who DO loager want them. "About 40 percent of them are pedigrees," she said. "I've got enough A.KC papen to paper a wall." There are so many animals beang cared for by league mem· hers that prospective owners can usually specify exactly what type of dog or cat they are look· ing for. It would cost up to $300 per animal to raise dogs and cats purely for research, according to an estimate offered by Dr. Stanley Van den Noort, dean of UC Medical School. So, animals for laboratory use are purchased from shelters. 1 .,....,~ ....... .., .... kll0'0-11 TO BE USEO FOA EXPERIMENTS C.ta In cagea at UCI A nlmal Reaourcea Center Cho• Pase CU ltrY roocn a.od well-equipped re· cover7 room In addition to boldlQI rooma fOf' the anlmala. Kirby uld aome of tb• 1nlmal1 .. purehated from the Animal Sbelter remain at the raclllty ror moN than a year. But. Indeed. tl:teir eventual rate la .. aied The doJ• and cata ev ntuaUy ar. killed bv an over· doH ll\Jeclion of barbiturates, tbe same met.bod employed at the abelter. "Ir I wu a doC al the pound," said Dr. Van den Noort. "and had a choice or being killed the next day or going to the beauurul UC Irvine campus, resUna ror a week. and being ex· perlmented on, und e r anesthetic. I'd opt ror Irvine. "And I'd be contributing to knowledge." But the antJ-vivisectiortls\s are far from satisrted and continue to take their case to the public. ON APRIL It of this year. Orange County Supervisor Edison Mlller -defeated In Tuesday's election -was one of 115 protesters who demonstrated an front of the Orange County Animal Shelter. The peacerul protest was in honor of "World Day For Laboratory Animals," a yearly homage to the estimated 70 mllUm laboratory anlmata that die ta ch year. Four daya earlier, MlUer aub- mttted I ret<>lutJon to relJow aupervilon uldns their aupport ror the ''Day.'' The ~ution p111ed •·O <Supervlaor Clark abtent> and cootalned perbapa the •ll'Onleat lanp11e on the subject yet luued by the comity. In euence, the l'elOluUon com· mended the etabt Oranae County cltlea that have asked that anlmall ptcked up ln their cltia not be sold ror research. HOWEVER, THE tel · olutlon alao addreued the "mlaerable pllaht or animals in experimental laboratories throu&hOUt the world." Ma. Strlcqr Unda It "ln· credibly h)potriUcal" that the supervisors could support M lller's resolution yet fa.II to eliminate research sales altogether. Supervisor Phillip Anthony. listed along with Mille r as a "sympathizer" by the anti· vivisectionists. attempted to have a research ban Imposed in September 1978. . With Or. Van den Noort among the testlrlers af'alnst such a plan. Anthony railed to Goodbye Old Blue Baldwin Pianos and O rgans I said goodbye to an old roe yesterday. It was a size 8 pale blue crepe dinner dress that clung so tight at revealed cellullte under your fingernails. / mUJt« any aupPort ror hJ1 pro. POHi. However, the wouJd.be action appareotly Ml the Ital• ror • aertea ot appearaneea by Mt. Strteker and suppc)IUre before clty council• tlfrou1bout the county. COSTA JIESA. Seal Beach, Weatmlnater and San Juan Capistrano council memben. after bearing the preaent.ailona. are among lbe city leaden who voted not to let local animals be •old ror research. (Any In· dMduaJ wbo brings an animaJ to the ahelter can make the same request.> "We don't have an endless supply or politicians and lob· bylatl who can go to these meet· tn11," said Dr. Van den Noort. In two cues however, research support.en gave counter presen· talion.a that resulted In reversals by the city councils or Fountain Valley and Anaheim. Anthony, who led the 1uc- cessru1 fight to remove decom- pression chambers rrom the shelter. said he has not loet hope that one day the board or supervisors will ban the sale ol research animals. "I like to try again, but al this ~~ - I ESSON" INSTRUMEN TS TAPES RECORD~ When we first met four years ago, 1t was resting easily on a mannakm. I had never seen s uch a heavenly shade or blue in my entire life. When the saleswoman led the way to the ritUng room. I said, "There's no need to try it on. It won't fat now. But rm going to diet into at .. SHE HAD THE SAME look on her face as my husband when I told him I used has last razor blade to take chewing gum off the floor, but I cleaned it orr good. tramc light m the car. I thought of the blue dress and contracted my stomach muscles SUNJUNS Yllll ~~:+~R Fashion l•l•nd 640·9020 OAll f 10 I SUN 11 ~ "'°" fl<UllS flU 10 t For the first three months that dress was hke a spiritual leader m my hfc: It ~ave me purpose. energy and a reason for getting out of bed m the mornings eating a piece or dry toast and a three-minute egg. It led me to running • around the block every morning before the sun and my neighbors came up. Every time I hat a One day I s neaked into the closet and tned 1l on. Something got caught in the zapper It v.a" my leg. It would be another few month!> beforl· I could even try to get the other leg m 1t MY EVANGEL IS M began t o v.Jnl· Merc1rully. winter came and the dres!> went into the gurment bag with the solemn prom1!>e that come sprang. I would have a new dres!> to wear that no one had ever seen before The second s ummer I had it. I just knew 1t would flt Mayva was there when I tried it on. "What do vou thank?" I asked '""'Wll•~·= point, there tan 't enou•h aupport from the rat ot the board," aaJd AAlboDJ. wbo wU1 be tn a nlDOlf to retain bis post lD Ncwembilr. TO ll08T OBIBaVEU. All· t.boay ad lUller lacked a tblrd vote on tile board to pau .ucb • meuw-e. Hale Bisby. an aide to MUI«, Hld tbe laaue may aurrace a1aln. Pro·anlmal 1roup1 helpecf brlnc 881270 to the State Senate A1rtculture and Water Commit· tee tut tnontb. rr paned, it would have eliminated aalea ror research at all u shelters ln the state that now do ao. Arter an hour of debate. Sen. Ruben Ayala's request ror a mo- tion to take a vote was lreeted by silence. Thus, the bill died in committee. Be Somebody. Be o carrier. Coll 642-4321. Osk for circulation. Hove fun, earn your own money, leorn valuable lessons about busi~ and people. Deliver the DAILY PILOT 642-4321 BARE ESSENTIALS. l he l.:\t9SI ad<l•llOn'\ lo !he Sun1un CC>1tt>c11c:111 ,,.,,.,.,.Y oe1ai100 callsk•n w••li 1"'1 C()mlC\fl and OUIA!)<l11y YC'll VIJ ('Q<llP lfl fll(pO(t ··What docs 1t feel hkc"" a!>kcd Ma) va "Like a full body cast But isn't this thl· most heavenly sh<1de or blue you've ever !>cen·• It's like a sky on a clea r d ay." ; ff aS4FA5HIOt05lAHD.HF#'°ITH.4CHl7141644-422l a27MAIH5TWHT.AL.HAMllAl21ll2U·H71 8 LESSONS $15.00 COSTA MESA TEN NIS CLUB 5 7-021 1 , foo1pnnr1na m a.and Foocprmonii m a B1rkens10Ck ca 80U1'H OOAST PLAZA - Colta Miia (714) 540-2575 • IQ ... upp«level ".cjjacent to the Jewel court' "I hate ·to tell you. Henny Penny. but thl' sky is falling . _ especially around the Tcxa!> panhandle ... THAT WAS THE LAST time anyone saw me m at. It got shuffled around an the closet until it was finally delegated to the same hanger with the cobbler apron and the paint slacks. Yesterday. I pulled it out. looked at 1t. took a deep breath and announced. "You won' My christening dress was a size 12 Wherever ~ou're gom~ I hope you'll be happy " ~1y husband sav. me npp1ng the dres'> ··wh> would you do that., .. he a!>ked Men are so naive Did he actuall~ thank I d throw away a !>1ze 8 label without r~cyt'lmg al" H You Knew Susie ELDRIDGE. Iowa <AP> -H you knew Susie like they know Susie around Eldridge. then you'd know that Sue Bader Is marned to Gary Bader. And Rick Bader. And Susie wlll soon marry Lance Bader. although Susie Is his mother . If that sounds like bigamy. or the end·all or marital mixups. it's nothing of the sort. But two or the Bader brothers have taken brides named Sue. and a third will soon marry a girl named -well, you guessed It already. Compounding the confusion is the fact that the three younger Sue Baders will share a mother -in-law: Sue Bader. wife or J im Gary Bader started the confusion by marry· mR Sue, a girl he bad met at West HJgh School Brother Rick. the next oldest. marned another Sue. whom he met at a horse show conducted by Gary and Sue Bader. Brother Lance is preparing to walk down the aisle with another Sue Mark Bader is the only brother to break tradition and marry a non-Sue But he as divorced and has brothers and sisters in law are putting some good.natured pres!>ure on him to fmd a Sue. too · · 1t was conrusing enough when there was Just me and my mother·in ·law. both of us were Sues. But now. it's chaos," laughed Mrs. Gary Bader. .. All or us have the same doctors and den· lists and they get the cards they send out u re· minders or checkups mixed up Sometimes we all wind up together In the doctor's or dentist's office. None or us Is sure which one they really wanted." Each Bader family operates Its own busl· neu. but the correspondence for the various business la constantly getting mixed up. "Ir we call and ask which Bader they want· ed they'll say 'The one that's married to Sue · A,;d we're rtaht back where we started." Mrs. Gary Bader said. RUFFEll'S UPHOLSTEIY W...Y•W• ...... lt UMlrtlerltw4. C.... ...... -..... llH C.11142-1171. Put • l•w word• toworll f r ou. J : !~ I I J .~ 3467 Via Lido Newport Beach 673-4510 Parking lot entrance Thev 11 t•e no11ce on the oeach this summer when vou 'lllOw up m th11 string b1k1n1 by H1Qll T•dft 1n royal blue trimmed wltll cerise Or try our one-pttl(le Een1 Meeni M1111ot wilh low cross 1te-b1Ck 1n 1trok1ng prtnte Put together a took with m1tch1ng Eenl Meenl wrap sN>rts -pair them with a cool HoP with cross blCk 01her metch1no pieces 1V11tabl• ChiL:ibeating Sickening DMA AJllN LANDSU: How old do ,ou '-" .... ~,_..,.,..... ......... JOU? I -11. a lllt. Md, ..... la...._ .. ..... "1 97 f.U.. I ,...'t 90 lmo detaJl .... It ..... t '" .... -but I haw A•• £•••en ......._ • ., face and a t.errtto.)ook!n• bJack •¥•· He lmotted me around becaUM I antwer«t M.m &a wbal be caUed "a tte.b tone of voice." I'm IUft I am not the onl1' kld who l•La P\llbed aroand like t.b1I I need to know lf lhb la a r1iht ol p.,..thood. My tat.bet aeem1 lo think ll ll. Am I beln• overly aenaitive! Pleue ex· p,... 10UI' ldeu oo Ulla aubject.. My lather above. your ~umn under 11\Y nose a lot so I koow be readl you every day. I really need aome help. -BLACK AND BLUE IN LONG ISLAND DEA.a 8 6 B: I am GpJ Hed lo bJ&tlag ddWrm f!I .., ase -wtu. Ute ucepUoe of an wcestn I ... ,• IM eeat wlMa. praclilooler ( Boroseope FRIDAY, JUNE 6 By SYDNEY OM.ARR ] A&IE8 (Mar. 21-Apr. 19): Doors may ap- pear ctoeed, but they can be opened. Know 1t and k~ the faith! Means restrictions are not permanent. You may be subject of clandestine conference. You'll get peek at operations betund tbeac~. TAURUS (Apr. 20-May 20): Emphasis oo de9lre, business acumen. significant revisions. travel arrangements, intensified relationship Gemini, Sagittarius natives figure prominently. Romance is very much a part of scenano. Re· cent request will be anawered -and fuliilled. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): One in position of authority may be temporarily incapacitated You have opportunity to display special capabilities. Accept challenge and responsibili· ty. Deal with family member in diplomatic manner. Domestic adjustment rates high on agenda. CANCER (June 21 -Juiy 22): Some persons make claims based on nebulous sources. Know it. protect your interests -insist on separating fact from whimsy. Pisces, Virgo natives figure prominently -and so does the number 7. Define meanings, terms. find out exactly what is expected of you. LEO <July 23-Aug. 22): Accent power, in· tense dedication -nothing occurs ln lukewarm m•nner. If merely "dabbling," move on. Member ol opposite au could insist on commit· meat. Money, occult experiences, reaching un· dentandln• with partner or mate -these areas are a1IO spotlighted. VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Finish assign· ment which. on previous days, had been ignored or pushed aside. You are due for wider recogni· tioo, opportunity for better distribution, display facilities. Be aware of public responses, legaJ rigbta, special permissions. LIBRA <Sept. 23·0ct. 22): Check facts, figures. budget -be sure those wbo are sup- posed to perform services actually do the job. Stress independence. creativity, welcome con· tacts. challenges -a nd be receptive to romance. Leo, Aquarius natives figure prominently. SCORPIO (Qct. 23·Nov. 21>: Teach. learn. make intelligent concession to family member Avoid brooding -it gets you nothing. Accent feelings, dealings with children, adventure or speculation. Cancer. Aquarius persons figure prominenUy -and so does the number 11. SAGITl'ARJUS (Nov. 22.oec. 21): Social life accelerates -don't scatter forces or forget diet, nutrition requirements. Gemini native plays key role. Stick to basic issues, build for security. Older individual wants to be "in· eluded" ln spedal activity. CAPRICORN <Dec. 22·Jan. 19>: Obtain valuable hint by reading Sagittarius message. Accent on relatives, visits, short trips, calls which provide "missing links." Some pressures are relieved -you get facts concerning get· rich-quiet scheme. Get mes. correspondence ln order. AQUAalUS (Jan. 20-Ftb. 18): Money is again "available." Check sources, protect possessions, obtain valid appraisals. Member of opposite sex aids in locating object that had been missing. Geminj, Sagittarius natives play lmporta.Dt roles. PISCES <Feb. 19-Mar. 3>): Views are vin· dicated -cycle is such that special honor or major coocession Is due. Moon ln your sign coincldes with added enthusiasm. independ· ence. YouwlllbeatrlgbtplaceatcruciaJmoment. Taurus. Libra, Scorpio pereon.s figure pro- minently. .._ na1•t1 dull •• _.. 11° •!'Ida .we, ..n ... t ..... eM...... ' ...., a .._..,., ..._.. M& M kMebd .,..._ ............................... . ........... '::t"8 .au. ...... y.., dad ............... My~k.l~IM wW ...... ,.,.. A.1110711 ... P.O. 8oz *• TwrlMI, Calif. -.1 .......... daat M ..a 1 Mlf..... 111• ........ •""'9-U M ,.,. r.... • .. M , YOU wrt&e. ,.... ersem•* ... .... • ...... ,,.. ,.. ,. , •• 111e1 .... u. ,,. ...... ,.. ....... . DEAR ANN LANDERS: M you can see, l am an Inmate at th.e central prison in Raleigh. N.C. I bave met aome welrd people slnce I came here a few mootbl a10. but the one I am writinC •bout la the oddball of all Ume. I'm 1ure you are aware that a lot of us loee our wive. and sweethearts while doing time. On top of all tbe other thl np we have to worry ubout, tbia problem can make life plenty mis· erable. The oddball ls ln my cell block. He just got a letter from his wife telling him she had an af. fair witb a man al work. Her conscience was botberin& her, and she wanted to "clear the air:" 1be dude also hu four kids. Instead of getu.ni upset be wrote and told her (dlg this) that he understands bow a woman can get lonesome wilb her man doing time and he hopes 1he will take precautions and not get pregnant. Also, he would appredate it if she kept ll "private," so as not to embarrass the family J wouldn't blame you lf you thought this let· ter was too crazy to print. I tbink the guy ought to be in a straitjacket. Do you agree? -TT TAKES ALL KINDS DEAR KINDS: No. In my opinloa, be ls ex· tre mely companlonat.e. You can be sure be ls hurt by bla wife's unraltbtalneas, but bis genetOlil&y ot spirit aad wtlllngness to accept her human fraUty Is certalD.ly admirable. CONnDENTIAL TO ONE WHOSE SJDP NEVER CAME IN: Are you satt you se-nt one oat? Too many people sit around waiting for sometblng wonderful to happen when lbey. baven'tdooe anything to deserve it. TIRED OF WAITING INA OFFICE? DOCTORS' HOUSE CALL SERVICE COMES TO YOU, 24 HOURS A DAY. 7 DAYS A WEEK-FOR NO EXTRA CHARGE. Pain. lever and 1llnc"..s CcJn flare up anytime ol the day or night leavmg you with a problem rl its lhe middle ol rhe night or the ~end Where can you find a dOctor and when can YoU !:.1-C him? 1 he answer rS Doctor<; Hou!:.e Can SeNICO It s a nf'W moOle medteal ~!fVIC{• lhat hrn1qs a hcensod M 0 nqhl 10 your ooor-;111) to !rear roullnc .Jnd non em<'rg<;ncy UISt..~ SAVE WORRY. SAVE TIME. SAVE MONEY. Docror s Hou:,t.• Call Sorv1c.P hds 1nstallAd .1 unlQue d~. D<1lr.h1nq .,.., .11-rn uo;inq radio K:lU10()(,'(j 11"11!, otfC!rtnQ m<.Jdern <Jnd uP to date rrv:h niquc..c; allowinq lh<' CIOCtor NOTHING ADDED TO YOUR BILL t.1ost oeoote are conce<ned w11h lhe coo°' rhrs new sef vic.c Th<> CO'.I of d v~t 10 your home,., comoorable to lhe ICXA:tl phy<,.:: 1o;1ns 1n your corn- mun11y ,md muc.h le'>~ th.Jn rhe local her.oral There rs no charqc lor mo1oage. (j15oatch 1nri or ~nd1nq lhe mobile unit IT'S COVERED BY INSURANCE. MOGI health 1nsurann:• P'<1~ will cover a ma10< p0r11on ot lhu rost HOU'I! call:::. arc .in ac~pled 1n•,1Jrarice ct ;:uqe Our ottl( c w1 1 be haPoY to a!;~rSI you 1n lhf> 1n~ranc.c cJa1m orocedun..! YOU CAN REGIS'n:A AIGHTNOW. tO (;]kP n()C,....._,:,ary lilbO<alOry Our trainee! oerr,onn(.f ;tr[! !.-.<irnp1~, o<e5Cnbc ilnd di', on duly 24 hour; a da ~ Pt"'~ nf'<'QOO rTif <:!teal IQO ano won I gee a rt 'C orOed ~ ... ~,. E-ven Q•vc ;i comoutunzed or an We -cl1...<.trocard10Qrarn on the SPOt . answer,nq 5.1..>fViC~ ......... can answer a11 your aue-:.11ons •vu ~Vt> D<r>CIOU'> hrTle dnd &encl I transoortat•on 1nconve0tenco you UrtnP< intor and ehrnmatc any delay 1n fl'ldhOn Please ca 1 now geltlnQ the nccf>'~ry rTlOOl(..11 dnen11on (714) 851-1895 • ?'-~ Si.u 1903'-----------------.. . . . • foshion slid~ Italian srylr To conw p ~" o nmrnn of/-. Wltt• and Camel Cal/ 8ofh 10Uh !tacltlfld HHI $44. Herbert E.ul Carlson Pro Pe r, 14672 Bel Aire Street, lrvlne, California 92714, (714) 759·5655/ 559-6713. Publl<;hed Or ange Coast Daily Pilot, June S, 6, 12. 1980 2J88..80 ---- PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ---PICTITIOUS aUMMEH P tCTITIOUS MISIMl.U HAMI U ATU1•l.Nf M--STATl.MCMT "• ..,._ --" -..,~ ,,.. lol'-•l'CI ,,.,_,, ••• dolnq ,.,...., ., bw'M'-"M .... (All,.()RNIA Pf:T PPOOUCTS JOSIE 'i 11709 PnlhC (N\I nu\ 8w<" ~· ...,... e,..tttorftt• Mt9f\••Y. H WftffnQtOft 8••<fl. '11''1 ""''""""'-o ... o 'i••<><v ~••<> JJtJ S E--J -. Mn s.1 ... -. &•«" Wtb,,,.. , .. ,..,...,..~101 W••lm•-~..., TllO\ ~· 0\ C-ted OY ... tn , .......... , ... !w-MI, tOl:)O ( .... Ohttetu.el "•"O"•"' Aw.,.u •• W•Ut"ft•n•t•r. 0.Vtd s S.0-... ,.,_ .... flll:J fhO\ >141l_. *~hi.cl wtlft lhl\ _,"H\ t\ t -IH oy • Counh c.aen.,. Or-Courot• °"NI•• ...,_.., peo11 ... ~ ····-" 1.-J-• ,.,.,., '"" -..... _ -.... PvOI-0.-C~ ~I• Polo4 Co..nly '"""' '" Or-c.o.;.,1y on Mo IS. J2 7'. J-\, •• J-J. ,_ 11 PUBUC NOTIC£ ~·..., ..__Or-c-1»11¥ ..... j -S IJ, H.a.... JJUe PUBLIC NOTICE ,.,,.,,. P\ll>h"" 0rttnQP C.0. .. t 0••1• P tt01 ,.,.,,. n. tt J.-~ •1 ·-l'"• !JO PUBUC NOTICE PICTITIOUS aUSINESS N-E STATEMENT TM fOUOWU'Q OIPf'\On ·~ OOll'Q °"~·· ~, .. , I,, •881 111 •BB• 8 U'!o1 Nf'>'> 8AOll'fA\ IJI •BETTE A 8 UStNf'>'> tHV~\t-..ENl .,., fw'\lln C' •C. (.0.1•-c..t ......... .,.,, LWtf' Rout\.lont>. 11•' l "''"' # •C. '-'• -c..1.-.... "»71 """ ~ I\ <O"Oue:ted by M\ '" d••-· Lor"ntAou~ ..... Tf'ti\o ~-f'miieftt •A flkd WI"' t,_ c-•v cien.,. Or-,_. .... M4v 10.1- PIJnll Pu1>11..-0.-C-.1 0.tlY Piiot. M4v n. :., J-s. 11, ,.., n-..o PUBUC NOTICB P1CT1Tious ausi .. 1.ii l'I~ STATIMEl'IT °''~.':: • .!.~'-•no _ _,, ••• Ooln( PAL l.IMITE D. 102I W•ll-, Apt •. C.~•· ......... C..•-· .,.,. Aoo-r I.. Cu""'"qfl•M, 1011 W•ll«•. c-.. ...... c;..i • ._.,,.,. l-s 0-....,, •1• -....... C..••,.,....., <At-· '01•1 "••"<• c-~ u1 .. ., •• ., ::.os•••1. s-. P.u••. C•tlfo.r P UBLIC NOTICE 1114) NOTICE OP T•usnE"' U l.£ TS.Ne-1 lllV,fOP'> RAVM()NO E OWARO \U Elf-EllZA8EfH$TULC • PUBUC NOTICE "ICTITIOUS aUllNelS NAMI STATaMaHT fll• lollowi1>9 P9'Wlll •rt f Ol"9 .... "~·~ THI! 0000 Ll"f OAOV,. 10180 U .Gor'• GArc ie. ,...,"'"'" llelley, C.Ulornle .,JOI • ~ny Dor.-KlftQ, 101W l!I Gcwr• cl'rc1e, "-••In ll•ll•Y. C•lllornle ~10I LM 0.4tl ........ , •• l'OIO El Gorr• Ctrttt, Fe><1nteln ll•ll•v. C•tllornt• .,.,.. Tiii• 11<1\lneu I• <OflCluc ted by • gefle••• oertN'111111) .>Mry O. Kint Tiiis •l•l-1 .... 111.0 Wllll Ille C-IY Clef1I of Or-C.OUnty on M•y J0,1'80. PUBLIC NOTICE N .. 1111 •OTICI! Of' INTUITION TO CltlAT& llCUalTY INTfaEST !Seu 6101 •101 U CC I HOii<• h lltr•by glv•n to Ill• fr•dlton of Ill OOIE'S 0 , INC C11 NIA 8AAICEA'S AESTAUAANT, 0.0. '°'· ·-""""""' _, ... ,, '" 711 E 17111 St"'41, CCKl• Mhe, C.thl(N'n•• .,.,, 171 tltt N Gr-A""""'· !.tftl• An•. Cetllorn1• '1701, Co11t1tf of Or•n~. St•I• ol &•fllornl•. lllel • 'WKllrlly ltWl'rHI ll ,_ IO ... «Hied ... Oel>lor -gr-eel lo SANTIAGO BANI(, • C•lllorn•• <O•POr•llon, !.oc ur•O Per1y, w~• l>U\lnH\ .o o,.o " m £ Ftr•I Street, Clly ol PUBLIC NOTICE ft1alC NOllC& MAHAOEMeNT, INC, """"for '-dlerd ............ Or .... Cant o.11~ ,.llot, J-s.u . .-,,,... PVBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE Tu.tin Coynty of ~M99. St•I• of f'ICTITtOUS auM•EU "ICTIT'IOUI austNIU C.lllor"'• •AMa STATa.MaHT NAMa ITATllMl•T Tiie P•Ollt'1Y. tn _.. .... '" wN<ll TM fol-.V --la -. boN· T ... follOW!ne --,, ..... .,_,... ,.,. S.<uroly lnfe<HI will be <rfflH I\ _. H ""' •• llxtur~•. f'<IUIP"'elll lurnllure end COMING WITH JOY, 17'0 Pia•,.. CHRISTMAS ICISS COMPANY, •urnl•lll"'I\ of Oooblor ...-bu",.." 11 c 1 -.. '~1~•-_.,.. "•n-n •• OOtE s D1, INC -MA •• CK.. • .... _..,. ..... 1111 Terno•• Hlllt Ortve, L•gun• a • .-. e AOlllM, '"° Pi.c--11 .. <1'1, c..t•tom1•n.11 8.AAICEA'S A fSTAUAA•H •nO tle,CCKl•-.C.lllomi.tttv Petrick.A M<LeYQf>lln IK•l.O •• ·--.. -lilted ... '°"' Thi\ .......... la <Oftdu(ted by Ml .... Thi\ bu!.1 ....... ,, <onducled by •n 1 ... T ... efontsetO -urlly lrertw<llOft Olvlduel OIVIOUel will be -ed on or •11., Ille a.-e £ Rolllnt P .. rl(.a A. M<~ll" 1•1n do ol J..,., 1'110. 411 • 00 • m •1 Thi\ 1'411-w• filed with 1f1e Thl1 """"-1 ••• 111.0 with ,,. !..11111-!Nnk, ...._-'"'"USE. Co I Cieri< of ~ C-1 C Cl of O f"or1t Strwt, 'l'l..un, C•lllornl•. JU::: l~ 1-. enQe Y °" A~~'::'.. ,:,;" reft911 C-ty on So ,., ., It """""' to tne S.C.wed f'111f17 f'IJ'7N P•rly, •II busl"4tn MrTlft •no •O· Publl.,_, 0r..,.. Coest Delly Pllo1, l'\illll1'1M Or.,. Coett O.lty Piiat, o, .... , _ 11¥ u. o.ticor lor ,.._ _, J-s. n. "·a. t• Ja.J-to May n.1'. JvM s. 12 •• m 1«1 ll><ro~r.'sei-:;2. INC. 08.A """ 1----------------------- 8.AAICEA'S • 1, m E. 11111 s1. eo.i. PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE MeMl.Cetltomi•m71 MA llAAKEA s • , n?s ... Gr•ncl A-..., iloMle AN. C..ltl0f nt•tt10t o • ....,._.,.,._ SANTIAGO BANI( •c.ll+Dr .... Corp 8y Lumlr 0 Cerny. lllU~ SK_P..,y SANTIAGO 8AHK m•·"'"'"',... T_.lt10 Cal...._e._ NOTICE OF INTENT .TO DEED REAL PROPERTY TO THE STATE Pur werlt to 5Kttelt\ J:ll1 ltW'outfl JaS, R.--T.ulloft Ce* t"9 Notto of •-to Oftd Aeel ""-'11 to -IUW "' -tor llw c-, of Or•n99, sc.I• of C..lfomle, l\at -div-...0 O•"'IC>llW le ., • ...,. n.w\-" of_..,.,< •r<uletloft ll\IClll-"' ~ C-Y '°' Plll>llCel!OfO of• po<110ft tlwr'90f lft ._.,.,. Mltd-1oer'" An11 L-rC»nly PUl>ll.,_ Or-. C:O.•I 0.tly PllOl I fl I II IS I It I I II e f O I IO w 1 n V -s i.-1,_...; ~ev1et1..,u,.._1ort,._O. ... . ___ ,, ........ PUBUC NOTICE NO.TICE OF DEATH OF LAWRENCE C. BAKER AND OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE NO. A·1046SI. To a ll h eirs . beneficiar ies, c reditors a nd contingent creditors of Lawrence C . Baker of Lavuna Beach, Callfornla and persons wrio may be otherwise Interested In the will and/or estate: A petition has been filed by Lawrence C. Baker, Jr. In the SYperlor Court of Orange County requesting tl'lat Lawrence C. Baker. Jr. be appointed a s personal representative to administer the estate of Lawrence C. Baker Cunder the Independe nt A d · ministration of Estates Act>. The petition Is <set for hearlno In Dept. No. 3 at 100 Civic Center Drive, West, In the City of Santa Ana, CallfOf'nla on July 1, 1980 at 10:00 a.m . IF YOU OBJECT to the granting of the ~tltlon . you should either appear at the hearing and state your objections or file written obfectlons with the court before the hearing. YO\,lr appearance may be In person or by your at- torney. IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR or a cont· l09ent creditor of the de· ceased, you must file your clalm with the court or present It to the personal representative appointed by the court within four months from fhe date of first Issuance Of letters as Pf'OVlded In Section 700 of the Probate Code of CaUfornla. The time for flllng clalms wlll not ex- p.tr• prior to four months from the cUlte of the bear· rno noticed above. YOU MAY EXAMINE the file kept by the court. If you ere Interested In the ) • est.tt, you may fll• • re-ouest with the court to , .. Ctlvt lptClll notlc.t of the fnventorv of tttatt Hsets •nd of tne petitions, •c· counts end reports described In Stctfon tHO of the C.llfoml• Probate COdt. ... 'fl::: H. Htwttr..:.\; .. ~,­C•••t Ht1 .. way, lo. ,_...._..._ Lll•U, Ce. tt617; teh ....... AP-"--•Mec>Per<eO.i .. -8••-81«k HF-NE ,..,_,,,....., NO N- Ptw -Ponion 'iE Sout,_•sl Tr Tr.Cl "'lUtCaL NUMelAl-0 S YSTIM IX fl'LA•A TIOtll The 4-'• ¥alt P~ .. H~ -ll$MI .. -rlbl _.., In , ... . ''''· ,.~ ........ _ ............. . lhe .......... W~~lfl""'' ---tftllj~-<91-°" 11w ,_ P99I or ,.,.,,... IN bloo A p•r<•• ftUml>er •• fer e1amp•• ··044~··. _..,.....,. ....... of ,,,. A•-·•~. 81o0 a..J lmACJ -». 11100 JI, -PM<.•f ~ wtt11111 "'411 bl«ll Tiie -~ to .,. ••• u .... for "-<tlOfl "' .,.. oHIC.e ol tlleA•-- All ~ 1• lftU. T~ lo.ICll •ncl ..... -of left ....... dlfto a. .. --1c11 ... NOTICE • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y L c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • IQUAL HOUllNQ • OPPOJ'TUNITY .~·!~1lom 'll'.:n::t ... ~.ftt..d 3~1r •a· .............. .............. ..,. lloulDI Ac:t of lttl ............ Ulllpl lo ad•mlu ••aay pre-,....,., UmltaUoD, or waterfroal home •/17&11' P•l doc:k. Prlced1 s1.21s.ooo . Bllildtr w /trade for Palm lprf11p Estate. far ..... OD tJu. home lllld ._ to see, ulJ Oliral Han, qt. Gl-40M. .... ~. P1XERUPPER 2Br ..... OD »&140' R·2 lot la~ Beh. a.-. Ult TD m.ooo at IO'J,), 751.-J 4Wdmbstkm ..._. • ..... a*lr ............ arllllliaMlortCID.oraa ...,....,. to make aay .. pnfennce. limita-tiaa. ardlllcrimmaUaa. •• 'nm. WW $4Plr wlU D0t bowtqly accept aay advertialn1 ror real .... wbicb .. i.D Tiola· tiaa of tbe law. llACMtS: Alhwtl ..... .... dlldi ..... ..., ... ,...... .... ..... 5 ...... n. DM.Y ... OT•-. ...., ............ . wnct .... ,......,. ....................... IOOZ ....................... CdM COttt BCIAL <:out Hlchway. owner will carry flnaoc1n1. S..CD>1qJl. CaU 673-3550 ()Pfl'f hf0•H 14.Jll.lf )l'tt ,,., l~IPdl Miaalon Hills Collatry Cub. :Ir, Jba, upcraded. lb.Md. Luxury condo. ~Pf course. $131,000 Ural 9 7 18%. Value DIS.cm. Want to sell or trade ror equity In Npt. Bch. home w /view le yud. Dou1laa Honi1. 'TW473-1191 <owner> IACKIAY 3 Bdrm, abalte roof, hardwood noors. re· modeled kitcb. Just a llAUTllUl. Hr~m".~er . Wl'lperioul ,.uo . .,,, blk to oeeaa. Hl1ft loan 11.nCJ,. Low down -.-.eaunow. .UIOLTY 673-6210 IE 111111 ILlllS CD. OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVK;E 5"1M.ASS WITH Y11W lleaut1foll11 0c'<'oratf'd Flv.-Bedroom On Thi• Crt"i.l Of Tht-11111 With Out11tandin11 V11·1<. Of OC'N1n & 8 .iv This llomf' Was Feiltur<'d In In int• Wurlt.b MaJta11nt' Huize Mastf'r Suit" With F'tr<>pl.1<'f> & Sauna SpartOU\ Famah lloom With °"t'I H<t r & F1rt•J>lan• l'ool <IW!"'/ fo'H Wll I. tit-l.P t-"I" \'<'I' WITH <\ I :! \l.l. l!\l"l.l'Sl\.'t-: THI ST L>Et.IJ Sil% 000 WISTCUff CONDO Tht• <.'hol<'f.OSI Of Lo<·at111n' In Tlw °"' ... I Newpnr1 Bt•arh Arf'll For \dull' Whfl v. Jnt \\Jlkinl! 1>"1.mc1•T11~hor,... PJr\\ & l.1lir.1n T"o Bfdmom Condo. t-:ach With \ tt .. 1h l>1n lnr Room fo'1rt-pl•<'f'. < ·ommun11' Pt.onl \ Reul Valli.· $1 Ill llOO Three-part suit! ~~ n ~d W~IWWWOMT-¥AC:A.Mr-UJI. ... Fantastic bay & ocean view. A real beauty in the well-known Mal Kai. Beautifully refurbished inside le out w•th lush new cptng & drapes (neutral colon). new kitchen appliances. Huge livlnf rm with a new mirrored wall renect.ing exciting boat activity. 2 Lie bedroc>ms. 2 baths. See any time. Wl5LIY M. TA YLOI CO.. llA&.TOU 2111 S.J1 I I ....... MIS'llW~r"POKI'-.., C:atra. "'8. MMtll ..J.C~eJie =~Ith new carpeta • drapes, bld·ln ldlcben. Offered VAor FHA ~ 7!U·3l9l ~'/JIUS Dllme • 36:2 bdrm &mds. Flrep&ace each WI· it + EXTRA PARKJNG! Reduced to rns.ooo ! ..... ..,,.... ..... •'75-7060• OCUMVllW CORoift't1rl° MAR. Owminl 3 bdrm, 3 bath home. courtyud entry. Iara• family rm & rarma.1 dimn11 rm Lovely VleW. new de<or. Won't lall' OCVM PACIFIC a..&tat. 759-1616 ""' .... COlldo CA'\Jy 2flc>' tow ater. sharp. dean 2 Bdrm 2 Ba with doubl~ 1ara1e Small down•~ W1U carry IUI0.000. Call C.oo.rue ICllS IEAl TY --~lW.70 __ ~.,~All are 2 Br l Ba and havf' garaaea and yard& 0-0. wW fin.aatt wtth ~ dowo. hll pnce ~ Acl-516-- LID01.SLAND .. Br. 3 ba. z frpb .• dl!n. cba rm.. 2 stonei. all'ftt SPY•ASS 1PllCl..uc:m ·~y.,_ TramferiWd. ·owner will c.-ry lat T D. at only 12%. ~ executi•e home-1eaturi ng 4 biidrowa, 2~ bat.ba, and a lot more. Corner loca · Uon. room for a pool. A steal al 1389,500. RCTc1ylo rCo ; ' WHAT- OML Y $63 5001 ae.n. •hart>. 1 ~ + den condo. with an aua.ma- b&e &om\ at only 10.$% and priced u low aa l53,500. Call oow 979-$370 ALLSTATE REA1.TORS SI lt,$00 Needs jw.t a UttJe work. llll what a auper value! Sm«AI! W!Yel 3 bdrm home in the popular California Homea. Irvine. Family rm wtt.h bnck fireplace. mirrored bar, formal d1n1ng rm, encloaed yard. Located at end of c:ul..de·sac Call losee. A Dlv1s1on of Harbor' Investment C.o to stnet. noo aq. n. oo ""!!!!!!!'!!!11!"!!!!!1!!~!!!!!!!~!!11!!!!!' Via OrvM!to Sl'n.900 ""' ManbaU RJt) 67S....OO HJ,front IH1n hom•· 1<. llh J I~•· Hdrm,, mi11d' room . <1('p.i r.il(' t11nm1Z room nnr1 ~ .I t· M R 0 a"'~um11 hlt> loan .2SO.OOO OCEAIRONT A i pertacular 3 Bdrm oceanfront con domamwn. Elegantly de <.'Orated. Laguna Lido romer unit lo be sold furnished Owner will prov'lde ftnandng •/fan- t.aSllc lttma. Hurry on Uusone: BALBOA ISLAND REALTY 673-8700 -------- 1006 • •••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Story 2 Bdrm. ·~ baths. PatJo. + prqe apt. + 2 rooma It bath auest quarters . 1425,000 m.(821 1002 ca •• ,.. 1002 beaublul t.oc.-rady to move lnto. Priced at .............................................. SU0.000. Ml.BllALTY 146-.oel4 S..... J Bdrm Dell.led to Hchaded Costa Meaa neilbbulhood, euy ac· ceaa to e•erytllla1. Priced to move a t SU17.«JO. 540-3MI +X!ft Now You Can Sell More wit• Dally Piiot PENNY PlNCHEa ADS Sdll ealy a . 3 llnes for 2 days only Sl 1 day. 34c a line Advertl•t' on• or tllore lttnu vehaed up to 1100. Eath addillon•I line I• only eoc for th• t~ da ya. Sorrf. no conamctcla ad1 1tlowed. Chtr&:A" Your PtlQy Pincher Ad of uu• your 8tnk Amflrlcard Vlaa or Jlutercard . ..., _.. ttl ..... ttlon .......... """'eel"'" 9453 10¥J-20Ya "" 1ff Mi-1Tf "°"T~ f5I Coldwell Banker OCIAM a IAY Yi1W Large 2 bedroom & pool in choice Harbor View HUis. First time offered. By appointment only so call today. $210,000. CSEWf CLlifHWAEMURTA STC~ 2~ff ~QNYRUMHI NOkRH S LfHAACAlll OSMO£AYIC!EIESUCMa• !LLACERlRSaLTL,SllC AIU~LNCLUCIMllLMHll 81£,EAOHMlRSCMNPWOJ ,.RICTYIAUlll,ULKAO HMSKNCHWMIVSOLAMCTI P8LElLAA81TLIMIWLll YfCYLOl"lllHUllTlll tMMfWEISAMA•OPMSSJC ICYlEOP,TU"CYOIUNRT AUAILYJAIUALAaJNPOA LILlACSP~"lllAlllll PUBUC NOTICE IM2112 NOTICE OP INT•NTION TO C••ATEHCUany 1•TEaEST !Seo. 4101_.107 UC.CI MANAGEMENT, INC, ....,, .. ~ P\llMI.,_, Or .... GM•I O.lly Piiot. J-s. ll. ,. Jn..IO PUBUC NOTICE No lle• It l\trelly olven lo th• {red1ton of 111 ODIE'S •1. INC 121 MA 8AAICEA'S AESTAUAANT, 0.0. tor,•-Dus<nen -rest" 111 111 E. 1111\ St.-. Colt. Mew, C.lllortw• '2U7 111 H2j N Gr-A-. ... s.<>ta Ane, C•llforn1• t2101. Cou11ty or Or•noe. St•le of c,.nfornl•, 11\el • W<Urtly lnt~fft I•~ 10 lie <rHled oY 0.0. -gr-ed to SANTIAGO 8.ANIC, • C•lllornle corporellon -----------~cured P•r1Y, whCXe tMll•net• ltd PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Orl'U '' m E Ftrtl Streel, City ol TIAlln, Ceyftly Of ()«M91, Slete Of C.alllorpla Th• D'-1Y. '" -rel, In -cl\ 1"9 Security 11'11""""'' will be crHted It 11w1ur~\. eQulpment, furniture end •u•n1\lllf'IO' Of o.otor w-lluslne" •••n-n•nOOtE'S 112, INC -MA 8 Allt1CER'S RESTAURAN T. •nd •ec•tltd •I ·.-addrn~ lhled below Tl\e •for9S<lld WJCurlly trenwctoon w111 De contummeted on or •Her tiw 1'1n d•y o1 J..,., 1'10, et t·oo • m •t S.nllevo B<lnl<. w11ow -'"'la us e. F1,.1 Strwt. TINln, C.lllornl•. So 1.,. as I• ,_, to lhe Se<ured P•rty, .i1 busl"9u ,..,.... •nd •0. drnse• u..i bl< u. O.IJlor for the pa~t """.,.en .... : ODIE'S •1, INC. OBA NI A 8AAKEA'S • I, 212 1711\ , C:O.ta Mew. Catlloml• NIA 8ARICEA' :n. 7 N, Gr.,.., A-. s.ntaAne. Callfornl•'1101 O•led·MeylD.ltlO $.A.NTIAGO 8ANIC •Callfomle Corp BY Lllmlr 0 Csrny, Vtce l'rft-1 Sl<ur90P«1y SANTIAGO aANlt Slf I!. Pim st....i Tttltfft, e.t ....... e ,._ ll'ICTlTIOUS aUMNU.S PICTITIOUS aUSIN.U NAME STATEMIElfT MAM9 STAT~NT Tiie '°''°"""' --•• doH'O lllnl· T ... 1o1-. --•• doi"9 -neMH! MStff: COMING WllM JOY. 17111 PIKen-CHRISTMAS KISS CONIPANY. lie, Cott•Mes., c.41fomlat>U7 ltll Temt>le Hills Orl•e. L•911n• Bertawe E. Aolll~. 17111 Plec-hKI\, c.41fomie .,.,, lie. Coate Meta, c.llfornie t2627 P•trlclt A. M<L .... lln Tl\ls bwlneM k <Ofldueled lly 811 In· Tiii\ bu!..nni I\ <ondw<led llY an ln-dlvlcNet. dlvkNal e.tler-a E AolllM P«TlCll A. Mc:Ulugfllln Tl\I• .... _ •• filed *"" .,,. Tiiis ~I Wti Ill ... wltll I .. Coun1y Clerll of ~ C-IY on Counly Clerll of <><'•f!Oe COunly on J->. ,.. Aj)<ll 2'. '"° lfllllft7 P111'1Q Pul>ll\hed Orenee Cont O.lly PllOt. Pvtllt"'" OrM191t C.O.st o.lty Piiaf. J -s, 12. "·-. '"° 23'2-«I Mey 22, Jt. Jvn<t s. t11• mr-eo PUBUC NOTICE PlJBUC NOTICE NOTICE OF INTENT . TO DEED REAL PROPERTY TO THE STATE P\lr~ lo SoctloM SJl1 ttwouafl .JJIS, At-.. -T •MUoft C-. tM Hol1ce of 1-10 Dftd RMI ~ 1D tfle S.-ill ft tot IN Counlr Of Or•~. State ol Cellfomla. hes -divoelod -"' OttlrlllUted '° ., ....... ~ °' -el c wcueatlorl Pllllll...., "' wocl co..nt • lor PUOl!celiOfl Of • "°"-~ 111..cl\ Of .. ..,_..,.,,.. ""'" L..W Otnty Pvblt.,..,OreroveC.O.stO.ilyP•IOt In tft•• ''" 111e tollow lno .--s ,.., J1'0.0 etlbrevlet ___ forllie_ ... . ~··-PVBUC NOTICE AP---•M-c>P•<eltlNumtler P~LNU .... alltG SYSTaM•X~TIC* Blk-BlaO Ft-Feet HE-....,,,,....1 Ho -N....- Por -Por1i0fl SE-Soutl>Nst Tr-Tree! n.. ._.-, M-.. P«UI - -...... Clltertlle ~In 1111• •••1. ~ ...... A--·--· Ille -P19P or lliOS* ~ lfl -• boOll ..... -lftdl1'IOIMI -<.el ~ Ofl 11 .. .._....,.or within u.11100. A P••<•I 1111mller •• for ••emple "OU.J63.0S". _,... -........ Of , ... ,.,_., ~. 8100 .., ,_ ~ ..... l). end Pwc:el S wltMn !Mt lllOCll. n. -,....,...-tlo •re eveli.eM tor~ Ill -offke of .,.,,._ All ll'-1't ''Ill tlle T_,..~ efld ......... $aft ---·lfto Bate end M9rld!M. NOTICE ' 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • ~ . -~ -· -·-40------- • , The ...... ~Oft 1M ~ C..ll .. DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS' You Catt hi "· find tt, Tr9de tt Wltll a Want M a ... ft &a.a OM C.I ... ,._ v.••vv,u f'ut CNlll .. ,,.., .. w .... 111~ ........ ....... ertieed ...................... Jlct to die Fedlnl Falr floulDI Aet of IHI .... lmka il Ulesal '° advertise "any pre· f-.c:e. limh&Uoa, or dlwrfmbrt'wm bMecl OD nee. color, reliPaa. MS, "' llllllkm8l orilflll. or an Wmticm to make &llY ..ta )lftleeoee. liauu· tiaD. "'dlacriadmtioo. .• nM ......,.._. wU1 DCllt lmcJwlnsly accept any advertialng for real --wbieb is lD Yiola· tiOD of tbe law. 9A')ISc ...... ...... ~dledl .... .. ..,_.,...... __ .... 5 .... ,, n. DAILY PILOT' •1 II ....., ............. cmndlm1rtm...,, ....................... t6UNITS! Pride oCo-wiiersbip ~ta! 1"'2 years old. Ebdokd 1arages. aab 2 BR 6 1 BR. On lite llllr· Low mamt. lo· come 1114.200 a year ldm. Xlot terms and rilbl df! Call ror pro- ..,_DOW. 'lSZ-1700 C4MCOt•BCIAL c.o.st ltichway, owner will carry finan<'ln1. s.m> lqJ\. CaU 673-8550 OPfN r~ O•fl \•UN 10111'v•1 • l9MNKI llisaion HUis Coutry Cub. 31r. 3be. unraded. lhlled. Luxury coado. ~ d course. SW..000 lint 9 718~. Value am.ooo. Want to sell or tnde for equity tn Npt. Bcb. home w /view " yard. Doutlu Hoai1. 7lf.tr13.ll91 <owner) IACKIAY 3 Bdrm. 1balle roof. hardwood noors. re· mode:led kitch. Jmt a baubful home-ready to move into. Pri<'ed at SU0.000. N.LBIEA.L.n ......... ~ 3 Bdrm nestJed ID secluded Costa Mesa ~.hood. easy ac· ce11 to everythin1. Priced to move at SI07.0llO. 54()..3668 +X!* Now You Can Sell More wu• Dally Piiot PENNY PINCHEa ADS Sdll ... ya. a lines for 2 days only Sl • day. 3'c a line. Advertlae one or more Items valued up to 1100. Each 1ddltlonal line 11 only eoc for the '"'~ day a. Sorrf. no commercl• ads allowed-. Ch8r1i Your Pewiy Pi~h•r Ad or u se your Bank Amerlcard : Vlaao,~ercanL • s r~ft~ ttualom ••terfro•t home •/l7dt' pYl dock. P~lced1 ll.2ta.ooo . Builcler •/trade for Palm Sortnp Estate. l'ar datlllai OD thia home ad appt IO aee, call c.'Cll Ha«, •• 131-00N . PrtDc. ODlY. PU.ZR UPPER 2llr hDule OD 50sl40' R·2 kit la llmitiqton Bcb. llUGO. (lit TD 113.000 at I0'#).'151.-J llAU'IWUI. 3Br~~.~Br . w/lpeeioul petio, \iii blk to OCHD. Hi11t loan 11.75~. Low down. GaJ50. Call DOW. .UIEAl.TY 673-6210 l!E llDlll ILlllS CD. OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE SPY&LUS WITH Y1aW Beautifully l>eror•ted Flvp Bedroom On Tht- Crei>l or The Hiii With Outstandtna Vie"' Of Ocean & Bay nus Homp Was Featured In ln·ine Worlds Maizazane Huie Master Suite With F'lrepla<'t' & Sauna Spa<'tou.~ Famtlv Room With Wet Bar & Fireplace Pool OWNf:R WILi. llELP Fr:"A'.'\C't: WITH A 12' · ALL INCLL'SI\' t: TRl'ST DEED 5695.000. WISTCUff COteo The Choicest or Locations In The We--t Newport Be•<'h ArH For Adults Who Want Wallunie DI tan<'t' To Shops Park & l..lbran Two Bedroom Condo. Ea<'h With A Bath Dinlni Room. Firf1)1ace. Commun1t~ Porn A Real Value Sl18.000 (5) --........... 759-9100 #2 C~ ........ .... ,.. .. c...... Three-part suit! J\i ~ l 1J Wli.iaNOMT-¥ACAM'f-C121.MI Fantastic bay & ocean view. A real beauty in the well·known Mat kai. Beautifully ref urbisbed inside Ir out with lush new cptng & drapes <neutral colors), new kitchen appliances. Huge living rm with a new mi.rrol'ed wall reflecting exciting boat activity. 2 Lge bedrooms. 2 baths. See any Ume. Wl5&.IY M. TAYLott CO.. llALTOIS 2111 s. J117' ....... MIWPOU CanB. tu. 6+Mtll OCIAM 11/z iUS Dehar.e dupla. 362 bdrm umts. flrepiace ea<'h UD· ll + EXTRA PAR.KJNG ! Reduced ID S275.000! ..... ..,,.... .. •.. •671-7060• oc:aAM..W 12'9,000 COROf'fA DEL MAR . Owminc 3 bdrm, 3 bath home. courtyarcl entry. lar1e hmily rm " fCJrmal dining rm. Lovely vh. 1M!W dee«. Won't a.at! oaHePACIAC ......... 759-1616 '75-4670 ~4:9.f~AJI m-e 2 Br 1 Ba aod have gara1es and yards. 0...-wW rmace with 29'lt down. Pall price ...... A&t ..... LIDOISLAND •Br. a ba. 2 fl'J)b .• den. elm rm.. 2 stones; street SPY•ASS PllCl....C• F..e..lkT.,_ Tramfer"9d owner wfll <*TY lat T.D. at oaty 12%. GorJreoua execuU•e home featuring 4 bedl001116, 2~ ballw. and a &ot more. Comer loca· bOn. room ror a pool. A steal at 1389.500. RCTaylorCo . ' ALLSTATE REALTORS SI lf,500 Needs jmt a llWe worlt, tu what a super value~ Single leYet 3 bdrm home in the popular California Homes. Irvine. Family rm with brick fattpla<'e. IDJrTOred bar, formal dining rm, enclosed yard. Located at end of cul-dt-sa<'. Call ID see. A Dlv1S1on of Harbor Investment Co co streel. noo sq. ft. on !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!' Vaa Clrvldo. S37t.i00. ManhaU RJt y 67s.44!00 R ;'l\ (ronl l.1do homr \\1th J l~t> Rdrm ... ma1d<1 room. sepa rult> d1nin11: room nnd a J l ' M R 0 a!isumuble loan .2SO.OOO. OCEAtRONT A Spect•Cular 3 Bdrm ocea nfr ont co n . domhuum. EleganUy de· <'Of'•ted. Laguna Lido comer unit to be sold furnished. Owner wall provide financing w /fan· USll<' terms. HWTY on thasone! BALBOA ISLAND REALTY 6'73-8700 1006 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 9.ory 2 Bdrm. 1~ baths. Patio. +garage apt. +2 rooms • bath auest quarters. sus.ooo. m.a I 002 G ,.,.. I OOJ .............................................. 9453 10YJ.20Va "" 11f Mi-11f W\T- «D Coldwell Banker OCIAN & IA Y V11W Large 2 bed.room & pool in choice Harbor View Hills. First Ume offered. By appointment only so call today. $210,000. Ill NllWPORTCllll'lllll .644~ J Dell'tiOMAL IACI IA Y llTATI LoOk thru the iron ••led rourtyard to th 2500 sq.ft. 4 Bdrm hom altuated on Q\:U a ' uro... Sho Uk n w and featu.res a ttd~ood dttk and spa. Gardlfn bat.h hous • larR~ 1ame room. RV 1tcra1 and many other extru. Nowsa.ooo. U~IVlJ ll£ALTORS. 675-6000 MU tat C~ H_...,.,, C0t•M 4411 ,,.., WE HAVI! J 31>1' TH IUAT U TINGS IN TOWflf CDl~t Boy ard Beach llAL ESfATE EXCEUEMCE SIMCl 1949 DOVH SHOllS AllA ••• Custom 3 bedr oom & family room home. Sparkling pool. Owner leaving area; Will carry complete financing. $272,900 . . . . .. . .. . . . . . .. Open Fri. l ·5 1200 Someraet Lane NEW-rPOR._IT_ HACH 631-7300 tOOI c..hiMne SOJ4 t' • --H1•M,...S. ....... ,..S., • thttlM'9ri9 of n~wparl REALTORS ., ....... HADY, WILLING & AIU , ...... .me ... ,. ...... ~ SIY*MS. .. ._.t.•1-.wt-.., ,..... ............. ..._,... ...... _.. ........ Jiilt 147',IOO. c.,_ .. Mw: Low ,,.c.4 ......... , 1-.11t '· , ~··-...... -l..J ... ................ 000 COU OF MEWPOIT REALTORS 25111. Coett Hwy •• C--.. Mw 675-5511 ftEHIMSULA ftotMT Ne\\.I\. d<.•t·or<.itl'd 1 bdrm fam1I.\' hom e: Ckt.'an vww ! $325.000. l.AYFROMT Wt• h uH• "t.'\l'l'<tl lint• home:- \\ tlh im·r & ~lip El TORO HORSE COUMTRY .t ll d rm~ .. :1 h a t h.., ~ ra 11 (' h s 1 "It'. mini estal<.' in nrnn1.w J!f'O H'!.. S2~9.SOO. BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR 341 Bo y~•O•· 011vt• N 8 b l''.> b lb l ••••••••••••••••••••••• OAI ... Dlalia cUv• new 2 bedroona. 2"' ba coa- doninh-. IUI&.•. ZJIDlmaAve,C.M. MH7M 1•11 I 104J ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••-••••••• -................ .--....:...... tff• ....... • .... _;;.a. to" •11~...... '°'' 7.a•OMl!W•--..-........... • r .. u.,_ ~ JUI( ......... ia:-4u1c1r -·;,:;:;;:.;:::···· ....................... .. ·-· .. ••••••••••• ·~c:-=.~::..:. Beaut. nei/110.-• 111 ~~ .. loeadon oo Humboldt plmtd alt •ve&op. 109J::r~•=:. ft. w/Yftttw. hev-•W. hland. 15• 1Up. 81 amit. 2 Bt '! deD-..!!d tlll*ld Iran ptes w/u t.111i, .. .-. Patna OWDer ,,... 000 n-a bM, J \.;mi 1 to""'" la 1 1 u rt 1'eDan. ...... m .Jm d.lly • 1153'1 c·.~O••I Lai. Nia Sal• pr1u ••c UI Ye .... wpo ~ • ,._ Sl45.000 0t-.. ror treo Baedl ....... l\I; ..ua. Lme. 714,_.1111. mo. ('714) tlH• Priec. to W•tcllff 1bopphtJ , Nlwport T.......,. c.o.do. .., Int. A<re •Sam S Y C A M 0 a I 1rtW I 044 QQ. taabet rrocn 9*,000. a.a-... ....................... a.,... Mlpll lltJ C., llam ~dally Jbr , 2...,ba, frplc • C*'Ulle Ule ...... i.ua.' ...... Pool. BBQ. aauna. 1123,000. 151·1102 or e.zm ....,. ~4MPAB or by appt. 1 °' aNe MIW n. nmt •aid.lit.ii Plan OCIAM YllW 5"-Cll14 hbuloul W. 3 bd. 2"' 3ewr! 2 leveb, 3 Br. 2'-' ~ 2 bdnn.-Is den ba. ~''ty townhome e. •family room. Brick TOWllbc>me wilh Larae "fWl.ll spe on patio. Bat loca· beautifully ludacaped cuw:lol. Only 4 available. tion fOf' privacy fs qWet. yard. Very desirable end h'oln Sl.14.llO. J&30 Seat.a Decorator Wallp!&:::in. wJtt is au.ached on one Ana Ave MU'114. . smmm1. drapee, 1k1e only. UPIJ'aded de- Sbmp 3 -twable. SlZK dn. Ut.990. Patrick Tenore. A#. GM•. lllClllS 21s38EDROOMS SLartinl at 1101.000. ~Victoria btwn Newport ls Hartlor Blvd. 541-355' E....141-3644 0 .W.C. ~~T.D. SlOO mo. payment.a. E · side 3 br. 2 ba. frpk. ram rm. A6I,. &cz. 9111111 " abutters. Earlh·tooe oorthnlouL .. DG.508 c.rpeta. Parquet mtty-.ffl.IUO 496-241 l Thia home 1oob Just Uke IJO.I050' 49J.'494 a model Call for f urtber deta.11. e-~ ; .".',1 It I ' 1 , f , i :r, i JU .. TOClll 2 Sl.ory,'4 bdtms. 3 bath.a. famaatU w /frplc. ck>H to • lhopplJ)' • parb.11.11,,500 JUST ELEGANTLY REDECORATED·3Br. 21/iBa Two hie . n r pool/om/St.Cira " aport.t facll. TP Me call ownr -.l.825 ii NA P~ Iv cmc d)' Jne. ... ,... ..... 106' ....................... Sl.171 ,_MOMTH_ 10%down. ~fin, OI' 30% -------- 'S a1J you pay when you lake O¥a" elUSlln& 10% loan on aenutlonal 4 bdrm Perunsub home! Walk to beach & bay. -.nu down. 103 fin. Mint cond. twnbae. SlOS.000. 64.2-0348. Yll'I Lne It! 4 Br. 2 ba. plush carpet. cwt.om shutters. covered patio. earden entry. SIJ,5,000, --------•I Seavlew • Gor1eou.' view, paladoualy dt .. DO'fBSHOUS Ulbt. airy. view. pro. ftUiona.lly deccra~ 4 Bdrm. 3 Ba home with pool and 1pa. Creative financln1 available . Mt5.000 HdlOll llDGI 2 Br 2 Be decorator's own home with a fantutac view overlookln" re senur and city hghi.s ~.000 UDOISLAMD Newly decorated • Bdrm J Ba on Fee simple land, vacant & ~ady lfK 1m medJate move·1n with r rt"at1vt" f1nanc 1n11 avatbble S3111Y,SOO P&eNSULA Duplex. completely re· cerated. ' bdrm home with la.r1e auumable. Imo. Call for apS)t. ~ view. Century ~1 Newport Center, MO-AS7 lO'k DOWN , 10 11"• INI'EREST. 3 br, l~ tNa, l '-'t bb::ka to ocean. Al· sum. 10% finaocia& or owner will llnance I cYt down. c.aJJ : Slar. 95'7-650'7 TwoaTWNHMI Sou1n& vawled ce1lmgs. 2 Br + den, $106.000. As· sumab&e loan in Newport Beach. Call Tim Rhone 831-1.2116 REALTORS f urtuhed. one block to bearh You owl) I.he land - Great fmanc:ing. S205.000 -------- ~ 759-9UI .... hlmd I 006 C•lttl www leach I 011 COlta ~ I 024 Costa MHa I 024 2 & 3 Bdrms. al l amerut.tes Pnced from S98.SOO Will exchange for bwldable land UOOLOVB.Y Eagliah COWltry sty le home, al.Ive wrtb charm & beauty Mas 11 1<e beams. duunc room, f uJI d sm " shadows Sff 1t & fall m love at ~.000. With•~. assumable 1st kJia.n. Lt· s most at WO&bAe. IEACff OUPUX •VlEW•. Only IS' to ~View Co.do 9'arp Newport Creal 4 Bdrm 3 bath condo. New· ly painted. pnvate deck. loads ol storage spa re. Owners motivated Of fered ul $175.950. For an appt ID see, caJ I S40-11S I ~,.. HERITAGE ............................................................................................ ~~'f!~fex C>CUrRONT HOME -------· ·------- IOo/oDOWN 3'900LE. 64.2-9560 1UrtJerodi: Glen Lowest pnced S bdrm 3 ba 3 r ar garage. Varant 1299.SOO CaJI 644-612.S Alt 6PM Clffenng 2 + den owners unit w/large sundeck & Iowa" 3 Bdrm rental unit Pnced at 1998.000 l"or more Info call Carol Hoff. agt. Pacesetter Realty. 631-0094 U'nUIAUOA Waterf rootage, 6 bed, S bath, 2 kitchen home --.ooo. 2.orled H·2. Call Robert Milliken for more Information 631 ·1266, _,...~-----~- OUTSTANDING HOME NR. SO. BA V BEACH BeauUtuUy remodeled & rmovaled 3 Bdrm, 2 ba. Lge airy r oom s + 2 Bdrm Alit. .. .5,000. &. halal & AllOC. ~ 675.Jlll Capht1 www .. och I 018 ••••••••••••••••••••••• By owner, custom S&muab llyle home w Jo oean view on lrg . comer lot. 2400 1q. ft. •Br. 2"'1Ba, A JC. 11ourmet kitchen. Bit. in 14fl. bookcase w JT .V. & ste reo s tora ge . Profes s ionall y land1caped w Jspll & apacious decks. Many bear ing fruit trees Priced at: $189.000 w/amwnable Joan of ap· prox. ll.50,000 at 11 v .. 'ii Owner wtll help fmance Shown by appt. '49~MH42 tn Capistrano Beach. 4 Bdrms. 2'-'t ba. fam rm. Sai.na bath ar hot tub. leach load IHffy. 496-0991 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IUILD TO SUrT ~30xl18' lot 434 8ejplla Ownr "lro-112.S !>-43-6148 s..fSa.d Located on prestigious Haul St. F1 ve houae1 from the water Fall asleep with aound ol sw'f. ~vu. bwltoo the C)'ll. Aa featu"ed in ~ Home Xaa. CaJI Tun Rhone Gl· 121111. REALTORS CNMACOYE Must sell this month. 3 & 2, ocean & bay view. 1349.000 Call 760-3211. 8.:l>to s :I> agt. Co&ta MHa I 024 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ass~.=loan & o wner may he Ip f1nanre on thi s 3 bedroom + den and 2112 baths Full pr1 re $108,900. Agt Cal l YJ6.2lfl60 or831-0'100. Cla.-;.,1r11'd Ac"' 642·567H ..... ,.. 1002 General 1002 ., ......•..•.•...•.......•.................... Uncler N e w Owners hip GREEN VALLEY REAL TORS Pr otess1onal Courteous Service .. 2toSBdnM Don't Walt . CHOOSE wtttt lpeclel u .. Your Fr• Dir ,MhHHUk• GI Clalt IMltlry -.sra. •ooo • 0 1 "o"'u A- fEW( Biii NOW! MANY YA llOMES . FR£E ltw lltlrlSt ... Buyer . .., .. Protection lftlllnt lnsurne You•-.. ......., __ ... _ ... NOW! CALL TllAY repa1r1 f9f t reef "'H 111.c .. uo w11111 IARROH I I r I I I I SCUM I I I l I 1J R l RA Ui I' I I I 0 D ' E M I I I' I I EASTSIDE 20HALOT Two indlVlduaJ houses on an R·2 lot. Each has a separate yard 8olh Ot"W ly pai.nted UlS1de & out. and highly upgraded Temfic location. Owners will carry 2nd TO fo'or rmre WO calJ. S40-I LS I ~HERITAGE . • REALTORS Trade your old stuH r or new goodies with a Camifled ad. 642-5678 "'SPACIOUS" ISTHEWOttD For lhi.s supt"r upanded ~1eu Verdt" home. It features a huge family room. beautiful pool and piillO and master bdrm with 11tt1ng room Owneni are anxtOUS ! For more details, call ~1.151 ~HERITAGE . ' REALTORS Sell W1th F.ASF.' lt's 11 BHEEZE Clas81f1 oo Ads 842-S8'1'8 GE .. 1002 GeMral 1002 .............. ,........ . ..................... . MINI ESTATE FIXER-CHALLENGE All WllAr •11~ Mewporl ~ .... • ..... appatt.lty fw tlM f*"Oll wtio ••ioy• • cl•••·•p aRd decoretl•9 ct.•aecga. ONE OF .A KIMD ~style ............ 7 bechotn, 5 bCL ... ..., Foo.I ..... ...__ ..... ~ poal. .,. ... 9•10w1 patio. st-..d ..... wl•dow1 lltro•9ho•t. lrlR9 yo•r IM11)inatloll! 0..... wHI Hd•91 for diMI_., boat • .to. . .....-.. SS I 5,000. 631-1400. O....WllR1 •c• 4 Bedroom. 1900 sq It. Mesa del Mar, bi g kitchen & big family room. $114,900. Agt 751·3191 MnoV_. fwlarhiur 4 Bdrm, -den. & huge famaly room with Indoor BBQ. pool. spa. new ap· pbances. Owner wm help finan ce . Full price S'l17 .<KM>. All 5.56-2660 3+lY.t. Sl12.000. SJ 2K down. owe. Prine onJy. 781).8Zll, 8: 31).S : 30, •It. .... ~~3Br.2~ ba, 2 car car . Prime hnancia& avail. Open home Set. Sunday 11·2 at3C7E. tahSt 13M911 $42,500 PER UNIT Eight 1 Bdrm.a. Good rent.al area. OwMr will help oo rananctac. In· d1v1dually me t er e d . Stoves & retrtaerat.on. close aaraaes. Call 64$-9Ull 777 • • • HOME INVESTMENT TRY 193110 OOWN . CALI.. NOW ' ' ' 6REDCARPET .. 754-1202 __;._~- SPAMSH HACl84DA This home haa ever· ythuia! Adams Model, W1th Uled roof. pool.a. sandY beach & your own back yard. too • Bdnna .. family with frplc., ft a areal U1wnable loan. 117'.0IO. R· '\ ll ~ 1 I I O-i°-P H· ·.1ltv • I',, .. ,, "I Glmmtllar. Byowmr. UGO.TOO 7Sl-<M25, 5$1-4.JSS. Bob ** .. SI.FT! Abloiutdy one ol a kind home ID one ol t})e crty 's IDD5t pnaUgMMM areas. 5 Bdrm. 3 be It ao much more. Call for your penon.aJ anspect ion. $195.000 SPECTACULAR SPYGLA~VU ,rofeui~ dKarahd .ct _, be c::: ...... with fw'N .... l ~ ... ' -OOM ..... wfth fonMI cllilllcJ roo._ f-"'Y l"OOllt .ct..,....._.. YllW ef .... ...... nus a be....... ,... & jocn:D. A perfect fGMly .._. for tlM °111Yomd ilt life" fmNly wlto ....,...... .....,! $575,000. 673·6'00 \\\lodbrld9c Reallu 551·3000 .!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1•!!!!!!!!11!!!!!!!!!! •n. Ber re llC' • ~ •> . I n-1- : OPEN HOUSE RE Al TY / WATERFRONT HOMES, t"C HlAl (.STATE ...... ........ ,,~""'""~ n 11. w ( , .... liw\ "'""f'i"I .,. "" 631-1400 macnab I Irvine realty A SUBSIDIARY OF THE IRVINE COMPANY ------ PIMIMSULA ftOINTt lmmaculale & compl etel y fu rnished 4BR r esidence on preferably quiet street. Open beam ceilings -2-car att gar -private patio. Walk to beaches. $325,000. Lynne Valentine 644-6200. <R-60) 752·1414 551-1700 (~ VQky(.nt• W~ (..,.., 64Z-IZ31 644-'JOO ci()I [)o.,., l>N• Harbor V-Y- ··-,, .. , .. ·-:=...... ·-aoc.... . .._ ·-'=-== .... ·~ ·-•lMM ~~ .. _ ,, =:= " .__ == 3 ~~otWc::.er SL S car gara5e. Robert Mllhken. Agt. 631 12166 .,...,., 1026 ••••••••••••••••••••••• New owner tramf ernd. IJUll sell $12.S.OOO 3 Br 2 Ba home. Will a ccept cuhttradetmotortiome on D>.<m equaty. Zoned far 2 more UDlll 681-890 F 1•¥.-.Y 1034 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IYO~ Reduced 110.000 for , qwck sale. Parkllde, comer lot. 4 Br. 1~ Ba • lrc P.R .. new pool Jjac., many ext.ru. S.1'8,000. 8CH258 • ............... o ....................... The Coklay: •Br+, A/C. Aalwne SI0.000-10~~. 11.58,000. Ph: 1-..os BY OWNER 5bd. 3be, d.IJt. ln1. den, I tr. lo¥ely home. Jot to beach. A lteal at IMl,000. ..... Dix 2 stry rondo. Walnut Sq 2 lfC Br. 2ba. atlach ur ll1ghly upard d. rucdy landscaped Next ID pool/park. 194.900/ofr CaJI Holly 770·32$0 or 561-Z'JUJ aft s pm Two Aclry. 4bd. 3ba, Tur tie Rock Haahland• Dll.OOO Alt &cz-e100 A HOME Desi~With GoodUvhtg In Mind This afmoat new ex· ecwve home ln Turl.le Rock Vista Townhomes, reaiur. 2 bdrm • 2 ba. " den wtLb wet bar. S Qwet deck.I. beautiful view. The perfect home ror en. lA!l'taininl an)'llme. See thia bdore com1derin& the purchaae or another home. rm.