HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-02-01 - Orange Coast PilotLl
• . . .. 'I
'
DAILY PILOT
~ -.
New Charges LOoming
. ,
* * * 10' * * *
1;.·
'• In Tot's Fence ·Death
;
TUESDAY :AFTERNOON, 1FEBRUARY 1, 1977
VOt. Jt, NO. n, I UCTIOfltS, 216 f'AOllS
;
'
,.
t
\
• • • •
East· Deep Freeze Continues • Ill
Hughes 'Will' I Crime Fight I ln
75 Dead ·
Bitter \
. Emergency Declared
V~)-ll'fi'!'~--~
'
Wins Fortune?
,.,., .. ~
ESTATE PLEDGED
How8rd Hughe•
' 'Fmal 'Roots.,
£pisode Sets
1VRecord
NEW YORK CAP> -The
serialization or .. Roots" made
television blltQry last week, ac-
cord.lq to A. c.· Nielsen figures
madeavallabletoday.
Sunday's COQ$1Uding episode
was the all-time most watched
:show in A}nericL In addition, four
of'tbe 10 most watched shows in thf history of television were
eptsodes ~the serlallutlon of
Alex Ra.ley'anovel.
With .0 Roots" listed ln last
week's national prime-time
averaps asseven~tbe topaev,m
showa, ABC urried the entire week end.inf Jan. 30with16.Clf the
tOo20abows. ~ -ltalowest-rankedshowof67rat ..
~programs was tied with CBS'
• ~'MASH." It was ''The captain
I 'and Tennille.'' •
Ranked 28th. MIJ:'be Captain and
'Tennille" waa .-1n an eetlmat-ed LSBmllllonbomes.
t The concludlnc -episode of • ••.aooa•• J>Ollted a Gt.1 ratine,
1Deanlnf it 1'U Yiewed Jn 36.•
" JDillionhQueebo.lds. . · •
A Nlelten IPGkeatn8" 1ald lt outpaced Jut I all's recorct .. ett.1na I broadcast of .. Gone •Ith .the
· Whtd" on NBC. He 1ald tho rJnk-
JDt• G. the tilp UOwl f.n teltwialoll
· <he'&OOl'S;'Pa&o;Al>
LOS ANGELES CAP> A 10·
year-old document which pledges
the Howard Hughes estate to the
task of fighting organi.zed crime
in America is being considered a
possible will by county officials.
County Public Administrator
Bruce Altman said Monday that
the document, a contract between
Hughes and two other men, could
be deemed a testamentary docu-
ment from the eccentric
billionaire and therefore binding
as hiJI last wish.
The· contract specifies that
Hughes is to pay S30 million to two
men, Edwatd M. Barbara and
Robert Morgan, for "certain
personal services . . . the nature
of which are to be known only to
Howard R. Hughes. Edward M.
Barbara and Robert Morgan."
Neither man was available for
comment and there was no back-
'rounddetailed on them.
The document. purportedly
aisned by all three men Feb. 11,
1966, said it was to be corusidered
Hughes' last will and testament In
the event of his death" within five
yea:n.
Hughes died Aprll S, 1976. 10
years later, but Altman said
courts might lgnon the five·year
provisionifnowillwaslocated.
-....... 11.P Wlr ... llolO
ICE FLOES FILL THE HUDSON RIVER IN THIS VIEW FROM THE YONKERS CITY PIER
Northea1t, Mktwest U.S. Stlll Locked In Grip of Punl1hlng Winter Storm
'63,200 in Loans
The document also states that ~
proceeds of the estate are to be
used to create a task fofte "for
the purpose of combatting or-
ganized crime in the iiftited
States of America."
Anthony Campaign
Fun& Amended
New Charges
Looming in
Fence Death
ByTOM BARLEY
Of IN Dall, f'lle1 S\afl
A lth ough cleared of ByGARY<iRANVILLE he borrowed $30,000 from in-manslaughter charges by an The task force is to hire the Los
Angeles sheriff and chief or
police at annual salaries of
$200,000 each. according to the
document. .. It'• a crazy story," he said,
"'but you can never tell with
these Hughes tbinas. •• Altman
said.
Altman said the document,
which ls siened. witnessed and
notarised, ls more likely to be
(See-IRJGllES. Pag~ .u
Restaurant
Goods Taken
Thieves Who used an air condi· tlontnc duct to break idtO a
NeWJ)Cft Beach restaurant got
away with aeveral lterna tnchJc&.
tna two OUtW ot champaane end Sl2$ in eaab, Newport Beach
police reported today.
The break·lD at Marrakesh
llHtaurant. 1100 W. Coast
Higbwa,, occurred durtna the·
boun ot darlmea ~ m,h1
and )(OlldQ inonWl ..
Polee.Did tbleva 1"Ulaelted
tb• restaurant before haullftl off
ii.em• •died at mwe than $1,IOO,
lacludlni tbe dltlQPape and money. •
ott1Moa11,~11ets1•11 former-turned-financier Conrad Less than a month after first fil-Orange County Superior Court in the final days of his campaign · d L N. 1 l t · i ina it. Orange County Supervisor JU ge, agnna ague e ec n c an PbilipAn•hh .... amended his fmal against Santa Ana City Coun-Daniel Gonzales Guzman faces w.avav cilmanHarryYamamoto. 11 t' f d deg campaign disclosure statement new a ega ions o secon ree Mondaytoa!\owthetruesourceof In a tape recorded Interview mualj{today.
$63,200\vortlfMcampaianloans. three weeks ago, Conrad denied Deputy District Attorney Paul
Onh.isoriainatdlsclosurestate-lending Anthony money and said Mey'is explained thal the new • the supervisor probably got the b al ( •t..~e ments, Anthony showed the loans c arges are a renew o uwtt to Friends of Philip Anthony were money from his retirement fund abandoned when Guzman. 32, ol
from himself. at Rockwell International. 29821 ~aseo de Ocaso. was indict· But apparently Conrad lent the ed b th G d J o ~1. ges uut tbe Wes tminste r *'ln,000• .. anA .. •t..--y rri'r~and. Ye ran ury n,..ar ~ ...,., ..., q.uUIUU uu ofinvoluntarymanslaughter. supervisor's amended statement campaign backer Who, ln tum, Those charges stemmed front
shQws the loans came from loaned the money to the then hls aUeged actloo in riaing a trip
former paid police informant <&eANTBONY. Pace Al) wtrelnhisf~tyftdtbatclaimed Gene Conrad, Fullerton attorney l f .., 11 ui h JI Michael Reminaton and RJO En-the if e o a e y ,.. c e e • McMullen, his neigbbor'a 2-Yeat·
terprilea. • Kn·~ ff led olddaupter. In an interview last week, An·J1e I.Ir Gusman explained to sheriff's
tbony aaid he showed the loans • officers that the hiah voltaie line eomine from himself because be tn•--'ed •-... d and
believed be personally. not the In BB Schoo) ::~otthl:'now;b:f. oaa
campalgb committee, was He was arrested on cn"mlnal
rapoosiblelortbeirrepayment. Questionln1 by detecUves to-d 1 t d for ''.I believed I borrowed the d in charges an • er sue
money personally and, hi t~. B!~~-:OU~':or:i::.::e ~:~~~ damages by the
lent it t() my campaian commit· a knife at a YoUDI teacher'• aide Meyers explained Monday ht
tee:•t.Wtuperviloraaid. · . a\ bll sdtool, etr.Ucin& Ml' in the JudceJames o. Perea' dlsmlllal
He said that repor:tinl metbod aboul~. of the lndtctment counts ••
waa tollowed alter conauJtinc The vfctlm of tho •H&LlJt with a baaed on a t.6Chntcali\y that made
-,ltb political comuhant William deadly weapon at Newland proaecuUonoftbeindictmentaslt •
Butcher. attorney Chip Nlelloli Eleruentary School waa only atoodlmpossJble.
and.Certlned Public Accountant bruiaed b1 th6 hurled bJte, 1c-''We bave rented charaes f1'
RayEdwardi. · cordinit.olnv4'tl11tora.. Hcond decree ,murder end "Thero oertalnly was no intent N~w1and School Principal Guzman will be arralped Feb.
tO d.cetve anyone," Anthony in~ Stanle1 Tbompaon tOld 28,!'tbopl'OHC\itoraaid.Gumwn
11Jted. autboritics thlt attack oce\lti'eicl ·,. ict-_ ,... .. •.13. -. Pai.e .U) Bll amended fiat.ement shows ·Th~. ~~~ . I • • ,.
Weather · .-
By 1be Associated Press
Winter kept its ¥.igid grasp on
the Northeast and Midwest to-
day, and a st.ate of emergency
was declared in Buffalo, N.Y .•
where 12 persons have died in the
worst storm in the city's history.
An estimated 75 deaths have
been blamed on the bitter'
weather in states hit by the big
freeze. (Related story, A4)
An Army engineering battalion ·
or 300 men was ordered to Buffalo
today to help the city clear its
streets of abandoned autos and
snow drifts. Federal disaster of-
ficials said the unit was ordered
to fly with its equipment from Ft.
Bragg, N.C .• "as soon as they
can get here.'' ""
The natural gas s hortage
caused by freezing weather kept
ECONOMY'S FREEZE
MAY OUTLAST COLD-A11
many schools, factories and busi-
nesses closed, leaving up to LS
million workers off the job.
Congress moved closer to
enacting legislation to ease the
natural gas crisis. An emergency
bill proposed by President Cart.er
was approved by the Senate 91 fo
2 Monday night, and House
leaders were hoping to send it to
Carter today.
Buffalo Mayor Stanley
Makowski issued the emergency
declaration for his city at 3:30
a.m. PST, banning all but essen-
tial vehicular traffic in the city to
enable federal and state crews to
clear the streets, still clogged by
(See STORMS, Page AJ)
Coast
Weather
Variable hlgh clouds
tbrou'h Wednesday.
Cooler ct.ya with highs iD eoa. Lowe .ts to sa.
IN81DETODA.Y
Jo1maf/ &ncfa'c •ltfOngecf
wf/• gdl Mr tum. at ·~ pl.ate °' •lut tdll how lwr. all-itor hu.band JJlaJ/'4 pjng .. pong
"'"" 1U beJ mara on u..fr ~.nlgld.and ~ned •h.• pou for Hudler ~S..ecgeAJ.
.... s: .. •• Ate
I I
~
,
A2
Buffalo Shuffle Bandit's
. ~pp are I
'Stic~
HUGHES •••
32 Miles Takes 32 Hours in Storni le1itlmate than any other
purported Hughes will be hu
seen, tbe San Gabriel Vall~y
Trlbuhe said. He said the docu·
ment has been examined by
aut.bort Md tu.med over to ta..
county el erk 'a off lee for
aalekMPlftc.
EDITOR'S NOTE: NI.Ju Jfen·
.drlclu, AuoclaUd PT111 Ce>rnlpOn-tkfd .. ~ • .,.... two .,.
dritrlng lJO m1"1 from S_vr'OC1£1e to
hffaJo, to lwlp cowr the norm
1torJ1. Thr following~ ha.account o/
tM dl//INI trip
By lllmE~NDlllCllB
.DARIEN, .• CAP) -When
1tae police J Id you couldn 'l get to snowbound Butfalo from
ANTHONY •••
slfttVlsorial candidate.
..4s for Remington, he a1reed
wjth Anthony's original supposi-
tiGll that $28,200 worth of Anthony
Joana were personal and not io the
supervisor's campaign commit·
tM.
To back him up. the Fullerton
attorney has copies of three An·
thony notes, all of them signed
personally by the county
sufervisor and with no menUon ot
his campaign comtnlttee.
Also, the three checks covering
the $28,200 worth or loans are
payable to "Philip Anthony", and
bear a similar endorsement.
Remington said he is pleased
with the way Anthony has handled
the transact.ions, including the
immediate repayment ot a $1S,000
primary election loan.from the
proceeds of a fund raise~
Richard J. O'Neill, w\UI three
Weeks ago chairman of the
Democratic Party in Orange
County an1t until last weekend
Southern California party
chairman, is a partner in RJO en-
terprises.
Like the Conrad and Remington
loans, Anthony originally showed
the $5,000 RJO loan as coming
from himself.
Last week, Anthony said he ha~
talked with the District At·
torney's Office and "probably"
would amend his disclosure state·
ment.
· The freshman supervisor said
the stir caused by his reporting
methods surprised him and is
something he'd "like to lay to
rest.''
His disclosure statements were
originally challenged when
$10,000 shown as coming from a Co~ta Mesa building supply firm
was traced through Conrad.
The 42-year-old former police
informer is under a federal Grand
Jury's scrutiny because of the
operations of Pension Funds of
America, an Irvine-based firm he
controls.
Along with county Supervisor
Ralph Diedrich's role as a ..-olun-
teer campaign rundraiser for
various political candidates lalt
fall, Conrad's and Remington's
parts in the campaigns of An·
thony and Assemblyman Dennis
Mangers CD-Huntington Beach),
ar~ under scrutiny by the Orange
Counfy Grand Jury.
The county Grand Jury re·
portedly also is investigating
techniques used by Diedrich to
solicit campJtign funds from
builders, developers and others
who do business with the county.
Conrad. Remington, and
Cobrad aide Loran Norton are
among those aubpoenaed to ap-
pear before the Jury this week.
•
Solid Life·
Te":D8. Urged
SACRAMENTO (AP) -A
Jeeialatcr who oppoeea capital
pwliahmmt wants first-degree
mllrde:ren to apend tbe rest ot
their lives in prison, with no
cbuce « a 1overnor ahortenlng
their terms. (Related story, AS)
State Sen. Mllton Marki CR·
San Fnnclseo), Introduced the
le1iaJation Monday,
'•Tbe proapect of life im-
prllonment without ever 1etting
o\lt ot priSCJn would, in my opt.
nloo, be a 1reater deterrent to
crlline. than tbie death penalty,"
he said. "It would make sure
that lite means life," he added.
s
DAILY PILOT
Syracuse, they were exaggerat·
Ina. Jl wasn't impossible -just
the a~ thing to it.
When traveling throueh
blizzard-stricken western New
York, t.beonly way to go was in a
trooper-e:seorted convoy. The hilid winds and blowing snow
turned the 130-mile trip into a
32-hour journey.
The rlrsl day's drive ended
abrupUy in this rural Genesee
..... ,....,..... lleadfl Act ' Tightrope walker Karl
Wallenda did a headstand
halfway throu g h hi s
highwire walk between two
Miami Beach. hotels Mon-
day night, but televis ion
viewers didn 't s ee it
because the network had
switched to a ~ommercial.
He was part of the s ame
television s pecial for which Evel Knievel was practicing
when he landed ii\$. Chicago
hospital. See ~tory, photos
on Page A4.
F,....PapAJ
'ROOTS' .••
history now stood this way:
"Roots." Jan. 30.; "Gone with
the Wind -Part I; .. "Gone with
the Wind ,,Part 11 ·''..:J Bob Hope
Christmas Special:" 1970; "The
Fugitive." 1967. and "Roots,"
Jan. 28, tied in fifth place;
"Roots," Jan. 27; "Bob Hope
C}\ristmas Special," 1971 ;
"Roots." Jan. 25; "Ed Sullivan
Shbw," with the Beatles in 1964.
and Super Bowl XI last month.
ABC said that during the eight
nights "Roots" was aired starting
Jan. 23, it was seen by 8S percent
of the potential viewing audience,
or 130 million persons at one time
or another .
It had an average 44.9 rating,
which translates to 32 million
homes, and was seen by an
average of two-thirds of the
television audience all week.
,,,.... Pflfle AJ
CHARGES ••
is free oa bis promise to appear in
Santa Ana Municipal Court.
Judge Perez declined to
elaborate on his pre-trial de-
cision.
Defense attorney Jam es Stotler
branded the continued prosecu-
tion olGuzman as "insane" Mon·
day after commentina that bis
SO· page brief and not any error in
tbe indictment led Judge Perez to
dlaml.sa the charaes.
"Very simply, there ls no case
ag,tnst. UUs man," Stotler pro-
tested. ''This t prosecution is
idiotic and if the effort puts me in
my p-ave I intend to clear Mr.
Ousmanofthese charges."
.. --
Ex-cop ~leads
No Contest
LOS ANGELES (AP> -A former"eoliceman ch1r1ed with
beatir\I a motorcyclllt so badly
h• Jolt an eye faces ·~ Feb. 25 after ple.ciln1 no COG·
le$t to ueault undu color of authority.
Charle• F. Hueforcl. who
rude blt plea Monday before
Su,.riae' CoUrt .Jud(e Edward
A. Ulna .rr., faffl a. mwmum
aentence cA OM year ln Jail and
a ts.ooo~ ,
. Ber9':Q, 21: •u ••Plilided . f1'0m t.bil fOl'CO pend1DC tile· oot--
come of h1a caM, and 18 DO
IONer: a member of the Loi
-. Ant.a.. Police ~rtlltmt.
•
County town Sunday night with
an anlJ')' trooper directiq traffic
to the local town hall some 20
mile.s short ot Buffalo.
Motoriata had turned to the
two-lane country hl1bway
tbroutb here when anow closed
tbe western section oi. the atate
Thruway. Now Route 20, littered
wltb abandoned, snow-covered
hulks -stalled tractor-trailer
rigs -waa closed, too.
One driver had bffo stranded
for four days, livlng off the
boloena sandwiches and
generosity of tbe volunteer ·
firemen and their wives.
Meanwhile, troopers were
If be hun 't chanted bi•
dothes yet, Costa Mesa police
have a pretty good chance of cap-
twln1 an armed robber who took m at ewipomt from a conve-
nience market Monda)' morning.
lt was the cunman's apparel
that stuck in lh~ mind ol tho
UTotEm Mark~t clerk, police Slid~.
''We uked our county cCNMel
whether or not it could be ecMa· •~rued aa a will and thoy inclleat·
eel it coqld bo construed u a
testamentary documcsnt, which meaoa the lut wlabea of a.,...
who died," Altman 1aJd.
A 1poke1man for Su11nna
Corp., wblcb controls Hulbel'
holdlnll, Hid that* wo\IJd be DO
comment.
threatening to arrest and fine ~ lfhta anyone traveling on the highway.
, Two motorista had been killed in
The male baodit was weartnc •
black silk or nylon Jumpault with
bib top and strap, no shirt, a
brown jacket. and carrying a
brown leather purse.
The clerk at the marltet, 2271
Fairview Road, said the tall.
dark and thin suspect displayed a
small black gun with a white han-
dle before escaping into the early
morning darkness with the casb.
P~rPlant
the storm.
"We're setious about this," a
stern.faced trooper said. "Last
night we caught 20 people trying
to go around the barricade. They
each gotfaned $200."
The storm was so bad that
snowplows were pulled off the
roads at ni1ht. Even with a
Arthbishop of Cante rbury
Dr. Donald Coggan wears a
miner's helmet during a vis-
it to the Bettsh ange r
Colllery near Deal ,
England. The archbishop
went into the mine and
chatted with mine.rs.
. .
Foes Seized
Guard Hike Set ·
MEXICO CITY CAP) -The
snowplow escort, volunteer Probe Unde• Way firemen could not get to a pre-.a
dawn barn fire in time to save 150
• Mexican government bas pro-
mised increased protection to
Chilean and Argentine exiles
after a report that spies and hit
men from those two right-wing
military dictatorships are in -
filtrating into Mexico, a promi-
nent exile reports.
NASHUA , N.H. CAP> -Six
M aaaachusett.s residents were
arrested outside a New
Hampshire state liquor store
where they were collecting
signatures on a petition a1ainst
the Se abrook nuclear power
plant.
Police s aid the two women
and four men were arraigped in
N ashua District Court on
charges of criminal trespass
and bail wu set at $200 each.
pigs.·
About 50 persons spent \he
night and half the next day in the
fire hall, .sleeping on bunks
brought in and eating bol<>troa
sandwiches, soup and fried eggs.
The people were great, but you
c-an get tired of bologna
sandwiches.
Finally. stale troopers agreed
to lead a convoy out of Darien,
because the unexpected visitors
were eating the town out of food.
Last car in the convoy wasn't
the best position for someone ~
whose rented car with a son front
tire couldn't make it out of the
snow-covefed firehall driveway.
Eight firemen pushed me out.
Once under way, the convoy
made progress. Even snow drifts
couldn't stop the traffic. The
small drifts were so hard the cars
just ran over them. Large drifts
ranged up to 25 feet.
Our convoy of about 40 cars
had to go back to Rochester, to
make the link-up with the
Thruway. It was officially
closed, but we were handed toll
tickets anyway.
Troop cars took the lead and
tail, while another one rode up
and down the line. At times it was
so bad from the blowing snow,
you couldn't see the tail lights of
cars IS feel in front of you. A few
people went off the road. but the
troopers were right there to help.
In our group was a Canadian
couple, and persons from In-
dian a, Kentucky, and New
Hampshire, b,ut most were from
the Buffalo area. A lot of the
vehicles were trucks or com-
mercial carriers.
The 60-mile trip to Buffalo took
six hours. When I arrived, about
8 p.m. Monday night, it looked
something like a bombed out city
-very quiet, wilh a few people
walking and occasionally a car going by.
The roads were packed ice;
there was a lot of spinning of Ures
and you got in trouble if you
stopped.
I still have the receipt., for the
$1.15 toll they collected when I
got off the ''clos.ed" Thruway.
* * * F,....P,,.eAJ
STORMS •••
abandoned autos and drifting
snow.
The forecast included the
possibility of several more in·
ches of snow for Buffalo today
and wind gusts as high as 40
miles per hour. But the winds
were expected to drop to 10 to 20
m.p.h. by tonight.
Makowski aaid only vehicles
carryiq necessary rqediclne,
food, or (uel will be allowed to
travel. Violatore will be.arrested
and prosecuted aud will be sub-j~ct to fines. and imprisonment, .
he said.
At least 11 states -Including
New York -bad already or-
dered emertency measure1 to
deal with the weather and energy
crisis.
The federal eneray le1i1latlon
would live Carter authority .to
divert natural 1u to areas wbere
it '1 most needed and would free
some natural 1u from federal
price coat.rol.a throu1h AUf. L
lndUJtry baa been hit the
hardest by the 1u abortaae, and omcw. in Onto ana 1nara.nae.x-
pressed fears of more workers
beint l~ off amid a deepening
shortage.
Indiana Employment Security
DiviJlon Director Jobn F~ Coppa
said a new cutback 111nounced
Monday by the Northern Indiana
Publlc Servic~ Co. could meaua
la1otf1 fot 100,000. Gov. Olis lt.
Bo•en eatlmates 50,000·60,000
atate .realdenta aie out ot ·work
and a.100 Orm• have been affect.
ed by cqrtallmenta. Northern In·
dlana tnnou.Dced cutback.a to
2,fOO ~ flrrDt.
~Man Burm SeH
-, -t
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
record industry la tµtder federal
investigation for possible an·
titrust violations.
Water Rationing Bits
Marin Co~y ·Resitknts Filling Vesseh
SAN RAFAEL (AP) -Strict waler r a·
tioning began in parched Mann·county today.
after re5idents hit the stores in a last-minute
rush for anything that would hold water.
"It's been phenomenal," said manager
Bill Daniels o f Un•ted Markets in San
Anselmo. "We're completely out of buckets.
They're'buying them two and three at a time."
THE F.W. WOOLWORTH Store at Corte
Madera said it sold out all garbage cans, dis·
hpans and buckets.
•'Some people a r e r ead y to t a ke
anything," said assistant manai:er Tom
Hurley.
Monday night was the last chance fot
169,000 residents of southern Marin County lo
stock up on water before the start of rationing
aimed at re<iucing consumption by 57 percent.
The Marin Municipal Water District has
laid down harsh financial penalties for anyone
who exceeds the daily allotment of 47 gallons per person starting today.
MEANWIDLE, AS THE STATE faced the
grim prospect that the year will be the driest
on record, the weatherman had bad news for
Northern California. Rain this month is ex-
pected in the places where it wlll do the least good. •
"Things look very grim," Ken Woodward,
head of the state Drought Information Center,
s aid after the National Weather Service re-
ported its 30-day forecast predicts below-
normal rainfall in Northern California.
The forecast, however, sllys there will be
above-normal rain in Southern California.
Good vilues on tires and r teries.
Atlas 42-month Pacesetter , ..
for cars with normal
accessory loads, $31 Quick alerting power
AtlH PA22F, with trado·1n.
It! .J .. ·:...'Jt,. 1f:-l~ ., .. ,4 UUt .... ,J't. .. -" IUt ,., o"'" 01 .. lt ~ ... "~· 01'·••
01 .. •• MM t •t ""·" lfTl.U M,Ct '"' ttn.U
, ... ~rr .. -.......... '"'"" •·1' .,...... la•
137.41 U.42 ...... U I
40.41 1'5
-•1.u t .,
cut •• • CMclll OW ffl-Oft 011\ef tllff.
~.n1 lltllHN.OIMONHCll.
Atlas 60-month
, f!emium Power .... s39 ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~Y· for big accessory
, loads. J .
...~-AllH PH022F, with lt8dO·ln
'
• I
Orange · ~oast
' EDITION
. . Tod~' Clos .....
N.Y. S&oe
. ' VOL. 10, NO. 32, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANG6 COUNTY, CALI FORNtA c TEN CENT
C8Iifornia
SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -
California imposed emergency
reatrtctians today on the use of
natural ,., -inelucllng a ban on
all lwmry uses -to help relleve tbt! crlaU in other parts ~ the contry.
Robert Batfuovicb, president
of the Calllomla Public Utilities
Commlaalon, said the reatric-
ttona may place Californians
"below the comfort level," but
* ·* * Buffalo
Storm
Kills 12
By The Associated Press
Winter kept itl frigid grasp on
the Northeast and Midwest to-
day, and a state of emergency
was declared in Buffalo, N.Y.,
lwhere 12 persons have died in the
worst storm in the city's history.
An estimated 75 deaths have
been blame d on the bitter
eather in states hit by the big
rP.eze. ~Related story, A4>
An Army engineering battalion
f 300 men was ordered to Buffalo
ay to help the city clear its
lreets of abandoned autos and
now drifts. Federal disaster of-
ECONOMY'S FREEZE.
MAY OllTLAST CbLD-A11
ficials said the unit was order~
to fly with its equipment from I'\.
Bragg, N.C., "as soon as they
can get here."
The natural gas shortage
caused by freezing weather kept
many schools, fa.cj.ories and busi-
nesses closed, leaving up to 1.5
million workers off the job.