~ Redh 1 l I <7~ Realty 1;-;:{ -;:~1111 Unbelievable value In t.tu t.ce ~ on l i,., Iota on Lado! 1 bdrm mam boule. pl1a guest quarters! Truly a maan1f1cent prop~rty tbat ta pnced to .ell. ~mi ~Walker & lee Redhill <7~Re.1lty •. :-.: :-:;1111 •CMY• ~ acul.ar Coll <'OU1W elt&e. MOO aq ft. 4 to 6 Bdrms, S\ioa baths. Pool md apa ll.!i00.000. lllSJAmlS co. &13-n11 LIDOISLI l Bdnm., 3 full batba; iJI • vestor's delight. com· pfete4y f Wllllbed. E 11 • oellalt rm.anc1q ava1la· bW Move-m condltioo . loch•dJq aotid walnut cabineta ltl kttcbea + aparkl1n1 new bathnloml HL'l ih ii I <7~Re.1lty I 1 :-: ; -;-: :111 f sami. Low down, owe. Total pnce. S24S.OOO. Pnnc ooJy. .... Seda & A.MOC. 546-fSZ2_·_ S EAV I EW by owner Hampt.00 & New Bed ford 3br or 4br. Xlnt. view. Asaume loan. n• 5811122 • • REALTORS SJ' to beacb, lrg 7 rm. 2 • sty home oo R·2 90' lot. bulldable. S33SK. 7101 ~ashore.~10 CHOICE SEAWlte> MOHACO Hmtlafo v. Phase Ill Ta!>te1ully upgraded --------•I ~. Pool size yard WICT ACULAa with V\e'W ol mounlaina & "'POefr"-5 IOllM oty llghts. Pnced lo sell Only 3 yn new with QUldlly at $198.SOO with vauJted wood beamed Jumbo Sl4S,OOO existing ce1t1ng1. gourmet loan. Own/~ 7~ latchen, baJcooy game or&iMMl53'. rm• SX7' ape to muter --------- balh PLUS mw:h more. tlw._ View..._.. Now offered at o nly Lownt priced "Fee' $129,000. Owner fmanc-home. Popular 3Br UC avat CALL ..... 1211 lllanaco ''Vanilla'' coodi- "1n ~\f,ll iJl\l l fj & AS~Ulil\1[5 ~-SZl.500 cTr~ven R"c:ime w,,.,,W view. 11us re- modeW home baa 3 br. 2 ta. fam rm Is booUI nn. 1275,000. Rae Rod1en Gl·lal REALTORS CUFUUAYB4 '9RCTIOH R-t.c.dto S349,500 Owner Will all&ISl With fUWM:Ull. Proless1on.ally dttorated throughout ' Uon. Decionte the way you want! Sl89,000. Creati ve fin . Bkr ~~ --- ~m Z bdrm. 2 ba. W1th view. GOOK -.sumable 10.2$•~ loan. T ry creative flMpcjng CaUC>wner ~1230/M0-3'18 DWLD WtBt NeWJ>Oft-<lose to bacb! lmm.cl&lat.e 3 & Z or, 2 It 3 Bdrms. Very veraat1le, with new car~ta and builtlns . IZ7'9.000 fee. 642-5200 So many 1>pe<"1al features ,. ux:luded in Uus J Bdrm Pe-tt home. !>UCh a)) t"rench t · door.I. master :-.wte with /:f,,r I spa aod V1ew Step down u:; I 1 v 1 n g r o o m a n d !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! brt'akfast room View'! from uiiper bdrms . A perft"ct homt" for the fanuly that ente rtains LaVlShly 831 1400 HartJar View Home, 4 Br . lots ol fealW'e5, lrg MS· sumab&e loan. By Owner. 641)..5023 1111!!!! RIECl.OSUIE Sl.2.<KM>TAKES IT! OCUNYllW WITHUCMfTS Eurunc tn linel 4 Bdrm condo m Newport Crat sanouaded by creenery. Pnvate and newly de· coraled.. Nice d~ and SPANISH famJy room. Wet'"'bar. S"per co mmunity No quaWyiq. assume io.ns. 38r, 2~Ba Condo. Z.000 eq ft.. <Nwpt Hats). a..t sell by June 20. 1192,000·a ppra lud lliZ.000. HACl84DA (aabua tacl'1 teonla. QM IACIC IA y aw.no. GJ.1400. OW World Cll ... -WATERFRONT .............. HOMES ' bdrm., ,iool, bot tub, REM. ESTATE volleyball eou.n. Price · 631·1400 reduced t o 1499,000. O'elltive lla.andn.c. Br· lal often. 2515 lrvlne Avw.. (Back Bay> ffldda M.aroal Aaeot 714,...._IOM f!I Coldwell Banker . CO&Dwaa: UMKa es 111m11e experienced Real Eatate aaleapeople for thelr new loc:aUon ln South La1Utaa Beach that wlll open June 15th. Ir you are lntAlntlted ln movlna up JQ. tbeJ.atJe.st dlv.enllled Real Estate Company in the nation.~ ~H Earn1, Rtee n rn•l ~IOIO today for a conlidenUal lnterview J~ECREEK Pim e. A prime loeatioa: ~lbmt.aln view. l Y1' old. Deoontor'• own home. Spectacular! Smilh·Meyer Bk r . M0-5351 ~~2be. f o rmal din rm townhome. "EJe1aot" llel,500. HAS11NGS Is CO. ~ s.. ..... c1111 -101• ....................... VN:ANr LAND: Ready to build 4 atoey mint ......... WIPC*. COD• ......... to .. °' toaclo.. Owmr wm help w /all .. ;, -·-~~ .... FAHl'ASTIC Al.TO CAPllTRA.NO 1!1ial bctnD ..._....,. __ IMlllalmdal.Larpyatd 1 laH rooa for pool, .... UNO() a&AJ.. aTAT& ..... '- • J une I . 1llO ..... ............ 11 ... ....................... .... , ........... . ...... . ............. . ............. v ... .,~_. ...... ... cm>•••• ................... "'"".,.,_..... ,., ., ..... ....,,..... ...1........... ... .............. ................................................................................................................... ti 11 WW. J167 UM Mla,.tlMdt J7H c.e.M1M •24 Ml pallNdt Jiff ........... \9.......... ..--.~!'Ii~........... .................. ..... ....................... ... .................. .. HOllll9f'OaaDT ...... Ule .......... to ... th. l lrloww, by poof, -v.Mflillbr.2-....-• I ...... Prte.. ,,.. ...... lo ktl, DO -mo. °"· MZ-4IOO: QM ..... DO petf. 421 all • ..,..u., 17,_.U ....... l'llCld 1•rd • ..... ~mo . .,..aat h m.7m w.a.,.._.w _.,..._.....;.·-----••ra1••· raalllH _..,__ ' pl•H •. Kld1 • ••ta -. ... c.u-..-or Wat I 1ta JZfl ..;m. ___ am. __ A...;~-._• ._,._ .. _. --1 --•11••••-•••••••• HOME FOR RENT ••••••••••••••••••••••• HOUll 4 • -· 1'bcd 'Jud • ........... 3106 fl()l-.r 4sa ..... ram11y pleue •• " .................. . lbdrm. 2bi.--fam-rm. Kida 6 pets wekome' W•tcrfroat delue 3Br. frpf, brick patio. trs yrd, cau --« '7i.29'7t. 2Ba uppe r . Oa r a,e, Cul·d•·HC, w11rd nr . ~nor-. refrl1. frplc. Yr y . a>. 137..a.tll. • Adu Ila . no pe ta . 2 '*1n. 2 ba. all eledr. 2 •· 2 ba. .U aduJt.. ao carport, adWta no pets. P1t1 from MIO. Am1M M2$/mo. 173·0712 or rrom N.8. Goll Courie. SS.X10 ln1mlt ..... Sbown b'/ •VdYPIUVATZ- Wlllk to beedt.. 1 rm Cot· '°' ...,._, mall • 1ud. NO DOGS. ... pakl.. •per mo. .. moww ln. m Lab, ILJL .... 4 ... ,. ...., p 1 Jll7 COt\& Jleu . all for "'""'~·<.;:~·~· tfls ... IMda J2'9 SllOO /mo. Ut-7213, l400 ~-. Brod new Triplex. I_..._...;.. ~OQlJ....;:._.MS_MISS __ • __ bdrm., 2 be .. frple .. pvt. Ve rulllea Peotboue. yud. l child OK. •n. oc:..i view, 2 bdrm. Z Nim downtown. f41.alt ba .. fl replace, •·u II CIU'se.aa, 1«urtty 4' ameout ... llOO per mo. Wkd)'• 1 Br, poal.1Z7S/mo. Stove, MM814. Wlmda Is E•• .. ....... •••••••••••••• Bl)'fnlnl UtUe Isl. Boet refr11. 1a1/water pd. &1l20 Ne•POrt Beach, lBr. 1101 WhlUler Ave. ---------aeeurtty, near beach. •lip, 2 bdrm, 1 atory, ~ 3 Br, family rm. den, ~ !r!' ...... ::.=/mo. Yrly E/llde Zbd. pooJ, lldJt.a Nbnndt lnu.,1 &aid .... N1!°"to _,..._._ . ..,,_, ---,__;,----1 · p 1 an wa. _:_~------we E. Bey, newly dec'd. a-cti 900 .... :.. . S3l-4300. Cr ' ' ' .... ,. ' h 3107 s:m.MS-12311. m .Slf60 ,_ ...,_ I t 1• l425 .-.................. --------- ... -. OaU m.i.m 8:.,';. UtU DCL -yi. -••••••••••••••••••• Vt 6 , ,. I"' 1 quAIL 11 ...... .,,.,.. • ...,... 3242 ~I :s:-. 'R= ....................... ...,. .. Jill ....................... f15.e12 ar &':::J~/,4~ PLACE ~~~ ....... ==or•!1!t'b:i S&\VIEW ~ownr.3br or I 14ran+du. h a lt• NOfllll'm .. dr,IBa.quala&C.pe Cc>d sllp. aBr Sb•. beaut 4br. Famrm.. Bntoc.un rod, UM fr1*, 114.~ Style, 1'41blk!_l~ bcb. Cll'lt'I. much more. Beat view.ll40011o.Sl1·UZ2 ~ Call 161-Tm --10,-n •M ,,,.,. Frplc Pll&lo. -. area, Hm«f"Qllon Harbor' loc. ·-·••••••• •••••••• 4 Br, 2 Ba, very 11. all on l 1 bdrm. Garden Apt, atove Nr Bcb lBr. a er. 2 ba. dJWuh, pool, noor. lit.auW\11 new d1x • rdria. AdulU. no peta. ctupm. lie S&Z5 mo. dbl pr. Nr S. Cit Plau decor . frplc, pvt. nr S!ll5.c.al.1541-1J'77. 557-985 lorOlny £w\nl, All aeoo8' ft .$ yn okl. Sl2IOO Own/~. 213/165·126$, [Ix. 2 Bel. a.. frp&c. Gar. -------··l....:mo.=:..:'NIMll.=:...=~IT.:....-----i /831-SID 111 n l oc v u . Yard. ~--...... __. ...:7~14::.::::...=:::.;... ____ I S575 /mo. 7 59 · 94'8. '""'''"••••••••••••• awl CT~...,... 2 Br 1 bath dupt.• No Spectacular vlew o f 644-1122 '1IO-M48 ....,..:-"" E' ... ~..... !ft. asnobr. peC.I. Pvt bcb ...... 2bdrm. den. z...., _.:.,_...;___•;...._ ___ _ fllipS. 1100 Pride d f,· ~avail lmmed ba,pool.~.nuna,ten· On t h e w ale r , un . -•••-•••••••••••••• 1115.~· ~-OD y. Auiuat. llOO/mo. ms courta. 1 yr old. ~ hrnlahed. completely re· cnaee. Brand new 2Br . t Y&Ba. Clatom upcrada throughout Lr1 . " f'rwya, eo. IG-:m:t a.c:b. ba.y. Avail now. 3 BR 2 Ba r-•A Uo Olildra> OK, 9125 mo. • .-. pa • 2 2 er 2 Ba waterfront C:OO· 1012 West Balboa. Jeff CV aar.. a dult.a. 1525 do, The T~l"lJ. Ith n.r • 7»3m. ~s.t. 1.2-4.91 Plum-SUOO/mo.~ot &la Juao Capo, -.eoo. 2 ._. 19M>tll 8DbLaurtto522-6720. mocWed 2 bdrm. 2 ba ~J 2 Ba. ~ aq. ft lyn 8 Uolta, SZSS.000. 21~ Beam ttillnp, fireplace. cm.~stl~ Down. OWC bal S yrs 1244 spa, BBQ. Avail July 1 •...._-.,...,a "'. Bv , (K int lll yr) 9.1 X c~_, •Ol .... bo ........ ~/moall. ~,2·7 Boat ..... r.11.'hft I .... aJllJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• \Alll..._ VI..,........., ~llQwood, ZBr, 2.Ba. l& arou Jlm Valentine All Spedoul r Y m~. UNIV PK-3Br. 3Ba. ten· av · · Ac. Im .-ledk>n ...:Ml)al9'7:.::....:.:..:..._ ______ 1 Pt\. courtyard• beac ~ -5 mo th I --~· Sub It New pa int • car pet. Ol.S. • Jae . .-· Cl.ffbave:o Home w1 aJ Owns _......._. m nxER UPPER Av 6-21 644-4157 the extru. Mapilllcent olleir. m-0111. ~ll. Sl0.000 Down Prime H. 8 . .!A!!pnt!!!!!!!!: !!m.wQ!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I view. near high school. 3er. Zba, 2 car gar. no ideal ror older children. MOBILE HOK ES: Beat ·-T.D. ~.=a at 10% ,..--"-.... l224 pets. Univ. Park. $625. $1050. "mo. 892·3385 or &dedlon l.n be•ch areu ._ ...., -48r, 21,')ba,eJttra s No · Full p r ice 179,500/ ••••••••••••••••••••••• n.......rfl ld S880 642--0565. AlJsW:w lcprices. 7Sl.a7 •2 Br c.ondo. nr. So. Cat pets . ....,.., e · · TorWM Plau. pool " spa. CJOO. Skrra M1imt Co 641·132-' :ir boat slip, poeh, 3Br. .... .._. LahfwS. 2200 No pe t a . 751-8166 ; WOOD B RI D G t.: 2Ba,lllOOmo 972-8421 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1S1MR17. Sycamore. 4 br , 21,') ba. 640-4919 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I Morro Bay-ocean vu lots _:.:::..=::.:.:------.----- from $2990, wa lk to ••3 Br. 2 ba Condo nr S. frplc, <kn, patio. Across 3 BR. f'am Rm condo for beach terms av a I I. Ost Plaza. Pool. spa. Gu from pool, tennis. Avail. Lse. Harbor View Knolls 2bdrm Mobile home ln Nnport BHch, 100 yrda rrom beach. Call Ad· Sitter #17, 24 hrs, eG-GIO. -P'AU.BROOK G.v cmrse fronta1e. 1.80 de«' view or mountains fnim this 2'X60' 2 Br, 2 ba, spa cious h o m e . Jacuzzi le 8x20 encl lanai. 2 stcnge spaces, euy care ~pmg. Slepe away from clubhouse, pool, t.emus crts le lat tee. $64,500 terms . (714) ~10 IRVINETIIEGROVES 2Br. 2Ba. dbl gara1e. $61,500. owner / agl. 544-4910 dys, 731·0599 eves •EXCITING• 1me1..I!Cff# ~ded Villa West Home, 20x60, I...agwia Hilb n icest 5 star park. corner lot w/large patio area. Air cond-only 127,500. (.JK:ila). ~'ctl~=ed cpt • drps. l9'T1 210x40 ~line. light inL Watlt· in closets, 2Br. lBa, YCJU111 adulta welcome. IJD603). 881-842i p d . $595. 75 l ·6 166 ; June 20th. S79S ~9991 BX> mo Pool & Lennis 751Ml217 · ntE W1U.OWS. 4 bdrm. f adl av!. 673-2717 ~Delef't, 240Cl IODS~OIC 2ba, liv rm. din rm. encl EXECUTIVE HOME .. ••••••••••••••••••••• EuUlde · $li95. aar . & p&Uo, fen yrd. S575/mo. Backbay. 3 br. 3"'2 ba, ------111111~ .... p atio. Fen ced yd. 644-1480.83().5050.ext40 atnwn.lge yrd Gd loca · FOii LEASE 642-25100f'64&-4848 1 bdrm. Condo: Refng.. tton SI ,000 pu m o New 2 ~m 2 bath 3 er. 1 ba, 2 car gauge. pool loc .. lenn1s. $395. 646--3893 _____ _ home. Mission Lakes 21111 Canyon llB. Onve Rudy Day 7S2·78SS. Eves NEWPORTCRFSI' Lrg 3 Country C lub. ~ollf. by ml/mo.645-7009. $9581 Br,"""'a"V1aw,part1ally t.enrws·pool. Beautiful y -=::....=::..:..:...:.:..:..:_____ _,.....,_., .. landscaped, no main· LOVELY HOUSE . 3bd, TIJRTLEROCK GLEN. rum_, avaJI now 673·8139 tenanceyard. d h,nr ffoag "bch.Lse. Beaut 5 BR. Tennis. llmOClubhouse. R . ~ tw&l03S. Pools 408-988 l.234. u t Oe9ert Hot Spn ngs 2J3..378-2572 ~DEL MAR, 4 lge _2l_4 _______ _ Miaalon Hills Country Cub. 3br, 3be, upgraded. Umlled. Luxury coodo. BR. 2 Ba. din·fam rm. w I 1\atJerock Glen 4 br. ex entry lt1tch. Child r en ec home. Prof. decorat· welcome. no pets. no ed & landscaped. View sngls. 1700 mo 546·9633 m> mo. 7S2-01B7 an 6pm. ~ goU coune. SlJl.000 Prime West.aide twnbse first 9 7 /8 %. Value Uke new. 2Br. 21,')Ba. 2· S!J86.000. Want to sell or leYe!. SS.SO/mo. 642-0346. trade for equi ty in Npt. Bch. home w /view le Homey 1 be duplex. lncd yard. Douglas Honig, yard. encl. g.arage. No 7U-973--U91 (ownr.> pd.I. 1285 mo. 548~ •v:• ,...__ J Bdrm 2 Ba, E.alde, big ~ 2700 yard. 2 car 1ara1e. SIMO. •••••••••••••••••••• ••• _SMo-411W8 ________ _ MIMI UNCH 2Br 1.Ba.17th" Newport. A fantutlc -acre plus "5o. tu... ranch with lovely 3 G-18U B d rm h ome a n d · ~~~·in Super Sharp, hu1e 3 midst ot miles al nding bdrm. ...., be. <Alldo. J og 2 trails, In Orange Part to........_ ....... so--..1A a /c d bl Aa'tlll. 3 piped corrals. .......... ~. t"'." .. • w '"""'"""" rlng tack room. gar . • a v a 1 I . n o . ~ ' 16$0 /mo. Call Gary RIHTALS 2 BR. 2 ba.. .. . .. .. S575 2 BH +d. 2 ba. . . . S750 2 BR. 211\1 ba... . ... S750 3 BR. 2ba.... . ... S77S J BH, 2~ ba ... S750/L5-00 4 BR, 3 ba ....... S78S /825 3 BR. 2 ba. $800 AnBheim Hills NWPT CREST Spectacular ocn view. 2 BR. <kn. +oft' 212 Ra, secluded. rplc bar. ai50 Tenrus, pool, elc 673 21Bl 2 bdnn_ SpaclOUS Condo on u~r Newport Bay l2•• baths. fireplace. VJew. 2 car garage 1 year lease. ~ per mo 1st & last + S200 cleaning tee. Call Mr. Fuentes at 833-0070. 4 IDl.M. HOME t block to ocean. pool. terws. bui!Uns, unlurn S850 per mo ~. 8 l-O S. 646-U118At\ S. Sat/Sun . _911:2-~1'11B.~~~~~~- don osen CLASSIC 2 b d rm . Co lt age Rancho S an Joaquin MOllLIHOME w11arage. 10 m10. to Townhome. 2bd. den, SensaUonal new 3 bdrm. 4 beth b uchfront home. Wet bar. conversation pll, 2 fi r eplaces , dramatic entrance. forever view. yearly lease Agt. 673-7300. Hartxlr View 4 Br. family rm, dining rm , rully landscaped. view. xlnt locauon t950. 21.J.790-512!1 r,.altor.., SALES beach. $425/mo. Adu.It.a. pool Adults $675 m o. 2706 Harbor, Ste 206-A l'M" Prospect, TusUn DO pd.s. 631-48118 752.ae80 .!!!!!!!!!!!!!5!!!!!4!!!0.!!!5!!9!!!3!!!!!7!!!!!!!!!!!I ____ m_.J_1_11 __ --i 2bd, 2"'!.ba Condo. FI P _B_EA;.....tm--F'lJL.--3-B-r .-2-b-a By o wner , 18 acr e, frplcs,pool,jac,nrbch, endtownhm,a/<',garop· horae/cattJe Ranch ad· nan-amkr. ~. nr, pool. ten, walk to joining National Forest 2 :IJdrm.. crpt.s t.hruout. lrg park teOO mo lnclud as· m i f r o m L a k e fenced. shaded yrd, dble soc. dues. 552.5093 eves. Harbor Vir# home 3Br. fam. nn. SSOO/mo. Avail 7·1 Ga rdene r Incl. 644-5865. c_ ... , ..... , Crypb 1500 ....................... Choice lot, Westmlnater Me morial P a rk in "Garden of Four Se.alona" Ad Sitter #163, MZ-G>Oat hrs. D=~ 1100 ....................... ~=r=o... 110 5,000 . R ob e rt Mllllba A#. &:Jl·J.211 .._ ,, .... , 2000 ....................... 4PLIX~S ATIOM ~ lftyou l.2<'k U1L In the heart ol one ol th• beat Investment areas In So. Calif. At .llJcgrou tbe price b only SUIUOO (or (our 2 Bdrm hOrlW OD a 50x:MO lot. P'OR INFORMATION c.1644-7211 Jn Nl[J[l. A lil\ll.f. Y ~. , 1 l\~'::iUll/\ll5 SiJverwoocioo Hwyl.38.2 gar, washer/dryer, Woodbrldie Con do, 3 houlee + guest house. 3 548-76.11to6 be.ms, 3 oorrala. 2 excep. l'i60lmo. pm . bdrm.. IV• ba. $600/mo Uooal wells. all quality ~ a.fler Spm. lse. M2·3339 Agent. corutructlon. S3l5,000 Utr. lrl. yard, l am all doe T ur tle roe It Brd m r . 4 lenllS. 714-Jll9.22U. dL 5'25/mo. See at Z39 E . bdrm. 2 ba. Lease or ......... 22DdSl.C.M. leaae·opllon. 1775/mo. belt• ,. 2100 New a u p e r a h a r p ..;Apnt_:..:_54_1·_5032 __ . ___ _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• townhome 2bd. den, L.aiJ-a .._,. 3241 For trade. new townh<Mlse 2~ frpl. dbl gar . pool. ••• •• •• ••• • •••• • ••••••• 1n ~valon:. San.ta Jac.aauna.Nodop. SIZS 4 er. ocean view, yard, C&talina ,!-1. FaJ.rV1ew Wayne, agl. l!:.'50 mo. avail. 1mmed Terrace <called the ~9181 96'7-19000f'640-934S Beverly HU.ls ol Avalon> 3 BR 3 Ba, compl furn .. all new, neve.r lived 10 Pool. tennis, sauna. Jac:uz:z:i. value 1275.000. W/trade for apts in Newport Beach or Hunt· U'lllon Beach.. Pvt Ply. 213·634·6484 wkdya; n4-84().2682 f'VS /W knds. F ,.,.., l2l4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• BeauW'ul 2 br townhouse w/crpta, drpa, f r plc, A/C, 2 car garage. 2 batbl, pool. a50 mo. lat 6 last.. Call Dtana days 51.550; eves 4"-3611M. Years lease lge 3 4br, 2 ba hilltop home Att pr~e 900 mo. 497 .3524 MonthrvSat L.aiJ-a tolpl l 252 ···········~··········· 2Br. goU course condo on Hartor RJdge; 4 BR Kens· i.ngl.on Model. reservoir view ; a uarded gate. l2000. mo. Sunny One Realty, ask fOf' Ellen. 56l~Of'752·5111 Walk to bch, 3Br . 2Ba. 2 fpks. UM ot pool & tennis oouru. avail now. l800 mo. yrl lse. 552·5088 AM only. s.a...... 1276 • •••••••••••••••••••••• Shar1> 2 +den. + 2t,oiBa, 2 c ar atlached , washer/dryer. rfg, incl rec. centu. 2 blocks beach S575 mo S.C 770·6084 LaC a r re Realty rairway 2nun to beach. MJaaion Hilla Country HOMEFORRENT SSSO /mo. 661 ·1080 or s..a- 3 Br C'TS. Focd yard " 499-5364. C•'tf: wco 3271 Cub. 3 bdrm. 3 ba., UP· on.......... Family please _....._;._ ______ _ -"-' U L ..-~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. .....,.,.. nused. uxury KJd.s le pet.a welcome. Large Exec. 4 br .• 2 ba. Lulaa'y 2Br. 281. frplc. he Condo. On golf course. Olli flM.2:566 °" 973"2971. New carpets & drapes. paUo, AC. elec 2 c ar $131,000 first 9-7 /8%. Agl, ooree. Larae yard. •ltached 2 garqe opir. pool. CJOO Value $266,000. Want to car 1ar. 1796/mo. lnclds mo. &42-4300. Ad-sitter eeUN orBtradeh fhor equlty1 inh (J(qeouaH . 4Lbdnn. lo/• bda. Gardener. Open Hou.se #218, 2' hn. pt. c . ome w t ouae. arge y a r . Slit. Noon till 5. 29701 An a View & yard. Douglas Gardener. t625. A1ent Mari• Lane. Aaent. Oassirted Ada. your one· Honig. 714/973·1191 _• __ 1.53S_. ______ 1 9157-0701 957·0669 stopshoppln11 center (Owner). lk._ ...... l240 ;;... _____ .....,..:,._ _____ _ ~.... . ..................... . --------• Wtllhd 2900 tlepat2bdrm,famrmti ••••••••••••••••••••••• den. ('725 mo). Plu b W~17?~ ~~ I BUY HOUSES AT crpta, 2Yt ba, e.clar le 950 1 l1Ma. 5 bib to oe.an. 70 llbl car pvt 111, tlally OF MARKET VALUE malnt. yd. Adlllt.a. oo •No Fee .. lDqul.re al 527 lab •lmmld. P\lrchue a. '7M eeo.an. =~--ready IDI0!:8P'Oll RENT ~ I Br. P r leed from ..... Fled )'arcl • .. ,. ............ . ~~~~~( Li*tw\ Adlm.. ~ard paUo. '500/mo. 2 Br l Ba. l bouN from !llS-%8 ocarJ Sf75 mo mcl. uUI. .ll6ce ,., __ 2 bdrm 1 b M15,qweUBr.2Ba, frpk. --· a. petjo, poot Adu.It.a. Ml m4B1 507 EBalboa ................. d ,.~ .. ......._ 3122 Fenced yard, gara1e. Amp Way. ~5607 or new pal.Qt $175. lst. last &M--Oll06 le SLSO security. 2029 ---·------ Wa llace . Apt E ., Prom ontory Poin t. ....................... ~ ....... ..... , .... 1707 ;;,;_··u;: ........... : .. . ••••••••••••••••••••••• lean6:. ~ ery S.-2778 F•buloua Ocean view, Small Bach Apt Elderly c sunny .-v mo genlleman onl)' Ullls 640-4030 La I b I •. tBr w/loft. $800/mo. rge r w patio ar 761).8241. paid 1150 per mo Brand new 2 Br, 2 bath praee AduJta. no pets --------- 6Th!i6S4 Alt 6 PM duplex. Finest 1n old Sl&S ~77 Venallles 1 Br beautiful c-. Mesa l7 24 CdM. mo. Ph 673-4485 MESA VERDE 2 br garden apt w/pa&Jo. BBQ. IUlih grounds, pool, lower. gar.. c lose to spa, gym, $.'500. 646-8389 shops, bus. etc. Adult.a, ••••••••••••••••••••••• CASADIOltO ALL lmUTJES PAJD WANTED. 1 BR or duplex w1pauo, in CdM for sngl woning female w /dog ~UO() range. Ad Siller 2. call at hn. 64.2-GlO nopets. 1375 ~5446 Large bachelor. f /p , Compar e berore you rent Cullom des ign 2bd. &Side off of 17th. f'rpl. gar, patio Cats Cit Adulta. $400 Call on ly7-8 PM 5Jl-484S ----features . Pool, BBQ. Bachdor. walk to beach. cov'rd garage, new and ston!S. uul pd. S360 furniture . i.urrounded 497_.e1 with plush landscaping ---------- Adult 1.tvmg Jl lls best 2 Bl 11-z ba. 2 stry. rrplc, Nopet.s pool, deck. beam ce11's. ..., mo fret" rent 2br. Iba a p t. Nice, quiet M1ghborhood elert & water pd 137Stmo Is l & last + Btt dep Qwet worlung adulu l s m duld OK No Pets or wat.erbeda (Jpen Houae Sat June 7. Ham 3pm at ZM2 Elden A pt 8 to ftl I out appl.tcauon or call ~ 2 bdrm furni.shed S480 bitns SS35. 6i3--047J ~W. W&Jaon.6421971 ------ SUSCAsrTAS f\im~ f hr apt S300 & up Encl gar Adulls. no pet.5 2110 Sewport Bl 548·4968 betwn 8 30 " 5'Jcn _____ _ I ..... ""'°" IMch 37 40 ••••••••••••••••••••••• H.l's RNEST Spa.rush F..6latt' L1v1ng • Ueal.lllfuJ park like i.ur roundtngs TerracPd pool Sunken gas bbq, !tparkltng fountain-, Spac1o u 'I r oom -. Separate dining .1 rl'a Walk·in closets. homl' like latchen & cabint'ls Wa lk to Jluot1n gton Cent.er l Bedroom furn from KIO 2 Bedroom rum S500 Adu!~. no pet:. UUllues Frtt · 2 RR 2 Ba. So of Hwy. walk to bch Old CdM charm rplc. S"ilS mo Mr Duggan. 752· l ll 1 lt24 ••••••••••••••••••••••• l Bdrm apt F.ncl garage. gu paid &f.2.5073 3 Bdrm apt. RICI paid Encl pr. adJb 642 5073 2 Bdrms, I balh apt Adults Gas paid 642 5073 RAM>MEW Beaut adull apt. Spac 2 br. 2 ba twnhse w If P • blt.m. L R. pauos S4SO to $f7S 642 L603 TSLMgmt s:MOto P50. 1 br. l ba apt, ,_,. IP· frpk, bundry rm. .Ubftna. adults oaJy. TSL Mont 642·9412 J Bdrm. 2 ba bltln<i Gar laund ~mo 782 W W&Jaon 548 5186 3126 ....................... tbd. gar. stove & dis hwMber Clean S340 2U~ 7257 t Wi.q°" leocJ. lt40 ••••••••••••••••••••••• UM!Jy all adult. no pets. 1..2&3 Br apt.I 6200 Ed cncer. h-~~19 LAQUlNTA HERMOSA l6Zll Parb1de Ln. l bllt W ol Beach. J bllts S of FAulpr 2 Br,,_ drapes. l chtkt dL no peg. S1IO rail. -SleTa Aqmt 641 · ll24 847~1 ~WALJC Le 2 & J br apt.a from MSG Frplc, larae )d. peao. pr, or Hunl.Ul~on ffart)our, cb1kfren OK. 11&2 JLb Cirde, apt l , MMll07. OieWR PoOktde xtra lge 2tr, 2ba. Bhm. dshwhr. ,..., miles beach Adlts. no pets S39S mo SJ6..Qi2 i.,--.... 3748 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LAGUNA BEACH MTR INN Maud M'rv . l'r>lor TV. heated pool l til (7141494 5294 985 No Coast Hwy Mt wpori IMc:.h 37 69 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WE KAVE SUMMER RENTALS WEEK OR MONTH associated 8 A' (.) t-i f N .. , P f A l T ( J II ~ l l]' Vlt l ulhr v , ' '"'-I THE "GOOD LIFE" Yf:AR·AOUND FUN. Social Ac.t1v111ei Do rector• Free Sunday Brunch• 880 s •Par tof'S •Plus much more OAEAT AfCAEATlON. Tenn•t •Free Lessons (pro & pro 1hop1•2 Heelth Clubs• Sauna• Hv<Hom• uage • Swwn· mono • Goll Orn11ng Ranoe BEAUTIFUl APART· MENT8: S1ngtee I & 2 Bedrooms • Fur n1shed & Unlum11hed • Adult Living • No Pet& • Modol• Open d111tv Oto 6 Oakwood Garden Apertmenta •28r Condo. nr So Cst Plaza. ~ 6 spa M50 ;-.Jo pets 7Sl 6166 , r.i&-02"17 SU CST PLAZA 3br 2bll Condo t620 2br . lba Condo M8S No pel.5 968 3652 , 556·2627 o r iSl.al8'7 ---- 1800 sq tt 3 be 2 ba 2 fplcs OR f"R dshwttr. dbl itar no pets SIC>~ CloMTolMch Nt'w bacl'lelot. all ulll pd SiLoYt' & m n R S290 mo SJ&:M:'l6 oc ~ m~ 2 bdrm ,..., ba To ..... nhouse Security . t.enrus. spa, l(aragt' Near bea<'h V60 577 1 o r 7Sl DlO 2 Br 2 Ba, deck. near new, Nf-wef' 3Br . 2Ba. frplc · garage S450/mo A~t tower tnplex. Nr So m.a;ro 631 ~ Ost. Plaut. Eocl. gar No ~ 1525. 644-S623. 3 Br townho\L~e. patto, ..:_ ________ comm pool, qwet 10<'. .e8tiBJIU BeaUUluJ garden apts . Poool & spa. Adu.Its. no pfta ZBr.1 ba M3S 161 E 18th Street ~ 2 Br. 2 ba S4SS 3111 W. WUsoo Street 6.11-S513 cm. 2 br. 1 ba apt. indry rm. pool. beam cln11. 8dults. DO pet& TSLM&mt 8421603 ~-q~~. No ldda/peta. $150/mo. CalUelU31·18 MmiUs to beach S42S mo Call 549 7971 for ---NMr bead!. new 2 BR 2 Ba QJt. 1t.artin1 at SS50 per mo M~ see For tn· focall~ WARNER/ALGONQUIN 2BR. I Ba. Om GaraRe. ba.lcony, laundry I c·h1ld OK. no pets S42S + 125() depoa.tt Call 9M 2566 or 973-2971. act. no fee 2bd. lba. pr. patio. no ptU, mo mo +depoe1t Warner /Beach 846-9401 NICE 1 bdrm .. paUo. pool, 1ara1e. frplc . trees. 1305/mo . 142·5251 fl 1G-151S. REALTORS ..... lt44 ---------_ ................. . 2 • Ooado with pool, utU ' Eaa;.~ireab rm• ..,..... "50. mo. paint, new d ecorator ..:54J.»'10~.;;;;.;~aftet'~-•-·---­ pouo. step& to bch. S28S yrly lease. 1116 West Balboa. 714·673·51B7 or 2'13-tm.2542 Af. hoc"'' ... wlslMd orlMhaal .. d ltGG ••••••••••••••••••••••• Saliud Yil•e ~ 1&2 bdrm luxury adult aplS an 14 plans rrom $390. 2 bdr m townhouses from SS3S + pooh, tenrus. waterfalls, ponds! G~ for coolung & heallng paid From San Diego f''rwy dnve North on Beach LO Mcf'adden I.ht.~ \\est on Mcl"adden lo Scaw1nd Village . 171<\1~51911 4000 ....•.................• Rtiom. .. lor Men. Pnvate entranc ... cooking. LaJtUOa Beach 497·3687 ~p·.: on!~. no rook ·g, for older cmpl 'd non · dnnk'r s mkr. $75 /mo. L'tl & l:ii.t 1$4.3 Orange, CM I Bdrm + b11 pool. J3l' Nr F<.11>h !sit-S200 mo + !tee depot.~. --------- Susocar R...tah 4200 . .......•...........••• Ill' to bch. lrg 7 rm house + )ard, :.le<'ps 6+, falJlllyl'l I only wkly : Jin'~ Jul ~. Aug $6.$0 7 101 St-a:.hore . ~10 Udo ls ll.', I HR. l ba . 11oalk to bearh. C'lub & t~'fUU.' ;\gt 675 6161 2 bdrm I ba Walk pn l b('h $55() Wl'i'k , S2000 m 0 . 49!>-4644 South Lag~~~ _ LAGUNA BEA C H OCEANFRONT. Pvt· secluded. fo'urn. Ma• 1mum 2 persons J une, Jul\. Au11 SS001mo. 4.'H.4J64 or 641.SJW. Palm Desert Tenrus Court Estall'. ~umml'r $1200 mo Gardener. wkly maid. 337·92'74. 568-4306 3 Br. 2't.~!~ June & July Also year ly Call V1rg1n1a O 'Brien 67'3-T.n> Cd.M -4 br exec home avail Jul) &,or Aug Fully eq111p Call 6i5·3280 --------- Vacation R...tah 4250 ....••.•....•....•..... MAUl KAPALUA RESORT 2br. 2ba. Jae in condo 21J..470-J21:? ....to .... 4300 ....................... Moring! AVCJid depc»ita le cut llvin1 ••penaes ! Profeulonally sin ce 11"1. HOUS&eATIS aMU4 Newport S.ach/No. 880 lrvma t11161ht crpt.a. drapes. walk·lD dolel. pvt pottb. pool. c.arpor\, IDdry rm. NO PETS. G• 6 •atw pd, sm mo. ms ....-&n. M5 E.Jab. ..... Al'ft.YMOCHAaM D~-~· I Br, 2be. ~ condo .-..! SbariQI Seniee w / 2 c ar 1 a r I n fflaJloomm ... ForYa. O.aqetrff. l'ull rec ..,..7c1Qa• 1111 (Tl4) 645·0550 .... port Bffch/So. '700 16th St 1Dovlf 11 •Ott>t (714) 642-8170 f..:il IDcW pool, tea crt, Wllll&ed. Female an.. ""'9lt rm. emaa. Avail II.-.......... rooCD· Jvq L t llo ...... -...... for ..,.., Jtrine 2 a-. t ba, all elec. 1'1 E . per mo 11.eq a.t/lut p&m CIDDlb .... JUD. Jab St. Apt C·I, ,_mo. 11:1Dlec. dlpoa. See lo ap- MU03Z. pnc. aaum..,.. ..... M/F$ BR. 2 BA. ........ nr •-twJ. Is So. Oat Plua. 1Ar113 br,Z ba.~ .......... -IWO(lpa. -+ utll. ·~~~~~1!!11111.WRI.. ..................... ,...... ltld• • P•t• ........ ''Ill -·· ca.u-.--1ar•1• ... , .......... •••••••••• -.n.. AIL, nor ... ~ Jl44 -.-.,-.---.. -.-..... -,-.-klde--.1 Ye6PiXd-W ~oJr~. .OCEANFRONT. avail .... dallJ. weekly. Spec· &aallar' ..... mstJRF . ..arOCC. No ..... MIO. -·••••••••••••••••• N*lorWalt.141..-U ..-. OcHofroot 2 bdrm. ...:m:::...:==------1 rtrepla&lJ 2 8tor1. Elly_,._, tz. Deeda 2 Bdnm. l batb. Oar. -/mo. ~ -.1o-..1rbeb, Na. \'le ._.. 6 Yortaowa. Pwll married ......... ,. .._ ...... ... 8lOOIP amrALS 91 ,...... or moaUl, no --~110 Pool. Adulta onlJ, DO .....,, Kib, tm;l4MllM ... ,........... • .. 1..=::...::;;;.;.;..;;;;;~ ..... --peea. ....................... -.... to* 1loui4t iD -.•1111 ~~ _tp!I rrtJ~~ um~~ .. 7_, •·1 You lf"af request Ad-Sitter ~ ~ ar: a.; a•.U lmmed, .. Ml'l•llJ ell nHt occ. aao. ./IDO .. lat. last +MC ., --llftlPll. BeautHalb f11rnbld1hed ct.p.e15-131l. COUMTIYQ.UI ....... -~ 1 Ptot HouH 1 rm . ~ Rllpoall-,..._.. cnntr1 Club ll It• a , Ula • ..,UO. lod.ry rm Sl.aal•.-1~-l>edroom ,_,to* 2 .....,, a M , placing yox od . . . cu Ad-Sater number wilt oppe« in ywr IQly Pilot ad .•. M-Sitttt tabt ywr m111 CIQl9 •• . you call In at your c:onveniera to get the AllpOf-to your od ••• thl& MN1ce Is onfy SS per w11k. For more Information and to pica ~ ad call Mt-5611 '."'llltlH. $1050 /mo . •mo •·-~--•"'* ln La1u1 Hiila. .Nu7• ...-.tuP11. =--.t..1900 a1mo+~ utll. can ~""~· 211rllall0t Home. ut.il pd, Ne ar new lbd • fba 41r ... ..,. 11. all oo t In ..a to bch .• mo lo _.... pMI OK Mii· ftoO, w cw.a& .,.. cl.ht ..=.;::..._ _____ _ •••at. 'JM.._.. .US-1...,.. ..,.;,, trplc, pvt, nr ftilij; mid•'• t10 * •r- biida. Be'ch bcMI 0.,... a...• MJ. Avail DOW. -a MI le, .... OI U.. _ ... NI ~ a.up OS, -mo ...... nc f8CU. fttM •-•· ae..troea. tBr,llLaJUI•~ ., -. ..... 1.n ._•·ca-. Ciltb --·-~··· .. --. •im polk.m.4114. •llll ,_,,, ...• ___ ....... . II II 1111 ............... a -I--&. -_.,__ 0r&...,.,. •• arki .. lot ~ .. --· ..... n•leakoaUq. ,. llM. ' rtW ,&w, ... Aafibit, .... .,.. ,.,. ..... ,.. aper. Ue"-u..-., ..... ~!! ........... . 1'W ...... wo ... wlll ..... .. .•. CUl'l'Oll IJllRA10 1 CARPICNTllY &yJay .... (#9 ... ,... ddld .... _..._, -.rri~ .._..Jnpalr. lot / .. l &Cll~...,,. _ fln l•h . o ld ti m • ~ -., 8al. taJ. t refttma1111 blp, 2nd boee, •lieu . y ard. _........ Mr Palom a.am bD.A.Qtlme•.f314 c 161 C I r•a ....................... . ..................... . A NEW JOB WmtOUT ltSUt6 TOUR PlhlNf OHi • ~1ott pe.,-c:.., .... ol .... C~hW. OM••~ ..• ,. u.no1wl0,M ....... ""'*-"'.,..,...,..... ... .....,,.....Of......, .... We .... v., ~----..... -e-_____ • k'OH IN _., --,....., .._.. --,._ .., tft1ef._.. TI\iiill t .....,_ .. COIN lil1 l..,,. f'Ollt to f~ lr\4' ..... _ -' .......... -"'9 I CNlnQIP ll' ate --... .....,._ .. _o1 .. caa io.11HOcor.n ... _ ~~~ t::n:j 7lr A~tlolf Proplr 1ooeai.1.,.....s. Svll•l70 SMf1.-~ .. ,., .... , ..... 14JI 10050" WOiie Ad Su ... :190 CUf>Oft"'Q CA ~IC ~! .............. . ,.,.,u •orl ; Hte IL8C'l'SICIAN·~ ~ ua '*· w&U rtldlt-rret •U••l• oo --~---..... .man,.. C..-t ... ... Lie. ..... .,... l:LECl'1UCIAN n 1rvb". amaU • ......... 11NMS .. Re ....................... .. ... -••••••••••••••••••••••• ....._. drJwall. pluaab Ula. e.,.....ary. E xper Call Rkk · Hl-Mll or Bnu:~. I' • I ....................... DOC~ SldOloeder. dump lrue k . \lrade . hlul. Dml-.-... ................... . ..,..1>6 '*-m rlean OD6ar llri ....... : wht CS* IOCDID bluch. C1eu liv. clarm. h811 m . Ava rm IJ.IO. ClOllCb ao. cbr a a..-eUm pet odor. ~ repalr. 15 Yt'I upr. Do work ~. Reta .531.()101 LAil •lftf-"""a' refiblah Haullo1·Movln1. Con· 1CIUf' flU'D . Call Mike c..-e • Lne removal. ..,,., p .!llf-1111. ~W'ric9.ta.7D ....................... °" Y CARE, North C.M. Aael$•up. l'\llltime. ~97~ Cut:eetor ••••••••••••••••••••••• lnter oa llona l Estate Rmovaters. Specialty an CUltCm home construe UOn & reoovalln& older ldquir homes Expertise 1n complicated cooalr\IC. llOn ol oceanside homes cau Paul at 646-41171 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Your health 1s your re s po n s 1b1l1t y Revem>ce ror your holy body temple. t 'ree health ccmult. .. '*• ....................... lllalnlenaoee Aeto\lftta, dean11119, llaulia1 I.Jc 37Wl. &GJI07 Gardealat. tree trim · mng, dean·up. • malnt . aerv.Arnie.~14 Gardeniq, major yard cln·upa , wkly main · tena nce F r ee e a t . fb)est, reliable " inex· pensive 752.1349 Competent. convenient REPO'ITING service . Call &.t.san aft 5. 642.2344 lh1 I\ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jack ol all Trades. Home re pairs. s mall Jobs . Tyler. 646-145.5 Ca rpentry . m a s o nry • roofing, pl u mbing Fioonng, Stucco & tile Drywall 4r more J B. 646-9000 H•"hlllrDumpJoba. AM far Randy. 548-43118 Cleanupa. trimming . bMlbnl. Fr.estimates 557C'Tl Hau.l /Gradlq , demoh Ucn. ~.du.mp. trutk. Tl'ees/yrd work 831-1257 :I>' Bobtall. closed true k WW haul anyUun1 btwn LA/San .Dteco George. Dys 493-1198. ev 1wkod 751·2864 •Slckol Junk,· •I HAUL STUff • Fast dependable sen·. free est. oJd 2 T truck. Paul J acobs 646-l.583, or Ad-sitter 1t242, 642·4300. ::Mhrs. Reas. depend s er vict> Free est. Hooe:Jt & qwck Ad·Satler No 167. 642-4300 .. .................... . Wiil a RZAU.Y CLEAN HOUl!! Call Gl.Qlbam out ........ ~$123 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Brick-bJodr·plntera • walll eu Pair r•lu WW.,.. Oavea.7""'21 Xlnt cleanla1 done by CU.tom brtck. sto ne. Lllb' w/esp. Dependable bled. cooem.e •mac&. °'911 ar-.147-mf Reta. free~. ~1$1 Dbty, dirty, dirty! Hne your oven cleaoed or l&Owe by the O¥en Mao today. Aat for Terry .... ~77 SlJIOIER RENT AL a.EAMJPS RaldentJaJ.Comm ·a lso ClllfU. windows. PACIFIC CLEANING SERV u cnwed-1.naun!d. C714t '31 ... 301 SUDS 'N snJFF Proc. cleamn&. Day or orte. Comm 'I " res. ReH rats SatislactJoo guar F rl•t• t•'I 968 911~2 536 6456 A~I ur 536 7441i a ft 21'M Aboe's Houseclearuo& Window wutung. Refs Reaaonable. reliable ~ 121l6. 646-4871 Lady W1t.h exp. very de pend . r e as rates 646-9001. 751-0383 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1'1.'"ESJ' lN J A..'1TU RI AL CARE C-Omm Ind Ex· peruse 64,S. 7440 ...... , ...•.••......•......... ......, ....................... Movln1! The Star ving Colleae St~nts have grown Llc. TIU·436 s.me good aen. 641 "8427 ... I a Sw •kti ....................... RN Needs Private Duty ca ae. excelle nt ex. penence fl referencea SJ&.9648 ,~,.•·tuMJ ....................... PETERS PAINTING Eapr 'd Reas Ra t es tr ee Est Call Gene 55'2 0458 --- Fll\t' ext painting St Lac Ins Try me ll Stnor 83&M56 Prof pamlulg Ext & Int Low rates •380015 1-'ree est 536-"383 MC IV1l>a lnr. outside Reasonable Dependable 1-'r-ee ~I Ja) 631 2047 Dia"-e·o; Pauiung . ..en inR area 9 )1"'>. mU6l reai. <'ht>c k m ' r e f l ie· 5fl>.fM2:5 ISSIAM Oltm ~. lo rates. Free eat. 3 y r guar. -.im. m.mr an $. INI'EXT PAIN'J'ING Compl prep, xlnt resuJta. Refs. est 542-- ~ty paint.en.Int /ext, reas. rates, neat. cooa- c 1e ntloua . 8'8·$8 84. MZ49> You ·prep. P roleqlonal asrleu apray. S150 up. SCZ..5448. MS-7f1T2 Pau.1t1ng &r Papenna . Protealonal worit. Ranbl Steve. 547..U.Sl ...... ,..,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Neat patA:he& & textures AB m !.... -''l: i_ilt ~('() & Plaster Patch. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ne w conatruc t lod . Remodelin1. reptplntr. eMldnlnlc leak detection. 'nip Hat. 53'7 ·31J4 G. Gidley Plumber. aep.ir ..-vtee. lnltall.a • don. bKtEtlow certlfica- Uon MUllU Plumbl n1 rep airs at draina cleared. Water heate ra , d 11po1als . fauceta Mic Visa~ . .... .... ....•.........••... Repa ir & Reroor. All types·s h inl(lea-r ock. abakea-eompo-t.ar. Free at. 5'1·5830 Fin. Avail. Qualified roofing. Free est Leak re pair. $35. Good r ates o n shakes /com po. 9'15· 1107 ext99 ----------- no JOb t.oo '!im . qwck & Tie clean 645--42UJ.64..\-4l99 ••••,•••••••••••••••••• --------• ')peclalize in entry ways " Expert lll cstm restucc:os l'eram1c tile fl oor~ & pat<'he<. ln11ex1. 962-18113 l<snbl Ed 64.5·5660 -------- 1,;ne mplo )'ed M as t e r Plumber need'i work Member Be llt-r bui. bureau Lie Bonded . 5CJ.ST1'9 d.ays1eves. M IC \Lsa If )UU h<1ven't had the t>e-.1 Trws.rric• ••••••••••••••••••••••• rree & shrub. prunintc & removaJ. yard C'lean UPfi. haul1na . H l ·2322. 1M&l41JJ1m Dave's T ree Servll'e Tnm.t.op.remove1 15 yrl> _!XP_~~~-~~--1 .. lllMlll 18!11 --l-Su• .. 181 S<IC•-l'AllMIS ~1&••n.1••• •400-IOISr...,.,,. -_.a..ch C•9">fl<I 111•111u ... 38flO w1-. ~~I ~::.:rt:'"• CA 90010 ~·~A-..CT The Gospel or Gods Holy Temple. ~7-8213 Have somethmR lo st:'ll ·• Uasstf1ed ads do at well •..._RXIT• <.:&rpenter & Pamlllllt LS years Ill area !\lake your <,hopp1n~ Proress1onal masonr ) (~J..<iter by U.'ilnl! lh<' Ua11\ Wt> II beat an) bid \\A.LJ.PAPt.HING F'rtt e.l Li<' 330".186 .\\t-r S1 I pr roll UJI Norm 64.S 0880 11lumb1n g, healan~ & ~wCleaninq ruult-r -serv t('e tl ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• bt•ca U!>l' you havPn ·1 Res1denllal & !'llore:. <.:ar 1 ollt-d AAA I \('l waxmg. (Juaht) "or k. 541HT52 842-4314 P11otClas."t1ed t\d~ 84&-6.'>14 Rderenre!i trll JfXfj 6'&2·~9. 64S-7972 RentalstoShcn 4300 OfficeRentat 4400 lusiness Rentat 4450 Msca .. •.a ....................... ....................... ....................... ...... .,_, hpjl1. Trwst 4650 ~ 5035 •NO. CC6TA MESM , Med/dent.al/HMO. 716 sq ft/9 rm swte & pauo. ----------1 S upe r .fully e quip. Fem 21·30 shr 2bd apt. nr S&tmo. Tom 540-2200 beach. $275. util incl. WW shr lrg Lux home. f'rpk .. Micro. nicely furn. H. 8 . Rita 536-8090 F.dith~335'7. Clrica in Bayview HOlel. Historical landmark Room.mate to shr 2Br S250 ck up. Bay View. dplx. Cdm. rum. S237 .50 Jmmed. occup. Contact mo. ~ 7515 clyg, 873-3460 Rose.S73-311Z2 eves 1or2Rmsmt.es. J.Zsq. ft. 9'a.re home .ti meals In flupfrom~ m w. 19th exchange for your cook· .,. call Tom ~2200. •MEWPOtt'T jC..M. t:p lo 4700 sq.ft a vail. al pnme corner . 17th & Nwpt 81. 67H800 900tlq. rt. -ret.a.al store 2&tO Avon Npt. :>58-8723 or 644-13118 Downtown Laguna Sch or face, approx 500 sq ft. fut ly carpeted. bookcases. $462 mo. 497 ·2351 or 4!11-4808. ing. 4fl9.. l.S31 ..... Medical & Professional Cccu-rdd fan. lo shr nlce house nr offices. Reasonable rent. .... 4475 So. Ost Plaza. ze>.30 yrs Qista Mesa 548-2103. •••••••••••• ••••••••• •• Teri S56-9016 M·l space avail. for lease. Office space, Newport Beach. Call Gene Hill. 4 350 642-<DlO ....................... Storage g arages. on Balboa Penin, or Fun Zone (1 0 ~:x20'n '). ~aa. 873-3830 PRlllE NEWPORT BCH OFF1CESPACE CORPORATE PLAZA 7»t53l Ute mfg. 2 units. 900 sq ft "25 ea. or combined as one. 1.oeding dock fl dbl doors. close to downtown Lagwia. 775 Laguna Ca · nyoo R d . 497 · 3220. 646-33S1 4500 • •••••••••••••••••••••• Const Contractor r e · nova~ )our prop. in e x t·hn11 ror fre e re nl- La gu n a B<'h P aul ~1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....... 0,plll'twlity 5005 ....•.••...•........... Local E.xecutJv~ expa nd· in& buslDess. Need am· bilious person who is willang lo learn. Call Mr . Fathy 646-4533 NEWPORT PJER·SHOP lee C rea m . don uts. soacb.? lllnt locallOO & potential S3S.OOO/of r . ~ AN'IlQll E HALL A new antique mall has 3 apecea M!ft roe lse. Pb· 831-2!822 or s.M-3111 . ••....•.......•....... Satfletr Mtg. Co. All l>J>eS of real ~ldte mvestment.s since 1949 S...cNllbilMJ ilt 211dTD1 64Z.2l1.L_54~0~1 I Widow has mone) for 2nd TD 's No credit r ht'ck. no pnlly. 520.000 min. n11 max For action call Agt 673-7311 anytime 2ndTD1S Moroissh! LS year lttm Sl0.00 or roore No BaUoon Lldo Newport C-0 873-75915 • . 2A Hr !'I Uo/o YWd f'r Year ~·__.._. 4400 ~-~!orntt spftac~-fohr ••••••••••••••••••••••• _.....__ ...,.._. 800 sq. · .~ut $650 lnd/Ofc near nu. •••••• .. •••;.;;;••••• Lacuna, Coast Hwy . 2765'.l8101RedoodoCir . Discounted T .D. with face amount ol SZ0.000 at lN-per annum A II due 3"-yrs. Pnce S16 000 •..oc:aJ Exec. expa nding I Prime~ Beach j 411MMt I !IS. Hmt 8ch au-2834 1oc. Near O.C. airport. CORONA DE L MAR I MmulhFreeR..t =e::n:~~~ n:~ /("-rR€\TIG€ lea rn. Mr f'a th y . HOM€\ 646-4533 Rem incl. reception, con· I Ground floor. Newly de· I 4800 ft i.a,una lfillS Ind rerence .rm, janitor corated. 260' w /bath. Pak, new bldg. 2 ofca. 2 MAR KETING . Up to serv., utals. 100 free $195/mo. Also smaller restrooms. 30' per fl SUX.l monthly , part time. c op i e 1 & m o r e ola. avail. Sand Realty Fwy access. s.M-5533 Choose hours. For a p-==~ll~vall. 752-1.830 Prime Newport/Mesa poo>tmeot call Ad.Sitter ---------•Share insurance office. Busmess Parle Quality No l64. .cdMDELUXESUITES, Harbot' 6 Adams. C.M. olfioe&warebouses pacel &42-4300 __ _ From 1295. Air cond.. 170 sq. ft. SUS mo . for lease Car pets. ample pkg. UUI pd. 28SS 6'1411581eave mesg. drapes & we t bar IR+ulwllt E.CstHwy.&7~ Newly redecorat.ed office 1380-1870 sq. ft. un1ls Oppoehwit, 5015 av ai..l.ab&e now. JOr sq ft •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • WESTCLIFF BLDG. NEWPORT BEACH "'"" Ito -'• I •• fl J •• ,,... ..... ~li#C .Ill' • ./=-........ ,/, ... _ wt=-» sq ft yd, S400 mo. 642-4463 M·f' 7:30-3.J(). Owner seeks contractor to ~ Sal9-l. build on good muJllple XLNr LOCA TIOM 1S20 S.F LOdustnal park I.Wt avaJI. for 1mmed. OC· unit lot in Huntington Beach. 751-8967 Real E)ltate lnv~tment.s 3333W.Coa.st Hwy. NB 645-6646 Clo6ed Sunday I st. Ir 21ut. TRUST DEEDS srn·s · Lst lo SSOOK. JO yrs, purchase and refl. 2nd t o S50K 15yrs Owner. Noo Owner No prepay. re~lleasehold Also lhn.I 4 & Coodo SS. DCJRBS f1N ANCIAL !:-.t-:RVl CES fi«>.6016 494-46111 ./---./ __ __ / .,,,.,,,. ..--... PROF. OFFICE BLDG Huntiogt.on Beach area LEASltGMOW cupancy. lllcls : Offices" .. ;;Aau• warehome space. Crpt.s. W..trid 5020 Aus !MW-•! drps. wet bar. For leas· ...... • •• • •• • • • • • • • • • • • '• a ain1h / Call llll r Howard 645. 6101 1·70FC-SU1TES 1ng info call 642~ M·F Orange C-Ounty Produc Lott Ir fooimd call Agent/Partner I 7 JOtoJ:JO; Sat9-l. ~Co. wants Investors ••••••••••••••••••••••• (714)~2208 I ~ '..~~. "-IShonl ._. H~m Alls ll9rt ••llt1 5100 4550 tro ~ """9 ·~~v ••••••••••••••••••••••• EXmmVES\JITES {.ffice lo share, prestige Sh#Uijl --Ne~port Center . full Newport Sch address. •••-•••••••••••••••••• ..__.tol.omt 5025 ~;c>in~n!;;;i~co ~·private. ocean SZlOtmo.~7595. WfStoiUijl MiRi -:::;::................. ~rs loshare V1eW,~ts30-7~. Ww• 1elmFY. ~ 49'1·2$59 M.IAlr'lllwt~ From Sl.5. Call Marylou --~ -----sea>. c:rp.. alr, 1000 sq. It. 3 Dl.x oles l vail. am med. at flM.1«11 for reserv & fNEED 14341 Beach . • B . in premiere higb rue ore cl.reciioal. W-n••wter. IU-2834 bldg. F\111 service law --------- suite. Call Lore lei or ..... W..e.d 4600 *DELUXE OFFICES * caron. 7S2-22166 ••••••••••••••••••••••• U ft 3 nm; Crom 93' sq. 1---------Wanted 1n Costa Mesa or ft. No be req. 2172 Du· PRDIE LOCAnON Irvine area, 2 or 3 BR. Pont Dr .• or a irport. By O.C. AirlJoft_ 225 sq . ho use prefe rred J G32Z3 9 A.M. to noon. ft. to 129> aq. ft. from SY Adults Xlot ttferenca •NICI• pen q. ft. Pbone SS'MOlO 6 t:l · S 7 0 1 E Ye a . & ..-eom. Newport Ceo*-Office 4 COM>MA DB. MAR Rent wtt.b use ol recep-Deluu 4 rm-Office, 125 Um. CXJDf room, tltcben, aq. ft. A/C, perldna. MSC> .pllooee. aecrelar1al Ir mo. 175-4S700 W.ud 1 Br or bach In Cd.M or Bal bl ror 1ln1le world o1 adult w /cat. Sl»MOO. ICM 87M280, eva 831-t127 {MONEY • CltlDITMO NOILIM M&lrd1Dao.. ~y eo..t ..... Lo.K 'i ~~~ ... ~.·-~~! ~-~~ ....... ~!.2.~ I ~-~-~ ..... ~!.~~ !:'>ea r <'h ·fo'1nde r ' o f C.l~(J JU.,t wanll·d lol l "~'' \b~ss1n1an ~·al Calafom 1a now h.t'> d W\Sh )OU .; Happ' An ~t'm \ •l Dana Pt 3 J I llranl"h Ill UriU!Rl' Coun nl\ersar) h ·., our Isl tijl .o.31 t)' We help adoptees u \e. lo\e & lawz h. ><>u I 1 -,._ --Y-,-1 · ~.bl ..... 11t OWIR em a e buth parent.'>, and other art-somt'ont' !>Pt <'ldl <.0U1.-!:'>.tblt' and Whitt· relatives rind m1~'>1nR Alw-.i)~ BB f(eo.oard 642 6280 lanul) For more info Loitlr~ call Ga) le at 7~ 8937 5300 l.1,.,1 ., \r 1)ld J llt>red ••••••••••••••••••••••• m.:tlt.· 'l·llow CJl. "e r ) ,lnendh East BluH arect PtnoftClls 5350 .........•.......•.•..• •IMT'l MASSAGE* JaCUZZJ • Sauna t« OC AJRr<>RT O>l Birch NB~075 U 2am acl"C)g.'I Sheri.ton 1-:SCCJftTS •953-4473• \l"i.)'S open Now H1nn~ FUllm ADS · 1 •M ~ l!iH___ _ TOUCH A CLASS ESCORTS l.o6l left handed fo'endn 2t HRS 9S2·1.S$3 ba.-.t" g1.11ta.r nr The Can· - Harbor Music AK flEE n.-r v SSO R e wa r d Prol'essional Therapeutic Rural -Ponder -~ 646-21~4 ______ massage. L1c'd . NB. ~only. Sieve. $48-2817 DUMB l'.a.. f'<Mld Shepherd Huskey, Ole W11Y of ga.iruog a re ~ blk & tan male. Grt pd.at.ion for being <'lever 642-5671 Py~ ma le. Setter as outlivmg e verybody fUtn ever. blk & J;ld , who knew >OU when you 1 femaJe. ~ Beach _were __ OOM __ s_____ !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Anama1 Sheu.er 644·3':16 ~-~•••••••?!~! Reward mo Lost male. FOi.Di fem pup. blk ra<'~. MAKE SOMEONE HA ... Y M.UE SOMEONE SMILE Pia~ a HAPPY AD 111 Uus rolumn (Of' ooJ y S3 2:5 <;all 642.5678 c:inmer & white cat nr I b6ondl> bdy, la tail. Vic East 111.b Sl "Sant.a Ana H.arbof. C>t ~3194 , Ave. call Khns .u..&144 · 1 L.ost J 3de & Gold wed I hm~. dlQll band. vie of Hunt I Lmt small t.an l'O<'kapoo I tnl!t on Be aC'h C 1v1 <' Male. West 642 7431 Cerlter6 4 ~l!HOeves. CasUMesa Fowio Rrt'Y Schnauxer, m:.ile Vil' Hunt1nicton Bch IM8 5117 after 5pm FUUNO in Universit y Part >ounic. remak Eng ~ Spaniel. White Lost · Sml crystal Jar ~ tan :.pol!> Nr Rancho wlma.5(' ~ 1.Jarge Soul Jo8qum J r High Lost 2•, YT old cat Dea!. wtute. blue e)'es. black flea coll a r w 1bell l 7th /Ol1ve . H 8 Reward. 961). 79llJ rt'Ward ~2779 5 '29 5151-0673 l.L6T 9mo okf G..-rman I t-'(JlJND Lad1t"'' n ng v1r Shepherd llllX. i-·emal..-.1 We~t cli ff S ho pping black bbk w1wh1te & Cent.er ·" 8 CallL0 1den b r o wn mark 1 n g s . lll> 646-<1975 ____ . I _~75e I F(J(JND an ontt1lal pn nl Lost or Found a ~ • Call 1ac-k~ '1 !:: rom~r or Animal Ass 1stan l't-I Ja::.aurw & C'st Hwy in I League 537 2273. no fee. ' ~gurui Bch 4~ 486_1 -I ~~~bp~~ss!: Lost Small ~air d oit htwds 5150 day weresuper' And you Bet~ w blk facr. \ittlf"e) ••••••••••••••••••••••• saJd )OU couldn't coo«. twr Paddy Nr Hoajt COVER GIRL tiah" Lou &r Barbara Hosp NB Needs speclal !:ftsi & Keith Thanks for a s~r weritend at lht> beach' You two ar-e lhe woricfs greatest hosts' Mynft Bob d>ft Reward ~ 7301 or ~ 548-78SS Found Moped Call lo ldenUI} 644.(837 FCAJNO Gray & whrte * 95l-0771. 24 Hr Outc all Service PRE LAW student needs SZS.000. Will do anything Legal. Coof1dl!nt1:.I DVM. P CJ. Box 3242, N B 91!1&63 rabbit. male. Har bor • V1~w H om e s area SPIRITUAL READINGS ~ IQam.lOpm f'ull> L1c'd FOUND 1-·emale lnah «·7296 or 4912·9034. 181$ St-ttert Shepherd mix. S Cammo Real. Sao Recent motbet" V 1c Hun· Clem. lmllU1 & lndJanapobs. R CJ L L S R 0 Y C E H.B f.34..7301 ~RTS SMOICBSNAYa Heavenly Fat.her. Hu r my plea and grant my u.p serenlty! Give me the ~ to kick the :;molt ing t h at ·s been causmg au my chc*ing. Let my breath be fresh & dean witboul a trace or 111coune. Guide me by ~ hoiy means past all cigarette m achines . I ask )'OW' help & it's no YIGlder 1f I don't qual. l'm6'eetimder Amen . Lr \OU need help call w. ror mformallon at The Smoke De Add1ct1 o n C1uuc. 714 n60-8602 ,\n> \OU a bus1nes...; extt. 1~0011! on ae tn p needing 't'r ' lo llS'il'l t Y<'U "' business a r r anRl'· ment.s while traveling. Qi.JI 7141894-9908 S h ~. good l oo k i n g caucasJan man. 45, 5'6" 100 lbs, non·smkr. non drnllr seek.' attractive peotJ~ lady 32-45 ror da l 1ng dinanl(. d ancing . travel & compa.n10nSh1 p No ob.)tttion to smokln~ or SCX'lai dnnking. Photo & ph no. a must. All will be a.Mwered Reply box ~l. Daily Piiot. PO Box J.SS), Co6ta Mesa. CA. CJutcall Maasa1e, for women only. For appl. MZ..Q21115 Loet Med sl Germ Elciorts•Ollkal Pl'91r'5111 ... dSemas 5360 Shepherd. all bm . wht 24Hn. 751..0537 ...................... . s to ma c h v e r y NOWHlRJNG WEDOINGSERVlCES -hi....;Ptnani"----"-lllllO---S7_S_l __ m-~-w ~cons Outcall 4213 or liceme ~~.... ~ms Lael: male . am long <714 19$3·1578. all o f _'*"'_c.u __ O_Dd_l)'_a_l_'MM __ to0_--12~~M~h~1:..~l)llda~~ol-_!1ul~le~OD~ 1ou. can a Via Udo. eau m-30&6 MIWPOU Mui ..... r.:aec-....-..eaatt.ea I ........ Ill 1119t1o ~. IDelda c.lef' ~~ ..... ~aulte. cepttoai•l· lelepllone lnclda aee. aervlcea, ~u.:TT·l:l ~wwertn1. 00W.i."f.11:S:A pro· .-.aq; pdm&., teln 111 , -••b·•·..... rm. ..,...,.:.C°AikCO::; For S8.50 you can 1end e 3 llne Greeting to Special Folk• and get a "Do it Dally" T-ahlrt toot balnd bUl dot-No collar Oranee C-Ount y T,..., 54A :: ans t o H enry . Vic •-•••••••••••••••••• =ce • ltth S t . lllSSAIE r:::lo~ · Be pamper.td with • SHREIPENSES.ASK lazlbk:llt1Jmtwhtltltten. personal reJ.axin1 FORT.J."511• ...., ""•'--" 8 .._ old massage by 12 ol lhe pre-._ ..... -.. w-. ., ... ~s::rrc. ra1r0r. ~'~~.'." J:r. A J: :;, _;;.. __ n_M __ ._...,._. ___ -t Jolm•'- • .,.., ft. tar ... pW mo. aa .... a.N.8.Aient su.-. OWMEIS-PIUM& oat VISWS'l'E. Jiff ..... I.el ...... _...,,._~•w ... ._., 7 '1vaale .. ', ...... ,.,... tlltK ale dwa . • _.., MA (PLI Lv -.,. Come In to •ny Dally Piiot olllce and place your Heppy Ad •nd pick up your T·•hlrt .• DAILY PILOT aam ~. Ope.n 10.m· ......... " •••-••••••• Found : I ad I ea ba 1. 4am: 1 da.YI • weet. Vis· .,.. WM & 7075 Br.lboe Blvd. Newport. •tM.C. A11anU9 Health uuen1 ............ _ -_,,,. S.., 211.1 HarbGr Bl•d. ... -99111 Girt .. "·-·-· <llr&a-., MS.MD lk'-..._ Ptr, hll n .. 9 POUND: Cal. M. trl-lac thl• ad ror 10..r Nwl+tblmt ·~ . cdar. ~ coUa.r. Ed· spadalllfl. Compu., It bawrk • A+llr. M.,,.,Ua. rv. ·----------------· ltm/Bd+••••· Call Renal med •ttn. STAGlaPVTPARTIES Natalie •11 ... M . AA ami: 11M01f NUD£1'DANCER IPll •MOD&t. ~---~--~-f'OUND: tee beip ~ blk WW QWr' yow next par. Sbtpbetd 2500 blll of ty. 1'm •JWI. ltyn . fOI.. NB. Colo. .Rabiea Pmn'• pv\. outeall. Aft • ,.,, OTM. loca. TOlllJ •pm: 541-0ZOT . Oya : .... ...... -..ro 718-Jml.. .-...S: _..... .......... ¥te. ... aMH la Sd· ..... -,_ ltl. Call (11.3 ..... llMCll' ....... mJN'D• ec.,.. lD Balboa PWPMI. • --•'-~ . ,....,~ . 972-1345 , • .· . . . . l'EOPLE • -CUST IM.Y Pl.OT ............ \1¥ •• ,. To deliver lo news rackl and stores In HunlJnitoa Beach & Fountain Valley area turday and Sunday momina. Must hav dtpendabl car and aood drlvln• record. Contact Georae Hardln1. Sln1I• Copy Sales Department. 64.2~1 CAt•A NtSON flOa Ll1MO .. ....,...., At leut 2 years experlence preferred. Excellent company benefits. Salary commen urate with experience. Apply in person to Paul Ward or Seth 'henlon. CUSSllll• ADV9mSIMG TUIM& The Classified Advertising Department of the Daily Pilot has an immediate opening for a trainee in all phases. Duties include typing (45wpm electric), filing, copy control, general clerical, and handling phones. Advertising experience desirable but not necessary. Opportunity for advancement lo telephone advertising sales. Excell ent company benefits include medical, dental, credit union, etc. For interview , please call : 642-4321. ext. 277 PART TIME EVENINGS Become a trained sales counselor (over 21) with the Jim Long & Associates Agency to supervise and chapa r one DAILY PILOT carrier boys and girls on a one-0n-0ne basis. eveninf,?s 6 to 9PM . We need concerned, innovative persons who are looking for a lucrative part·time position. $4 hour to start; $100. week potential. Call 642-4321. ext. 250 between 2 ar.d 6PM. Ask for Lori. DRIVERS SATURDAY & SUNDAY Deliver Daily Pilot bundles to car- riers. Requires van or large wagon and a good driving record. Phone 642·4321 Ext. 211, ask for Harry Seeley, Equal Opportunity Employer. MOTOR ROUTE Immediate opportunity for part·time earnin~s. Motor route available in the La~una area. Delivery afternoons Monday through Friday. Mornings Saturday and Sunday. No monthly door collections. Earnings about $450 per month J!ross . Reliable transportation required. Call 642·4321. Foster Ouellet for details. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT 330 w ... .., St •• c ......... Co. 642-4321 /lvl .... 0,.1 lwltylt fhr• ---------1 Arti.al, F rr producfion. !ICTeft\ pnnUng, related ACCOUNl'IMG products. Call ror in· a.aK tervlew. 964-4764, ask for Rapidly growing intern•· t1onal co. seeks en-Mr. M. thl.lllutic, sell at.arting Al'T MMGR. individual for poelt100 in ~~~· WlfetoHice. accounting dept. at cor· Huaband/maiotenance. porate headquarters in u · Oc d Ex Irvine. Good typing • 10 3IO ruta, eanaa e. . key capablUUes req'd. perience required. TSL XJm oppty for advance-_Mgnt-""--· MZ-__ l603_. ___ _ ment. OUtalanding com· ATTENDANT. for Arco penaaUon & benefits in a Service Station, ata.rtmg ....,w ..... 7t00 ••••••••••••••••••••••• PM:TOllY ...... c .... , ..... CUllMftal HPffiHce .... .. .,.Ill. =..... •IUaae poel· .,..LA,._. Uoe tor fut ltantr. to blmm bl C.M. 6 H. 8 . -. • 1--~ -NAll.tl75to ... /mo+ ........ ... "" ..... r ,,.,.. ...... Depeodeb~car ~~·a matve . ... pm'IOD to do ;:==.• IOIDe heavy wort. ly n penon: 1'1n:fr.y .....,~Co .. 1114 Placentla Ave .• C II . blt'w-. lllllD. ~ . UN&ed a.llfcnll .. u •<>reuAve. i.i-a•--~h ..... ~. ,.,,. IOwpm. needed. 14'·44 or ..... ,.. ato.e. .,"" -..z 1U·a1Jl, Alll for lh.1--------.!!!B-•l!!!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!! E.O.~ _tc.rt. ________ Dlalal •'l. Oftho, 4 dya pr "-aper. lD RDA ,... Free HawaUan Vae for .,.._ tor t mothe'r· •"*1 .. WWW quired. Npt Buch. .. .. ._ Pftf,eem. Jme tJlru Au1u1t. eu-e112 Aft S:Jllpm c:c-. .. ue11cW•Telln Caatl.l•ri•I eaperlence --*lbedlelrable Unlt.ed Oillfon:Ua Bank d80 Bl.ch Blvd. llts•"ftllon Beach PAIT-TIME Cl.Ell 11()4157$ -.1J:JO,. E.O.E ---------i Oran1e Couaty Blnkial pharmaceutic a I mmuladurinc company PAITTIMI requlrea part-time M 1 p clerical help ln its P9nonneJ Department. PoatUon b 111 aUable in Responsibilities l.Dclllde our New Corona Del Mar amwertq pbooea, 1-ftd· branch. 3--4 da)'I • week ins vtaiton lD lbe lobby, 1ocludtn1 Saturdays. and learnlDI basic P revioua Savln11 • pel"IODDel procedures. Loan. bankins or Acc11r1te typlo1 ia a cashiering experience Dllllt. P&eaae call for ap. dell.red. pointment We are a growane Sav· inga & Loan and are of· fering unlimited op· portunilles. Excellent starting aalary. Please call Mrs. Moma at <714 > 675«711 to arrange for an Interview. IRBfTWOOD SAVINGS& LOAH 2867 East Cout Hwy Corona Del Mar, CA 92l62S Equal Opportunity Employer M /F Bartender. exp male. at nfrany'a Privau Club in Newport. Reaume needed 67S-6090. uk for Oluck. Call Tues thru Fri after 2: 30pm. ICXJIOQ!ll'H F Mm. rm. ~yDiedrc~al 'office. Pref. expr with in· surance and medical ronm.~1380 ~. 4·5 hrs dally. Rion Hardware. 1024 lrvine.Weatclarf Plaz.a, NB. BOOKKEEPER · IRVINE firm needs ex- perienced person lo han· dle ca.sh rtteipts & dis. bunemenla,P /R, & poet eeneral ledaer throucb trial balance. Some typ. aog requl red. Non· sad.er pref erTed. 97S-0194 8>okteeper full charge. exp., ror busy ad agency in Costa Mesa. Accurate, cost conscious. self· st.uter with personality ph•. Salary SlOOO a mo . great benefits. Mary 515&-1600 ~~t~~ Carol Rufino (7141 5t6-8901 AHAIOUC, INC. 178aZGUJette Ave. Irvine, CA 92"113 F.qu.al opporturuty emp&oyer M IF Regista' today for local temporary usipment.s. 557-1145 Cf\-Llr\';. llMl'OllAll't' PUISOHMl ~IMCIS 1723 llrda Strfft ... .,.,. ..... Clerlt. Mature woman, no exp nee .. Hrs : 4 · midnight.. N.B. toe Xlnt. pay after traming. Call Day: 642· 1494 or eve: 673-5.ll!IS Clerlt. retail beauty supp- ly. exp, mature. apply In person. Newport Bch area. 642-8910. Comparuoa/Houaekeeper wanted. UYe·in. Mon- Fri. Must drive. Bal Penan. $25 pr day . 673-5.S4S COMPUT'Ell Key entry operator for lumber estimating on Burroughs l.9000 t'Om P'.&er Xlnt working con· dluons Medical & dental insurance. Huntington Bch. Hrs: 8 lo s. 5 day week. Salary open. 847-8511 Dental Aalbl&Dl, but)' Newprt Bch reaatoraUve lftd,ice needl ab&rp, en· tbusia1llc. eap, Ind. Gl-3112. p,.ft::.'~I'!!· ol- Oca. llult be available for m:nbap. MS-2152 DINl'AL HYGIENIST to wort in establiabed ol · flee near South Coast PWa. FURNITURE SALESPERSON / INTERIOR DESIGN for Nib quality ~ store In o.t.a ...... 111.o. Syr retail furniture exp. ~-Ask for Chet Qehwnan af:e&er Off!.C!&o Newport 11.D. Pftler re· call coUec• f raduate. Eaperience n skills helptul. bu& not euenual. DINl'ALASSISTAMT teSO/mo. 40hrs. ll·F OIDli··Nnt. ~P w/X· Pleele Med ,re1ume to Ad tm. D1uly Pilot. ~· RDA optiofta.J. P.O. Box lSIO, Costa Mela. CA. 112128. Dent.al Gemral front otfice receplionast. n.e Balboa Bay Club 11 Exper. nee. Xlnt. salary /benefits. Com-~~fDER : Put pWil' knowledge helpful. umr. Must be avail. eves 811-UTTt. & wtmds. DENTAL ASSISTANT· Pleueca!Horawt. Fniot desk. exper'd or 114.5-7~--- traaned. F . V. area. GENERALOFF'ICE _9fB._1648 ________ 1 Oppl'y for new grads DENTAL HYGIENIST Wort for Homeowner'a for Laguna Bch general Management <:o an pract.ace.Tue&Wed. Ex· Irvine Should type panded duues not nee ~have 1tood phone Call4M-3538. alalls aod lcnowledge or all genera.I o1r1ce duties Dictaphone typist. Ac· $100/mo + ro. bt>nefats curau flOwpm. Wa 11 tr am Cail J aan ~7-8220, ext ~ word·procesaang 21& Great opporturuty Good benefits. Call Diane GltBAL OFACE Roberson : 833·9SSO. penon needed few bUly E.O.E. Newport law farm lll&at have phone exper DRIVER: Car prov1ded ~l Pref. t.eeaager w/llc for -------lawyer.~ Gmen.I PU.-.S HB.H:I DRIVER: Full time co. Wilftn..Ui i200 wk at.art dnver. Must be 18 or Open8am-8pm ~13 older Have valid Cahr Lie. Clean dnving re cord. Boats waan i. Locker, 2A31 W. Coast Hwy N.B. Driver.Helper for Fashion Island ho me funushmgs shop 35hr wk. Ct.II Tom: 644·8860. DRIVER· to ptck up de· oeaaed pets & some light yard work. Seabreeze Pet Cemetary. 19S42 8eadl Blvd. H.B. DRIVER. for Harbor area. Lale deh' era es Neal appear Full o r PIT Gd dnvmit record Master Bluepnnt. 234 Fischer. CM ~9373 MIYEllS OfACI WOltlC I 110 Wl U tiailn Sl80 to slart (Jpen 8am.Spm ~ 8413 DRIYBS SZOO W1c Wiii t:rain truck dn v"rs Open8am-8pm ~l.J Amen can Gua~ Ftt GB8ALOFFICE Gt.rt Fnday, eood typm& skills & telephone penooa11 ty P4ust en JO) nstomer contact. Top rates & bend1t..s COf41U.UTECORP. A Subt.1d1ary of t:ATONCOKP 711 W 17th St 8kl.g FU. Co.ta Mesa (714) 64.S-lSOl Men or women 25 yrs or older. Know the coast GeMral Office C1Ues Nd $180 a week or Bnght lnd1v Needed For more Orange Coast t:orl> Office Use of 10 Yellow Cab. 17300 Mt key & lite typmi;t req'd l8•over METRO CAR WASH 2950 Harbor 81. C. M Herrmann . Fountain Uibotbenefit.& Sal <'om Valley. <No of Slater mensurate w 1atuht> Coob betwn Newhope & Non smoking ofc Call Brea.klaat Cooks needed. Euclid Rusty Pelican Corporatt· Full tlnw. Top pay & .!!!!!!!!!,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!t otr1ee m41 549-9322. 2862 benefita. Exp'd only. AP· Mt:Gaw. Irvine pleasant work ln1 en· 13.:;ohr. 67J...laz3 vtro.,ment. Contact CAI WASH ~I A&i.omatlc tram rebuilder Cashier wanted:-~Wknda. ply In person 3-Spm. 400 EARLY MORNING AM S.o.tHwy.La1. Sch. DEUVERY·LA Times, Gmerai ~c , recrealJon .!!!!!!!!!!!!lm••!!!!!!!!!!!!l!•!!!!I MOO+ Must bave depen· de MJllw'e person pre Sch llflc & trans R.&R man. Call oily. N.8. CallM4-44eO. ~~ for appt. :w&-2288 CASHIO ~~. 5S1·905l EOE Auto Mech. Efficient. Do you enjoy music? Do COOICS~'d. ~car. 546-023$ rd. Call s.:JS.8800 __ _ .... ...., New shop Opportunity. you Uke worlllng with ~~2:563 people? Costa Meu Univeralty Stereo nds AU'l'OllOUTI fllime cashier. No expr BKPNG 11IE REGISJ'ER. Early nee. Ask for Lau. Good c:ompiny 'benefits Apply tn person only, I lo 5pm. Tues thru Sun Sebastian's West. 140 Ave Pko, San Clemente TEMPORARY AM. l~ to 2 b.n. S375 to 60-91531 ~ today to work $ 4 5 0 I m 0 . x I D t . --------c~~·sT _ _. __ a ............ ••-, ._ Cashiers wanted. FuU Ir .-,.on v-..,.. c ... .._.u.u • moonlight. Wives, re· Vo um e us Ines s Bect1adc Tedle&~3n Divenif'aed . ID mtg ID1trument1. Ad vanced Kinetics, 123 I Victoria St. CM 64&-716!· E.O E. bookkeeping assign· tired, disability, stu· part Cashlen wanted Grinder Restaurant ment.a. Work cloae lo dents. Need gd wheel.a. Full & P ft. Tustin • 21002 PCH. Hunt. Bch. Or llechtd.. F 1 h Fl g La1una Beach area. ante· County a r your ome. ure ~5'215. 531HlllM ~·-ds. Costa M•sa Oertcs to Senior Accoun· ---------_l.Atlda ___ :_6"_ ... _____ I ----------· .___. "' tams needed lhroulhout Couneuclan for facials In scale. Wl4-Sl863 OnmaeC.OUOty exclusive s kin ca re per mo. Appia cations Bankipl c .. •r.r salon. Prerer mature nut be filed be(on June IUIWtR.J penon 642 4ill 19,.->. FM lnfonnallon, GBBA.LOFACI TOS950 lO·kf) b) lOUC'h Al' curate typ1111l \'an ed ~ 8327300 ~nertl oHice. r1br1r print mra need~ a dertcal exper'd ~rson that hlndles chanite e11111 b " euon vanet) or work Call Helen . 'mZSl22 llClll .. T HAL.PW 1B!m w /Sid. lqr. '---------1 ca:uct Orange Cou.nty -· accounlerq>s =1::: ae~i!:: u T DTE M ~U:1~t ~tc~~~~r f'alrpwnds, TSl·ai4' salary and benefits. Call aeanen. 2547 Eaatbluff ~~~~. F~~~~!t . mmt fl.rm needs resp . accurate penon to h•n· dJe &nnWty II Insurance & Ucenaln1 processln1 . Call 840-0123. . . .-:: GecqeClaytor. MARKETS' _Dr_N_._B_.644-0032 ___ . ---1 ...,..,, ...... ConvenUooa, J>rocreulve Savings. ... y • .,_. '714/!llCM.'llS E .O. E. For 2nd & 3rd Sbitls part 1 es • Ir d • t ea We promote to mana1e· mem "aupenialoo from within. r~e~S9!:e 547-1445. Part or full lime. Must won Seturdays. Apply HlfpW...tM 7100 Hs(pW..tM 7100 HllpW..eM 71M . ................................................................... . -... PFfilCI Mo011 ll'•fttMOt.Ml.D ............ ,_ dlneal eelr1 PG9I· 11t.v lefel HIH Is daa. UC. lnial '5wpm. • , ••Uchboard reuer ~• ----..;;;;....;~--_..._ ,..... lllllt vllW dut'-Good com-M'••MCI ba"9 ~ ..,.. _,. beD111ta Ir l>&e:uut 'flClllCIAM 6 ........ ..,_, .,_... workln1 conditions. Inch.Se: IMlde Hla, PIHH call Ll\IU ...... offlee. Newport • ....,.,_ ..... tollda· o.ar-o..ii., "ft""• Uoa. l!'.ut Coat lo l m.eeo. wwt. will tram. pt _.._ .... --•.1} 1-~ GRAVEYARDSHIFT typto1. Career Op-~ M~G:t ;:: INPM. llan&ul. Arco PCll'tUDlty. E.O.E. Mn. Piil)' btoefila. COGl• S l I l l o n , 2 1 4 5 2 DudlikMt-Tf.54 "*"°° + bllM, prdlt ~ HB. M2-90tl hlluruee •htrlOI Hd pea.ion GRO°tdPR ~IUH Hilla a1ency -. Wen witbln sjpt ~.... needs P9'IOD w /taper. In " tbe OCD. lamed opeG• pUdna • rauoc com-inc. Send retume to: PO AlJ breed iroomer Must tave apa'. Call Dan at Parlter'a Peta: 640-0080. IOleftiaJ rtaka .&17.aoo Boa UOI, Newport I N T E R I 0 R ,_Beada_-.,•_Ca_._ .. _l'I_. __ _ GUARDS Full Ir pert Ume. All areas. Uniforms fumahed. Ages 21 or over. Rd.ired welcome. No experience nee. App. ly Univenal Protection Service. 1226 W. 5th SUM, Sa.nu Ana. In· t.ervww houri t-12 " 1-4 Mon lhna Fri. LANDSCAPING co Maueuse. Uceuect. for Neb teap penon for u -Btal.CificaUoa c.otre In 111taoce lo all areaa. Sou&ll Cout are.. Call &a.BO Cor.w.561-7131. lntJmai. Apparel aaln Mm.ft woman part time. woman, mature. 40/hr Ute cookio1. wubln1. 3 week. No Sun. Cail adult.a St hr. With ear. 642-1197. _567_.am ______ _ GUY,IGtRL GwwwdOffice lmmedaate opening 1n C M Accurate typist , pleasant phone manner, late bookkeeping. co benefits $850 i.ta rt. &C2-3SZ2. HAlaCUTTHS HAllSTYUSTS HELP! We are turrune away business and are in need ot top hill serv 1 ce stylist Guaranteed ulary. Paid vacations. JAHITOltS P /t1me eves. Exp 'r couples prer. Irvine area. CalJ llam to 12 noon 54.5-5428 KEYPUNCH CJPERATOR to lra1J'I on CRT for grow· ina dectrorucs nrm. x lnl opporturuty & benefit.a. Call Elsa at SM-BM> KEY PUNCH OPERATOR. Growing company needs fast & accurate operator . Ex- penence requa red. Ca II Maas Moore. 641·9000 bonus program & a 1--------- marvelolU> opport. for Kitchen help wanted to advancem('nl Join our learn food preparation. µrogress1\•e staff and Male pref Working learn the latest styles ham-a Sam lo lpm Lori 'a from our nationally Kitchen. =-n7 So Harbor known st.> le d1rec·tors Blvd. SA Call 979-0747 for Plnse call 714 /S40-8888 aRJl Ext :n llat.r dresser w 1cllentele Kitchen help wanted, tm for Beauur1cauon Centre on a~ slicer " portion inSouUl Coast area. Uill an.rot Male preferred. fur aw. S.SS. 7136.___ 5' 00/hr to start Lori's KAchen, '»rt S If arbor. Hair Sty list Assu•lanl SA. ca11979-07•7for app. Good wortuni;t ('C)o. Uc reqwred 64.S--0212 Lab Phlebotonust wanted Have you wonted for a re full time np only i.1denc1al builder., Are ___ se-__ 9347 __ . __ _ you looklnit f Of' a rttep. U-Oni1t /1ttretanal ~. In a imall I but busy J of fa~"' If so. please ull Jame at TI4-83J.27G4 Mon thnl f'r1. 8 30 5 30 Help wanted Full time po51t1on in OW' readt-r ad dept. ltr!> Mon·t-·ri. 9 ~ Tt•lephone & C'oun tt: r !>.ile' Hequ1 res good s~lhnJ:. 1iir ammar. & penman:.tup Mll!>t enJO> ~ the public App I) Pe nn)s aH•r. 16b0 Placenu.t 1\\.e . l M Jlo!;ptW.h t> Host~i. ~ ex ~ Need hai>t~ses 1n l>e\eral loc ations P tune. near )our home 'll>elcom1ng new rt>:>1 dents Bnn«ianR i1 ft ~ lrom !()(.ii men·h,.nh ~car & t~~"'nkr 1-M appt _call !>4i JW~ HOSTISSFOR HEW HOME SAUS Wuod.bndtie are.1 Sat & ~u n d.:a) and \ .ir1i>d ~'' 10 to t> For more inf11 C'.al l Sul' Hl•mard il4 "779 i2!>1 ur 213 8:11 0401 or Iv m.i.g .it 714,1Q3 3600 HOSTESS /CASHIY Needecl rot <b> work . Mon· Fri. Apply dally uam. Mi Casa Me11can Restaurant. 296 E 17th ~C.M tmlT AUil Cl.Ell Weare~ a reliable persan wrth an aptat ude for nsures • cakulator skills to work N1ghl Audit. EnJOY xlnl co benefits anclud111.& a r ree meal per shirt Apply 9am·noon Mon ·Fr1 Penannd MAlltOTT HOTIL 900NewportC-en~r Or Newport Beach Equal Opp E.mptyr M /F ~ape malnteoaoc~ Foreman needed. Vaned dWes Full u~ perm a· mm&.. Good co. benef 1t.a Apply al A fr H Land.scape. 231H 1 Vaa Fabncant.e. MwlOn Vae· '° l. LEAD TEACHIElt S MJA51on VJotLag. Hiiis areas. Im l1M.'d openings. Amencan Pre SchooJs Tro-1999 or 770. 1991 LI.GAL 51e•y PrestlRJOUS Newport law hrm needs 1ecretar)' with min I yr ex· penentt an general law. ~l ------Lecal Secttt.ary for small general practice hrm. ExPt>nence preferred. Good phone maMWr es· sentul <:ompel1t1ve ~ ,Sewpon Beach. Call L)nne lla y ~s iS2 1773 ·----- LIGAL SEC. N~ Bch law firm seeks ~ry (Of' family law au.onw) ExPt>r'd & good <Jolls t:.J I ~ S400 uquor Store Nights & "'et-kends Must have c ash re~1 s t e r ex · ~~ 1888 Placentia c; ~~Yin perso~­ M ACHIN 1 S T A S SEMBLER Npt Och manlctr ot food procesi-· ~ eq\.lp ~ qualified ~rson w all around machine shop exper Must ha.,,e own tools Ple11 ,e call Jim n• 6429000 ~OS Wanted. 1661 S ~ Hwy. La&una Bch. CalJ 494-4892 M.a.mtenance man. part lime. retired Costa Mesa area. set your own houra Apply at 3020 RecDull Ave. Ga~way. SaenlJ.flc Management MA*tHMIHT •HOUSECLEANERS• TIAl.-S Full or put·Ume. good lmmedlau tullftme day wortina C'Ond. Must have pcs1uons avail. for •1· own tnnsp. Eng •peak· p't!l..•dve tndMduala #ith inl preferred. Work on good peraonalltlea. residential at comm. Starts at tll0().Sl200/mo. (TUI en-GD + beoeflts. A&e l8 It over Medical front office for sW'Sical sub spedaUat w/office practice. E.a· perienced cmly need app- 1 y . Salary com · men1urate w /ability. Henefita. HB. M2·2S96 Med ical Ass istant, 1 person ore . C .M . OB/GYN. Mon It Tuea <nty. 548-3441 Medical back office Newport area . Part tune. Exper. Gastro Specialty. Apply : 17822 Beach Blvd. Ste. #263. H.B. Mechcal Ofc needs ex· per'd <S yrs> back ofc girl, P ll. 25-30 hrs per wk Apply wkdys. betwn 9·1 at: 2139 Placentia Ave, CM Mope«t Medlanic. middle age to retired with oul· i.1de income. part·time also some sales. 631 ·2S04 Nurse Aide. comp.·live·m. Beach area. 6C2·2686 NURSES AIDES: All shifts. experienced or Tramees. Mesa Verde Conv. Hosp. 661 Center. Coi;ta Mesa. 5e·S585 Nursing tEt tODIAL YSIS RN,A.VI+ Cnllcal care Exp. pre- rerred. Will tram for thas Specialty. t\Jll time. In Mission VieJO 714-831-1100 :"lurst.ng ~tiffed AidH S4 00 7 .3 shift. Xlnt worlung conds 8 Paid holidays. EOE 642-3505 8a)'Vlew Conv. Hospital :m5Thunn Ave. C.M. Office PositiOll available . f'1tim e l..Ust.omer relations & bk· kp'g helpful but not nee. LRe company w /good benefits Call :;49.1575 for mten 1ew J . Herbert Hall Jewellers CJlflce Manager. Book· keeper for CPA. Please write Ad 111110. Dally Piiot, Box 1560, Costa Mesa, Ca. 926:!16. F\t1J ~e~!!f Ught typing & 1ood phone _personality. 642·2256 __ ~.,$~m·:~ty Mental Health Center needs penson with strong c:lencal. bookkeeping. s upervisory & com· mwucataon skills. Call Dr Scher. 642-0377. OfACllUCl'T. Part tJme·luly ist thru ~ 15. Mon thru Fri. 11 30to2:00PM. Neatap. pearance . good telephone mannen re- q\.lred. Good salary. Ca II Peggy btwn 12·2pm tm-ZJU Packagers, female 13.15/hr to at.art. Merit raises. UJ1 Monrovia, N.B. -----·----PARTnMEhelp, noe:icp. nee. Demooatrate food products In marllet nr )'CU'bome. Fri. 6 Sal. JO cot.~ • p • A.RTDEPJ' WANr A CAREER? ~<n4>*'IDI 3125 Newport .Blvd. Coeta Mesa. ESCROW llflCER fc1 I ~5 lb-..__. needed to =-·~ f::u/ .. ~rt~~ I on D won fot .Julee's Ra1· u .. -. Jile.N·FA'• Piua. • ' 5£CRETARY Cuhle.rln1 experience : A4¥ertlalGI •&ency tn • rr.. B. need• qualified : penoa to wwk clolety ,. ·1~~~~ director In : C::::-joba • plac· • -cmdla..165111. would be belplul. - ... ' :· . UM lbe Delly Pilot "'ut Result" aenlct cbrtttory Your aervice is our lpeclllty c.116U·S618 UL m stmEl WOll~siJT·i(~ For college student• Ii college bound high school 1enlors quaHficaUOM: Hard working & able to relocate for the summer. tntervleW held on Tbunday June 5. lO :OOAll. t :GOPll and 4 :OOPM al the Hollday Inn. Brl1lOI & 40S in Costa llaa. Room I '1331 PLEASE BE PROMP..T' am.J> CARE. F/Ume, pa m8D!llt (or S IW old llJt.. Uve lD /oat. Salary, rm. bou'd. etc. neeotJa· ble. Lq. Bch. C.ll JtaU. ~fteaor ...... da,ya. .......... eet of _, 1ar'll ~. Sc:hedul· •Aim, p/Ume • c1ay, ._'1D_E._1_'1lh_._c_.11_. __ _ inc~ for .emlruu11 _wk._ma:l4. ______ _ lk Some typln1. Call IOJS!!XPRLIVE·IN ll!ll~--......... -----Rlta. ~. Coutal Qi.Id C8n for 8Jr okl == rY· mo boy. LIP&~ NSVEaAFE.£ Prlv rm • board. Nr .__ fr acbool. Nwpt !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ 8ch. Ptlfect for ...._t., ........ '1JMl1J. ----------. Doing Bu•neaa Under A Flctttloua Ne me? HOUSEKEEPER J'rl a:»a:a •tar. c.u ootJ U~to~ 1°"' ~job. llut be wtllinc to do wtodowt, oven• 6 laoodry ·~•ontrua ...,.....o.i1 .... ...,. HOUSEXEEPER·Llve· ......... ,DOD•lmoker, for , ....... IOll. Room. bOltd • 1alary. Mail dri ... mann. m..tl:IO ·~n• F~.40..i~f.Cood tl'Ofkh•I coadt BOC. llr\'WWC.• Hoap, 206$ Tburla 4•• C.11 ..... U you have manqement ••P•rience In the holpltal. health eare, or ~nanlql1ekt. our npktty eapaadla1 OGl'POl'tltioft WOQld D• to lamw mon about you • Weare~aaeddl· tiaMI omce ln Our hl1b1Y ~ ONqe Couft· '1 .... AeMe cad nd dAmlM tNa~dh-. C7141147.0JI I ~O..lmlilJrM1r Part Ume tncome UnUmlted potential w /LU llbelten. Lv cns1 m.tl1J i 7 .. ,, ,, ...... _... ..... '• uu~=.. Ceate Nea•, CA •JU6 1714) 14' 1010 lllllSWICK lmllATION •• ••Dl•W. FAl\W Opporturut y ~erM/F -ttlt27 .. ., ............. . fut •ec.4 New,.ri ...... aftke. Dlt ••··· ... 1c1 ••. "" rfly,. ·~ r=:-..... WA ~llOMST N~ nlr1 f•HI ,.... ...... ,...Swwk· la1 ~ood. oear O.c. Ahport. M "' t ~· ..... 6 dJI #..,.., AM la ,.._ to Mr-. .._. Ill RGbert Bela. WUUam n.t fr AMOC., laQ!Mlllll.N 8 ---- ..!ftt~W d•· \ elopmeo& company lft N•wport Beach Full Umot o ... ral ofc t:ll pcricnee. Good telephooe .Jalla. attutate typm1. Mature • dependable< s.lat)> l700 mo Call fur IRJl.~WL Recept1on1st 1Secreury Raped!)' pvwuig lrvtne co seemng expenenced per:.oo to handle busy phoo~ &: fronl orfice traffic Good tYPlD& re qwred. Salary com · men!i urate w 1ex penenee. C..11 Charlene ~:ml ;=~=~:i llEClf'T /SCTRY ror lrvme Aeal ~late P9'9onDel firm. Gen 'I or c skills, h te PERSONNEL SECRETARY l)"PlDI, some bkltpg ex pr s.52-7000 ~ Growing medaeal office needs recept1onal>t. Some amurance billing exper Typtng a must. Salary open. 972-1581 ~I llah1n. c,•nata ble, dlt..... • IA. wad, •l'I reputable Attlq&ae *JI! Call d&Yt. to*5 nMded for..-mar. of llOfu ~'1Y M . Must baVt< ~ t)'P&nl sktlb. &H ~100 wpm, nice •P· ~ and Sood at· UWde For appt . please call Mr Anderaon at 714 -.~ ~ Ban-dilier C:r FV s.mstre5s DftJCkd. full • put Ume Exp helpful. 642·LS97 SECaETARY IOOIDIPH l girl ofc. Npt Bch ~Z277 Seeretary /Girl Friday Gen office work Exp bkkp'g· & int. de!>1;tn helpful Steady pos1l1on Newport area. Send re sume to "kDIUly Pilot. PO Box 1560, Costa Mesa. Cal 921626 llUllSD lOISl YortnownAn HuoUnitoo Beach CA 9atl SECltlTAllY S..-.ed .. today's claulfled ••der PaSOMHB.. .......... 1tel Secretary. 'ONDEltOSA HOMIS. Majcs' res1denllal home bWder &ocated In Irvine. ia seeluni experienced PenonoeJ Secretary to as.sist with varied duties ID our busy corporate personnel department. 1be ideal candidate must possea a muumum or 1 year per s onnel aecttt.arial experience, and good working knowledge or a com- pderized personnel re cordkeepiq system. SECRETARY ---------1 Xlnt oppty for sharp 1:al w1xlnt typing skills to Alrinnative Act.100 Employer Qualified individual ID.mt have excellent typ me skil.la, be highly or- 1aniud and have the ability to commumcate effectively wilh a ll levels. Thia Is an ex· oellenl growth opportwu · ty ofterin& an outsl&Dd· 1ng compensation/· benefit. package. If you meet stated require· mallB pteae send your resume includint salary history to: Gena Mem or apply lo penoo at: POMDBOSA HOttES . SWle257 3112 Baatoees Center Dr Irvine, CA 8271.S Affi.rmatlve Achoo Employer PLAMTSHOP F/Ume pos in sales for person w /inter plant knowtedge. ~ ask for Joan. PLASTICS. vacuum lonnlng, exper pref'd , not neceu. 642·4800 PLUMBER -repair &: heatint. Pay according to exper. Refs. request- ed. Geers Plumbing 516-1'52 RECEPTIONIST Irvine based h ome builder has an 1m mediate need for a Receptionist to head our buay front office. The ideal cand.adate will have a DWllmwD ot 6 months to l year generaJ off1ee npenence and type 50 wpm. Excellent "WOrkang cond1 lions and an outstanding compensation /benefits package are offered. For munedlate consideration please call Mon·Fra 9:00am·l2'00 noon Gena Mezo. ~1600 or apply in person· POteEROSA HOMES P!nonnel Department 3112 Business Center Dr Swte257 lrnne. CA 92715 Aff1rmauve ActJoo Employer llL..tS.. 10.l~o~ S..NsS-.od 955-3402 Alli for Mr. h~­ Rel.table woman to help care for mvalid 9-5 6 day wk. Refs req Call betw MO am. 548· 7311 Restaurant CAPTAIN : Private Country Club. Ex. penenee preferred but will tram. Must have Waiter expenence. S7 per hr to start. No tips Ql1J Wed thru Fri. for in· Pool Lifeguards , to la'Vlew &M-S404 S3J7/hr. Swim 1nstruc· -----t.on. to •.50/hr. Santa Restaurant. McCormicks Ana, c.o.ta Mesa loca· Land.mg now tunng. 31BO tians. 988-0Jll Airway, C M Apply ID PllSSMAH person. All positions A.8. Didl380+3M Milar -<l-"4l'f'.l-'------- Platts. 2 yn. mm expr . mmt know color & be a quality conscious 10 d.lvidual. Top pay for rilht penon. 540-1355 JacS p rr or ,. tr. Phone exper. nee. Salary + bonus. 6J5.alll. T.S.I. RN'a Part time. Relief C harg e Nurse . ll-7:3MM. Mesa Verde Qmv. Hosp. 661 Center. Coata Mesa. S48-SS8S Sales & management poe avail . 1mmed op · por\Ullllles for career· rmnded &lid at Smarty 8-1 Elltate bcen.ae req, Pants Fash.Ion on ented land sales. euh comm . 3 clot.tung st.ore. 2407 S. dinner partift, Orange Bnst.ol. SS7·3S31. ~. SG Valley, SF SALES, CuMom Tee Shirt Valley, pdeeeb wit, plen-rollciton. Noexpnecess. lY cl ~ • call col-F /P time. 642-0742 lect or dlrect ~.ask for Len-s.&ca/needed 5 top ftrat _IO'-"-o.le __ . _____ _. call cben. Full or part •IJ!lllJl![l!ll•ll!!.lll.-•llf tune. llSMOO.l. ReelDtaUs.Jel S AL ESPER S 0 N · .... l..ted bl s.maet TELEPHONE ror ad- Blitda ome.. top com-~company baaed • ..._ lD Hua~o-.a Beacb. 1714t ....... JOJ Guana&.eed base aaJary plus commission and -.... Smit l"l!lllllDe: . .&Jtecinn Stlel llqr. ID· dmt.ry P\11 Company, nan 8taeb Blvd.. a.a. or call for en appt. •1m. anet nmmer Job for LMdller'I. ~ an fast paced. con gerual Newport Beach of flee Call l.J I a at 833-2900 SECRETARY to 2 JllDIOr execuuve. al busy N.B development company Must be bnght attractive & prolessiorutl with out· st.anding skills Call Lan· da752·1107 SECUTAIY Bro ke r age fa rm 1n Fash>On Island has 1m- me d . opening for sec re tary /bac k -up operation. Exper. pre- ferred. Hrs:7-3 :30 Con· tact Helen McGlnley for appt. 6"-2292. Secret.ary. busy Laguna Beach mfgr needs per.mn to answer phones, lypelcftle. 497-1556. SecretM)': F\IU time for ReaJ F.atale Co. T ype doeuments. aurumaJ 50 wpm. Able to handle pre· ssure W1U1ng to work ~ Salary •tart.I at $850 +dental. health• tile im Call 494-8.521 ext. 272. Ask for Samantha or Pat S ECRETARY · PresUfCIOU.'I real estate firm needs or ganized professional take·charge per5(lf'I Typing· SSwpm lrvme 752 0161 SECREI'AHY Legal farm 1n Newport Beach re· qi.ires Recpt. Lite typ. mg. Will send through legal training program. I NTERNATIONAL BliSJNESS SERVICE. 18552 MacArthur Blvd lni 752-0161. SICltETAllY Xln1 appty for 5barp gal w ix.int typing skills lo work in rut paced, con ~Newport Beach of. fice. <.:all Ula al m.2900 ~·••le\ $1000 Pol1Uon.s avail. in the Newport area offenng xlnl growth patent for an· d.IVldua.ls w /lnt.elli gence to beeome manager 's nght arm. Good phone personality. 100% Free to applicant lrvme Pa'sclnnet Agency 488E l7th.Cmta Mesa &dte23e 642·1470 Security Officen needed to start June 13 io the N 8 area. Full & p/t. All shifts . Male/female. SHI.~ plus per hr. Auto & pbooe req'd. No exper oecw. $tudent military llCbedWes welco~. Call ror appt. m. Ul80 S.C. ltf Officers AU abif\a. Oranae Co. lcadoD <n•> t'la-72'3 SECY/BKPR. part/full Ume. R.E. Co. Cdll. Sal.try nq. ~ SEC'Y /RECEPT. Npt Beach real estate of. fice looking ror ruU tJme aper person. Front of faee appearance, prof telephone manner. ac- curate typing, & or ganizatlonal abilities. Salary $Ul00 /mo with lD· crease in llO days. Cn seU Propert.aes Inc. 752·1194 SHOE SALES. Wanted, full or part Ume. Good Co. benefits. Future mgmt poeitions possi· ~.Apply m person bet. 9am & llam 3{)77 S. Bnat.ol, C.M. SHOE SALES-Xlnt oppty qualified person. Gd salary + benefits. Ouldren's Bootery, N.B. ~2t64Mr MalW-. sa..KSCREEN OPR SlealTAllY ~-Setup & operation ror Financial investment aiaomall!d machlne. E•· firm for educators. per. pref. Mana1emeot Personnel Communica-pos1tioo opportwdtlea. hons Dept. Secretary Salary commen1urate Xlnt typing. Sb req'd. w/aballty. Good bmefata Exec. secretarial e1per. & lllnt work.to1 coad. a must. Noa smoker pre-631-0700. rd 1nqu1 re (714 > .-.0123 "'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! SUit screeMr for atasa !! shop. Experienced & pro- ll!!!'JI Allilfr,..tee•,r.r. dl.lction aWtude a must. 4111·1.566. Small. fut·arowlne roUenkate mr1. co. look· Ina for exper. belp In In· ventory control , ~lq. produdloa. le 1en . o perations . ~. Stationery Store in Corona cW Kar DMdl ex- pr'd aal .. ledy. Full time. 5 da11. Xblt wortt-lal cmd. llrpeclallJ1me c:Bmae. ~1010 Sbmal \0 ..... I« • ria- kla lmp&lnd J-a man frcm .. tpm. $t.OO 1'r. '7M·0171. Call btwa 44llm- ...... -.......... ._ .. . . -., -.. !~~.a:~.·.~ ..... ?!.~! ~ ............ ~!!~ 'lTAOIZIUI-Am edur.a · lltmet• lltuu. crA. fla I • .... Ji..., 1171 ••~' •• .._.. a ... ,,., of aco.' ...... .....-.. ....................... ----···· ....................... . • ,..._ t"9 YWJ put. f7l..m7 New BettlllOe aore • •ll!iifJ!l'IATl:CAIH• 119t~at ntri1ere ttm• 6 hll ·tlmt .......... ..,......._ ... For Gold. lther. -.a......-....• liatraUYI opptys ror a... IMO m.an Platt .... A•1 Iliad. 1hwr1• te•be tifDt ......,...,U.111m· ;Hf°-•• .... • .. •••••• ..t.. • &u&. Dea1e1 •c.u.-r wtia. Part u Jobi KEl!SHOND ~. AXC. CorHr 1ro••· ••• .._ '°'!J1 lllUMCI. r I ai.mp ... ll/F. Pelts Jlrowa/ofl•'#bttl •laid --------Nn CA.aPET Lt •"" .. • or O· s bow. p • l pl)' -Jferc1daD co.er. me a.a.. t r 1 .... "" ---"'llCI ;d;' ~ 8"t-anb eaU m.-i-J.Mhfllpm. ..... «.MU aoe .... P.P. .-~a:;-'M· Tom~.-oi. mea.-.-. eraTV--·•~ cw ..,.._, .._ AKC o.ra.. Sheptirrd. AnD tola w/S ~. .... 11t''::P ~· lft-li•lM Fem, I wh. 1boU. avwn/Wtlb saoe. Pat-Qennt rtaa. fdOqea,11 · ;.;...;;,._;,. _____ _ a--. ..,..d telepboae 111.oeM, att.r •:• • -. ... ,,.. ndlowtda t.Y*-111 wtatte oJlcl. • ~Kmbe0r Ant. CMrc· • ..... ~ to worlr ~·~~! _.~!·:.._____ 8-tnels pl eyer SH. yrt old. tlOOO firm. ;.·..::_a~ lrwa _, ofc. We MU Yartmaiaw Terrier puwy. .557.-a tQ.2171. ADl9«Vkkle. ell walDuL Accordwl. .-.0 capy • ofe aup. __ ....... .,,. "'"--p ... _ _,, ....____ .... :111 .... 11 .... ~ ....... ..... Our top .... ~ -· ~ • ..,._... .,. ..... _.. ~ aet. • .., I If c.. ._ .. ---·· ... .,.. fnim ---......... dn.2 ... ead tb&es. 2 Mew, .... per wt. lltny co. BOXEAPUPSAXC rattan chra • tbl. Gold. tddQI ilJVer fl beoeflta. For taterv• OIAllPIONSIREDIZOO ~ ailwlr~ = 940-Sl.01 ask fw Aft.ertpm:IU-01.0I CHEAP-llUST SELL! i•• SakkMwt <Id r.m,. Sbeepdoc pup-Compl. lhta1 rin : 1 ct. Dlamoad Solltare ..,!§'Iii =-~-·10 .-. AJCVC. wtndettver. eoudw. tablet, zs11 TV, vsi.1 color, str'Oa& blue _._ No -141 -._. 7214 recilner. Roman lampe. fluoreacenctt USGS -expar ~. -. -·-Kin& Bdrm ad(compl.>. Certificated Value No adJiD&. ACl'CIA from ........ _._. ex: Ai1port.. z.tpm call Pomeranian pupplea ltttcbm ta.,,..,/4 cbn. aft Sl4.m. Nol.,_. m 1lkt Tami,&U-0189 AXC. 10 weeks. Lillie s.aUs.tCIUt6·7SOI yellow 1old+weddln1 cbamp'1, 2 males • .iute. _..;_ ...... -.,..-,~-... -_...-_-_--1 bmd. SUe price -75. DDOeedl.-.oo:.M 3 ,...,, ..,_ • "''"""'"' aet. Pvt appt. Call eve Ttavel Acmt. with exp. needed for Corou del Mar Travel A1eacy. JuliemC!lO. Kerry Blue Terr. AKC puppia. Keoael bred, Pvt pty care. 751 '3773 (h'O abeU units 6 l 6GG3I matdrin& colfee table) ms. Mao's Diamond rin g . 6 pc brown modular "-l. VVSZ. w/14 stooes. couch. 1125. Call 7&0-83t6 App r SS. 000 . Se 11 : S.1.000/080. SST--4250 t«nrl1 11• Weifld ••• ....................... TOP CASH PAID Ftr llled fm-nlture fr IP- plUDcel, wor1dlll or DOl llr14J.33 Wanted: baby crib ~ other related f~. Pleue ull MMJ21. ....... I I IOIJ Elil~~lal travel a•eacy bu 1m- med. operunc for exper sales aaent. Computer training euentJ.al. Xlnt. benefit&. 8Sl.-J3. AXC Eo&ll•b Sprtn1er Sparuel puppies, $100. Blaclt le white. 6'2·9US3 Sobd otk d.imnl rm table. 2 leala & 4 spindle back ctw.n. Lt.ke ·nu. SS9S. Game set. tabl & l chat.rs, l2IOO Baby fum, dresser, chest, duk 1 rt + dlanlood. custom -•••••••••••••••••• rinc. S,., OI yelJow/COkt, aJllN Dindor trombooe 12.000 PP MZ-7991 Wllb case. Escdleot coc · AXC Cocker pupa, buff, Sl7S. CaJJ M6-QZ1alter4 pm. ---------• dibon, llOO. 615-81152 after &PM.. TYPIST-GENERAL Cit'· f1CE. hilh school grad. no exper necessar y Good benefits & promo- uonaJ oppty. Farmers ln6. 540-4100 E 0 E . 1045 M-0 , 8071 cha&r. clothes. DllSC. An· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fender M&U1c master Uq_ues __ 7_flO._fM_1_1 ____ TRUCK Spray booth t.M. x1nt condition. SlOO ....................... FREE TO YOU Cute. Sobd 0aJt Coffee Table, n~fy latteos. M/F. some xlnl cond.. makeofrer ~Vlllbu. I yr old, 30' ~ Typist. d1etaphone. ac curate. &Owpm. wall train word-processing. Greet opportunit y, good benefits. call Diane Roberson 833-9550 £.OE. Manx 646 8 5 44 o r 6C2-l648 aft SPiii ~9158> Kmg Sa Waler bed. wood. xlnt cond Bookshelf. padded rails, spel'aal mattr. 6 drawn. $675 or hist otr S4&-1682 aft 6 loq x 16' tugh x 22' wide. --------- (Jf(er Re built Steam Electric Guitar w /car.e eleaner, Electromattc Diman:io Ptck ups and BX> 00 21.J.771·2070 amp. Brand new. Callror Wo. 'm-8382 MAie Lab/Retnever pup pies. great w t k 1d s 962-127Jl aJ\er 5pm MA.NG ROT<lflLLE A ----- TYPIST. Expenence a mu st /teletype operator/Mag JI. Sr T y p I s t INTERNATIONA L BUSINl::SS SERVICE. 18552 MacArthur Blvd Irv. 75.2--0161. Waitresses Part time da> Over 18 Gaslight BrOl1er Will tram. MlrN.'J!!~~use experience only Apply in penon to 20th Cef)l Ur) Ud. inside South Coast Plaza.Ma.II. WAREHOUSE MATER 1AL MNGR Experienee will qualily you for good salary plus x1nt company benefits with a rast grow lni eAectronic dlsln bu tor in Irvine. Call Bob Tracy 8-S. Mon· Fri. 5"9-0954 We lder /Produc ta o n wortter aoucht by small oo..Obrs .• $4.~/hr st.art Laguna Etcb1na1Press OJ.49M301 WORD PROCESSOR Experienced~ capable, For 1rv1De law r1rm. cat I Fran 833-3622 ........ . ..................... . .... u 1005 •••••••••••••••••••••••• wtSJ'MINSTER ABBEY AN'IlQUE MALL DatJy l<M>, f'r1 lG-9 CLOSEDTIJESDAY 117Sl Westnunster Ave GardenGrove ~~lo.'J Art Nouveau vase. silver & bronze $100. Mahofl veneer mirror 19x25" $4.S. Set ot 6 salver spoons $35. Vict.orian brass door knob le nusc hardware Si!5 Eves 67S-i090. Ted 2fW'T)' lull.en..,, 1:re). MAlt' & Female 97tMO'l7 eves ---Kil tens l male salver lab by, l rem BnndJe Tiger S36-e338 aft 6 ......... 1050 ••••••••••••••••••••••• **I RUY** Good Usecr'~rruture & ,\ppllance5 -OR I ~1u sell orSEU..forYou MASTIRS AUCTIOH 646 1616 • IU-9625 -----ftemodehng , antique Eng. OU sideboard S4SO 3 F.ng. chairs Sl2S Llke new compl t wn bed Sl90 Det11gner 9x9 rug 1285 ~ UdDV•&Stae-... , .. , I dS••• ••n.• SAT.JUMl7, IOAM ZIOOALTON AV£. IRVINE. ORG COUNTY PARTIAL LIST: to.ni. Queen . Full le Twin bedroom sets D1oette, pauo &: L1v1ng room f umrt.w-e Color • Bio w 'IVs. Slereol. Speakers Kidt-a·beda, ~n1era lion Coo ler s. Raricenton. Waabers. Dr y er s . Stoves . Vacuums, 40 Antique tyepwrlters. Chao debers Rockers C~t o r drawers. D~s k s BIC)eles Pictures Mir rors HONDA MI N I BIKE . Rue s PERSONAL EFFECTS 100 s OF BARRELS • C ART O N S WITH COM'EN1"S TERMS-CASH OR~HIERSCHECKS WA REHSE PH <714 I 540-2121 E.C. "'ID" JIHICINS AUCTIONEER (2.1.l ) 789-t6118 7 HIP Good cond 1750. 645-51.24 ~------- --10 .. Craftaman RIA saw. Prvl Party has household Near MW lncls stand & furn for sale. r e as 4 blades SZ30 645-078.5 or pnced XJnt rood eash 542.7144 only 546-1(115 -------- U;rner Set. 2 maU.resi.es Msellmlew 1010 box sprg~ + spre adi. •••-•••••••••••••••••• SlOO }to\'UIJit Sale good valuel> oo u:.ed furn l> R lbl, 6 ehri.. M BR ::.et ~2 4WlS 644-0755 -----K11 -.z bed. top qu<1I . dllDOl5t new SlOO Like n .. w lawnmower $2~ ~10 ------------ Compiet(' ~pc antq Bdrm ~ S"JOO,{JB<J Recllnt:>r roeker , R1ccar >t:'W mactune ~ --------- ln!ant's Bureau Sl.rucWTalJ) sound. S50 644-Q.89 ~vmg Sale: Kuig-sl~e bed, box s prings & frame. S75. [)e.corator ~a secl1oOal . SLSO. Om· •DR tatMe & 4 eh.rs. ~. mi.sc household items ~~~ GwwywS. 1055 ....................... Esta~ Sale ever) thaog "* holaeho«i 1eds. ap- LUGGAGE TAGS from )OUT bustness card ~one eard for ea(h tag plus one spare We return perm.inently sealed attractive tag & strap, meetlnJC :urhne I D req\Brements Pre \'Ult loss & theft' For a penon.ahud ta fl enc lose ,.allpaix-r. fabric o r "Day Glo" paper & we .. ,11 back & 1nm your Ldg5 (Jr try two card:. back to back PRJCES Si!eaorl /Z 4 'Stao SJ..60ea 5,g1.ap SJ. SO ea lDor more Sl .40ea. Sales Tu lnduded NO CARD" ~w )'OW"~ or~ name, address, phone le we'll make one card per La&-Add~ each. Send check OC' mooey oc. dierco. ""°' fllnilT'IMG P.O Boxl.* Coll.a ..... Ca. -- pboc-es. & murh more ~19 Sign.al Rd. NB Sat ....... &lri ... w anl> !M Z \Dfanm Sl.5 each. 1 _..;;._ _______ , ~t-Sae&-10,aJJ SAT JUNE 1. 8 30 am· m ncef'ml coad.tt.loa fr 6pm Louvre wood front WGT1 only a few Umes by door. drapes. tgd ronc:t 1. student nurse. s.40-5721 household. a.rack light· al\6 ~. ptctures. doUung 1~862 Dee p H ar bor Dnve. Hunttngton Bch •o ff Bea<'hwal k & Gddenwest l ----- M<NINGSALE' fut J une 7th. Sam 3pm Hl:JQ. Lawn mower. bab) clothes & miaeh more 22'J E 16th Plaee C M Garage Sale t:vt'ryU11n1? JOflNWAYNE TDINlSCLUB MEMBERSHJPS 11'ree IJJllh Vldual or fa m membentups avail from O> elo1nng 1t.s Newport Bch otfice. Make offer. Call M . Alexander. ~1900. 5 Ple('e Roger's Drum. Set Z1ldian Cymbals hke new. Best offer 631·3719' KU6tom Cabinets with 2 12· spkrs & Lrg horn. $150 ea OBO ~s.113. Fende r Tel eeas t~r w case Xlnt. Maple nt'<'k Nal. fin Offer ~ ------ Offkefwftitwe& ....... 8015 •...•....•............. Used otfice chairs. ~SSO F'lle eabmets. $40-$70 Pnced to sell qwckly Newport S tationers. 4229. Bu-eh St N B. CJH1ee furn.: Desks. chairs. file c ab and rmre Pf' 962-7791 and 988-21645 1017 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SHERRY'S PET CARE Boarding & grooming Wllh love. rree pkup Poodle Pups le Persian Kiuena for sale. Tea C\lp atuds , 25 yrs exp 546-2841. ~~·tog & ~ Afghan. 5 llQl o&d female SSO. 2 finches w /cage Sl5. 2 cockatoo. w 1cage S75 "'1·32D6. S6 gallon all gJa.u tank. filter. rash a nd wood Ned. Sl25 64&.eolll ..... &er.,.. loto ....................... PLAYER PJANOW /MTR Owner Must sell ~. 775-?0.111 IT1U5t go 7921 Ma<'Donald St H B Sat tSun .... ..,Gooch 1094 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!lm-111!!!!!!!!!!!'91 ..................... .. lbadul ol funuture for 11 Spcn 847·7851 .........,,. Sobd oak ice box. 6' tall. beveled mirTor. 891-8059 sale. 296t Pepper Tree 1975 Anniversary plate Ln. Apt A Caah ooly 2 Fam Garaae Sale 6th 1!178 BeU VaJentJne Girl., ........ 566-9344 7th 8th 90'i Alabama, d G 11 me 1um oose Girl OR·NGE COUNTY H.B tolf lndtana pohs 1 ~6 .. Moving must sell new COLLECTORAMA ANilQUESWAP MEET Sat June 7th , 9 3 . 0 c. £.A. park.mg lot. 830 N Rau, Santa Ana Call Oiane:SJS..33.SS Herculonoouchw,mateh ~g 6 7-8 F\lm,sgl& Sofabed , newly up GUN SHOW ~ ~or bat olr qn mattresses, more ~ bobtered. +-new mat· .June 7 & 8. t9l!O ~I l~ Mani;:old. Cd~ 644 2:599 lJ"ess 1175 Xtra fLrm qn A1.:aer & Bcllc>r box1mau. Sl&S &U-8205 Ru\' ~II · Trade R.ENODEUNG tu"•c• 1010 New5°'11bed ll60 ort>nt ... •••••••••••••••••• •• dfer _ssz.._OMB ____ _ Westinghouse Refng Natural wtute. Imported Tools Skis. e~. lawn furn d..sk, 3016 Don· aic~us wood S140 nybrook. CM Sal 10 5 cord. Call 646-5201 Iv . 1060 mess orl42·9489eves. Wbtte, l.8cu ft. ,.....,_ -..1a •· 1o p..,. D>O. 551·9'728 ......_...,. • ve ""an ••••••••••••••••••••••• Vegu gambhnft eqwp. + Wi cker co((tt table New Cln:le Y West sad-$400 Rack for LUV Retng/Frzr 18 c If Ad· set 6' ttlde • bed, Wl· dle. S350 usu. Cnimp pdrup, siso. 10..spd blke, rm.ral. No frost, white. 3 UKd HJ1ehb11tk brown Engl saddle. p~rfeet liO ~1312 yn okl WUT. Lake oew dia&r 1111~ cond wthlllngs 1250 S2.S4>/firm. SS2·1717 an IDJ-0208 Qacm utility Rack for 6 ::.> Ford truck. SlSO /ofr. MUSTSEE' t• &1hldGoodal065 ~ Refngerator. SJO. O>cnpl. l Br apt furn., ••••••••••••••••••••••• Worts nae 1V'1, livin& rm. dlniog Cdfee table. comer table. Olrpet.lna. plush, rreen. Call 551..oci29 rm. becboo.n, patio set, breakfast set. red.mer. Z5 x 15'. hilh lo. Sl75 or plant1, paiotio1s . hne111, appliances ~ offer.se.«113. Refriprator Whlrlpool, cry at a I . I amps . nusc C.all536-U95. u.nwt Gold. U.3 cu. ft ,i.aware. All 1 yr old. HOUSE SOLD auto defrost. SlOO Pd Sl5,000, ucrlftce Ooktapot retrt1. old but NOWSELUNO m-«153 saooo. Leavin& c ity good. SIO obo. Brown CONTENTS Bal boa Bay C I u b hide+bed. dbl. 1100 obo F\uuitun. Lampe, Ap. lJ cubic foot Amua .-861610 6i5-3496 or Ad·Sitte r plimc.. Plants. Tools, not freesa". E.xeelleot a~. M2-4.300. :M bn M.lic. • rnu.y Anllquee. condltlon . Ast Ina Sct1onhurpt•fumiture~ mT Francia L.ane, C.111 . 1125..00.541-11'19at\4PM equipment. Cha in, Jr#alry 1070 Call for d1rectlooa. .__,_ 1020 chrome fire eat ........................ ~Wlti.llOld. _.,._ tn1ul1ben, old maps .................. . ;;;.•=.it::;.•;,;;;:;Zs•; dnft1nl tables. etc. Sat. PlULCO rerriaerator. BICYCL• BLT r 2 J\me 7\h, ~u. N~ l'.ftATr liwrllJ f"°9t tr.e. IJda by 1Mle, ~-or · Harbor Hl1h Scbool. WI I~ IL"U. white. •" b1P • IO" _.Ha1xlr',Caata 11... (<Id bur larat• ana.) l.49ct Emerald c ut wide. suo. Tan ftlvet -•-=--'-1------• a lrvtaa Ave. Ne'lf1IOR dia.mond. VVS.1 E cok>r. loveaeat. Sil.GO. Nt1bt • ... .-8Badl. llouretcence high blue IUDd, 2 d:rawen. dutl _.._ GIA certlflcated. •P· wtla11t, 25\9 .. wlde. ~ 2111d'*tl, llw.d. ma• ~~Id 159,290 ttll as.oo. Phone (110 --....;._..,-_..;.._ __ I • l'lmtb. te5 bo&b. ll91t Jbcelet w1dlamoada & Weft l.PM. FEAT\JRING \\ Jo;APO:-.:S & I\ r (' t-:SSO R 11'.:S ·t ... ,,....,.~ • K•loedll\I o;upph,.. • ~ .... ()opt'" . ..., .. ., ... _ ·•bl-• .... ., •• ,""-' anllQW •t.Ml'M."""" • , ... n"m'U'I m prf'm..,.. .,..,,.~ INDIAN ARTll-.ACTS • .ltw~lry •R..,4 l!IMll.U • K IH'h1no Doll• • l'c>llHY ANTIQUES& COLLECTABLES •WMttrnR ...... •Art • Ciw11 •w &r'UfMU • Mf"tr10f'1tbih• • C'tllfl' °'*'. s.1- <.;QV f'.: RN M l':NT SURPLUS • Uft•IGt"'" -(' ... , ....... • PorK""' .. • 51ttPtM """• • g.,. Pl.Cl! l1t0l~l'IOll o.-<7rnlll ITSMJI MUEU.Dll TAllU.:S ONMU LOTllOP' 1'11£& PAUINO rooo °" PIUUllLS&:S Jiii ___ , ·--OPltN TOTlll PUIUC '" M Ulil llMll O.,e ,,.,_,....a CMlillr9 U.... I• fl ORANOe COUNTY' FAIR GROUNOS 1-.., ....... Clll ... ArtblttOll Of 0..JA QMto lMN,Ca ••11 oul dlnl•I 11t =--~ =~= ~~"T:O.~s~~i = . .a:~=:=: _ _:!!!!!!!~:::. ..... ......,~;.;.;.;.;...;.;;.....;,_-1 SUS. Also, 2 &euan ~ wi'dlaJDCJ«Mb & .hm 4lh NPll, Wed a . C 1 •a cNlra. 1 a..., tablie a pc. -.a..-, •JIOt&i..--...... &a I •....S.tft• 1~,· _. -· .. !ti.!!~ ..... ~ ~~~~~:!..---I ;".:,SPendant diamonds. U.ScuftnibitllOO. B/W JfOllll ..._•a \6 s t ii. lad Prame, maUNaa. ll*b, n....... nna t 'IV • •as ~ m . SUtwlda•-'-• 911 ... • headboatd; Sibt-rltn purple color ....,.kit..aibloet•/1 .. tine lam m..n. AU.. 'l'tHdlt .. d : 8tt91e Ametbyatll.500. a HdWd. *'-'•I _. tODd..O ::t' tlltd Clf'Pll II *I· 1ftlt; '*"' OU.-eetnr &ttrmetn•· dMIU... • BnaktQt. .. QIU ....-Im• --U.; 4 llau.u ~hrt.ct IN)er1 appt. ell: t.tlllt • I dire •.' Dhlhll chain: a.,.. N£."~1 All 1C*f eHd. Call l!allmlll.l'J'l.lm - ---...... ~~~--~~~~~ Call~-M71 .... b ., .... lo ml, ....................... . ,. ., ......... . .... ----· ~ "· .. , ... , .. . ,.. 'DO.: ........ . -.all .n11-. Aa ... "* . I ,.na. t.Hll er llleat. ... '11tm •• . .... ,.., ........ 1TTAN '11. ll' J.• llli. 1 • -1111e ..... CaU ._.._ ... --------... man ' \a l'Wd P.U .. ,_. wort !'Tl VW a... allll ~. ... . ...... .. nuuu ...... •••••t••• ........ IEE AJt/Pll <•Htl.e. tlloo. ~ an ftal..... ir V1llll'\1R& + t.nlJlr a ......... NCa t•... 04... 11' ~ t.ra»er. rt &: .. ,....,,..... d~ &o •tff5 flrm. Ind...,. ......... .., --...___...;;;.. ____ 1 941'72 mft IPM !Wblk. ·a -.. Aeblt. -.. Good ccnd. SUDO/OBO. Call eft.. lpm: 51'7·-· '71 '>e'IMftt. ,._ Mil .... Good coodltlOD, nm...-. Low MU..&•· m.imaft.fPll llatJ•1n. 419 ...., __ .. .., ___ .. bu.met' a.Ma -v--. •. aHlll -....-•• ......... OVMI, ""'1a, a..& ...... ~ .... -... eloMla • t upboarda. W; ...... _ _ ll1r 6 outboetd. -d.tU 6 ~omforta'9&e llll lliiii ,.. .,.,.... •:UIJ'a , .am --•••••••••••••• -.-. -~--_._ ...... _~..;._• -_..-.. -.... -_-r.:::.:.=::.:....::.-----1 .. .,..._ W ' K•tler 8 I UN ~ ... °'6of' ..___._,...,,.., '°'"' fl70 Dltuu. Loaded, tak•· 'IV. I )'t "'"">'• ta. de o..I C!md. -· ••••• .. • .. ••••••••••••• ~..... ...... • 11_.,, 11.M .... 1 OaU•1 .. m 18' aarcraft trailer , • a.wy lbortbed V-4, soNY TCK ~·II n11 II S!.'~* of a.r;.a.:.:,ao ovaloed lhoeb. Xlnt dlctl,WlllltOO.Now-1 -1 a I coed. U500J 080 . AIJ.amldl·-•-... •n bU}'IOI a uu .... Small travel tnUer. 1.974, 51U-4* ~-IMlbaet ....... ta ••uperb --------- tl70 opporlwally for Hp. sJpe 4, HtrH $1000 ...... ...._ aallor to buy Into 40' _TM_Mr __ ·ll25 ______ 1 y- ' ; 'J M MtdL Unlimited 1a1Un1 ,......., wmtr t I 10 -·•••••••• ••• • • •• • Ulne •¥WY 1m1U Invest. •••••••••••••••••••• • •• 81 114111 90 I 0 mQ40 lmlJTY TRA.LLER zooi:\(; .. ;;~~·a::~•d4 -1-.-0-arde--n-K_et_c_b_.-11_p_1 5·~. =~ Raider IV llO hp IMtt avail, briatol. SSt.500. &relier, many ac' Perldna d &esel ('114 ) ..-.s.wwtw,,.... cwone. Leu ow. 75 m.511Z. (714> -....... 6Aocalu"" t400 bn '1500 d3-81113 Prvt Party, owner will Clean your boat for sum· pert.I.ally flnantt. mer Exp sail Will do 14' Drakecrafl. 2 sails. vam, wax, paint, etc. Xlnt. cond. w /trailer. Reasrata QuaJ fuar&n· SUO. t'19·36H dya . teed. Ad-Sitter No. 116, _~ ___ evm __ . _____ 1 642-4300. 1:1' Balboa "19. <Hu it all). B-08'19 637-0890 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Xtra nice 14' Enterprise 90 HP Evinrude s&oop R11. k.lck-up Rdr. UkeMw. -.SO trtr. xt.ru. Movan1. need ___ 2_13-598-3283 toset.1 l&So10B0631-8175 Maintenance, de livery. 18• Prindle Cat, yellow, USCG licensed. Intrepid cat box & trlr. Id cond, ••••••••••••••••••••••• BYICI DB'I'. Open 8 ()a.ya A Week Moo. ·Frt 1:»s:30 SaWrdaya 8 :00.5; 00 ~~· C.C.taNeH S46-ltJ4 SSAYISAYES WITH USID PARTS 1mpx1.ed car paru IMPORT AUTOSUPPLY 101 N. Manchester Anaheim 7'16-9900 ....................... t4IW ltn 1/a TOM CHPYYAM (cml) OHLYSl7tl ~~ NEWPORT BEACH IJJ.OIH THEODORE ROBINS FORD JOt,O HARBOR !ILVO CO'>IA Mt ~A 64'2 0010 manner ~·2534 6J0.3150. 963-1427. $1750. ... Mm-W r.,.1,..... ..,_./ 9030 DodD t070 Wboard Mot.or Mercury SOHP. short-s haft, xlnt GllC 1176 Ventura, ~ __, ..en ~ ,........... eric. 38K mi, xl.ut cond . ....... ..._ ....... _.._ves. Ice CXXIAer, stoYe. A.akin1 54B-6IXJO dys ~ !i.S'J-2948. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Canvas/Complete set of boat covers Fits 42' Blue. good shape, ofter Clll 640-0589 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• HEWPOltT MARIHA Saps Avail ~1 SUPS AVAILABLE Sailboat.sonly Delaney's Battery, Manne Diesel Restaurant area, up to Service 1 week new Z7' Rest.room. shower. & Bought wrong size Coi.t ice machine incl 5f C.Wfer 6!0'-~---673-8)0, ask for Dave IMPORTANT NunCETO READERS AND ADVERTISERS· The pnce of items advertised by vehicle dealers 10 the vehicle classified advertising <.'Olumns does not IDC I ude any applicable taxes. ltceru.e. transfer fees. fUJaDCe charges. fees for loah, Poww 9040 Sip avaJlable for 35 • to 50' ••••••••••••••••••••••• Yacht. S9 50 per ft. 1978SCARAI Twin JO's. 130 houn, loilckd. Pn ply. Best CJf fer! Call 546-1200 <Mon - f'ri. days>. 731 821G ·tevenings & weekends). AsJt for Jerry ----43' Gran Manner fully eqwpped. beautifully cnamtatned. ready to cruise or ltve ubonrd Sip may be available U i,..,'Jc Fmancml( J)(MISI ble. sao.ooo Jack Curley 534-1505 eveninss 4't weekends. 642·4321 .. :.·-ya. .. . ::::-17 FT. GLASTROH '•"4 5• 85 horsepower :::: lllrude engine with : .,. than SO hours. full :::· t.lnvas. heavy dul} · •• trailer with h1lch & • • • ttlged for f.-hmg or ski • -.. • jqa hncludes a set or ;::· •tersk111l Ha'! 11180 •: .. : ~~ & IS "spotl~s•" :-: • '1U1 for deta1 ls Ardell Manna. 642·5735 43· slip avail. in Hunt rur poUut.aon control de•. 1ngton Harbour Call \/lee certif1('aUons or de- _Debbl __ e_Zll_J:'Hl. __ ·5645 ____ 1 aler documentary prl'· paratJoo chargl's unlesi. Boat Slips available. otherwise specihed by ro25' at S6 per ft. Daven· the advertiser. port Marina. Hunt. _H_arb_our_84f>._5498 ____ 1 .wt,..a/ 9520 Sip or side ue with eltt & ac.aks ••••••••••••••••••••••• water wanted in Balboa ·29 Model A 4 dr town rst area for ·zr to 30· sail sedan. restored. 110.000 boet..RespNBcouple .oo ·46 F o rd Woodie. children. Call aft 6 , restored. 113.000 675-6161 e«MG9 ---------'S6 t'ord 'ht.on Cius le. Gd FOR SALE 40' moonn1 cond. $1900 Newport Brach With 218' 661 811JO power boat. Off Manne Ave. westa1de ot Balboa ·65 Classic Must Convert Island 645-0748 Yellow wtwh1te lop. blk ------u-u. Mich l1res l2.000 loah, s,.ed Ir nule new enl{ SJ0.000 SW 9010 firm.. Pti I 398-0338 dys or ••••••••••••••••••••••• I ·34.S-1ll eves Swnmercamp wants lo buy newuh bow nder 1951 Riley. xlnl cond 110. 1ro-200 hip. 16' to 18' Aft.er6 PM. pleue call. tn hull. Jam 492-89$4 714 552·2055 ::;.:. 1-7572771-1076 ff Glaspron w/90 hp : .. :!a Cabin Cruiser, newly Evinrude. Super cond . '51MGTD BeauWully restored. Pvt. party. 492·8897 • •; • N!Jurb 40' mooring, j WI t Sl.llOO. S4G-484.5 ·: •; ~ ot Pavilion. Bst of· Ti .......... ------77~ V.a T .. aulotrans. PIS. P /B, rblt eoe. V-8. Bllt otr S46-0'131 Ford. "14 E300, custom camper int. loo many xtns lo hat Will flnance $3200 714 651 ·1313', 71~nes. ·75 Chev Van, lo m1 's Shelves for service work LDeded. 642·S944 9590 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WEPAYTOPl>OLLAR for top~ cara.forea1n. domestics or classics If )'()U1' car is extra clean. see'*' F1RST ! BliZ"' -r-J. ·-~·-2925 Harbor Blvd. ~A MESA 979-2503 WEIUY Cl..EAMCAIS AMDTRUCIS COMHfLL C HEVROLET .,.,_,.ll,111• r II. I • •'-"I \ 'vi~' I 541>-I 200 WANTED! • ~ J f • IMGflOll .;.; . avail end of une. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~·: .. l 14-679-5835. . .... -----•Ca 41rs. Sde/ ~Race. aodl t540 a....te modet Toyotu and ••••••••••••••••••••••• Volvos . Ca ll u s :~:!JTri-Hull C.llfornlan ... 9 I 20 ; ~ . tandem trlr. com ••••••••••••••••••••••• DeMrt Rail. ''19 Chenowth y ! ! ! 2 seat. fresh 183$cc en1. All chrome. xlnl race tranny. Great au s · peimon, new tires Call t.o find out the rest. Must see 4't drive lo apprec l5CXX> invested Toul sac latS21100 ~ •;; ~ 11. bait tank. fish 8' Roem·aboutsleeper •:•: fbader. many xtr ai., 1C:U~:5° '.::: t$HP. k> hrs. hah or sh :·,. Jlm.968-4213 '70V.W. Pop-Top Camper :.;;·11 15ft. Whaler /40hp 500 mi on reblt eni. Xlnt • ~ Trlr h all , cood Stereo. 35 mp1. -(' ~·"· • ai. or $3300. 1131 -0300 or : tn1-Tom 645-0222 -..:SS. ·111 CheveUe SS 396 X Int cond Make offe r ;• -~--------~·~•t. 17ft. power Cat. ::. rcury llo·o /O Big :·~];trailer w/brakes . 548-Ql . . ·21· ..Lyman Clus1c bay • ~ lapetrake. cuddy. -~ hiiid. ftx·up. Sl.500/080. #! 8'9-8266. 67H393 ·---------~i& Searay Exp Crus. t ftin 4'10'1, very clean. 80 f, ... All xtras Make ol• · . te. Aft 5pm 640-9738 __ CHEAP-MUST SELL u · 646-M&1orS48-4413 Cabover C/O compl. 1115. aft s. all Sat 646-7506 4 wt.el Dri..-'5 5 0 CM ••••••••••••••••••••••• '79 Ford Bronco Ranger. Ranchero Camper Shell. X1nL cond. 18.000 Call fits 19'70 & 1971 . Xlnl Joy.8:»5pm 640-9072 oond.. SUl5 546-9339 ·113 J~p Wagoneer. '65 Camper shell for mini reblt :rn Chevy en.c. Nd.a t.nack, eooct cond. 1100. wor1t on en. 67~. 548-8'731 '66 Ford 4x4 Stepside, Matot llltd .... 914 0 heeled susp 300 ('U In, ••••••••••••••••••••••• nn IOOd S2000 ~ Honcbt Express, 800 mt. bukets, xlnt ah•pe. 1275. Call AM, 648-11668 i4 Vespa Ciao, top cond . $300 /080. 549-3297. 64U876 ttlO PllSCHES WANTED Allow .. the opportwUt)' to CllJIJUdtt the purchase or tnde-ln ol your clean Alnche. Check with Us nxs..y• ..... 9772 ,.,... tt40 ....................... .. .................... . _..~.w ......... . ........... . '17 Poncbe 3.51A. Car drha~ 6 eomplete. ....... VOLVO "72VI: 4do0r, P/B .• PIS. ..... t701 .. .• rdo. Rua IOCJd. Im OaU '75-2075. ....................... SALIS. SlaY'ICI ~RY EXPERTS MW. q1~~11 A111illaC>11aeo1 MU!TGONOWI llACH It •OITS •Doftltreet NEWPORT BEACH 7u.ot00 ''11 ALPA ROMEO . Sp6der. Blulr beauty Xlnt CODd. 25-JIS mpe. 5 irpd. Mmt Mt. tMOO/ofr. Gl~ ,., mac ror eve appl. lfmSPYDER JlOIAC. MIOO P'IR.11. 1137,5975 EVENINGS 9707 ....................... '70 AurJj loot..S, 4 spd, 4 dr. 4 eyl, aood cood. Runs xJm SJZ50. 8'15-0510 "JI l-2IO ~ell. Br. 4lpd. ._ (nry, IZIOO. WW dml. •·C>l'5 . ~:=rs· o.u•-... ... ..,.. t7H ....................... •t OULU IN U.S.A. ~Tav1a t0US·ROYC£ .. ~ ........ " .......... Kii ___ .... _..,.. IWILllU .. ~ilvd. COSTA MESA '46-tJOJ 14M4'7 ''10 Volvo 1455. '17 ,000 ..-Jtat o1rer 9112-4814 ... cwt ttlO ....................... ORANGEOOUNTY'S ~CURY DEALERSHIP IAYFIADllOI LINOOUf·MERCURY 16-18 Au&o <:.enur Dr. SDF'wy·LMe Forest exit IRVINE ll0.7000 '76 Comet . 4dr, ecyl, 'T'J -i+z. AM /FM ·49 Beatley. Mk XIS . ....._.,.... clean. low mllea1e. -SJ:!O b2JIR Bl'oota St.. So I•• I................... sz.a. ~ l&ln!O.•brakee.~ 14a.w 8 Ill t901 · G.-.m.87eves. -·•••••••••••••••• '78 M1rcury Zephyr z .7 M t725 SMt t760 MCm•• OYB wtth VII. auto. trans . ·-•••••••••••••••••••• -· .. --•·•-••••••••• 54995 pwr. lteerinl & brakes, 1150 S p y d er Sp o rt . I tlO SAAi air oond.. AM /FM stereo am/fm/cus. Runa good caudle. wire wheel cov· 1st BO t.akea 1t. ~ 1URaO. en, new Urea & auper hereNOWforlmlnediat.e •-... 1 Pri ,,. ........,. m..*.or641·111'1 1 Fr c"".... . .,.y. --· de 1 very ! ee 5 yr. • Call 540-9100 <weekdays "1113t Spydrr: White with 1MW t7 U red lnL s spd ~ Call ~.OOOmale dwiag dayl & 11151~8 a'Y~ <nenmg• weekends>. ••--••••••••••• •••• •• 644-5837 or 640-52165 RACH IWOITS 54Q.9202 Mere i6 Monarch Ghia. z CREVIER $1 St 6 HOAO'#A'I' , .... , .. ,. .... 835·3171 Tit( ~TtM•Tl OfttVWO ""'C"',_ •USEDIMWs• "133.0CScpe, mintl~) '76 21002 41p <Z'T2PHL I 77 321l 41p. air<2SMSX E > 77S:U 41p SJR C01'19) "T1 S3llA mmt ( 1008) 776.10csl C456SXG > '78 33»4sp. air (4221U '78 32UA, air ( 60lll5) '78 mA loaded ( 5r468) '7933X4spS/R C8Ul6l '79 S2lllA SIR ( 215 l.5 l '79 S28i kNldect ( 0256) a...d BUY OR LEASE NOW! FOil THI llST DEAi.iN OIANRCO.- COtelMANO SEE US TODAY! No phone quotes Sti.DDI a•c• VAU.IY IMPOUS 284'rl Marg\lmte Pkwy. lliaaioD va.;o llf-2040 4tMt49 IOIMdAUM'1 &'SON. Beach Blvd. LA HABRA (5 Ml. No. ol SA Fwy> ll.!.1!~tf 1~~ t727 ....................... VISITYOUI OIAHGI COAST HONDA HEADQUAnHS TODAY!!! UMYBSITY SALES6 SERV1CE OU>SMOllLI HONDA 11411 Dove Street Mc:fl ft t0 dr. ate. AM /FM tape, NEWPORT BEACH --•••••-•••••••••• xlnt cond. ~9822 eves 7SZ.OtOO 'i'3 Buid: Century Lwuaa wqon. all power. air. tt.t.. 9t5Z To,ot. 9765 AM/PM. ~-$ttr1.:tt. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••-••••••••••• • •• •• • B-MZ 8¥9. "12 ec.ivert. New top. V8 '79 Cdlca GT Ld\bac:k 5 it Buick Rep! Black, 351 Real sharp loobr! s pd 3 tone p•ant , ...... loeded w /sunroof mx> CaJIMl-3913 AM/FM CMS. 12.000 m1 _, IS450,St4-ZJ27 14 .500 m1 Assume 1974 Musang II. PS. PB. Im SRS La ft back a /c:. am.fmstereo. lo mj Xlnt mnd. S4300 Ca.ll Joey 9.5; 752 0202. After 6 . 644-70119. Tamar• •+liGO 561 97211 AC. al&o trans, almost Mull lift Uus ·66 Riviera, p't9l cond • co for far las then It's worth Tlh wheel. pwr windows. mDft Call Dave~ new Uta, VID top, raUy wheels. 71.000 ml, t2300 or bes t offer. Xlnt mecharu('al ccod. Neoeda rranor body won. Call 642.-91311 GMC TRUCKS 77 Corona Waaoo 13999 2lii0Haibi>r8Jvd. ~any extras Andy 1977 F.al Wen 9 pass. '71 Grande. P IS, P /B, <X.6TA MESA Work 9~5-2700. home Goodcond l2850Firm AiC.st.ereotape.11695 54~9640 642..IJlllXl ~ 9501 l73-0878 ........ 9730 '74 Cehc:a. new tran5, c a c '" 5 1965 Mustang Conv 289 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IZ'.Ui& AM1FM. • .... •••••••••••••••••• V 8 ac. auto. fm.a m. '73 XJ12 w1lh mobile 6315903 77 Stvtlle. while. very restored. S4200!MI0-53'75. phone. Leat h. i.lueu dmn.1'11100 Looks great. runs grut 1'9Toyot.a Corolla wagon 640-4lllll3 lr100 M.S-5191 L..i.U new, sJJver w /black Clean Classic Car, '65 Muatang Convertible, xJnt oond. "3:J..4054 dya -----------ant Air rood. S·spe~d '74 XJ6L. ~itency red, tra1u , low miles. A good l"Ond. S7~ ~uper, h.usle·frtt. gu M.>1B70 uwr car! Only ~.585 MmdD t738 Call Ad·Sitter t 1111. ••••••••••• •• • • • • • • • • • • 612-4:11> .. 31 hn 1!J74 Maida RX4 Good cond Malle offer 536·5561 or home 646-46216 tm RXl. ll("w eng. rlutch. ball . w1r1 n1t . mort BX>/bett offer 494 ~ ...,ce•a.._ '740 ••••••••••••••••••••••• "72 DIESEL VAN t.o.ded.. SlJ..500 lo/ml. ~/975-0734 "13 450 SLC. Suorf. a..lnL MUil .U. IU.IOO. Ca II 87U'JOO. 642 '1261 t767 ....................... 'Cl Tnumph TR4 40.000 rm. roll b&r. ma& wbls. ""' l.lra Hrd • ('Oft v UlCJI 1st Sl.300 dn ves 1t away '7~5141 Jim or Mart • TnlllDPh en. ao1o< fer ~ Iv ma.sa1e. lee nne. Yukz i 9770 ....................... Havtnl tJ:bie selllo1 )'OW' car" Try us! Paid faroraat! Mk for Fraak Marino or Tom Aikin JIMMARINO YOl.KSWAfHN 1171 t llACMA'YD. ·~;::- '79 Cpe de Elegance. xlnt cond. lo mi. no down. t.u over 22moa of 38mo • P~t.s l3Q61mo for purchase $10.500 ........ '68 Mustang fastbaclr 289. a..ao, PIS. nms & loob IPld. $1950. 897--40 lZ ---------1 \,a.-~······ it StMlle. l.a.ded wtth 9t55 equipment Only 9000 males Just hke new $12,700 or ba t ofr. 714,..'Jlll ••••••••••••••••••••••• i6 Okk Cutlus. 1 owner. 4 d:r V8 eng, AM ffM. air. PS 714 f75-04 l.5 'T'J Olds Starfire, V·6, 9917 4gpd, 33mpg, 11'100/080. ••••••••••••••••••••••• «·53111 after6 pm. Camaro. ·111 beauty. mtUllic brwa wl\an ant. Dl~EL Dell.a 88 Im· auotram. Ut wt.I. maca. mac. •.