Congress moved closer to
enacting le(islation to ease the
aaturaJ gu, crisis. Au emergency
blD proposed by President Carter
was approved by the Senate 91 to
2 Monday night. The House ap.
proved the bill today but it must
be reconsiled with the Senate
measure. Buffalo Mayor Stanley
akowski issued the emergency
eclaration for his city at 3:30
·.m . PST, banning all but essen·
al vehicular traffic in the city to
able federal and state cnews to
ear the streets, still clogged by
~andoned autos and drifUng
now. ,
The forecast included the
sibility ot several more in·
es ot snow for Buffalo today
nd wind gusts as hllh u 40
ea &>er hour. But the winch
• ere expecte,t to drop to 10 to 20
. .p.b.,by tonight.
Makowski said only vehicles
arryina necessary med!cio.e,
food, or fuel will be a!Jowed to
U'avel. Violators wW be arrested
and prosecuted and will be aub--
Jeet to ftnea and hnpriaoument,
be Hid.
<See STO•MS. PJ1e At>
T SACRAMENTO CAP> -tellalailotl autboriiinl a a.N-
JplDlon state Joan to keep the
loutbena Call!omla antiamOf d.ls·
trld afloat bu been puaed '°the
Goorof tbe sttteSenate.
• But motMr bill Civinl tbe dis·
' h'lct a no0.trln11·attacbed. t:I '2·DillllOO grant was killed by
Ul• a.ate FlnaDc• Committee
•odd&.voaal·lOvote. I
I
will not lmpou hardship& u in
the Wdwtilt. East aQff South.
0'Tbe enel'J1 crisil is lndivlai·.
ble,., be eip&llned ... What aftect.s
otb~ ol the cQUDtry altect!s c.Htorma. Tbe steCle are belqj
taken beeause jobs are be1na lost
and people icre <1Yin1-" ·
Southern C1Ul9111la G11 Com-
pany last weelC' said it could
make 2.5 billion cubic feet availa-
ble to Cities $4µ-vice in Oklahoma
.and Kansas th~h the El Paso
Natural Gaa Compaoy and
Tran1we1tern Pipeline m·
pany.
Padtic Gu ~ Electric has
offered to loan S6utbem Natural
Gas ComPQY in' BtrmlnJbam. Ala., up to 109 million cubic feet
of gu per day for a month foc uae
In Georgia, South Carolina.
Alabama; Miuissippi, Tey-
nessee and Florida.
Nurses Aid Ct1~list
" Two off ·duty nurses assist Costa Mesa paraD'\edics in a
parking lot at SOuth CoJ(st Plata Monday afte r a
motorcycle driven by Brian W. Chapman collided with a
car driven by Mar>' Jensen of Orange. The 17-year-old
Costa Mesa boy was reported in stable condition today
at Mercy Genera l Hospital. T he two nurses, Helen
Galurro (left> and Carol 'Fischer, drove past the scene
of t he 11:40 a .m. crash and stopped to offer help.
· Biiilding Permits
Top $6.2.7 Million
Cotta Mesa rwsbed 1916 with a
wbopp~ $182. 7 million worth of
penqits issued for new construc-
tion in the city. That figure is
nearly three times.the amount re-
corded tn 1975, according to city
records.
Builcl1ng permits were taken
but for 180 multi-fam ily projects
for a total of $24 J'ljllioo -$1
mUHoll more than all pennii-.
eombllN!dat the end or 1976. Planning D"irector Charles
' R.Obettl aald the dramatic in·
CH ... in buildinC penntl .valt.Ul·
Uoril Ip due in part to several large
ap~ cotbplexet •Oringiog
gp la ttie city, aa well u new con-
1t:ntcUon uncle!' way at South
ComPlaa.
~ sald two large con·
domlnlum projects, one at the
northwest corner of Sunflower
A •en\ie and Bear Street, and
anothel' oa tbe 11qt1b aide of ·
Paolarl.bo Avenue eut of Brlatol
Slreet. helped boost the ·1976
permlt.11,ures.
.. lDaddition,"hesaid, "Webad
tM PiDecreek apartment project.
OD Adams Avenue and a bu1e ,pro-
jeet at the old Paulo Drive-in
Theater location.''
He said those four projects
• helped raise tbe total number of
multi-family dwelling units to
1,185 lastyear as compared tooo-
ly 209 units io 1975.
Permlt!J for multi-family pro-
jects totaled *24 million last year,
compared with $4.4 million in
1976, ·~~tine for nearly one
• third Qltheto'-1 value of permits
issued. '
Perm.its for single family pro-
ject.a ~ 1h9wed impressive
iatn.s Jut year, climbinJ by more
tbanthree times. with istrmits is-
sued for 37f homes as compared
<See PERMITS, Page Al)
Huge Fund Urged
WASHINGTON (AP) -
George Meany, personally carry-• mi his fJCht to Congress tor a big.
ger job• program, is arging
lawmakers to reject President
Carter's ••umid approach" and
spend $10 bUUon for public works
projects thJ.a year.
Natural ·GaS
B·atlnovlch said the gas will be
sent ''on loan" to hard·hJt areas
and will be r e placed tater
thi.s year as the supply situation
improves. But he added, "even if
we sbouldn 't be able to get it back,
it 'sonecountry." Besides encou·raging the
transfer of gas supplies by the two
major C•llfornia utilities, the
J;>UC order, effective im-
mediately:
-R equires all utility
c u stomers to se t thell·
thermostats at 6:> degrees during
the day and 55 degrees duriq
sleeping hours and suggests addi-
tional sweaters and cloth.in& or
""other means of keeping
warmer" be used.
-Orders a ball to all luxury
uses of natural gas in the state, in-
cluding beating swimming pools,
gas fireplaces, decorative light-
ing and similar uses.
-Restricts space he~t.ing lem-.
\,
peratures of commercial and i~
dustrial establishments to a hltb
ol 65 degrees ~~ requiHS beat·
ing be shut oii during nonbusiness
hours except those areas wbete
minimum temperatures are
needed to keep pipes from tteei:
inf or being damaged.
-Requires all hotel, motel and
similar businesses to shut offbeat
in vacant guest rooms and forbl
uae of beating or l.l()()ling faclllti
unliltheroomiaoccupied.
Merger Viewed
Water Unit Urged in Mesa
By STEVE MITCHELL
Ol 1• O.lly ~, .. , Sl•lf
Saying the move coutd save
Costa Mesa taxpayers $137.000 to
$175,000 aMually, a city council·
appointed committee recom·
mended Monday that the Costa
Mesa County Water Di~trict be
merged into the city as.a depart·
ment.
The decision was met with little
surprise from water district QI·
ficials who have indicated they
will Oght the merger every step of
the way.
The 11-member panel, appoint·
Anthony
Changes .
Statement
• By GARV GRANVILLE
OltM Oally ~li.t Sl•ll
Less than a blOnth after first fit.
ing)S, Oraii•• Coumr Supervisor
Phlllp Anthony amended his final
campaign discl08,UJ'e statement
Monday to show the true sourte of
$63,200worthofcampaignloans.
On his original disclosute state-
ments, Anthony showedithe loan::.
to Friends or Philip Anthony were
from himself.
But the Westminster
supervisor's amended slatemenl
shows the loans came from
former paid police informant
Gene Conrad, Fullerton attorney
Michael Remington and RJO En-
terprises. ,
' In an interview last week, An·
thony said he showed the loans
coming from himself because he
believed be personally, not the
ca mpaign committee, was
responsible for their repayment.
"I believed J borrowed the
money personally and, In turn,
lent it to my campaign commit-
tee,'' the super.visor said.
He said that reporting method
was followed after consulting
with political consultant William
Butcher, attorney Chip Nielson
and Certified Public Accountant
Ray Edwards.
"There certainly was no intent
to deceive anyone," Anthony in-
sisted.
His amended statement shows
he borTowed $30,000 from in·
fortner·turned·financier Conrad
in the final days of his campaign
again.st Santa Ana City Coun-
cilman Harry Yamamoto. .
ln a tape recorded interview
three weeks ago, Conrad denied
lending Anthony m oney and said
the supervisor probably got the
money from hls retirement fund
at Rockwell International.
Bµt apparently Conrad lent the
$30,000 to an Anthony friend and
campaien backer who, in tum,
loaned the money to the then
supervlsortal candidate.
<See ANTHONY, Pace AZ>
ed 10 months ago by the city coun-
cil, reached its decision in an 8·2
vote late Monday night, with
members Ralph Burgess and Don
Tompkins opposedJ.o the merger
and member Faye Wilson absent
The panel was aided in its study
by reports from independent con-
sultants hired by the city and by
,the water dislric;t. The decision
that the district should be made a
subsidiary department of the city
came after comparison o( those
reports.
The recommendation could go
AMENDS FUND REPORT
County Supervisor Anthony
Final 'Roots'
Episode Sets
1VRecord
NEW YORK <AP) -The
serialization of "Roots" made
television history last week, ac·
cording to A. C. Nielsen figures
made available today.
Sunday's concluding episode
was the all-time most. watched
show in America. {n addition, four
of the 10 most watched shows in
the history of television were
episodes of the serialization of
Alex Haley's novel. '
WithL·'Root.a" listed in last
w eek·~ national prime·time
averages as seven ofthe top seven
·shows, ABC carried the enllre
week ending Jan. 30 wjlh all 16 of
the top 16 shows.
lts loweat-ranked show oJ81 rat·
ed programs was tied with CBS'
"M•A•S•H." It. was "The Cap-
tain and Tennille."
Ranked 26th, "The Captain and
<See 'ROOTS.• Pale AJ)
to the city council as soon as next
Monday night.
The water district's general
manaeer, Ed Schnabel. said he is
not surprised by the committee's
findings, adding "They were
simply afact-finding body. Theis·
s11e is really up to the city council
as to what is going to take place
next ."
He added the district, an in·
de pendent agency, is far from
ending its fight to halt a consolida-
tion.
The water committee's three·
(See MERGER, Pace c\Z)
New .Offer
For lnJine
l
Finn Made
A claim by the Mobjl OU Coen,
pany that it is the only contQcler. •
w~ '°me an -1\ c .... ~ . for UM lr CO • .,, qwcldy s own Monday
the trial of Irvine heiress Joan
Irvine Smith '&lawsuit. againat the
James Irvine Foundation re-
sumed in Orange County Superior
Court.
Representa tivel of a con-
sortium headed by Wall Street
financie r Cha rles Allen and
Detroit developer Alfred Taub·
man announced that they are now
prepared to oifer $282.7 million in
cash for the Irvine interests.
The offer tops Mobil's S281.9
million bid by $800,000. And it ap-
pea rs to make the Allen.
Taubman interest the top con·
tender in what has been a bitter
battle for control or the Irvine
Company.
Mrs. Smith is known to favor
the Allen-Taubman bi<\ because or a provision that she wvuJd be aJ.
lowed to retain her 22. 4 percent in·
terest in the company founded by
her grapdfather if the offer is sue·
cessful.'
The other two contenders in the
Irvine Company acquisition
race are not prepared to ut.epd
that privilege to Mrs. Smith. She
would be compelled to sell her
stockiftbeytookover. .
The Allen-Taubman represen-
tatives made it clear Monday im·
mediately after Judge James F.
Judie resumed what bas been a
two-year court battle that the new
offer will only apply lf asyatemoC
sealed bids is ordered by the
court.
Allen-Taubman otricials ancl
representatives of Cadlllac
<SeelRVINE. Page.U)
Coast
W'eatber In atb-1 •ote, UM committee ap-
proved the loan bilJ, by As~
!F,IDblyman Jerfl Lewis CB· ~~cblud>-· , -Tbe i...i. bW .1"Nld praylc1e
•mer1e11c1 tundlng tor the
Spqtbern Callfomla Air Quallb' Jf •naaement District. ·
Water · B•·tionlng Bits Variable blib clouds
through Wednesday.
Cooler da1• with highs hi
60s. Lows '5 to 53.
Tb• new dlltrict faces a molt ' Loe An(eles CountJ, wbidf ts
1q &o PA1 Its abare of the ec
TIM dlatrict 11 made up of all of o..anre 0ount1, and the populout
.-u '11 Loe Angeln, lUvenlde
ud San n.nanunoeoupues.
• Tai• amount a count.¥ Ja1* ~ penctsoo ltl population. .
Loi~ Couatyb1110 per. eat ii the :pOs!Wailon alljt ll •us>-1*ect to .., 10 percent of Ute t111dc•L But· tbe coun\J''•
.-.~ contend that u tho
GOUD«)' ~¥ides blOlt of tM lund.·
iftl it ibOukt have mott tJt tbo• ~tff oo tbe, d1'trict'1 board.
whleh has UM Job ot coolrolllq . jfatlon~~1mof.
J
. Mclrin.,County Reaitlenta Filling JI ea1ell •
" t •a t •• AM M
•
,.
I
'
A z DAILY PILOT c
Kille:r
By TOM BARLEY Of ..1111 o.ilr ...... SU"
' . ' One of four mm wbo inflicted
what the trial protfCIStor
described as 'un1pea\table
torture" on a man who was
beaten, kicked, atran1led a~'
bumed ~ death ln a Placentia
ap.,-tment wu found eullty ot
second degree murder late Mon·
day.
An Or.ace CoUnty Superior
Court JW')' ended nearly four
da1s er deliberation b)' ret"""'1nc
that verdlct ln the trial of Gary
Eaaex, 24. of Compton. He was
additionally found iullly or as·
sault eharaes. /
Judie Walter Smith nt Feb. 16
u the dete he will sentence J:s· aex to what could be not less than
11 years in stale prison on the two ..............
ANTHONY STATEMENT. • •
As for ReminllOn. he agreed
with Anthony's ort1lnal supposi·
tion that $28,200 worth of Anthony
loans were personal and not to~
superviaor's campai1n comolit·
tee.
To back him up, the Fullerton
attorney has copies of three An·
tt>ony notes, all of them signed
perso na lly by lhtr county
11).aperviSOl' and with no mention ot bJs campaign committee.
1 Also, the tbi'ee checu coverint
~e $28,200 worth of loans are
payable to "Philip Anthony" and
bear asimilar endorsement.
Remington said he is ,Pleased
with the way Anthony baa handled
the transaction:s, tncludlng the
immediate repayment or a $15,000
primary election loan from the
proceeds of a fund raiser.
Fro.. P.,,e AJ
PERMITS •..
with only 84 m 1975.
Total value or single family
homes begun in 1976 topped $1S
million. considerably higher than
the $4.4 million recorded in 197S.
There were fewer commercial
p ermits issued last year, but their
v alue tdlaled $7.3 million, as com·
pared with only S4.8 million 1975,
according to planning depart·
lflentfigure§.
Only 40 com~ercial permits
w ere issued. 11 less than issued in
1975. Roberts said the expansion
i>f South Coast Plaza. with three
new department stores planned
for the giant mall complex, added
· t othebuildingvaJuationflgures.
Industrial permits also c11moeo
dramatically last year. from 21
projects worth S3.8 mllllon to 74
11ew projects totaling $9.3 m \lllon
Roberts said other permits,
aucb as electric: heating and
plumbing permits. bro1.aght to
?,869 the number of permits in
1976. wh.lch compares to S,440 ls·
i;ued in 1975.
· Roberts sa\d he was not sur·
prised at the buildm& increase in
Costa Mesa, sayine, "This ls a
rapidly growing city and we've
had so much activity around here
lately that these f11ures just pro-
vetbat polnt."
l'rem •-.4J
STORMS.;.
Richard J. O'Neill. unUI three
week• aeo c hairman of the
Democratic Party In Oran1e
County and until last weekend
So uthe rn California party
chairman, ls a partner ln RJO en·
terprises.
Like the Conrad and Remington
loans, A.nthOny origina lly showed
the $5,000 RJO loan as coming
from bimseltt
Last week, Anthony said he had
talked with the District At·
torney's Office and "probably"
would amend his disclosure s tate·
menl. ~
The freshman supervisor said
trie aUr caused by bis reporting
methods surprised him and is
something he'd "like to lay to
rest ." · His disclosure statements were
originally .challenged whe n
Sl0,000 shown as coming from a
Costa Mesa building supply firm
was traced through Conrad.
The 42-year-old former police
informer is under a federal Grand
Jury's scrutiny because of the
operations of Pension Funds of
America, an Irvine· based firm he
controls.
Along with county Supervisor
Ralph Diedrich 's role as a volun·
teer campaign fundralser for
various political candidates last
fall, Conrad·s and Remington's
parts in the campaipa of An·
thony and Assemblyman Dennis
Mangers (J).Hunllngton Beach>.
are under scrutlny by the Orange
County Grand Jury.
The county Grand Jury re·
portedty also is investigating
techniques used' by Dtedrith to
solicit campaign funds from
builders, developers and others
who do business with th~ county.
Conrad •. Remington. and
Conrad aide Loran Norton are
among those subpoenaed t.o ap-
pear before the jury this week.
F,....P.,,.AJ
'ROOTS' ..•
Tennille" wu seen In an estimat-
ed 1.58mlllionhomes.
The concluding episode of
"Root.a" posted a 51.1 rating,
meanini it Wal viewed 1n 36.4
milllonhouaeholds.
A Nielsen spokesman said it
outpaced last fall 'a record·aetUn1
broadcast of "Gone Wlth , the
Wind" on NBC.
CMvtt.'dom lfbe declcttt ta apply
them coosecutively.
ll• bu a1rud1 acbedulecl Feb.
10 •• the date ho wm aentence co-
defendant Richard "Preacher"
McKay, ~ of Placentia.; who
ma)' draw • Ufe term tol1owinc
bl• •• u ... JW'Y ~victlon ot rim
d•lret tnurder.
McKay , Enex , Jerome
Dedrick Toles, 19, of Compton
and BlUY' Wa)'tl• Hollies, 22, ol
Santa Ana, were arrested in con •
necUoo with the kUlina of Ervln
Sutton, 22. ol Garden Grove, last
Aerna. It wu testlfled that the four
men, helped by two women who
were deacribed by the defebdants u vlctima of Sutt.on 'a association
wltb police officers, hottied S\4l·
ton then kicked, slashed and beat
him.
~hing Old Depths
Sutton's ordeal. which included
being jumped on while held down
in a bathtub. filled with water,
ended when one of the two
women ln,Jected battery acid into
his veinl and virtually burned
him to death.
Pacific Telephone repairmen ate working
18 feet under the ground at the comer of
Bristol Street and Santa Ana Avenue,
splicing telephone cables for Cosia Mesa
customers. Officials at the utility said 14
concrete ducts of conduit cable. some nut in yearl ago for future use, are now being
spliced into operation. The utility expects
work on the proj ect ta be completed
within two weeks . ·
One of the two women bas been
identified by the prosecution as
Cynthia Mendenhall, 24, 143C
Avenida Del Mar, San Clemente,
who facea a preliminary hearing
Fe b. 17 In Santa Ana municipal
court on related murder charges.
Arresting officers said Mrs.
Mendenhall provided them with
the Information that led to the ar·
Mt1rder Charge Refiled
rests o( the ro ur men but Although c l ea red or
minimized her own role in the mabslaughter charges by an
killing of Sutton. Orange County Superior Court
It seemed unlikely late Mon-Judge, Laguna Niguel electrician
day that Toles would go on trial Daniel Gonzales Guzman faces o~ charges of robbery, assault new allegations of second de1ree
with a deadly weapon and dis· murdert.oday. posttton of a body. Deputy District Attorney Paul
Judge Smith set Friday for a Meyers explained that the new
court appearance that may r.e· char&es are a renewal of those
suit ln Toles' filing a plea to the~ abandoned when Guzman, 32, of
a llegations. Hollins has pleaded 29821 Paaeo de Ocaso, waa ll)dict-
gullly to reduced charges of be-ed by the Grand Jury on char1es
Ing an accessory to murder and of Involuntary manslauihter.
faces sentencing at a later date. Tboee charaea stemmed from h1s·alleaed actlon In rlning a trlp
wire ln his front yard that claimed
the llfe of Ke lly Mic helle
McMullen, his netihbor'a 2·year·
old daughter. .~
Guzman explained to sheriffs
otficers that the hlCh volta"e line
was intended to keep dogs and
ca ta off hh nower beds .
He was attested on crl min al
c harges and later s ued for
$300,000 in damages by the~
Mc Mullens. Meyers explained Monday that
Judge James 0 . Perez' dismissal
of the indictment counts was
based on a technicality that made
prosecution of the lndictment as it
stood Impossible. ·
•'We have refiled charcei of
second degree murder and
Guzman will 'be arraiped Feb.
28, • · the prosecutor sale!. Guaman
la free on b1a promise to appear ln
Santa Ana Munl cl pal Court..
Defense att.omey Jam ea Stotler
branded the continued prosecu·
Uon of Gusman as "insane" Mon·
day, aft.er commenting that his
50·page brief and not any error in
the Indictment led Judge .Perez to
dlamias the charges.
. "Very simply, there,is no case
.against this man,•· Stotler pro·
teated. "This prosecution is
Idiotic and if the effort puts me In
m y grave I intend to clear Mr.
Guzmandfthesecharges."
Rwnmage Sale Set
At P o m ona Scliool
Members or the Pomona
Elementary School Parent·
Teacher Association who lost
several hundred dollars In a re-
. cent br~ak·ln al the school are
holdlna a rummage-and bake sale
Saturday to attempt to recoup
their losses.
Mrs. Chris Twardowski said the
sale will be held in the school
parking lot al 2051 Pomona Ave.,
from 8 a.m . to 5 p .m . For
further information. or offers of
donations for the sale. call Mr~ .
Weber at646·0862.
't()NIGHT
"BEHIND THE HEADLINES"
-Dr. Otlea T. Brown lecturer, occ Forwn. 7:aop.m.
COASTLINE CC LECTURE -
"Investment Alternatives to
Stocks and Bonds,'· Ronald C. Ga·
ble lecturer, Unitarian Church.
1259Vlctoria, 7p.m.
"OLD TIMES" -South Coast
Repertory Theater, Tuesday·
SundaylhroughFeb.19,8p.m.
Good valiles on tires and ··· teries.
WEDNESDAY, FEB. Z
COASTLINE CC LECTURES
-"What You Alwayg Wanted to
K.now About Travel1 .. '' Lee
Partin Lecturer, Estancia Hlgh
School Choral Room, 7:30 p.m.
"Claaaica of the Silent Screen,"
Paul Ballard lecturer, Estancia
mitt School Forum, 7p.m .
Atlas 42-month Pacesetter IM
for csrs with normal
acceaaory loads. $31 Quick starting power
'Atlas PA22F, w11n tredo·tn
Atlas 60-month Premium Power
$3~ ~~~~~~~ ~~~~t·
for big acceasory
Joiida.
All11 PH02 F, wnn tr~d•·tn.
At teut 11 atate1 -\nctudlna
New York -had already or·
dtred emer1ency meuures to
deal with the weather and energy
...._P .,,eAI •
crisis. ·
The federal enercy leals\alion
would live Carter authority to
divert natural fH to areu where
lt'a most n~ed and wwld free
some natural fH trom federal
price controlt lhrou•b Aus . 1.
lnduatty has been hit the
hardett by the 1as sbortace. and
otnclall in Ohio and Indiana ~
pressed rears of more work-en
l>etn1 laid off amid a deepenlna
ehorta1e.
lndtana Employ,.9'ent Security
J>lvlalon Dtrec\or John J'. Coppa
aald a new cutback ann~
I .
MERGER URGED. • •
p11e recommendation lists sav·
inl• expected in a merier includ·
in1:
.....£Umln1Uon of meeUn1 costa
fort wo aepuate 1ovemln1 bodies
(the city council ,Md the water
dlatrlct.) board of dlnctora)
-Al*Orpt.lon of some water dis·
trtct clerical runctlona by eltiltin1
city departmenta, and the use of
tbeettycomRPter.
-Reducin1 the amount of
w•ter-ntated convention atten-
Du1sao aid tbe council ha.a lwo
way1 to go on the commlttee's re··
commbdallon.
"They 'Will either vote to carry
on with the conaolidaUon proceed·
inti. or they wiU vote to drop the
matter al the council level," Du1·
aansaid.
If the luue 11 carried out, it wUl
proceed thro\l&b various county
offices, 1ncludlna the Local Asen· cl Formation Cornmluloo
< AFC>. which would make a re·
commendation to the county
Board of Supervisors.
I
· ~onday by th• Northern lndlana
Publlc Service Co. could mean
layoffs for 100,000. Gov. Oti.a R.
Bowell eatlmatea 50,000-80,000
elate residents are out of work
.and 3,100 rltrnl have b4ten affect·
ed by curtailments. Northern In·
diana announced cutbacks to
2.500 more Orms.
dance bydirec~n.
-tntearatlnl the dlstrlet's
public relit.tons funcUon lnt.o the
dty ·~ pub_Uo relations program.
-EllQiin'1inc cost of separate
elettlMI for water board mem·
bera.
-other savlnp, such u tbe
need for maintatnlnt separate
"Then the 1u~rvi1ors make
the final determlnilUon whether
to aP.5ove consolldatlon flat
out,' an1a1d, "or deny it."
He 1al the 1up6rvisor1 could
choose a third ~tlon and turn the
i.1ue over to I vote of the ciUsena
Uvlnc within the Costa Meaa
County Water Dtltrict.
Euiin'SIMI :;l
c
DAILY PI LOT
1
headquarters.
The water dtatrict h .. tona ob-.
jected ~'man7 of the so-called
aavincstothe.clty,•ayingthecity
muat be,cweraWfed b\ order to
take ovtr1n• ot the dhbict.'i
tasks.
"So this thlhg'1 far from bel.ng
over, ••1ie1atd.
Pr••h.,e AI ~
ne.consntttee a}locta1m..s: IR'rrNE -FraplentatlOft of declllen· ···~·.I. • • •
::.,.~J F"t,. ::J:: Fllrvtew Qrn>oraUon of Tol'GllU>,
countabiU , a4dlnJ tile clb''s ca:11ada, the otber' maJor ,bkld.,.,
crowth u deveJopmeat ihoU.ld h•v• reacted strongly to ~n
be carrl14 OD ..W a aina.. earlier open bkScllna proced\&n in junMtucUCJD. wblch Ute new• J1'edl• •of\en
-Tilt reol)Ollfl\ill!I f~= learned <II blda bofoh lh•Y • .,. ntns ~~~ta _•at.r 1 fUad lnt.be~ttroom. to~llrt~d• '.'-'Lawyers for the foundation ·~=~fi~,4~ = .. z:;~'T::4Uc~:=
mel\\athew .. '9\lvtct.: -~· repeat.cl llft.elDeall &Mt th'1 -J"lftYjUblldta1Y-cllslddt .,.. • want to aU tM tCNmS•tloda 14.5
1\0W cper9'ia• \lndtr cltJ lcwtlD• pilfteot~ IDtefUt lq the mentdlUhecountt. and "ltla..-. lhlneCoropay~Mobll .