~or malte o(. JtM savma :m V Victor II fer $-3307 mom only only 1100 nu. bill offer over M.500 or aum lie wtld)is 752 8115.2. eves 4't wtlaldl 7S2.40f7 it Camaro. k'yl. maot. AM 1F M ster eo. air. ·19 Toronado. diesel, every xtra. l9K m l. SU.950 f1nn. 640-8862 or 644-4684 ------- '957 DlU'll f141ah 4't rust proof ••••••••-••••••••••••• Lo m1 . H .S75 P p "71 Plnt.o. perfect transp, - --.o963 body not perfect. ssso. -· 9S2239 "12 350. 4 spd. ~ Int. sreet. body needs wortt '711 Llftback. 25K ml. &m IOCJd. '1804239 a.tom Int. auto, ps. pb, rdl llres, 25 mpa. l32SO. aw,,•• t920 m.311112 ....................... ---------"13 Pln1o 2000cc. loaded •USMST! w/exlras, good cond. We ha~ a IOOd wle<tk>a .._. oa-...... _.llZ of NEW fl USED _...,,.. ___ .... _ _...... ___ _ 'TT~ JIOI). Dec slml'O()( Ado. air. CIC. U IVOI')' w/bemboo interior All rcd1·ora1 owner l at SK. 100 takel 41).131:1 or 483-WOO&f\6pm (Uk for Jotm) a.wolea! "12 Runabout. auto. reblt • "13 5-er' &Ntle. .... enc ll200 o' bst ofr mJea. 4 spd. Like DeW f*lltsdJ.$51~ C.OHMHl C._.EVROlfT cand Best offer taka ~!!!!~~~~!!!!!!'j lllD Z20 SE Mdaa. 1ood '79 321111. Air. sun.root. 4 coadD 1!:72502020~ doUer ~ "13 ~·~ens . ..,~ ~ -... ' e 'I ,. . \~ r ' ~4 b-I 200 "'' ....................... spd, stereo can. fol{ ave, '" · ~ ays • .. -. ....._t sys-m ~:ml-"enln&• IDft. Ca.U 873-1542 ht.es, alloy wh1I SI 1.500 _or_bmt_7_14_J840-__ 1_e_11 ___ 1 "11 MZ IMMf >tO 4 spd. '7'I RabtJtt.. air. db int. '78 BMW 2002. air. s~reo. BJr, low m.1, like new. All/Fii, res gu, bm. 40K ml. aolld. $1300. P¥t pty.lDmP1. 114.'150 9XI0.~1MI Ph 714JM>.m1 _Phane __ -. __ 7836 _____ 1---------1 ·• VW eu,. new brb. "113000 MB. ncep dua acw u,., nm.a treat. 9715 "'18 lloele Carlo, n ew Urea. brakes, •tr, PS, PW 11200 /or b s t . mC74'7 ?.Ulo11&e Carlo. imm•c: .. 11'111. 561•10 ~ 6 lo ml. mtal seU by lllOtOBO. 873-321.t ••••••••••••••••••••••• '1· 15·80. Bat ofr over ~ tt27 it, 9 mo nu. k>aded/w U'J .900 takes . ( '114 > VW '70 Scabl. ~11 en1. -·••••-••••••••••• Ghia ... + AM /FM • ~. V.ry deu. caoo -bst '74 Comet. fair condition c.us wtth 4 spkn. tit olr •Z!aeves. IG). steenoa. wire whls. ·• 200. 4 dr. xlnt ort1 vw 'G. ,,.. IOOd. body cea&tt conale. S.O Uter oand.-.PP. lllnt. New P•IDt Ir ,,.-----.. t9J2 q. pt mi. huny muat IG·IW. _..,,...._ sell. ATAP d)'I :9'13-1083 ~ 974• ......... SI*. 154 . ._ -•-;•.;.•;;;;••••••• ew.:'131.zllll. -• 6 'SI VW Bu1. fully . --·•••••••••••••ft Whttmaroon Int . All "13 Capri, 4 spd. 4 cyl, '12MG Mklat ~ d.Mak. IZIOO. power. 2'7,000 ml. lm- M.000 mi. AM /Fii, very P'alrCCIDdlUon 71.MMHS ~. 'JM.fnOw Ad- '78 Formula, 4SK ml, 3SO enf. ste reo caas, All/FM, lllnt coad. A.a&· llll 5'100. ~'1-aet 'llO Phoenb Coupe. •uto t.nnl, wht side wall tires, .tlnled llua. dr 1uards. moktinc. sport mlnon, PW, 50 m.I. 9)0. 536-3100 aft 6PM /Wttnds. ~ ~ Lellam, I cyl, ~ coad. Mu.t raeu: "50. 631.1809 um PQnllac SWlblrd. Low milea1e. new tlre1, lhocb. ND1 a.celleat. 913-1.172. 13,000 ''11 P'lreblrd. Auto. ....................... '78 yellow RM ·lOO Suwkl. -c_-._._ ... __ . ~----_cau __ ,..._...;•Y'-~-----1 For a• a • : 1 t It Sib.a' 1 lG. ta'*· at :..a.__-t...... lra.aday. PS/PB. air. Orta. m .... Sl.200. Ca.U 41S-TUO . Perf. coad. Never raced, riddm lddom ...... u. _,,., atr. ~ HoadaCBS50/4, 1171 1.awmn..smo. ..... 1*11 YalDllba yz IO u. ......... ,aeed. ..-s AdUl•-~DJJr~ 2+ ~~8dat-'f~8~ You may rtCauest Ad-Slttlr ..W. whlt1 ploc~ yoJr od • . • CM A6-Sittlr' number wiN ~ in your Daly Piiot od ••• Ad-Sitter tm.. yo.Jr m111.-.. • you coif in at your conwnilra to ~ the ~-to your od .•• ,.. ~ Is on; SS ptr wt.tt. For more information ona to ~ yox od d . 6«11611 - "13 Capri, rmat 1eU Rum Mal 9744 v~---· 11.000. • '°'*-tnaL SlJOO or ... _ ..... ••••••••••• ca&l Rhanda at 141·1.ISO '74 Ull, 41pd, TA rldlaJa, "T1 ~ bprit, 47X ml. ll1&alt Mil. <:tr . ....._ • MOB _. mi. New cr-.Z. OMrMM. oaM.om palM, ---,-------pelM • putt. • •. ,. • o.IMr' clieae1 win ...... lldlr. ateno. ..... t7JO cw..M ............. -*4.AIWSPM~-::"' •.loml.WW•&naa· 11 f11tlilnl tt70 . ---•••••••• e-..-.,,...., ...,. ty. Oa• of a k ind ...... •••··~··•••••••••• tu.MT..., -mram.ant. 'T1 T·8'rd ........ Ub "nmB.lllll .... loml 'TO vw Bu1. New .... ~lppar. ~~'°''., :.:~1~,':.~:.·~t::.~~ .lM:.~t:L. r--.c.11~::'.7:' 111111..._ • ~ !:'o:'~':=::C • ,-... a.-teu, iooo ,..._ ....,. tlua. ia Oll'lr -.-• .._ ..u. mt. LIM over &nae. No lllPI• 81t ta Oun1e beltC18111r.MT.-. C*llJ ,_rtid, oely lood ~ ........ '°.,. -.11r.-a ,,. •• ~. a .eoo1oao. "71 eair..u., elMi, la .---"""----'--- --· ........... ,.., ·-.... "14 ..u ,_.,.,,, ... ... , .................... . NB ~ Ytla. Good CODdttkia. tt11 ~ .... /080. .,,., t741 ~J \ . 'Ye•rBe•et••• Dally Ne•sp~per TWE~TY·FIVE CENTS VOL. 73, NO. 157, •SECTIONS, 52 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA 7 o.ily ~ S\Atff .... THE VALLADARES FAMILY HEADS FOR NEW LIFE Cuban Refugees Manuel, Norma and Glady•, 8 Cuban Refuaees Arrive i1 ByJODIO Ot-09 The first wave of Cuban County early today -we_. enduring weeks of hunger homeland. News that the 18 refui Florida to live in Orange Co ty groups Wednesday aflern They are the Cuban J County and more are expec coming weeks, authorities s SPOKESMEN FOR Tl Cuban Assistance League ii had been stormg food. cloth a month in anticipation th here. None of the 18 Cul Orange County and many It Manuel Vallandres. hil old daughter, Gladys. wert ing asylum al lhe Peruvian They lived for 12 dayt sickness and salvaging the that the United Stat.es sh'. Vallandres "MY WIFE WANTEJ hunger and too much sicko squeezed the juice from lei He said that he hopes t ly and a place to settle my Anxious families fronl Los Angeles International familiar faces of relativet Castro came to power two Orlando Tailon of H\S as he embraced the son he "IT'S BEEN A VE• "But it's wonderful to see I While families from t refugees destined for Ori leave for lhe Cuban Club shelter was prepared. 0 1 OOULDN'T SUP.,. Dario Duverget, who wo~ interpret.er. "Most of the l The former National be would be grateful for As the refugees sh Herrara, whole wife wai em baasY, asked reporte~ tnow tbat be was all ri&1't Hostage :Set Afte • ' ; Vote Snafu Located By DAVID IWTZMANN Ol .. OeitY ......... Computer obstinacy and ballot mixups -and not tbe county's new $1.5 million vote counUng system -were responsible for foulups wbicb bave delayed ftnal returns trom Tuesday's balloting, officials said t.oday . In fact. elections chief Shirley Deaton said she still wasn't cer· tain when the results of two pre- c inc ts -in Anaheim and Fullerton -would be tabulated. meaning Orange County would likely be the last county in California to tabulate final re· suits. Despite the delays, which could be the longest in recent county history. both observers and officials defended the Qerformance of the Martel Vote Counting System. saying it was blameless for problems plaguing election returns here. Mrs. Deaton said her office was quite satisfied with the 90 new machines. into which were fed the results of voting in 2.061 precincts throughout the county .. Election officials contend. just '"' thPv had oredicted. that the [ , • DAILY PILOT •Thursday, Junes, 1980' .. I • ' • ' •Thursday, June 5, 1980 DAILY PILOT , .. ; 2 JOBS -Supplement to CoHt LIFE. June 4. 1980 & Dally Pilot. June 5, 1980 ConstructiOn layoffs lead to increased unemployment By JIM POND '-lat*--..... Orange County's unemployment rate reached 4.2 percent In April - four-tenths higher than the rate for April of 1979 The jobless total of 44,800 ln April increased by 2,100 from the March level and ~.700 from April of 1979, primarily because of conUnulnc layoffs by c onstruction and manufactwin& finm. THE CIVILIAN labor force totalled 1 ,080,400 In Aprtl. representing an annual growth rate of 3.8 percent, accorcfin& to the Employment Development Depart- ment <EDD>. Numerous additional layoffs are predicted by manufacturinJ flrtm for lbe next three moot.ha but wW partially be oftaet by ~onUoDed aerospace birlnt and Huonal lo- creases tn food J1l'OffAinl. AGRJCULTVaAL employment peaked ln llay and toufUt..related employment will expand durin• summer moadll, tbe EDD~ Layoff~ bave been llv.n to school personnel In several districts and competition for summer Jobe T employ helps both worker and employer ..... will be "keen." The report said the unemploy· meat rate will rise sharply ln June wben new eraduates enter tbe labor market. GOVEltNMENT EllPLOYllENT rose 2,900 ln April u temporary census takera were blred and public recreational raclllties re· quired seasonal eatru. Manufacturing payrolb slipped 800 In April aa small gains In -(our Industrial IJ'OUJ>S were O\{lwel1bed by layolfJ tn a1x other ut.eeortes. Transportation industries showed a net lou of a ln April u la)'Ofta by motor home, boat and mO((r vehicle equipment manulacturen were IOft...s by a 100-woriter b). ereaae ta tbe alrcrafl·mlssUe catetorJ. the EDD aald. BLa."nONla ftrma hired 200 In April met roee a.eoo UDUlly. while com,...~ bl.-ed 100 and •.nuaa;. "··· Tlte ciill1 • •• dilfeue eMqoriel POltiftl ... In April ...,.. ldeft. tlftc llwtrumftrts and prtntinJ, each up 100. Penonallzed temporal')' service. accommodate both workers and employers at Temploy Inc. of Newport Beach. ~ "We've been very succe11ful , since opentn1 14 months ''o because we 'mphaaize a pe.....,.. rapport with our employees Jnd clients,'' assistant mana1er Barbara Bauer saJd. That penoqaJ rapport lncludet In· divldual reference checkln1 and 1creenlna by "out1olng" staff mtm· ben, she added. Mo.t PoeiUonl fllled bf Temp&oy are tn derkaJ and Industrial fields, altboQgb technlc .. and data ~ cnsiAC Joa. at.o are fllled. Temploy LI at 42.$1 Mart.lnnle Way, ln Suite F of MaeArthur Square. Newport Beach. Employees wortttne for the tlrm are pakt salaries by Temp&oy baed on tbe type of po1tuoe and e&· perieece, lb. Ba.er said. a..-. Glfered tJaoee enas>lo,eee lncla vacallon, t.ouday and lkS paJ~ "-•• allO _..featured. "We're a • .,. tpeclaJ lfOUP of peoplt ~ ... people •• 1'0r'k , .. .. "91..-...~·~ abe laid. -~-"!'""!"---~~-- Boun It~ an 7:IO a.m. to t :IOp.m. Securify guardS choose schedule (714) 851-1895 DOCTORS' HOUSE CA'' SERVICE LET US MANAGE YOUR NURSING CAREER TOP PAY SI GREAT BENEFITS CALL OA CO. IN: ~ IQi'hr Health' Care ~ -1 ·-· ... - 1126 N. BROOKHURST. SUITE 109 ANAHEIM. CALIFORNIA 956-9660 NOT AN AGENCY EDE S,,eciafizin'I in Ba•s Savings & L0mtt Mh)e Lending 'lscrow /-aliu:iNJ Typists Secretaries Bcokkeepers .!~ E~Y!f' Retained ----· Acct. Clerk s ~ eceptionists Gen. Office File Clerks Troinee, ,,. C-.11 .. AppllCMf.., ' ~PPlement to Coast LIFE, June 4, 1990 & Daily Pilot, June 5, t980 -JOBS 3 Lois Cuzid<, left, directs counsekn at 8izd>eth Ycrl, Santa Ano. Elizabeth York rings of success Elizabeth York keeps the bell rinling. A amall brass bell decorates the waU ol the persoanel agency at 2101 E . Fourth St., Santa Ana. "Every time we place an appli· cant we rinl the bell," said Lois Cuuck ol Elisabeth Yort. Elizabeth York, a corporation for almost one hundred years. specializes in clerical placeme'\l in permanent positions. Positions filled range from file derk to executive secretary and ad· min1A.rati ve assistant. Applicants pay no fee. AU fees are paid by client employen . Employers are offered a 30-day, unconditional guarantee on ail ap· plicant.s, Ms. Cuzick said. Tbe strength of the guarantee ls bued Oil thorough SCrffning of all applicants, she said. Counselors al Eliubeth York in· terview, test clerical skills and ob· taln relerence checks on all appli· cants. Applicant and counselor then re· view available job openings. Tbe COUDHlors undergo a 90.<fay trainlng program. They are given on·tbe..job traJning and classroom experience covering sucb lkilla as inlerviewln1, bow to find employers and ethical prac· Uces. For more inform a tion call 973·209'7. 4 JOBS -Supplement to Coaat LIFE. June 4. 1980 & Dally Pilot. June ~. 1980 Processing_ resume for manager Eve Moen, '91f, ii Pat lolmn at Plam Seaetcricj, Irvine. DO YOU taD A .. OFISSIOMAL COLLECTION AGENCY CALL PROFESSIONAL CREDIT BUREAU, INC. • DEBTORS CONT ACTED SAME DAY VOOA ASStGNMENT ts MACE • EXPERT SKIP TRACING ANO LOCATION Of ASSETS - • OUR WELL TRAINED COl.lECTOAS AR£ FIRM VET VERY DISCREET - • LOW OOMPETITIVE RATES-NO oou.ECTION. NO FEE • CALIFORNIA STATE LICENSEO a BONDED • OFFICES ANO <X>RRESPONOEN'TS THAOUGHOUT THE WORLD Unstable economy fosters need for iob security and resumes Job aecurtty dffreues ln an .m- 1table eeonomy. so many women are 1etttnc resumes to1ether in cueolla,yolb. Tbat'1 where Piasa Reaume Servke comes ln. •• M tbe ltabWty of the Ora.nee CountJ ecoaomJ dec1·eaae1, we re- ceive man clienta 1ettlnl tbtlr re-aumea in 1bape aa a 1eeurit)' meaaure," aald mana1er Eve Moore of tbe firm at 2012 MlchMllcla Drtve, lnlne. Penon1 antlclpat1n1 chances within lbelr companies -u well u th.o.e out of work -are updat1n& their old resumes and an compWnc new Job·bunUn1 campalana. 1be 11ld. Tbe lat three monlhl tt.ve seen the &rutest tncreue ln tbe resume businell ln tbe five yean Plu.a bas been ln bulines1. she added. "Our business la boomln&. desplte the atate oft.be eecoomy. "Part of that businesl boom la because of layofh ln bl1 bullnesses.'' abeaaid. Pl.aza Resume Service coostltutes oab' part of tbe firm'• business, wlllob aleo incl udea Plau Slteretarial and j)lua Eucut.lve Suit.es. TM aecretarlal aad eucutlve Hlte llfrr!nee• lDd...S-: -Typlng and wrltlna ol form l& ten -Word proceAtni -Au&omaUc leUen -Ut:IDI -Duplicata and ort1tnall -Dictation -Bookkeepine and lnvotcln& -StatlstJcal t)'J)lna -Personal and bualneu eor· respoade:nce. Included ln the resume aapect or the firm are two pbalel: -CclmultaUoa for clientl who • wiab to start from ecratch « who want t.o work on cban&lnl the at.rue· ture ol t.bdr old~. -Actual resume preparation for those wbo want tbelr attractive futures typed ln aD appealing or mat and printed. "No matt.er what field a pe.non won.a in. be or lbe can benefit from a 1ood resume." lb. Moore Nid. .. Many people believe resumes are jmt foe bl&b·level positions.. but they can be used by almost any job see-ker." &be aa.ld. .. •. lloctt. whole backlJ'O'.IDd • .l· eludes 20 yun ln the business field -wtlb six ol thole ln penoanel management -doee most ol tbe n · aume comuJtaUon for ber firm. Word procesalnc operator Pat Loulen. wbo keya til most of the re· aumee, feell the UM of ber skills ma.ta COi' • beUer ftn1abed 1aume. Ila. Koon added. '11119 lbe recommf!DC!t to resume writ.en lndude: -Doll"t bore the reader with tedklul detalll -Leave out any untavorable clata wldcb ml&bt detract from \be resume'• focus -.,., attmUon to the laquaae. 1pe1Hnc, arammar and appearance ol the resume. FREE · FREE EM~~~e~1 ~ ---~~ . .,.._'),_.__ ... JOBLIFE MAGAZINE ''for those who wont to illlproYe their id> or find o reN one." -. --·--~ -- ........ Carry Fox fills bank need Demand la blah for skilled workers and tralnees in banking and clerical fields. Carry Fox, who spent 10 years in the personnel industry specializ· Ina in bankina. places clerical and banking personnel. The aaency la at 1616 E . .Cth St, in Job magazine enlightens job seekers Jobllfe publlshea a job op· portunlUes magazine with a 50.000 clrcuJaUon and sponsors Job skill workabop6 on colleae campuses. Rebecca Britt, • 1peclall1t ln perlODDel placement, and Deonll Lahey. a human resource conaul· taot, formed Jobllfe ln July of last year . .. Jobllfe'a key la to provide the maeazine to those Interested in the employment fteld. "JI • company advertise• for enslneerl. Jobute will band deliver copies with the ad la it to local en1laeerlng meetlnes." uld a apokespenon. Jobllfe ii free to Individuals °" companies Interested in the emp)ay. ment field. To receive a copy, send name and addrea to Joblife, P .O. Box 75", Newpori Beach, CA 92660, or call t79·1811. COURTESY SERVICE Santa Ana, near the Santa Ana freeway. "There's no charge to the appli- cant," said a spokesman, "because employers are happy to pay the fee." The agency places applicants in Jobs all over Oranae and Los Angeles Counties. Applicanta include those Interest· ed in career changes, recent college graduates. employees reenterint the work force and workers llffking better aalarlea, beneflla or Jobs closer to home, accordlna to the spokesman. "Worklna closer to home can save quite a bit in fuel costa," he pointed out. AM Documentor leads electronics industry AM Document.or -a leader ln Point of Sale Terminals -employa 400 engineers. 1y1tem1 analysts and production adminlatraUve penon· nel. The rum, at 29:21 S. Dalmler St., Santa Ana, employ1 more tban 100 1alumea and field systems analyst.a who sell AM Document.or products worldwide. AM Documenlor, • product dlvlllon of AM lntemaUonal, In<:., selb and manufactures lntesrat.ed electronic mana1ement lnformaUon and control systems. INTEGRITY RESEARCH SARRA BERK AGENCY A t'EAM Of PERSONNEL SPECIALISTS ACCOUNTANTS/BOOKKEEPERS BANKING/SAVINGS• LOAN•OATA PROCESSING GENERAL OFFICE • INSURANCE • LEGAL MEDICAL• SALES• SECRETARIAL • WORD PROCESSORS Supplement to Coast LIFE. June 4. 1980 & Dall~ Palol, June 5. 1980 -JOBS 5 EJectrontn AM Docmnentor ls Hiring We are looking for : •Assemblers •Inspectors •Technicians •Clerical •Programmers •Engineering We offer excellent benefits which include one weeks vacation after six months, eleven paid holidays and group insurance begins upon day of hire. Call us or come in to get acquainted (714) 546-3551. A division of AM International, Inc. 2921 So. Daimler St., PO Box 10547 Santa Ana CA 92711 PLAZA/&ecretar1atServ1ce Specloflzlng In ~ RESUMES TYPING CONSULTATION -.PREPARATION COMPLETE SERVICE CHOICE °' STATIONERY FOR COVER LEnERS COPYIHG ------SPIRAi: BINDING __ _._.~ DOIEDIATE TURNAROUND SATUIDAY a EVENING HOUlS 752;o2A I JOBS -Supplement lo eo .. 1 LIFE, June 4, 1980 & Dally Pilot. June 5. 1980 Endevco needs employees to fill technical positions Fifty job openings ln technical, mechanical and engineering fields are now available at Endevco, San Juan Capistrano. ··We currently need workers in all levels of our technical operation," said Ralph Bache, director of human resources for lhelirm. Endevco is at 30700 Rancho Viejo Road in San Juan Capistrano. Phone is 493-8181. Parent company of End~v~o is the billion-dollar.a-year Bect9n- Dickinson and Company. ~gency combats 1ob turnover LYM Carol Employment Agency a nd Zip Temporary Personnel Services combat the high costs of employee turnover. Lynn Carol and Zip. at 3420 Bristol St.. Suite 209, Costa Mesa, offer firms a program which deals with the problem. "The program consists of Lynn Carol and Zip hiring exclusively for a firm," said a spokesperson. The result saves large amounts of time. money and aggravation for firms. he said. Lynn Carol and Zip soon will ofter a special conference for Orange County firms. Toplca include: today's market, how to attract applicants, bow to re- duce turnover-. Endevco empbiatues two maln bualneu functions: -Non·destrucUve acoustical e m lsslons_ testing for petro· chemical and airplane manufac· turers -Utillzation of transducers and acrelerometers In measurlag shock and vibrat.ioo on various products. Currently employing about 600 persona, Endevco's employee growth is about 20 percent annually, increasing workers' job security over tim~. Bache said. "We're not the typical technical e mployer because we're involved In the furtherance of scientific knowledge." he said. That scientific aspect or Endevco puts more challenge into jobs. he added. .. That 's why ao many of our employees stay with ua for so long." be said. And with a S6 million-dollar·per- year payroll. Endevco helps the economy of surrounding com· munities, Bache said. Also helping surrounding com- munities is an Endevco program in·. vol ving training of Saddleback Community College students in technkal rareers. he roncluded. For job information. call Ron Crowder OI' Louise Nlshimuta at 493-8181. Building computer components f« acoustic tfM1iseions deva is senior assembler Rose Klohs at EndeYco. CHOOSE A WORKSTYLE TO RT YOUR LIFESTYLE!! If you want the luxury of belna able to work when you want to work, then visit the friendly people at UNJFORCE. We have jobs for everyone. •Seen ..... . ,,.... ~ ..-1 1b1 I •A111 ietrm IUt91A11WOlll AND THERE JS NEVER A FEE! EVEN IF YOUR SKIL1..S ARE RUSTY. WE'LL HELP YOU. BRUSH THEM UP .•• SO BEAT JNFLATION AND BALANCE -THE"'FAMtt.Y11UDGET. won A DAY A WEEK Oft LONGER. AT UNJPORCE YOU CAN WRITE YOUR OWN ' TICKET AS A UNIFORCI! TEMPORARY EMPLOYEE. -. ------ Trained staff at Sarra Berk fills openings The trained stafl at Sarra Berk Agency has a diversified back· ground and knowledge or the busl· ness world. "WE RECRUIT the right people ror our employer clienta. Jlld only those candidates whose backeround and experience meet the require- ment.a of the job order are referred lo the m." said a spokeaperaoo. Sarra Berk Agency·Employment Service/Career Bullden has been at 18952 Mac Arthur Blvd., in Irvine for ti ve years • . THE AGENCY has a team of persoMel speciaJists. ·"This means we understand the o eeds and requirements o r employers and appli cants." she said. The stalC ls experienced In finding career po1iliona for applicant clients -positions that m~t their experience, background and career goala. SERVICES are free lo the appli· cant-oalytheemployerpayaafee. "We have an inventory of the finest people lo Orange County and vicinity. "Our employer client Uat lncludes &he top companies ln Oran•e County and aurroundlq areas." •he aald. Sam Berk ~ency la a member U the National Aaaoclatlon of ftcitic City Bank WB HAVB TIME 1'08 rout A progressive local Independent bank. "'°" .. ............... ~ ............. .. I.DI• IWwl\,_.ffll ...... a.w_.. • ....,. ... ,, • ........ ~ ...... .... ................ ... ,.... .............. ,.. _......_ We ft'MlY have an opportunity for you. Ac>Pllclteons acoePted Mond8v thtouOh Frtctay from 9:00 AM to 11 :30 AM Md from 1 :00 PM to4:30PM. See Perlonnel Department. 1.00 GoldenMlt Blvd .• Weetmlnster. C.lifomfa. Phone (714) ~1234. 4 An Eou .. ()ppoltuMy Emptoyer Supplement ro eo .. t LIFE. June 4, 1980 & o .. iy Piiot. June 5. tNO-JOBS 7 Penonnel Comultantl and Alloclat-ed Employment Acenclea. Call1&1-82. ) • ( " ,. , ' -· ' .. . , . . , .. 8 JOBS -Supplement to Coast LIFE. June 4, 1980 & Daily Pilot, June 5, 1980 Good salaries and bonuses combine for temporaries Temporary worken ln the fteldl of account.ln8, data procesaina and fl.nance ftnd Jobe tb.roulb tbe ea· pertl at Robert Half Ac~ Robert Halt bu been tervlnl those ftelda for more Ulan • JeJll and now ii at 2338 N. Broadway lD Santa Ana. •·All our eounaelora are H· perienced la the neldl tbey lel'ft, .. a apoke.penoo 1ald. "We make IUl'e our counaelon re· taill tbelr blah ltaDdarda by payiq 1eneroua wanes and booUMI, be added. Robert Half ba 10 ottlcee. 1be Sout.benl Calllomla brancbel are directed by Certified Public Ac· countant Harr7' Gilbert, be con· eluded. Sheet metal firm proud of its grO\Yth and increased ser:vices Lescoulie Nurses Registry helps fill OC nurse demand Temporary nurses help alleviate the nursing shortage in Orange County. ••NUJlSING SCHOO~ just aren't tu ming out enough graduates to meet the demands," said Hope Evans. of. flee manager for Lescoulie Nunes Registry. "We provide all types of nurses for private duty. homes, hospitals, and convalescent hospitals." she said, "and most of the demand is in hospital work." THE REGISTRY is at 351 Hospital Accounting Clerical General Office Road, Suite 119, in Newport Beach. "Our nurses can work full·time or part-time, choosini their own hours." abe aaid. .. For instance. they can have weekends off, which ia lmpossible for regular nurses in hospitals," she added. LESCOULIE Nurses Registry bas been in business for 12 years and off era ita nurses a medical and dental insurance plan, as well as malprac· lice in.surance. accordiq to the apotespersoo . Typist Receptionist , Secretarial All llS 111% Fill ELIZABETH YORK PERSONNEL AGENCY 2101 East 4th St., Santa Ana, 92705 973-2097 Service Second To None WHY NOT Jiit A GREAT TEAM!! ARMm & UNARMED OPENINGS EARN TOP PAY IY HB.PtM6 PIOPLE •Uniforms • State registration pref erred • All shifts & locations available • Semketlred welcome aeK•N ;,r.ic>ooioN" seRv1ces 2601 W. Ball Road Anaheim, Ca. E.O.E. (714) 761-4831 .. ..................... Templof ................ ... Temporary Services off en .... , SUMMER EM"LO:YMENT ·~ • ,.,.....:....:.:.~._L..o-_ •G...aOfOee • WWd Ptoe111Df't Supplement to Coast LIFE. June 4 1Q80 & Daily Pilot. JuM 5. 1980 -JOBS 9 --· ~-------------------------------Total i<>bs featured at Career Concerns Medox expa~s • nursing care, services homes An Irvine temporary nursing service la expanding its services to cover home care. MEDOX, at 1197'2 Stypark Circle, suite J, offers llcenaed and non· licensed nunea for home care services. "We wort with each famuy·on an individual basis to serve them," said a spokesperson. THE 1 ... promto;~ to bring in· creases ln the demand fo nurses, she said. Orange County expects demand increases even higher I.ban national needs '>ecause of the area's rapid growth. she added. THAT DEMAND ls reflected in the sh6rtage of nurses in the county- only 50perceotof regi.stered nurses in Or aneeCounty are employed in nurs· Ing jobs, however. The spokespenoa attributed tbe shortage to b1Cb Job atnsa tewJs. inadequate numbers of aw-ain1 •cbooll and low pq. •EDOX offen top pay, a i.rse benefit packqe ud "freedom ot ebolce-ln-almost ever, matter. ID-cludlnc pref~ .ott aldfta, ~ and ioc.6on, '' lbeaakl. The fl.rm often takes the role of mediator between bospltab and nunes. .. WE DEAL ST&ICl'LY wilb hospitals in an effort to relieve nun-m. ltaff lhortacee. ••she said. Nurses woridna for Medox lm· prove1beir tkWI, Ille said. became their ooaitlom YU')', exposing them to a wlde appllcatloD of their skWa. R011Uarel:30a.m. toSp.m.dal· lJ. altboueh employees are on call at boura. Call SU.8551. Career Coocenll Center provides • eoatP"ebemlve progam covering almolt ~ facet ot the career de-nlopmeat proees.a -eounae&g. traJDJnc and placement. Eaeb member ot the staff at Career Ccmc!elna. at 4101 Westerly Plaee, IUite 110. Newport Beadl, br· lop with bltn more thu 10 years or profewkmal nperienee. ••1'brougb eounsellnc. testing, Soal·Mttina and networking people are llliated. in m= career de-d.alom ... aid a apotes non. ·Professional dHelopment pro-grams in muaiement. nlel and communications fleldl be1-> prepare candidates for plaeemenl. Once a career dectston bas been made, pis aet and lkilla acqu.lred, Career Concer1>~' p1ac:ement perscmoel help tbe candidate MCUre a position ot Ida or bier choice. Call 8S3-'1$11. Doctors driving to homes need nurses to help diagnose illnesses Providing health care to people 1n their homes can be an exciting and reward.iJl8'career. "We've begun an interesting and binovative way to health care -the .doctor comes to the patielrt." said Ross Hamlin, administrator !or 'Doctor's House Call Service. · Vans equipped with standard diagnostic equipment operate 24 hours a day, every day ol the week can reacll IM!'!)Ple unable to travel to a doctclr, be explalm. The company's office as at 1300 Bristol St. North, Suite 218, in Costa Mesa. "We need certified medical assls· tanta, as well as RNs trained as triage nurses," be said. Hamlin nplained that the word "triage" comes from the French and means "to sort out. ••A triage nurse ll1ten.1 to a descrlJ!lion or-the symptoms and de· cides whether or not the patient is IF YOU'RE THE BEST IN THE FIELD -AN INNOVATOR WITH NEW IDEAS - ,:rHERE'S A PLACE AT EOCOM FOR YOU. an emergency case,•• be aald, ad- diq, "It'• not. diagnosis -juat. preliminary Judem.ent of wbat lnlsbt be wroet and bow Ml'loul it could be." Tbe compu1 ta also aeekiQC paramedle-~alned radio dlt· pateben, Hamlin said, because eaeb nn is equipped wltb a two- way radio. "A dispatcher routes tbe .-and should not only know Orui,e= geography-especially the ar~u-but be familiar wltb medical tenm," be said. The service is not deslped as an ambi•lante er emeraeocy aerrice, ~ tbe medical staff can pro- Yicle treatmeat mUl an •mbralance aniva Employees of tbe company, wbieb la put ot a.large eorporatioa, work 10 hours a day and four days a week, accordlng to Hamlin. alore about the jobs ls available at (714) 833-9381. I .. -- _, .. -1 · -- l I .. 10 JOBS -Supplement to Coast LIFE. June 4 1980 I Oa1ty Pilot June 5 ·1980 Patti Mcfvilly Director, Kelly Health Core Uniforce has more iobs than applicants Temporary jobs are plentiful. .. U you've beea havlnl problem.s ftDcllna a Job, JOU mlpt bave beeD looktna ID the wron1 place." •aid Bob Wood, owner ol Uniforce Tem· porary Services. Wood said be baa more Jobe than pec>ple to ftll them. Unllclree la at lllU Beach 81:!4 SuJte 101, HUDUuton Beada 11MJ lnlDe 81..W •• luit.e 140, TultlD. ··11 .. and WOllMD of alJ .,. ftl rllht taeo I.be temporU)' pkture," be 1ald. ..Homemabrt and atu· denta, who can oalJ work CIDI or two day• a week find temporary Ullp. meata the ldeal Wa) to earn extra money" "llolt tempor.uy JoM ~ulre a minimum of elOt bows dallY, but not neceaaarlf y on eon1tcuttv1 d•1•· Since tbl temporU)' worker LI an emploree of UDlforce, tbere II ao --------fH to tbe applicant.•• be said. LESCOULIE NURs-.·s REGIST.RY. . Unemployed nurses obtOin port-time iobs at Kelly Nunea unemployed because they can't ~ full-lime can return to tbelr proteutoa part-Ume. ••our aunes cboole tbetl' own boun and d-ay1. worldnl their acbedula around tbe needa of tbeir fammea:• aald Katey Barnes, apokespenon for Kelly 8HJtb Care, a divillon ol KellJ s.ntces. TIM aftlce II at 1UI N. Broothunt St .. Suite lOf. Anaheim. "We provide tempor&rJ atamna for bolpttaJ1. lrhate dut1 1na bomet."lbeaal .. Our loal .. to allewlate tbe llalf altuadaD ID llil9pltall, IDOlt ol wbicb are abort of belp," lbe added. Ket~ provkrea RN1, LVNa and Pacific City Bank offers /Obs working with public nurses· aides., tn addition to bome makers and live-la companions for convaleaclna paUeata, their apokespenon explalaed. These worken need not be narses but mUlt have some tpedaJ Vain· Ina In their areu. abe Hid. "We a1lo have a public bealth nurae wbo la a beme care aupervllor," lbe added. "We th1nk paUeatt deserve the belt poulble care." Kelly Health Care bas four other offices in tbe Southern Calltornla area and cooUnually expands, ahe HYI. O(flce boun are I a .m. to I p.m. Mood17 tbrou1h Friday. Call 956-9680. BY ILUY IANE 8CA&CEUO ........... ...._ The ~ bu.llneaa II a l~ place for e wbo enjoy wor wiUt tbe pu c . .. WE'RE LOOKING for tellers and teller-trainees wbo have aood ap- pearance and penoaaUty. aa well u a blab math aptitude.' •aid Diet Cole, spokesman for Paclllt Cit.1 Bank. TM hint'• re8lJ}ar Jocauon ls un· ,... COllatructloo, and the tem- porary eddresa la 14600 Goldenwest Blvd. in Westminster. .. WE'RE ALSO ~!ng for a PBX operator with a pleasant phone voice," he said. "We would prefer aomeooe with experience, but we can train a qualllied applicant." lo addiUon, the bank II looklna for an experienced credit cbecker, Cole •aid. and all posWona.,.. full· time except for a few part.time tellen jobs. "We have some at.ended boun for teben, because tbe bAU It cpen h'om •:ao p.m. to a:ao p.m. and for flve boun on 8aturday1,'' be ex· plained. Another openSna for a person with at lealt ftve years tn banklna opera- Uont II a J>Ut·Ume nilbt 1upervllor wbo woufd work the evenlns and Saturday boun at one bank branch, be said. "WE OFFE• our employ ... IOOd beneftta-medical and life In· 1urance, paid bolldaya, two-week vacation• and free banklna aervlct1.''Cole1aid. Applicants should call the penoa. nel department at (71') 8'1-128'. ; ,. . ' ' . . . &.tpplernent to Coast LIFE, June,. 1980 & Dal~ Piiot, June 5, 19e0-JOBS 11 Selling Sales Outlining the advantages of advertising soles is mori<eting director Jennifer Monroe of the sates management program at Career <:oncern Center. (See story on page 9.) Ac:oounttng -· ,_,. ..... There are many new nrma moving Into ttle Orange County .,..., bnnglno lbout an lncreatfng demanJ for experienced Accounting and Dll• Proceulng personnel. ~Place To Grow! .. TRW San Bernardino would like to introduce you to the Inland Empire, located at the west end of the San Bernardino County. Here. hot.ising costs are considerably lower than In Los Angeles and Orange counties. You can enjoy an easy rural life. vet be ao ck>ae to the big metropolis. From the Inland Empire, you're freeway ctoee to great ski resor1s. balmy deserts and the great blue Pacific. - - 12 JOBS-Supplement to Coast LIFE. June 4. 1080 I Deity PllOt. June 5, 1980 * • e 1n. ou·rse In .S.an Juan C:Gpistra·no We're on the leading edge of one of the moat dynamic Industries In the world, the ~ealgn and manufacture of highly sophisticated Instruments and systems that measure dynamic phenomena. And we're actlvetv seeking talented lndlvlduals to help us grow bigger and better. We're seeking: DEVELOPMENT TECHNICIA~S - If y04(re artetectromechankal technician with ·2-s years experience In transducer development or relatid activity, ~·need youj ~ MACHINISTS, JOURtEYLEVEL If you're a qualified Joumeylevel machinist, operator or ..speclallst MACHINE 8PECIALl8T8 on lathe or mm, check In with us lmmedlatelyl MACHINE OPERATORS - PROJECT ENGINEERS- A BSMA, or B.S. Physics Is required with minimum 3 years e>eperlence In transducer design and de- velopment. From design to finished product, you'll direct the activities of technicians and~deslgners. APPLICATIONS ENGINEER - If you have your BSEE or related degree In materials or Physics, and 2~ years In non-destructive testing or elctctronlcs, calf us right now I We 9llO hne op1'*'1a for: • COST ACCOUNTANT • QUAUTY PROGRAM MANAGER • SYSTEMS PROGRAMMER • ENGINEERING ASIOCIATE • MARKE'llNG DATA AUDITOR •TEST TECHNICIAN (SR.) • FIELD TEST ENGINDR • MICROCIRCUIT A88EMBLER (SR.) • TRANSDUCER A88EMBLERS • .FllLD TeST TECHNICIANS • ORDER ICtEDULER • TRANSDUCER TECHNICIAN • MARKBT DEVELOPIENT MANAGER• PRODUCTION SUPERVISOR • Dl!SIGNER, SR. Q OUR TOP-FLIGHT BENEFITS PACKAGE MAKES A CAREER WITH US EVEN MORE ATTRACTIVE. We offer• hoSt of benefits that Include: a 4112 day work week, llfe Insurance, dental care and many other Insurance benefits, performance bonuses, savfngs Incentive plans, van pool programs credit union and a host Of other employee benefits. ' 7 ' I aeh VOL. 73, NO. 157, 4 SECTIONS, 52 PAGIS ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1990 TWENTY·FIVE CENTS Mlf~IWff,..... THE VALLADARES FAMILY HEADS FOR NEW LIFE Cut>.n Refugee• Manuel, Norma and Glady•, I Cuban Refugees Arrive in County By JODI CADENHEAD Of-o.11•~"-" The first wave or Cuban refugees trickled into Orange County early today -weary, homeless and hopeful after enduring weeks of hunger and hlgh seu to nee their homeland. News that the 18 refugees would be arriving from Florida to live In Orange County reached Cuban communi· ty groups Wednesday afternoon. They are the Cuban retucees destined for Or. ange County and more are expected to arrive today and ln the comln& weelu, authorities aald. 8POKl'!8MEN FOa THE Cuban AaaoclaUon and the Cuban AssUltance League ln Oranae County aald that they had been stonng food, clothing and fum1ture for more than a month m anticipation that retuaeea would be anivtn1 here. None of the 18 Cubans have relaUvea Uvlna ln Oranae County and many left famlllea behind. Manuel VaUandres, his wile. Norma and their S.year· old daughter, Gladys. were amona tho first arrtvala seek- ing asylum al the Peruvian embassy In Cuba. They lived for 12 days at the embusy surviving the slckneiu1 and salvaging the scarce small packagtt of food that the United Stutes shipped In every day. explained Vallandre11 "MY WIFE WANTED TO leave It was too much hun1ter and too much s ickness," said the truck driver "We 11queezed the juice from leaves of orange trees to live" lie sa1d that he hopes t.o flnd a job soon. "I want liber- ty and a place to settle my family." he said Anxious families from the Los Angeles area crowded Los Angele11 International Airport terminal seeking the ramlllar races of relatives that many had not seen since Castro came to power two decades ago. Orlando Tailon of llunUngton Park fought back teart1 as he embrat>ed the Hon he left in Cuba 10 years ago "rl"S BEEN A VERY TERRIBLE tame." he sald. "But it's wonderful t.o 11ee him again.'' While famlliea from Los Angeles wept and embraced. refugees destined for Orange County gathered quietly lo leave for the CUban Club ln Orange, where a temporary shelter was prepared. ... OOULDN.,. SVPPOltT the system anymore," said Dario Duveraet.. who worked in Cuba as an accountant and interpreter. "Most ol the youn1 people are dl11at4sfled." The former NaUonal Leaaue baseball player. aald t.hat he would be arateful for any work. Al the refuaeea ahurned lnto a waltln& v n. Albert Herrara, whoH wlle was unable t.o aet into the vlan embaM)', asked reporters lf there waa any way to I know that be wu all rl1ht. Hostage Release Set After Trial? BOSTON tAP> -The Carter admlnJ.ltraUon la revlewJni • plu alllns for t.bia American hott.a,. In Iran to be nleaMd after ..,.... of them •r• put on trlal • epMI, tlM Bolton Globe reodrtAMI today. the oo.taa., are worried that alter the ......,., tbe Central In· telll1ence A•ncy "mt1bt r•· tallate by p&cklna ott tbe mill· tant l•aden OIM by on•." Wh.lt.e ~ oMclall are wary of tbe ~ 1cbeme, but are lntermediart. ar• uklnt for H1urance1 that if a deal la worked out, the Unlttd Statn wm not 10 after tbe mtlitanta. The new1paper quotH un· nemtd Amertctn offlclalJ u HJlQ( tMn 11 DO tip thM the A)'ltollab Ru.bollalJ. ~bomtlni wOuld lfPIO¥• ay bOltate ,.. 1 .... ..,.......m. Third Bocly Found LAKE llABELLA <APl -A f11herman at Lake IHbella tw found the body of a third Loi An1•.,. man who drown..S.. ln a M IY 21 tiioeUnf ICCkMftt, I ......, Cou~t •lltr If'• apolse1ma.n titd. ~a fourtll .tedm &I ··alt • Tll• ~M'~ 1-11 .......... .... ••llll•ay. I , . Computer Error Blamed Vote Snafu Located By DAVID KUTZll.\NN Of .. CNifY ~ ..... Computer obstinacy and ballot m1xups -and not the county's new Sl.5 mUUon vote count1n1 1y1tem -were reaponalble for foulupa whlch have delayed final return1 from Tueaday'a ballolina. offlclala Hid today. In fact, elections chJef Shirley Deaton said s he aUll wa1an't cer- tain when t.he results of two pre-c 1 n c t a In Anaheim and Fullerton -would be tabulated. meanlna Oranae County would likely be the last countr in California to tabulate flna re· suits. Despite the delay"· whic h could be the longest in rttent county tusto ry. both observers and officials d e fended the p_crformunce of the Mortel Vote Counting System. saying 1t WH blameless for problems plaguing election returns he re. ' Mrs Deaton said her offi ce was qulte satisfi ed with the 90 new machines. Into which were fed the results of voting in 2.061 precincts throughout the county . Election officials contend, jwat as they had predicted. that the m achine processed all ballot.s by 2.30 a.m. Wednesday. It ls al this point. however. the problems began lo emerge. Mrs. Deaton said that when t>Omputer tapes bearing the elec· lion results were fed into the county's main computer in downtown Santa Ana for a printout, 38 precinct.a would not 10 through. ·•we don't know why," she said . For 38 or those precincts, the informaUon wa11 tranaferred on- to new tlpejt and fed aucceaful- Jy into the Computer Sciences Corporation computers In the county'• finance bulldin& ln th• Clvlt Center. Tbeje returns were eventually added lnt.o the cumulative vote count by late Wednesday mom- ln.c. Mn. Deaton said it wun't (See DELAYS, Pase A!) 'Shon Day' Study Slated ByTrwtees RecommendaUons regarding the fate of Fountain Valley School District's controvenual modified day pro1ram will be presented tonight to district trualeea. They meet al 7:30 p.m. at the Education Center, Numbet' One Lighthouse Lane. Modified day is the early dis· m issal ol students one day each week t.o permit time for faculty planning, staff meet1n1s and other staff a ctivities. Thia shortened da) wu a aource ol bitter dispute In the cont.ract ne10Uat1ona that reaulted ln a 10-day teachers atrlke earUer lhla year. Toniaht'a recommendations will be the v1ew1 of a 12-member committee ol parenu, teacherl and admlnlatratore who ob· talned hundredl o( written ODln· lom on the poUc)', aa welf u some verbal reaponan durto1 two publtc heartnp. Dlatnct officlall declln.cl to dlacuu the recommeodatlon1 prlortotonlpt'1meet.1n1. Dr. Ruben ln1ram, an aa1lltant aupe~t who advtaed the committee, HJd the final NC· om mendaUooa were approv.cl unaoJr&o..b' tw the 12 commit· tM IMIDb9n. ff. P"dJcted that the report wouta pleaH tbe trust.., u well .,. teacben and parenta. Gtmman Robe Valley Store . A J'ouataln Valle1 IU,.,...et WU robbed Nl'tJ W •d•Hda1 b1 a •ea wllo brouOt a carton al mU. to tbt clerk llld UMn pullad oat u au~ pbtol, pollee Hld. Tbe lncktent OCCurNCI It 4:• a.m . ntMMarketlubtltGN, ltl2l Brooldlunt St. Pobct aald UMt rotiber ordered Uae clerk to .ftll l browll ...,_ -. •• wltb IDODq, ,.... ....... fJtcl on foot wtdll ,..,......., tar aDd • tT·aeit·oanoa GI na.US,PllMellltd. Dell,~ ..... .._ IN THE CALM BEFORE ELECTION STORM , REGISTRAR AL OLSON PREPARED BALLOTS New Vote Countfn9 Sy .. em Wotked. but Cornoutera and B•llot lll•uo• Titw8fted Ooeratlon IA County 't:' outh Latest Sla)ing Victim Identified The body or the latest vidJm of the so-called Freeway Killer haa been tentatJvely adenti6ed by Huntington Beach police in veat11at.on H a Loa An1eles County youth. The v1d1m. whose body wu found dumped behind a Mobtl service staUon In aout.h-central Huntingto n Beach Tues day mornin11 reportedly wat rec- ognized DY his parents from a photograph supplied by Hunt infCton Beach police. Detective Sgt. Luis Ochoa said the boy's name would not be re· leased until positive idenUflcu lion Is made by his parent.II. probably later today Sgt. Ochoa said the vlctJm's parents. who live In Riverside County, had Informed police that their son was min ing. He had been living In Los Angeles County. The officer isald ldenllfacallon eliminates the po11slbllily that the young man waa the victim of a possible kidnapping reported May 27 in Garden Grove Ochoa said police plan to talk with acqua!ntances of the boy In effort.II t.o learn his activities before his death. * * * He said it 11 not known al thu time whether the youngster had been lutchhikin1 before the .Inci- dent Many other victims in a string of homoaexual·relat.ed slaylnp were last wen h1tchbik· Ing Ochoa said police have re· ce1ved scores ol telephone callil rrom concerned citizens who write down bcense numbtt11 or Vt'h1 c les seen packing up hitchhikers. 11 l• s.Ud all Information 111 helpful an the search for the killer or kallenl rangm.c over five Southern California count1e11. Ochoa said the latest murder appean to be closely connected with the discovery of a body fou nd May 18 behind a Mobil ... talion In Westminster The Westmlnster victim re· mains unidentified In both cases. the victims were nude. strangled and had mark.I around their hands. feet und neck indicating that t.hey had been bound The latest v1ct1m may ~ lht' 4 lllt In U serlell O( related slayanp In Southern Callfom!a ~mce 1972 • • * Freeway Killer Task Force Nixed ByDELOaESBaOOKSISWJN .,. • ......, Pleltl.., City and county law enforee· ment offtc.n are doln& a iood Job In coord.lnaun1 their aearch for the P'reeway Kiiier, and a HUIJlde Slr~ler-llke task force Isn't nee&td, Supervisor PhlUp Anthony aaid Wednetday. Form.uon of a tut force at flral seemed to Anthony "Uke It may be the answer" to IOlvtna about •l apparently cOIUMded murders. the First District aupervbor aald. But Anthony told fellow 1upervt110n he rejected the Ide• of calllnt for a tuk force after talkln1 to Oranse County Sbtrtlf BradOawe. "The lberllf ueured me lNN l• exull•nt eoordloatlon betwffn hl• office and Uae cltJ ... " And)oft)' taid. Supervllon lnttead decided to urae lM public to come forward with lnformatlon about the klll- in11. In addition. an overall fund should be established to reward purveyors of Information lead· Ina t.o the arrest and conviction or the slayer or alayere, they Hid. The Freeway Kiiier I• believed lo have 1tran1led or auflocatAKt about '1 ~":' men whose bodiet1 have found alon1 heavily travel•d roadways. Bodi• have been found ln five Southern Calltomla countl". Anthony flid h• flret con· alder.cl MldAI for 1 tuk forff 1ton1 the 11.Dts al UM KlDIJcs. Stran11,_r. lnve1U11Uo1a effort whlle talkinl k> a NPOrt.er M u elect.km nl'9lt pert;J. But M •ald he 1cuttJed the Idea after recelvlq 01LM' M · 1urance1 tbat thtN atre• ii 1ulflcient OOOl'dtnetlon •IDODI the PoUe. .,eoclel ln¥olv.d. • ---- AnthonY uld the tMrtft Wd him u.··r.at problem a.~ tbe l&Uler waa "IHI& at:~ 1vldence aDd INdl &o foUow. • • Bus Crash Death Toll Hits 20 JASPER. Ark. IAPI A tour bua from Texas with 33 aboard careened ofr a "guicide curve" and plunged SO feet down u rocky ravine in u mountulnoUb urea ot northern Arkansas to· day, killing at least 20. "In Z7 years with the state police, It's the wo rst I've evn seen." said Capt. Biily Boh Davia. commander of Troop I of the Arkansas Stale Police ut Harrison ·'It looked us tho ug h lht• brakes apparently had foaled ." Davis said Frank Wisc. admm1i.trut.or of the Boone County lh>Kpltul at HarriM>n, aa1d 13 were treated there for injuries One was listed m critical condition. The cond1 lion or th(• others was not 1m mediately ova1lablc Stale polacc• sa id the passengers were all from the Dallas areu Some v1ct1 m l'> '>t 11 1 we rt• trapped under the bus and sur rounding Umber four hours arter the accident. Davia said the bus was north bound down a steep hill or the two-lane Arkansas Hi ghway 7. a scenic route. It traveled along a ditch on the right side of the highway for more than 200 feet • then hit a cuJvert and veered off the road, landing nose down in rugaed terrain 50 feet below the shoulder of the highway, he saJd. Keith Hopper. u spokes man for Central Tex1.t11 trailways ln Dallas. said the bull w as chartered by Mni. R . W. Jacobs of lrvlml. Tex. The touriata ap- <See BUS, Pqe A!) • Coast Weather P'air tonl1ht throu1h Friday except for late evenJnf atMI early morn· ln1 c oudlneu. Lowa tonl1ht 48 at the beachet and 55 Inland. tD•ha Fri· day mid p t.o mid 70I. INSIDE T0•.4 ~ -DM.XP!LOI Hlf Iny ... Jwttl. tMQ laraeli rFrooJ# ~tacit Guijnillaa in ~lianon Ta. AV1V. a.tMI tAP) -JaneU \roOpl attaclltd Pal .. UA· lea ~ .-"'-a .. ~ LebaooiiD toclay. UM UUt &n• alvenary ol t1'e at.an of tlle 1111 Middle Eut war Throuchout lara•I. tl'OCIDI ..,. • IU1J alert. The military command ~ed Lhal an laraeU force altuck the port o1 SAdon durtna the tnorn!n11od klUed a number otcuemu .. An Ufn.1 apok"n\an detUned to tomment on a report from ISelrUt I.bat l&taell ml ... llt bolt.I nred ~•eta It. I beachalde COf· fM .... near don, llllllna one Leban ae clvlUan and wound· tn1 t.llNt. TM llrHU ala.ell waa almed at deterrtn• cuerrilla attacks on 1..-.e:l ad PlfttollnJ the auemnu from 011an111,., auch ac· lion.a, the lPOkeeman aald. Gm Far 8tll •·~• •• C'arlf"r WASHING~ <AP) -c.on,reu tod1y rorm1Uy dellvered to P,....._ Ca.rter lt.1 death tenteftee for hlt dlm••·1aUon •aaoUne fee and prepared ror an n.,.eted eaty override ol b1I prom....,veco. Howe Speahr Tbomu P. O'Nelll. abandontn1 booe• that Cart«'• fflo couJd bt auataloed lD the face ol ove,...helmlnt votea Wednetd97 lo both the Houle and the Senate, uld an /owrrlde etlort eould be compl...S by lite tod1y. • The HouN ... , lhe repeal leablaUoa to Caner today by a 1lmple vo6ee vote a1 HOUM leaden c1pltulated and decided to 1ccept wtthout further del~ the Senate'a approach of attachln1 lt to a bill exwndtna t.be naUonal debt ceJUna. • f Can..-. "•••ftf• •• c.,.,~ W ASHJNGTON <AP> -A private conversation In the quJet of the White HOUie Uvln1 quart.era Ian 'l exactly what Sen. Edward M. Kennedy had In mind when he demanded that Preal· dent Carter debate him. But that'• 111 he's 1oln1 to iet. With their last claahea at the polls behlnd them, Cuter and Kennedy are meetln1 today at the White House, but there Is no sign their talk wUl lead to Kennedy not presalnt on with his at· tempt to take the nomination from Carter. Jim f1ug, Kennedy'a spokesman, said the senator remained determined to challenge Carter for the nomination, although the president haa won enough Democratic convention dele1atea to a.sure himself of victory Gold ,1d.,aft("•-. Dollar .Jfl.rt-d LONDON <AP> -Gold advanced today to ita highest level since March 12. The dollar was narrowly mixed. West German markeu and some others were shut for the Corpus ChrtaU boli· day ln London, the closing price was S587, up from W7. ll traded al s.598 in New York, up SU.70. Silver was quoted in London at Sl5.S5 an ounce, up from SlS.40 and a six-week high. It traded in New York at $16.42, up 87 cent.'\ lfftfll SPnd l p . I""' lwr (.'rat i MOSCOW <AP> The Soviel Union today launched two more cosmonauts Into orbit using an improved Soyuz T2 spacecraft, Tass reported. The launch came just two days after another Soyuz crew - a Soviet commander and a Hungarian cosmonaut -returned from eight days In space. They had docked with lbe Salyut 6 space station, where cosmonauts Leonid Popov and Valery Ryurnin have been in orbit since April 9. Tass called the T2 an "improved model" or the Soyuz manned spacecraft series. It was believed its crew would also link up with and enter the Salyut aatellite. All Plead lnnoeent 12 Countians Face Trial in P,,,-amids Twelve Orange Countlans. charged with misdemeanors for alleged p a rticipation ln a Sl.000-per-person pyramid scheme. have pleaded Innocent in South Orange County M uniclpal Court. The 12 had been cited during a pyramid raid by Orange County Sheriff's deputies May 2 at the Mission Viejo home of Maryann Mattingly, 31, of273Sl Limones. Watson Joins Board of PBS Dr. Norman E. Wat.eon, chan· cellor or the Cout Cornmunlty Colleges, has been elected to the 35-member 1ovemln1 board or the Public Broadcattin1 Service <PBS>. conslaUng of 286 stations across the UnJted States. Wat.Ion, one of four newly elected lay penona to the board, will serve for a three·year period and wm be 111l1ned to various committees by the board chairman. The PBS gov- erni ng board Is based in Washtncton. D.C. The colle1e district owns and operates KOCE·TV, Channel so. a PBS affiliate based on the campUI of Golden West College in Huntlnat.on Beach. OftANQI COAST HI~ DAILY PILOT The precise charge Is violation or Section 327 of the CaUfomJa Penal Code. prom0Un1 an end· less chain. Pretrial hearings were set Wednesday for June 30. A jury trial Is scheduled July 16 for aU 12 defendants. Facing arraignment Wednes· da y were Tracee Gwynn Hartline, 32, of Costa Mesa; Jimmie Bill Brooks. 26, of Coeta Meaa; James Edward Reale, 38, or El Toro; and Karen Deborah Storm. 37, of Santa Ana. Those pleading not guilty last week, along with Ms. MaWntlY were Beverly Lee Hunter, 33, of Newport Beach; Linda Lee Yenl&ch, 38, of Huntln&ton Beach; Wayne Charlea Allen, 58. of Santa An•: Conn•e Beaty. 23, of Minion Viejo; Gre1ory Mura· dlan. 23, of Mlsslon VleJo: Betty Tobe)' Turk, Z7, or Ml11fon Viejo, and Larry Steven Levine, ae. of Mltslon Viejo. Valley Panel Has Va~ancy The Fountain Valley Clty CouncU la teekln.& IPJ!llCurtl ror poaltkm on the clty • Advllor)' Committee on tJJe Handkapped. Tb• committee meeta on the third '11'unday oC each month at 7:IO p.m. ln UM councll con· terenee roon> at Ctty Hau. tOIOO saaret Ave. - T h • e o m.m I t t • t • • rnpomlbWU. tnetude a11tltln1 clty plannlD1 and bu11dtn• of· flctall lft .Umlnatln• ban1en to the handicapped tn bulldln•• and fHWtlell promodnt tdue•· tlo11al and reereattoaal pro· 1r11n1 for tbe band.Mapped and to necMll'.,. amplo1mtot Of U.. bandiotlppiid. ANle..a. may be obUdMd ,,._ tbl -eleftr It cttJ' ffaU orbye .... •ai. (\ ,.,..,.,,.., ' DELAYS. • • known~U.. tem wu la lhl main •Y•tetn or with lb• R rar of Voten Nm· puter .a\dpmtnt at another loci· UottlalelitaAna. Tbe ,.....,..,., com,.,Wr wu uaed to traMftr the eltcUon ,... eult.1 pnceued by the Martel m1chllMl9 Ind put on ca1..U. tc m••nettt tapet whlch the C8C cornputen downtown would UM for malllnc prtnloutl of reaulta. "W• sun hope to unravel the problem." the electlon 1upervl110r aald. Becauae the county had no prtvlous experience wlth Ute Ma.UI machlnea -in UN for the flrtt Ume ln Oran•• C«mty it bu becoc:ne more dltttcuJt to track cfown the problem. of· llclal1 said. In the cue of two other pre. clncu-AW untalUed u ol lh1I rnornln1-problem1 were of anotbft' nature. In Anabelm. for lnatance. the wrona ba1Jota were sent to a ptt· clnct with 447 reatstered voters. otnclala said. Of that total. 