..-~to CP'!cladf tho lt wt.ht
modtl'fl wa)' ot clolni •m• to put all ettY aervlc. under a 1lqle
Jur1141CtiGn. 'l"bl tommlttee aliO CU1CouMect •b~tttealledapec\&laUau.uua. -· aen1cet pro-¥lded woald d
te.Hora lri tbi eve ot • ~ tocltyCOUocll~.
AHll\anl Clb' llanqer RObart
. ' ~
I
Mn. Smltb iued the foqdltJOD
t1fO years 9"0 at a Um• WbeD the
defeltidantl wen pnparta1 to tell to MobUtor$IOO ailWon.
f'M IU2 ~. n. Ttit for
A11oll bllehtll, Wltll trade-In.
F our-AIY pofY9s1er cord
tor a smooth ride.
Ptllt 0 " F•d. b , Ttll lof E1 .. 14 llltckwafl, wtlll tflldl.<lft.
Polyea1er cord body wltt\
twin fiberglass cord belts.
,._,. •1.1' l"ed. IX. Tfil for
AA7 ... 13 ltrhlttwtU, lfl\11 tra!N•ln.
Radlal 1>41nOrm1ncre.
economically prl~d.
Benld 1111111 '1J l $4799~:'
fllus st.at ,td. ~ •. 'fell for
BA7'-13 *lltl•wall, witn If~. '
Our bht tire. Tope In mll••o• end pertormance.
·()ff Duty;
' Cops Tola
'Cut·Sex'
LONG BEACH (AP) -A
1rodp ot Loac Beach poUeemen
known durinl oft-dutJ boun u .
the 6cKIUl &y CJub hu been toa.l
by Polle. Chief Bal.PJI Kort& to
stop tbelr early mornia1 driAk·
Un, and IG 1*11• ia pattlq
Iota nearthe1tatloo. • The "dub" hu approalmately
l20 members but bu included up
to 100 officers in the past. KCJIU
Jaid.
The m~malrlnt involved
*r driitJdD& and sexual aetivtb'
with womp partlclpanta, be
&aid..
Kri.liM1Nld a d.lnodft 1an • .21
•a1ln1 tbat "departmental
oia.naaement will do everyWng in its power to eod the public ac-
tivlUea of U. so-called South Bay
Club.'~
Both Kolts and Police OfD.cen
Association president S1t.
Michael Tracy said the club has
been around, kl one form or
another, tor several years.
It dJaappeared about a year
-go, then surfaced aaain ln late
1976, KOrtz said.
Similar actlvlt!ea by off ·duty
Los Angeles police officen were
fictionalized in Joseph Wam-
baugb's novel, "The Choirboys."
Jn the book, police called such af-
ter-hours revelry "cbolr prac-
Uce."
·'It is just as much a misde-
meanor for a police <>fficer to
engage in queatfooable conduct
or drink alcoholic beverages in
public as it is for anyone else to
do so," Kortz wrote in his direc-
tive.
Tracy contended the club was
not doing anytbinf illetal,
althoulh be admitted they bad
been drink.inc in public. He said
be bad not attended meetinp of
the club for about a year.
The group consisted of mem·
bers of the evenin1 watch who
wanted to drink and relax
together, Traey said. Bars are
closed when their shift ends at 2
a .m . so the meetings were held in
a parking lot on Magnolia
Avenue, later shifting to a park-
ing lot on Chestnut A venue,
Tracy said.
Irvine Man. Cited
For Carrying Gun
An Irvine man who allegedly
tried to board an aircraft at
Orange County Airport with a
loaded band IUQ ill bi.s briel case
bas been' cited by sheriff's ol·
ficers.
Deputies issued the citation
charging carrying a concealed
weapon lo Ronald Joseph Di
Palqia, 24, of 121 Esplanade,
. after ~resence of the weapon
was revealed by the airport's
aecuritysystem.
....................
AH OLDIE BUT A GOODIE -DICK HENDERSON ADMIRES 1907 CASH REGISTER
Cost• Mee• Merch•nt Tuma tn Computerized Modef for Thia Ancle~ Be•uty
Mesa Cash .Refl!ster
Antique Has .Ev~rything
By STEVE MITCHELL
Ol Ille O.lly PlleUWff
Dick Henderson has a 1907
brass cash register that doe~
everything but spend bis money·
forbim.
Tbe 35-year-old owner of Coun-
ty Fair, a boutique in the Harbor
Shopping Center in Costa Mesa.
says he's so happy with h1s ~
pound, three-drawer brass cash
register that he's getting rid or a
$4,000 computerized register he
boughtlastMay.
•'All I need is something to put
my money in, and a muffin pan
can do that, so I bought this beau-
ty," Henderson. said, patting the
s hiny , heavily engraved
machine.
Henderson bought the National
Cash Register antique a rew
months ago and said be invested
about $3,000 for the machine and
the work t.oclean it up.
·'It waa nickel plated -sort of a
dirty silver gray color when I got
it,'' Henderson explained.
He said an electrochem etch
took the nickel pl a tine off. He bad
the~ pdlisbed to lln ~· *'"~ ... Pointin&·to a brand new blue
and white vinyl m~chine, Hen·
derson said, "Every time you hit
a button on that cornputerized
mons\,er you're committed, and
it's nearly impossible to correct
yourtrrors."
Tui-ning to his turn at the cen·
tury model, Henderson's voice
soft.ens. ''But with lb is gem you
can erase your mistakes just by
pulling this thine down.'·
"There, you see," he smiles,
gently pulling a small lever lo the
rigjit ot the m_a1hine. There is a
dtill thud and blngo, the cash re-
gister reads $00.00 again.
The brass machine also bas
three cash drawers, one for each
clerk. Hendersoosaid.
And each drawer has its own
distinctive -and loud -chime'.
One sounds like a San Francisco
street car bell. The others are a
toneortwolQwer.
·'That way l can sit upstairs in
my office and tell which clerk is
doing his thing,·· he s aid.
Each clerk gets a drawer and a
key which opens only that drawer,
Hender5()n explained. "I can pop
ope n each drawer and see exacUy ·
how much each clerk la taking in,
and when I come up short, I know
who's responsible.''
Asked why the drawers are
marked A,B. and D. Henderson
chuckles and says, "I knew you'd
ask that." :
It seems Nc.Ri ~ever uses the
letter C JSe~aliM .. the printing
machine inside-the register often
closes the C with an ace um ulation
of dirt and ink, making it look like
a zero. .
"I understand the company still
a voids using the letter C in its
machines, even today," hesajd.
And, speaking of r.eceipts, Hen·
denon said his machine is 004' or
the few older repters which
prints a receipt complete with
symbols that identify the clerk,
d~lermiile if the sale is cash or
charge, giv~tJie ate of the sale and the amount f the transac-
tion -upto . .
·'Most of achines only
rang up sales to, s y, $25 or $30,"
he said. ••And most didn't ring up
penny sales, they only recorded
amounts in nickels."
"I'm reaUy amazed at bow
sophisticated this machine is,''
Henderson said, pulling out a
handful of keys.
The machine bas ten keys, eacb
one performing a different func·
tion and each with a correspond-
ing number on the register.
-The· keys open various
peepb<>lea, with c"e sliowirig total
sales, aoother key <>penlnf the
pripter, another showe how many
times the cash drawers hav.J' been
opened, and another opens the
back of the machine so lobe owner
can extract the drawers.
"And even th.at ke)'I unlocks a device that records how many
times tbe drawerJ , ba~e 1~ef\ taken out o( the mu~hine, he
said.
Henderson said he only re·
cei ved six keys wilb bis purchase,
but s aid there is a 93·ye~-<>14 man
in Santa Ana who used tO work on
the old NCR's, "and he's making
tberestoftbemforme.''
He said bis reaister cost $750
back tn 1907. "wtilch was enough
• • -,.. tobuyacarbacktben."r h 1. ~ He said the top·o -t e-me
• · model waa purchaaed mostly by
"., 1argE! department stores who
'\. could afford them. But NCR de-
vised a met.hod to make the
•1WIU.UlllCB&EaQ. • Of .. ....,........ '
Tb• rec.nt •xu Kluit Jaan.
1"9fated ~lotenc• at Camp
Ptlld,Jetoo...., UMt exploelve re-
ault of lcmatUdliUt racllm that
tbe mW~>~.~~ty NCeDt1y
atartedeomllli toJf(p, wftb. nat II the a1MUment of a.-r · Adni. lobo S . O'Connor, a
CatllOUc monal,-nor H4 chief
chaplain a{ the .. ,ea services" ~
the Navy, Marines and Coast
Guard. c>_ •
"The nliUtary bllio'5 perpetuated
lnst1tutiooal nclsm bon\ of iC·
QOt'UM:e but sUll preaumpUous
and arrosant," O'Connor told
neJt'lmen during a visit to El Toro
Marine Corps Air Station Moo·
day. •"J'be sea services are guilty
ofthla.''
Incldmts like that at Pendleton
and prior racial violence and pro-
tests oo Navy &hips serve to
.. shock us into realliing our mis·
takesandthecrlUcalnatureofthe situation,''O'CoQnorsaid.
"I aee no deslre or effort to
sweep these things under the rug,
i4nore tbet0 or pretend they don't
exist;• the senior chaplain said.
•'There baa been a tremendous ef-
fort toeorrectit.
"l;lut we alw!lys have to be
aware today of the potential for
explosive aituatlons," O'Connor
added. "We must get a better feel
for this." .
The admiral warned that while
"tremendous progress" is being
made in improving relations with
blacks in the military, the armed
services are sWl laaing in deal·
ings with bispanics, Filipinos.
Jews and other minoriUes 1n Wl·
iform.
He~ that-of his 800 active
duty chaplains, only 10 are Jewish
rabbis and jwrt three are female.
O'Connor said he could use2S or 30
more woman clerics "without dis-
turbm, tbe critical sea to shore
rotation.''
He noted that womeo are not al-
lowed to serve ,board ship DE in
com bat theaters.
All told, there are about-1,600
sea ~ce chaplain$, counting
reservists. But the admiral said
that ts far short of filling the real
need he lias seen in 25 years as a
military priest.
Placentia Oil
Derrick Falla· , ..
.e
Tiro Injured
Two men were injured and
about i&,000 residents wue left
without electricity Monday after
a mobile oil cmmck toppled in
Placentia taking three high·
voltage lines with it, police re·
. potted tcmy .
Tbe 96-foot derrick toppled
when lts-footlngs gave way, fell-
ing two 66,000..vott power Unes
a nd a 12,000·volt line._ in-
vestigators said.
The lines also fell into a chain
Mrs. Beneh at Bat
Ping Pong on Wedding Night DesCrilJed
CINCINNATI (AP) -Vickie
Bench, estranged wife or Cinein-
nati Reda catcbe!' Johnny Bench,
Hys her husband bas broken her
heart and spirit and promises
their mari~ conflict wilt'be set..
' machine affordable to small
merchant.a, too.
Henderson pointed to a lltUe
metal box in the first drawu of •
the machine, equipped .with a
change slot and a key bole.
· link fence around a storage yard, charging it with electricity.
tied in the courts.
· In a copyrighted story
published. Monday by the Clncin·
nall Enquirer, the Z7·year-old
former Miss South Carolina was
quoted as aaytnr the breakvp
dam'-'9d btr bealth and career
-•·a career tBat I '1adl1 gave ap
to mf"Y• for kNPm, the man I k>ve.
The Bene~ were married
Feb. 21; 1975, in what the local
• news media treated as "the mar-, 'rta•eottbecentury.••
•They separated a year later.
··Then Bench, 29, filed for divorce
last Aucust on grounc1a of~
neglect. . r Mrs. Bendl's remark.I eame
' several dQW .after a dlvoree .re-
• f etee ~er anted her temporary
llUmont followini a •lx·hour
I beai:Jnl in a Hamilton County Dollieltle Reial.km cc.rrt. ~ ~She IUl :a.ch asked that no public~ bemadeaboQt &.HIP~-.~.
·~·!Jneett.eo. be ha made mis· lea~ pahllc .iatemeza and
•tolcl vadou• lleJ about me.
'Priritely. Enou&H la eDOQlh." •Hetaid. ,,,. . ·
\ I She ·laid Dench WU the <lfte
· Wbo sued tor cUworce. but~.
1 .. Lut week he leltlfted under when I was sict .he.told me to de.
oath that.I hid done ev~ l Jay seeiq a doctor until tile team
'chuld to mate· the · 01arrtaae phyaLCl.an came to town -his
-.rk. hit on ~ actrottt~ •erviees were tree. When I asked ~ me tM& I laa4 ~ I~ u I eoul4 hire a mald one~ a
ntvo •• ,,~ --"Anoar--a.ac .... ..a-• week, Jotannr said D.O, it would ~~ ,.,~~ eoattoo~··
l 'tboellld'he waa tbe man be. She said the marrla"e ct1£· ~med to be. After the Weddlnc a ;Utt. l\e toot Mt belt man b6me flcalt!• have NlMd her chances •
'With us -~,they pla~ed Pint for a ._.wed modelfna career.
Pong. · ' • ~ •'J did Mve one ollu: RusUer
•
1Jolmar'-told tbe~nu. he lhaaatne offend me $25,000 to
'ttanted a wffe wbo w~• po1e fn Ruttier Jlfle. I rejected in the bedrOom. rm 'a the {dee bot lobnn,y aalcl •Why
tbe only kind of wom e ever not. tt'a lOocl rnQlleY. •Th•\ preuy ~He certa "° · much aho1"d th respect be had retpertforanv wom , and pro. !orhllwlfeandthedoUar.'' . 111:::._·~~'h;; .. ~ =·=t:.::L•d,"l"e"~
.. canlole~°'OOOon a bet ind •1>:. • Clf.ahl ltGfY.~~ J6bnny .pear to l»e ancoa~~· ~~· ·• JMloOll• ~ ~le..,... l ~... ' • I ••• : • L-~. ,.....~. ----~-...
.... .
''Merchants used to put a silver
dollar in there after each working
day and at the end of the month
the NCR salesman would show up
with bis key and take out $30 to
payfortberqlater."
"Man. they thought of every~
thin•.'' Bendenon said. shaking
hia bead lo admiration.
poe_nrJJman, Derek Moore, ·20: df ~Beach, was ou a plat-
form atop the 96-foot derrick and
rode Lt to tbe ground, police Jald ..
-He, and aDother workman,
Robert DuJardin, 30, Long
Beach, were ti'eated at Canyon
General Hos'pital for minor ln·
Juries and released, police said.
A._. 25 tdlident.s in tM area
were eva~for a short time,
cSlfitials wet and 16,000 homes
were left witbbut. power tor .. bout
t~uarc... of ani.our.
@
&EMWI __
DAILY PILOT Jl3
..
o.11, ~ ... Stett ...... ·' DISCUSSES RACISM
Mllltary Chaplain O'Connor ,,
• -11.s "It I• imperative that Congres)lt
authorhe the numbers ol,.1 chaplains we need to simply pro).:a
vide our people with the ap-
propriate opportunity to exerc~sc
their religion," O'Connor said.
"Anythina else is unconstitu-
tional."
The chaplain should know his1
con.stltuti.onal law. He bolds adoc-.a.
torateln political science.
"I am not at all convinced that'"
we as a c0untry have the right to .
ask people to perform arduous du-' '
ty and then tail to support their ap' u
propriate moral and spirituaP0 •
needs," be said. "It is immoral
and it makes me mad." <lit
Since be became a cbaplainf""
O'Connor sald he has seen ;f <t
dramatic change in the outwarcfl._
morality and spiritual life orrn
servicemen and women. He said
it probably paralleled changes ir111';'
societyuawhole. .,,,
In the past, he said, Olerewas a ...
"clear, concise understanding of·'
what •enerally was right and"!
what was wrong -the values
generally tauebt in church and ~
school.'" ,
But be said chaplains today are.,
contronted wit.ha "habitual ques-·
lionin1 of whether or not there are
such ablolutes." \ Despite this change in values,
O'Connorsaid there is still a deepr,.J
seated striving in most people fw
''something better than constan~.,
stiifling. There are chall~nges, ~
and ideals to be reached for." ·· l
The clUe! chaplain said manr-·I
people are coming into tht'-~
mllllarytogetawayfrom moderrr "
society's pennissive':!~~s .
On ()ther matters, o 'CoMor ob-
served that new President Jimmy
Carter appears to be "sincere" in
his deep moral and religiou~ij
beliefs:'l'he chaplain said be dis-,
agrees in part with Carther's
pardon or draft evaders and the.,.
movement to abolish any re-•l
ferences to "honorable" or. "dis· ,i;
hoqorable" discharges from the ::: .
mllitary. . .
''To aay that giving one perso11 ,.,._
an "honorable discharge deni-, i·,
grates somebody who didn't ge~ '1;
one Is like saying someone who,,.,,.
geta a bJp scbool diploma ls de;~~ ')
nigratingadropout,"besaid. 1 •
He safd er06lon or sucb stan· 'f
dards and benefits for military, •..4
service threatens to "dealroy a _ ..
realwayof'll!einthemilitary. i
,..qulrH the apptlcant for m~m~lp to complete the ~emologtoal education
delCffbld abolfe anct another
4;0urte on tales and
merchlndl:Yi; To be elected to m~ p the apolk:ents
mu1t bell• ~roven thtJr
bu1ln••• ethics above . teproach.
The tltl• Nlrded by tf)e
American Geen Society are
Regletered 'Jeweler and
Certlfltd Gemologfst. TI\e R.J.
Utt• Is a ~ulllte to the C.G . Both are annual
~ppolntment9 and mutt be tewon bv )'9llf't)' eu11'11Mbdn. Donna 8leckman on our .tan
)a • ReDletered Jeweler and Helen l>oplet t'IH nearly
completed her requl,..,,.nta
· · for th• Hma title. Rick
Mc~tvalna hH a Graduate
Q•rnoloOllt diploma fl'Om the G , I.. A. tnd ta a Student
Afnlh1ta of aM A.o.s. When he
comptetM "" A.O.S. OOUl'M he wlft be •eflglbte for .,,Polntinent to the A~rlcan oam ·soolety, •nd u
Jewtl« tttr.. we _.. PcOud of our flrtn'a
mem'*1h(p lo the Amari~
Gem Society •nd •• lnd1vldUtl• tor our l.PPOllUtnenl• to 'Ou~ ~--.
, ..
1
~ . )
I
l
•
.. '
II
:··fl
•' I ' ,,, ; .. ,
r. I'
. .,, ·'
•
I
eo"erenee or tbe 38 Senate R•bUcaos. even as Treasury ~retary W. lllebael Slumen·
tk-1 wu tesUfyin& before the
HoaseApproprlatlons Committee
about Carter's plan. • ·
Carter formally handed his
plan.toCcmgress ICondaf, calling•
it a realf.ltlc way tb dea with un·
~ployrnent without worsening
inOation.
............. f! ..
TOKYO <AP> -Vice President
Walter F. Mondale ended his 10-
day, 22,.000-mile fact·ftnding trip
to Western Europe and Japan to-
day, vo;:Jn the United States "will r an Asian Pacific
power."
lloDdale told a news conference
be emphasized t.o Prime Minister
Takeo Fukuda that tbe Carter ad·
ministration ••ctoes not lot.end to
turn its back on Asia:''
j...., ... AJfJH,.NNI ..
'J'EL AYJV, Jsrael <AP> -
l>e9x>ite strong protest.,. from re· .
Ugiows factions, Israel's parlla,
ment has approved a netr abor·
tion law that allows t~ operaUon
for unmarried women., girls un·
der 16and women over 40.
The law adopted by the Knesset
Monday also permits at)ortlon for
reasona of economics, t)ealUi.
possible deformity or the fetus
and impreanatioo by rape or in.·
cest. One controversial clause
sanctions the opeTation U tbecpre· pancy ts likely to cause "se'Vere
barm to the woman or ber
chUdnln becauee al hanb IOdaJ
and farilily eooditlons. •·
.4..-1•'4 ..... 0K'fi
WASHINGTON (AP> La*'Yen for former VJce Presi·
• dentSpln>T. Apewbavebeenor·
dered bJ a federal jud1e to tum
O\'er bis records for use ln a tu audit. • I
U.S. District .Juctae Jobn H.
Pratt ruled Mooday that a aub-
poea qatnst the firm of Blcb·
teia, Shapiro & Morin for records
ol their fee arraniementa with
~ mUll be enforced. The In·
ttrnal Revenue Sfrvice la audil· int the Im tu retuma of Apew
and Im wife Judy.
\, .
Spill Follows JurnJ? Over 'Mar(,eaters'
•cHICAGO (AP> -Tile atiarb fl• WU rued reallq ~. Whll Knlev .. alto •Ult.a&Md
were none tbe ·worse IOI' wear. fortablY ear today in Michael internal bleedlnl ln bta ritbt &el.
Juat ~be. the evll·teetbtd bi-Reese Hoap tal on Cblc110'1 the OG1Y Other ~ loJ\ar4d in
laa• bid evil-eyed the !';vet mu. . Soutb Skle, a few miles from tbe tbe a~tdent waa fr••·lanee
Became Evel K.nlevel ave'wu lnternatloqal Ampbltbtater. cameraman Tbooiu Gena ot
• the wone for trytna to tat• a wtt.b a fractured forearth that 1uburban Pallltm4'· He ne.s.t
Jump over their lar•• nib..... nMdl ....-)'. a fractured left 1lx 1titcbeS for a mbloi eye a.
WASHINGTON <AP) -
Secrelary of Transportation
Brock Adama san new navtga.
Uonal safety rules for tankers
" l take a blg step toward re·
uc g (tanker> accidents and
tb• cu~ties and pollution they
a'use"
a putting the new tanker re·
1u · to ettect ..Yonday,
Adams established a Marine
Safety Task Force to find out
ways to cut down on tanker acci·
dent.a and oil spills. ..
lllin Oouds
'
. THE ORDER A~ sets rules
for regular position fixing, com·
munications between masters
and pilots, and personnel and
equipme nt re a diness . The
critical s hip maturnvering
system aboard each craft must
be tested within 12 hours before a
Neptune Weath~r --
Cllanges Detected
WAsmNGTON (AP) -Scientists report the first evidence of al·
mospberlc v~ations on Ne~tune, giving earth's distant neighbor
mote in collllbon with the ch8nging weather of the inner plan~ts than
previously liad been believed. .
Jn announcing the diScovery, the NatiooaJ Scienc~ Foun<labon said
Monday the finding ls ;iignlflcant
because astronomers long have assumed that Neptune and
neighbonng Uranus did not un·
2 Moms Held
In; Deatlu of.
FeuT61Ulilren
dergo l'o(lJOr atmospheric varia·
lions.
BECAUSE OF Tms assump-
tion. Utest: planets . have been
used as standards tor measl.U'inW
tbe brlghfness or other bodies in
tbe aolar system. Brightness is
used to estimate such thmgs as
distance and mas~.
The foundation sa~d or.
The cele6rated daredevil· collarbOne and asorted other Jury. •
ltwrtman took a practice leap acbte IDd patna. A botpital tPOli••m•n a.aid llClllCl.ay over a 90-foot·loal pool L~ltn h1s bed late f'ooday Knievel'• cbelt pd back p&tU
!'.t~....._!ltb 13 lemon 1bark.a, nJPt.~ motoreycU.t "°""~ ··aa tu u wt can determlM ~·UJ pronloteri of tbe event come bitek: 0 1 will return . . . . .. 8te the reeult of old frac· • "maeaten." I'm not a qQitter.'' turea ...
KNISVBL CLBA&•D tbe OF THE MISHAP, be said, 4.. CWFORNIA ortboPtdiat
ool but thars when bia "Tbere wa1 10 much IJDpact was expected toll.Y t.oCbleqoto ~an. becauae. aOCOfd· .. :· upco tandiq tbat\h lost examine Knievel and detennibe
• a qokesman. be landed eoclrOl. whether tbe 1urg&r)' wm be
on the extt ramp on the WTOal ' He bad made U.e practice performed at Michael Reese or
wheel -h1s front -and lolt Jump, be -said. "because tbe on tbe West COa~. Surcery wlll
control. jump· was so dangerou• I not be needed to mend the cla'1·
couldn't brt.nl myself to do lt cle. the bospttal 1potesmaa
vessel eaters or gets under way
in U .S. waters.
Adams ordered the task force
to go ~yond that by making an
"immt:diate. in·depth review of
the euure r.egulatlon spectrum
dealing ~tth tankers. Our goal
must be to insure that the highest
possible standard.S of safety are
maintained in U.S navigable.
waters.'
The task force will be headed
by the deputy transportation
secretary. Allan Butchman has
' been nominated for that job and
is waiting Senate confirmation. ·
THE NEW RULES went into
effect immediately and apply to
au vessels, domestic or foreign,
operating in U .S. waters and
weighing more than 1,600 tons.
Tbat includes esstntially all
ocean-going tankers.
Ma(lters on s hips with In·
operative navlgational equip·
ment must now notify the Coast
Guard captain at the port to
which the· vessel ls bound. This
would allow the Coast Guard
time to decide whether to keep
the ship out of port.
Adams also propost>d that all
ships be equipped with
LORAN.C, an electronic system
tbat allows ships to plnpoint thelr
positions within 50 fee\. The ship-
ping mdustty bas until April 1 to
make comments on this proposal
before Adams Lssues a go·abead.
Adams' ·directive stems
from a sudden ~urge in tanker
accidents in U .$. waters. Fifteen
tank en were l06t last year.
cold turkey." And, be saJd be saJd .
wa1 sorry to disappoint viewers Knievel, under sedaUoo Mon·
awaitina bis performance. day n.tcht. ~d reporten, '1BYen
He bad been ac)\eduled to ata.r thoueb I'm hurt, I'm proud l
in a 90-m.inute CBS tetevtsion was oneoltbe competJton."
production. "Evel Knievel'• The show. wblcb went on
Death Defiers," and tlaougb he without the leading attnctlon,
couldn't be there in person, be included spectaculars from
wu viewed via ·videotape. The other locations: A diver plum·
network replayed tµs crash. meting ei&bt atories into a la:rae
sponge, 72·year-old Karl Wall•·
da walking a bt,gb wire between
skyscrapen and human bomb
Orval Kisselburg beinl bluted
through the alr by an explosive charge .
MARTY PASETrA OF Paset· ta PTodu~ons, executive pro.
ducer and director of the
television show. said he un·
derstood that the stuntman still
would receive his $500,000 fee
agreed to beforehand .
Spokesmen for CBS were not
available for immediate com·
meat.
Elderly Pair
Die in Ice
In Kitchen
N E'W Y 0 R K < A P I
"'Everyone she was close with
was dead," said Lola Valli, after
learning that the body or ber 80-
year-old neighbor bad been found
encased ln five inches of ice on
her kitchen floor. ,
The bodies of Margaret Shotter ~
and her brother. Walter. 77, were
discovered Monday by poJice
after a relative was unable to
contact the pair. ·
Walter's body was round fQ!ly
clothed, tnclUding a heater. on a
bed in a seOOnd·fldot room in the
rundown 75-year·old frame
structure in the Sbeepshead Bay
sectJon of Brooklyn.
Authorities said the oU burner
had failed.. bursting wate~ pipes
in tbe kitchen. Neighbors said a
full suppl)" of fuel had been de·
livered last week.
Knievel 's sbarta re·
portedb had been In tbe pool for
three days. lt waa unclear
whether they were bothered by
all the ruckus as be soared over·
head -and skidded past.
OMAHA. Neb. <AP> -fJ'wo young motbers whose four pre·
1cbool·aged children d1ed in a
fire that bn*e out while they were unattmded have been ar·
ruted for, jnvesU•ation of
mamla~.
Richard Joyce of the Kitt Peak -------------'-------------------------"--
National Observatory in Arizona
Apt.boritles said the fire in a
one·stoty frame llome on the
city's .nortb 'side apparently
ataned while &Jae cbildren played
1tlth matcbea 1" .a bedroom
where they bad been left alone
for a~ two hours Monday-af· ternoon.
Held OD four counts of suspi·
ciOQ of manslaughter each were
Catb.1!9V S. H'wkin1. 21, and Loil L Pittmab, 21. Charges
were being studied ,.by the
Doqlu COUnty attorney's of .
flee. Dead on arri•al at two local
boapttals were Obristopher
Hawkins, .aae 4 or s: biJ 14·
mnU.-014 1J1ter~ Lata1bla Hi•ldlis; Daoa La Ron Pittman, !z W bil 1'1·~t b~r, :-r•naee· Plttmea. ltoliiltal =--aald allttc:~Y = .... lnblla . A tMld: tMli'Q tiblmon.
s, Mn. Plttmma"S son, •u at·
Met!lill kinderla.rtea at tbe time of t.befire.
and his co-mvest.lgators, while
examining infrared light
emissions from Neptune, dis·
covered transient, thm clouds
high in the planet's atmosphere,
''The clouds we observed give
the first concrete evidence sc1en·
lists bue found for .weather pat·
terns on Neptune,·• Joyce said.
ALONG WITH VARYING
clouds, tbe scientists also dis·
covered that the brightness of m-
fr a red light comtq trom the
planet was t'banpg, tncreasmg
1ubstantiall1 between April 19'15
and Mardi me. • Vartatiom in cloud pauerus
and radiated btlghtness have
been observed for years on Ven~? Mars, Jupiter and earth,
said -ine NSF. Scientists watch
these changes to study .at·
m0tpheric dynamlcs of planets
and possible effects on their weather.
Nepttane revolves around the
1un at an average distance of 2.S
billion miles. In distance from
tbe 1un Neptune ii second only to
Pluto among the planets in tht •
solar 1ystem.
Oefl.-C!iMh lllOulCI llrlft9 O't .. CHt motlllrll' .-Id 9tMf .. ,, coo1er ons
to MIKll tf 5olAAern Cilllf«!ll•. IM .._Of\M WINI,_ Service wt~ ,~ pl'9'dld9cl tM l>l•nket
tf cl_. WOlll4 <-r •II f't9loM, ,,_ Ille c-. MSt to u. _, .. ,.,
.OoetefU.
Tem_lt_ ~ rMC:a IMe llw
• ,,_ tlNcll ,_ to .. lnlenct
..,.,,.,_..,..,.~-s...
e.rM"""' '°"""" wtlll 1Nt In tM -• 111ew11t•f11 rnor1' ·~•"""'•· lllfvkl II.-•• ,..,..119 1.-tN
-..... W!tf\ ....... orw.I~ to ._u.,is;
'" ... ...,.. llltMr el«•t~ WW4 MW_,. lft Ult •...s l'lfMt ~ ......... ....,..__ tllOlllcl .. ..... ,, . ......,"'_
' ,
\
\
... '
This Valentine ·s Day send your rove
a gteetlng all 1he world can share
With a Daily Pilot Heart of Love. It's
easy. compose YQUr.~ptrsonalized
greeting and we 'HrJnt your
meseage in ~to flt the border of
Your choice or. ydur 9'alid Wrtttfn
thOugtita ,,,,ay appear IQ.the border
you select. • 1 I] ~
Borders come In the 3 sites ~
shown below: S 15. f8 and a
special child's slm for 12. ('(oo
must be ~nder 12 to quaJlfy for the
littlest greOtlng.)
"
•
Panel .Stalled .
llZ SAID LAST summer, aft.er Brown signed
Callfarnla'a wiprendented nuclear safdy bills,
• I tJlat ft waaJd take tbtte years for the commission to
I man lts ftndlnas.
Dodar. an opponent of llllclear power plant ex·
IJ:i~· commented: "It's possible we'll have.a in 1979 -but it may be th.at tbe commission
' bas not found0 adequate federally approved
medlods. "It could not be before 1981 or lt8S,'' be
added. J
11At11.UN1 ASKED when be~ the com:
m1uico COQ)d make its recommendation to the leclstature. said: ·
''You're utint the ultimate question. We have
not be,vd all tbe witnesses.••
1 • TD OOMIOSSION opened three days of hear-
.. ings on implementing the new Jaws, which clamp a
moratorium on nuclear power plant construction in
Callf ornia until:
-The legislature ratifies commission findings
that the federal government has approved adequate
' faclfltles to reprocess nuclear fuel, or approved an
authorized facility that will be oper ating when
necessary. ~ -The legislature ratifies commission findings
that the federal government has approved and
there exists demon.tlrated 1'chnology or means for
cliapCINl of bi&h·leYel ,uclear wastes.
Da. VICl'Oa GILINSKY, a member or the U.S.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission, testified that its
program 'for' licensing storage and disposal
: (aciliUea ia at "a rudimentary sWlge of develop-
ment."
Tbe schedule calJ$. for construction on a site lo , betln in 1981, with onsite testing in 198S.
rt.U .... IMG
· HUT1HG
AaCOMD. ,,__ ·--Seni.ce "' Your Ate1-C.••
"'ISS•ON VIEJO
?11922 c.,,,.,.,., ("·~·r~ ~ .......... n· ... ,,
lttS-0401
cosu wts'A . .. l'..211 .. .,.,...,, 81""' ' ... l• '42-1751 · •ww,
. ~=---"-~~~~---~--~-----------------------------~
J
' . i
• I
j
1
J
t
' j
I
' l I
I
'
For fast relief &om that
run ~own f~ling ...
_call us hr>t. take a Fir~ N.lnon"I
Auto Loan. and go directly to
~ cMalcf! Thet's aU lhn ts
:.; •toltUpon~lola•im~
credit llPPhc.lllOI\ w11 loon _1 1 _.
you up 10 80'.., of th{' plf·
chaw pncc ol an1;
new car ~ou
c~ lndud· Wig~ •. ~~~:-T"'I
And here's a
borllh "incl!
MAINOFF1CE
At the P\aza in downtown Orange
COSTA MESA: Mesa Verde & Adams
IRVINE: Unt\lersity Or. & Michelson Dr.
LAGUNA Hlll.S: Alicia Parkway & San Diego Freeway
ORGAN
CONCERT
WEp.,
.· FEB. 2
7:30 .P.M • FEATUllNG:
NORM
NELSON
ON THE
Gulbrarren
RllllTOll
I -
--
f
WHY ITS IN YOUR SELFISH INTEREST TO
ARREST THE PROBLEM INSTEAD OF THE CHILD
The latest evaluation of the Assessment a nd
Tre atment Services Center of Coasta l Orange
County (ATSC} shows that about 80 percent of
the juveniles whose cases were handled through
. the center have experienced no further difficulties
With Jaw enforcement agencies.
~
That's. dose to 4 out of 5 boys and girls between
the ages of 7 and 17 whose p~oblems have been
arrested b9 counseling at the ATSC Center. Once
considered off enders in our society, these children
h~ye been diverted fr~m the trauma of juvenile
court and have learned through counseling how t • •
to become productive c~iiens of their communities
once again.
ATSC is a private, noh-profit, non~government
organization dedicated to the prov0cative objective:
"Arrest the Problem, Not the Chilcl~ It has the
blessing of fow enfor~~ent agencies, the Juvenile
Cou~ and the Cotinty Probation Department. But
to continue this vital program, if needs your help .••
your understanding and your financial support Two
prof~ionnl counsellors plus volunteers shoulder
this burden now. Additional resources are needed
sO\hat ATSC can work w\th other children with. . .
problems, from drugs to rltalicious mischief, from
shoplifting to grand theft. Your contribution will
save tax dollars and mak~ your cQmmurt\ty more
secure. But more importantly, think of the ch•ldren
you'll save. Call
... c,A'TSC .....
A&sebmlnt and Treatment 5-Mus <Anter
• of C.O..l Orange County
..
John W. APl*g~ M.O..,, President
Judith H. Loos, V\ce Presk5ent
Charlotte ~las, Executive Director
1640 Southeast Bds.lol
5erQ AN. Callfomla 92707
Tt'-Phoot; (714) 549-1814
. . .
•
, __,
Number 39 in a series of Public Servece Ad~ts s~sored by AtJco flnandat 5ervices. Newport Seadi. CalfQin\a .. --. . . . ... . . -.. , -
• •
..
I ..
,• .
• '6Jty. G«i. Evelle J . Younger baa deeided it
lso 't 1D the be8t lnteresta of the state to prosecute· state Treasurer Jesse Unruh Jn COGQeCt1on with
$10,000be~elved from Dr, Louis J . Cella Jr.
cemed mow what the commission wants to see done
along the coast.
Despite the Daily Pilot •a headline over the story
411nouncln1• Younger's decision ("Ulll'\lb 'Clean' ln
Cella P~t'!), the fact is lt wu a dirty little piece
of campaip bualness and we hate to see Unruh get off., tltbcM even a alap of the wrist.
Unruh solicited the $10,000 as. a campaign con"'
trlbutlon from Cella, the now-disgraced wheeler·
dealer of Orange County politlcs, ln the spring of 1974.
i ~ a cover-up, Unruh arranged to "sell" Orange
County Democ:raUc k1.nOin Richard O'Neill some
unt office furniture. Presumably, Cella bad given
$10,000 to O'Neill so~ in the transaction
d no one was the wller-UJltil Unruh was sub-
naecl to testl{y in one of Cella 's tri"'-8 for fraud.
1 'Ibat tactic was stnelly enough. but as it turned
Unruh didn't even use tbe money in his campaign.
showed up as personal income on bis income tax re.
m . l 1be attorney· general says the facts of the case
1 'do not warrant criminal acti~ by this office.•'
I Maybe not. but (bey sure warrant a censuring of
p nrub for a deplorable bit of pplitical buggermugger.
t 'l Coastal Confusion l Last week, members of the state Co~tal Com-
JDission adopted the new set of rules under which they
tmd their regional commissions will function.
There have been some s~bstanUal operaUng
chances made. but ceneraUy, the guJdlng philosophy
.is the same as lt. was when Prop. 20 wu apptoved four
years aao-the coast is to be protected for recrea·
tionaJme. ,
That is cleafly the Intent ol the gµJdeliDes which
have been written ID· a general form to cover the
whole coasWne as well as In specific detail for each
beach community lying alongit. .
Backers of the new law say they designed the
commission 'a operating procedures with efficiency in
mind. Tbe new law allows cit4es immediately to
assume the pel'JD.it l!'antlng authority and assumes
that the regional commissions will function only on a
temporary basil unW Ul8l when the law says local
governments mu.st have completed their Local
Coastal Programs. At that time the permit-granting
authority automatically passes to the cities and coun-
ties.
'lbese provisions for local control are not as clear-
cut as they seem. Some cities may not want to assume
the permitting authority before their programs have
been approved by the state. Granting coastal permits
is going to be costly and time-consuming.
Even in the cities where such control is assumed,
owners of property within 300 feet of the water still
·· · will h~ve to go to the.regional corpmission to get their
perlDlts unW a Local Coastal Program for their area
is approved. .
' The rules are divided into two groups: a set of
temporary regulations for the prbcessing of permits ~nd a collection of guidelines designed to let all con-
How much real authority has been returned to the
local level is open to question. Appeals of local de-
cisions, with the coastal commission as arbiter, re·
main relatively easy to file and the staff and com-
mission personnel at the regional and state level is
substantially the same as before. 'What did he mean by that crack about changing lifestyles?'
~
I ~erts Vie.e 1rith Ala.,-'flip Van
lJrinkle up
rTo Date
Dear
Gloomy
Gm Carter's Security. Blockbuster
I
.. (~_A_R_T_e_o_PP_E _ _,)
t1 It was ten yean aio th.ls month
at young Irwin Vamplew was
pped on the bead by a D.lCht
~ck wbUe smashing windows in
Berkeley in order to end tbe war
in Vlej.nam. So you nn tmaglne
the el6tion ol bis pa.renta when be
finally emerged thla week from
lits decade-long coma.
His first word•. natur~J· were : "Down with the Estab · ment!" •''Ther e,
there, Irwin,"
said his father
sootbin1ly.
.. Try to keep
calm ... "
"Ob, It's
you, Dad ...
said lrwln. .. Well. 1 don'\
care wbatyou
say. The Eltabllahment got us lo·
to this mess in Vietnam. And the
. ~ly thin& to do is admit our mis·
•take and withdraw our troops,
even if it means letting the Com·
rpuniata take over.'•
.. PLEASE, taWIN " said bis
"1other, .. we already dld tbal"
"No (bleep)?" Hid Irwin un-
~Uevlo1ly. Then be caupt ~11. "Sony, Mom, to use
~~~letter ward.'• be •aid.
' but 1ou know bow I feel about ~ Zltabllabmtot'a in1Uona1
~ry t•
''Tbat'• all ri~ 1rwtn.•• nld ~1• mother.·' Everyone HJ• Cbleep), (bleep), and even
~bl-s>> these daya. ••
l ''They 4o1" aald Irwin, wmmc. ~'Tbat'• nlce ... Tbm be
.sded ~1. ''but I d.oD't care
•laat you aay. rm not 1otna to cut
Ill)' batr. •• '
"lt looks lovely, Irwin,"
•frffd his mother. "It'• not u
After viewing TV showing
of "Roots" the past week I demand equal time for the-
sbowing of Aesop's Fables.
S.R.
long as your father's but ... "
Irwin seemed to see his father
for the first time. "Good Viel• Dad," he said, ".you look like a
hippie pof.smoker."
"Not r'eally, Irwin," said bis
father, smiling. ''Ob, we smoke a
Joint at 1Wtiee now al'ld then wben everyooe else is. Or When
your sister, Beth, cOmes to din·
ner:" ·
"Well, I'm glad to bear you•ve finally forgiven Beth for running
off with that guy to live in a com-
mune." said Irwin. "But I l\U~
lM*I you forced him to marry ber
to conform with your rldlculoua
Enabllabment conventions.••
''OB, NO, Irwin," said bis
mother. '"lbey're still Just living together. Hardly anyone geta
married any more. Re'1 ln tbe in:
1urance business and. • . "
Irwin looked d11ed. "But
there's no way the gstabllab-
ment can get rid of ltl lDlfatned
sexual hangups and realize that
obiceaity Is lim"P!Y in the mind ol
tbe beholder because. • • " "Don't about, Irwin.•• aald his
father. ••Why doa't .you Just cud
LlP with• maeuina and relax?"
Unfortunately, the m .. uble
l.nrtn chose to curl up with wu
Playboy. He took one look at the cecterfold and lapsed back into
bis coma.
BU POENTS assume be's
bpplu that way, for bis flDal
words were 1 paraphrase~ a re-
mark from Pogo. "We have m«
tb• Eatablhbment , • • la•
munnuted u be collapsed, .. aDd
~areas."
W ASJUNGTON -Suddenly
without warning, at a closed-door
meeting at Blair House late on
the evening of Jan. 12. Jimmy
~arter dropped a blockbuster on
this nation's tqp national security
officials which could imperil
Western Euro'pean indepen·
dence:
He wanted imm e d i ate
"studies" looking toward reduc·
tion of the U.S. strategic
nuclear
arsenal down
to only 200 to
2 50 Inter· continental
balliatlc
missiles
<ICBMs).
Stunned
speechless.
Gen. George
Brown. chairmflD of the Joint
Chiefs ~Staff. stared at the man
about to be bis commander-in· chlef. But Dr. Harold Brown,
soon to become Defense
Secretary. managed an answer
that was "diffident" (as
described by one witnesa > -but under the circumstances, pro-
per.
Dr. Brown's reply: to ~onsider
such an Immense reduction of
America's 1trate1tc 1arsenal
would be a fund.ame1atal rilt in·
volvln1 the most complex,
tra9scendent questions of
pollUcal and mllltary str~
<even though the Soviet missiles
would be simultaneously re·
duced>.
Tben. Gell. Brown <no relation
to Harold) overcame his
-utonllbment. Of course, be told
Mr. Carter, tbe Joint Chiefs
would immediately undertake
necessary studies for a reduetion
to 200 to 2SO Joq.range balllstlc
mlaallea wblcb Mr. Carter
speclfled should all be sub-
marine-launched. Not a word ol
caution tseaped the General's
Ups.
Mr. Carter'• order to Gen.
I
I
\Anarchy on the . aigh Seas
*'
The most outrqeoua upeet ol
e ArJO _ llerchaftt oil spill olt
ape COd. to me, 1'U not the t1COlolicll impact. or even the
4'ic1•11ft that the tanker wu
.... wortby.
' It wu tbe lbockUia fad that,
Jin• dlttl after the ahf p broke t.Q>.
the comba>ed '4t1ourcea of
U.S. 1overn·
llt Al•D·
wereatW
able to
, ~over wbo !J!4• r •a I ert#.-e.
Tbe Ario
erc.bant
f1l. w t b. •
Uberiap flq. Thll ts known in
marine drdea u • "fiaa of eoo-Yut,ence." But "convenience••
bite 1s • ~emlm for .. lr-
naponatbWQt. • 1 Llb.rla baa tb• larceat
Ecbaat O.et ln tbo world1, but
a )esal Oetioa. Tb.la uW.
tr)' tn Alrlca li a bav~or tlllpon'" wbo WIPt to I.)'
MIU1lbh tu.e1, b1re at
er•••• and avold lb• more rlCOrOua lailpection ~ cl other~:•
( 1-oil •PW In lntemat1'"1ol Wiien SYDNEY BARRIS CID Infect the-ol ony land _ -lD thil cue. threatea!n1 dis·
uter to the spawnlna lrounda ol
la lta a:a JMn ol operatloa. the Ar1~ Mettballt bu had fOW' ownen. It bu a1lo been involved
in 19 m~ incidents in the last
doseu years -incluclinf col·
Ullom, fires, nmnini .. round. and general breakdowu. ...
· ONE·'l'llRD of the world'•
tanker capacity. ts und'er
Uberian l'elillrY. 'lbe present ow11er of the Aflo Merdwat is
. "Tbebes Sbippiac.'' Tbe tanker
b operated b)' .. Ammblp A&•·
CJ.. of New Yott. But DObodJ
could flnc1 out, for MON than a
wetk, ~ attua1 ldenUty ol. tbe
oner •.
A f Nlpter fb1nl the Liberian O•• ts tree trom all 1ntertermee in llateroattcmal waters. U can be
1 rotted tub, maDMd by lneom· ~t n0on Ud COIPmJ.Dded
by a n.,UCIDt c•Pbln. lrltb in·
adeqaate tn.trument.l.L~ • lcloi blatory ol cuualdes. l:KW, no ooa
caaW.c:btt. • Bal,.tbe aeu be1oai eqiWlj to
•11 wM -.. UM•. ~be Wtnd bloirttla WtMre It liltetb, llOd •
Geo11es Bank. and ruln1ng an en· Ure industry.
TSE llAIOa maritime na-
tions of the world met 4 few y.ears
a10, to evolve • uni.form code for tbe aea, one that would jusUy a~
portion rlabts end 11emaoct
reaponslbllldes. Tbe U.S. al,.m
1ucb an ••reement, bul bu failed to ratify ll. Mot llOW, there la uarcb.J on tbe hllh aeaa;
tbere are no preventive
meuUJ'f8, only desperate and
fUW•eftO(tl after the f.act.
There m\lllt be lmmed!ate dla-
cl•ure ol. the ~blp of all
commefdal 1h1P1. There must
be '° lb&ernational 1tandar4 of mapeet.lqn and ...,utatlola. There
muat be an end to the COD1plney
o1 sl'ffd tbat ha1 ~ulted in
fi'audula Uberian reliatr)t for
fleeta that have no rul eonMC· t10n wltb that country.
TM wcrld la too mall and
stlnmk•. too lnlefllepcndeJ>~ to
permit tb• pollution ot our
nten by ~OUI aOd tr·
nlpoutble CGrl.9Jit. •
( EV ANS-NOV AK J
Brown leaked from the Pentagon
into the White House where
President Ford was winding up
his affairs. He was appalled, and
so was Henry Klssmger. Both
agreed to say notblne unW the
Carter national security policy
bas time to develop.
THE CASTER blockbuster.
many national security experts
believe, would presage the end of
democratic Western iurope. It
was dropped in the mids\ pf OM
of the most tlthtly-guarded
military brleftnga Mr. Carter re-
ceived just ~ the lnauiura·
tton: a full report on the Presl· deot•s awesome respOnsibllity in
the case of threatened or surprise
Soviet nuclear attack.
The enormity of Mr. Carter's
order to Gen. Brown can be seen
again.st the backdrop of Ford's
long. valo effort to pin down the
Russians to a atr•tegic arms
limitation <SALT) a1reement
baaed on a cellln1 of 2,400 in-
tercontlnental-ran1e ballistic
mlsslles1 ol which 1,320 could be
:MIRVea -equipped witb in·
dependently-tarteted warheads.
Rough dimensions of a SALT 0
agreeD)ent along those Unea
were agreed to by Mr. Ford and
Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev at
Vladivostok. 'A deal was never
consummated, however. because
of dlsa1reement over bow tp
treat the newly developed U.S.
cruise missile and the Soviet
Backfire bomber, elalmed by
Moscow not to be lntercontlnen·
tal hut believed by the U.S. to have intercontinental capability.
In ordering Gen. Brown to
plot a free world defense based
on only 200 to 250 submarine·
launched missiles, Mr. Cart.er raises the following grave pro-
blems:
1. By radically limiting a
nuclear res ponse, expose
Western Europe to the Soviet
Union's immense ceoventional-arms superiority which nobody
believes can be matched by the
West.
Z. BY REDUCING the U.S. and
Soviet sides to such a small number of strategic weapons,
pul a. premium on Soviet c~at,.
ing. Moscow bas never agreed to
on·slte arms inspection by the
U.S., and now bas mobile ICBMs
extremely difficult to track by
Why Learn to
satellite.
3. By limiting the maximum
possible incoming missiles, en·
courage serious development of
the antl·balllsttc misslle <ABM >
-limited by treaty but suscepti-
ble to Soviet cheating.
President Carter's heavy em-
pbasla on getting a ''fairly rapid
ratification" of SALT II. stated in
his first White House interview, also worries military scholars.
They regard it as "exactly the
wrong way to negotiate with the I
Soviets" because it narrows U.S. ~ bargaining flexibility and puts• •
premiwnonSovtetdemands. ti ./
MOREOVER. Mr. Carter's
"solution" for the cruise misslle-
Backftre deadlock -set both weapons aside for resolution
after SALT II -failed in t.be
Ford ldminlstratton. The plan
waa ottered ~ the Russians and flatly.njected.
MOit worrisome in this trial-
and-error period of national
security policy development is
the absence of any perceived dis-
senter on the Carter team. Proof ·
of that troublesome fact ls the
way even George Brown. so often
brash and outspoken, bowed to
the new President without a single word of caution.
' W7 • ? "rite ..
It would be euy' but it would [ ] 'Ibey then u:rnfn' tbe&e skills 'at be munna. to say "B«ter late CHARLES ln-servlce tr I procrams for
than never." More to the ~t McCABE bi&b acbool English teacher•
would be a 1trin1 ol hodnn~ to ~ _ throulhout the ltate.
the University of California for '------------ENCOU&AGED BY the suc-~!s rb'c!~~ u!~b a badly cordance with the truth olthinp, ceas of the BAWP. the state de-
Be.ri.... t affat.rs eannot be canted out." is . partment ~ education plans to aw.line nex summer· 00 ~ c.tucius put it. 1et up writing centers, modeled
atudeot will be admitted to UC ftere are Umes when I have ontheBAWP,intbeSaeramento-
wbo cannot hlld occasion • .,. doubt this ex-Davia area, the Central San Joa· show th e ,..,
8 bill t y t 0 cellent statementstill held. It bu quin Valley, San Dle10 and Los
write seemed, at Umes, u tf tbe writ· Angeles. Tbree to five centers. 1 com· ten word were quite literally ao-bavebeenproposedforL.A. --i
poaition of at ing down the tube. 'lbe audience Good writing ii fi lntertlt to
l e a s t 5 O O for wrtUDI bu been dlmtntshlna more than the academy. Th~ =: .. ~ ... ~ · at an alarmln1 rate wttbln the depravatlon of pt,tbllc llf e r,! ....... past couple of decades, aa vealed by W••aate. wu ihowh
"The aelec· anybody wbo writel fer 1 livinl in ltnauaie equally depraved.
tion of a main cantellyou. "' John MH\Oll knew about this
idea and the when be W('Ote, ''w~en tbe
development WRY READ wdttnc when all Janiuaae of men in com,._ use
of that idea throuah arcument you need are "huh" ad "far lp any country become• ir·
and example; coatrol ol diction out" and "ri&h~ Oil'• tb let Y.0U re1ular and depraved, lt II
(appropriate word choice) and tbrvqb the buslnela ol a -day? fOUOnd bJ tbelr ruin aDd tbe1r
clear sentence comtructkm <the Where parair•fhl have become delndatlon." avoldance ot nauenea and am· 1runt1, what s the 1ood of
blaultJ) and commaad of aearcbin1. out the pleas\ll"el ol
mechanic• (atodard apelllDg Lambandllu.Utt?
and pqnctuaUOD)." The biih schools have become
The new POiicy was outlined in so bad u ·Ellcllah ~acben that
a letter to Calltoplia ~ school frequenUy more than half of all ~at. sent recebtly by Lyle entenna colleae freshmen mutt
G ey, dlredot ol admilatons take ftllledlal En,uab cla11e1.
and re,tttrar at UC. GalNley Admirable u the UC stiffenina
wu aJaO 1peclftc about wtu~ UC ol requirements la, it lbou.J.d not wants ltUdentl to leam Jn b1'b be taken as thoroughly 1atisly·
lcbool Uteratun counea: "'lbe tna. The Uteracy requlrement.s
ablllty to anafyzc ..i literary aet up for colle1e 14adillon
Pllhi•, todetern:inethe:meMd lbould be made to :Toto the methodt of cbaracterbaUca." Wbole bJah school 1 '*"• wlMdlef they apply to 0 ot DO.