231 voted TUes· day. However. •natead of cutinc ballot.a ror c1ndJdates lo the 71at Anembly District as they ahould have. the voten were atven ballots ror lhe 19th Aa· sem bly District. Thi• meana the voters ln the West Anaheim precincts wtU not have their votes counted in partisan races ror which they shouldn't have been votin1 in the first place . The votes they cast ror Jud1es. presidential candidate& and U .S. Senate candidates would be tallied because these were COW\· tywlde races. Mrs. Deaton uid the ml•· take-and 1ubeequent canceled vot.es-would not alter the out come of any races. The foulup was apparently caused by a computer ustgn.ln1 the wrone ballot cards to the Anaheim preclnct. Bent.on Vejach, foreman of the Orange County Grand Jury and an election obeerver, said It was his Impression the Martel vote counUn1 machine• performed well but that computer problems were probably lhe result of try. Ing to wed new systems for the first lime. The result. Vejach said, was that the two didn't mesh well. Vejach, who was among five observeNI from the grand jury at the Registrar or Voters office on election night. said he expe<'t· ed the computer related prob· lems to be solved by the next countywide election In No- vember. The Martel machines are ln use in other areas auch as Tulsa County. Oklahoma. Tena and anotber southern states. Registrar of Voters Al Olson Hid. Fro• Pap I I BUS •. parenuy· "had no afrilialion w1th any oraanized group." Hopper declined lo comment on state police reports that the brakes raUed. Davis said the driver and three or four paasengers were thrown out ot the bua. Al leut four were found on the highway Davia 1ald the driver, who hu not been ldel'tilled, wu amon1 lhe dead. A ne1rb) resident heard the crash and alerted authorities. Elmer Dunn, 81, of Grand Pr1lrle, Texas, was among those who received minor In· juries. He 1ald he waa ridlna on the lert •Ide of the bus. toward the rear. and was almost aaleep when the bus ran otr the ro1d on a curve. The windows were knocked out rrom the lmp1ct of t.he crash. Dunn said he hlt lhe back ot the teat, then 1Ud to Ute noor and crawled out a window. He said one aide or the bus was demolilhed. There wu no tlre. The acctdent occurred 1hortly berore l a.m. one mlle south ol J11per. Authorlllet Hld ldentlf\catlon of Ute female vtcUm• wat dif- ficult because puna were seat· tered ln the wreck•••· The bus waa chartered by Ctm· tral Teua Trallwaya °'" Waeo, Te"u. and left D1ll11 on Wednesday for a four-clay ~da>' In Ml.Mourt and Arkaoaa. of· llel•l•llid. The but landed in a roc~y. tree~tnd ravlne about t.hne- fourthl mile above the Bulralo River. Tb• alte. known loeall1 u "suicide curve,.. hu bMa tbe loe1ticn ol muy f ataJ trlffte ac· cldent1. Nearby. U•• •tat• Hl1bway and Tranaportatloo DepartlDll'lt la COOlt.rUd1Da aa emer1-.ey ramp coaalatinl ol dHO pavel • ...the.. ramp_Ja la· - tended to allow driven tr•wllDI · down the atnmelr •tMI> hl1J to- •low their vehle\el when ~ Co out of c:ontrol. Dunn 1atd th• tour w11 1ehedua.d to traWI to Br-. Mo .• Wednllday n~bt .and N • main IMN tbrou Tbal'ld81 nl1ht.·1111.S tbe wa1 • l11td In ~I bet•I•• Sta-. Pail ......... An ..... for I ftff .... Wed..-, bee ... el e ,..., ,..,,..., Sllrlin' on tlae Wind Skyler Tegland. 14. or Laguna Niguel. takes a wet ride aboard his windsurfer at Dana Point Harbor. He was on the water Wednesday after school. catching some good breezes. He's been windsurfing about a year. Female U.S. Agent Slain in Holdup ............. Sl.AJN AT LA AIRPORT U.S. Agent Juli• CroH Video Store Burglarized Fast-moving thieves who often loot a store and nee I . three minutes are believed to be responsible for the SS.000 win· dOW ·smash burglary or Hunt· ington Beach home video store early Wednesday. The break·in occurred at 6 a.m. at the Home Video Center. 8907 Warner Ave Pol~e said the thieves ned wltb three home video tape record.lni machines and •bout 50vtd'"°caanttea. LOS ANGELES <AP) -An apparently cotncldental holdup shooting has r~ulted in the r1rst duth m tbe hne of duty o( a woman Secret Service agent. Lhe Se<'ret Service said today. Agent JuUe Y Cro!'ls , 26. who had been with the Secret Service less than a year and had just transferred to Los Angeles last week alter her initial tra1mng. v. a!'> i.hot to death ai. she '>take<1 ou t a s uspe<'tcd counterfeit o p e r a tion Wednesday 1n Westchester. near Los Angel~ lntemat10nal Airport ··At approximately 9 15 p m Spe<'1al Aaents Cross and l..Joyd Bulman were seated in a Se<-ret Service vetucle ... when they were approached from the rear by two bla<'k males approx· 1mately 30-35 years of age who were apparently attempUna t.o commit a robbery ... Secret Serv1<'e spokesman Jack Warner s aid in a slalement LSsued In W ashmgton .. A i.truggle ensued and S~ial Agent Cross wus fatally wounded Her partner was not 11'\IUTed · · Wamer ~aid the robtx-r~ at tempt v.as apparently unrc·lated to the rounterfe1tmg operation Loi.. Angeles policeman Cal Brash said Ms. Cross was shot at poml·blank range with a 357 ma1P1um revolve r. Bulman was knocked to the ground In a scume wt.th her killers but lhey escaped, lnvestigat.on aaad Special Agent Cross. born in Bradford, England. was a re· serve lieutenant In the San Diego Police Department where she had worked just before join· ang the Secret Service on Oct. l. Her husband. Bob Hannibal. Is a detective with the San Oie10 police _______ ,.., ___ __... _____ , _____ ~ 'Attack' False WASHINGTON <AP> -U.& military otnciala increased the alert ol 1tra~11c nuclear bolbb- era and mlullea ~rltfly ~ day when a computff problem e1u1ed 1 faJ.ae alarm lndle.U.S a multlple Soviet mlaalle au.d, the Pentap 1aJd today. A quJck check of 1 variety ol tensort in the complex wamJnc 1y1tem, lneludlnl 1atelJJte1, eon· firmed wtthin thrM minutes tfaat no Soviet m l11lle1 bad been launched and the alert wu re· taxed, officials aald. No bombers were launc'hed, althoulh enatnea were •tarted. the Pentaaon saJd. There wu in- creased communlcatloo with ml11lle crews but no weapons were prepared for launch. Neither President Carter nor Deren1e Secretary Harold Brown wu notified. the Pen· taeon said, but the White House Situation Room. which deala with lnternallonal crises. "wu aware of the possible threat while It was being evaluated." It was the second false alert of this type since November. Both resulted from problems at the North American Air Defense Command headquarters at Colorado Springe. Colo. However, ortlclals said the "technical problem In a com- puter" early Tuesday apparent· ly did not occur under the same condlUons as the Nov. 9 raise a larm. In that Incident, a test tape simulating an attack was red into the NORAD computer and because or an apparent mechanical malfunction was trun!\mltted to other mllltary <'Om mands and federal agen· Cle!> The Pentagon said the latest f a l!>l' alarm ls being in· vcsllgated The ral~ alarm Tuesday in· d1cated Soviet launching of both lnterrontlnental ballistic mis- s1l~s and s ubmarine-launched m1ss1les against the United Statea, offklals said. Senior office rs m the Pen· tagon·s Military Command Center. the Strategic Air Com· mand Headquarters In Omaha, N •b. NO~AD conferred swiftly. Judge Faces Vote Runoff It was Incorrectly reported in Wednesday'a Datly Pilot that North Oran1e County Municipal Court Judge James Wright Cook was elected to a Superior Court 1udge11h1p 1n Tuesday's elec· t1ons Judge Cook fell one-hair percentage point short or gam· lhf! a majority vote m a field ol ~1x candidates for the PQ51tion bean~ vu~att'<L. by Judge LHter \'an Tatenhove Cook will race a November runoff contest with Susanne Cur· r1e Lewis, a Los Angeles County deputy district attorney who re· sides In Mission Viejo. Of the 369.116 votes counted, Cook received 104,079 and Mrs. Lewis, 63,250. More Coverage Additional Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley co¥erage appears today on Pages AlOA and AlOB. , --- ·. • Election Cost Real Estate lntePests • LOIMfOSLIS(AP)-AMifNlllHew_.,~.......__... bla•J'-"'-'heM&1'1•1111"*Mllot•111we...,._.rea1 .................................. ,..eGMl'ol ................ ...rt,1-1. OUci•t•l•,•IM .... .._., ... ,.......,,_tWr. atW. "f'C' 11rJ Ulle ..... fll Pa DI llMM .:.lb~ wouJd laave tUllll ...... -..... Md ,_ a ,.... to ,....-~. 0... Sd....a lrowa ,, [ ) =-~;!..,~,'::. ~ NEWS ~NALt. l~ lacometu "8&. 111 tot•· _ _ ly • Pll'INm o/ eM VcM, wl · Propoe*-10, tM •euure to repeal 1U current mt C!Ofttrol law1 ud MvtnlJ ....uiet uw onee. .. aw T88 D8MOCllATIC 1ovemor, and eavlronmenlal * . * * * ... * * * * * * * ' .. measure would spur •P•rtmeet constriction while pro~· •• realODable controll, •• tt aot oaly as perceet of U.. VClt-* and f.u.d to carry a atnale county. •• ~ .. Reaten bave arrived u a foree lo CallfomJa Politlcs, declared tenant &obbyilt Stephen Hoperaft, wbo be.rded the No- on-to ca;:fdai"' ln Northern Ca1Uom1a. He tenant groups woWd renew proposal.a for a "renters' blll of rtlhta." lncludin1 protec:Uon aaalnlt evictions without cause. Similar proposals have been defeated repeatedly ta tbe Leglalature. TR.E DAY ALSO PROVIDED a meuure of vindication for ac· • tlvlat Tom Hayden, focus of a ftnal-weelc attack by real estate • groups wbo portrayed him as the ainbter force behind the . No-on-10. ~ : Jania Aims at. Public Pensions "It wu a tremendous victory for renters, who I hope will · become effecti" u a oolltlcal force in CaUlomla," Hayden said aa : a statemen&. "I bope ft will be the beginninl of meetings between • renters' organizations and builders to see what we can do in com·; mon on the wboJe question of affordable houalng." • • LOS ANGELES <AP> -Howard Jarvis, aeeminc undau.ntect by the cl'UlhJGI defeat ol bia lncolM w cut proposal, aaya h1I next initiative will leek to Umit. public pensions -and he might aim another one at 1<>vemment spenclln1 "I am not 1ot.n1 to take any rest what.oever as loai u I'm alive," the '16-year~ leadel'of the tax rewlt -a movement wboee status la ln doubt Jn.er Tuelday's election -said ln an ln· t.erviewWednesclay. '· J want to pus another amendment. I want to put a cha1n around the politicians' necks so they can't bankrupt the pubUc." Jarvis' mood seemed to have changed since Tuesday night, when he bitterly promlaed to "shove lt up the ears" of public employee un- ions for leading the successful opposition to his .1uv11 Proposition 9 Income tax reduction. He paid a backhand compliment Wednesday to public employee groupg, saying they ' ran a very, very well-planned and a very IOOd campaign, despite the fact that for the moat part it waa tDtally diabooest." Proposition 9 would have cut state income tax rates in half and reduced state revenues by more than SC billion a year. . It got only 39 percent of the statewide vote and didn't carry a slngle county. The election came less than two years after the overwbelmlng passag~ of the Proposition 13 property tu cut that made the squat, bull-voiced Jarvis a celebrity. Jarvla said bia next initiative la aWI being drafted and mieht be ready to submit to the stale for clrculalion ln a couple of months. He said it would Umlt tbe pension of future public employees to "somewhere near" the amounts drawn by comparable workers in private industry. "Nobody knows how much deficit there is In the pension fund but It's In the hundreds of millions.'' Jarvis said. "It will have to be paid. and because they can't pay it on the property tax and can't raise the sales tax, the only alternative is the income tax." Asbestos Firm Freed of Damages LOS ANGELES <AP> -A Superior Court judge baa ruled that it would be inappropriate for a jury tJlat awarded Sl.2 million In general dumages to a worker who allegedly suffered asbestosis to also levy punitive damages ( J against th e asbestos manufacturers. STA.TE The Jury bad been sc heduled to begin the punitive damage phase of the case Wednesday, but Judie Earl F. Ritey said before the proceedinis got under way that. be felt a punitive award would be wron1 S7 ,tllllifJn A•ked ht IJt»afla Sllif SAN DIEGO <AP> -The family of a San Diego man has fUed a $7 million wrongful death suit growing out of a PoUab jetliner crash that left 87 persons dead last March, includiag a U.S. boxing team. Yreruo "Junior" Robles, 40, was one ol the boxing coaches who ·died in the fiery crash near the Warsaw airport. Tbe lawsuit was filed in federa1 court by Robles' former wife Margaret Ojeda ol NationAl City. l'ear-ro ... d Srltool OK•d b1 LA c.-t• LOS ANGELES t AP> -Despite objictions from tbe American Civil Liberties Union, a Superior Court Judie bu approved a Board ol EducaUoo plan to relieve overcrowdin1 by ru.Dllinc·some acboola year-round. . School attorney Peter James said tbe ruUne Wednacby by Judge Paul Egly, Laguna Beach, means the plan could go into ef· feet at eome efementary and junior hlgb schools July 7. W...a11 Ra~d at llo•t-tor f;fdft-ly SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -Five men burst into a home for the elderly, pistol-whipped them and raped a 67-year-old blind woman before fieelng with about $100. police said. "Every time you thlnk you've seen it all. something like this happens," Capt. Joseph Lordan said Wednesday. DirineJob Some look for water. some oil, som e gold. But Tom H a rmon. a Monterey Pac1f1c Telephone employee, uses copper divining rod!, to locate lost underground cables . He learned "Witching art," he says, from an old cowboy in Big Sur Mountains . De's*I ... Light up Dad's face with English Leather and your caricature at no extra charge ;. .. .. . If your Dad's an English Leather man, we've got a twlce- te"lflc gift Idea. With any $5 purchase of English Leather, a famous caltoonlst will draw your caricature In just one minute. Now, Dad can have his favorite cologne and your picture to remember you by . .. :· 1 lrip wi<11 Continental'I Super Saven. They'd wcirt for you. wo.Just caJI )'OW' travel agent Qr Contiriemal. Seats are limited. So don't put it off any longer., Loee une wait with Continental. , Park. ay e y .Be '~e Square' • Orwe ~ .. ~ ....... towanl eeqW11n11rt .cnifat·llnd oned by tlle fwdlrll IOVWDD*ll ln NU. 5quan Part in ~-Valley. .: • In tMina the Ht.loft to ~ with neaotJaUool, • lvperY\lon •PPl'OVed ~ for tllk1 wttJi the \J .s. ·~ MariM ~. whlc'h Is 1iekJn1 Other cotmtJ land for •. tr purpoMll 1bl' lS'f acrea. vlrtuuY In UMt NOtM' ol \be park. formerb UNd b.y the llarinea u a helicopter land· .,. land h leafd on a year-to-year bula to tM t'OUDt.Y and • u tJMI MU1nl for Ute Gordon Bennett , Ba.lkloa Rat'fl ln April. Now the Martnet are Interested in XC'h ~ ~ parcel for other county land that rould oo uSt-d tor tralruna. T1w> slit"e ol land be-came a source of controversy . ..,. hen pl ve ~ &NM>Unced to develop a housing area l ~ f.,,. Marine penonnel. 'Jbat proposal was dropped .. toll cntkilm from nearby resldenta. lt as aood to learn that 1UJ)e)'Viaora are moving ahead ,. .tit Uoo neaotlaUons which. if successful, would • ' provide a chance to develop the park into truly a mile· qua.re racWty. · It also ,.'OU.Id alleviate concern on the part of resi· dents over a miUtary·related development that may not be compatible with their desires :Plant Closure a Loss Fountain Valley city olficials are understandably dis· ·appointed by the announcement that BASF Video Corporation is closing its local plant, less than a year after it opened. Impressed by tbe firm's international reputation and ; its promise of 1,200 new ;o~ in Fountain Valley, the City Council, acting as the Agency for Community Develop- . ment, provided a $1.5 million su~idy to help offset : BASF's rent payments. 1be property itselC is owned by Q · B Properties, a Newport Beach developer. Just one week ago, the company laid off 200 workers. . announcing that the remaining 80 employees would be phased out in the next three lO six months. The West · German parent corporation blamed deteriorating monetary exchan ge rates, inflation and Japanese com- petition for the decision lo clO!le the plant. Initial indications are that the city's Sl.5 million in· vestment is not in jeopardy because of contractual pro· tection clauses. Still. it is not in the city's interest to permit the prime industrial acreage occupied by BASF lo remain vacant for any length of time. The city should cooperate ";th BASF and the proper- ty owner to help encourage a res ponsible corporation to move into the soon-to-be-vacant plant Paramedics' Value Just three months ago, s hortly before his third birth- day • .James Thorsen was pulled unconscious Crom a Hunt· inglon Beach swimming pool. He was not breathing. and his heartbeat had stopped. The boy was clinically dead. Today, James is alive and well on his way to a normal childhood, thanks to the expert treatment of a team of two paramedics and three fire men who were on the scene just two minutes after receiving a call for help. The rescue crew artificially stimulated the boy's breathing and circulation for some 26 minutes, until his functions resumed under their own power. Not every medical distress call a ns wered by paramedics makes for a dramatic headline, as the case of James Thorsen did. Nonetheless, the trained rescue teams that rush to the scene or accidents and other emergencies deserve special praise for their effective µcrformance in a diCficultjob. In the past, questions have been raised about whether the sub5tantial funding commitment to a paramedic pro- gram is justified. Sometimes. it lakes an incident like the revival of young J amc,'5 Thorsen to remind the community just how · valuable the paramedic service can be. • Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Dally Pilot Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists Reader comment is invited. Address The Daily Pilot. P 0 Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Phone (714) 642--4321 Boyd/Contest By L.M. BOVD Rare is the writer who gets paid S12.000 per word. But Mrs Deborah Schneider of Minneapolis, Minn .• may achieve that distinction. She won a coiltest back in 1958 by describU\g Plymouth cars in 25 words. Her prize was SSOO a month for life. Tbe life ex· pectancy expeTls figure she'll collect $300,000, in um.- Rouahly half of all hostage deatba occur during rescue attempts that end such sieget invariably gets good cab service by a simple sociaJ trick: He checks the driver's dis played Ucense and makes a polnt of addressing that worthy by the first name Q . Are there any ladies of tb~ nipt in the People's Republic ol Cblna? A. Not out in plain sighL Those who might be so described are referred to over there as wt1d pheasants A peD8Uin can swim a lot f aater than • aalmoa, bear in mind Nobody knows whether Greenland II oae tatmd or several Ever beard of a minnow that wel1b1 80 eound1? Neither bad J. Bat tbe Colorado 1Ml'*Awft"9 of the \ mlftDOtr famU,y ii Slld to 1et J that.., Q. How~ ail-ballets did the 1.-. llaqer •boot durtu Ida eueer oo r.no aod "J'Vf Try that one, frlend-o. ! A tl'tlqMllt ~ vllitor • to vadoul bll au.a • .,. be • ~ " • A. J:utt1112.8M. at.r. Amona. thole eome1Ubl• you eouldn•t 1et eullJ dur- ln1 World War II w11 tapioca. It comet from BrHll'• CHH•• plant. 'lll•t'1 UM veaMatkJa from wtdab tlJe BrutlilM m• UMtlr ..... AD4. ~ ... 90IAI •It tun aeaa. now 'hploca.,... ma1 hard to eon.t. bJ. aan our Cbllf ~·-· • Soviets ~ore Mandatory. Accord!,:4. to the latest public oplllloa • many Am ncans are ao d.lMncbanted with the llkeh· Democratie and RepubUcan candidates for pral· dent that tboy'd welcome a t'han~ to vote for ''None of Lhe Above" t.b1s November. Indeed. thla dllgruntlement •monc the electorate is the main tblng Rep. John Anderson bu going for blm. Oddly enough. the same pro- blem exists in tho Soviet Uruoo. where the SO· called elec toral process l eaves the voters no choice wben they file into th e pollintt booths t o .. eleet .. the o nJ y can · didates on the ballot. And yet. accordin g to America's Kremlin-watche rs . disenchanted Russians stlll manage to .. vote with their feel" by staying hom e on Election Day. This has also ~en eon· Mailbox firmed bf 1 Sovlet defector who Wat~ a blah officlal of the politburo. TRE OEFP.Cl'Oa, who used to be a Comm uni1l futy supe~llor fOf' aeveraJ election dlatricu. told my aaaoclales Vicki Warren and Dale Van Alla how widespread the practice was. "In all the di.trtcta that I supervlaed, as well as in dis· tricts where the real results were known to me." he said. ••betwffn 15 and 20 percent or the voters dedared their unwill· angness to vote." How many actually persist in their intention to boycott the spuri~ election process ls not known. First or all. it's against the law for Soviet citizens to ab· stain from voting. Communist Party activists are saddled Wlth the Job of getting people to the polls for the formal endorsement of party candidates. THE SOVlt:T part y hack~ have hsts of all voters in their districts. and check orr each one as the vote as east. Those who don •t llbow up ere vtllted duriq \he day. Detplte thl• beavybanded chaude, our SoYlet 1ources estimate that more than eo mUlioa wt.ere -about a \bird ol · tbe adult population -refused to vote for the prtlclaJ Com· muni.t Party candidate ln dee· lions ot the mid·l.9'10.. Thia wu. the sources said, a way ol ex· pressing oppoeition to the gov .• e mment. There cou.ld be other re asons. though. Soviet eleetions are held o n Sundays, and a lot or Russians use their day off to get drunk. according to a Slate Department source . THE ftlJE number of Soviet e1t1zens who vote -or. more im· portanUy. the number who don't vote -neve r reaches the bigshots in the Kremlln. Party bureaucrats. fearful of lofilng their Jobs. "syst e matically falsify·• the figures on voter turno ut, aceordlng to our sources. Nol long ago. one Kremlin of. fic1al had the temerity to sug- gest lhal more than one can· FAMINE IN CAMBODIA: Coo· tradlctln ecent optlmt1Uc new• reports. Central-In· lelUtence A.pocy ualysta pre· diet um conUnuinl famJne ls a virtual cel1,.1linly In Cambodia. "Onl~ deaths and emt1nUon can decrease ~ number ot peo- ple to be fecf,'' the CIA report notes. And it makes elev that there ls not enough food to go around. After a promlillng start last fall, the lntertaaUooal relief ef· fort in Cambodia is in danger of collapsing, as funds dry up and the au.ent\oft ot the great powers tu m s to other areas of crisis. Meanwhile. the Cambodians' cupboard ls bare. "Food •tocks are vlrtuaJlv exhausted,·· the C IA reports . "No slgnlflcant a mounts of food will be availa- ble from crops grown ln Kam· puchea <Cambodia> until next December." THE CIA PUTS the problem starkly: Altn06t 750,000 metric tons of food and seed are needed. The current crop will provide S6,000 tons at best. Even with the eomblned relief efrortc; or the Soviet bloc and Western agencie s. the r e wall be a ~hortCaJI of about 200,000 tons or food and 60.000 tons or seed. Even a 26,000-lon short.fall, thl· CIA notes. would .. lower the caloric value of a n average ra t1on below lhf' starvation level. .. And even that Rrim estimatt• assumes a distribution system that wo uld prov id e an "average .. ration. ln fact, ac· eordlng to a st.'<'rC't study. the s )'s\em is a shambles and dis· tribuoon has all but ceast.'<i. A PT ACRONV M : The Statt· Oepartment"s V1etnam-Lao~­ Ca mbod1 a office has won a s a rdona<' nickname in Foggy Bottom. Becau.<,e or its apparent- ly unending dtt•t of disaster, th<.' VLC off1~ 1s known as the Of f1ce of Very Lost Causes. Don't Blame Judges for Defects • ID Law/ To t he Editor I have worked ~1th in our county's court system for almost 20 years and believe that I am therefore qualified to commc·nt on at least one aspect of Judi<.'1al elections. I huve never done :.o in this manner before and do so now only because I feel that s trong ly tha t our Judg es themselves. have been mis judged by those who contend that they are too lenient m their dealings wilh criminals. An ever·increasing crime r at(• and a growing disregard for society's means of try in~ to con trol the conduct of ca<'h other. our laws. are cited as bt>in~ direct results of this lenienc) And it is not unreasonable lo draw this conclusion 1f indeed our judges eould righteously be ·held solely responsible for tht: inherent weaknesses 1n our syste m that affords the criminal som ething Jess in the way of punishment than we believe "fi ts the crime." It struc k m e early an my marshaling career that only the innocent come into our courts seeking j us tice. Justice. of coune, is iiboul the last thmJ: that the guilty want. They want out. They want ore. They want acquittal. dismissal or anything else they can manage to get that is cheaper than the going price regularly charged Cor the crime that brings them there. And in tbls country, they have plenty of expert help al hand to get them what they want. II they can't pay for it, then we furnish 1l Cor free. SOME OF lt doesn't cost anything al all. It's already the"' in the form ol ambiguous lawa, protecllve precedents. confoundedly complex in· terpretatlon1 and frequently fru.ltradol t«hnicallUes -all of wblda IDUlt be rell,SOUSb' ob- aened It all ataa• of the P">-ceed'~:="' with u.e t and arrest. Vlrtua!IT MY lnuulartty alon& the UDe wtl1 tnvarlably aerve to compromlae a eaH lo tbe befteftt of the 9CC\IMCI. But, \Ul· Jen the public la tboroqbb f aml~ WW. all e&em«ltl of • caH aad •ubMclueot dftelop- meat., ••1'fteo ~lie ,.... ...... tbe crtmtnal fllill &o rullw-* Jmt dlllltl. "Some tool ...... tuned blm looM'' we bear.·-... ~' die Jud&e bad no ddce tn tbe matter. In fan, Juq. have bten beld '° blame in aucb c.,.. wbea, Sil trutb. tl WM a Jury wbo arrtnd et ~ dlWPolDUDa dld.ll4lll. 8omli PlllPCIM lo 0 UY'ow tM r•etall oat" wt&ll Ute _. ... , .• .,.. ...... .-; •••• abiliiitu~ ml:'nt IO thl' JUdl l'ial ~<'heme O( than!(~ But Wkt• m~ "'ord for it. ba:.t•ct on hea\} l'Xpos ure and «.>x pern·n<'l'. 1t won'\ work that ~ay h l't'i.IU'l' we would simply be npl.1(•1ng tht•m with othe r m o rtal s v.b o. g i ven the r 1rcumstances as they exist. will bl' lawfully bound lo perform the awful chore m essentially the o.;amt· fashion as those v.ho arc· n o w <· h a r g l' d w 1 t h t h l· rt-spons1bality and who. in my '1('v. and a.., lbe rerords will 'ho" handlt.• at C'xtremel) "'"'II DONE. RHEA Marshal. Orange County .;.; It' roftg To the Edttor: Your staff is certainly being misled about the causes and ef· frcts of the S.S.mile speed limit. In a recent editorial you said that the limit saves lives and J,!asoline. The faet is that it does neither. The state has quit mak· mg claims about the gas saving. and both the state and the feds are lymg to us about the lives saved. 1be M-mile speed limit ls a political issue that bas nothing to do with safety or conserva· t1on . It is a fraud against the motorist. VOU ALSO said t he Leg· i s lature s hould stand up aga'nst the truck drivers, but they are the ones who. ror a ehange, are our friends. 1bey know the fal.sity ol the limit. Al. least 60 percent of all tickets issued are f« speeding but ex· eess speed i.I 14th oa the list ol accident causes. Speed trappioe is an elC1ortioo scheme. ll serves only to raise money for and glorify the bigoted and in· tolerant. Except for the drunk driver, tbe bl11eat problem on our rreew~ today are the &low driven 1D tile fut lanee. Yet the CHP 11 wtwilllinl and unable to take t'Of'l'tlC't.iWt 9d.lon. They me the 1tow drtwn to Ml~ eatnp the YMdlDI ol tbelr malldoe11 haraument, Uck.etlna thole who protest or try to paaa tho tUepl 1lowpokee. There ii eoou,ta U'cJu. ble (or driven Oil the tr.....,a now without mddla1 man eo· tnpmem. Cm:sfER KING •• , ........ ..w To the Bdl!A>r: can. on O<'casion, be an ex- tremist r v.as born 67 years ago in southwest M1ssour1. I enJOyed ..hill billy" and other kinds of music. and listened regularly lo radio KVOO in Tulsa which ht< menlioned. Also. as a boy grow- ing into manhood in a narrow and bigoted religious environ· ment. I was taug ht that we "Rood .. people should. like ~­ tn<'hes. buf'\' our heads in the ~and and pretend that sex dad not t'XISt I was aware an tho6e days that some o( the beautiful ballads which I most enjoyed were banned from radio play because they were deemed. by whom I never knew, to be sexually sug- gestive and therefore too ··dir· ty'' for public broadcasts. Believe it or not. the Joplin, Mis· souri radio statioo < WMBH? > once refused to allow the band I was p~ in to broadcast live from Its little studio 0 'Tbe Sweelhea.rt of Slgma Cb1°' for that reuoo! PEIUIAPS, lo the minds of some, the peoduJum ll today swl.ngtna too rar ln tbe oppoette direcUoo. But ooe tbiAa ll cer· tain: 1be vast majority ol us are no &ooger trytnc to pMead that sex does not n.lst. And I, few one, belle¥e that ll a positive step 1D the right dlrecUOG. When we at.art teadlina that M'X is good and really wooderfu.l, when associated wllb love, un· deratanding and •dult responalbWty. I believe we will De well on ouren::~aetUna there." Such t.bink· inl Ls long overdue. I now have the Ume to liltlD to a areat deal ol Tadio bk:Judlq ·•country music'' about wblcb HarveJ 1'to&e. Not ooc. be.-1 beard a _., two.dealt Wbk!b I would deacribe H .. porno- arac~;" Cl coealder IQ1'l8tf qua to mak• • JudpMnt In thM area became of IOID9 aqu~p wttb pom .. at baa Mm ewpicted lD movMI and ID mqmdDM 1udl U HUltler.) Thi• leads ~ to the lnesc-s>a· ble concluaiOn tlult inY o&d friend baa lndoed burled b1a bead lD the aand. P•ul Baney bu been one of my fa~ COCIHll .... on for many ,..... am I Ola't lmow Ulltll .......... ., • col.an ___ _.,_ abOut.fGUllltY wte-ift tbe DdT Pilot \bat we '"" Q • tM aam•.,... •nd, •PPa....ui. 1bared mutu•l l~terut1 H )'(Mltbl. Nor did 1 reaU• thtit he .. Bolsa Chica Suit Was Predicta ble:· that appeared in the Pilot on May 22 Your <'on<'lus1on wa~ I tha t the slate Coustal Com · mission should not have des· i~nated the Bolsa Chica a., a wetlands. I believe tbal this des· ignation <By a 9-2 vole of the commissionen on March 291 was tamely, appropriate and v.ell advised. The de<.'isi<>n was appare ntly based upon the following considerations: First. a number of regul atory agencies bad already made this determination. The U.S. Army ,, Corps of Engineers. the U S. Fish and Wildlife Service. tht• Slate Water Resources Control Board, the Regional Water Quality· Control Board, the Calllornia Department of Fish and Game and the Environmen· tat Protectioo Ageocy all rec-. 01nt1e that the Bolsa Chica · lowlands are wetJands as that term is understood in their a uthorizing statutes. SECOND. according lo the coastal act. •·wetland" means lands within the coasta.I wne whit'h may be cove r e d periodically or perm•nently with lhallow water and includes aaJt water manbes. fresh water mar1be•. open or closed br•ckl1b water marshes. swam.,., mud fl•ts •nd fens. (Section 30121). It sbou.Jd be ob-ae rv ed tbat tbe definition .. wetland•" refers to lands within lhe ~aslal zone, and lbelr lands Beed not be subject to tid•l ectloo. Clearly, the Bolaa Chica wetlands m the coutal act cleQnlUon. Third. local plann!na bas been cooduded both within and out· side ol tbe local coa.ttal plaan.lng pr'OC'ell. All cl tbetr efforts ba-re I floundered and *al coastal · I planotna cannot meet tbe I ltatutorY deedJlnM, tboGab lack ol pnJtlW wu • m.ior reuon for the It.ate Ca.11.fomi• CoutaJ CommiNkle tald.ni' acUoo and deCl•rlQf Ute Bolaa Chica a " wetludll. ln~S:: ~':!°°de= upon the assignment of numeroua doeumeota reeeived in pgblc be&dnp (oae..of wbieb was held lD Huntlq\oo kadl lD ., F•bnaa.ry J and on b11tottcal. "'- blolotkal and other acl..utlc la data . PETER GRl:SN, PbD Prealdeat, Amt1oa de Botta Cblc:• BASKETBALL /BASEBALL /VOLLEYBALL On tlae Way to a Title Mar k Anderson of UCLA clears the final hurdle in the 110-meter event of t he de· cathlon Wedne!'nav a t Austin . T exas. An- derson amassl'd i.l total of 7 .893 points to win the NCAA champ1onsh1p Miami Eliminat~d Droke Leads Volleyball All-stars For the second straight year the North has preva iled over the South in the a n nual Orange County All-star ~ame at El Toro Hil?h. 'Cl1ttch Cargo' Delivers for Cal Coach Charlie Brande's North unit coasted to a 15·4, 15·8, 8 15, 15·8 victory Wednesday night an d Newpor t H arbor ll1gh·s Kevin Droke was voted the game's MVP DROKE WE NT to the line to ser ve at the match's closest junct ure and won nine straight points to secur e the victory. He :i lso scored 11 ki lls on 13 at· tempts at the net. When Droke went back to ser ve in that fourth game, the North had just lost 15·8 and was trai lin g 8 ·6. as t h e South threatened to even the match at two games apiece. Estancia's Kent Smith a lso played a key role in the North's victory. as did teammate Dan Vre balovich , who ha ndled most of the setting duties. Bruce Caldwe ll <Newport Harbor) provided a solid force at the nel with his blocking. while the North got str ong performa nces from Braden Bodner <Capistrano Valley) and Chris Vansell (San Clemente> U\1 AHA 1.\l'J Ht'> l<.••1m m u t e i, at I h l' l ' n 1 H' r ., 1 l v of Ce1hforn1a 1·all Tom <'olburn ·'Clutch Cargo At the Colleg<• \\orld &nl'" \\t•dnesda:-n1J!hl Colburn o;howed "'h' hl' h<i'> <'<irnt·d lhl· name TH I:: SE:\IOR CATCHER .,mul'ked a tlAn-run hom1·r 1n the t•1ghth inning to tie th<.· '>(·ore and California v.ent on to 1·hmtn:l\1: M1am14 3 /\ t h r o \\ 1 n g t' r r o r J! a v <' California, 44·22. tht• '1ctor,> and set up a showdown "'1th Pac1fl<' Te n Conference rival i\nzona tonight. The 10 ... er of thut gaml• goes home. The winnN will pla:- Hawa1i , 60-17, for the NCAA htlt· F riday rught. Arizona. 43-21. stayed alive by handing Hawaii ib fir'>t loss of the series. 6·4 in 11 -innin!"s. in We dnesda y night 's second game "If it was the eighth or ninth inning. in a clutch s1 tuat1on. r d give my right arm to ha\e either Colburn or Greg Zunino up to bat.·· Caltforn1a Coach Bob Mi lano i,a1d. "We're luck.) Colburn 1s good in the clutch."· Teammat e L:,.le Brackenridge. ··we call h1m <Colburn> Clutch Cargo after a cartoon chara cter He really com C's thn1ul!h "'hl·n "'t• need him · CALIFORN IA TRAILED :\1 w m1 3 1 and the H urricanes· .t< l' p1tl'h1·r. '-.;!'al lleaton, 18-4. ",,._ \\Orkin~ on a s1x -h1tter throul!h ... cn•n rnnrng ... Hul J<'ff Ronk "'alked to lead orf th<.• t•ighth and Colburn tai;tJ?«.'d u 3 I pitch from Heaton O\er lh<' :JiO fool mark in left 1·enter U.S. Stars Battle NBA INGLEWOOD -The 1980 U.S. Olympic basketball team and t he NHA All-star t ea m open their best -of.fi ve Gold Medal Series at the Forum June 16. T he competition is replactng thl' Olympic games in Mosrow ror the 1980 team or top amateur cagers Lakers Nor m Nixon and Michael Cooper are among the NBA AJI stars Laker coaches Paul Weslhead and Pat Rdey will direct the NBA stars m the series wtuch res umes June 18 in Phoenix. l'Onttnues lo Seattle June 20. New York June 22 and In· d1anap<>li.s on June 23. AN ESTIMATED crowd of 400 watched the clash or Orange County's finest volleyball talent, and the bleachers were heavily stocked with college scouts and coaches r=-.:z~=-nr;;~;;;-;:=::=::::;:;;:=::::::;;. Henbit Wins Epsom Derby }(~:~'"° EPSOM. England (AP> -Henbit, a U .S.·bred 'JI ~~~,:'";,'::~"9 racehorse, won the 20lst running of the Epso" ......... , ........... ,, ...... "'"" Derby and $387 ,022 for his owner , but fractured a " •11 ........... ~, ...... ,.,.., bone in his root and will not race again this season. com .... 641-1289 , Qt N""""1 .... Veterinary surgeons announced the injury well 11111$ION viuo495-0401 after the race, Britain's richest classic and one of 1,.:::,.c:::;o.~1 the world's most prestigious nat races . ~========~!..1 The colt veered sharply to the right after tak· ing the lead from Rankin inside the last quarter- mlle of the race. It appeared that was when the in- jury was suffered. ORANGE COUNTY COLLEOTOBAllA GUN SHOW ••••• llTT8 ~ .... JUNE 7th a •• 1llO · BUY • SELL • TRADE 350 TABLES ON SALE - Fetturlng Guos -Ant1aue & Modem Ammo-War Relk:s & &Jrptus Indian Aftrfacta -Rugs & Jewelry-Coins 8 Foot Ellhlbit Tabl" 130 00 For Both Daya A ........ 12.71, c ........... Sl.M 1-..WW.M,...I ..,.._ t A.Mo TO lrN P..M IOIN llAYI OUMI COUNTY Mii •OU.S l.ftflQllfCll PAW W. I I ..... w ....... c-.. .... .. W.t1141 .... 7"7 lEASE BMW 1980 320i Cypress green 5 1>peed slereo cassette. 109 lamps. air cond .. alloy rims p1ns1ripes (7150391) $253~~ • IU Ol' __ C_ .. ....,,.,.. ---Clo --••••l&M 11•••0"'' .... " ~ C.p recluChOft 11600 Toi• ...,......... $12"3M ...... .., ""_,, -..... 124•5•• ......... 1980 528i Ascot grey. fu ll pQWer and air cond . etc 1678087) ,$336~ ....... ...,... ....... ......., ---c.-•1"'1• ~ l"OOI Clli ......C-t ltoo t•• ,..._ tH n• • ~IOr_,.. ___ _ ...... ........ , ..... OMHnann1 II• Md AIBtllc. •1MW w 121·1333 ' .. , .......... Le ...... M Wl(t IOJllCA4 ~· --~ ~ . .k!NI 1880 •' f PIL01 Mi11ionaire Flasliliack Buss WtU Succea1ful; Nmsi, Maloof Weren't CORONADO <AP> -Tb.ree mllllonalres purcba1ed team • ln the National Basketball AJsoclatlon a year ago. For Jerry Bu.11. bis rookie sea&OD was a dream come true; ror Sam Nasal and Geor1e Maloof, the dream wa.s marred by defeat. Buss' Loe Angeles Lakera won 60 games dur· ing the regular seuon. then ~aked during the playoffs and beat Philadelphia ln an eitciting six· game final aeries to win their first championship since 1972. BUT N~l'S INDIANA PACERS bad a losing season and failed to make the playoffs. and Maloof's Houston Rockets couJd do no better than .SOO in the regular season and then an ignonlnious four.game playoff sweep a t the hands or the Bos ton Celtics. Buss. friendly and likeable with a doctorate in che mistry and a stable or starlets and centerfolds for dates, was very much a part of the Lakers' championship season. "There were many keys to our s uccess. and I think the first was our new owner." s aid Lakers center Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, who bad one of has best all.around seasons and captured the sixth most valuable player award or bis 11-year car~r. "He came in and s howed us that be would do whatever it takes to m ake us a wmner. spend as much money as necessary, and that made a btg difrerence." Buss says it was money well spent "EVERY DAY TH.AT GOES BY, thtS thing sinks m more." he satd dunng a break at the NBA Board or Governors meet mg earlier this week . · · 1 <'an 't tell you how much I've enjoyed it. When so many people tell you you've made the m happy, you're bound to exper ience a great high." It's been quite a year for Buss. who made his c~0 u ·~ IT'S HAPPEllll8 Ill ->~ MISSIOll VIEJO 4Ci~~ SUPER bVlll88 IOWI "'LEO 0 ~ • h,·4.L.-.~. ~-;~--. MISSION VIEJO IMPORTS Z11111 • ... 11rn,. 111•1•-na1m1111-n• fortune l1' real atat. and a year aao &belled out $67.S mJWon -in euh, no less -to purehate the Laken, hockey's Los Anaeles Kinas, tM Forurn io ln&lewood and various properties from Jack K~t Cooke. "l uaed to be just another IUY who loved sp<>rU. Now J can just call up somebody like Muhammad Ali and say, 'Let's ao to dinner.' tt's amazing. it really ls. . "People come up to me all the time and s,y, ·wow. I wish 1 could Uve your life for just a wed.' I think a bout it once in a while and I have to admit. I do have a pretty good thing going." BUSS EVEN OWNS MARKET SQUARE Arena in Indianapolis, where Nessi's Pacers go through their paces. Nassi, another California millionaire, paid several vis its to Indiana during the season and did not like what he s aw a s the P acers stumbled lo a 37-4S record and once aaain failed to make the playoffs . So Monday Nassi announced that Bobby Leonard. lndiana 'a coach and general manager ror the past 12 years. was being let go and that J ack McKinney. who started last season as coach or Buss' Lakers before suffering serious inJUries in a bicycle accident. would coach the Pace rs next yeu "We were losing. so I felt we had to make some changes.·· said Nass1. "I saw during the season that ther e were incr easing conflicts between the coach and the office staff. and that could not contin ue. So I did what l felt had to be done and made the change." MALOOF. ON THE OTIIER KAND. decided not to make m aJOr chan~es in the Houston Rockets even though the club fa iled to live up to expecta- tions. The Rockets won 47 games in 1979 but dropped off to a 41·41 mark last season. then got clobbered by Boston in the playoffs. THE INCREDIBLE WORKMATE.SWEEPSTAKES · JllST UlllKlllG AT A WllllKMATE® l:lllllDBEWll " . ONE-FIRST PRIZE-Sl000.00 GRAND PRIZE SHOPPING SPREE TWO-SECOND PRIZES-S250.00 SHOPPING SPREES FIVE-THIRD PRIZES-Sl00.00 SHOPPING SPREES If you haven't stopped by a partic- ipating dealer t o s ee all the incredible Black & Decker WORKMATES. he h as on display. you could be overlooking your chance to win a $1000 Grand Prize Shopping Spree In his store. Just read the slogan that you find on dis play along with our complete line of Black & Decker WORKMATES·. Then fill in the missing words to the slogan, "The Incredible WORKMATE works and and ___ _ as it appears on yo ur entry coupon. Then send it t o us. You and your neighbors have an excellent chance to win the 81000 Grand Prize or any one of the 8250 Second-Prize or $100 Third-Prize Shopping Sprees. That's because we 're only awarding prizes to participants from your m etropolitan area. So find out what a rewarding experience it can be just to see all of our Black & Decker WORKMATES·. And enter The Incredible WORKMATE' Sweepstakes. · Bl.ACK&. D$C.KER WORKMATE' SWEEPSTAKES Qff.ICIAJ,. ijULES I To entt'r rill out lhf' orrtcllll mtry blank or on a 3" x5" card. ~d your romplt'lr n1U11e and 11ddrr-.' to WORKMATE· Swtti>"lhll~ PO. Boll 83. NN< York N Y. 10046 Yoo m~l nu In Ole misslnA word°' 10 the !>loilan In order to be: cll,qlblc If you cannot find a display with the complete alogan. acnd a atamped, ~U·addrutled envelope 10 . WORKMATE· PO Box 1~2' Lor\& Island Clly. NY 1110 1 .J Entf'r ¥~ OllMl "'\"II ltkc r\111·01,.,..-. 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' 10041> 7 NO PURClfA~E :'\ EC~'>ARY ·-------------------~ I Thr 81.ick It Ottkcr Int red obit' \\OkKMATE SW~J>!>lakcs I I To mt er. fill In lht' blank~ \M1'lsln11 word'> may be' found on thr I Ola<'k ~ Ot'<'kt'rl.l.'ORKMATE dl.,play .11 anv pan1c1pa1ini;i I dealt'r., I "The' lncrt'dlblc WORKMATE· work., .md I I and . I Mail your completed form to: I Black & Decker WORKMATE· Sweepstakes I I P.O. Box83. New York. NY 10046 I I Name I I Address I I City --I I Stat Zip_ I Wbea America ..... ,.. to ... I .J":':!tt.. tt nulie• fer lllaolt6 Decker I : OBlaaks.Dscksr. I L--·••••••••••••••••~ Avall•* at""'" OLE'S HOME CENTERS: Awa....,._ .. lftew BUILDIJt'S l!MflORIUMS: ORANGE COUNTY SAN llERN.\AOINO ORAMGE COUNTY SAN BERNARDINO SAN DIEOO COUNTY ... "20 Wntm6nater An. 2117 N. SNn1I Wr, 2221 W. L8 HelWa Blvd. 221 Foo«Nll Blwd. 7'75 Jac:bon Dr .• Gerden Groft Sen hmtlrdlfto LaHebfa Uptend Sen Diego 2144 W. Unootn Ave. 3SO I . Mount• Ave. 2411 E. a..pm.n Ave. 1700 E. Hlghtend Ave. 137t Thtnf Aft., An• .... Fultettoft Sen Bemerdlno Upland Cttule YISUt 11200~Ave. ll'l1 .....,"...,Ave. , ......... 1t1 St. Feun"*'V~ 1uQMenlAve. . ......... , YlotoM!te fUYl!A9tDE COUNTY M10 W. UftcoM Awe. '" ..... AM""" MHIAocMetd SAN DIEQO COUNTY 3531 Alventde ~ 11M I. CMpiMn Ave. IOA~AY9. EITCHO .. .,,.,..,. MIO V= vi.. St. 0r-.. Motttoeelt 415N.IMDrddolhd. Buen• hoondlto 412 N. Me4ft 8'., ftrYIRlfDll coyH!X 1212 lrflnt Ave. 1431 ... , ...... Rd. Cofona Tusttft lptln9Y...., llOO V• Buren •tvct. 1141 l . "-tie A .. , i111ewr.. ...... °'. ,., .. ,... r 0n"te .. nDt.,o Stoor: Aft. ' 21t!, 111h8t. fUn COIQ .... I " 8 Albacore Could Bit Wt wat. ....... all.,_. 9c1utbwi1 Calilonla are ltattial to talll •bout die~ fw dl1I MUoa'a.,.. vi allMMOre tUt ii tndlUaulb dve to -la wltlM the M1t..,...,.... .....,._ haw been e&llOt localb u earl1 11 UM tint-... ol J-. and u llM u U.. ad ol Ju· '1. wtdl a couDle ol 1•an ~ no •port· Hta&M alb&M al all attOl"di.nl to Balboa A.Dellq Cluti r-«ona C:OlllNG OPP A V&&Y POOa lbowlna lut year. U.-~ctabM ncaboDda ol the brtney Mp. are IW.I UM moa talked •=.1•m• flab lbat 1wtm In our total waten. Trldl 1 the peak ol U.. IOGdlD Muon &akM place la Aquil. but lut year tbe lbort-.d MU08 uw tbe tlab peak and dilappear before the month ol Auiuat. There were • eouple of yHn when tbe albacore orodueed "pluater" type an1Un1 and tben broke IOOM ln Octobef, when there weren't evea a handful ol fi&bermea Interested in ro1n1 out aftertbelonc·ftnnedtuna. Mike Ward ot Antler's Center In Newport Beach, expects looaflm will be cauabt t.hls year but lan't quite sure as to bow far out analen will have to travel to intercept t.hll miaratJon of tuna. OUIDOORS Ward reels t.hat each year lbe longfins seem to sw- ing rarther off the Southland coast, but closer to northern shores off Morro Bay on up to British Columbia. Ward further added, that local commercial fis· berman Buz Person headed out to t.he Midway Islands In t.he Pacific. where large commercial boats are pulling between 200 and 300 longflna per day OD jigs. According to reports from the fieet of intemaUooal boats working lb.ls area, t.here are fish everywhere. VETERAN SKIPPER and owner of Davey's Locker. Phil Tozer, is laking a "Hope Springs Eternal" outlook on t.he prospects for'thls season. Tozer says t.hat each year we seem to be a Utile dlaappolnt.ed in the albacore fishing, but always look to t.he next season as bringing back the good old days d t.he ~·s and 60's . Tozer feels t.hat with t.he current change in t.he water temperature our chances of a good season are better now t.han they were a rew months ago when the water temperature was running at least five degrees above normal. Tozer added that this warm water did make for excellent angling durtng the winter months for his fleet of sportfishers run- ning out of Newport harbor. Bue Bucannan, manufacturer of the hot ·'Clone" type albacore and marlin lures, feels t.hat we might be in for a very good longfin season. The current water temperature on t.he outside is Ideal for bringing the fish into local waters. U our pollu· Uon problems don't present a stumbling block, albacore could be caught regularly this season ort the 60 Mile Bank and the three Spot, wit.h an out· side chance that they might even make an inside sweep THE FACT TIIE YELLOWS have not staged a wide open bite at the Coronado due to cold water currents is a potentially good indication that longfln.s might come closer this year than during the pa.st few seasons. Bail conditions are good with a mixture of pinheads and hook bait available al most landings. Let's hope that albacore do come close this year. what with rising fuel costs the trip on sportfishers and charter boats isn't going to get any less expensive. Currently boats running re· gular trips to t.he outer islands are not having a sur-charge ror fuel but this could be a reality dur- ing the summer months ir sportfishers are re· quired to run 80 to 120 miles ror albacore . San Diego based boats are packaging two to rive day mini-long range trips to take advantage or rish that are too fa r off shore to make daily runs. These longer trips g reatly improve angle rs chances of getting into some red hot fishing and in· crease the number of angling hours for greatly im- proved catches. Information on mini-long range trips can be obtained by calling Fisherman's Landing in San Diego at <714) 222-0391. Bahia Corinthian Has Busy Slate Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club will have the busiest schedule this weekend with an invitational one-design regatta on outside courses and the quarter finals for the United St.ates Yacht Racing Union's O'Day TroP.hY for singlehanded sailors. The latter will be sailed on courses inside t.he bay. Purpose or the one-design regatta -which also includes racing-cruising type yachts -Is to broaden t.he opportunity for one-design class rac- ing among active production fleets. FLEETS INVITED to attend Include the CF ·37, Ericson-35, Etchells-22, Soling and San· tana-20. Each Oeet will receive an Individual start in each of three races to be sailed. There wlll be two races on Saturday and one on Sunday. Entries for t.he regatta wl1l be received at BCYC no lat.er than 10 a.m. Saturday. A skippers meetlna Will be held at 9 a .m. Auendance ls not re. qllired as the meet.inc'• purpose la to acquaint vis· lUne stlppen wlt.h local race condttlons. ID otbel' local action: Voyagers Yacht Club will conduct t.he fourth race of its Humphrey Bo1art Serles for Performance Handicap Ractnc Fleet yacht. oo Saturda)'. a.lbol Yacht Club and Newport Harbor Yacht Cl.ab wUl eomblne thelr efforts to bo9t tbe Lido-1' Fleet I dulmplonablp Satul'Qy and Sunday. Caplltraoo Bay Yaebt Club will eoaduet an overm,bt ar&OIY type race to Oceanside Saturday ud&mday. ID otJMr area• of the Southern Calllotllla Vaebtb:ll AlloclatJon: . __ .. ---~ ------------- Muther Deal Called Best EVer JNDIANAPOLIS -Riek lfutMt ol IAPaa .. at'b ii• opUmlatlc u he bat ever been al>out b1I ride In a new chemp~ ear for Jack Lani ol ~ tlWI oe tbt evt of U.. MUwa.&kee race SwNIQ •. ''11dl II tbt beat d alt ev r bad.'' Mutber laid by t.elf11hcne from Jndlanapolla lh.ll week. "I'm In UM car to 1ta)' and we'll be runnlal the fell ol the curcwt t.b.ll aummer. ~re are 10 more racet and we hope to aet well up ln the polnt 1tandlua." Muther and the Lana car had their abare of problema at lndJanapoU1. Ourtna a pracllce lap Just prior to quallfylne. tbe car apu.n out and didn't make it to the trials or t.he race. "We found out that t.he Croat roU bu bad broken," Muther says. "But we didn't find it until we pulled t.he car apart after the race. "Maybe It's a good thine we didn't get back out o'n t.he track or we mi&bt have bad a more serloua problem. We were the next car in line when rain canceled t.he final few hours of qualify. lng on the final day. Engine problems cost lbe team a chance at qualifying on the first weekend. "At t.hal time, we were cussing t.he rain but now we're blessing it because of what might have happened. "Yes, Indy is the big one and we hated to miss it but I 1uess things turned out right for us. We'll drive th.ls car at Milwaukee t.hen we'll have a new Penske PC7 to run at Pocono in the SOO-mlle race. WEEIDAYS 9 TO 9 __ SAT.-SUI. 9 TO 6 AD GOOD TDU JOIE 11 SCHAUER FADI I: ·ROME AUTOMATIC 10 AMP .BATTERY CRAIGO For 6 01' 12 YOlt batteriM. 2s•!me12 10/50 AllP 3••• STAITD/CBARGEI -.N•12 ION AIRE COMBO SPOTLIGHT 8 9913FT. CORD Super white li9ht. beccnn• a c:listna lioht by .naPPin9 on lnclud.d reel or yellow len.e. plug8 into lighter outlet. PORTABLE ELECTRIC AIR COMPRESSOR 128!.is Plu9 into lighte1' outlet and pump up ti.J'M, inflata},1-, Up to 60 I.be. preauN, clamp on £iller noale. IDIDJWD UllVDl&L AUTO FLOOl llATI TWIN m:o3'1'118448 TWIN FROlt'I' 4 77 .... YO\& auto buy a .t. in ueon.d oolGn. Little JNI' tNn folD (oh. 1t that what lt -..f). • ...,.,..... •••-..oT "'" "( t.boulht It WU probably my rault that the car spun out at Indy until we found t.he broken roll bar. But Jack has stayed wlt.h me all t.he way and hu told me I would be drivinl lbe rest of t.he circuit t.h1I summer. "He's really ereat and the beat owner I bave been hooked up wttb anytime." The Pocono race is set for June 22 and Is t.he second of t.hree 500-mlle events on t.he cham- pionship circuit. The third and final one la on Sun· day of Labor Day weekend at Ontario. * • • WREN THE NASCAa circuit returns to Riverside SUnday for t.he Warner Hod1don 4d> stock car race, last year's rookie of t.be year Dale Earnhardt will be among t.he favorites. Earnhardt sat on the pole for this race a year ago and finished second int.he Winston Western SOO in January. He ls the current point leader on the HOLLYWOOD 2 TON ROLLING HYDRAULIC I• .. FLOOR JACK NASCAR clrcu.lt but tbere are thole who HY be hat O'OW'D too fut and ts turmna ualnJt bll fana. Rlpt or wroq, Earnhardt la lookla1 forward to bit retum to Rlvenlde. "I've adapted well to t.he ro.cS eoune and we've sot fOOd equipment and a good team. We've got It alJ worldna well." Earnhardt wtll be joined by IUcbard Petty. Cale Yarborou1h and all the ~t of tM top NASCAR driven In Sunday's race. * * • ONE OF~ TOP IPECl'ATGa events of the aeuon will be comto1 up shortly at t.he IM Angeles CoUaeum. It la tbe off ·rc>M ebamplomhlp grao prts produced by Mickey Thompson. The event will be held June 20-21 and will also have a spectacular motorcycle dlatance Jumpln& attraction. Gary Wells will attempt to break his own di•· lance record of 176-4 'h when he rues off a 40-foot ramp C005lrocted of wood Just Inside t.he main archway of the Coliseum penstyle. He is expectea to land on the downhill portion of the off-road track. falling the equivalent 9f a five-story build· mg. He'll be performing the ~at without the aid of wings. parachutes. hang-gliding devices or any ex- traordinary assistance. Wells will be attempting several "firsts" with the Jump. including an attempt to establish a motorcycle-flying record without aid or a parachute or any kind of kite assistance. 