MY ENTDtlSJA.Slf foe-these No sludent should aet a bllh
1trinacct rneaaurH t1 both ac:bootdlploma witilhelboWI ti..
sellilh and altrulatlt. Uh any muter")' of En1l.llb ~ for
pe.-aon who writes for a livinl, I adal..soetoUC.
aa2 aJad to have, God wtlUDI. a v.-. ~W-. dGne In new ~ ot readers wbo cm not tide twd, aeid be dul1 not-<MlJ rad but -.rite clear nd re-ed. e,, tbe a.,. AM Wfttial rto; adable Mlltenc... lft the larler Jeet; operated JCllUltJ1 i by UC cmtat, I feel you cauot tun the &itteley and sev.na Sm Pru·
Wotfd on Whet t41htllon teatbM, dleo Area school dtlliictl. ...
Ud thet there will alw&Jt be a Se1tcted Eriallab teacben ~-the wrttten,;ant ltUd1 bOw to toeb wnttna • .. If lansuace be DOt ill ae-apedj,J UC summer 1 rntona.
•
He '1tMps waving that wand at them, but "-1 won't disappear."
Got a problem? Then write to Pat Dunn. Pat will
cut red tape. gettmg the answers and action you
flHd to aotw inequitiet in governmeftt.and bun·
*"·Mail uour q~·to Pat Dunn At Ybur
Servfce. Orange Coast Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1560.
Cotta 'Mesa, CA 92626. Include your telephone
nmber. The column appears daily except, .scuuraay1:
r.uei,.. s,.....,. llecllreeted
DEAR PAT: Yout recent item about "harm-
.... '• aerosol products prompts me to ask if there ia
._, way the average shopper can tell which pro-
Ctueta are safe and which sUll use nuorocarbol\pro-
.,.Uants.
. • , . W.R., Costa Mesa
• • AIJDC19& all lllavlni ereama, apny pabata, laee·
es and boaaellold prodacta are propelled by
.. , ... laydrocarbou .... food pfOdads. aaell u
ftipped eream, alao_preaen&i·no pJOblem ae to
tlleb' c..-dloDde ud Bltroas oslde propellnta.
II.air apnya, cleodona&a ud aaUpenplraa&a are
ellle m ala prodacta wlaleb ltlD ase • fhloroeubae ..wen ... ~ -.. ~ td seleatlfic reports eonftrmla1 ao
Minne envtroameataf effee&a of Oaproearbon pro-
.. ...Uuu med la aerosol pl'Odladl; t.be l'ood ud
bn1 Ad.mbdstradoa has propoMCI Ulat Ulere be aa
ord~ lllaa9eOat (DOl a recall> of all .. -eaaent1a1
ues M n..oearboa propelluts la food, d:na and
coe•etk predllda. Alto pl'opoled ta t.be ~alre••t of 8 wandag label OD all eoataiDen asUag pro-
;e&laa&I.
ne large toiletry eompanles ba.n -.. de-
..... , altenati·yes to ftllONCuboea ud ltne DO
... edlate plus to drop uy aeJ'OI01 prodaeta.
llel-4'• Size C......,. .. ,. '
DEAR PAT: Last April I ordered several items
~ cJoth!hg. including a coat. from Lane Br¥ant. I
enclosed a tl11 cbeclt with m~ order. When the order
arrived, it did not Include the coal I later retumeCl
all tbe merchandise aod requested a refund. I was
aent a $78.24 check. The amount deducted was for
the coat.
I wrote to Lane Bryant and was told to return
ffftain papers in order to receive the refund. But I
bad 1ent these papers when I returned the other
Items. I explained this to the company, but did oot
ree•ive anallSwer. Wbat can I do now?
R.S .. Huntington Beach
. Lue Bryaat apololiftd for &be eoafuloll ud
b8 lined • reta6 daeell to y-. for die remalabag
,..._. 4,_ paymeat.
Learn What MeJkes
The Lindora Method
So Effective
· A comptete program to Instruct patients
hOw to lose weight easOy. then how to tne*ltan thef lean weig)t.
Dolly therapy. wtt"' audio and sub-limlnal
visuol aids to promote motivation and
enc<Xlogement
H.C G. a fat mobljZiig SLt>stonce. mol<es
It easier fa patients to lose weight without
fangue ex e)(cessive lulger.
Lndora's ve<y special diet. designed for
qXj 'Wfi(tlt bi.\ crd h'poYed eothg hc;t)ts. .
Benc:No-modflCOtion tecmiques to lean
~t con1Tol.
Llndora's easy-to-follow maintenance
program· to prevent regokiing.
The entire program is under the stnct
~of~ doctas. speaallsts
"balatdc ~·
Odll '°' u•1to1mot10n• 'f ~ tt\111 fl!dQy •• ,.
· 9AMf0H',..-2'MtOo,M
NEWPORT BEACH
640-6831
' J f.crh.TI lt"'l 'Cl
' 1' COSTA MESA
• 557~893
J
..
,
> ~ •
•
Fish Halt
Uaat felda m ...U. 1t UM bottom ot
tb• IJttleT~ River,
Pe"OJ9et trc. eompUane. wtUa u. s..
dancered Speelea Act -or the flab
are taken off the endancered roll.
tourl1m •nd au1m•al exlatl•I
hydroelectric power.
It la found only In. tbat 17 mil• ol the
river acbedul~ to be part ot tho
T•Wco Relervoi.r.
ON Dile. a. Im, fov moat.bl aft• dlaco,..., ol the ftab. Cob,,_ puMd
tbe Endqered Speeles,Act. And ln 1'75, the Snail Darter wu emUled Oil
the llat ol such anlmala. ·
TIM TVA .r:.......S that 80 CM Md bHN of tbe Siiail' Dater ftea ta.
dam w• ~ ln 1988. 'nelll'OJed
w11 primarilJ intended to ...-.nt
Blount. IAlftdon. and llonroe countl ..
in Tenneaee and •oWd crMt• a
navllable ftllenoir SZ m.t.lea lOQI m
"Tbe co~ellltJ ol the eedocseaa tcMllcm IUUtltl t.bat tbe deUt ..... tal lmpaet;ol •project upon u--.
dua...S specl• m~ QOt Wiii ~
clHrlJ perceived before~
11 well underway,•• the •nellaw
court said ln ltl ct.claloa.
Ill makin1 lta nallnC baltinC all ae-
Uvity wblch ~t destroy tho SNll
Darter'• home, the appellate court
ruled tbe permanent b\juncUon would
remaln In effect until Conarea. by ap-
propri•te legblatlon, exempts the
1e,ooo ecree. r. ''For ~ or·Ute ·HCNW7 of)
• tbe Interior to be a~l• to mat. JMU~ lnlful dectaJoQI ln f\artberaoee ct t.M, ~oltbe.act. the op~t.t
chooee mast be pneenecl~ One-e • ll•· ln• •peel• hat been ••dieawd. dla.; creUcmlolea lta 11,mftcuce. •• ~
SAVE
TUES . ~
raoPON&NTS or nm proJeet
aald it would stimulate new ~
lnduatrtal development. tnerHH
recreational opportunltlH aa4
SAVE AT FIDELITY FEDERAL
NOWHERE ELSE CAN YOU FIND All THESE FREE TAX RELATED SERVICES!
Ifs all here at Fldellty F~ral ••• your convenient One-Stop Savings Center. Income tax
preparation PLUS real tax savings through the use of bona tide ·tax shelters PLUS the
highest Interest allowed by law on your Insured savtngll · · · ·
LIMITED AVA1'1,AllllTY
INCO•-TU
PREPARATION
Appointments are llmlted. Assure yourself of a choice
setection b't' booking YOA.Jf reservotton ear1Y f91 F-ebruary ·
and get a voluabte free ~at the some tine.
To start. let us prepare your normal personal 1976 Federal
and California income tax returns absolutely FREE for ,..st
time users with a Adelity Federal account of SS.000 a
more. $2.500 In odditlonol deposits required for rep&ar
users. Other state returns can also be prepored at a
nominal fee. Check with our savings counselors fa f\nhar
quollfleatlon detqils.
Personal. private tax conference. plus comput~zed
preparation of your returns to help assure you toke ad-
vantage of every possible deduction to 'reep yo.x kJll8I
as low as possfPle.
Fiii '
Get your free .copy of this
handsome 96 page hord-
COYfiitf tx>ok at ony of our of-
ftcel. It contains 225 food gift
k1e<J1 for a variety of occo-
sb'w that you con make right .
In yo.x own kitchen ~ color phot~ show you how. . ~ '
• FREE
TRUSTEE
FEE
NO TRUSTEE FEE ON IRA OR KEOGH ACCOUNTS
" Stott noW to reduce you 19n 1nc0me taxes by opening a
tax-deferred retirement account. By opening you ac-
count row. rather than at year end. you'I also defer taxes
on Interest crecfited to the account during the entire yea. . .
l.R.A. (INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT ACCOUNTS) KEOGH RETIREMINT ACCOUNTS for Afty
for Any EmplOyed Peno,.. SelfwEmployect Person
tt rot already covered by a. qualified retirement plan. set Set aside up to $7,500 of edmed income each year
aside up to Sl.500 earned income each year exempt exempt from current federal Income taxes and S2.6CX> a
from current Federal and California Income taxes. No cur-California state fncome tax. Interest earned also exempt
rent tax on Interest earned. either. • from lneome taxes untn withdrawn In retirement years.
EXTRA BONUS: Adefity Federal Pays W..% (equal to 8.06%
compounded doily) on any balance I.RA or Keogh Aoeo.rl.
OTHER
FREE
SERVICES 'AND ALL THESE FREE SERVICES, TOO! .
• Frff notarizing • Fr•• travelers' cheques
•. Fr•• document copying
AND WITH SPECtFIED BALANCE ACCOUNTS / • F,.. money orders
• Fr•• cottectlo'n service for truat dee(j and
ofher not•• anet l•a••• • Fr•• Savings Bond redemption • Fr•• saf• deposit boxes • Free.Operation Safeguard for Identification
ofvaluabl••
• Free checking accounts
• Fr•• MoneyGard for a cheek montt\.
and many, many mor• • Save by mall -postage paid both wa,.
HIOHIST INTIRllT
Yo.x savings account Ot Fidel-•
lty 'Federal eans the highest
Interest ~wed by low on in.-
Med toWlQll ·' ~ • •
7%% 7Y2% .6%% 6Y2% 5~%
per veor per year per year per vea cl.mN'lt IOt9 per ¥9Clf
6 year Cett1floote 4 year Certtftcote 2'1\ yea Cet ttncote 1 year Cettllcote Posat>Oot Acc<M'tll
ACCCU'lts Account• AOC<U'1ti • . Accounts ' S5 miWTun
Sl.000 mmun Sl.000 tnlrt'ru'1' Sl.000 ~ Sl.000 "**"-"' · N"nJd Yleld ~ •
AMJOI Ylatd 8.0041. • Anrual Yllld 7-"' • Alnia Yllld 6.9" • Arns:I. Yield 6.1'n •
'""'-' ~ ~ ona ~ "OC'CW'f lor Of'e w.ar ~,.,... ~ ~ ~ ~ b _,,... ..-oo-ca
onal~
We ~ to save you TAX DOLLARS. Let ua show you hOw. ..
' 21 offices tO aerN.you statew/dt
F$[JC -------·--
•'
I 11
. II
I
I •
...
II
J
,,.
tl'
e1
I
,,
n
u;
" I
.... ... .,
. ,. .
., .
:
. ..
•I
11
'I I
r
•
..-..--~--"t-~------------T-U!!!!!t ...... ...._•F-!bru!y-...~~1._11T7.._ •
..,.__._..........._......._•~Y ""~""~terla-lll!lfll~I .State Aid for HQrses
Equestrian Cader.Planned at FairgroUnds
BJ 8'nVE ilttiBGI . .,. .................
OraDC• County Pair Board directon han
Iearped tbat uearly fl.S m1llloo ~• IDOIMIJ may
be OG lb WQ to the falrooundl wttbiD t.brM ..U.
mucb ol it deltln9d for a multl·m.ill.lo&4ol1u'
equestrian center.
And bone owners wbo keeptbelr anlm• an the
f airsrvundl turned they will not be e.tcted duriq
tbe three-phase conatructioa of the eqDMtrtan
center on 18..f acrea of land at tbe nartbeat comer
of lb• fa.lfCroundl. ' Tbe fate ol bone ownen and tr.men after eoa-
structian oltt..eeeotM ts 1Wl up ID the alr, however. •
•'WB BAYS TO AJIOtTllS tbiJ stat.~.''
be told tbe bone owaen ... It'• • loaD., not a put. a.net weTe bor1ow~ a couple ol m1W4lll dollars. We
uveto•eUtback.' ·
One bone owur asked U U)at meant tboH wttb
Jut CIG8 GI' two animal.I will be evicted h'om th•
equeatrtan area to make room tor tra!Den and mon apwlve ant.mall.
••At tbla point we don't '"--what will happen," FlDJ eakl. . ~ ~ oewa of the expected state capital lmproye-
ment tQnda came from Georse Gom•. procram ad· •-ova INTENTION 18 NOi' to crowd out mbliltratorfortbestate'sDtvtsionoff'alraandb·
owners with • bactyud bone they cu't keep in the poaltkm, who said the board could ezpect tbe loan
city," board member Clinton HooM Aid In a la· .tthlntbreeweeb. tervtw. Much cl. tbe atate moaey, provided under As·
Hooee. who wu mstnmental la~ the sembly Bill mt of the Pood and Agricultun Code.
equestrta center eoaeeptaakl. "No CJDe will blve to would IO for tbe flrat phase ccmtruction of the new
leaveduringtbecoeatruction.'' equestrian center. ' "Gosh -1 bate to see a romance break up with such
bltterneas ... " But the-fate of ane-bone owuen after' comple· ..
tion of the center, scbedulied for IOllMldme in 19'18. ls
,_.............._-'-""' atill ID doubt. and board Preatdmt Warnm Pinley
Deatlu Elaewhere Cl t aremon I MOUNTAIN VIEW bomeofason.Cosbywas
AP>-Spacepl--eerH born Dec. 21. 1881, lo G G allu Allen, 66: .. whos~ sharecropper parents in els rant
iscoveries made possi· Rockfish, Va. " .
le the sale return of 8 ·lrt.. By Irvine stronattts to earth, died
turday of a heart at· POUWTAtMvau.av
ack. COMMU1ur1NOS~T•L The James lr•lne ~ ,,, "" md ol _....... Mr. end ~. JMMS Puntv. 16307 Fo~atloa Nww r-•
AND TllA.T CONS'l'&VCl'ION is what baa horse uwnen and trainers wcrrlecl.
They expressed concerns that the coaUy
equestrian center pro~ mlcbt force them out
because ot hlCber nnta on stalls and the cost of
feed. . .
The board voted to tum tbe issues of barn and
stable leases, feed contacts and stable maintenance
over to tbe panel's equestrian committee for
further d1acussion.
Hone owners were told a notice would be post·
ed when the committee would meet. adding that it
will be wttbln the next two weeb.
GLENDALE CAP> -
lt•rlea F. "Cbarlle"
IJ'lllard. 93, said to have l>een the nation"s first
,..barnstorming pil.ol, died
Sltrr•. '"ount•ln veoev. 111r1 Beach bas awarded a ~~" •;:11~ =:" ~~-:_ ;::; $50,000 grant for.~
.,_.., '4, nn support and a _.,,ooo ORAllC£ coum SA Water \
Unit Picks \. COPY SERVla HAS GONE DISfOUNTI
,,,., •"" """ Hlcflol•• s_p11ne. 1ouo on-ant -the cam-·•-. Le De•-~.,._,..," venev. bOy e• nia ..-....,
onday in a local
ospllal. He W'8 said to ave been the fourth
Jnan in America to pilot ..an airplane. Tbe-Wright
rothers and aircraft
uilder Glenn Curtiss
•receded him.
Mr. and """ Steven Rtl'IQ. 100tt to renovate a music
C.bo or .. w..tmlMter. bol' audi•-ium al the Clare Mr. end Mrl. MlcllHI s-el\e'f, ~· •
HJ« Rlvltra, H1111tl1>9ton .. Kii. mont Colleges. ..,., .__.. ,.. .,,, The library grant will
""· en11 Mn. .Jt11wt Ali-. 11,., reduce the library's
eo~llH c1rc1 •• H1Mt1no1on ... ,11. mortg.,e and channel t •. ud Mn. ~"' 1n•1•"· ~m fund• toward book
Dollar Dr., HunU"VIOfl '*'"-olrl purchases in.stead of in·
-· _. .:::-::, ?:.::::. ... .... t.ereat paJIDellta.
Palsy PR
Aide Set 1-1" 0r .. .._..,.... e..c"' llO'f The Intne grant for
'APPH> ILA8DELP1H&IA ~.·:. ~: .... ~1~~ the Mabel Shaw Bridges Harbor Area resident " -amue • ,,_,.,,.,, Music Aud1tortum ee>m· B ni .. F dd b 'Cosby, 95, grand.father of Mr. •!Id Mn. Herold Mor•'"·..,. letea the drive for coo·' on: e -c a en aa comedian Bill Cosby D.e1os1uw •• P~lft va11ey, 01n P .-.&-d been appolnted Public
died here Saturday at th~ ~ ... :"t..!~W:::~ 9212 stnh;YW&t•-~.~ ~ RelaUona Coord.lnator sures "" • ~ n~" for the Unit'ed Cerebral
D •Ja w •I D-tla asa~-• f~~he Auditorium was OPalsy CounAssotciation of · ea& nrO& f!e• ..,_ ,.,, nc..., closed in September 1975 range :y.
.HN•ICM Per11, N-.on a.ac11. c...-Ptc111c for renovation. The main Miss McFadden re·
• AHNAMAR1E&EH1s0t.rn1c1en1of v1-_,lllf'Ydlr.cton. const ... -tioo in the clos· cently graduated from • ... _ _, &each, C.tllorftla. Ptned OU!fft UC&• .~••v J.,.uar; 30. 1m survr~ b'f HAllR'V v. DUNN, sR .• ""ldeflt flf Ing was a requirement W e s t Texas St ate
41•111111\•r Ver• Moody of Newport Satlt• AN, ClflfOtnl• .... IWCI ••av for nearly .... "" 000 in Universi•v. She resides 'eHcll. c;.; !l"indsorl O.vld Conftell, Januery 29. "77, s..rvt .. d bl' 1111 wife -""• '"JI
·\•' Hunllr>QtOfl Btnl\, c..; er1t1d· Pl\y1111 ~: '""" wns w1111...., 1.. equipment and re· on Balboa Island with
•llO'llerc.rOll'l'la.-ofow.N;'-011nn, of S...ta Ane, C•; Robert CODStJ'UctiOD to meet fire her husband and ·three etMf~INIClll-. 5wvKM Wiii Ila OW... of Smit• Ana, C..; Hafry V. 1.u..1-; ... d on ~y ,...,,._.., 1. at 0111\1\, Jr. ot C.slro Valley, Ca.: regulatiOOS. Cu.uun::u.
' 8•111·~ c.t• MHll Qiapef, alaYtll 9f'...0Clllldre11. OH tree!· '"'j>ft,._. Mit.,omenc. ~ or~ld; llntlWr WIMIMI E. 0.-
, C.O.t•~,.,_,alHol'llfctlf'edOt'l. of Salt L• .. • Cllv. Ultll; Btlle UCI Pr f Gi ~ llt 11 JONIS S.ssl-of Sall Uike City, Utell.
PAUL c'."JeHf.S, r .. IC.nt of S-Vi<" wilt ti. fteld on W~ 0 '-T.en ',._PO" e .. c: .. , (art*""•· p,.,.. Ptlitn.le'l' 1 •I '·oo PM ., Ptcllk ~ ... '
• -y ~ JO, 1'11. ~ W V .... °""91. ll'lt.,._.. P9clfk View
• ~•I .. HeNI Joftft• --lltktlanl .,...,..... ,.,._ ....._, llffell, C..
• ~-• o1 El T_;, Ga : 8o11 JoMI el P.Clfk Vlftt Mer1Uery dl...cton.
Wlldt,..tr, C•.; 0-ICI JOflff af MeltllllG
ll•IDoe. Ga.: -ltlt• o.oroette Cw1 lt08Eln' C. HERING, rtslcfllM of
"' Ntwoort Bt•cll. C•.; "'"• o.-y, c.llfomla. ,,.,_, ratldellt .. GreftdClllldrell. Or•"'sl# wrvlc.t C1f ONt• llMH, C.tlfOrlll•. Pt1-
wlll 1>e Nld 011 Wldl..-t ....,_., t -Y ~ :ie. 1'77. SurvlYofel Ill' Dr ~ ... u-ton of N-n--.... -.. • al 1 00 P"1I et Paclfk V19w ~-Ills wife C•rlella Herlftt; one • ._.,auvo.u ---,.._....,."' -~ r•.,~ ,_ __ .., ____ .,.,. .....-Joen ou-111 GMndele. fesaor ot Spanish and Portuguese at UC lrYb:e, bu
OAS Fellowship
..... SMITMS'MOITVMT
627 Main St
Hunltngton Beactt
536-6539
c..: - -winiam e. *"1>11 °' been awarded a research fellowship by the i=:t: ~ ~=:~~ ~ Organization of American States to complete a boot
10·00 AM•~,.., Mortuary, m s. on the Colombian novel. ... ~:'°of 8:~.~1!'°:'~:· ~ He will spend this summer at the Instltuto Caro
.... e1a to Tll• ,_.,,"" c uc:tr yCuenoinBogota, Colombia.
Chai'rman
Ruth Bt'~tten Ander-son of JUveraide bas been
elected chairman ol tbe
Santa Anl · Reglonal ~ ater Quality ContrOl ·
Board for 1W1'1.
The reglcm.a1 board 11 a
state qeney wbicb re-
platel activities which
may cause water pollu· Uon.
Mrs. Anderson bas
served on the board
since 1.970. Board mem-
bers are appointed by
tbe 1ovemor and serve tour-year term.a.
Free Legal,.
Aid Given
Tbe Western State
Univenlt,y Leaal Cllnic,
whtcb provides tree legal
~ounsel to ~be poor •
begins Its second year of
operation Feb. 3.
Tbe dinlc, aupet'Vlaed
by attorney Kenneth
Kududa or Newport
Beach. is located on the
WSU College of Law
campus tn Fullerton. For
fUrtber informaUon call
87M301.
PIBFAMllY
COl.OMIAL fUMIUL
NOMI
7801 Bolsa Ave
Westminster
8~3525
s.<.1etv. cuio Dr. Menton •a work ID Latin American FON ftc·
• ftOeERT L-CRAIG, reslidttlt of UK Uon bas earned him International recoenwoa. His ~~~· ~·,1:,o;:"~:C...o.,.,a:;: critical anthology, "El Cueoto blspanoametk~ '' CA>ast Man
Carol CtelQ: -.,,.._ Cr••• of baa been med aince 19S4 as a basic text ID utk-ature
P'ACIAC YllW
NIMOllAL P'AU
Cemetery Mortuary
Q\apel
3500 Pac1'1c View DnYe
NewP()ft.
• Cahfomla
6«-2700
Eureu; doaUON• Net.alle 0-•le ot ... _ • ....._ .. th U S • -u-• ----' d L" _.._ G LOft<a 8l'WICll, ..... Wwl': -t~ coa.nes WM......-VU• e .. , ~ l'UUllCUC4 an ~ rant
Bet'ft!Q C11ll9 °' ~ OMo: ......_ Europe. =~~~:"~~ Recent worts by Dr. Menton include "Prose Dr. Roa Winterowd,
_.Y ....,,_..,a.., n:oo AM• Fiction ol the Cuban Revolution," a critical Huntington Beach, "ac."k ""-w a.a• *'"' •ev ... ,,, analJll.I ol IDCll'fJ tban 200 novels and volumes of Ellallsb BCbolar at the ~" =:.o-P~-;:clf:~':. abort stories from 1959 to tb'e present. Earlier boots University of Southern
...,_., CllradorL oa the Guatemalan novel and the Costa Rican abort Calif ornla, bas been
ouAU> ~~ •• ,..lelaftt .atory al8o were mltjor COlltrtbutiona in the field ~ awarded a Mf ,000 erant
ot costt --.. c.1-..1a. PnHd LaUn American literature. by the National Endow· ~~,,.;..":~~ A member of the faculty since 1964, Dr. mentfortbeBuman.lUes ., c..--. ea.:•"*..._,... Menton wu the founding chairman of the UCI CNEH) toeooduct-asum.
J Cox ot ""'" ~IN °'8"1 • •-•--""""' d ·-t. He ed l _, ___ • 1) urvlc:H wlll M llel41 Tll11nder 10fe,..u --.-e ep-uuelI aerY U prel • m~r lel&Ll..IMU 10r CO ege
XEROX
COPIES •••••••••
• HEW E9UIPMEMT with
increased capablRty
also look llncllnCJ • TyplncJ
• HEW DISCOUMf PRICE -
• COPY SERVICE
711 W. 1711 St .. COSTA MISA
12'/a 111ocb Wiit of Ml.,.t ll'ld. • W..t (7• SU
"-631·1425
ouAUn 1n1uranc•
ai reasonable prices!
AUTO
kAMBcman ........ S 116.
COLLl•I STUDIMT •
stM•LI OYll JO •
.. ,...
5150. ,_YIU
STORE KEEPERS
FACTORIES
APA«TMENTS
CONTRACTORS
HOME
OWNERS
.S21.000 'f&ULT $6 7 I ••••••••• •
TIAIL'J $ 166 SI0,000 • • • • • •• •
...... l9tllllg .... ~ • '-it .,...,.. ...... .........,,.,..
fwtoo.-cla. .
YACHTS
l.ARGEBOAT~
EXTENDED CJUS&NG
TO MEXICAM WATEIS
COMMERaAl mATS
BOB PALEY -MORTHoc-546-3205
& ASSOC, INC. souTHoc-642-6500
'.
...COINIQ(
MOtmliltH
Laguna Beach
494~9415
Laouna Hills 76&-0933
Fe11r .. ary ' •t 1 :00 PM •' ••11 dent of the American Alaodation of Teacbera ol teachen.
Broedwey _,__., ...... ""'°' Mff· Sp--'-'" --...1 a-......... ln •""'" l;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~;::~=======================-'IU otttc ..... t. lftt .. ment et e1 TOf'O --.-ava•..._ .. ete .a..1.L.
c.~ ..... "'*'-" MllrtUMy -::;::;;;:;;;:;;;;;:;;;:=;~==!;;;;~=~==~~~~
•
San Juan Cae>!t1trano
4~1776
14Ln.aBMIOM
N•AL NONI
Corona del Mar 87~
ea.ta Mesa 649-2424
la&. llOADWAY
NOl'NAIY
1 tO Bf09dway
eo.t.Mes.
642·0150
Olrecton. .., .. uo. i:: I MAR8 OE LOS llill. HAltll. l'MHl9nt of LM
Aftll•IK. C.llfwftta. Pa1Md away
JaftuerJ 1', "17. ~ -. •If•
J-H-; --Rlc:Mo1ll 0 . H-
" ~ l'l«lela; ~ JtM
Mlll•r of e1111tert, lflellffl•: ''"' ........ ~ -ll'W'-9'...,_, 0••"'"4ilf Mf'YI<•• ta ... llfl41 Ott Tiwf'May ~---y J, et I 00 PM.
Pacific VI•• MdMOrl•I l'•rlll, New--1 9Hcll. llltM'IMflt ,.ac.lfk
VNw ..._. ... ~. "eclfk View ...,_., dll"K1on.
OAUCMM OPAL Mattie GAUDIN,,.....,. el ..... ..,, e..at, Callfonll .........
-y ~ .. ""· ..,..,.,..., ..., llutll•ftd O.tree Gaudin : lw.e
·~--• • ... ...-~...,... Acltannan uf U\ -•n ,..,,,,_ -Ve11•1, and J•c1111e Alldrtwl Of WB'fCu.p CMAfll. f'ull9f•: M• 91'lftdctllklrM. Pf'IVllte
427 E 1701 St. 1_11., ~ e1 •:oo ,._ °" "-;====~~~~~~~~~~~~=~~ COlea Mela• Me 4198 dO hllrv.,.., t •t Pacific: View r
CIMtptl ,., .. ,_.,, ,.eclflc. View ( J Ina Ana CNpet ..._... ,..,.. -....rt 9M<11. c.. MAILBOX ~-!!8 ... N.:aerc:t7~1•1 ::.;_i.u a:.~.:::...~ • ~: , ~na ...,,.. • ~ • C•it<er lttM•r<lt. '"•clflc: Vl•w
"· "--------" ....,...,.,.,.. .... DAILY PILOT
' '
EXTRA EXTRA EXTRA·
TM•CAST T .. , ............ , ...... AltlGelMll
................ ' ........... '""Leoillll
ltklMrd ................... ".: ... •rue•~ c..,,.. ... .. ........ .... .. •. 1.\ll'lfta.IMtrl
...... ••••••••.,••., ,. ., , ,. ... leWllClyMlli
LyM •••· • ···-· .1. ........ • J~.._.._., Clllt"4 • • . . . • • • • .. ••• • . • . . . . . • . JeMka lte¥! Cleftl .... ~ ...... , •••.• , ......... 81410.U.
• tbey dllaJ wttlt tMir fnmtratlon.S
is overtooted in tbe UC Irvine
;, ~~ctfon, which closes
• wJtb ftDal pt:tformances Friday
: and Saturcl&y. But tbe rreewbeel·
iD,, h10 ~·drama 1eeeratr
ed by the PIJCbotiC intruder COID·
• eente' ltq• wttb apledlld lm·
pact. .. =·· unfold• aplut dart· '• superbly reallatlc
bstk ol UM diner. complete
with wortable kitchen and Lb at.
tendant oclon. one of the better
aettlnaa orfered in cotlef,iate
theater. The "you are tbete • ae-
proacb ls carried f\lrther t>y
director Aahley Carr. who makes
maximum use of his surround·
inga.
BEU WI! •EET Jon U>vitz
aa a restless young ru.bt..took, all
bark and little bite (u we will
leant later>. stewing about his
sltuatbl and grou.alng •t the
overweiaht walve11 <Baala
Wilc1ymki> who b quite IC·
eutomed.lo bis Uradea. H.b stem
Film/or Famw FOxe
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina
<AP> -ranne Foxe, the Argen-. tille-'*11 stripper once roman-
tically linked to rormer U .s. Rep. wubUr Jlilll, ,. reportedly pre-
parfnl tb 111ake a mov1b h~re
nextmontb.
Tbe omctal~elam News Agen-
CJ Hid that Mks Pox, whose real
name b Annabel Battiatella, will
anin Feb. 15 for a 15-day stay.
It aatd the movie, the Utle or
wblcb wu qot given, will be
directed by 11 1oung Argentine
dlreetor,RafaelCohen.
Telans did not say what the
movie w about.
Mill Fox, known aa the Argen-
tine Bombshell, wu one of four
people in Mllls' car when
WulllJlCtOD. D.C. police stopped
It lot apeecting without llgbta.
Lat• it WU revealed that Ml.as
Poe ud llll1a were romaDfically
iavolved.
'mgb School'
.Star Signed
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Tim
·llatheeon bas been signed to star
ln "High School," currenUy film.
ing here under direction of
Martin Davidson.
The youthful comedy also stars
Bruno Kirby~d Lee Purcell.
Matheson most recently was
star of the television series "The
Quest."
" ... Nothing less than
the most exhilarating
entertainment of the
film year to date."
~ ... .,. '""" NEW YORK TIMES
Taadays at 7:30 p.m.
Do it
LOYITZ. WHO leoda to
be#OtlH too byper too earlJ,
_..........,. prOVea an involving
ftpre when m.atched acalnst bis
atron1er adveraary. James
Halley, though playlne a
character three times bis age,
probably gives the soundest
perfOfDlfDCe as tbe crippled gas
ataUooowner.
Bruce ~en is weaker than
hil role demands as the well·to-
do travelet', while Lynn Ba1estri
baa some excellent moments as
bis condescending wife -;:.Jhoulh
her thlnly veiled overtures to
Teddy are a bit pu~liDJ. Basia Wilc~ld ts ~tlfU.lly natlU'al
as the waitress, \fblle Bill Gekas
is very strong as tbe diner
manager and Jessica Hoyt ac·
qulta herself well as Teddy's
ronower.
"Red Ryder" is a shocker or a
play whicb replaces traditiooal
theatrical values wtth tbe sting of
reallty. It concludes with two
performances Friday and Satur·
day at 8 p.m . tn the Village
Theater en the UCI campu.a.
Q. "ffail aqfbod.J rf.U, ~ tbat OTW~
•eittlt .om.. taed to be men •• iD U. tom.-.depattmeat ?'' ·
A. Cu onJJ repo" t.bat numet'O\ll ,... 1earc'-' lnatlt aueb \o be the eue. Ov Lo¥e
and W1r man'• ftlet eontain auui ..... clalml tbat the pleuintlJ phnnp ~crave affection
and enjoy Uvel.Y amorous •C:tivity.
Q, '"Loll6e, wbat'1tbetMll,..._emt1ocif .. ......... , ..
A.TMOld._...,._
I• Fort Wort~. Tezaa,
wtdMM a doubt.• A tenl\aa •
namltd W.at.er Kau.tmama
run.a Ute t9t.cbal. Another ••W.. Walter's wife Nan-
CJ, O.Y ...... guesta' wants
out front, U it Ian 't perf~.
It Lan 't aened. Or sueh ·~
pears to be the house rule.
Q ... la the cutle in Oia-
MJ1-4 peu.med after a real palace!"
A. IDdeed. ~ mOlt apeetacular palace ill
tbe world. 'poMiblJ. Neucbwanstein, located
120 mil• IOUthwest of Munich, Bavaria. Mad
K.iq Ludwig U built lt on tbe aide ol a moan· tata. It loob like i&.'a about ready \o fall off.
but lt isn't. Neuchwanatein ls said to be U.
molt copied o( all castle~.
About 20,000 acret ol deeert in Callfonie ..
dnoMd to tbe eommerdal ~ ol ~ ...
'l'.be tnmt • roots ol the JVteCM JWd a ••' tbat 1uppliea the foam Oil root befi'. TIM ... ._
wbea pounded produce a cnam u.et MrW9
well in shampoo.
Addraa maU to L.JI. Bffld, P.O. Bos,_, a..ta
1i111a,nas.
IVIMWA't' eltf ~
CAllllt111
'"" IOLLIUALL•
I,
. • ..
fte Carter admlnlatration already baa
aa,t.borbld beDlftU for filblralen and oyatermeo ln
tbt ~ueak• ba1 areu ol Maryland and Vlratnl•· Slnillar ald ma, be fOl'tlltcoln1q for
11orida'1 mlerant farm workers, ldled by .-mid·
JanWll'l' freeae wbleh deattc>Jed mueb ol that
at.ate'• claw anc1 "ecetablecrop.
TD II STATES THAT BAJ> bofnrnd from
the Federal UoomploYJDmt Meount are Alabama,
Arkamas. Ccmneetiaut. Delaware, Hawaii. Illlnal.s, Maryland. MuaaclluHtU. M.alne, !illehllan, Kin·
nesota. Montana, Nevada. New Je.._.y. Oregon,
Penn11lvenJa, Rhode llland. Vermont and
Waabtn&tm y
·orought
Expected
. ......_... 1¥.,.a..ltm••
Gordon L. Hough, 58, has
~n elected chairman and
chief executive officer of
Pacific Telephone's board
of directon. He'll assume
the new duties April 1,
r eplacing r etiring Jerome
W. Hull.
To Worsen BankAmerieard
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE
()pen 8 nlW c:ertific:ete 18Vin,p
account with us tor $5.~or more
and we'll haw H&R Block PNPI,.
your 1976 federal and C811fomla
individual income tax r9tums frM.
This service Includes special
schedules for ltemlmd ded~.
Interest and d1vldend Income, .... of
property, pension Income. Income
averaging, and many more wit~
additional char19. Or open an account
of $3,060 to $5,000 and the charge
is only $15; a biC aavlncs. PreMnt
Mutual Sawrs can alao qualify. C.11
today. Appointments are limited.
free Income Tax Service Is Just
another reason why you should have
your savings at the Big f.1, Mutual
· Sevinp and Loan Anoclati~.
CepidMI0-5'"' aemente•:
570 camino de Estr•ll•/493-~51
CcwoM dll "9...: 2867 East eo'ast
Hlghwey/675·!5010
Fountain Y~: 17900 M11noCia
Street/963-8396
s.nt. AM: 631 North Main
547·9741 •()pip! Sftlrdllys 10 AM to 2 PM
MUTUAL
S~. ---Gr~ ..,._,
8}' .... \111 dated.,...
Tile Saa. Joaqeia
Valle7•1 long droa1bt
may not end in Pebnaary
u mllll.'T bad hoped, tbe
National Weather
Senice aays.
Tbe 30-day forecast re·
leased llooday lnd.1cates
le11 than normal pre-
clpltatloo. the weatber '
service~
80 I'll th1a lealQD, tbe rabafall to&al 1urprh.-
lniJy ta aJmmt normal 1n
parts of tbe .,alley beeaase a couple of
1torm1 dumped large amouma. rre.no. for ex·
ample. baa 5.22 lnebes
thil ae•oa, Just als-one
hundredth• below
normal.
But the valley 's
alriculture depends OD
anow runoff from the
Sierra for irrUation. and
tbe anowpack 1a reported
down to one sixth of
oonnallnsome places.
Planes Bought
Air Transport Corp .•
Newport Beach, bas
purchased two Boeing
'70'1-320C aircraft, phls
spare engines, from
Brltiab Caledonlan
Airways, Ltd.
'. '. ! ' ' u . .,1(
c~ ......... W)C Cf'PIM M()lll[ ... .,...,_ ....... ~ ........... ,,.... • °""""'° ·~
-· t97.S400 .. LO C A-.o.._,.
IaQDCbee Switm
What may be the biUest name
chanae undertaken In the bat
card industry ls under way bJ
NaUonal BankAmericard, Inc.
<NBI).
The operation will establish a
single new name. Visa, for cards
like BankAmerlcard ln tbe Unit.
ed Statea and Cbar1ex in
Canada. Issued under dlffe:rmt 1
namea ln 22 countrtea and
bollored in more tban 110. the7
are carried by some 48 m\llloa
cardholders -33.S mUllon of
them in the UnitedStatel.
Starting tbia montb, tbe
chance will be announced to 2
million partlclpatlag retail
e1tabllsbment1 and to
cardholders. Tbe tut will be
carried out by the nearly 8.000
member banking institutions
that own and operate card pro.
srams.
. ..
I-
NOR111BROOK. Ill <AP)--Owners ot newer homes lmund b1 All·
stat. In • .uites and the District or Colambla will pay 10 peretnt a-l for premhnnt, the company hu announced.
Tbe ctllcount app~ea to bom.-ftve )'ears old or leaa. lt ioee ~to ef·
feet today ln Wuhlllstoo and 38 states, tnclud.ln& C'1lforota, &Qd lD ,.
Mmlmd and MJmieaota nat 1 ~
Moada;y.
ALLSTATE INSU&ANCE
company. which 1ay1 Jt11 tibe na·
tJon'I sec<md luaett bome ln·
111?W', aa1d a surve1 tt conducted mowed homes up to nve years
old produeed fewer elalmk than
(' TAKING
STOCK )
have yet to come up wlth a eood
small eU' that wUl .ell. tbe presi· dent of the N1tional Automobile older bornes. "Thla dllcouftt 11 an atte-.,. lo Dealen AssoclaUoo aaya.
our "And &here'• no reason for lt. 02ore equitably dlarl u .s.., th t ' 10 ure .. •aid J-i..-J bomeownas• ~WDI among a s r s • .. "'-'.. .
our POUcybolden " a spakesman Pobanka, winding up a year aa sate[ ' bead o1 the NaUonal AutomobUe
Other insurers bav~ similar DealenAssoclaUOn.
diacounts. but AlJltate ts the flnt "AQy country that can put a
amoill the nation's top 10 to do man oo them~. can certa1nl.Y so. tbe spokesman said. build a small ear. be said.
The cliscoUnl wlll applJ to If •..-C (It •I• S.U. new polJdes wrlttea after tbe .t· fectlvedate &Dd uiltlna potiriea SACRAMENTO <AP> -Tbe aatbey9NNDeWed. Farmers II ark et 1, •
..,erlaet • •.-.~Off superpiarket crbaln wltb 17 '"'' .,,.... leased st«es in Sacramento and
MILPITAS (AP) -Ford 18 in other California citJes, baa Mater C01)lpany bas announc..s been sold.
it bu laid off lt~ em'*'-Carl Stein said be and D. from its big assemoq plant bere . Herbert Gray boQgbt the ebain
Company offlclals 111d Kon· from eight corporations. all
day tbe extended 1ero weather ia beaded by Walter Fona, wbo ha
the East baaAianl\:Ked normal beenlnbuainesabere slncetm.
manulacturfn1r acthltlea on wblch tbe plant depends.
Cell~ Prtea Rise "1il'l'EP~N. Y. <AP>-
Tbe Nestle CompaD.J' bu raised
tbe wboleaale prices of lts inatant
and freeze.dried coffees by s to 8
cenU an ounce.
"I don't want you to thiok this
slpala another round of prtee ln-
ereaae1." a spokesman said
Koa.dQ. "We're just catching up
witb our eompetiUn. ••
Tbe increases won't be felt at
tbe arocery atore for several
weeb. be said, since there is
about a two-week baekloa ol or·
den completed be!OH the price
change.
C•r Maiten AatllW
NEW ORLEANS CAP ) -
American car manufacturers
Over The Coun'ter
HASDU....,.
Ouner;'• Bag~
5-ceni Coffee
MOUNT AYR. Iowa CAP> There'• no grumbUna about the
price of coffee at McNelley Drue
Store. It's a nickel a cup, Jmt u
it was wbm the store'• soda foun-
tain opened in 19'8.
Owner Steve Mitchell, a.. a pbarmaciat. says be "breaks
pretty close to even" witb nictel
coffee and bas no plans to boost
the price.
"What's the big deal!" be
asked. "I view it <the low price)
a s a convenience to tb• customer.•·
11,.. .........
OOMtl
Ptl Up \001) Up S7 t Up JO.O
VP 11 1 Up 210 Up 20• Up "t Up 1• 1 VP 15.A Up t4.J Up 14.J Up IU VP 12.0 Up 111 UD ti. Uo 11 I
(Jjt " t Up 11 t Up 10j Uo tO' Uo 10.)
Up 10 I Up 100
Up 100 UP 100 Up 100 Ult IO.O
U Jt Ola Pel
tl4 -"' Off 11.l ) -""' ()ft IA.J 7lli -"' ()ft u .• ao.. -I~ Oft tU t -'4 Oii II I
11¥1 -''°' .Otl I0.1 ti.It -"" Otl ... . , ... -'"' Off .. .. , .... -"" Off t ,I
n -t °'' u 11 -' Oii u
,.,. -"' Otl '·'
3 -v. 041 '·' • -"' Oii 1.1 ·~ -"' Oii 1.1 .... -"' Off 1.l )loo -•4 C)tf JJ
)'• -.... ()ff '·' f"--\.o C)tf 1 I
'"" -.,., Oii 1 t
""' -11<t ()ft 1 t ~ -'"' OH tt , -.... Off ..,
l'lt '"' Off ._, 11/t -I.It OH ._,
I ( .
MUTUAL FUNDS
. "
Meet BOS. The Branch Operating
System service. It's new at Avco
Financial Services. and being in-
stalled right now in our branch off i·
ces all over the United States. (
The BOS service is the most ad-·
' vanced on-lloe computer system
service in the Consumer Fmance
Industry. It puts each of our branch · Afl~ce19Au
offices in direct contact with our L..../~
~
"
.•.
"
..
l/N DAILY PltOf 1'J~
NEW YORK (AP> -The stock market headed b.igher
again today in its second attempt at a rally.
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stock~ was up
3.99 points to 958.36 after a previous technical advance faded.
On the New York Stock.Exchange, advances broadened
tbelr lead over declines. Turnover was active .
• Brokers explained that the market was reacting to a
senes of technical happenlngs, prompted ln part by its
sharp reaction Monday .to the economic uncertainties ere at..
ed by the cold weather.
The government's reports today that factory orders
i:ose and construction spending declined ln December had
little value for the stock market. because of the unusually
cold weather the followlng month, brokers said.
StOC!la In The
SpotUglat
LOSANGEl-ES !APl -, be difl'lcultfortbe rkt qffr ,
snowbound America to im ,
but tbe Lo&AngeJes Doc11e ve
been out like trlaky youn1 lta in
1prinithne. working tMir y fn.
to sbape in the ·warm $ot4bem
CalllornJaaunsbine. . f-.
And one of the most tager rookies at the informal 1>9d&er
Stadium workouts, the oq~ run-
nlq, doJnt'situps and yelljng a
lot, has been Thomas Ctlarles Lasorda.
"I just can't wait for spring
training to start,'' said Lasorda,
fhe·Dodgers' new manaeer. "I'm
1oing to be first in lJne for the
plane to Vero Beach."
L .. smla, who firit Joined the Dod,... °"laniuUon in 1948 u a
pitcher, didn't make much of a
splash as a player. But Lasorda·
manaeed teams won five pen.
nant• in the Dodgers farm
system.
When Walt Alston retired as
Dodaers manager at the end of
last season. following two years of
fmisbJng behind Cincinnati 1n the
National League West, Walter
and Peter O'Malley handed the
reins to Lasorda, the man "w)lo
bleeds Dodger blue."
Lasorclii; a 4~.'~e'at!h1d'naUve of
Motrtstown. Pa., said be intends
to stick with the same managing
philosophy be used in the mi.nOts.
"I go by the Boyden theory/'
Lasorda said with a twinkle in his
eye. "If conteftted eows give bet·
ter milt. then contentecf players . play better baseball.
"I want this team to play hard,
a1'"91ive baseball, but I also
.waat them to pJay relaxed. I real-
ly thlnk baseball should be fun for
everyone ltlvolved, the fans, the
pJayen-and the manaeer." While Alaton was known as .. the
quietman" andgenerallykepthiS
distance from tbe players.
Luorda is anything but quiet. and
be '1 oneoltbe euys.
... Uke to· com~er ua a
tJplcal American family,·· ••JS Evert. "We have our lll'Oblems like everybody ebe.
I love my family. I doo 't like •
SAN FRANClsc;o -The
Athl ... in Action IF: \o a t(-13 tildlibitloa but vie-,' tor ovjt ~ Fran m.&e UnrvVl!fty Monday . t, 1,cS by f~ud Ttm Hall wbo scored 21 poJntf belere balJ.ni out.
The ~ators, t.G~ ~Y guard • Orlando Williama 28 pointa,
trailed by only nin~ 1Polnts -
41-32 -at the close o{ the first Jialf.
TOM LASORDA
Many of the Dodgen played on
Laaonia 's minor·league teams,
and be said it's as if they grew up
with him. He thinks of them as bis
"kids."
. "People have asked m~ if I •
thblk I may have some trouble
beeauae I'm too close to the
players, .. said Lasorda. •'What a
dumb th1ni tout! I'm no better
than they are. And besides, that
woa 't bave anything to do will\ the
wa7lnmt.t)eclub."
Lascria said his toughest task
ii "teepm, a happy face" when
the teamlOMS.
"I feel like it's my job to appear
happy and cheerful, even when
I'm not. U ~players see you
down, despendent, they're going
to worry.and that just mates ev-
erything worse.
"But when we lose, I'm not go-
inl to be happy. I'm a rotten '-»er.••
But AJA, a cQUectionfof former
college players based out of
Tustin. outscored the Gators, lN
in the tlrat six minutes ol the
second half, putting thP game away.
an Ft I• Atlftlteea
NORTH UTrLE ROC~~ ~· -K8l'OOll Rahim ot PUllUUl euu, defeated Steve Turner. 6-0,
~J lloadQ nlght to advan~e. bltq
th NeODd ~ ol. a pro~ towumeat.
Collll Dibley Jra• ti.to vlc-tonoua, u be topped Rick n...
Iler, S-J, M . Geor1e Hardie ectaed us-year-old John ~. 7-1,M. ..,. ,
.......
Palmateer in Nat.,ionat Hockey l..eague ac-tio~ Monday niaht ln. AUanta. All8"ta 's
F\ajnell won. 7 -3. • . '
UCI tias two other game& tbia
wee.k, traveling to Omaha Th'"°
day· to battle rugged Cre..-.too
University (15-3> and bostinl Ci'
State <Bakersfield) Saturday
nJgbi. Creigbtoq toppled DePIUJ
Monday"n.ight, 84· 75. .r,
VCI'1 w.omen 's b••ketbaJI
team is also lb acUoR. tonight
(5:30>.at ctawford Hall. meeting
CaJ Ny (PomonaJ Jn .t SoudMrD
CaUlorma· Athletic Alsoeiatioa
game. UCI bas a 6-4 reeord.
. ..
• .. .
. .
Wbat are usually conaldered slow months for
hja fllhiDa tesort.s is nqt hc!&dln1 true um 7ear. PuMa Cqkqda re-ports that suesta are tatlnc
aerlin, dolDbin. waboo and lots of yellowftn tuna
ud $1141 ~ellowt.ail are expected to arrhe socm. -~e an1Jer Mel Calloway just returned flo. .ColoniOa and said fi.shiDI and ...U.. CODdi·
doDI are ld.u. .
Tb• belt fishing in the Sea ol Col1a usually b1fJu around late April and peats ln June. Thia
79ar lt could be earlier. Accordlng to Mn. Bob Van
Warm~1 wbo operates Punt.a Colorada. there are
9b pTOOMma in the area and analen ud their
famWta are encouraged to vacatloo a.round tbe
cape . ., .......... ,. ... . , '
• ····-.... of ......... =-.. ......._ c.lllwal• rh·en .._. IN ,.._
.................. 'hebqlrtM1 ... an ... t1 l ........... u1,_ .......... ahtr. 11 ..... ll,......aneo1UDOa.-&MMltl9re _,a .... • lll•~r llloe1Mia, lbe Ne. I. ftlt ~ :·=.~ 8lftr 11ear lbdakeJ'• ...... II .... t.. lit• Ute-&laree a."._•••• cl .. rlllll ...
MD r.i'aasJee
With St. Pant ••tet Del Blab olSan-t a Ana teturn1 to
AQ-~butet•
baO aeUoo tontabt ln Mpeaot~.1~ lea~~ at Santa Pe 8 St. Paul
(CM). II at T:•.
la amau •1-Ja · ac._ tJ~ a.f1&4an Of If S..cb ta at
a11 .au11Uan (8)
and Hunt1nltoa Valley CJad~u of Newport ~II JI at Downey's A•o..,lldor Cbrllllan Ct>.
..... UCll _ .. ,.,... ..... ,
-·~~PwtttUOO, Jwtlllte!J.~• .... It .. 1.20 CMlt~l~I uo ta .......... ,u.Mll , ..
I'
A.a ~ saikbtial 1taff that II PGttn· Uall1 tlll btilt II UM eetio0l11 blatory. will be the ar.y
to 1uee.a • failure fbl' toacb Fred IC$er'1
loUtlMrD CIUIGnd1 ~ ol Costa Meta blleb.U ....... ,..... . . .,
.......... ltlWMn and nln• Ntumln! ... J
Wrma to bUUd aroud,.. Keener ·~·· • Out .. JIGUDI aDd p~ ~.., but ,
. ..
beltnaftwebaveJalld.~' 1
are tbne retum.lnl IODMlllorea, • fnttumn and a Junior tranater to buDd Ute 111ound., .