77 RAC TEST EQUIPMENT No, Clifford, it doesn't weigh two tons, it lifts two tons. (That's a lot of Chevy. Toyota, LaSalle, and Cr~ley.) PATmlDEI 12" ADJUSTABLE JACK STAND 2~ Once you'r. up then, get a bunch of .t.and.a and &.ep the ca.r, trailer. or what..er aa.fely up ther.. FOICIAFT AUTO RAMPS 14~ Youaawe .o much doin9 7(N.r own minor work nowadays. but do haw. the ri9ht aid., okay. IOI AIRE llTCBD ON TIE GO 11 97 W.ISOl IDIULATED lllDPllll WIDll .,. .... t)\11 dt.. ·-the lone trip • little ftioer. 3 66 5e• IDIULATD llllHlll CVlllOI DWELL 1 I ~j TACBOMETD TESTER r _. M.euurn dwell, and RPM 1 on 4. 6 . 8 cylinder engin•. . . (What? you have a 12 ,..!_ cylinder Doozleburv?) 9 9!9 D.C. POWER TIMllG LIGHT Sync that baby ri9ht on the Umin9 mark with thi.8 stop· action li9ht. 12~! , ;.:--; __ \ MAXI TUNE --~\ IGNITION ANALYZER : ./ '. Do over 15 buic tune· up I t..u with this unit. ~ 24~! ...., __ _ HOLLYWOOD EXACT TIME II DIGIT AL CLOCK I I 8 8 ,311 Mount anywh.ae in, on, or unclu the cluh. l>iaplay liohta up when ignition ia turned on. llACO 11-DASB AJl/FM/llPI RADIO WITB 1-TIACI PLAYD 01 CAISDTE PLAYD 59!? =ICE: IOD-651 KID-881 --------l '' ---J , , /" " J Added Jet P°'•lbl• ••P••tlon of Ul• al~ ,.... .... pNUdellt ol lti• Martain ·CommuaU.y Al· IOclettOft, •tao CODtnclt that cbae ... at t.M atrport could re- 1ult ......... ~ ol meDtal nba_.., and a aeneral feelloa ofd•palr. Jn • letter to the director ol the eouaty'a Envbonmental M •n•lflmeDt A1ency, Turner Dlilty ..... MMI~ THE VALLADARES FAMILY HEADS FOR NEW UFE Cuban Aefugeff ....,.,.., Norma and Oladya, I Cuban Refugees Arrive in County 8)' JODI CADENHEAD Of .. Dilll\' ........... The first wave of Cuban refueees trickled into Orange County early today -weary, homeless and hopeful after enduring weeks or hunger and high seas to nee their homeland. News that the 18 refugees would be arriving from Florida to live in Orange County reached Cuban communi· ty groups Wednesday afternoon. They are the Cuban refugees destined for Orange County and more are expected to arrive today and in the coming weeks. authorities said. SPOKESMEN FOR THE Cuban Association and the Cuban Assistance League in Orange County said that they had been storing food, clothing and furniture for more than a month in anticipation that refugees would be arriving here. Nooe of the 18 Cubans have relatives living in Orange County and many left families behind. Manuel Vallandres, his wife, Norma and their 8-year· old daughter. Gladys, were among tho first arrivals seek ing asylum at the Peruvian embassy in Cuba. They lived for 12 days at the embassy surviving the sickness and salvaging the scarce small packages or food that the United States sblpped in every day. explained Vallandres requll&ed tU& competeat IOd.al aelent.llU bl hired to atlld7 tbe eUecta airport expamJOD wOl he\'e 0111 the Newport nei1hborbood. Nobe from jet fii&bta leaYinc Johll Wayne Airport affecb. homes ha Dover Shores, the Baycrest area, and West.cliff as well as Santa Ana Heiabta. The Federal A viatlon Ad· mlni1tratloo bas ordered the as Da1naging airport open to more curlers. Reaiden\I cont.end thlJ means more dally nights and more noise. The county has hired VTN Conaolldated of Irvine to develop a master plan for the airport and to prepare environmental documents relatins to airport nolse and future land uses sur- rounding the airfield. The documents are expected to be completed by mid-July. Amoni the alternatives, Vl'N planners have propc»ed that the county either buy homes from resldenta and help them relocate or bankroll &0W1dprooruai lm· provemenll ln bomea. But the study. and future en- vironmental studies to come. are directed ooly at the Santa Ana Heigbll area and not at the Newport Beach neighborhoods. Trilb Butler, a VTN eomult. ant, said only Santa An• Heights •Jet In the critical area -the a.·ea where jet noise reaches the S5 decibel level. This critical zone, she saJd, is also the blgb risk area for plane crashes. She explained that VTN in· tends to find ways to reduce noise to shrink this crjtical area. <See NOISE, Pa1e AZ> Computer Error Blamed Vote Snafu Located By DAVID KVTZMANN Of* o.ily ...... It.ff Computer obstinacy and ballot mixups -and not the county's new $1.5 million vote counting system -were responsible for foulups which have delayed final returns from Tuesday's balloting. officials said today. In fact. elections chief Shirley Deaton said she still wasn't cer· tain when the results of two pre· cincts in Anaheim and Fullerton -would be tabulated, meaning Orange County would likely be the last county in California to tabulate final re· suits. Despite the delays. which could be the longest in recent county history. both observers and officials defended the performance of the Martel Vote Counting System. saying it was blameless for problems plaguing election returns here. Mrs. Deaton said her office was quite satisfied with the 90 new machines, into which were fed the results of voting in 2,061 precincts throughout the county. . . Election officials contend. just as they bad predicted. that the machine processed all ballots by 2:30 a.m. Wednesday. It is at this point, however. the problems began to emerge. Mn. Deaton said that when computer tapes bearing the elec· lion results were fed Into the county's main computer in downtown Santa Ana for a printout, 38 precincts would not go through. "We don't know why," she said. For 36 or those precincts, the information was transferred on-, Carter Eyes Rel.ease Plan For Hostages BOSTON (AP> -The Carter administration is reviewing a plan calling for the American hostages in Iran to be released after some of them are put on trial as spies, the Boston Globe reported today. White Houle offlcLals are wary of the proposed scheme, but are ~xplorio1 it tbrou1b tbird parties, the newspaper said. There wu no Immediate com· ment from the White Houae oo the newspaper report. ·J The Gk>be quoted 'dl~c sources u aa)'tnl Uaat -t.M fra- nJan plan calla for tbe relMle ol most~ tbe boltae•. a 111_. .. trial of tbe "budta.I" .remalnlna for al.leCed esplOaap and then the ~of thele people. Tbe newapaper did DOt aay ""* U. nleue could oeeur. It Mid tile mMttaat• '"+'RI u.e ........ .,. .. , .... tMt after tbe ........ tbe c.er.a ... ·iem1ence Apney .. mlebt ... . talial bJ pl~ off Ute .. . tut lledtn one by ooe." IDWmldlaliel an ... lne for .... , .... tlMt If ..... ls . wort• oa1. t11e uaw ...... WillDGt• ................ TIM MWlpaper ;....._ UD· D8 ..... ~cm Oflletati U MYIDI ....... DO ........ tile AJatclllab Mbollab Dcl•llDI woakL IJPl'ON 81Q' bal&ql n-.............. .. lo new tapes and fed successful· ly into the Computer Sciences Corporation computers in the county's finance building ln the Civic Center. These returns were eventuaJly added into the cumulative vote count by late Wednesday mom· ing. Mrs. Deaton said it wasn't known if the problem was in the main computer system or wtth the Registrar of Voters com· puter equipment at another loca· ti on in Santa Ana. The registrar's computer was used to transfer the election re- s ults processed by the Mart.el machines and out on cassette"! to magnetic tapes which the CSC computers downtown would use for making printouts of results. "We sure hope to unravel the problem ." the e l ection supervisor said. Because the county had no previous experience with the Martel mcu:hines -in use for the first time in Orange County it has become more difficult to track down the problem, of· fic1als said. In the case of two other pre· cinct.s-stiU untallied as of this morning-problems were of another nature. In Anaheim, for instance, the wronR ballots were sent to a pre· Prueeed W'iCla C'autioa Six-year-old Steve Jansen of Irvine moves gingerly across a rope bridge in the adventure playground at Irvine's University Community Parle at fl Beech Tree Lane. 1be park offers a number of f ac.Wties llicluding a skateboard course, courts for volleyball, tennis and rac· quetball and a soccer-baseball field. ToUr Bus Plunges In Ravine; 20 Die Some \'ictims still were trapped \8Mlet' tbe bus and sur. rowa.dlal timber four boun after · tbe acdaeat. Davla aald tbe bus WU diorth- bound down a steep bill ol tbe two-lane Arkansas Hlabway '· a scenic route. It trueled aloq a dltch on tbe rte.ht aide ol the bt1bway fot' man Ulan • f-.. then .bllawlv~ .....Soft tbe l"OIMI, 'MdMtl DOM clolft ID Miiied ...... $0 feet below tbe aboulder ol tbe hllbway. be tUl. Keltb ffiollper, a 1pokeuun tor CeMnl tau TrallwQS 18 Dallaa. Hid tile bu• waa cbarta'911 bJ llln. B. W. ,_.. of lrytac, TeL Tbe &.ourilta ... paN111lJ "W DO anwaaao.i __ uYGrPNW~.·· Hoppw •lbMd ID eom.,... :.::t~ "'°"' ~-.. ~"11.Pa11Al> cinct with 447 registered voters, officials said. Of that tot.a.I. 237 voted Tues· day. Howe\'er, instead or casting ballots for candidates in the 71st Assembly District as they should have, the voters were given ballots for the 69th As· sem bly District. This means the voters in the West Anaheim precincts will not have their votes counted in partisan races for which they shouldn't have been voting in the first place. The votes they cast for judges, presidential candidates and U.S. <See DELAYS, Page AZ> No Charge Planned In Fatal Criminal charges won 't be filed against a man whose pickup truck slammed into a jogging Irvine woman May 28, fatally ilUurlnl her, police said Wednesday. Thomas K. Hughes, 20, or 148Q llayten Ave .. Irvine, woo 't face charges, since the woman was jogging with her bac.k to traffic, said police investigator Owen Kreza. Police traffic Sgt. Robert Kredel said pedestrians walking with their bacb to traffic are in technical violation of the law. He said the woman struck by the truck was, therefore, acting in a way that contributed to the acci· de.nt. Carolyn Telfer, 33. of 14492 Guama Ave., lrvine. was on her daily morning jog at 6 : 15 a.m . May 28 when she was struck by the truck on Harva rd Avenue just north of Moulton Parkway in Irvine. Mrs. Teller's jogging companion Judy Miller, 31, or 14562 Guama Ave.. was a few feet farther from the traffic lane than Mrs. Telfer and she <Ms. Miller) wasn't injured seriously. Officers theorize that Hughes momentarily lost has gnp on the steering wheel, causing tbe truck to fail to negotiate a slight curve of tbe road on which the women were jogging. Mrs: Telfer, a mother of five children, was tf.ken to Santa Ana-Tustin Community Hospital where she died Friday after· noon. Trudt driver Hughes lives in the same general area of Irvine as the t.o -women but didn't know them. police said. Coast Weatlaer Fair tont1ht tbrou1h Friday except for late evealU mad early morn· ln1 cfoudlneu. Lowa tonllbt • at tbe beaches and 55 &alaDd. Kia.ha Fri· day mid• to mid 10I. IN8IR Te•A 'Y . ; . .. WASHINGTON <AP> -o.ar-. toda1 formal11 dellvwed to Pr.ldm Carwr lta death sent.Me for hla dlm•a-1allcln 1uoat• f• and pnpaNCI ror an u~ted ea1y override of bll Pl'Om!Md veto. HouM Speak• 'l'!MMDU P O'Neill, abandoolftl hope1 that Carter'• veto coulcl be au.stained in the face ol overwhelmin1 votea Wedne.clay in both the House and the Senate, said an override effort could be completed by late today. Tbe Howse seat the repeal leJjslaUoo to Carter today by a simple voice vote u House leaden capitulated and decided to accept without further delay the Senate's approach ol attacbln1 it to a bill extend.inc the national debt ceiling. Carfn-. «•••d• I• Ce11l•r.~ WASHINGTON <AP> -A.Private eonvenation in the quiet of the White House living qilarters isn't exactly what Sen. Edward M. Kennedy ltad in mind when be demanded that Presi- dent Carter debate him. But that's all he's 10Lng to jet. With tbeir_lulclubes-aHhe polls behind them, Carter and 1Cenneiay are meetin1 today at the White House, but there ls no •IJD their talk will lead to Kennedy not pressing on with his at- tempt to take the nomination from Carter. ~ Jim Flug, Kennedy's spokesman, said the senator remained determined to challenge Carter for the nomination, although the president has won enough DemocraUc convention deleaates to assure himself of victory. Gold Ad"•~~ Doller .tfl%ftl WNOON (AP> -Gold advanced today to its highest level since March 12. The dollar wa.s narrowly mixed. West German markets and some others were shut ror the Corpus Christi holi-day. In London, the closing price was SS87, up from $$57. It traded at $598 in New York, up $15.70. Silver was quoted in L(>ndon at $15.SS an ounce, up from $15.40 and a six·week high. It traded in New York al $16.42, up 87 cents. . Ket& ~"d lip .-lraotfan-CrafC MOSCOW (AP) -The SOvtet Union rocketed two more COS· monauts into orbit today aboard a new T2 model of lta manned Soyuz spacecraft, Tass reported. The launch came just two days after another Soyuz crew - a Soviet commander and a Hungarian cc.monaut -returned to Earth followin&. more than a week aboard the orbilinl Salyut 6 space station with Russian cosmonaut.a Leonid Popov and Valery Ryumin, who have been Ln space since April 9. Moscow radio said the T2 crew would abo carry out joint re- search with the Salyut satellite. All Plead •••oec!nt 12 Countians Face Trial in Pyramids Twelve Orange Countians, charged with misdemeanors for a lleged participation in a Sl ,000-per-pe rson pyramid scheme, have pleaded innocent in South Oranae County M unlcipal Court. The 12 bad been cited durin& a pyramid raid by Orange County Sheriff's deputies May 2 at the Mission Viejo bome of Maryann MattineJy, 31, of Z73Sl Limones. The precise charge la violation of Section 327 of tbe Calllomla Penal Code, promotin1 an end less chain. Pretrial heartn11 were aet Wednesday for June 30. A Jury trial is IChedu.led July 18 for all 12 defeodanta. Facing arralanment Wednes- day were Tracee Gwynn Hartline, 32J.. of Costa Mesa; Jimmie Bill Brooks; 218, of cost.a Meu: .lames Edward Reale, 38, of El Toro: aPCI Karen Deborah Storm. 37, of SanU Ana. . TbOM p1uc11n1 not sulll.J last week, __, wt1b Ma. MaWJllly · were Beverty Lee Hunter, 33, of Newport Beach; Linda Lee Yent1ch, 38. of Huntington Beach; Wayne Charles Allen, 68, DAILY PILOT -~--"'--•A. ....... .,,.._, ....... ~=:::~­ Ofl!M9 u::-.:= ='="~~.~ .. ,_..., _ 11111 IMcll ...... _• of Santa Ana; Connie Beaty. 23, of Mission Viejo; Gregory Mura· dlan, 23. of Miuioo Viejo; BeUy Tobey Turk, 27, of Minion Viejo, and Larry Steven Levine,•. ol Mission Viejo. l'r••P«pAI DELAYS ••• Senate candidate• would be tallied because these were COUD· tywlde races. Mn. Deaton said the mis· take-aod 1ubHquent canceled votes-would not alter the out.- come ol any races. The foulup was apparently caused by a computer assigning the wrong ballot cards to the Anaheim precinct. Benton Vejach, foreman ol the Oranie County Grand Jury and an electloo observer, 1ald It wu Ills lmprea.aioa the Martel Yote countlna machinel performed well but that computer problems were probably the result of tryt ing to wed new systems for the first time. The result, Vejach said, was that the two didn't mesh well. Vejach, who wu amoo1 five observers from tbe srand jury at the Registrar ol Voten office on election night, said be expect· ed the computer related prob- lems to be IOlved by the next countywlde election in No- vember.. • The Martel macblnes are lo use la otbel' area 1ucb u Tulia CounlY, Oklahoma, Texu and another 1outhern states, Realluar of Voten Al Olloa 1a.ld. 1P.eiia p_,,. A I NOISE ••• ·~·~-·&WIN etty m ~ aaw wore. meat ometn an =a llOd. i:: =-:=nr-· ~ HllllAM ... .... llo't...W ........ ftlllp Aft~ Mid ........ .,. Formldca of a t.ak lon:e It ftnt ........ to AllC.MGJ .... It ma1 laie tllll .. ._ .. to IOIWal about ft .......U1 cCl8Mded murdera, the Ptrat Dlltrict 1upenilot' aaid. But Aotbon1 told fellow aupenilon be rejeeted the idea of calliq fot a tuk force .a.- talkina to 0r...,. Couty SIMrtff Brad Oates. ''Tbe lberUf UHNd me dlere is excellent coordination between bis office and tbe ciUes," ADtboa.y aald. Supa'Vilan b:wtead dedded to urge the pubtic to come forward with information about t.be kill· infs. n additioo, an overall fund sbouJd be establilhed to 1"eWard puneyon of lnformatloD lead· ins to the arrest aad eociviction of the 11-yer or alayen, tbey said. The Freeway Killer Is belleved to have atraqled or suffocated about 41 YOUDC men whose bodies bne been found along heavily traveled roadways. Bodies have been found lo fin Southern Callfomla countiu. Antbi>ny aaid be first con- sidered aaking for a task force alon,g the lines ol the Hill.side Strangler investi1atlon effort while talkinl to a reporter at an election night party. But be said be scuttled the idea after recelvln1 Gates' u - surances that there already ls sufficient coordlnatlon amonc the police agencies involved. Ant.bony said the sberift toad him the real problem ln ftndlna the killer was .. lack of &ood evidence and leads to-"ollow. '1 Judge Faces Vote Runoff It WU i.ncorrect1y reported in Wednesday's Dally Pilot that North <>nmce County Munlclpal Court Judp James Wn,bt Cook WU elected to 8 Superior Court Jud&eab.lp ln Taesda1'• elec- Uoal. Judge Coot fell one·balf percentqe po6Dt abort of 1ain- ing a !Qjority vote ln a field ol 1ix candidates for the poaitioa being vacated by Judge Lester Van Tatenbove. Coot will face a November runoff contest wttb Susanne CUr· ne Lewta, a Loe Angeles County deputy district attorney wbo re- 1ldes lo llilsioo Viejo. Of the •.118 votes counted. Cook received 104,0'19 and lln. Lewla, Q,250. l're•P.,,.AI BUS ••• Davi.I said the driver and three ot four pu1ta1en were thrown out ol tM bus. At least four w~ound OD tbe bllbway. Dari.I the drl.er. who bas not been idenWled, WAI UDOlll tbedead. A nearby resident beard tbe crash and alerted autborWes. Elmer Dunn. 61, of Grand Prairie, Texaa, wa1 amon1 those who received minor in- juries. He said be WU rldlna OD the left side ol the bus, toward the rear, and WH almott uleep when the bul ran offtbe ro.don a curve. The wtndows were knocked out from tbe impact of the crash. Dunn laid be hit the bad of the Mal. tbeo 1lld to the floor and crawled oul a wiDdow. He Nld one aide 'Of tM bua was demolllbed. There wu DO fire. The accident oeeurred abaftly Wore 1 a.a .. IDlle -6 ol JHper Autborttiel laid ldenutk8lloo of u.e female .tetlml •• dlf. ficultbec ................. t.ered in tM wreckal•· Tbe tu ... ..,...... by c.. tral Teu9 ......... .,. ol ..... TesH. aad left Dallaa oa .........,, •• 1os..-..... la .......... A.tkWM. ol· ftclaJIMid. Sta•fl•' on tlae R'itad Skyler Tegland. 14. of Laguna Niguel.' takes a wet ride aboard his windsurfer at Dana Point Harbor. He was on the water Wednesday after school, catching some good breezes. He's been windsurfing about a year. Female U.S. Agent Slain in Holdup LOS ANGELES <AP> -An appu.ently coiocldeolal boJdup- •bootiDC bas resulted in the lint death lo the line of duty ol a woman Secret Service agent, the Secret Service laid today. A1ent Julie Y. Cross, 218, who bad been with the Secret Service less than a year and bad Just transfe!Ted to Los. AnceleJ last week after her initial tralninc. was 1bol to death -apparently with her shoteuo -as she staked out a suspected coun- terfeit operation Wednesday in Westchester. near Loa 4'naeles lntemational Airport. Her par1ner, Larry Bulman. was not injured. Special Agent Larry Sbeafe, who i1 in char1e of the Los Ancelea Secret Service office. told a news coo.ference toda.y that the Secret Service is offer- ing a $25,000 reward for anyone who IUl10lies inlormaUon lead· lnl to the arrest and coavictioo of ber killers. Sbeafe a.aid Aaents Croa and Bulman were sitting Ln their car when two men. about 30-35 yean old, approached them and ~­ manded money. Bulman told them they were law officers, and one of the robbers flippantly replied that he was a lawman too. Sbeafe said. ''There's no doubt in my mind · they knew who the agents were." Sbeafe said. But be added be ls convinced the robbery attempt had no coa- necUoa with the counterfeiting operation. "It appears that these two black males simply were at- temptinc to commit an armed robbery on a mate and femaJe 1eated la a car on a dark 1treet." Sbeale said. _ There were several wit.Delles, lncludiq reeldeat• ol the aput. ,. ........... SLAIN NEAR LA AIRPORT O.S. Agent.Jule Cron ment building wtuch was wider surveillance. Sbeale saJd they beard the shots but d idn't speaify wbat they saw. He said on~ of the bandits reached into the car and grabbed Agent Cross' shot.gun. and ap- parently she was killed with her we apon. However. he said. an autopsy would have lo be con· ducted to be sure One bandit po inted a l57- m agnum revolver at Bulman, and the agent began to struUle with bim. At that point, the otber would·be robber grabbed the shotgun. ~ause of the scutne, Bulman was unaware of what was happening to Aaent Cross, Sbeafe said. Bulman was knocked to the pavement durin& the slJ'uU)e. then was stunned by a sbotaun blast that went off near h15 bead, Sbeale aa1d. WASHINGTON CAP> -U.S. mllitary Clftlclall Jncnued tbe alert of ltratellc nucJear Domt>- en and milall• brleftJ ~· day wbeD a computer pNaMm e.UMd ...... a1ania lDdledDI • muldple &cmet m••le .uMk. the Pentaeon aald tod.a1. A quick cheek of a variety of senaon ln ~ complex wamtng system, indUd.Jnc aat.ellltes. CGi· firmed wlthln tbne mtnua. tbat no Soviet mlaaUea bad bMD lauaebed and the alert wu ,.. laxed, otflctals 1ald. No bomben were launched. alfbough enJjnes were 1tarted. the Pentaaon said. There waa lo· creased communication with ml11lle crews but no weapom were prepared for launch. Neither President Carter nor Defense Secretary Harold Brown was notified, the Pen-tacon said, but the White Houle Situation Room. which deals with intemational crises, "was aware of the possible threat while It wu belng evaluated." It wu tbe second false ;tlert ol this type aloce November. Both resulted from problems at the North American Air Defenae Command headquarters at Colorado Springs. Colo. However, officials said the "technical problem in a com· puter" early Tuesday apparent- ly did not occur under the aame conditions as the Nov. 9 false alarm. In that incident, a test tape simulating an attack was fed into the NORAD computer and because of an apparent mechanical malfunction was transmitted to other military command.a and federal agen- cie1. The Penta1on said the latest fahe alarm Is beine in· vest11atecl. The falle alarm Tuesday ln· dlcated Sovtet launcblng of both intercontinental ballistic mis- 1llea and aubmarine-launcbed ml11lles against the United States, officials said. Senior officers In the Pen- taaon's Military Command Center, the Strateaic Air Com· mand Headquarters in Omaha. Neb. NORAD conferred swiftly. ··As a precaution. and in ac· cordance with s tandard pro· cedures, certain Strategic Air Command aircraft and com- mand control aircraft we re brought to a higher state of readiness," the Pentagon said in aatatement. The ooly plane to take off was an unarmed command and con- . trol aircraft from Hawaii, of- ficials said. ''There was no chan~e m over· all U.S. defense posture and. after an evaluation. all systems were returned to norma l," the Pentagon said. Blood Testing Set in I rvirw Free blood pressure tests will be offered Saturday and Sunday in Irvine's El Camino Real Plua near the intersection ol Jeffrey Road and Walnut Avenue. The tests will be given both days from 10 a.m. to noon and from 1p.m.to3 p.m . Blood tests also will be available for $15. Doctors House Calls of Newport Beach. a mobile medical practice, will be coo· ductina the tests. . - '-----................. -.-.-- • ' ........ ~ ......................... 1. wlllclt Included mo..,.' lor.fllla UleMriel. wUd.llle ~ water eoaaen ..... and demp. and.,.... .... ,.., •• ,,..._ panot ._. b'tf-••rrr1 ......_._ttl"'"°aa. .. ,....... ~ bolidl......,.,.. .......... the .......... re- IOUl'e91'' plma pro.oked OllPCl9.... floom powert.i ll'uapl - fAJ'11Mn. loaen and the It* <lh11dler Cll-OHnmeree -ud ~ ,........, wu re1pCID&tMe for tlae 1MM•e'1 Mfeat. ProbablY tbe day'• bl&cert • .._. .... tlae 1oGlelJ OI'• , ....... tlUlllJ fiDaDced teDat, elderly aDd llbenl IJ'OUllS tbat op- poeed Pr'DPl"lUoa 10. Desptte • blab-powered advertiabal campalp that claimed Ute , * * * • • • Jarvis Aims at Public Pensions LCS ANGBLES CAP> -Howard Jarvis, eeellliai undaunted' by the~ defeat ol llis lDeome tu cut proposal, M1I b.la next tniUati .. will Hiik to Um.it public pen.sioas -and be ml&bt aim MMJt.Mr w at Coft1'9ment sperwUnc. ··1 am not eotna to take any rest wballoever u loac as I'm alive," tbe '18-year-old leader ol tbe tax revolt -a movement whose status is in doubt art.er Tuesday's election -said in an in- terviewWednesday. ''I want to pass another amendmmt. I want to put a cbabLalound the._R91itidana' necks so they can'tbankrupttbepublic." -----· Jarvis' mood seemed to have cbaneed since Tuesday night, when be bitterly promised to "shove it up the ears" of public employee un- ions for leading the successful opposition to bis .1aavtS Proposition 9 lncome tax recluctioo. He paid a backhand compliment Wednesday to public employee groups, saying they • ran a very, very well-planned and a very &OOd campaign, despite tbe fact that for tbe moat part it was totally dishonest.·' · Proposition 9 would have cut state income tax rat.es ln half and reduced state revenues by more than 14 blllioo a year. . ll got oa.ly 39 percent ol the statewide vote and didn't carry a single county. 'lbe election came less than two years after the overwbelming passage of the Proposition 13 property tax cvt that made the squat, bull-voiced Jarvis a celebrity. Jarvis said his next initiative ia sWJ being drafted and might be ready to submit to the state for clreulalioo in a couple of months. He sata 1t would limit the pension of future public employees to "somewhere near" the amounts drawn by comparable workers in private industry. "Nobody knows how much deficit there is in the pension fund but it's in the hundreds of mi.llioos.'. Jarvis said. "ll will have to be paid, and because th~y can't pay it oo the property tax and can't raise the sales tax, the only alt.ematlve is the income tax." Asbestos Firm Freed of Damages L~ ANGELES CAP> -A Superior Court Judie bas ruled that it would be inappropriate for a jury tbat awarded $1.2 million in general damages to a worker who aJlecedly suffered asbestosis to _..also levy punitive damages ( • against the a s bestos ) manufacturers. Sl'.4TE The jury had been s ch eduled to begin the punitive damage phase of the case Wednesday, but Judie Earl F. Riley said before the proceedings eot under way that be felt a punitive award would be wrong · S1 .111111•• A#kftlJtt Dnitle Sllif . SAN DIEGO (AP) -The family of a San Diego man bu filed a $7 million wrongful death suit growing out of a Potiab jetliner crash that left 87 persons dead last llarcb, includin& a U.S. boxing team. . ~renio "Junior" Robles. 40, was one of the boxing coaches who ·died m the fiery crash near the Warsaw airport. The lawsuit was filed in federa' court by Robles' former wife Margaret Ojeda of National City. l'._,..,.._d S.-..._. o"•t11a I.A C...f9 LOS ANGELES tAP> -Despite objections from the American Civil Liberties UnioQ, a Superior Court Judae bas approved a Board of F.ducatioo plan to relieve overcrowding by l'1IDDing some sebools year-round. School attorney Peter James said the ruling Wednesday by Judge Paul Egly, Laguna Beach, means the plan could go into ef· feet at some elementary and junior hlgb scbools July 7. It'-• R•Pftl at Be•.-fer ElfWrffl SAN FRANClSCO (AP> -Flve men burst into a home for the elderly, pistol-whipped them and raped a 67-year-Old blind woman before fleeing with aboul $100, police said. "Every time you think you've seen it all. something like t.bls happens," Capt. Joseph Lordan said Wednesday. II your Dad's an English Lsather man, we've got a twice- terrific gift ldsa. With any $5 purchase of En.gllsh Leather. a famous caltoonlst will draw your caricature in just one minute. Now, Dad can have _,'\. his favorite cologne and your picture to remember you by. trip widJ Continmtal's Super Sawn. They'd work for )IOU. tOO. Jllll call )'OUI' trPd IBC"l • 'II' .. -" or Coadnental. .! Scacs are limited. So don't put it off any longer. l..oee 101DC wait with Continental . me...,......,.,_..,........_~ wblle':,..ettlil$ .. ,...,.,... d8ll'Oll.·~11-.,.percaflt ........ , ....... carryalballeCoulltY· ~·· .. ...._. uw anhed • a f.-ee la Califonla declared tmalll lobbJllt ...._ Baperaf'., wl9o t.M No- 00-10 eampatp In Nortbem California. • He aid teat ~ would ......, propoeall for • ''reaten' blllotrfCbla:' ~l\ldlllC ~ Mablilt n6etiw riMut CUM • Similar proposals ba•e Min r.-efeated repeatedlJ 19 the.,. uC111Mun. , TllE DAY AL80 PllOVIDED a meMUft of ftldlcation for K · tlvt.t Tom lla.1den. focus of a naw..-au.ck b.J real estate 1roaps .,... tortr•Jed bim • tM •'nkl• force belUnd tbe. No.on-10. . "It ... • tremeMoul victor')' for reaten, wbo I hope will become efredlft • • pelitical fcwee in CalllOnla," Hayden said as a statemeat "I ltope {t will be tbe beCJti•inl of meeUnp between renters• qaniutiou and builders to see what we can do in com· mon on the whole qwtion ot aftonlaJ>le bouslng." Dirine lob Some look for water. some ·oil some gold. But Tom Harmon. a Monterey Pacific Teiephooe employee, uses copper divirung rods to locate lost underground cables. He learned "witchmg art." be says, from an old cowboy 10 Big Sur Mountains. , lnibe \'Gt.9n have ,... ..... lrvtne Clty <:ountD ln· camlMntt David .am1. Mary Ann Galio and 8111 VanloWil. n. laaa ._ IOIDeUlw·beated election campalp la over and It Ii time I« U. lntDe ~ Coiunell to 1et back to bUalneu a.od tackle a number ol ~ lUue.. Tbe tabllahment rl a Pttformln1 Arta Theater. a proPGMd 1muement part, dev.lopment of Hveral lrviDe Con\Dany·~•nned relldlnUal communhlt1 -and ever 1rowln1 traffic PTOblemt -wUI eonUnue to dominate lhe aaendea ol Clty Council meet.ins• lo day1 to come. Anothe'r m-1or l11ue la Irvine'• coapnerclaJ 1rowth. The City Council muat find W&¥1 to eoCO\u'a1e the Irvine Company to develop mucb·needed retail busmeuea ln the city. With all these l111ues and more that will likely arise, the council members must rem mber that an efficient council ls one which deal with iuues, not pereonaUUet. City obeerven bave ~ted out that the council la becoming increaalngly pola.ri.ied into a three-member ma· Jority faction <Silla, Vardou.lla and Art Anthony> and a two-member mlnorlty f acUon <Mn. Galdo and Larry Agran). . A lively, constructive exch~ge of ideas is useful. But disagreement for the sake of disagreement is unaccepta· ble. And grandstanding is bush league. . The end of a council election seems an appropriate .. ·time to discard City Council factionalism in favor of a . working-together approach to government. ~A Public Water Board : Newcomer James Goodrich and incumbent E. Ray !Quigley have been elected to the Irvine Ranch Water Dis· : t.rict Board of Directors. ; Water districts often gain little notoriety. In Irvine. • the IRWD has been thrown in the spotlight because of a : Superior Court ruling late last year that overturned the I historic landowner election method in favor of a public : election. • With Tuesday's election, all members of the board : have now been selected by the public. : During the water board campaign, the issue arose of : using the water dlstrict as a tool to slow the growth of Irvine. Quigley and Goodrich opposed this idea. Both candidates seem to realize the importance of the • JRWD as a utility. Both seem to understand the danger of using it to control the city's growth. Goodrich and Quigley .wlould be congratulated on their campaign victories and urged to make the water district as efficient as possible with a view toward using • the publicly elected board to protect the interests of the citizens. Canipaign Trick The Daily Pilot is no more immune than the next par- ty when it comes to being misquoted in the heat of an election-eve campaign. One week ago, we endorsed three candidates for the · Irvine City Council in this Tuesday's election. As it turned out. we recommended the three incumbents. acknowledging that the combination likely would con- tinue some of the frequently strained relations on the council. In the process of making this recommendation, the editorial noted that another candidate, Dave Baker. ap- peared to have the potential of a good council member. but that his election might weigh the board a little heavi· ly on the pro-developer side. . "In summary," the editorial concluded, "the Daily Pilot endorses the candidacies of David Sills, Bill Vardoulis and Ma ry Ann Gaido." Imagine our surprise when a door-hanger campaign card showed up over the weekend quoting selectively from the editorial and clearly indicating we had endorsed a Sills·Vardoulis-Baker slate. ' The campaign card. distributed by "Friends of Dave : Sills. Bill Vardoulis & Dave Baker, 13 Ironwood ~ Irvine," lifted the nice things we had said about Dave : Baker -but neglected to even mention Ms. Gaido's • name or our endorsement of her. : As it turned out, all three of the candidates the Daily Pilot endorsed won . And we congratulate them. Bu( we wish two of them hadn't had their victories sullied with such a cheap, transparent deception. • • : Opm1ons expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot . Other views expressed on 1hls page are those of their authors and artists Reader, comment 11 Invited. Address The Daily Pilot. P.O Box t560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (71 •) 642·4321 Boyd/Contest By L.M. BOYD , Rare is the writer who gets paid $12,000 per word. But f Mrs. Deborah Schnelder of '( Minneapolis , Minn.,. may achieve that dlatlnct!on. She won a contest back iil 1958 by : describlnf Plymouth cars ln : 25 wOl"dl. Her 'prize •ll $500 • a month for We. The life ex· l pectancy expertt figure abe'll collect $300,000, tn time. : RoulblY haU of all hl>.ltaae • deat.ba occur clurin1 rescue attempt• that end 1ucb aJegea. that weighs 80 pounds? Neither bad I. But the Colorado squawfish of the minnow family is said to get that heavy. A frequent business visitor to varloua big clties says he invariably gets good cab tervlce by a aJmple social trick: He checks the driver'• dlsplQed Ucenae and makes a point of addreaalng that worthy by the tlnt name. Q. Are--tbere any ladles ot the nl1ht lo tbe People's Republic of ai!na? A. Not out In plain 11tbt. Those who ml1bt be 10 described are referred to over there u wild pbuaanta. . Q. Can an Oltrlcb outrun a UooT A. Given a bit of a bead start, It can. Q. Quiet, name th• only Nat.lout Football Lu1ue team without a acoreboard at bot.b _.of ltl home fteld. A. 1be Pittaburab St.Miers. A peftl\lln can 1whn a lot faster &Un a ulmon, bear ln mlnd. ActOrdlna to th4t lateat pibllc firmed by • Soviet defector wbo don't abow up are vlalted durinc oplnloli polll, many Amerlcut waa ~ a hi&b omclaJ of the the day. are ao 4bNnchaoted with the poUtbu.ro. Despite thl• beavybanded likely Dernooratlc and charade, our Soviet sources RtpublJcan candidate. for presl· THE DEPECl'Oa. wbo used eatlmate that more than 80 dent that they'd welcome a to be a Communlet Party mlllton voters -about a third ol chance to vote for "Nooe of t.be i upervllor for several election the adult populatJon -refuted dtd ate b• offered to the "voter•." Later, a non· Communltt aoclaJ brfu.lutJon quietly ftelded a candJdat. for the Sovie< Parliament. •JUI\ as qul.ily, be waJ forced to drop out. A~ve" t.bll November. Indeed, diitricts, told my associates to vote for the official Com· thle dlsaruntlement. amoq the Vick! Warren and Dalt Van Alla muniat Party candidate in e1ec· FAllJNE IN CAJlllODIA: Con· electorate ll the main thine Rep. how wideafread the practice lions of the mid-19709. Thia was, tradlctln1 recent optlmlstlc John Anderaon has aolng for was. "In al the dlatrtct.a that 1 the aources said. a way of ex· news rfporta, Central In· him. super~. 81 well 88 In dis-pressing opposition t.o the gov-. teUJgence Acency anaJyata pre· Oddly enough, the same pro· tricts where the real results ernment. diet that conUnuin1 famine ls a , blem er.llta lo the Soviet Union, were known to me." he said. There could be other reasons, virtual certalnty ln Cambodia. where the so-"between 15 and 20 percent of though. Soviet elections are held "Only cleat.hi and emigration called elec· the voters declared their unWlJI· on Sundays, a nd a lot of can decrease the number of peo-toral process ingness to vote... Russians use their day off lo get pie lo be fed," lbe ClA report leav es the drunk. according lo a State notes. And ll makes clear that voters no How many actually persist in Department source. there ls not enough food to go choice whe n their Intention to boycott the around. they rue into spurious election proceaa 111 not THE TRUE number of Soviet After a promising start last the polltng known. First or all. it's against citizens who vote -or. moreim· fall. the lnlemaUonal rellef ef- b o o th s lo lhe law for Soviet citizens lo ab-portanUy, the number who don't fort in Cambodia ls in danger of ·'elect" the stain from voting Communist vote -never reaches the collapsing, as funds dry up and o n I y c a n . Party activists are saddled with bigshots in the Kremlin. Party the attention of the great powers did ates on the the Job of gelling people lo the bureaucrats. fear-Cul of losing turns to other areas of crisis. ballot. polls for the formal endorsement their jobs ... systematically Meanwhile, the Cambodians' And yei. according to of party candidates falsify" the figures on voter cupboard is bare ... Food stoc.ks America's Kremhn·watchers. turnout. according to our are virtuallv exhausted," the disenchanted Russians still THE SOVIET party hacks sources. ClA reports. ''No significant manage to "vote with Uteir feet" have llsts of all voters in their Not long ago. one Kremlin of. amounts of food will be availa· by s taying home on Election districts. and check off each one ficial had the temerity to sug-ble from crops grown in Kam . Day. 1l11s ha!> also been con· as the vole 1s cast Those who gest that more than one can· . puchea <Cambodia) until next ---------------------------------------December." ' ~, . \ .. \ '\' ,, •1\ ' ' . ' .. Mailbox \ '' ' 'I\ \\ \\ ' ., THE CIA PUTS the problem starkly: Almoat 750,000 metric tons or food and seed are needed. The current crop will provide 56,000 tons at best. Even with the combined relief efforts of the Soviet bloc and Western <1g ent•1es. there will be a :-.hortfall of <tbo ut 200.000 tons of foo<l and 60.000 tons of seed. Even a 26,000-ton shortfall, the CIA notes, would "lower the caloric value of an average ra· t ion below t.he starvation level.·· And even that grim estimate assumes a distribution system that would provide an .. a verage" ration. In fact, ac· cording to a secret study. the ... vste m 1s a shambles and dis· lrtbullon has au but ceased. APT ACRONYM : T he State Department's Vietnam-Laos- Cambodia office has won a sardonic nickname in Foggy Bottom. Because of lta apparent· ly unending diet of disaster, the VLC office is known as the Of· flee of Very Lost Causes. Don't Blame Judges for Defects • ID Law To the Editor. I have worked within our county's court system for almost 20 years and believe that I am therefor~ qualified to comment on at least one aspect or Judicial elections. I have never done so in this manner before and do so now only because I feel that strongly that our judges. themselves. have been mis judged by those who contend that they are too lenient in their dealings with criminals An ever·increasing crime rak and a growing disregard for society's means of tryi ng to con· lrol the conduct or each other. our laws. are cited as being direct results of this leniency And It is not unreasonable to draw this conclusion if indeed our Judges could righteously be held solely responsible for thl' inherent weaknesses in our system that affords the criminal somethmg Jess in the way of punishment than we believe "fits the crime." ft struck me early in my ma rshaling career that only the innocent come into our courts seeking Jus tice Justice. of course. is about the last thing that the gu.iJty want. They want out. They want off. They want acquittal, dismissal or anything else they can manage lo get that Is cheaper than the going pnce reaularly charged for the crime that brings them there. And in this country, they have plenty of expert belp at hand to get them what lhey want. (f they can't pay for it, t.ben we rurnish it for free. SOME OF It doesn't cost anything at all. ll 's already there in the fonn of ambiguous laws, protective precedents. confoundedly complex in- terpretations and frequently • rruatnttn1 t.ecMlcallUet -all or which must. be rellgiou.aly ob-served at all 1ta1es of the pro- ceed.1.Qp, commendna witll the lnIUal lnveatlaaUon and, arrest. Virtually any lrre&ularity elong the line will invariably serve to compromlH a case to the benefit of the accused. But. un· leaa th6 publlc ls Utorough1y f amWar wtth au elemeata ol a case and 1ublequeot develop-me.ota, lt too often condemna the Jud~ 1'tMn tbe crlmlnaJ faUa.ao receive b1I Just deaart&~ "Some fool Judu tuned bJm looee" we hear. wllen ach1alJy the judfe had J\O eboi~ ln t.M matter. tn fact. Judat1 have been held to blame tn such cNet when, 1n truth. lt wu a Jury who •rrived at the disappolnUna decision. lome ~ to '4tbrow tbe raaeall out" wltlt &be bope Ulll• ~"°" tlaat ..... IO W W1U bl'tJll abciut.an I~· • t• I ment an the JUd1 c1al scheme of thing~ Rut hike m}' word for it. based on heavy exposure and ex pt'rience. it won't work that way bC'cau!>e we would simply be repliJcing them with other m o rtal!> w h o. ,:1ven the c·1rcumstances as they e xist. will be lawfully bound lo perform the awful chore in essentially the !5ame fa:-.haon as those who iJrt' n o w l' h a r R (• d w 1 t h l h e n ·spon:.1b1l1ty <tnd who, in my view and as the records will ..;how handle 1t e xtremeh Wi.'ll • DONE. RHEA Mar::.hal. Orange County :;.; Wroftfl To the F..ditor : Your staff ii; certainly being misled about the causes and e(· rects of the SS.mile speed limit. In a recent editorial you said that the limit saves hve.s and ~3SOJine The fact is that It does neither The state has quit mak- ing claims about the gas saving . and both the atate and the feds are lying to us about the Uves saved. The ~mile speed limit is iJ political issue that haa nothing lo do with safety or conserve· lion. Jl is a fraud against the motorist. YOU ALSO sald the Leg· islature ahould stand up again.st the truck drivers. tMrt they are the ones who, for a change, are our friends. They know the falsity of the limlt. At least 60 percent of all Ucbt.s issued are for speeding but ex· cess speed ls 14th on the list of accident causes. Speed trapplna is an extortion scheme. ll aervea only t.o ralse money for and glorify the bigoted an~in· tolerant. Except for the drunk driver. the bl11est problem on our freewaya today are the &low drive~ tn the fut lanes. Yet &be CHP la wnvUllinc and unable to take conectlve actJOG. They use the aow driven to belp .map the 9fcttma ol t.betr m~ harHsment, tJckttln1 thoee who proteat or lry to pan the Weta! alowpokes. There ls en<Mllla &rw· ble (or drivel"I on the ,,.....,.,. now without •ddinl more •· trapmeol. CHESTER ICING D~l~•••ule To the Editor: Paul IU:rvey bu ~n ooe ol my favorite tomm.utofl for many yean. Ba I dl'9n"t llnow u.ntU readlni )llt May • ~wnn about ~try muslc ln tM Dail)' Piiot t.btt we crew up In tbe ume area and, apparnUy. shared l'.Mtual lnt•re1t1 11 YO\llhl. Nor did l re•U• tbal ... can . oo oecasion. be a.o ex- tremist I was born 67 years ago in southwest Missouri. l enjoy~ "hill b1.Uy" and otber kinds or music, and listened' regularly to radio KVOO in Tulsa which he menliooed. Also. as a boy grow· ing into man.hood in a narrow and bigoted r~igious environ· m ent. I was taught that we "J!ood" people ~houJd. hke ~ t nches. bur') our heads in the i.<.tnd and pretend that sex did not exist l was aware in those days that some of the beautiful ballads whl<'h l most enjoyed were banned from radio play because they were deemed, by whom I never knew. to be sexually sug- gestive and therefore too .. dir· ty" ror public broadcasts. Believe it or not. the Joplin. Mis- soura radio station I WMBH?) once refused to allow the band f was playinJt in to broadcut Uve from its little aludio "The Sweetheart of Sigma CbJ" for that reason ~ PEaBAl'S, in the minds ol some. the pendulum ia today swinging too far iA tbe oppoe.lte direction. But one t.bl.Di la cer· taln: The vast majority of us are no longer trying lo pretend that sex does not exial. And J, for one, believe tbat ia a positive step in the right d.irecllon. When we •tart teachlne that sex Is good and really wonderful, when associat ed with love, un· deut•ndlng and aduH responsibility, ( believe we wW be well on our f..ay to "1etUna there." Such enlightened \biok· inf ls Jona overdue. now have the time t.o listen to a treat deal of radio lncludlns "country music" about which Harvey wrote. Not once have I heard a IOOI btoadcut which I .-ould describe as "porno· 1~hlc." U consider myself q GM \() make • Judc1nMt in tbat ua·l>6C'Ime eK-._,. aqualntanceab.ip wlth pan u it bu i... depicted in mo.i. and In mapslnes such u ffuatler.• Thia Inda me to the lnescapa· ble COO<'lusion that my old friend has indt.'(.-d burwd his head in the sand WlLLJAM CORKRELL D~•rrr~ f'h•f' To the Editor I applaud you for your ~ffort. .. to exp()Se the inconsiderate peo- ple parking in the handicapped park1n,:: iipaces. However. 1t v.ould be even more satisfying to the public. besides knowing the license plate of the car. that tht' \'iOlotor wa:; then contacted by the proper authorities and given a substanUal fine. If .anyone has the timl'. perhaps an artJcle adjacent to the picture. might advise the public bow we could assist or be aure these "better than thou peo· pte" do in fact "pay their dues" for their lDconaideration. I GO TO Gelsons Market near· ly e•ery day and invariably someone in their fancy sports car ls parked In the handicapped parking space and il truly irks me. How can lbe public help or as· sist? 1bere should be some way to atop the CQOtlnual disregard of tbe reserved spaces. If the tabln wen turned and they were tbe handicapped. they would probably scream their heads off. RUTH ANN OSOICK 1'ft!p ilt.-Cat• To the !'Altar: This Jetter ls pertaining to your May 29 article, "Cal· alyst?" I tblnk that Bruce Hopping should go and take a hop! His idea ia nutat And what'• a\Ore, Helaltf Park 11 kno.n aa a Wild Llf e Sactuary. not for cats to go and ldll the 9e1uirrell, nor do we ln LafUD& Beacb •ant these call .,..._around. Jt '• bad enoup when we get stray doo.Od OW' lawn, and ._,. • .._,.,.,_.mutt behind, if the cata ~ •·n.um.inc. we'll have mon tnde markl. It'• ll1IO nice to take a 'Walk In the parlt, and see the aqulrrels, and other Ufe. And as loq aa one doeto't entice them. (the squlrrela) they wlU do no Ul"m to aJ\)'OM. So lf )'OU wouldn't mlnd PUlln& a UtUe meuqe to Clty llattaaer. Mr. Robert Wynn, doo't bother! keep your 11ray cate. MRS. SYLVIA~OODROV'SE COREN ._.~--· ·- th£oast VOL. 73, NO. 15114 SECTIONS, S2 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY. CALI FORNI A THURSOAY~UNE S, 1980 TWENTY-FIVE CENTS Arch BeaCh Heights Land Unstable 81 ITSV& MITCllSU. ... ...., ........ Properties near the landllbde \hat HYerely dama1ed two Arch 'Beacb ...._bta boma ln Lafun• Beach l"eb. 1'7 are far ttom •ta· ble. leoloflsts say. And they warn that, ii steps aren't taken soon to at.abiUie the 30.000 cubic yarda of loose dirt and debris below Del Mar Avenue. chances are that more homes will be damaged or destroyed as a result of rains next winter. La1una Beath City Council membera and Arch Beach H•llhll ~ta llatened to a rrJm UMAmenl ot t.be poteoUal problems raclna the hillside nel1bbofbood Tueeday. It was preaented by Lelahton and AB· soctatea ,-eoloaist lraj Poormandt. At the conclualon of the one· hour pre:sentaUon, council mem· bera voted to hire a civil en,-lneer to find out how much it would cost and to devise a plan to stabilize the bill. .,..., ptl9'...., ~ THE VALLADARES FAlllt.Y HEADS FOR NEW UFE Cuben Refugeee llllnuel. Nonna 9nd ~-a Cuban Refugees Arrive in County By JODI CADENHEAD Of .... o.tty ~,..... The first wave of Cuban refugees trickled into Orange County early today -weary, homeless and hopeful aner enduring weeks of hunger and high seas to nee their homeland. News that the 18 refugees would be arriving from Florida to live in Orange County reached Cuban communi- ty groups Wednesday afternoon. They are the Cuban refugees destined for Orange County and more are expected to arrive today and in the coming weeks, authorities said. SPOKESMEN FOR THE Cuban Association and. the Cuban Assistance League in Orange County said that they had been·storing food . clothing and furniture for more than a month in anticipation that refugees would be arriving here. None of the 18 Cubans have relatives living in Orange County and many left families behind. Manuel Vallandres, his wife, Norma and their 8-year- old daughter, Gladys, were among tho first arrivals seek· ing asylum at the Peruvian embassy ln Cuba. They lived for 12 days at the embassy surviving the sickness and salvaging the scarce small packqes of food that the United States sbipped in every day. explained Vallandres. " .. MY WIFE W.4NTED TO leave. It was too much hunger and too much sickness," said the truck driver. "We squeezed the juice from leaves of orange trees to Uve.'' He said that be hopes to fmd a job soon. "I want Uber ty and a place to settle my family," be said. Anxious families from the Los Angeles area crowded Los Angeles International Airport terminal seeking the familiar faces of relatives that many bad not aeen since Castro came to power two decades •co. Orlando Tallon of Huntinlton Park fought back lean u be embraced the IOll be left in Cuba 10 yean ago. urrs BEEN A VERY TE&UBLE time," be said. ··But It's wonderful to 1ee him again." While fao)llles from Loe Angeles wept and embraced, ref u1ees deaUned for Oranae County 1athered quietly to leave for the Cuban Club in Oranae, where a temporary abelter wu prepared. ... OOULDN'T 8UPPOJlT the system anymore," said Dario Du~et. who worked in Cub• as an accountant and interpreter. "Most of the YoUDI people are dluatfafied. •• Tbe fonMI' Nadoaal Lape baMball player said that be would be p-at.et.J for a., wort. A.a the Nf'qeea 1buftled into a 1'altln& van, Albert Herran. Whole wife wu unable to pt into UM Peruvian embUSJ, ut4'd reporters if tbere wu any way to let ber Dow that be WM all 11Cbt. They allocated up to 128,500 for the studies and augested the wort be done as soon as possible in the race to stabtlile the neighborhood before ..rain aaaln falls on Laguna Beach. The February slide dama&ed two homes on Del Mar Avenue. destroyed a manhole. portions of a sewer line. uWity equipment and nearly 40 feet or the west end of Del Mar Avenue. Tbe tom or dirt and debris swept nearly 200 reet down the hillside, covering portions of Gainsborough Drive below. Poormandt said that. unless remedial work is done before the rains. more damage is inevtta· ble. "If you do nothing." tbe geologist said. "tlte banJt holding up Del Mar A venue has a very high chance of falling." That could result in ~loss of homes abutting Del Mar A venue and Baja Street in the densely developed neighborhood. In addition. be said. large por· tions of the broken earth mass below Del Mar Avenue could continue down the slope in fteavy rams. damaging properties ln the Crestview neighborhood. Adding to lbe potential prob- lems in Arch Beach Heights is the difficulty in stabilizing the slide area. The Leighton firm did the geologic studies and provided recommendations ror re· construction of Bluebird Canyon when 24 homes were destroyed in that neighborhood a year and a half aito. I Poorinandt said the Arch Beach Heights slide la much smaller in area than Bluebird, but, be said. the steep sJopes make it difllcull for heavy earth· movi ng mac hinery to get around. He said the most economically viable plan for stabilizing the slope would be to remove the slide debris and construct an earth buttress -heavily com· pacted dirt founded on un- disturbed bedrock -below Del <See LAND, Page A%) Computer Error Blamed Vote Snafu Located By DAVID KUTZ MANN Of IM O.tly ,., ... SC.H Computer obstinacy and ballot mixups -and not the county's new $1.5 million vote counting system were responsible for foulups which have delayed final returns from Tuesday's balloting. officials said today. ln fact. elections chief Shirley Deaton Said she still wasn't cer· lain when the results of two pre· cincts -in Anaheim and Fullerton would be tabulated, meaning Orange County would likely be tbe las t county in California to tabulate finaJ re· suits . Despite the delays, which could be the longest in recent county history. both observers and officials defended the performance of the Martel Vote Counting System. saying it was blameless for problems plaguing election returns here . San Onofre Checkpoint Investigated Border patrol agents at a c h eckpoint south of San Clemente and e lsewhere in Southern California have been investigated for alleged brutali· ty by undercover operatives po5· ing as illegal aliens. The federal probe is still in progress and sbme agents may face indictment. a border patrol official at Chula Vista said. Donald M. Cameron said he would have no comment on the matter while the investigation is continuing. Meanwhile, the probe was criticized as "entrapment" by a spokesman for the Natlonal Border Patrol Council, bargain· Ing agent for 2.300 border agents. Richard Bevans of the council said the U.S Justice Depart ment WJlS "trying to draw atten- tion away from its failure to en· force the immigration law by persecuting agents and making them appear corrupt and brutal.'' The operatives were in· vestigatlng the San Clemente station because of complaints about mistreatment of aliens. The operatives posing as aliens were working for the Of. flee of Professional ResponsibW· ty of the Immigration and Naturali.zaUon Service. Bevans said the San Clemente case was baaed on flimsy evidence and that be did not beUeve the seven or more agents under investigation bad physically abused anyone. Supervisors Get Dana Plan Tbe <>nnce County Plannll\I CommiAlon baa approved the Dana Polnt Speclfk Plan &Dd tent lt fo tbe Board of Supervllon for • .JW, public beariJtl, Appronl came after a tO· minute public bearlnl durlna wblcb commt11loner1 bearcl favorable ec>Olsnenta oa tbe Dlan ~,of \la varioua Tlae commlHIOD m••tl•t Tuetday_. 