1taff tor a 1r"tlln1. 5f:1am1 aebedule tha~
tomttimel • .. m,ny • atx s..-1n a wed. ,,
fi....it-. 11' AIM R1t1 -T• M9" Sport. i t• Otttl~ 0. ~ .... MitMY :r, '-:.~ ...
TbNe atl114n Ytill probabl)' eome from • 1roup,1 lnfludJQ topbomorea Butch Ward and . Larry 1 Adama from lMt year'• teul IDd traatfer Dan
Btrd'Wlll from Paclnc CbrtaUan a I
1 ltia 1111Mblro. a Nt w ...Uever,1 from Hawall, wtll be = m 'def by Bob,.
SalQll!lla. a transfer froln OnJ'• Harbor IC id0 SeaW.ladfnlhmaa T\m LJ9ot\ . .. ,,
'" '" '" '" .,,
NUll1't 1tAC9 -•YW<ts. J y .. r ... ~. l'WMSU.. ~ ... ~,
4.111 IUD SJO "=~' uo J.00 V Jllwl I 0rtytt I l, JO '\--"··· A .. 1191' -:rewt'' CllllW. TM CAtl·
lbD SelHHa, uotti4il' t;UilfW trOm P1clfto1 Cbri1Um. will blDdle U.. e~ dutllt. Ht ·blk
.3S$ llit year and wu picked on the NAL\ Diftrict~ m Me(llld ... Q
O.q Cllaauakaa. an outfielder. ls ' U!lrd;. player from the PCC team now attendiQc SoCaJ. {.
PCC abandoned bueball this season. Cbepllaualr11
bit .301 and •tole 28 of 30 attempts. He Is a 1wttcb-\
bitter and la acbeduled to start in left field. •
Sophomore Stan Thomas returns at tlnt b11e.11 He la betna pushed by freshman Gary Skelton1 one,
of the largest players on the team at U ana 22Si1 pounds. A left-hander. he hit 14 home runs la1t year1.,
and was a 12tb round draft choice of the Ba1Urnor~11 Orloles. dNll•. Del llWn ~l9ft'er. To Halt or ~ ..... 111 'Ne 1er.iC11tL 11• Rick Peten is back ai shortstop and Ml.tr. Ellllr(
may be able to play at thlrd base 8'ain altboub ~
la bobbled by a knee injury currenUy. Peten bft .-0 and EUia .Ht tut aeuon. '" '" ,,,
'" '" "' '" '"
Two tr.hmeo are vyinl for a starttna role ~
second base -Greg Adams from HaY'Ward IQ,,
Northern Callfomla and Scott Albin from Omaha, .. ,
Neb.
Randy Greer. a Junior with two y•an II· •
perieoce as a !lta'.rt.er, anchors the outfield.. n..1 heet-tooted cellte!' fielder hit .271 last seuon and._
baa ataleo 53 b9see ln two years.
Mart Wood, a treshmart Hom Syl111ar Hilb·
where be bit .SJ.A. 11 penciled in for duty ln ri1ht•"
field. He bu a strona arm and power at the plate,
says Keener. Jf
''N Johi dOtf (,Seti y(IU'r9 ff~-
11i. 0 membet d 1he fotnlfy.
I khOw Pb 'The Greek'' Of ..lotwon
• & Son. This ls rrt)' MCoOd cor .from
mem.Thof's~I~
you dr1 .... tO~ C, Sdn. Th,tr ~ TcM:t\ ~ II the Otl.Y
wby to~ GM •'"9\ o W.'
Donn' Dou&f as
"The Beverly Hillbillies;,
Monday. Jan. 31, ll AM·l PM
David Nelson
"Ozzie & Harriet"
Tuesday, Feb. 1, 11 AM·l PM .
Jay Stewart
"Let's Make A Deal"
Wednesday, Feb. 2. 11 AM·l PM
' Mony Bee
"Tfte Cntl& Ford Show"
Thursday, Feb. 3. 11 AM·l PM
Pat Buttram
''Greenacres"
Friday, feb. 4. 11 AM· l PM
Clsele MacKtu:it
"Your Hit Parade"
Monday, Feb. 7, 11 AM-1 PM ,
"
~nrct Ftqneman • ~ ' "You Bet Your-Life''
Wednesday, Feb. 9, ll AM·l PM
Alan Ital~ Jr.•
"Gilligan's Island''
Thursday, feb.'IQ, 11 ~fiti'l'~M~
, l ' I
We've J~st con)p,eted construetlon :ot your beautiful new·Home in West-·
tninster-and that calls for a celebration I So we've invited all the stars
you see abOvQ ...::8nd you-to be our guests. for a gala OpeA House from
Monday, ~anuary 31 through Friday, f;ebruary 11. Meet t"&stars in person,
reminisce aboUJ some of the great TV shows in history, Qnd enjoy re-
freshments of coffee, punch' and cookies. You'll even get a· free souve-
nir gift to take home with you! .. . .. .
Of coursi, tne ' ~iggest st,r of all is .your new Ho met Faced with real
Italian ~ on the outside, and with plenty of free par~log, the new
office rs spaelous and c0Jr!fot1a~le Inside, a truly 'fltf1ng place to enjdy ' an the services·'hf America's Large~t. ·
• I
As a memento of your-
. visl~ durlttg OpeQ House·
we have a gJk fQr you-.,_,.r.o'D'llllL~'.'"'' "'-"'L""-~'ll"~\ .. a Cbpy~f 6'HOW sweet lt
Was'' ... a 192 page
plctorlal review of TV
sf nee its beginning. .
~ .
•SURI TOMK rMOUT NOMI'S SIWERtCIRCLE ·
Silver Cirole is Home's own special program
of extra benefits'fQr.savers. It's
an el(<;iting woFtd of travel 'to ·
exotic places ... money-~ L' ..
saving opportunities Jo buy . liver
cars et ffeet prices or ~1. · i•,..le ,1
insurance pt group r~tes, ~~, '~ ~},
and muchhf11UOh more. Ask ~~,J~
any Home SaVingS counselor p • • ·
for full details a11d how to join I
I
· 1
-
..
..
' . \ . '.Fa~ever'
Not SuCh
A 'Long ~
-:J;if;lle
. '\
By DBNN18 MeLELLAN Ol•Dellv ..........
It W¥ a co1d Detroit Sunday af.
ternoon in uba;wben Bill Dowler
and a friend J1iasaed the streetcar
into town, where they were going
to shoot pool. •
.t>owler, a red-headed 24-year-
old'had been working seven days
a week on the railroad and he
wanted to relax.
But instead of walling for the
next atte4;\car-aqother 40
mi.Dute. ilt the cold-the friend
au11eatec1 they fo to his re·
laUve's b;oua4;.
· 'l ba~ a ted-beadM cousin,"
lie told Dowler.
1 The young men ape.at tbe after·
1lMft in tbt two-story house on the
broad, tree·llned street. They
had' Sunday dinner and Dowler
met Ule red-beaded cousin, Lulu. I Tbat was the beginning of a
'four and1 a iµll!-year courtship
.
!t
' ... ,
that resulted in their marriage.
THE COUPLE, now living in
Leisure World, celebrated t~eir
7~b wedding anniversary last
$eptember. It was an occasion
marlced by a party in their honor,
attended ·by 125 friends and re·
Jatives. President Ford also sent
a letter of congratulations.
On Saturday, Feb. 12, Bill, 9S,
and LUlu, 94, will be honored as
one of the county ·s oldest
sweethearts at the Orange Coun·
ty Ball. which this year has a
"sweetheart theme."
The gala, sponsored by the
Oranae County Chamber of Com·
me.rce, Will be held ln the South
Coast Plua ijotel. Tickets are
$20 per person and may be re·
served by calling the chamber of.
fice, 634.e900.
The Dowlers, whose red hair
has,tui:ned ~nowy white, recently
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
Tuesday. February 1. 1977 81
flll.
By BEA ANDERSON Ol .. Del.., f'IMt 5lelt
OR THEY MJGDT just spend
the evening around the parlor
oiano sln'ging the songs of the·
day: "She•s Only a Bird in a
Gilded Cage," "After the Ball ls
Over." aruJ "'Under the Shade of
the Old AppteTr,ee.'' .
Favorite games, added Qowler •
wlth a laugh were "spinning the .
bottle and P"lQffice. .
"Of course· !A the winter we
had sleigh ride parties."
Mrs. Dowlef at the time was
running the household for her
widowed fathe'r and her brothers
and sisters. An aunt, who ran the
house for years. had moved to
Oregon. ·
That's the same time she l'iiet
Dowler ..
\
"I b&d cried all day," she re-
called.. ''I 1f U so lonesome. In
the eventrlt ~e came. That
healed everything."
The aunt1 living on an Indian
reservation in Pendleton, Ore.,
later wrote about the "wonderful
opportunities." Land was be.log
leased from the Indians lhroq8h
the government, and the firtrilng
was excellent. '
~WLER MOVED out .. f&rst, ·
followed shorllv after b~ his
fiance.
They were married in her
aunt's ho~ on the reservation
by a Presbyterian missionary.
<They were the first white couple
. he had ever married.>
Asked if they had a honey-
moon, Dowler said it was harvest
time and he was too busy. Th~
.. Bill-and Lulu Dow/err
married 70 years,
will be honored
as one of county~ 1
oldest sweethearts
at gala "Sw.eethea~·.
Ball" Feb. 12.
joked that their honeymoon was
the next t;norning when Mrs.
Dowler aCC!Dmpanied him and
the hone and buggy to the load·
lngbouse.
The fara.ilill life didn't pan-.
and Dowler got a job in a aboe
st.ore, a bWiiness he stayed in
after their return to Detroit
several years later.
They moved in to Mrs .
Dowler's father's house, which
remained their home for 160
yeara.f'
Asked if he still gives.his wife a
Valentine's card, Dowler said,
"No, that's for kids.',..
"Re once sent me a Valentine
and I had to hide it so my father
wouldn't see i~ '' recalled=Jdrs. Qowler.
THE COUPLE has a bOD and
daughter, an "adopted"
daughter th~ took into their
home, five grandchildren-and 10
great-grandchildren.
)
They moved to Oranse County
alx yeau aeo. Dowler, a-'
boaonry member of the ort~
Kiwanis Club in Detroit, ·Pl•YI u
occasional round of eoll, pUW6f
h1s own cart. He won't use an
electric. ''For an able-bodied
man, that's not golf," be scoffs.\ Mn. Dowler, who is a talent'4
arijst with a cabinet full' of her
China paintings, said 70 years ol
marriage doesn't seem like L longtime.
"Time goes by :io fast." s e
said. "It was too filled and
passedtooquickly." ~ "We have wonderful memori
of those years," sa~~P:r 95-ye • old sweethear:t.-a g they've
witnessed many changes. \
.. I REMEMBER so well ule
headlines jn the paper, " 'Detroit
Talks Wit.6 Lansing.' Tbat was 8C>.
miles away. = "We have no great aceompli.s
menu. We have a very di
and tbouahUul family and not am
enemy tn the world. I think that's
tbe ereatest accomplls~ment.'J
_)
)
.~
Slow, graceful, yet
strong and forceful
\ • I
) ... mpvements of Tai Chi
Ch'uan are executed
by Jennifer Booth,
who teaches the
ancient Chinese martial • 4.
arts a..t Orange
Coast College.
'
' I
• •
.
~
.
T"-d!y. '*"'? t. 1t7'T ..
• l
l
Plight
th illy
Dolores . Martinez1 glit, sits on the
ps ~Oliva Zamar-
p a 's trailer in
lmestead, Fla.1 as
e migrant wor1<ers
cuss their plight.
olo~ea aald tbe1
th three other
mHles pooled all )' their money to buy f6od stamps ·since
Chey and their
dUsbands have been
qut of work for two
weeks because South
lllorida crops have
F
en killed by the
ld. In the doorway
Maricela Pecina,
J/oodoo Doll
Best •
baa. I Uft to do SOXETHING .tetmiClfoetopuapeople. aet rude. -OVl:R 50 AND
wblle I'm U..S qp ~for 12«14 Whit.,.. tbeJ? Well, ~ue . H.~DSOFF, PLEASE
bOWI. lndlvktllaala Who ·srab ol DEA&OVEaM: Y .... bell&de-
"Btn eomes tbat alee \adJ · you wbeD they talk. Tbey pt a. feue 11 a*-' .n ... . -~ ber doe . Boy, .. RS • lriP Oil your band (or BOnl Yoe lmfto by WI U•• .... tM
tiacky:1•11*md. I wllti aom.aae ba11dl) and won't let 10. Qr IMjle-cawben are. W1tea 1•""
would tu. llE f« a wait. Well they'll put an ann around JOUr ... eeelq, 11.e Mm ti. .un
.r-. I I'*' I'll cbew on tbe porch wallt -very ebu .. my -or put ..... WW. a wan1 ••Ue ud for • wbllel .. -YOUR SAD tbelr bandl on yoOr 1houlden lD .... tuc1 f~ ,. .. cu IJUT'I' a deatblriP. Oettbe kieaf pnMet ,...u _....... bellll
DSd IWTl't Wrt&e ..... SollMl6aMI theJ al•• you a rib-..... to ... _,, 1rM •ew well
..... ,. .. .... ...... ... ... cnaablnl'"" Oft sneunc. or arab • bet llldla .... ttt-.tty. wut &M ..-el ... ..._ lelb you around tb• neck and knock • ~·· Y .. leaer wwN •el& a . your hat off. or beqd you~ DJAR ANN LANDERS: I'm -•ntf..... e1esJ11M1. · uauilly not at a loss ror words. · I'•• bed lt wttb jbese pb.yslcal and tbla era of Women'• Uber•·
DEAR A.NM: PINN :._ 1 WIJl'd typetandlfJGUdoD'ttell mebow tlon bu reduced MY b~ ot advice, lo UaoM ot UJ .•bo .,. to prcMet lllYHlf. I'm lolnC to and made life a lot easier, but
l
CONJ1DENT1AL TO F-RlmfD
OR POONY!: Tbe beat Wa.J to
Judie an lndlvldual 11 bJ -....
tn1 bow he truta people ,...., ..
do bllll abcsoJuttly DO lotd. • · : ..
tRtDNl;SDAY.FBBllUA&YZ
B1 IYDNEY OMA&&
be encourqed. Don't be in too much of a hurry.
Confusion need not be cause for depression.
A&ll8 (Karch 21-April 19): Security, op-
~ far advaQcement -these areas are ~· Dl&tsUYe problem can be averted if y keep recent retOJution concerning diet, autri. u . ~VB (April 20-May 20) :.Key is wllllngaes1
to make lntelllaent. creative concessions. By gjv· . llll ~ .little, )'OU could gain much. Maintain
baladee.h!,Jmor -enlarge horizons. •
' GElllNI (May-21-June 20>: Check coeb,
pOtent1al fer loss and profit. There ani apt to be
hlt1den clluaes -,avoid premature acUona. P~ or mate may have valid, valuab~ legal
inM1natioo.
CANCBll (June 21-July 22>: Changes occur:
.member or opposite sex could play ''fea~"
role. Ccmtracts, agreements, marital status -
these are spoWgbted.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Check resources -
paymeqta should not exceed ability to direct your ·own alfaks. Means don't JM1nn1t budget, costs,
'Purc)iaaes to get out-of ·band .....
VDGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22>: See as is, not mere·
ly u you want places and penons to be. Usten,
but l¥' dllcrim1nattn1. Accent on desire, lover's
quarrel, apeculatloo.
LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22 >: Business,
reapnmlbllll)'. pttlng priorities lined up and ln
focua -these are bigbllgbted. Those "In
cbar1e" disagree. You could be subject or mild
controversy. .
SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Finish what you
start as contrasted to beginning a new project.
Older person "leans" on you. Key is to be con-
siderate without becoming a human crying
tOW#l.
PISCES <Feb. 19-MarcblO): EmoUoa.atend to
dominate. Attain or beut COll\DWld more-tban·
usu1i.I attention. : • ·
•
1.
•
I
•
Interior DeslgJ1
50°/o QFF '
SALE' * AU SALi fTIMS I~
OltMOUOM
*ALL 0118 MIRCNAMOISI
20% °"'
' I•
.c
'Spell' Her Cure
SAGrM'ARWS <Nov. 22·Dec. 21>: Protect as-
~• ·1""" ·seta;"ask for a "new deal''. Refuse to be in-
. tlmldated by tradition'. Count your change; insist
on service that ls excellent:
CAPRIOOllN (Dec. 22-Jan-:-19)( Ue low, wait
unW amoke clears -means time is on your side. I w1!-s,
END ·=·
\,. J,
AQUAalUS. <Jan. 2d.-Feb.18): Li8ht touch iaeo· ' I Cindi Jemen suuested ln a recent column tn
A1fbltberafleld <Conn.) ~ that the world
wu ready for an Erma Bombeek doll.
·' • T1da woald be a believable replica ot a ' houHwtfe witb "lumpe In all tbe WTODg places,
an ovenbed sweatshirt covered with paint, and
"'1ray roota lD her hair."
~aturally. I'm nattered, but face it, Cindi -
can't compete with Barbie's 2'At·lncb bust,
Cher's concave stomach and the Bionic Woman's
&gem.ails which open a can of t~a in two leconds fiat. ·
Besides. J just received a doll that could not
only replace my encounter ~. it should be in
Peering Around
C&\1181NG the Caribbean abroad the Doric
were Dr. R. Binnin& and da.,,iiter Karen of
Newport Beach. ·
SDVICE awards were p~ at the
meetlne of Hoaa Memorial Hospital
Presbytstm. Amona tboee recopbed were Mrs. Wesley
Shaffer. parUamelllarian aod former auxlllary ·
. prealdeirt. who baa tened 5,000 hours.
Otkn are t.be llm•. L. H. McBride, ,,000;
J . L. Hetzler, 3,000; Donald Ftuer, 2,500; R.H.
Kreyser and WiWam Saxton, 1,$00, and F .
Herbert Coeur· Barroa, 1,000. Alto ~viDg an
awaf'.d ... John Rolens rora.ooo~.
llAaY 8ETB l&WIN and Ellyn Beth
Beamllb have been inltlated lnU) tbe Delt-t Delta
_ Oelta chapter al the Unlvenity of Calilomia, t>avia.
Their pareQll .are 11.r. and Mrs. Charles
Irwin, Cofvna d''t' llar, and Mr. and lln.
Ricbard Beamlah,,Newport Beach.
Both are freshman. Mila Irwin ls a business
and economics major and Mias Beamish ia ma-
Jortna ln mus communlcaUons.
1 THE Aanna.u. Kidney FoundatJon pre·
• Mated awards to the board of directors at a
special appreclaUon dinner.
Members have been lnvolved with prepara-
tions for movin1 tbe foundallon'1 limited care
center from lb form~r location in Garden Grove,
to lb new clinic wblcb occupies tbe second noor ot Mutln Lutlau lbpttat ID Ana!Mb. Local boanl membel'I reeeMq appreela· I Uoa awards were Roq O'Leno and Q11 Reavta.
• botbotNewportBeacb. •
• t •• ,
JC• •
everr ltiteben in America. It's a Voodoo doll.
It stands ebout nine Inches hiah. baa a DOD· 4•criptf~ a few stringa ol black yarn for hair.
Printed over its enUre bodt are cures and cunes
• (des>endlnl on your aaaeta> wbJcb can be
enhanc«l by white pins (for the cures> and black
piu ~fCX'tbe1pells).
Lilted oo the female doll are areas such as
migraine, tennis elbow, droopy panty hose, split
enda, double chin, hairy legs, yellow teeth and
natcbelt.
The male counterpart has bullseyes clearly
marked for athlete's root, triJ:k knees, varicose
veins, P9t-bell_Y.!~.!'.1 loose deDtw'el, brolqtsi lip. peraalid rllll·~·tbe-collu. · ,,_HI•• ti~cqn my ~~':.f-lfa~a came U, ·for coffee t.be otber m . ·
"Who"""tbll ~c toT" lhe utecL ··Jt··· -~ .. ... , "'Ob ·f°"~50dt 1ouc1.-Dic1n•t·a11~. ~· l tellyounu~n 12? WbaCattct01'" -·-· '
"A la&. er I see a alJe 10 tbat gets on
my nenes, I Jdt srab a black p(n and pve tt a ·
tbruat and immediately every size 10 bl the coun-
lr'J f eell rotten,• I • L •iAn you 1aytn1 to me that you really
believe ID tbla noaaenae?" •
"One ttoce ID Pblladelpbla alone '°Id 14S)Oof
tbem,' laalddefemlvely .. lf JOU uk me. I thlDt someone put a am In )'OW'....... . . ~
'l'bll momJ.ni, Kayva ealltd and lakf, '1'd
have PODPed ID aooaer, but I've been feellDI lousy, lib someone aewed my mouth abut.••
KQVa uqcerate1. I Qllb' took a tuck u;tt
wltb twolmall black pins.
1711 s....-. ..... . "c ... ....
... Miiii ..... ......
..... ·----
. . -
..
MJoy. "amli•.~: .
... YOU ... 00 '. ~ .' . .. ,m . . .. .,.
If You've added poonds and
inches over the holidays .· .... '
If. it la .difficult ;getting into
that tight fitting pantS.soit ..•
Start now at Lillian Ballards
It takes so little time and ef • fOrt. . .
It all begins 'with your
trained figure counselor.
She will give you a thorough
figure analysts to help you
set YoUr weight goels. ...
./ No Strenueus Exercise
./ No Shots or Piiia
./ Nutr1tlonal Guidance
./ No Disrobing
./ Improved Posture
t 10 years Experience
~
• ean· NOw ts
Yost.ol;IP.ljmmry ..... ••
AllALYSIS• 6a1-2•••·,.
' . '
1 SHovEU:t>
OF=J: THE
FRONT STEPS
NOW SHOVEL. OFF
THOSE STEPS
J.•r-----
~
~
' .
'""' C'40f'
:r¥JP
. ~Ho:)'
bJC ...... sM.Scllli -------·'
.___Ju . --._ _ ___, -
by Ferd MMllllOI
Y0CJ t>oN'r ~E'ALLY
iHINK 'IOU'U.GET
APP'OINTED 1t) . ~IT&--... 4 Attfr._.IN~? ""'
"Ifs hatdto believe we'v~ bcu ~· ~lbalfl*fY~ iln'1 itr
DENNIS THE MENACE
I ~
..
ABC• 8:00 -Happy D'Yi. Rlcble's mother <Marlon Roll) becomes a ~waltnal at Arnold•• Drlve·ln over the
IJl'Otelt$ o1 bet t am.lly.
NBC e 10:00-Police Story. Jackie
Cooper stars as a cop with mounting
personal and professional ·problems ln
this episode with Harold Gould and
Stephen McNally.
<JI AMlllMI__........, llll'M•UA ,_._
A~CA ....
Otl Los.-.....a--.. ..._,.tal ~ .... --lltfll•-rrfDIW.....,._t
J1Stic....A-
Lol ........ CA't'°....._A. ,,,,,, ... Oilef
Office" ----..... .. ........... 0 ............ ..
..,....°'*'VI co.. o.uy f>liot. ~ 1.1m
175
10200
J
• • • •
•
FroaAP~
Federal Trade Commt.SliOlier Paal ..... Dis.
ealled CONUmet advocate•• NMSH "• IOQ:.of ·a· blteb and a dirty Arab" at a neat appeara1*o before an lnduat:ry &r"Ol&P, •cCC>l'dJ.ni to aourcu wbo attencled.
Dixon, when uted !\,:~about the lncl· dent. would not den)' m 1 the alur and decl*red ••1c1on•untendtoapoloalset.o phNader.•• i -
NM9r coun1eNd that "He owes me ~d hll
chief,.._.... Caner, and manyoUter Ame~ana
an a~. And bewil1J1ve me one." · . MCl!liWblle, it wu understood that the NaUonal
Auoclatlon for Arab Americaoa was draftina a
formal protest tO tbe White House. . *
When llobert aeclford accepted the New York
Film Critics' Best Picture Award fi .. All the Preli·
dent's Men, .. the· lady who
banded him the award promptly
med for bis •uto&r•pb. '
"I can't 10 back to
WasbJnston. •• sald actress Ellu._. Taylor, ''unless I get
your autograph for my
dau1bten, my secretary. John's
dau1btera and Jobn'a
secretary."
"John" is former Secretary
of the Navy Job Waraer, Miss
Taylor's husband.
*
ttaOf'OttO
Tbe Rev. Bob Talleld bad beard enough of the
f1imay excuses people uie to avoid eolng to church.
So with tclque ali&hUy in cheek be bad an am·
balance 1tandin1 by and a ~le of bard bats
available at "No Excuse"
services Sunday in [ )
Tolland, Conn. 1r0,1nr p · They were for those Pc" TJl.dj
wbo bad wamed him of ---------" heart attacks or a falling
roof U they ventured out to church.
And there was more -objects laid out near the
pulpit at the First Baptlat Church symbolizing other
often-wsed ekcuses. It looked almost like a ~
mage sale -paristdonen contributed the items. • Family and friends of Freddie Prime said
farewell to the young television star who took his
own life. His co·atar, laelt
Albertaoa, and best friend, T-.,
Orlaado, read eulogle,.
The amaJL,J.uneral service
for the 22-year~td star of "Chioo
and the Man" was held at the
Old North Church at Forest
Lawn in the Hollywood Hills.
The pallbearers included
songwriter PaaJ Wllllams and
Prinze's buainess manager ,
OttLANoo Marvin SllJder, who stood by
stunned as the despondent oomic pulled a .32·
caliber automatic from a sofa in his apartment and
shot himselt in the bead Friday. • Aetor Mlcllaef WDdlns. 64, was improving from
an attack of pneumonia, the Naticnal Hospital said
lnLondon.
Wilding is semi·retirM followin& the death last
year of hJa third wife, actress Marsare& Leighton.
·He was married to Ellzabetb Taylor from 1952 to
1951. • Cook County <Ill.> Democratic party
slatemaken ovtrWbelmingly chose Michael Bllan·
die to complete t}\e mayoral '
term or the late Richard J.
Daley.
Bllandic, a Daley protege,
was a little-known alderman
Just slx weeks ago when selected
by City Council to serve as in· tertm zwuror after Daley's de· atb •.