1followed a •lailar laea.U,·Mld la Dana Nat lla:y 21. Jletldelltt Who auended the meetlne ~· 1Uppott tor ,. dueed boallal dealtt• • .._. merclaJ 1011lq, parklq ud ltrMt eBpm•, call4'd.b In tbe plen. - Mrs. Deaton said her orfice Election officials contend, just was quite satisfied with the 90 as they had predicted. that the new machines. into which were machane processed all ballots by red the results of voting an 2 ·30 am. Wednesday 2.061 precmcts throughout the It 1s at this point, however. the _c_ou_n_t_y ___________ ll_r _o_IJlprn" h<>gan t" "mPq~e Downhill Crash Buris Taco Mrs. Deaton said that when computer tapes bearing the elec- tion results were fed into the county's main computer in downtown Santa Ana for a <See DELAYS. Page A2) Laguna Beach police and firemen give first aid to Gary Zubko. 16. of 630 Loretta Drive. South Laguna after the youth ap· parenlly lost control of the Porsche he was driving on Park Avenue late Tuesday mght His passenger. Oliver Ludwig. 16. of 400 El Camino del Mar. Laguna Beach. was also injured m the crash. Both remain in South Coast Medical Center in stable condition. hospital officials said today. Tour Bus Plunges In Ravine; 20 Die JASPER. Ark. tAP) -A tour bus from Texas with 33 aboard careened off a "su1c1de curve" and plunged 50 feet down a rocky ravine in a mountainous area of northern Arkansas to· day. killing at least 20 ·'In Z7 years w1th the slate police, it 's the worst I've ever seen." said Capt. Billy Bob Davis. comm ander of Troop I of the Arkansas State Police at Harrison. ··tt looked as though the brakes apparenUy had failed," Davia said. Frank Wise. administrator ol the Boone County Hospital at Harrbon, said 13 were treated there for Injuries. One was listed in critJcaJ condition. The cond1· lion of the others was not lm· mediately available. State polic e sai d the passe111era were all from the Dallas area. Some victims still were trapped under the bua and SW'· rouncnn, Umber four hours after tbe accl41eoL Davis said tbe bus was north· bound down • 1teep bW of tbe two-lane Arkansu Hla.b•ay 7, a 1cenJc route. It traveled al~ a ditch on the ri&bt aide ol the hlchway for more than 200 feet. Ulen hlt a culvert and vffnd off tl\e l'Olld. landlnc noee down ln n111ect terrain so feet below the shoulder ol tbe highway, be aald. ltetth Hopper. a 1poteaman for Oentrat Texu Ttailw'YS ln Dallas, sales th e but w .. cha.rttted. by Mrs. R. W. Jacobt of lrviDI, Tex. The tourists ap- par~ntly "had no affillatlon wtth any oraanlzed .QP· •· !lopper dee to ~mment on •i.te police reports that the bra kes failed Davis said the driver and three or four passengers were thrown out of the bus. At least foor were round on the highway . Davis said the driver, who has not been ldentaf1ed . was among the dead A nearby resident heard the crash and alerted authorities. Elmer Dunn, 61. of Grand Prairie. Texas . was among those who reee1ved minor in· juries. He said he was riding on the left side ol the bus, toward the rear. and was almost asleep when the bus ran off the road on a curve. The windows were knocked out from the Impact of the crash. Dunn said he bit the back of the seat, then slld to the floor and crawled out a window. He said one aide of the bus was demolished. There was no fire-. The accident occurred sbortly before l a.m. one mile south ol Jasper. Aut.hortties said Identification of the female vlcUms was dJI. ficult because purses were scat- tered In the wreckage. The bus was chartered by Oen· tral Tex.u Trallways of Waco, 1'e,,;aa. PllOT DETAILS lXJfJNTY 'JOBS' Today's Dally Pilot detaJl1 Oranp Oounty job opportunlt.lee and empjoyment cancUtlona la a U·P•I mqaD.oe, "Jobi." CUSDBoard Geu Budget Capistrano Unified School Dis· trict trustees have received without comment a $40,030,699 tentative budget for 1980-81. and a re expected to review it at their June 16 meeting. Trustees received the budget at their Monday meeting. but did not discuss details of the document. The tentative budget totals S383.7S9 more than the S39.6 million preliminary budget re· cently reviewed and more than SS mlllion more than the $34.9 million 1.979-80 budJlet. Coast Weather Fair tonight through Friday except for late evening and early mom· Int cloudiness. Lows tontebt 48 at the beaches and SS inland. Highs Fri· day mid 80il to mid 70s . INSIDE TODAY l .. ex • DAil V PILOT UIC ~~ ......... ~~JVST~NG----~ .. ... •, ...., ..... ,,_. ...... ..,...,, .. ........... .,, ••di •• c ....... WASIUNG'roN <AP) ~ ~ tonnuty dellvend to Preadeftt Cart ,._ dMlh lence for bla dl1n•·a·1allon 1uoUne r ud prepared fbr an tQttttd .-uy override of blJ promiled veto Koua.e Sp.aler Thoma.a P O'Neill. abandoftlnt bopea that Carter'a "-eto could be auatalned tn tM face ot overwhelmlna votes Wecme.d~ la both \be HouN and the Senate, sald an override effort could be comp1«ect bf lai. t.odly. The Kou.se aetal the repu.l lq\alaUoo t.o Carter today by a simple voice v<U H~ leaden capitulated and decided to accept without rurt..beor dela.)' the Senate's approach or attachlni it to a bill extendin& the national debt cemna. ea ......... KrMllN .... C'o11frrrlttt' WASHINGTON <APl A private conversation ln the quiet of the White HOU£e living quarters Isn't exactly what 'Sen. Edward M. Kennedy had in mind when he demanded that Presi· dent Carter debate him. But that's aJI he's 1olng to 1et. With their laat clashes at the polls behind them. Carter and Kennedy are meeting today ~ the While House, but there is no sign their talk will lead to Kennedy not pressing on with his al· tempt to take the nomination from Carter. Jim Flug, Kennedy's spokesman. said the senator remained determined to challenge Carter for the nomination, although the president has won enough Democratic convention delegates to assure himself of victory. Gold Adra11t"..._ Dollar .Jff.rrd LONDON (AP> -Gold advanced today to its highest level since March 12. The dollar was narrowly mixed. West German markets and some others were shut for the Corpus Christi holi· day. In London. the closing price was $587, up from $$51. ll traded at $598 in New York, up $15.70. Silver was quoted in London at SlS.SS an ounce. up from $15.40 and a six-week high. ll traded in New York at $16.42, up 87 cents. ~ S.-11d llp . I 11011tn-Crall MOSCOW CAP) -The Soviet Union today launched two more cosmonauts into orbit using an improved Soyu1 T2 spacecraft, Tass reported. The launch came just two days after another Soyuz crew - a Soviet commander and a Hungarian cosmonaut -returned from eight days in space. 'nH!y bad docked with the Salyut 8 space station, where cosmonauts Leonid Popov and Valery Ryumin have been in orbit since April 9. Tass called the T2 an "improved model" of the Soyuz manned spacecraft series. It was believed it.s crew would also link up with and enter the Salyut satellite. All Plead lnaoeeat 12 CountianS Face Trial in Pyramids Twelve Orange Countians, charged w•th misdemeanors for alleged partic ipation in a $1 ,000-per-person pyramid scheme, have pleaded innocent in South Orange County Municipal Court. The 12 had been cited during a pyramid rald by Orange County Sheriffs deputies May 2 at the Mission Viejo home of Maryann trial is scheduled July 16 for ail 12 defendants. Facing arraignment Wednes· day we re Tracee Gwynn Hartline, 32, or Costa Mesa; Jimmie Bill Brooks, 26, of Costa Mesa; James Edward Reale. 36, of El Toro; and Karen Deborah Storm. 37, of Santa Ana. • Mattingly, 31, of273Sl Limones. Those pleading not guilty last. week. alon.g with Ms . Mattingly were Beverly Lee Hunter, 33. of Newport Beach ; Linda Lee Yentsch, 38, of Huntington Beach; Wayne Charles Allen, 59. of Santa Ana; Connie Beaty. 23, of Mission Viejo; Gregory lllura- dian, 23, of Mission Viejo; Betty Tobey Turk, Z7. of Mission Viejo, and Larry Steven Levine, 36, ol Mission Viejo. The precise charge ls violation • of Section 327 of the California • Penal Code, promotini an end-• less chain. Pretrial hearings were set : Wednesday .for June 30. A iUJ'\I · Nurse Suspended DOWNERS GROVE, 111. (AP> -Good Samaritan Hospital here bas suspended a young · nurse following the "unex- plained deaths" of two paUent.s under her care, says the at· • tomey for 1.Jnda KUJ'le, 24, who was told the deaths came from a • sugar deficiency apparently caused by an overdose of ln· sulln. • • • • ' . -' • • • • • • F DAILY PI LOT ...,_ .. ~:"!:-1111-a.. °""" -O..llMoet-•~-----.... '"'" ,,.,tlNCll--- T•••11lliD1t• fn•)~ Ct1NlfteclAd¥ ...... ...,. SC Slaying, And Suicide Under Probe ,.,... ..... DELAYS ••• =· ............... ''We -'t -.. ftJ.'' allil :!r It:=-&'=: •:!z:!~~= ~orporatloa comP'at.n iD tbe ~·· ~ bulldla• ... the CIYlcC.... TbeM return1 were nntuany added into u. cumwaU•• vote count by lat. WedMlday mare· 'ii n . Deaton Hid It ... ·t known U the problem wu ln the main computer ay~m or wtth the Rea!atrar of Voten com· pater eQUlpment at anotliii'"Joea. tlon ln Santa Ana. The ~·· eomputer wa uaed to tranlfw tbe eleetioo re- sults proceaed by the Martel .machtoe. andputoa cueeu. to ma1net1c tapes which tbe CSC computers cknmtowa would uae for ma.ld.nc printouts of results. "We sun hope to unravel the problem." the election supervilor laid. Because the county bad no previous experience wlth the Martel machines -ln use tor the first time In Orange County -it has become more dJfficult to track down the problem, of· Ciclala Aid. In the cue of two other pre- cincts sUll untallied as or this morning-proble ms were or another nature. In Anaheim. for lnstance. the wrong ba.llota were Hnt to a pre- cinct with 447 registered voters, officials said. o r that total. 237 voted Tues- day. However, instead of casting ballots (« candidates in the 71at Alsembly District. as they s ho uld have, the voters were given ballota for the 69th M · sembly District. This means the voters in the West Anaheim precincts will not have their votes counted in partisan races ror which they shouldn't have been voting in the Cir5t place. The votes they cast for Judges, presidential candidates and U.S. Senate candidates would be tallied because these were coun- tywide races. Mrs. Deaton said tbe mJs- take-and aubseque.nt canceled vote&-would not alt.er the out· come ol any races. . The foulup was apparenUy caused by a computer assigning the wrong ballot cards to the Anaheim precinct. Bent.on Vejacb, roreman of the Orange County Grand Jury and an election observer. said ll was his impression the Martel vote countinl machines performed well but that computer problems were probably the result of try- ing to wed new systems for the first time. The result. VeJacb saJd, wu- that the two didn't mesb well. VeJach. who was amons five observers from tbe grand jury at the fteelstrar of Voters office on election night, said be expect· ed the computer related prob- lems to be aolved by tbe next countywide e lection in No- Vflmber. The Martel machines are in use in other areas such as Tulsa County, Oklahoma. Texas and a n o ther southern s tales, Registrar of Voters Al Olson said. LAND ••• Mar Avenue. That earth would be "borrowed" from adjacent areas near the slide. But be !Nlested that due to the consfrainU of the steep slopes, a civil engineering COO· sullanl should be hired to de- velop grading plans. Jlm Clampett, spokesman for the Del Mar-Baja Homeowners· Aaaoclatioa, urged the COUDCi1 to expedite wort on the project in order to complete atabllisatioa of the slide mus by November at the latest. The city is attempUng to re- coup all ol a aubltantlal portion of the espenMS from federal dll· aster aaalatance funds promised by Pre.ldent Caner followln& the February ralna. City Manqer Ken Jl'rank said his "boneback eatimate" ot the costs ranae from '500.000 to seoo.ooo. "and &hat doesn't m- clude eome aborlnl wort below the tndivtdual properties.'' be added . And, be told eommmalt1 members, .. tbere II oo 1u1rantee bow mucb. lf IAY· tbe federal pemment wW put uP for th1I project • But couucll memben voted unanimously to pa1 for •• .......... anal"" "' tbe ,.. mectlal woct, 11,m, tbe1 would deeide cm alternad .. pr'Oducld lft tbat lbl4y befor'9 r9'0llllllnle• Uon~. Deaili ToU RJeee Surlin' on the Wind Skyle r Tegland. 14, or Laguna Niguel. takes a wet ride aboard his windsurfer at Dana Point Harbor. He ~as on the waler Wednesday after school, catching some good breezes. He's been windsurfing about a year. Female U.S. Agent Slain in LA Holdup .. ,.__... SLAIN NEAR LA AIRPORT U.S. Agent Jule Croaa Trustees Eye Mileage Hike The Capistrano Unified School District board of trustees will take a second look at a possible seven-cent-per·mlle increase in e mployee mileage allowances. following a request by trustee Ed Westberg. Superintendent Jerome Thomsley told trustees at their meeting Monday that rising fuel costs prompted the request. But Westberg said he would like t.o see more information about tbe subject at the board's June 16 meeting. He said he thinks the increase from 1.5 to 22 cenl.s per mile Is excessive. LOS ANGELES CAP> -An apparently coincidental holdup. shooting bas resulted m the ftrst death in the line of duty of a woman Secret Service agent , the Secret Service said today Agent Julie Y. Cross. 26. who had been with the Secret Service less than a year and had Just transferred to Los Angeles last week after her initial training. was shot to death as she staked out a s uspected counte rfeit operation Wednesday In Westchester. near Los Angeles International Airport. ·'At approximately 9 : 15 pm. Special Agents Cross and Uoyd Bulman were seated In a Seeret Service vehicle . . . when they were approached from the n!ar by two black males •pprox- imately 30-35 years of age who were apparently attemptinjl to commit a robbery," Secre t Service spokesman Jack Warner said in a state ment issued in Washmgton ... A struggle ensued and Speeial Agent Cross was fatally wounded. Her partner was not U\Jured •• W a mer said the robbery at tempt was apparently unrelated to the counterfeiting operation. Los Angeles policeman Cal Brash said Ms . Cross was shot at point-blank range with a .357 -magnum revolver. Bulman was knocked to the ground ln a scuffle wtth her killers but they escaped, investigators said. SpectaJ Agent Cross. born in Bradford. England. was a re· serve lieutenant in the San Diego Police Department where she had worked just before join· ing the Secret Service on Oct. 1. Her husband. Bob Hannibal, is a detective with the San Diego po Hee. ' WASHINGTON (AP) -U.S. mllllal'Y olftelals laueuecl tbe alert of ltra&epc nucJear bOml>- ers and mlasUes briefly Tues- day when a computer problem caused • false alarm bMlicatlng • muJttple Soviet mlulle attack. the Pentaaon laid today. A quick check of a varietY ol sensors in the complex.. warning system, l.hdudlng aatellltea, con- firmed wfth1n three minutes that no Soviet missiles bad been launched and the alert wu re- laxed, olflclab aaJd. No bombers were launched, althoufh eneines were started. the Pent.agon said . There wu in· creased communication with missile crews but no weapons were prepared for launch. Neither Prftldent Carter nor Defense Secr e tary Harold Brown was notified, the Pen- tagon said, but the White House Situation Room, which deals with international crises, "was aware of t he possible threat while it was being evaluated." It was the second false alert ol this type since November: Both resulted from problems at the North American Air Defense Com m a nd headquarters al Colorado Springs. Colo. Man Clubbed By Wrench; Suspect Held An argument between sailing partners on a boat out of Dana Point Harbor Tuesday resulted in one of the men being struck by the other with a pipe wrench in the harbor-parking lot, in- vestiaators allege. Or ange County sheriff's dep- u t 1 es said Ma ynard Axel Damm. 51, o f Or a nge was booked on suspicion of assault with a deadly weapon after Tho mu Raymond Huuler, 40, also o( Orange, waa clouted. Deputies said the men re· ported.ly argued during the day while sailing. And upon leaving the boat a fist fight on the dock ensued. deputies said. The susped allegedly went to his truck, got a pipe wrench, and hit the victim in the bead, dep. utles said. Hutzler was treated and released at Cb•pman Hospital in Orange . Onofre Plant Out of Action The San Onofre Nuclear General.mg Station will remain out or service until about June 22 while plant maintenance and construction work is completed, Southern California Edison Company the operator or the plant, hu announced. T he 456-megawalt nuclear generatilur unit wu shut down April 9 1or rerueling, main· tenance and completion of con· s truclion work, a company spokesman said. The spokesman said refueling or the react.or has been complet- ed and an overhaul of the steam· powered turbine a enerat.ot' is in proeress. * • and envlroamental • • ' -.,..,... ........ ~u wt&lt the defut of l'Npolttl.on 11. Which •ot .. NtttGt ol Ute '"*• and Pl'OD09ttioa 1, a S-million park U4 c-.wvaUcn bond meuure, wblda•ot41 pereeot .. BJ'OWD hd parUeularlY st.kM bis hopes Oil PropolJtuon l , wblcb inel'Uded moMY fo.. ftlb bateberies, Wlldllfe refutet. water couervatioo and cleanup, and wlllte water rec••m.UO.-part of bll aJDtlitklut ••renewable l"llOUl'Cel" prosram. Tboultl part boadl usuall7 pua rwtlDeb'. the ••,....able re-aource1" pfan provoked oppo1lUoa from powerfa.I O"OUsi-- farmers, Jouen and the state Chamber ol Commerce -aDd ai>- P•reotb' waa respoaalble for the meuun•a defeat. Probably tbe day's bla• wlDDen were the loolely Ot'· 1aohed, tllinly ftoanced tenant. e)derly and liberal &J'OUllS that op- posed Plvpoaition 10. Despite a high-powered advertlliDC campaio dlat claimed the * * * ... * * Jania Aims at Public Pensions LOS ANG~ <AP) -Howard Jarvta. seeming und•untect by the Cl'\IJlhinl deleat ot bla bM?ome tax cut propoeal, says hJJ next inltlaUve will leek tr> limit public peuiom -and be mllbt aim anotber oae at 1overameat spendln1. ·'I am DOt aoln& to take any rest wh•taoever as lona as I'm alive," the ?~year-old leader or the tax revolt -a movement •hose status is ln doubt after Tuesday's election -said ln an in· tervtewWednesday. "fwanttopuaanotheramendment. l want to put a chain around the poliUcians' necks so they can't bankrupt the public." -..J,arv.is' mood.seemed to have changed since Tuesday night, when he bitterly promised to "shove it up the ears" of public employee un- ions for leading the successfu.l opposition to his .1uv15 Proposition 9 income tax reduction. He paid a backhand compliment Wednesday to public employee groups, saying they • ran a very, very well-planned a\id • very good campaign, despite t.be fact tbat for the moat part lt was totally dishonest." Proposition 9 would have cut state income tax rat.es in half and reduced state revenues by more than S4 bUllon a year. . It got only 39 percent of the statewide vote and didn't carry a single county. The election came less than two years after the overwhelming passage of the Proposition 13 property tu cut that made the squat, bull-voiced Jarvis a celebrity. J arvts said his next initiative is still being drafted and might be ready to submit to the state for circulation in a couple of months. He said it would limit the pension or future public employees to •·somewhere near" the amounts drawn by comparable workers in private industry. "Nobody knows how much deficit there is in the pension fund but it 's in the hundreds or millions.'' Jarvis said. "It will have to be paid. and because Uiey can't pay it on the property tax and can't raise lhe sales tax. the only alternative is the income tax." Asbestos Firm Freed of Damages LOS ANGELES <AP> -A Superio.. Court judge bas ruled that it would be inappropriate for a jury that awarded $1.2 million in general damages to a worker who alleaedly suffered asbestosis to also levy punJtive damages ( agains t th e asbes tos L"r ) manufacturers. J i :4.TE The jury had bee n sche dule d to begin t he punitive damage phase of the case Wednesday. but Judge Earl F. Riley said before the proceedings got under way that be felt a punitive award would be wrong S7 .tfi llio" Aflked la Dratlt S llif SAN DIEGO <AP> -The family of a San Diego man bas ftled a $7 million wroagful death suit growing out of a Polish jeWner crash that left 87 persons dead last March, includiq a U.S. boxing team. . yrenio "Junior " Robles. 40, was one of the boxing eoaches who ·died in the fiery crash near-the Warsaw airport. The lawsuit was riled in federa' court by Robles' fonner wife Margaret Ojeda of National City. l'ear-ro11"d Sr .... 1 o"·d i" I.A Co-•· LOS ANGELES <AP> -Despite objections from the Amen can Civil Liberties Union, a SUperior Court judge bu approved a Board of Education plan to relieve overcrowding by running some schools year-round. School attorney Peter James said the ruling Wednesday by Judge Paul Egty, Laguna Beach, means the plan could go into ef· feet at some elementary and junior high schools July 7. WCM1Gn Raped a• Bo•P tor f;fdrrly SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Five men burst into a home for the elderly, pistol-whipped them and raped a 67·year-old blind woman before fleeing with about $100, police said; . . "Every time you think you've seen it all, somethmg like Uus happens," Capt. J oseph Lordan said Wednesday. ' . ? • . . . ·~ measure would aliur apertmeet _.tilletJID wlilli P~: ••reue111able controls, 0 tt JOtoaly IS per'ffDt olt.IM wu Ud falled to# CUTJ8.anclecoadtf0 :.::.r:tl ,;: "Baden ban arrived • a force bl Califomla ~· ; dttlared tenant lobbyiR Stephen Hopcnft, wbo &be No-, on· 10 campaian ln Nortbem California. Be said tenant J!OUP' would reaew pl'OpONll tor a "rent.en' bill of ri&htl, '' lnclu41DC proteetioo qalMt evietiom without eame. Slmllar proposals bave been defeated repeatedly ln the. LeaWature. . THE DAY ALSO PaoVIDED a meaare of vtndleation for ac·: tivllt Tom Hayden, focua of a ftnal·weet attack by real estate: grou,. wbo portrayed bJm aa the slnlster force bebiDd the: NO.OD·lO. "It w• a trem•!Sotm victory for renters, wbo I hope will: bffome e«eccn. u a Hlttfeal force In CalllomJa," Hayden said as • a statement.. ''l hope {t wtll be the begtnnin1 of meetinp between · renters' organlzatiooa J,Dd builders to He what we can do in eom·: mon on the whole question of affOl'dable bousiq.' • : Divine J ob Some look fo r water, some oil. some gold. But Tom · Har mon. a Monterey Pacific Telephone employee, uses copper divirung rods to locate lost underground cables. He learned "witching art," be says, from an old cowboy in Big Sur Mountains. . He's#I ... trip wiua Conunental'a Supu Sa\'etS. They'd wotk for )'80. t00. Just call your traW1 agent or CondDental. Seats a1e limited. So don't put it o ff any longer. Lose IOmC wait with Continental. t ight up '.Dad 's face fA!ith English Lea ther and y our carica ture at no ex tra charge If your Dad's an English Leather man. we've got a twice- terrlflc gift Ides. With sny $5 purchase of English Leather, a famous cattoonlst wlll draw.your caricature in just one minute. Now, Dad can have his favorite cologne and your picture to ' . remember you by. • I . s.. a..-. elU.. ~ cmatrolled l"'9'Ul and .......... admimatratlaa Mft WOD I lft__. Ylftar7 Wltb defellt t:I tht ...call:...-....,. KJroUnt ~. r.anc an upbill lflellt ·...-i land ,~ who , ~money ilM ..-aJl.,briCbn• poekMI, U.. reildeota o• ol Saa ClemieuU uve ... ._ ... to tboM who WOukl ucrtnc. their quattty ot tu to bf 1 money lnt~restt. Thty lntelid lO be tbe mut. ~their own boUSe. San Oemente IMWd now be 1ble to k>c* forward to ~ •an <>Pfll air admlnl1w1Uon, wtth clU1en1 h1v1na the op- • porlunlty to voice th~r oplnJont on -uattera olfectina them. Tbe wlnn1na "no·• vote on the recall of tne mayor tabliahes that Mn. Koester hu the aupport of the ma· · jority ~ city resident.& who voted Tuesday. Sho now has the opportWlity to continue with her efforts to correct past city pruc:dcciJ unpopular with San Clemente citizens ::,Speak Up on Budgets City council rnemben in all three south Orange Coun· ' ty municipaJlties have begun conductln_g study sessions ·• and public hearings on their respective budcets that will determine where the money will be spent during the next fiscal year. The task is made easier with the defeat of Proposi· lion 9, which would have forced city officials in Laguna :aeach. San Clemente and San Juan Capistrano to make !drastic changes in their preliminary spendlng docu· :ments. : Public hearings, in which city residents have an op· :portunily to support or oppose specifi c spending pro- ; grams within their cities, are required by law. I All three cities currently are holding budget study 'sessions and public bearings. Adoption of the spending :documents is expected later this month. 1 Laguna Beach will hold a public budget hearing ·Tuesday night in council chambers, and city officials say ; it is possible the document will be approved that night. ; Jn San Clemen\e, budget study sessions are st'heduled ; from 7 to 10 p.m. Monday and Wednesday and again on : June 16. with a public hearing on the budget expected : June 18. . San Juan Capistrano council members will review i that city's budget Wednesday. with public sessions • scheduJed later in the month. j Citizens who do not attend these sessions and voice t:their concerns will have a difficult time justifying their 1:eomplaints later in the vear. , ! fAirport Site Touchy . San Juan Capistrano city officials have received a re : port on the shortage or tiedown space for south county : small aircraft and have indicated a desire to participate : in selection of a site for a new local airport. . The new airport would replace the old Capistrano : Airport and alle~iate a tiedown and hangar space ; shortage expected to increase to 1,152 spaces this year. The closest airport is 25 to 30 miles away. • When Capistrano Airport was closed in 1978, it touched off a legal errort by pilots to keep the landing strip open. The city ordered the airport closed because il pre· sented a potential hazard to adjacent homes. A five-year-old girl was killed three years ago when a ' plane clipped the youngster as il crash·landed at the airport. i An airport is needed in south Orange Cot:~y . The city and other agencies will need to proceed car.,tully in the ' site selection process to avoid the difficult problems of safety. noise and legal entanglements. • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot Other views expressed on this page are those ol their authors and artists. Reader comment is invited Address The Daily Pilot. P 0 Sol! 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4J21 Boyd/Contest By L.M. BOYD : Rare is the writer who gets • paid $12,000 per word. But : Mrs . Deborah Schnelder o< : M1nneap0Us. Minn .• may • achieve that distinction. She : won a contest back in 1958 by t describing Plymouth ears in t 25 words. Her prize was $500 • a month ror lire. The life ex· : pectancy experts figure ; s he'll collect $300,000, in time. , R-0ughly half of all hostage ; deaths occur during rescue •attempts that end s uch ! sieges. I the night in ~h~ People !> Republic o' China'! A. Not out in plain sight Those who mlg ht be so described are referred to over there as wild pheasants Q. Can an ostrich outrun u lion? A. Given a bit of a head start. it can. Q. Quick. name the onJy N aUonal Football League team without a scoreboard at both ends or 113 home field. A. The Pitt3burgh Steelers. Q. What proportion of the car /bike accldenta are blamed on the cycllat3? k Three out of four. Q. How many aUver bullets did the Lone Ranaer shoot durina hi5 career on radio and TV? Try that one. frlend-o. A. Exactly UM', alt. Accordinl lo I.be lat.ell public opt"lon po&W, many Am...tcaoa •rt '° diHOebanted wilh Lh• llkel1 D•mocratlc and ftepubOcan candtdatet for preai· dttnl that they'd welcome a chanre to vote for "None of tbe Abovt" thls November. Indeed. thl• dl1arunt1ement amona the electorate la the main tblng Rep. Jobo Anderson bas aoiog for blm. Oddly t'OOUib. the s ame pro bhun eldlt.I in the Sovlel Union. where the so called elec toral process leaves the vott.'r l) no choice when they me into the po lling booth i, to '"elC'<'t " the on l y <'an didates on th~ ballot And yet. a ct'o rd1ng t o Americu"s Kre mlin-watchers. di s enchanted Russians still manage to "vote Wlth their reet" by slaying home on Election Day Th•s has also been con· Mailbox firmed by a Soviet defector wbo WH once a hip oUtclal ol t.M poUtbw'o. TH£ DEP'ECTO&, who used to be a Communh·· Parly 1upervitor for teveral el~ dlatrlda, told my aaaoclate• Vicki Warren and Dale Van Alta bow wt deaf read the practice was. "In al the districts that l supervhed, as well u ln di&· tricu where the real results were known to me." be said. "belween 15 and 20 percent o( the voten declared thelr unwill- iogness to vote.·· How many actually persl.81. ln their lntenUon to boycott t.be spurious election proceu is not known. F\rst of all. it's against !he law for Soviet citizens to ab- stain from voting. Communis t Party activists are &addled with the job of getting people to the polls ror the rormal endorsement of party candidates THE SOVIET party back!. have lists or all voters In their districts. und check off each o~ as the vote Is caS'\. Those who ,, ' \ \,. \ ' I \ I \ don't lbow up.,.. Vbltld dwinl tbe day. DHplte thl• heavyband•d charade. our SOvlet tourct1 estimate that more than 80 million voten -about a third ol the adult populaUon -refuaett to vote tor lhe ofllclal Com · munilt Party candidate In elec· tlona ol the mid-1970.. Tbll wu. the aources said, a way of ex· pres•iluf oppoe.it!on to the gov •. emment. There could be other reasons. though. Soviet elections are held on Sundays, and a lot or Russ(ans use their day off to get drunk. according to a State Department source. THE TRUE number of Soviet <'illzens who vote or. more im· port anUy, the number who don't vote n ever reaches the blgshoc.8 In the Kremlin. Party bureaucrats. rearrul of losing their Jobs. "systematicall y ralslfy" the figures on voter turnout accordin g to our sources. Not long ago, one Kremlin of flc1al had the temerity lo sug. gest that more than one can· . \ \\ \ I . \ - I I ' ' '. dld•t• be off•r•d to the • • voter1." Later, a aon· Colhmalll eoclal or•antutlon quletJy ftelded a candidate for the Sovttt Parll&meot. Jult aia quiotly. be wu forced to drop out. FAKIH& IN CAal80DIA: Con· tudtcll•I recent opttmlatlc news repo'rb, Central In· teJUgence Agency analysu. Pff· diet that continuing famine la a virtual certainty in CambodJa. ··Only deaths and eml1ratlon can decrea11e the number ol peo- ple to be fed,'· the CIA report notes. And It makes clear that there is not enough food to go around. After a promi1Ln1 atart last fall. the ll)temational relief ef· fort in Cambodia is an danger of collapsing, as funds dry up and the attention of the great powers \urns to other areas of crisis. Meanwhile. the Cambodians' cupboard 1s bare. "Food stocks are virtuallv exhausted." the CIA reporttt . "No significant amounts of food will be availa· ble from crops grown In Kam· puchea !Cambodia> unlll next December." THE CIA PUTS the problem starkly: Almost 750,000 metric tons or fr>od and seed are needed The current crop will provide 56.000 tons at best. Even with the t'Ombined relief efforts of the Soviet bloc and Western a i:encit>s. then• will be a ... hortfall of aoout 200,00(1 tons of food and 60.000 tons or seed. Even a 26,000-ton shortfall. the CIA notes. would ·•Jower the caloric value of <An average rn· lion ~low lhe htarvation level." And even that ~rim est1mall' tti.sum~ ., d1strlbut1on system thal wou ld provide an '"avera~e" ration. In fact, ac· cording to a secret study, the ::.ystem 11> u shambles and dii.- tributJon hm; ull but cea1>ed. A PT ACRONYM: The Slatt: Department's Vietnam-Laos· Cambodia office has won a i.ardoni<' mckname in Foggy Bottom. Because of its apparent· ly unending diet of disaster. the VLC office is known as the Of· flee or Very Lo6t Causes. Don't Blame Judges for Defects • ID Law To the Editor : l have worked within our county's court system for almost ~ ye&.rb and believe that I am therefore qualified to comment on at least one aspect of Judicial elections. J have never done so in this manner before and do so now onJy because I feel that strongly tbat our judges. themselves. have been mis· judged by those who contend that they are loo lenient in their dealinf's with criminals An ever-increasing crime rate• and a growing dlsre~ard for society'i1 means or trying to con trol the conduct or each other. our laws. are cited as bein~ direct results of this lemencv And it 1s not unreasonable io draw th.is <'Onclus1on 1f indf:(.-d our Judges could righteously tx· held !IOlely responsible ror the inherent w,eaknes8CS 1n our system that afrordi, lhe crinunal something less m the way of punishment than we believe "fits the crime:· It struck m e e arly 1n my marshaling career that only the innocent come into our court.-; seeking justice. Justice, or coune. la about the last thing that the guilty want. They want out. They want ocr. They want acquittal, dismjssal or anything else they can manage to gel that is cheaper than the going price reaularl) charged for the crime tbat br1nga them there. And In tbiJ country, they have plenty ol expert help at bud to get them wbaL they want, If they can't pay lor lt, then we rurnlah it for free. SOllE OF it doesn't cost anytbinl at all. ll'• already there 1n tbe tonn of ambiguous law1, protective precedenta, confound._dly complex; In· terpretatlona and frequently frultraUn1 technlcallUet -all of wbJch must be reUsiouslJ' ob- served at all 1ta1ea of tbe pro- cee&qa, commenctna with t.be lnlt11l lnv11U•aUon and an-est. Virtually any lrr.aularlt.y Alona the line wt11 invariably tene to compromlte a caae to tbe beoellt ol the accused. But.. un- leu the pubUc 11 tborouahly tamlHar with au elem•ta ol • caH and 1ubNquot ~ev•lop­ ment.e, lt too often concS.m~ ~ judse when tbe criminal fatil to receive b1a Juat CSMer\I. "Some fQOI Juda• turned hhn Joote" we bHr. Whet actually t.tNt J&Ktae had no cholce In t.be matter. lft fact. Judtes have been held to blamt in such cate• when, ln lrut.b, It wu a Jury who arrived •Hhe dldppOlntlnf cleclifon. Some ~ to "throw <be HIHU O•t" with tbe bop• 8A41« ~....,., that lD dotq ao we~~~ 1bo9lan lmprov• ml'nt in the JUdiclaJ scheme ot thmg~ But take my word for It. based on heavy exposur~ and ex· penence. it won 't work that way because we would samply be rt'plar1ng them with other m o rtals who . &iven \he r 1rcurnstances as they exist. wiU be lawfully bound to perform the awful chore in esseoUally the ~a m c fai.hlon as those who are n o w c-har ~t>d with th l' rcl)pnns1bihty and who, in my vie w -and all the reeord.s Yt'ill 'ho~ -handll' 1t extremely ~l·tr. DONE. RHEA Marshal. Orange County :;:; 1t' roag 1 o lhc Editor . Your staff 1s certainly betng misled about the causes and ef· ft>cts of the ~·mile speed limit. In a recent editorial you said that the limit saves lives and lo(asoline. The fact is that it does neither The state has quit malt· ang clrums about the gas saving. and both the state and the reds are lying to us about the Uves saved. The 55·mlle speed limit Lil u political wue that haa nothing to do with safety or conaerva- tion. Jt is a fraud against the motorist. YOU ALSO said the Leg· 1slature should stand up asaln.lt the truck drivera, but they are the ones who. (or a change, are our friends . They know the fal.llty of the Umit At least 60 percent or all tickets iUU#d are ror speeding but ex· ~ss speed ii 14th on the list ot accident causes. Speed trapplq is an extort.loo scheme. It aervea only to ralte money for and glorify the bigoted and in· tolerant. • . can. on occasion. be an ex tremist. I was born 67 years ago in southwest Miuouri. J enjoyed "bill billy .. and other kinds ol music. and listened regularly to ·radio KVOO In Tulsa which he mentioned. Also. as a boy grow· 1111 into manhood an • narrow and blgo(ed religious environ· mcnt. J was taught that we ··~ood" people should. like o..-. triches. bury our heads in lhe ~and and pretend thal ~ex did nut t'lUSt. l waJS aware 1n th06e days that some ot the beautlful ballads which I most enjoyed were banned rrom radio play because they were deemed. by whom l never knew. to be sexually sug· gestive and therefore too "dlr· ty" ror public broadcasts . Believe It or not, the Joplin, Mla· souri radio station <WMBH!' once refused to allow tbe band l was pla)'inR in lO broadcast Uve from its little 1tudio "Tbe Sweetheart or Slama CbJ" lor thet reason! P£a.HAPS, In the mindl ol some. lbe pendulum la today s win gin& too far in the oppoe,lte'" dJrecUon. But one thins la cer- tain: 1be vast majority ol .a are no longer tryin& to pretend that sex does not exist. And I, ror one. believe that ii a poaiUve step ln the rl'ht dlrecUon. When we start teachln1 that sex ls good and really wonderful. whftJ associat ed with love, un· derstanding and 1dult reaponaJbillLy, I believe we will be well oo our way to "lett.l"I there." Such enlightened thlM· ing ls long overdue. I now have lhe Ume to Uateo to a 1reat deal ot radio lncludlns "country mualc" about Which Harvey wrote. Not once have I beard a eons broadcaat wldch I would describe H .. porao· 1racblc." u coulder myMlt Qa&a a.ct to make a jodcm-t tn that area becaUM ot tome aqua~p wtt.b pora u tt ba-... dllpl~ ln moYI• IDd t.m ..... tucbMH..a1s.> Tbll 1udl DM to tbe lnescapa· bl• conchalion tbat my old Mend bu lndeed buried b1a bead tD the 1ud. Except for the drunk drive!'. the blueat problem oo our rreeweya today are tbe alow driven in the f11t lanes. Yet tbe CHP ll unwlllllna and unable Co take eotNCUve 1ctJ01t. They UM the llow driven to help .,.. the vtctima of tMlr malldoul heruament. t.lcket.lnC thoM wbo protest or try to pua the w.,ai 1lowl)Okel.1'her. is eooup trou· blt for drtvera on the frteWa1S now without addlna man U · WJLLIAll CORKRltLL CUESTEaKINU'-~-81~••4 trapmcnt. To ~ l:dl&ol'~ Defe•4• •-•~ T•CS KeDMd1'1 reHat •P· To lhe Ed.ltor: P••~=· ID LOI An1elt1. Paul Harvey hu been ooe ol aJOft &be comAeal but ct.Dy my favortC4 commtll&atore lot 8ellA Abluf, bo&b •• • many yean. But I 6te't lmow •"9Wlllit.ND.. ...., until readlQi bb Jlay JI cclum0 MCU''• ~ ftlel II about country mualc In the D.i1y our 1t•t•. but to PT'Mtrate Pilot t.bat we ~ up In &be b.lmMlf Mlol'9 tM ~mdr. same area and, apparentlr. l•bUIDi .-d a.&e--. pr1 'J 1bued mutual JntertaU as lat t.biem ta. nm ot tbe ov.a al· y{)utm. Nor did I rtallae \hat be tite, .a..ald hit bit eleded, '8lultt (' the intelligence of the most 1g· nor ant o( peQpll' Teddy offered the 1ota }1> "their •pecial rights.·· Jus~ what right~ 1bould be gJven any se1o1 ment of our a -ciety because or their sex· ua. preference? l happen to pre· fer male companions. so must I be shunted uJde as aome kind of kook and my "rights" restrict· ed? He then proceeded to prom· 1t>e the women or California that they. too. would have their "rights." sbould he be elected. I. for one. am sick of the ERA. its threats and blackmail, but have been naive enough to believe that the individual states wert- allowed to tor not) vote for the raliflcatioo ol same. FINAU. Y, fighting frantically ror the ChJcano vote. Kennedy promised that be would tear down the border re.nee&. thus al· lowing any and all Mexicans to migrat.e to this country. I have close ties with many Chicanos here. legally, with proper visas. A more kind and loving group of people are hard to come by and I cherish their friendship. They want their countrymen lO enjoy the trulta ot their labor (and Mexicans are hard workers) but only t.hrouCb an orderly process, not a •lid and irresponsible fllght, such u we are witnessing with the Cuban refugees. MARY 0 . MOORE f(~p ••e Cata To &lie Edie.or: Tbla letter IJI pertainln.g to .your• Ma.y 29 article, "Cat- alyat?" I lhlnk that Bruce Hoppma 1bould IO and t.de • bop! His tdea ., natal And wbat'1 more. Jlej.sler ·Pa.rt la k'Do'lm 11 a Wild Ule ~aaary, not for cats to eo and klU U. 1qwrrell, nor do we to Laiuaa S.ub wut these Ht.I ruan&al around. It'• b..t ~ when we get 1tray dad on our lawn, and leave &blfi' &rede mark beblnd. If th• cata .,.._. a..runolnc, we'll have more trade m&rkl. It'• a1'o Dice to take • walk in the pan, and tee the tQ.uJrTell. and other We. And aa lClftl u one doMo't entice them, (c.be acautmal they wm do no harm to a~. So lf you woWdn'l mln=' a little m ... qe to CltJ r, llr. Robel't ""'°• dcta't bother! Keep your 11n1 cat.a. MRS. SYLVIA WOODHOUSI COHEN :w ......... . hllyN••• .... • C TWENTY·FIVE CENTS ~oulity Shelves Na1·1neo Health Tests t a, ,...Ta.AVlllN complatnt1 have develo,.d ral10.....t on • mlldemeanor llanaaement Dim'tet pu1bed the A plea ol no contest would not health. property and emotional •• .._ ... ..., a•ODI.,.. Nlld.au. public nulaance eoaiplalnt a11o complaint about chemical be admiulon ol guilt but could damacee u the result of plant l Pl.. fw ...U.. blood and Or. ThomH Prtnder1a1t, bu been postponed. eml11lom at the plant when result 1n a fine up to $500. operaUoas. lbe 1aid. luap of ,..ld11t1 Uy ... DMt h •ad of t be county • 1 N armco Attorney Bruce some ao raictent. agreed they In .addition to the criminal Dr. Prende.Jiut 1ald w--.. 1 eoat. ....... Nanllco •awtaa. CplclemtolaC)' and DtMa•• c.on. Corbett of lrv1ne aaid arralp-were bothered enough to Co into complaint, another Irvine day tbat in tion to preparlq lee. Ila-. 1*ID JM Off~ trol Department called off the meat ortct.aallY set for Kay 30 la court. lawyer. Ellen Wlnterbottom, baa for the neighborhood m·edlcal U. Oraale ~ llMltb health tea ti that had been scheduled now for June 20. Corbett aald today the com-notified the pl&lt1ca plant that tests -eougbt by realdents and rtlnillDt. 1cheduled Wednelday. "We are in the process of db· plaint la the aame type l.ISued to she represent.a about 80 Costa members of California Cam-.U.Utt plant at• Vic· He said problem• had de-cusslng the complaint with the the driver ol a truck with .tlat Mesa resident.a who plan to rue a paip for Economic Democraey tori a Ave. hi becoJne the tarcet veJoped in formula Una a c · District Attorney's office," be appean to be "dirty exhaust." sult in fede:ral court. -be la researching county and of ... .....,... Who elala1 it ~ Uonnair. to be ottered to e said. "Jt appears t.be complaint "We will not plead 1ullty and That suit, expected to seek state records in search of area ducee odon a.ad allqe that an espected to participate. bas no merit." we probably won't plead no con· stlll unspecified general and medical irregularities. lnorcllnate number of medical Meanwhile, Narmco'a ar· The South Coast Air Quality test," he said. punitive damages. will .i1ege (See TESTS. Page AZ> \ ................... THE VAL~ARD FAMILY HEADS FOR NEW LIFE CUban Refugees .......... Nonna •nd Qladp,. Cuban Refiigees Arrive in County ·. By JODI CADENHEAD °' .. .,....,"'-' ..... The first wave of Cuban refugees trickled into Orange County early today -weary. homeless and hopeful after enduring weeks of huneer and high seas to nee their homeland. News that the 18 refugees would be arriving from Florida to live in Orange County reached Cuban communi· ty groups Wednesday afternoon. They are the Cuban refugees destined for Orange County and more are expected to arrive today and in the coming weeks, authorities said. SPOKESMEN FOR THE Cuban Association and the Cuban Assistance League in Orange County said that they had been storing food, clothing and furniture for more than a month in anticipation that refugees would be arriving here. None of the 18 Cubans have relatives living in Orange County and many le.rt families behind. Manuel Vallandres, his wife, Norma a nd their 8-year· old daughter, Gladys, were among tho first arrivals seek· ing asylum at the Peruvian embassy in Cuba. They lived for 12 days at the embassy surviving the sickness and salvaging the scarce small packages of food that the United States shipped in every day. explained V allandres. "MY WIFE WANTED TO leave. It was too much hunger and too much 1ickness," said the truck driver. "We squeezed the Juice frqm leaves of oranae trees to live." He 1aid that be hopes to find a job IOOD. "I want liber- ty and a place to Bettle my family," be said. Anxious families from the Loa -An1eles area crowded . Los Angeles Intemattlooal Airport terminal seeking the familiar faces ol r8'aUves that many bad not seen since Castro cattte to 1>0wer two decades ago. Orlando Tallon of HunUncton Park fouaht back tears as be embrace,d the aoo be left lo Cuba 10 yean ago. urrs BEEN A VE&Y TEll&IBLE Ume," he said. "But ll'a wonderful lo see him again." .While fainilles from Los ~eles wept and embraced, retueees destined for Orange County Jathered quietly to leave for tbe Cuban/Club in Orange, where a temporary shelter WU prepared. ~I OOVLDN'T ltlPPOllT the system uaymore," 1ald Dano Duwirnt.. wllo woned lD Cuba u an accountant and inte~ .._.-:l'i(Q.t fl the 10GllC people are dluatl&fted." The formw, N..._al Leap baseball player said that be wauld be P'ateful for any work. Al the refUl9lt 1huffled into a waiUna van, Albert Herrar-, whole-.. wu unable to 1et lDto the Peruvian embUI)', aaked reporters tf there wu any way to let her know that be WU all rllbt. I Computer Error Blamed Vote Snafu Located By DAVID KVTZMANN Of .. OMty ~ ~wtf Computer obstinacy and ballot mixups -and not the county's new Sl.S million vote counting system -were responsible for foulups which have delayed final returns from Tuesday's balloting, officials said today. In fact, elections chief Shirley Deatop said she still wasn't cer· lain when the results or two pre- cincts -in Anaheim and Fullerton -would be tabulated, meaning Orange County would likely be the last county in California to tabulate final re- sults. Despite the delays, which could be the longest in recent county tustory, both observers and officials defended the performance of the Martel Vote Counting System. saying it was blameless for problems plaguing election returns here. Mrs. Deaton said her office was quite satisfied with the 90 Foley Tract People Flay Assessments City offi°cials were charged with excessive spenjling this week when they announced as- sessments will go up S4.l per home next fiscal year in the SO-house Foley Development tract off Smalley Road near Sunflower Avenue.. Residents of Tract 9901 live in a north·city assessment district formed in 1978 to maintain plants fronting the perimeter of their walled community. City CouncU members set the assessment fee at $98.24 per home Monday night to pay for maintenance by city crews. This year, the families paid only $57 each. City staff members blamed the increase on dying plants that were replaced and on a budget deficit resulting from under· assessment this year. Ed Rath of 1025 Damascus Circle objected to the higher fee. Saying he ls in the garden- supply busines.s. Rath noted that the fees will raise a total of nearly $5,000 to maintain less than a thlld-acre of area already planted and watered by a aprlnkler system. "I don't know where thole costs come from,•' he told council members. "You cost.a are hlcber than if we farmed it out to an ln· dependent contractor.•' Rath charged that the city ap· parenUy ls amQrtizlnl a number of administrative costs in setting the fee. Coupcll me mbers 1u11ested that Rath secure private bids on the malntenance projects for re- view by the city .. Watson Jo.ins Board of ~BS new machines, into which were fed the results or voting in 2.061 precincts throughout the county .. Election officials contend, just as they had predicted, that the m achine processed all ballots by 2:30 a.m. Wednesday. It is at this point, however, the problems began to emerge. Mrs. Deaton said that when computer tapes bearing the elec· tion results were fed into the county's main computer in downtown Santa Ana for a printout. 38 precincts would not go through. "We don't know why," she !\aid For 36 of those precincts, the information was transferred on- to new tapes and fed successful· ly into the Computer Sciences Corporation computers Ln the county's finance building in the Civic Cent.er. These returns were eventually added into the cumulative vote count by late Wednesday mom· ing. Mrs Deaton said it wasn't known sf the problem was in the main computer system or with the Registrar of Voters com- puter equipment at another loca· lion in Santa Ana The registrar's computer was Lois Cieszinski, cafet eria manager at California School in Costa Mesa, gets retirement kisses Crom her old boss. former California principal Bill Hamilton (left), and the school's current principal, Larry Alford. Her retirement at the end of this term was marked today at the school she has served since it opened 18 vears a20. Tour Bus Pl11nges . In Ravine; 20 Die JASPER. Ark. <AP> -A tour bus from Texas with 33 aboard careened off a "suicide curve" and plunged 50 feet down a rocky ravine in a mountainous area ol northern Arkansas to- day, ldlllnc at least 20. "In 27 years with the state police, It's the worst I've ever seen," 1ald Capt. Billy Bob Davls, commander of Troop I ol tbe Arkauu State Police at H'arriaoo. •'It loolled as thousb the brak• appAHatly bad failld," Davllaakl. Frank Wbe, admlniatrator ol tbe Boone County Ho.pltal al Harri.lea. Aid 1J were treated tbere for~ ... One wu lilted ta crtt1cal coodltion. The condl· tton ot the others was not Im· mediately available. State police said the passengers were all from the Dallu area. Some victims still were trapped under the bua and 1ur- roundlna Umber four boun after the accident. Davia aald the but wa1 north· bound down a ateep blll ol the two-lane Arka ... Hi.hway 7. a aeenlc route. It traveled •Iona a ditch on the rtiht 1lde ol the hlcbway for more than 200 feet. then bit a culvert and veered olf the road, llDCUng nose down in rutced tern.in 50 feet below the 1boulder ol the hichway. he said. Keith Hopper, a spokesman for c.tra1 Tua.a TrallWQ'S lo Dalta1, aald tbe but was chartered by Mn. R. W. Jacobs of lrvtng, Tex, The touriatl ap- parenUy '1had no a{fWation-with eny organlsed iroup." Hopper declined to comment fffDE DETAILS on atate police repart.a that the brakes failed, ~ f1'IT"ll ''}''°'mM:!' Davls said the driver end ~l-. • • v~ three or four pUMQ&era WWI Toda~·· DaUJ Pilot delalli thrown ~ ot the bus. At leut Onn11 CCiUiifj Joti'opportuaiU. four wen found oo tM lilatawQ'. and ~ tGellidGM m 1 Davia Mid U.. driver. 'trliO Ml ll·P•P DllCulM, "Jobi." not belD ldlntlfted, WU ..... ---------......... --= ....... UM d911d.~--~, used to transfer the election re- sults processed by the Martel machines and put on cassettes to magnetic tapes which the CSC computers downtown would use for making printouts of results. "We sure hope to unravel the probl e m ," the e l ec ti on supervisor said. Because the county had no previous experience with the Martel machines in use for th~ first time in Orange County -1t has become more difficult to t~ack down the problem. of. f1cials said. _In the c~ of two other pre- cmcts-still untallied as of Uus <See DELA 'YS, P•ge AZ> Mesa Eyes 'lhree Lots For Project City officials have begun con· demnaUoo proceedings to t.a.ke three downtown lots as part of a $1 .3 m1lllon project to widen and realign the busy. troublesome in- teraHtion of 17th Street at Newport Boulevard. A half .dozen small stores and shops are squeezed onto the property owned by Steven and Waltertice. Tenants ot the business struc- tures have retained Attorney John Dawson of Newport Beach to secure relocation and other benefits expected from govern- ment in such a condemnation move. The property on the south side or 17th Street will be required to widen it between Orange Avenue and Newport Boulevard to a six· lane divided thoroughfare and loop it to the south to meet West 17th Street. says Bruce Mattern. director of public services. Mattern told city coun cil m embers this week that the Boices had been offered more than $350,000 for the parcels dotted with auto ser vice firms, a donut shop and a car "stereo out- let. Tbey refused the offer. he said. The project. ~xpected to be un- der construction in late 1981, or early 1982. is· financed by Orange County and the city. Each entity i.s picking up about 50 percent ol the costs. Mattern said. The project is an attempt, he pointed out, to improve badly needed east-west traffic flows in the city. Coast Weatbe_, Fair ton11ht through Friday except for late evening and e.arly morn· ln1 cfoudlnesa. Lows tontcbt 41 at the beaches and ~ inland. Hi1bs Fri· day mkU01 to mld 705. IN819ETe8AY • " o.itf ...... IUlt ~ .. ~., ..... :::• ,, ... MN lfll TFdlJ • .... ., ta. ,.,..... report. ed .... Mid, lDehldtd .... -ord•n Ind 91•~lnitaliola, oom •oa 8JD0111 ebemleaJ werbn. ·•row<...-.> ..... ... ,eaJnM .t.........., r. ... • o•., two rear1i" • aald. "That'• not v..,, mpNllive lD lerm1 ol a lot ot problem1." Prender1Ut taJd IM al.lo la r• ... rcblQI bUUI aad deetb daU for tbe ~ IUl'fWlld. ln1U..p&a, · He Mid bl Mekl lnfe>rmaUon lndlc.U... am•uaJ DWDben of deathl. premature delivery or maltormatlcm lo infant.a lo tbe tract.a turrOUDd.m. Narmco. •·We would Uie to turn up sometbiftl that mJabt lift 111 sometJlilQa to work on," he Mid. ''I'm ~lorelun11towhat we should test for. "The only thlncs we have at this point are symptoms as- aoc1ated with 1mella. Tbole can ca UH eye lrrttaUon or aore throat, but don't represent. a serious health problem. SID SOFFER PRESENTS HIS CASE ATO' CAR He Turne Tlfer In Fight Witts City Over Pink Caddle "But to those wbo have them, It's an unpleasant experience." -Flap Foments So// er Still Suing Mesa Fro• p,._. A I DELAYS. • • morntn1-problem1 were of another nature. In Anaheim, for Instance, the wrona ballot.a were Hot to a pre· clnct with 447 re&.lJtered voten, officlalasald. By ARTH\JR R. VINSEL CM 111it Daily ...... ,..., Vintage Cadillac car buff Sid Soffer has h is p rnk , 1962 Eldorado back Loday after the city ol Costa Mesa, which had 1t towed away May 9, relented and agreed to pay $123.50 m ac- cumulated Impound fees The city had to swallow an ad· ditlonal charge for towing the Newport Beach raconteur's beloved buggy back to 900 Arbor St.: Wednesday where It was s~1zed, after he refused to pick 1t up himself and drive 1t home. · '"I told them I'd Jw.t rather they put It rlght back where It bt•longed," 11ays the bearded owner or temporarily boarded· up Sid's Blue Reel, a Newport Beach restaurant-nightclub dat- . mg back some 20 years. The trials and tribulations may not be over, he suggested today, because the older model Cadillac, one of 18 he owns as tn· vestments, came back to him Wednesday ~rtemoon with an ex· tra he says It didn't have before -a big, ugly crunch down the passenger side "I'm happy as hell ," quips Soffer, who contends the city of Costa Mesa acted 111egally and employed a 72-hour parking law he maintains has been found un· const1tut1onal in seizing his '62 Cadillac Soffer 1s scheduled to ap· pear in U.S D1str1ct Court in Los Angeles July 22 fo r tnal of his 1978 suit against the city over the towing of three Cadillacs un- der that !tame law lie is seeking $100,000 in punitive and general damages c ha rging de privation of his civil rights and the process of law and believes he wlll be up- held by the court. ''They are 100 percent • wrong," he aaya of the city and its contention of Juatiflcallon In the towing away or hJs cara and. the arksome 72-hour parking ban under which he waa cited. Wednesday'• act.Ion by the city mark• the second Ume ll haa re· leased Soller's seized cars, tow- ing them home and picked up lb.e towing and impound fees owed Harbor Towlne Company. ''I'm through playing Mr. N l c .e Gu 1. " n o w , Soffer declared. ' He had been acheduled for a hearlng Wednesday before City • Manager Fred Sorsabal on his contentions the city was In vtola· lion In the May 9 ticketing and towing ol the car. which was or: d~red by a young police cadet on p11rkln1 Control duty. ThrOUJhout the Soffer vPri;ua ( DAILY PILOT - the city of Costa Mesa ep1sooes over the put two years, the city has steadfastly declined lo com· ment on legal aspects of the matter. City officials have agreed on each occasion to pay the cosl'l normaJly paid bl the car's owner on advice o the city at· tomey. There have been three city attorneys since the first towing incident City Manager Fred Sorsabal informed Soffer in a lette r, he says, that since the city 1s re- turning his CadJlla~ there ls no need now lor a further hearing. Soller disagrees. He says be wants to hear the city admit its alleged guilt. as he contends next month's federal court trial in Los Angeles will estabU.h beyond a doubt. Soller is a frequent visitor at the Orange County public law llbrary. ''I don't feel It was their option to do away with my bearlng," he says ol the vacated Wedneadaf. appearance before Sorsaba . "They have now fully deprived me or my due process ... Soifer says Harbor Towing Company contends his Cadillac was already damaged when It was towed in to their Impound lot May 8, but he disagrees, even though he agrees In spirit Wllh a police report. The report written when It .-vas hauled away for allegedly being parked on Arbor Street for more than 72 hours without being moved -which Soffer denlea - cites overall poor condition of the car. •'Overall poor condition d oesn't m ean &c rapes and dents," declares Soller , who In· slats they must be repaired by som eone and that someone won't be him. 01 that total, 237 voted Tuea· day. However, Instead of cuUnc ballots for candidates ln the 71.at Assembly District u they 11hould have. the voters were given baJlota for the 89th As· sem bly District. Thia means the voters In the West Anaheim precinct.a will not have their votes counted In partisan races for which they shouldn't have been votlng in the first place. The votes they cut for jud1es. presldentJaJ candJdates and U.S. Senate candidates would be tallied became theae were coun· tywlde races. Mn. Deaton Hid the ml•· take-and aubHquent canceled votes-would not alter the out· come ol any races. The loulup wu apparently caused by a computer aulcnlnJ the wrong ballot cards to the Anabelm precinct. Bentoo VeJach, foreman of the Oran1e County Grand Jury and a n electlon observer. said it waa hla lmpreMlon the Martel vote countlna mactllnea performed wen but that computer problems were probably the result ol try. lng to wed new systems for the first Ume The result, Vejach said, wu that the two dldn 't mesh well. VeJach, who was amon1 live observers from the 1rand J~ at the Reptrar ol Voters olflce on election night, said he expect. ed the computer related prob- lems to be solved by the next countywlde election In No· vember The Martel machines are ln use In other areas such as Tulsa County, Oklahoma, Texas and a n o t her aoutbern atates, Re1l1trar of Voters Al Olson said. ~--JUST BREAKING----... Late &Unu /rom toda11'1 world and naUonol Mtot Israeli Troops A tt Guerrillas in Leba n TEL A VIV, larael (AP> -JsraeU troopa attacked Palatln· ian guerrilla poelUon1 In Southern Lebanon today, tbe Uth an· nlversary or the start of the 1987 MlddJe East war Tbrou1hout Israel, troops were on full alert. The military command announced that an ltrael1 force struck the port or Sfdon durtne the momln1 and killed a number of guen11las. An army spokesman declined to comment on a report from Beirut that Israeli ml11lle boat.a llred rockets at a beachllde cof. lee house near Sidon, klllln1 one Lebanese clvlllu and wound· Ing three. The laraeli attack waa aimed at det.trrin1 1u.mUa attackl on Israel and prevenun1 the ,uerrWu from orsanl.llnf NCb ae· Uona, tbe apoketman Hid. ~ Gas T.u a111 •aelc f • c.,.,.,. . /flesa E nt.reiprftleUr Jose Alvar.00 '. bu gone into business for himself. He aathered up all the old magazines he could f lnd and la aelllna them for 10 cents apiece from the front lawn of h1a home on 21st Street in Costa M esa. However. the coonskin cap he's wearing isn't for sale at any price. be says. Female U.S. Agent Slain in Holdup Killer Facts Sought LOS ANGELES (AP> -An apparently coincidental hojdup. ahoottna hu reaulted In the lint death in the Une or duty ol a woman Secret Service a1ent, the Secret Servtce •aid today. Agent Julie Y Cross, 218. who had been with the Secret Service leas than a year and bad Just transferred to Los Angel~ l u t week after her matial training, was shot to death -apparenUy wlth her 1hot1un -as she ataked out a suspected coun· terfelt operation Wednesday In Westchester, near Los Anaelea International Airport. Her partner, Larry Bulman, was not injured Spec:laJ Agent Larry Sheale, who ls In charge of tbe Loa Angeles Secret Service office, told a news conference today that the Secret Service is olfer - lng a 125.000 reward for anyone who supplies Information lead· Ing to the arrest and conviclJon of her killers Sheale said AgenlB Cross and Bulman were alttlng in tbetr car when two men. about 30·35 years old. approached them and de· manded money Bulman told them &hey were law officen. and one ol the robbers fllppanUy replied that he waa • lawman too. Sheafe said "There's no doubt In my mind they knew who the agents were." Sbeafe s aid. But be added he Is convinced the robbery attempt had no con· necUon with the counterfeiting operation. "It appears that these two black males simply were at· temptlnl to commit an armed robbery on a male and female seated In a car on a d ark street." Sheafe said. There were 11everal witnesses, Including residents of the apart· ment buHdlng which was under ' surve111ance. Sheafe said they heard the shots but didn 't speclly what they saw He said one of the bandits reached Into the car and 1rabbed A1ent Croes' shotnn, and ap-parenUy abe waa kTUed with her weapon. However, he said. an u ........ SLAIN NEAR LA AIRPORT U.S. Agent JuU. CrOH 81 DELOllES saoou 1aW1N Gt-.0.., "--- City and county law enf0tte. ment officers are domg a good job in coontlnaUng their aearch ror the Freeway Killer, and a Hillside Stran&)er-like t.aak fotte IJn 't needed, Supervisor Philip Anthony said Wednftday. Format.Ion ol a t.ask force at If rat seemed to Ant.bony "like rt may be tbe answer" to solving about 41 apparently connected murders, the First Diatrlct supervilor aald. But Anthony told fellow 1upervbon he rejected the idea of calllnl for a task force after talkln1 to Orange County Sheriff Brad Gata. •'The sheriff asaured me there Is excelle nt coordi nation between his office and the r.ltlea." Anthony said. Supervisors mstead decided to autopsy ~ have to be con· urge the public to come forward ducted to be aUl't!. with Information about tile kill-· ln1s. One bandit pointed a 357· In addition. an overall fund maanum revolver at Bulman. ihould be establis hed to reward and the agent beaan to stru&&Je purveyora or information lead- w1th tum. At that pomt, the other Ing to the arrest and conv1cllon would be robber grabbed the of the slayer or slayers. they shotgun ~ause of the scuffle. uad. Bulman was unaware of what Tt\e Freeway K i ll e r 1i. was happerung to Aaent Crosa, believed to have strangled or Sheafe aaJd . sufrocatoo about 41 young m en ·vhose bodies have been found Bulman was knocked to the a Io n g h ca v 1 I y tr ave I e d pavement durang t.hc i.truggh.'. d ed b hoto roa wa)it'. then was stunn Y 8 s .un Bodies have been found in rave blast that went off near his head, Southern California counties. Sheafe said. He lay still and the Anthony said he firs t con· assailants apparently left him aldered uklng for a task force for dead. Sheare said along tbe lines or the Hillside A ft er the s hooting, othe r Strangler investigation effort Secret Service agents moved In while talking to a reporter al an and arrested Thomaa Michael election nJght party Pens In the unreleated coun· But he said he scuttled the terfe1t case. Agents seized f7.000 Idea after receiving Gates' a&· in counterfeit $20 bUls, Sheafe •urances that there already Is said. sulllcient coordination among the poUce a,encles Involved. In Washington, Secret Servtce Anthony said the sberilr told spokesman Jack Warner aald him tbe reaJ problem in findm, the klWna wu the fi.nt aucb ln the killer was "lack or good Secret Service biatory. evidence and leads to follow." aUI' TllS DSllOCSATIC 1ovemor, aad eovtronmental • • • • * • lfOUPI. ~ NtMea dJa tbt dtftat ol Propoetuoo 11, which sot " ~ ot lhe ~. -ProDos1Uoe 1 .... mWkja park Ud C'GSlll'YeUae boGd meuare, Wbieltlft4'1pereal.• Brown bad partleularlY _ ltakecl bll ---~ 1, nlda iDtludtid 1DOMY ror· flab ~. WUdllle ...,__., water COAMrVadaa -e&eaaup, Md .......... recl1m1UO.-part of bit 1mWJoUI ••reoewabM ~ .. procram. ~ park boDclt uauaUy PaN routilMly, the .. renewable re· tOUre." plan· provoked oppo11Uoa from powerful IJ'OUPI - farmers, klaen and tbe uw a.amber ol Commerce -and ap- pamtly was rt11pcoalble for the meume'• defeat. Pn>bably tbe clay'• blaest wbmerl were Ute loolely or· ••n.1.red. thiD.ly fl.naneed tenant. elderly a.ad liberal ll'OUPI tlwt op. poeed PraposlUoo 10. Despite 1 bigb-powered advertlaing eampa.tgn tbat claimed the * * • * • * Jamill Ai'rns at Public Pensions . . LOS ANOEL!!S (AP> -Howard Jarvll. &eelDiQI undaunted" bJ u.e cnaabinc defeat ol hia income tu cut proposal, says bli next initiative wW --' to limit p.-blic pen.siou -a.ad be mllht aim anotw cme at IOYennn•t speDdi.Qc. "I am not going to take any rest whatsoever aa lont as I'm allve, ·• the '1&-year-o&d leader of the tax revolt -a movement wbose status ls in doubt alter Tuesday's electioD -said in an in· ta'vlewWednesday. "J want to pass another amendment. I want to put a chain around the poUUctana' necks so they can't bankrupt the public." Jarvis' mood seemed to have changed since Tuffday night, when he bitterly promised to .. shove it up the ears" of public employee un· ions for leading the successful opposition to his .1uv1s Proposttic:m 9 income tax reduction. He paid a backhan~ complime.nt Wednesday to public employee groups, saying they • ran a very, very well-planned and a very good campaign, despite the fact that for the most part it was totally ~t." Proposition 9 would have cut state income tax rates iD ball and reduced state revenues by mott than S4 billion a year. . It got only 39 percent of the statewide vote and didD't carry a single county. The election came lesa than two years after the overwhelming passage of the Proposition 13 property tax cul that made the squat, bull-ve>Aced Jarvis a celebrity. Jarvis said his next initiative i.s still being drafted and mipt be ready t.o submit to the state for circulation in a couple of months. He said it would limit the pension of future public employees to "somewhere near" the amounts drawn by comparable workers in private industry. • "Nobody knows how much deficit there is in the pension fund but it's in the.hundreds of millions," Jarvis said. "It will have to be paid, and because they can't pay it on the property tax and can't raise the sates tax, the only alternative Is the income tax." Asbestos Firm Freed of Damages LOS ANGELES (AP> -A Superior Court judge bas ruled that it would be inappropriate for a jury that awarded $1.2 million in general damages to a worker who allegedly suffered asbestosis to also levy punitive damages ( against the asbestos ) manufacturers. STATE Tbe jury bad been scheduled to begin tbe puniUve damage phase of the case Wednesday, but Judie Earl F. Riley said before the proceedings 1 got under way that he felt a punitive award would be wrong S1 .tlilffon A•ked ii• Drafl1 Sttit SAN DIEGO (AP> -Tbe family of a San Diego man has flied a $7 million wrongful death suit gJ:OWing out of a Polish jetliner crash that left 8'l persona dead last Much, inc:hid:lq a U.S. boxing team. · Yrenio .. Junior" Robles, 40, was one of tbe boxing coaches who ·died in the fiery crub near Ute Warsaw airport. Tbe JaWIUit w11 filed in federal court by Robles' former wile Margaret Ojeda of National City. l'.ar-ro..,.d Sdaool 01'. ... i• ~A C...19 · LOS ANGELES t AP> -Despite objections from tbe American Civil Uberties Union, a Superior Court judge bas approved a Board ol EducaUon plan to relieve overcrowding by fUIUdq some schools year-round. Scbool attorney Peter James wd the ruling Wednesday by Judge Paul Egly, Laguna Beach, ipean.a the plan could go into ef· feet at some elementary and junior h\gb schools July 7. W...a• Raf'ftl ac He•.-for f;fdn-111 SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -Five men burst into a home for the elderly, pistOI-wbipped them and raped a 61·year~ld blind woman before fleeing with about $100, police aaid. "Every time you think you've leetl it all, sometbine like this happens," Capt. Joseph Lordan said Wednesday. WELOSTWAll trip wim Cdntinental's Super Saven. They'd work for ~wo.JUSl ca1J your travel agent or Continental. Seats ate limiud. So don't put it off any longer. Lose some wait with Continental. If your Dad's an English Leather man, we've got a twlce- te"lflc gift Idea. With any $6 purchas6 of English Leather, a famous csltoonlst will draw your caricature In just one minute. Now, Dad can have his favorite cologne and your picture to . remember you by. . • t measure woald •»or apartment ~ Wblle ~ 'f • • reaaonable controls,·• It sot ODl.Y as pel'cellt Of tbe vote lliiil failed to " carry111nOecount1. : ••Renters have arrived u a foi'ce ba O.utonal• :pouuc.:~ · declared t.naat lobb7ilt steobm Hoperaft. wbo bdd9cf'U.. No-· ' oa·lO ca!OP&lo iD Northern Calllon!a. He said tenant poupe would,..,... propoall for a 0 r.ters' bill of rtgbta," inchadlnJ proted:loD ••atmt ~ without cause. Similar proposal• bave been defeated repeatedlt ln the Legl.llature. TllE DAY ALSO PROVIDED a measure ot vladieation (Of ac:· ' tlvist Tom Hayden, foc:us ot a flnaJ.week attack by real estate groups wbo portrayed bim as the sinllter force behind tbe No-oo-10. "It .-s a tremendous 9idory for renters, who I hope will ., become effective as a political foree in Californla, .. Hayden. said as , a statement. ''f hope it will be the beginning of meetinp between • renterl' organiz.ations and bul1den to see what we can do in com· ' mon oo the whole question of affordable houJlng. • • -Divine .JolJ Some look for water, some oil, some gold. But Tom Harmon. a Monterey Pacific Telephone employee, uses copper divining rods to locate lost underground cables. He learned "witching art." he says, from an old cowboy in Big Sur Mountains. • • • eo.te Mnua nsldlq Mrtll ol tlae IU Dte10 P'reewQ are ....... abaat I CtN'dlP to enet _,. IOl't ol ·~ aCboci) ,..., ............ bodaoOcl. , . 1be iehool dlltrkt, -... , boQiht • KNI there , , for two ICt.oola thet.....,.,... "Mat. ,.. Now .. falllil6el --~few bUltq to tcboola re· moved from tM Mtpbar by the freeway and buly ,.. • atreet.t wtu.out ildewall&I or thoee tmpacled b)' South Cout Ptaaa tnftk. ~. Dlltrtct otneta1.t note that all but 10 ol their acre1 h.avebieelllOld. One otnclal opined 1l would be "political .Welde" tor dlitriet ~ to build oo the nmainlna parcel -•Jtboillh capital 1..-rowment fuadl are readily avalla· .. we -When oUwr dlatrtct tchocNI are beln1 c10Md becauile ~ c1ecun1aa enrollment. •• And the 9Choola aervlna lbe north Mesa nelahborhood are fUJed nowhere oear capacity. they report. ; Bear 8treet Elementary, built for 316, houaes 300 atu· 1' dents; P~ Elementary has a capacity of m and ,, enrolls 3'5; Davit Middle School, built for 800, will enroll ··· 500 next September and TeWlnkle Middle School wfll house Din a f acWty built ror 1,2.85. Because of tM unuaual safety problems, the board ol trustees might want to conaider some modllication in lhe busing fees for this area. But it appears that, unfortunate 1SS It may be resi· dents in the growing residential area must face the same low-cost tWle to which others must dance as school ln· come wanes. 'Happy Mesa Tradition Here in Southern California. with the exception of the..r Tournament of Roses and Capistrano's swalJows virtual· · )y anything that happened last year and the year before becomes a tradition. . Now in i~ 35th y~ar, the Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions Club Fish Fry 1s a community celebration perhaps not so well known outside its home cities as those but justly deserving or the title. The Fish Fry is ~ell· entrenched indeed. Since a bunch or energetic young men fresh from · World War ll service and eager to boost their fast· growing community conceived it, the Fish Fry has grown steadily in !)Cope. · From the humble beginnings or 1946 that netted SI.200 to build the community baseball field in Lions Park the Fish Fry has steadily increased its offerings in both com· munit} good times and year round service through funds . raised. · Th~ event in Lions Park last year raised nearly $.50,000 to benefit a number or worthy causes. principally programs for youth and care and preservation of eyesaght and hearing. .. Inflation may make some types of family fun a lux· • u~y these days, but this weekend's 35th running of the Fash Fry and Parade offers plenty in variety. some of it ' free for the watching and listening. And a percentage of what you do pay for, from fish ctinners to carnival rides and other concessions is ah in· vestment plowed right back into your community that re· J turns dividends for years ahead. Water Bills Rising Costa Mesa's water bills will go up 25 percent after July 1. a move considered necessary by officials who cite rising water import costs and hikes in what it costs to pump from city wells. The increase will move the average family's bill up from the current $16·$18 every two months to about S20·S24 for an identical period. Over in lluntington Beach, residents pay about Sl8 during the same period; the average Fountain Valley family pays about.,$22; and down in Newport Beach they pay about $20. • Newport City officials hint that in July, their rates. : too. will go up. . Mesa Consolidated Water District last raised its rates · in 1977. Subsequently. the cost of imported ·water has 1 gone up twice. • The district. which recently completed a systems and management study, has plans for drilling more wells to tap the county's underground water basin, nearly filled during three years of heavy rain~ and hopes to hold water bills over the next (our yean. Well water. they report, costs less despite increased c~ts of energy used in pumping. Rising prices always are unpalatable, but it appears at this juncture, the district's efforts represent the best of , a worsening inflationary situati.on. • • Opinions expressed 1n the apace above are those of the Daily Pilot Other views expressed on this page are those of their authe><s and artists. Reader comment is invited. Address The Oally.P1lot P 0 • Box 1660. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (71') 642·4321. I I Boyd/Contest t By Lii. BOYD : Rare & the writer wbo geu paid $12,000 .PU word. But Mn. Deborah ScbDelder ol MinneapoU1, Mln•., may aebleve that cllstindbl. She : woo a con.at INack la 19lt by • descrilllq Plymouth can In 2S -~. ~~ ••• *500 a month for JU•·.~ Ute U· : pectaDcy eapertt rt•uro •lle'll coJlect SI00,000, In time . A penguin can swim a lot faster than a salmon, bear in mlncl. Nobody koowa wbetlner Greenland ii one llland or several. Q. How man,y silver bullets dld the Lone Ra.naer •boot durin1 bis career on radio and TV? Try that OD•, friend-o. A. E1tactlY u,eac,•air. , Amoe thole comntlblea 10U eciuldD't c4't euU, dur· ID-. World War II wu ta ploca. It eomH from Bu1ll'1 CHHV• plant. Tbat'a U.. v .. etatloQ from wbleb the BruU1anl mat. • lbelr 1Mabol. And ~ ... It kjall ..... DOW. ~ ., ... ay be bard co C9IM by. aaya our Chief Propoatlcacor. American Indiana appear lO remain unimpre11ed by tbe report that Wlnat~n ChurebllJ wu Pt.rt CIMtokee throuch 1n American ll'andmotber. Mailbox THI Dt:FECTOa. who used to be a Communht P'\rty supervtaor fM Hveral electlon dl1trleta, told my aaaoclatea Vlcld Warren and Dale Van Atta how •tde.pread the pracUce WIS. "In all the dlllricta that I au,perviaed, as well u in dis· lricls where the real results were known to me," be said. "between 1S and 20 percent of the voters declared their unwill· ingness to vote ... How many actually persist in their intenUon to boycott the spurious election process l5 not known. Flnt of all, it's agai.nat the law for Soviet citizens to ab- stain rrom voting. Communist Party activists are saddled with the job ot 1etting people to the Polls ror tbe rormal endorsement of party candidales THE SOVIET party hacks have lists of all voters in their districts. and check orr each one as the vote ls cast. Those who THE ftVE number of Soviet ciUtens who vote -or. more Im· portantly, the number who don't vote -never reaches lbe b1gsbots in the Kremlin. Party bureaucrats. fearful of losbtg their Jobs. "systematically falsify" the rigures on voter turnout. according to our sources. Not long ago. one Kremlin or. ficial had the temerity to sue· gest th.at more tban one can· t"AIONE IN CAllllODIA: eor.· tradlcth11 recent opUmlatlc new• reports, Central in: telll1ence Al. ~~ey analy.U pre-dict tbat COOUDUlnC fam.lne fa a virtual ctrta.lnty to Cambodia. "Only deaths and em11ration can decrease the number of peo. pie to be fed,•• the CIA report notes. And It makes clear lbal there I.I not enough food to go around. After a pt0mlain1 start last fall, the lnternational reUef el· fort i.n C~bodla ts in danter ot collapsing, as funds dry up and the attention of the 1reat powers tums to othet' areas of crills. Meanwhile, the Cambodians' cupboard ls bare. "Food stocks are vlrtuallv exhausted," the CIA reports. ''No signlficant amounts ol food will be availa· ble from cropt grown ln Kam· puchea cCambodJa> until next December.'' THE QA PUTS the problem starkly: Almost 750,000 metric tons of food and seed are needed. The current crop will provide 56.000 tons at best. Even with the combined relief efforts of the Soviet bloc and Western agencies. the re will be a i.horHall of about 200,000 tons of food and 60.000 toru1 of seed. Even a 26,QOO.ton shortfall, the CIA notes, would "lower the calortc value of a n avera,e ra. t1on below the starvation level." And even that grim estimate assumes a distribution aystem that would provide an "average" ration. 1n fact, ac· cording to a secret study, the ::.ystem is a shambles and dis· tributlon has all but ceased. APT ACRONYM: The State Department's Vietnam -Laos. Cambodia office has won a s ardonic nickname in Foggy Bottom. Because of it.a apparent· ly unending diet of disaster. the V LC olficc ls known as the Of· fi'ce of Very Lost Causes. Don't Blame Judges for Defects • ID La-w To the F.ditor: I have worked within our county's court sy~lem for almost 20 years and believe that I am therefore qualified to comment on at least one aspect of judicial elections. I have never done so in this manner before and do so now only because f reel that strongly that our judgei.. themselves. have been mi s· judged by those who contend that they are too lenient in their dealings with criminals. An ever·increasing crime rate and a growing disregard for society's means of trying to con· trol the conduct or each other. our laws. are cited as being direct results of this leniency. And it is not unreasonable to draw this conclusion if indeed our judges could righteously be held solely responsible for the inherent weaknesses in our system that affords the criminal something leas in the way of punishment than we believe "fits the crime ... It struck me early in my marshaling career that only the Innocent come Into our courts seeking justice. Jus tice. or course. Is about the last thing that the guilty want. They want ou(. They want off They want acquittal, dismissal or anything else they can manage to get that is c:P.eaper than the going price regularly charged for the crime that brinp lhern there. And in thla country, t.bey have plenty of expert help at hand to get them what they want. If they can't way foe it, then we furnish it for free. SOllE OF It doesn't cost anythln1 at all. It's already there In the form or ambiguous law1, protective precedents. confoundedly complex In· lerpretatloas and frequently fntatratiftl technlcalitiet -all of which must be reU1loualy ~ served at all lllqes of the ~ ceedinp, commeoclna with t.be lnJUal 1Dvest.11aUon and arrest. Virtually an,y lrrquJarity along the line will invariably ffrve to comprornlH a case to the benel1t ol t.be accused. But, un· leH the public la tborou1hly lamlUar wtt.b all elementa ot a case · and 1u1-eque.nt. develop· mebtl, lt too often condemn1 the Judte WbfG tbe Crimi.Dal fail.I CO receive hll JuK ~. "Some toot Jada tumed btm looee'' we bear~ wllerl act~ Judee bad no choice Jn t.be matter. In fact, Jl.idlta have been held lO blame ln 1ucb case• whet\, In truth, It w11 a Jury who arrived at the dlaappotnUns decl1ion. Some prGpOH to "throw the ra1c.l1 out•• with the hope and/or nJ*tatJon th1t In c1otn1 so we •lll lwt.na about an hDJ>r'OVt· ment in the judicial scheme ol things But lake my word roe it. based on heavy exposure and ex· perience. it won't work that way because we would simply be r eplacing the m with other m o rtal s who. given the circumstances as they extSt. wil bt> lawfully bound to perform t.M a"'ful chore in essentially the i.ame fashion as those who a~ nuv. c har ~t·rl ~•th th e n·sponMb1ht y and who. in m) view and ai. the records will show handle 1t extreme!)' v. el I DONE. RHEA Marshal. Orange County Hradl119 _,_._..,. To the Editor: I think it is terrible witb all the waste in educaUonal pro- grams at all level.I tbat Special Reading has been dropped because ot "lack of funds." I have written to the Board ol Education u follows : "I was Informed the other day Special Reading bad been dropped. "My son baa bad severe physical and eye problems which slowed b.1a development. He has made great success in the Special ReadJng pro1ram. "Why cut this progran> when there are so many classes at all levels which are unnecessary? At the high school level. drama and sewing. to name just two. Even tf a girl sews she has to read well to follow a pattern. • · 1 realize funds are a prob· lem , but ln our modern society reading ls a necessity. not a lu:x· ury .. MARV PETERSON A rll•llf" E•d••.,or To the Edit.or: Your article In the May 28 Daily Pilot about Ali Roushan's meditation tower. and the city's adnUimtrative reluctance to al· low b1m to erect hia work on bis property, la cogent comment on the lnt.nllivenea of iovemment Into the liws ol people 1uppoeed lo be free. For the record. the cower ls 34 feet high. the pan at the bue adds 3 feet and a 3·f00l ra.ilina adch another; from crass to raif. ing·top Lbe stnlctutt will ~ 30 feet btgb. Ali plans to set 1l 2S reet rrom the curbline. Also. for the rttord. Com missiooer Maureen DiDomenico stated at the planning m mission meeting that she h· · us reservations .. a bout the piece o( art and a ~· \'lew or lh at mel'llng ·., transcnpts w1ll show that her com ment.s were couched in ref erence Lo and d1st'w.sion or t~ . potential politJcaJ imphcal.loos or Ali's tower. IN SlllPLEST terms. Mr. Ali has created a work that ex· presses his lire. and wishes to present it to the world. oo bis own property. He plans to continue to up- grade a formerly semi-derelict Industrial slum into a place ol beauty, tranquility and· medita· tlon. He dedicates bis wM to God in the name of peace and common humanity, and wishes to share bis achievement with neighbors and visitors. Re bu already invested over $30,000 in bb artistic endeavor. and ls do- in1 it with no lbougbt of prollt or business advantage. This is a purely artistk and pb.llo&opbjcaJ endeavor for the highest aesthetic and moral reasons. I lblnk it cowardly. craven and despicable for those fog. bound equivocators, petty tyrants and cultural commlsara down at city hall to deny this honest. passionate and dettnl man the right to see b1s life's dream, ol the mo01ent. brouahl lo fruition. Tbey are impuptna his motives: t.bey ere deG.YlQI his rilhts. And, by ex~t they are den.1tni Ute rtlbta ol all who come under u.tr ~ control. ' . JOHN PlllLLJP PALMER s .............. . Tot.he Editor': I am wrltlq co you became I WU bom to ea.ta lleu but IQ)' pareatl ~ away when I was In the foUrtb grade . .,, pannU were ldUed ln u automobile ac· cldent when I WU lt ud I Uved in a roster home until I was 18 I am incarce rated in lhe Georgia State Prison now and have never felt more lonely in my life. I don't have anyone to write to or anyone to write me I BEl.JEVE that some of mv people still live arouod Costa Mesa. or someone who knows them and I thought that maybe if you cou.ld publish my letter in your newspaper they would see 1t and write me I om a while male but loneli· ness picks no certain age. If there is anyone who reads my letter and waots a friend to share a •mile with from lime to Lime. please write and J will gladly answer. Thank you for your consideration. ELLIS LONG P .O. Box 73801 F -4 Reidsville, GA 30499 :i.i ....... To the F.ditor: Your staff is certainly being misled about the causes and ef· recta ol the 55-mile speed limit. In a recent editorial you said that the Hmit saves lives and aasollne. The fact la that it does nett.her. Tbt state baa quit mak· lna claims about the gas saving. and bo&.b &be state and the feds are lJtal to m about the lives saved. The SS.mile speed limit is a political I.Aue that has nothing to do wit.ta safety or cooserva· lion. It ii a fraud against the motorist. YOU ALSO aald the Lee· islature should stand up a111.ut _,,. Uilck drivers1 but they .,. the oaes who, ror a eb3are our friend.a. They know I alalty of the Umlt. At. leut percent of all tickets issued are few a~ but ex· ceu lpeed la 14th oo the list ot accident tMllel. Speed traPPing ls. an extortion scheme. It serves only lO raise money for and •loilfy the bl1oted and In· tolerant. Except fOlf' t.be drunk driver. tbe bl1.-problem on our freewa)'I tbday are tbe 1low driven ln tbe fut lanes. Yet t.be CHP la umriUllnt and unable to take COl'nldlve acUon. Tbey uae tho slow driven lO help entrap tbe victim. of their malltloul bara11~tlcketln1 tboM who Pl'Ol• or co paaa the llJecal IJo•PGk•. n.... ll enouCh troa· ble for driv.ra on the ,...,...,. now Wit.bout adcllnc more en· trapmtnl. CHBSTEI\ UNG Jobi .. Oalm1 laaeue "Jldjor8ftd Kailroad Merger· Almost Unnoticed 9YlllL'NN ........ ............. A '-J' tJdDI bal'l*Md a..._ of ...U $.OM of the ~Ht ......... ID U.S. bu.tr•r ....,,, wu .. GOUD aDd eftr70DI JaW'IMld. 1'1IM met pr would umte In CJDe corporate eabooM two ol tbe larPlt railroad compulel lD tbe na&ima: a.ic~ baaed Santa Fe ladutrlet and San Frantlaco-baMd Soutben Plldfte (8P>. 8IDta ,. Gperat. UM famour Atcblloe. Topeka and Santa Pe ralllMd gver 12,200 mil .. ol traek •tnteblnl trom Cldcaao to UM Gwt of MnJco ud tbe Paclllc eo..t. The SP operates tram. OYer some p,ooo miles ol track. com'-down trom PortUnd.. Ore., to t.o. An1el• and mOYlDI acrON tbe routbwest to New Orleans. IN 11'1t 'l"BE SP toot In S:U billlon, tbe Sant.I Fe SZ.5 1'll1Ion. 'l'boee are pretty l:ilg numben, but tbe mantaae aaaouneemesrt caused ao great 1tirrln11 amon1 the populace. It commanded tome P11e 1 bead.Unes. and it made the Watter Cronkite news show. However, the reac· tioo wu generally ho-hum. Reporten who lnt.ervtewed SP employees in San Fran· clsco fOWMI lbem apathetic. Invest.on seemed unexc~ too. On tbe day before lbe mercer Wat' anoounced, Santa Fe's stock waa selling at $55.75 a shai'e on the New York Stock Ex· chan1e. Southern Pacific's was selling at S39. In the next few days SP was hammered down to. $33 and Santa Money Tree Fe fell to ssz. A "'plague on both your houses" appeared to be Wall Street's response to this proposed amalgamation. THERE WEBEH'T EVEN any ftery thunderbolts fired out of Washington, D C To be sure, the mer1er has to be approved by the Interstate Commerce Commission - and that's likely to lake years -but no government of· flc1al rushed to the microphones ~o denounce the combina· hon And con.sumer advocates were notably quiet. As for the man and woman in the street, when you think about it, why should they be exercised over -or even interested an -the merger of Southern Pacific with Santa Fe., The railroad wa.'I once a central force In American life. Now it has receded from the view of most of us. We know they're out there -once tn a whlle you're stuck at a railroad crossing _:_ but we're not quite sure what they're doing WHAT THEY'RE mostly doing is hauJmg freight car$, lumber. chemicals. coaJ, com, fruits, vegetables and other commodit1es. The people who should really be con· cerned about this merger are the shippers. The SP and the Sante Fe operate oarallel routes through the Wesl. and they chum the merger will result in· greater effi c1enc1es Will tl -or will it bring the ktnd of : control that rt>Sults tn higher prices because a shipper has ' no other choice" Both of these comparues are. ot course. much more, than railroads these days. Thanks to the gift of land they· got from the U S. government. they're major owners of timber and rruneral resources The SP controls 3.7 millton acres. much of It in · California. where they own 2 percent of the state's land surface. Santa Fe owns 854,000 acres of Umberland in . eastern Texas and southwestern Loulalana'. Santa Fe pumps 45,000 barrels of 011 a day SP sends 011 through pipelines. BO'l1I COMPANIES ARE in the trucking business. SP 1s, in fact, the nation's 121..h largest trucker. And Santa Fe 1s not far behind. SP owns the nation's largest title in·· surance company. T1cor Santa Fe owns a big Sun Belt building contractor. Robnt E. McKee And the SP operates via microwave a long·dl.stance telephone service -"Sprint" -that com· petes with the Bell system. So these two big railroad·based comoanies are active on a lot of fronts. One other thing they have In common is this : each bas next to notJung to do with the lowly con· &umer. Tbe only consumer business left here is a 47·mile com muter run that the SP operates between San Francisco and San Jose. And as far as the SP is concerned. the less said about that. t.be better. They have bffn trying desperately for many years to slough 1t. IN ANNOUNCING WHY they had to merge, the SP and t.be Santa Fe said the marriage was "necessary to maintain our <'Ompelihve position ln an environment wherein major raih ad combinatlom are in various states of formation." H you can't understand that (and who can!> What they mean 1s that the Union Pacific Is plan· ning to amalgamate with the Misourl Pacific and Western Pacific, and the Burlington Northern is planning to hook up with tbe Fn.seo. Disney Chief Named . BURBANK CAP> -Ronald W. Miller, son·ln·law ot . t.be late Walt Disney and head of movies and television · operaUOm, la new president ol Walt Disney Productlona. Mllltt..:. 461 a former pro(esaiooal football player, auc· Neda E. UU"CIOft Walker, a. wbo remains cbJef executive : officer and becomes chairman. ~ Donn Tatum, IS, moves from chairman of the board to , chairman ol the eaecutive committee, a new post. : Gold, Metal Quotations BJ TM A.IMdalM Prete Selected world Sold prie9I today: I •fl•: morninl fbdDl,·~.90. 'IP '10.00: afternoon fWu .at.'1S, up Sl0.15, ckllils -7. futa: .atternooD ftx~:· up 110.11. l'rlllldm1: aOMd for • l i I i ! ..... : am.oo I*!, uo ••• .-..oo .uec1. N .. YNk: HudJ • U....... mid·---'811.11. up • '10.2$. N.,. Y.rt: Bn•elhard Mlliq prte. mld·mo1'1llna S581.75. up$10.J5. New TNk: Dlltibard tabric...S told mld·momll\I te02.11, up uo.as . • * * • .. .. I! ~' . ··~" ....... __ ........ ....... vs..-..... .._ . ~ ....... ,.,.,....,. ;r'u 1\0WWCY "-............. .................... ,........,_ •eooo~ JJ I fl9 tllOIO•; fN!r ............ ~ ... • -..:mmoaerwt ...... ,.,--~'" MC ... l·'TM~-...,- t:aO (I) ft) T#J ~ n..ww.-.. a......s.....--•111 c:Nrge al IN nllll OI tM *' ......... Md C¥ol E. awl lot the~. Breald11g A.., ... • MNP'ON> ANOION Fred ltllnkl ltlel ~f'I Altieen dl9I and c:ulfome ate IUdlctoue umt he,_. what 11 lndUdM. Jamie Lee Curtis helps Gil Gerard break out of an interplanetary jail on "Buck Rogers in the 25th Century" tonight at 8 on NBC. Channel 4. • t..Oe AHOiB.n an ...-C COMPETITION The 11X llnlliltS tn Che erVIUel LA City Mu* C<>me>etlllOl'I !*form. and reoelve "'* flnel r8nl(lng&. GD OWREMY Gue1t c:orn.d1en Dtcil 15'nol~~ 7:00 C88 HEWS N8CNEW8 HAPPY DAYS AGAIN Joanie get• more 1XCfte- men1 then IN! eountll<I on when 91'9 ---out 10 a Red Oeol!ll per1y I A8CNEW8 Cl) JOt<ER"8 WILD • M•A•&•H Ctierle9 a11Umes heroic prooort10n1 attl!f rev1v1119 a dying pitllenl With heart mUNgll • THE 8EHNY HILL SHOW Bonny oelebfates hill !Mtll twthday '" the llolptlal surrounOed by beeulrfol nvrSM Gi) MACHEIL I~ REPORT 7:30 II THE OONO 8ffOW 8 .. SEAACWOf-.• Auatr aliarl UfOe" 19 FAQ. TMf MUSIC MATCH GAME TWI! IOWVANS Dave and Gr-dlScua the peat relatlon1h1p betwaan Maggie and lltmMff. John ~ ,.. 1Ub;eet1 and !tie 2nd AIF w9ll be 1«11 OYe<MU IOOn. • AU IN THE FAMILY GIOria 1ee11 Bke a "dumb blonde" when Mike ~ '* low an .. .,,.._ lec1ual" trl9nd e OOOOTM.8 Alter J J wllll tile tottery, NI Is laoeG with two gun- lotlng rnemberl ol a glrll' Q!"9· 6iJ MACHSL I LEHRER REPORT m NEWSCHEa< Cl) P.M MAGAZJHE An tnl-Wllh Liie reel doct or t>elllnd TV'a "M'A'S'H" and "Trapper John. M 0 "; a vial! to an Artzona r9neh for mentall'( felWded adulta. Claa111t4!'I ~&tings 9 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles D KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles D KTLA (lno I Los Angeles D l<.ABC-T\I (ABC) Los Angeles (I) KfMB (CBSJ San 011~90 0 KHJ. TV (Ind ) Los Angeles (!)) KCST (ABC) San Diego • KTTV (Ind.) Los Angeles m KCOP-TV (Ind) Los Angeles e KCET-lV (PBS) Los Angeles e KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beach ~.Cl) TH( WAL TONS John~-·~ ono '°' '* lonQ-4W.ited high ldloof dlptoma. wt1ile MIWY Ellen IMrna a i..otl "°'" • bedlwoodl peuent. @ 0 8lJCK ..ooEN .. THE 25TH CENTURY &ck ~ .. a oomtct to catch a ~ epeoe ;tct\~) * * 'n .. The Dion Broth-..... ( 1974) Stacy ~ Fredefle Forre11 Two btotner. llMd Weal '" -en o1 more exciting IMll • outlawL (2 ~) D 9 MOAK & MtNOV M0tk'1 ~ lrlend bidor 11111 tor a wedly meter maid (Georgia Engel) (RI 0 MOYIE * * * "Mr Luctt'(' (1943) Cary Gr ent. l.lf lllnl Day A prote.alonel gambler 11111• In tove with a gli'1 at a Char· lty be.la. wtlere he .. trymg 10 nae a bankrOll by Ol*lllng garnbl1n9 1at11ee (2 11r1 I .P.M.~ • THEOAEAM MERCHANTS HOiiywood lludlO chief Johnny EcSoe endangers htS rnarnege by r~ an Ol<I name white • llnan- o.81 conQl<>mefate tnes to ""'9f•t 1111 POWW In lhe motion pcture industry (Part 2) fB 28TONIOHT Hoct Su1111 Frledtnan Jeltrey Kaye r9')C>rt1 on llMlth CIWe for ~ Odds on 'Dallas' Greek Tabs Kristen or Cliff NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - Kristen Shepard or Cliff Barnes shot J .R . in the television series, ''Dallas." You can lay odds on it. said he talked with a CBS official, thinks Dusty is ooly a 200-1 shot. So says Jimmy the Greek, who did just that, the Nashville Banner re- ported. BE'S BE1TING 4-1 that Kristen, J .R .'s sister-in-law and former mis- tress, or Barnes, his brother-in-law, will emerge as J .R.'s murderer when the series resumes on CBS ln the fall. Since the show ended its season March 21, viewers have been speculating who shot J.R. And the New York Post said last week that it was Dusty Farlow who shot and wounded him. But the Nevada oddsmaker. who THE BANNER further quoted him as saying there 1s only a 20-1 chance that J .R. dles anyway an that the show couldn 'l sustain his loss. Jimmy the Greek was giving 5-1 odds oo Alan Beam, a lawyer and protege of J .R.; Sue Ellen Ewing, J .R.'s wife and Dusty Farlow's lov· er; and Vaughn Leland, a banker and J .R.'s ruined business associate. Al 6-1 is Betty Lou Stone, a woman from Beam's put. Bobby Ewing was 300-1 "because brothers don 'l shoot brothers•· and J .R . 's mother rated ~l because, Jimmy the Greek opined, ''mothers just don't shoot their children." I akers Special Slated "Your Champions, the Loe Angeles Lakera," a two-hour special saluting. the NBA champions and hosted by Chick Heam and Keith Erickson will be telecast on KHJ-TV Monday from 8 to 10 p.m. over Channel 9. Appearing as special 1uest.s will be ·the stars ol the Lakers -the fll'St six players, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Magic Johnson, Jim Chones. Jamaal Wilkes, Norm Nixon and Mike Cooper. Also appearing on the pro- gram will be the two coaches, Paul Weslhead and Pat Riley, and special commentary from Dr. Jerry Buss, the owner of the Los Angeles Lakers and the Los Angeles Kings, pro- fessional ice hockey team. ...... , ·-·u. .............. ...... .... .... HMtl...,,. ...... ......... ..... """""°.,,.....,.. .._. .. ....,,~a .. • ........ ..... ... °""' kif ..... 00.. -cw.e.19') L'=-.,,,.,,. 111111. "Wrono NumW.· .. ..,,.... NIQhl." ''Til9 "•ollal," "Vacuum ...._" • ILL MO't'IN' .IOUNW. ... t.000.000.000.000 ,~ Oefenaa" 1111 MoY•n r~I on -MW de\ 8'Qo111en11 "' welPOf\I *"'IOioVY and In..._ hMtot9 a... """" and OltyHet1 .... a.. .. ...., Anc1 v..r· t:OO. Cl) MMA8Y JONES Wtilll at~ a_gymnu- ucs ,.,... '" wtlldl the cMuQtl1er of .... tr1end • c-.cino. 8llmaby IPOt• ..,. ~ OMd IMl'I in the OtOM1 fA) D NBCMOYI! **"+ "Amateur NtgN Al The Dixie Bar And 01111" ( 1979) VICIC)( French. Loulae Lltharn. A V9riety ol people are drawn ~ wtMle IMlng per1 lr1 M ameMur lelenl ~ test 11 e oounlry roed- ~ (R) e di IWINEY MIU.EA Hal Unden and the ,. of the caac P9Y lllClute to the let• Jec:ll Soo. wtlO pot- trayed o.tect""' y-_ wttll ~ ffom ~ apl- todea ht~ In. (CCI ~ MERYOM"RN • OlD HOUelWOM8 Bob c.latierl deecnOM GllOfglan end Fede•al erc:hitect,,.. and .,_ e -·~wood Iller. 9:30 8 QI 8EJM..TOUOH Barba<• J-and Shake try to get Biiiy Clyde 01.11 Of Ills depreeaior'I C/'#W • io.t ~ by letting hlln up With abhnddate. 9THENOHTEOUS APf'\.ES ··Po0n1 Of View.. Rac:llll leneiOnl et Sherwin Higtl mount during the~· ~tlOl'l Into the~ bing of Ille .-.tent pnn- ;-'" sr AABOAAD .. Brenda Simon And For- ltYIW Dancon' .. tO:OO e Cl) DAUA8 EJlle leem• 111111 tier aon Gaty tS beck '" Dallas anct planning 10 ramltfry Lucy 1 rnoti-Valene (R) BG HEWS D l!I 20120 e NIGHT GAUERY "Hallee! Unto 0ea111M A suceesalul WTil•"9 team ~ """1ing aboul tr.... . a<Nentw• ""''" a gorllla. ''How To Cure The Com-'"°" Vamplr9" Two "I"' Jack Soo, who played Detective Yemana on "Barney Miller" until bis de· alb last year, is eulogized with clips from various episodes of the show in a special episode tonight at 8 on ABC, Channel 7. "Y•--·-.., .... -~,,.. ''Ouro ~·· ...... n.er. OI .....,...-T"9 ._.,.... .,.... ......... Duro ~·· -..int Of ''OM Koto. M • ,,.,... cit,_ ffOM N lolUor'9 Of "'9 YONIMI ..WO~ I MIWIOHIOIC 10:IO • ...,. MAlllllJ ICI ntl!ATM .. °"' .... DUiy'' Enoout-aoact by hit MlCIMI In \'tr• bat ~ "'°' aorne of Etlglend'• "'°" P'°"**" poll1101ane. Otar a ell dtcidee to 1land for Partla- ment. (P111 1 of 4)(CC)(A) • IEN WATI'!Nlf.R0'8 ,.., "Sri Lanita. Second Tllougfltl In The Third World ' Ben W•tane>erg \lllAI Sri ~· k> inVWU-91'9 • polittcal experiment 11111 coukl helle vttal 1mp11. c.tloM for otMr Tl*d World Milone 11:00 ID • Cl) <II HlW8 N!Wl VW1D GAME MOVIE • • ''WtPt Would Anyone Want To 1(111 A Ntoe Glr1 I.Ille Yoo?" ( 19811 Eva Aentl. Da'llCI 8'lcil Wlllle on vKatlOl'I. a beeuttfut girt • VIC!lml* by tem'YW'O allernpta on '* •te (2 hrs' • THf 000 OOUll\.E Feluc plant a surprl9e twttlday perty low Oecar. who loa111e1 bltthday 1>111• • THf BENNY HILL SHOW Benny'• Fr9'0Cfl leelOf'I -full of Ille ptornlM Of 1reet1 In •tore. Cl) PIAHIST8 Of THE AMEAIOA8 Plano ar111t1 from North, South and CentrW Atner>- Cll perlor'lfl the won.. ol Btll>ml. Uz:ll. Oebuuy ~.and01'-• 11:30 9 (I) THE JEf'REA80N8 A friend out ol OeOfve'a put ttweaaena to ra111e the llteieeon in George • cioee1 ~ ... com. up wrlh aome c.all IRI 0 TONGiT G~t llOal Joan Rlvwre Guea11: Abtoait Van Bu<en, Mee Davit It DA TINO GAME TUBE TOPPERS IOU e 8:GO -.. Mr. Lucky.'' Cary Grant atan In the JM.I movie that ln· 1plred the TV Nii•. plQtn1 a aambler wtth Lara1oe Day co-ttarrtna. NBC e 9:00 -"Amateur Nipt at the Dixie Bar and Grill." A country roadhouse la the scene for this TV mov(e · about a homegrown talent contest. CB.5 9 12:00 -"Mogambo." Clark Gable, Ava Gardner and Grace Kelly are a volaWe trian&le in this movie drama set in the African jungle. I ([I A8C NEWS HOQAN"S HEAOES Ho9M pi.. 10 .,..,. • "'Ptured ""*II lor an und«ground agent, bul Ills plan• 90 awry' • OETSMART Mu ~ a jOC> al a flUt'l8fy where one CONTROL 8Qel't hW alr-'Y myateo- ~ dlMpOMled. •• CAPT'IOHED A8C NEWS 1 U O D 9 <:HAAUrS ANOa..8 The ~ attempt to ..... 11'9 ... Of • golf pro #f'O ,..._ to W!Uldr- from c:ompeuuon deae>rt• repeated ·~ on her Ille IRI -~- 12:00 8 Cl) C88 LA TE MOVIE ••• ••Mogambo" (19S4J Ctant Gable. A11a Ger-oner When a plentallon over- -fall WI love W'lttl 0.. '""9 ol en ~. COl\- n1C11.,.. CRI 8 lWIUOHT ZONE A gunman tor rwe .....,. '"*' "'' quarry .... •Mdy ~lulled • MISSION: IMPOSSa.E Tile !«mer dtC1ator 01 • CenbbeM leland .. made to lla11e h•lluc1natory ~ -part ol • plot deelgr1ed by llWI IMF • TOMMY COOPER Ian Hendry, renowned Engllah .a«• jcWll Tommy In • ,.,, Sltatcll. • CYAUI VAHOE'I FAMWEU. Reos!Uy reaignll<I ~ Vance mek" Illa ltrat ITlafOr ad<k-llnCe .,. reeignt!IOn 12:*>. MO\llf * * "Ouadalcan11 Odyuey" f t974) Docu- mentary. Narrated by lAllllle ~ Forcaa OI Mollltl ~· b the loM• Of manlond. as ..,._ 1ra1eo In 1 _.of W<>Od W•r II lllm dle>I. ( 1 lw., 55 mon I • MO\llf • * * ''The Oeaer1 Song· ( 19531 Kattwyn O.ay90r\, Cloo'oon Mac:Rae A profes- aor leaOt a doutlle kfe ......,, lie lr19P"9I • 9foup 10 •""°841 en evll Aral> ie.cter f 2 !Ifs I 1:000 TOMOMOW Gueata IPO•la<:aster$ Warner Woll. Steve Sornw.. 8111 C..ne and Ttrn Weogtl IRI G l!J BAAETTA Batetll tearna tlult t Cn.- -gang 11 plann•ne to k 1111111 lnend Cflat1le (R) .. 1:101• NIM 1:21 NIW8 t:IO MOYll ••• • 0 0.a.e.· fft4f> Alen L'9dd, O«~ fMJOW8'd. .MOV9 * *... .. AcliOrl Ill Anl:tlta" c 11M<t) Olofge ..... Vlr9lnla Btvo9. • MCWIE * * ''The 8tfange a.et Of Adoff Hitter" ,, .... Gale Sondel l)Wd. LA4ilg Donati\. • 2'M 8~ *** "Thlngt To~ ( 19'3e) Raymond ~. RalPh Ridler~. 1:46. MOVll! ••,; "o...tl On ~" ( 1947) Darr;t HlcAuNn. Noreen Neal\. 4:00 I> MO\llf * ·~ ··"*'1ude" I "57) June Allyaon, AOtMno Brazzi. 4:251 HEWS 4:30 MOV1E •• ''Hofne And ~ (1957) J-* w-. K-. ._.. Harr1ton. • e NEWS Frida•'• Da.ti-.M•.,~• -AFTERNOON-- 12:00 D • * ~ "Yankee Pfllllt~ ( tCl541 Jell Chandler, Rhonda f1emlno. • •**"'"TheF~ head" ( 1949) Olty Coooer. PatndaNNI. ti) * * • "But Nol F« Me .. (1959) Clark 0.... Lllll Palmer. s;30 D • • * ··o.o.y. n.e Slllll Of .11.wte • • f 1958) Rob- .,, Teytor, Rlctla-d T~ JOHN DARLING by Armstrong & Batiuk Ille~ Sparts F111nst111 PeoPle €>·-·._...._-.._ I I'·"· Four LA Emmys K OCE a Big ~ Winner KOCE. Channel so. garnered four Los Angeles area Emmy awards al the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences' 32nd annual ceremony al the Century Plua Hotel. KOCE's wtnnang entries in- cluded: -Jere Wltter in the category or "Individual Achievement - Best News Feature" for his work on a "Newscheck" feature "Swallows, Dollars and MedJa Return to Capistrano.·' -Terry D. Nelson in the category of "Individual Achieve- ment -Editors" for his work on ........ lllU Or-6.)7~ _ .... ....._ '--"-~' -·--~ ... ~UJI QIH9t ... __ lr'fllltY.11~ ....... QIGIA ClllU c:.41 .... 979"4141 IMl ............ 1111.1 .. -v-.•r..llnO ......... -"46111 -· __ ...... Or111111 ~I071 .. To Say I Am'" "The Magic of 011 P8.111t- ing" Ul the category of "Instruc- tional Programs" -Carrole El- lerbe. producer: Donald D. Gerdts. execubve producer. -"Debut" in the category ol "Children Youth Programs - Specials" Harr)' Ratner, Sylvia Kunin. producers; C. Paul Corban , executive pro- ducer. Actress Signs for 1V HOLLYWOOD (AP> -Ac- tress Ma~ Winningha m, who has appeared in four ABC televis ion movies in the past seven months, has been signed to a development agreement to appear in two more movies for the network. She recently starred in "Off the Minnesota Strip, .. which was writte n for her afte r her p e r form an c e i n • • A m be r Waves." HOW f:'LAYIHG ACADEMY AWARD WINNER lest For.lgn Language Ftlm 1979 , .. ,. amu1ne mNtaple<e •• .a cbw•...C wari tJI mt that muat be ........... mc1 ....... n, Doa'tmll91t.• ____ , 5 I 'C'