Bllandic, 53, bad said he
would quit politics after the ,
special election next June to fall t1LAN01c
the remainCter of Daley's term, which expires in
1979. • One of,.Califomia 's first female Highway Patrol
officers h8a given it up torun a country store in
Tulare~ty.
DcmDa EAer. 26, who graduated with the initial
clu1 ol 27 women officers iu.l975, says she quit the
CHP mainly beeause of a lP.v male officers who
didn •t want her on the torce.
Top Daricers Plan
Coll~e Classes
l'our of Southern Califomia•s top ballet and
jazJ cboreopaphera will participate in a special
1erle1 of "maeter lessons" starting Feb.13 at Sad-
dleback Colle1e.
The program, called "Experiencing Dance:
Master Lessons:' will feature Ballet Paclftca's
Lela Zall, Los Anseles City Ballet Companx
founder Michel Panaleff Denver City Ballet direc-
tor Victor Moreno and TV choreographer Carlton
Johnson.
~ --
..
~ ol the aer1eana.. and OM U4iilMllaat particular. mad-. no bonM about .1aot YU womenomcen a.round, .. ahetald. ...
A proeecutor ft)'8 Florida half no cue •la!M.t
ABC sportaeuter Jim LampMy, who wd ~
on an old n1artJuw ebar1e after a d«ectlve ...,
him on televialon durlna the Gator BoWI. •• ••unfortunately, thero wu ao tmproper 1arth
and arrest," Alst. State Atty. PrM GnHe told.
Circuit Judie lllelaard J'uller
before the state dropJ*l tbe • char1e.
"The marijuana, the·
evidence. baa been destroyocl, .. •
Graves said ... Tbe arrest1n1 of·
ficers are no loneer policemen -an circwnatances which
would make prosecution dU·
ficuk."
Lampley, rr. was arrestfd . rn-..... Dec. 26 m Jacltsonville after a ,,,,__..,.
former Miami schoolmate, detective Tia JH~.
recop.iJ;ed him as Lampley did a slclellnelntenieW
at tbe football game. •· • The founder and president ot Ne• Colleao or .
Calllomia announced be will resl.gn u soon as a
successor can belaund to lead the innovative school in San Francisco. 1
The Rev .. Jolua P. Leuy, s.J., madts the l!UlOU.· cement.
'the liberal arts cone,e started ln 1'71 •tn
Sausalito with 18 students and a $2,500 bud&et •4
baa grown to more than '°°regular studenta. a law
school that enrolls 65 freshmen a year and a total
budget ot more than $1 millloo. •
* I A Glendale businessman cited personal reasons
ln reaigning from the University ol Callfomla ~
of regents.
WUllam E. Forbes. appointed to the 2'·memf>er
board ln 1962, submitted bis resignation to Gov. id-
mund G. Brvwn Jr. ,
Forbes' IS.year term would have expi»ed
March 1, um. Be WU named to the board by
former Gov. BdmmldG. Jh..,.aSr • Fcnes ii president of the Southern Callfomia
MusieCo.
* Sgt. Maj. lolm B. 11 ... aro of Cleveland, Ohlo.
waa named the top enlisted man In the liladbe
Corps.
Massaro, '8, wW be assigned to Karine Corps
headqua.rtera wb~~ he will be available to .ct9le
s enior Marine oUicers on matters con~&
enlisted men tn the corps.
Massaro, who served four years In Vietnam Is
wllb the Isl Marine Division at Camp Pendleton.
Brown Agrees ,
Sclwol Bill
Change Eyed
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Edround Brown·
Jr. bas tentatively agreed tq discuss changes in his
school finance proposal with the legislator who
plans to introduce the bUJ.
Brown's aide for
education f inances , ( J Charles Gocke, told re· State
porters Monday that tl1e -------~ changes involve the
money _rown originally
proposed for tax decreases.
He said Brown bas agreed with Aalemblyman
Leroy Greene <D·Sacramento) to examine the
posslbillty of using that money on l)rogl'ams to as-
sist pupils in low-wealth school districts. •
Petition Baea T~ .. Rlela
SACRAMENTO <AP> -·About 300 public
employes have delivered a bloclt·long petition to tbe
stateC.pitolsupportlngbigbertaxesfortberich. •
Ma ralw Monday, the workers and a b811CUUt or
Democratic state l'!Sialators criticized Gov. ~
mund Brown Jr. and said public employes are be-
. ing made a scapegoat in th~ baWe over tax relief.·
• •
SACRAMENTO CAP> -The CalJfonrla Deput·
ment of Water ConaervaUon is proposing that the
s tate coualder forcing water districts to adopt con·
servatioo measures. .
It drew hnmediate criticism trom repredo·
taUves ot the state Water Commission and Water
Resources Control Board. They asked wbythedraft
r eport didn't offer more suggestioos for coDJerV1l\1
urban water.
.c..treUer Rap• Balllcs
s.ACBAM.ENTO CAP> -State Controller Ket\
Cory says two CalUornia banq may be tryina to In·
timidate or barau aeven atate.e.inpJoya with sub·
poenaa tar their personnel records.
But an attorney foT the two banb, Bank of
America and Security PacUlc Bmk, •aid Mooday
be wasn't lnterec1ted 1n the data which Cory sakl tbe
8'.b~ seek. and that be ?)l'Obably co\aldn"t 1ub·
Pcl'laa those records anyfiay.
a.aa~ 'Dlretlt E•ptfa a .. w ... ..
SAN BERNARDINO (AP) -A county•
superviton' meet1n1 was tnierrupted' and more
than 300 pe1l"IOGS evacuated followini a telephone
bombthreatto the county bulldlng. : .
Authorities said a caller warned a bomb would
go oft within eitht minutes, but a balt·bour search
Monday turned Up DO exploel\'e device and ever•
yone returned to the buUdJn1.
Stat,e's .History
CourseSc~d
, 'I .... , Meller.
Al Nil tlltate advertlsed •dllla~llUb
jea to.U.. Federal Fair
9ifftlDI Ad of lH ~makes it UleCal •d•ertiae "any pre·
lw.H, llmltauon. or diac:rtadDatlon baNll OD race. eolcw, reUCion. sea, ar utkmal oripn, or an 1ntentioa to make an.y
such pnderence. Umita-
Uop, or cUacrimlnaUori.''
Beat lntlatloa ~~~~~~!.Is Br 2 Ba, ON YOUR LOT. Oa11 SM,tl50. For llVEST.S • tddMkle•I Info. Wrtte to E.c.o. PlUD.bal. p.o.
~' ::illl5,aMDaPart.Ca.
PllS1MH Two ...... le ~ • liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_iiiii_iii ... DI01 •Im'&• co.ta ..... ~ UVI.. 7.onec1 tor thrff mort ~ c.1uvo1 uita, surrounded b7 llnl IUU
rT:"Jl THr Rl:.l\l
~y_ £S.IAHRS ------
3 fiili "••rs •*cast DUPLEX ln Sen
Clemente SU ,500... 450 NEWPORT CENTER DRIVE 759.()8tl HOVSE w/ocn vle'tr ln •
La IU n. s us. 000. • • --1!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!1••----
DUPLEX w/ocn view bl •••r.. 1002~ 1002 So.~~~~ ....................... ~;.~ ............ .
llEALTORS 49t-223'1 -----.-------MIW'POtn' lar1e apartment Brand new, never llved
11da newspaper wlU not ~ eompleus Tb1a parcel ln. execuUve bome. 2 auvONE urrn au
Dowtn1ly accept an1 Lo¥ely2 Br plaa ..inut t s re ~ d y .. I o r Stcl')' llvtq room with llACHllftlAT Ml nu.u M
advertising for real paneled den {cou1d be development. Full price muslve fireplace and $44,500 OFFICE BUILI•? flltate which ls lo viola· ~Br)wlthalidintr8Uo -..soe>.CALL55&-216G view loft. s Bednn, 6 ~ to poundJng au.rt na
Uonoltbelaw. doon to 10 a 20 ttice CSELECT ~·~1;\c:= vanl~bay~al ~~k S.H•,A/C,2..e.yofc.Wdl.•• .. ~r:p1e~i: ..:,:~!1~ TPROPERTIES out onto spectacular ·~Whlc&i"~ 14._.::r.lt._..._.__. ....... "°"'" Por S. kitchen with Cortnlng 1t-------•I pool, wa~rfTaU and1 1oU "Viallrways to seclu. ded • .... of ,.. md • di ' ; MOO ••••••••.'\••••••••••••••electric range, forq,al courae . ru Y an entry! Gourmetldteben. a:· w/37,..w.g apacet wl odllltoilal Gw,.. 100 dlnlnl room and new VAMICICIA~1T~4R.._E.....,.Y outatand.l.nthome. Stepidown converaatloo ....... 11ap .. ..._., c.... aoc. ...................... plush carpeti~g N • ,..u 640-6161 area+ fireplace! <llhforao.'lllt .. •prtYtlle~
t.broulbout for '93,000. F 0 R Y 0 U R Sunabine breakfast CJ• _.......... _.....__. or ___ fft •t • __.__ ..... View Hwa Seeing la believing in this INSPECTION. Super paUo. Pool • Jacuzzi • --. ,--~ -
llonteco model• abowa brtlht airy home with family hom~ with 11. volleyball. Garden livlnl .._ ,_ _, ~ 12345 Wt1t111a 11 a,
like Ol)el Custom wall large back yard. Call Bdrms, dbl. brick atltafinest.Cal,1M7·60l0. a ......... 712·7311
WI Ddo W and fl 00 r 5tl-Z313. ftnplace, beaut. carpets, Olt'N r#I· ,,.s 'UN 1011.N1Cr• • ~
"""'"'"""'"'•"''' ... ., ......,...,,, fomU, !I g~.l~ §a~.;t~er--------111111 !:~;.;..:.:.~;1;;.~::::.;~
~to mention. 0n•--------misatblaooel 546-5880
a beaulUully landscaped1-------• corner lot. See to appreciate. S138 ,000. -'.~.:.. HERITAGE
M4-72'10 ' .. To plae. your messase
befonthe
re~ public,
pbooe
DaUyPUot
ctusl!led. M2·58'78
REALTORS
IASTSIDI
COSTAMISA
S@\\.~~-/££~s ·
That Intriguing Word Gome with o Chuclcle ----U........, QAT L ~----
•=ro:.:~:.o.:. ::
low IO '-f-"""* wOrda
( WOTLUA .l 1 I l*l*I
~ t 0rf t El I
I· 1ii"tl I
1MIS YALINllO•S DAYMnd your Jove ·a greeting all
the WOf'kt can INre wtth a Daffy Piiot Heart of Low. It's
easy. compose vour personalized
Qtelttng and we'll set your m911age In
type ~ bon:ter of your choice or ~ ·nen thoughts may appear
In ttMt bonMf you seJect.
• YOU WISH fO CllAYI your own
~~"(-{~ drll# your destgn to ..... .....,..
fit one of me dotted line •hnrtl" shown
blkM.
For help with yotr
ad . tust call
84'2·5878 & 8
friendly Valentine
ad·vlser wHI be
hippy to 8181st you.
And. If you flke. you can charge
your Heart of Love ,
or uee your MaJter
Charg• or
e.nkAmericard. • ---_.. ... ....
'
FIXER UPPER
wmtPOOL BriJ11 ycur paint brush
and tools and turn th1s
bome back Into tbe cbannet' it ahould be.
Located in Ganlen Grove
area 3 Br plua large llvlne room. Priced to
sell at $55.900. Call
eollect ('Zl4) 842·2535.
""'"' Ill 9 • " s fl.JN ro Ill NIC( '
~THE REAL 1
ESTATERS ----_)
,_•Acl•W-1111Wartd c. s.. 643-1671. Id. 330
Smart Trio Afghan of Rowers!
BA YFRONT .1pier & float, lots $165,000
to $295,000, to build your own custom
home. Several areas to choose from.
ATrRACTIVE Linda Isle 5 BR, 4~
ba., fam. rm. & formal dining; lge.
tile patio & waterfroot deck. ~.ooo
BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR
).11 l\11y,1d1· Dr"" N e IJ. S 6161 .... , .. 1002 G1Mral 1002 ..............................................
~
COATS &WALLACE
REAL ESTATE. INC.
All TERMS!!
VA. FHA or assume
8Xiat1ng VA loan A ~ltb
just $13,000. Sharp-nome
wtth added ramlly room ror only $53.soo. Call lmmedla~ly !
531•5800 W..._.ttt Rtilton
W,HMetwork
DISTllSS SAU
lmmtcliN P<l'*Slon I bd, 2 beth, rr.h paJn~ ln•ld• 6 out. Owner
Dtldsfa1tNle.M1-T111 .
~
Walkr.r 1; lt!I!
Hr.;il I sf11le
·'.~~ HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
· ~,. HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
2ON1
LOT
1002
J7
~
\\itlk1:1 1: I 1:1:
Ht• .11 I·,' .111·
AHAL ...
Located in OM Ol lrvtne'a
ftDelt areu, a bolile. not a t01uSomlalum, wltb ~lovely bedroom•. a detiabtf\11 ramlly room.
entertainment lrltcben
•nd enclosed l•n•I
adjolaJ.q I ll'Ut pnvata
ya.rd. No HIOclatloa. du... Price I• only
JT0,000. Call DOW to Ne masso.
f C lRf .-, T I
OLSON
~
Walkt:r 1: l 1rn
Hr.al l~:laft·
S12t1.•WNI l>OO IQ.ft. fa-.illY deUpt m the beart ot tount.a.ln Valley. CaU for details!
SSl-5800 w ........ .....
..... -
• • ~,.
ft -
Ol'IH Ill t • II S ""°' IO llf HICt •
~J THE R[J\l
~f ESTATER~
1 ar8rls.~voUR __ ..,_0_ .... ~.· • .t.-• !!!!!!l!:~!!:::~~!!!!!!i=:iW:l_.111111• · LA.uMAC~
LOI'. Only $SS.ISO. For --------• 111.la a bdrm. okler baime ~ __ ...,..,....,..,..___,._.,,...__,......,,.,.. eclditkmal Into. Write to A HIDDBI llrw.e 1044 '"'-1044 wl\b DUtcb door. atalDed ,.
· YOU AlllD l'OI ntlSI Yau want a ee>mplete)y unobstructed front line ex-pansive view of the bay & ocean; this
2 yr. old custom home ls it! 3800 Sq.
ft., on Cliff Drlveln· everything you've always wanted, eluding a rotary
telephone, bit-in vacuum, sauna, 2 wet bars & security system. Priced at
$320,000. A really great way to live!
673-4400
HARBOR
DiYWoa of Hll'ller ...... I HI Co..
100.ZCia•ral 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
~ E.C.O. PlalllliAC, P.O. ... •• SUll = wtbdowa ~=ed Box•BuenaPark,Ca. IRSA •••••••••••'••••••••••• M•••M••••••••••-•••• ~ ,,..--!.., c._ '1
--------• S,.dOUa I bdrm. a Z 101Z1 A lk'om st nob wvuu 1
""'"'• • •
SPAMISHVll.LA tMdba. each unit. Larte -------::11o11. teams. ::;J: f12JIO. A =:ts!"U:.·~~ b
autr. bdrm .. beamed .._ listia• f: DU'k.Lovety3bd,2batb, .s.....,...:SUMiiv2YA • -~tf& k,~, $4f.SOO·llACH eell., •Int rentals' ..,. iownbome. tastefull1 ...
Winding walk way P.500 decorated ID warm earth
throusb Cutllllan court PAULllARTIN tJI. tona. real frplc, paUo. EverJtbin« ~I 'vel beendl TY)--~ •t yard leads to authentic REALISl'ATE 166-7113 .,.._,, • dbl iaraeet See it to lookfn• for oc u DI ~v.., • redtllerool~ MODOWM appreciate. $81,900. ~~31D ~~ 8\~ DUMP •H·UOO ,,-
balcony! Seel entry c:.t.w.M IOZ4 PAYMT. 968-3371,5*1754. 2 run baths, abate root L~.~~!'!_··.~J?/WR!~ ,,
Lo Rancho li•IDI room! ••••••••••••••••••••••• S~ac:loua 3 bedroom d t .,.."!.., ~"1:&1• ,,,..,.. .... Fieata dlnlni plaa 'ii II v----2 •-an aunny coun ry to "--·c .. 2 BR bome. , . •a ••n"' -1-,. o rera privacy and lit 1 t ch en, park • ~ ... ,.. =o~:X-m,c;:m:! ~-!.: .. ,!.,~!!.·700m. ~0Y lunry at reaaooable plQIJ"OUDd ls pool. Beat ID Irvine'• CUlverdale. 1t11ntt cond. dLar1erfo~ .at
p cm Pool au•••un•--n• price. No dlL paymt. Low value for )'OUr money in Necotiate and create a w rem en o u I . pounding a c. onl)'7S1·3930 · monthly pymts. Truly a ___ ..;;._ _____ Irvine. Hurr:y, pleaae .............. ,_._•-. DOteotial. Larte eftOQlh plus telllila make this--------....... ,..... __ ... ..... ..... w.......... for2ndunlt 18ZAOO ~u
gardenbomellvlDeatlla WTSIDICHM __...Losee ...... enjoy. IW'*'°"~ 10~0 call REDCARPET754.1.D ' · '"
finest! Tr)' $4,950 Tot. Sharp 3 Br, 2 ba on buie Hurry._pleuecall •••••••••••••••••••• .. • S4o.J66_6 RANCHO SAN JOAQUIN
D q, I For q u i ck lot. $72,SOO. All terms. :t4o-J666 OWNER SACRIFICE: 3 br, 2~ ba. popular San -----ciiiMft:
a p polo Lm t-n L ca 11 86Ulm. Bk.r. ; Priced to sell rsst! Soon Lula Rey. vu &Olf course
847-tlOlO. to be vacant 3 bedroom " 1 a k e . 11 14 • so o . 1020~ew.t ttwy.•9'·_8511 • 1 Ol'f;Nlll9•1fSIUHTOllfNICI' home. Oodles Of fruit 1133-3al5
..
MESA VlltDI ' trees. a covered patios. 5C'1·'1064/ Walk to beach. 2 Br •-'
' . •.a.V 3 Beclrm .. family room. w ...._...__to..... Aaklng $S,!.;.O..,OO. Call w ........ to...,. WOODIRINI ,charm house w /pool. Iii ~·· carpet, drapea, freab •nr--... Tarbell.~an.->,MZ-8854•-------'---MIOILAll l~~.~ .... L~.UNA , .. pmm, patio, larte yard. SAS R ale Specialists 3 Wcii•Up........... u ._...,.,.,
COYIM&TOM l'nA~~~ we .!!0~~!Y 38r, 4ors:irmmodelsavau: ~o2:8'i:;~ ~ ~!:= 1~~ u..rJ.ArctalclY ;~
4PLIX 2~Ba Condo lo the ~w/poola.9lllM602 641-MlS aft 9 P11. Prtn mdl.CallMC)..Q74. 2BOIUI. den. 2~BA "l
PRIME Huntlnito =-~~=-= ~Cb Quartera. Will PeilniDltonPropert.les only. WOODBRIDGE contemporary. Wood· :ru ~h lOcatioa. Let us sell or trade for a 3Br FROM HC OOO •--------Luxury C 0 n d 0 , b Y aJ,ua. View. view. view! ""
show you bow you canj~~~~~~~~I boll8e In or near C.11. .,.,.,, IMTMITBRACE Owa..-. Arbor Lake IOMO ~
become the proud OWMr 33 s.s8874orl7M489 HiihlYdestrableend unit "Briarclltr'' 2 BR, 2 Ba .. GAILER.!,<!!°.!fOllES , dthisprideolownershlp 9 HOMES CARf>IPF model tba\ ..&.i.....a -~ ~ , • 4 plex. Great Investment MESA VBDI •as been metic~oualy Save •over next ...-. · . ~
for tax shelter and Total fee-AU 10 11.L.-38R 2ba uP1raded tt..rg leach . maintained. Can be 558-l.IS3or-.zt08 ....... ..,.... I052
appreciaUoo 3 bedroom llulth>le Llatlnl Boards Buceola home ID beaut. n. best Mtectao. of yours now for only RA.NglOSAN JOAQUIN, ........ ••••··~··•••••• .,
owner 's unit with ln Oranae-Co.-obrtloodneariotfcoune S74JIOO. beat locaUon " view A.~11..-. 'L 1• fireplace plus three 2 A•allable-Owner-and park. Lota or *-lly ....... -.. I priced ror lmmedlate , ~ ... ~ ... ~ bedroom unJta. Owner Occupied " Vacant Wl'Ougbt·lron Ir brick ......... t HmTy wWle aale.Prlnc.only. 752·'7868 ON THE-FAIRWAY· will help rinance. For Homes-Quick Top OPEN HOUSE SUN 1·5: .. ~lasts. l Ir 4 , Luxury custom home
more tnformatloo call Dollar Salea-Quint.lrd 1782 Kin&let Ct. AGT. I • Cf ;. 0 0 "' 1 FOIMAL with all the extras.
963-67trl. Bealty.m.azso 673-7801 ... or Informal, lt'a your Relrl&eration alr cond .•
Ol'fNlll9 •11HUNl08INl(f' •/flrapllCH Ir f..ny Choice With thlt rool, j&CUUf, grand ~.. ' · $35,000 O~MOYINC5 ......_ Hurry. plHM functionally dealfned, lvlnf room with
\.\ L :--I. I , 'r' ~.;
TAYLOR CO.
l0-:1\l.T<>l{S -..11H·1· l~H(j
. a.mo 151.1 HOMI FOi U.SI ' 2 llDIOOM out o( area • wants eel beautifully appo nted ma1nl lcent views. 3
Lovely 2 Story. 3 Bdrm & den home k · ·. .......__ Coff~ action! Big 4 BR., 2 ba., •tl-7855 .. IAMCH REALn home; lavish matr. suite, Bdnna.1 3 baths & den. "'{' ·· · ~ 2·••"""· Near St. JOhn • Sii 2000 with vaulted eeU., plush Exten11ve frontage on incl. lge master BR w /lge sundeck. l~==:.:=~~~=-i Located on peacfUl ree· Tbe ...... Baptist Church & • dressing area & deck. 4 the golf course. An
Spac. LR & formal dining. Cpts., RAMIUNC5RANCH lined street. This roomy ac:bool.Only'81,000 STMtTHISTLI . Bdrms., 3 baths; brand lmpreulve home !
drapes Unfurnished $1000 RXB·POOL 2 bedroom dream home DEERFIELD Aspen new, lo 'Turtle Rock · · • mo. la ready to move.Into. Glen. sus.soo 21' I s.. Ju,... ... .... $64,HO GARDEN SETTING patio home near pools,
,
AJEU.JELL
C 1 r cul a r d rl v e t prov Ide u n ll m ited Nlceb' upgraded carpets 552·7000 I' ~ I • i.
1; I I t I ' 1 ~
HIWPOIT Catra. M.I. 644-4910 AIAHDONED wmtORANGETREES We .... -.toltelp schools, spas, park. ~
.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.I dramatic home built on opportunity for your OP8' t-SDAILY Hnti Seacllff 4 Br. and drapes. Cable TV.
aiqlelevel. Huge family immailnatlon. Hurry. Bl Veluco w/pool. SUS.000. 4182 HURRY! $78,900. n THE · ·· . ELNl<fUELTerraee. Lg.
Gama.. 100.Z Ciwr.. IOOZ ailed ll•ln• room. pleaaecall Meaadelllar,CM Llltle Harbor Dr. IANCH551_2•00W Vlll"C·· E . . 2 br, 2~ ba. twnh~e. ••l••••••••••-•••••••• •••••••••••••-•••••-• Count.ry kitchen. Dine. 54"3666 AGENTM&-04.1 538-Sl700wner/Ait .Od n . .. Ladscpd. wood panel g.
1 ________ 1 Family eotertalnmen v-.. _______ REALTORS comm. pool. 155.500. By
Just4 U OCIAHROMT area overlooks covered 40/I' •----....,.....----1 owner. 640-0254. Opell
Pavilion and sparkling BOAT MISSING Slechom.. Get ~I ------· HouseSun.l·SPM Good Cotta Mesa
location. Close to
schools. Modernized
lu1e kitchen, family
room. separate J.-undry room. Owner Is anxious,
so call today! M$-7221
DWI.IX pool. Separate wine for lleaa North vacant Verutlle floor plan . .. w~·d ff 3 Bdrma., 2 baths up, ~ massive master suit bome, new carpet " features a convertible II YoU see thla tfedrm ~10 ltnl Mtwport IHdt I 069
bdnnsb .. 2b baths .dowob; and cbildrens quarters. We......:.L....-fo......,. paint, room ror bOat or den, fireplace & big giant.or4 + bonusroom C.....$11tTroct ••••••••••••••••••••••• o t • ' t Tremendous bartain ro ...,_ -.. bonus room, huge awlm on a large cul...,.ac lot PHASE ti WISTCUFF ~cn!.~.~;~.sya~!,?~ ~ bandyCaU...;...~ won' &.&.a..Prt•• v~ REDCARPET pool. Trailer o~boat from the outside aodyou WILLOW MODEL . •Br, BY OWNER
..,...,. ,pv ---. ....,...,ao£ ,,_... 7 ...... ·-= 181900 Tarbell need snace for lbat 3Ba, 2 stv. •s•,"OO. "8 -, "'8 • • ··-·-"~. Good rental record. (l'{Nrrt•••IHUHIOllfNICf' c~·-·............. ---. . . . or I • v <I c;..uc -.-..-, ~ ------------• call962·556S. g:rowtng famllJ--fOU'U 640-eSSl or He 6"·TGJ. prtced to aeU, 911.900.
=:•am.ooo-~~.. ~-ll~PdfJ ~=TZ;tm! s ~1+9.~~~a. ~.:!:cu !!fat~~~~ ;::::~:.~.-~-t-b_u_y_•n_N_ .. _po_rt_.
associated 1
r•.-•••••••-wood cabinets in the COLLEGE l>ARK . u--..1--r lly h interior! It'sexcellentln o-..... ar Plan. 4 Br LIDOlSLE
C .. _.. 's .. 'tchen. • ""'· of Newly redec. •79,500 . ._.......,me am ome. l t di ·--· I br ..... DR • --,._ .. u..;_ 1022 ua ... &AAO ~ 557 : .. 51 4 Bedrooms, 1~ bat.bl. every way.._!!_ 'L!! fam rm. 2 b'a , Cal 4 ·-· ....... orpoa. 1
H ._ • t •· .Jr ,, w , ~ _, . decorator tou~hea -uat see. .,.. or Pool ta~e alzed bonus price! You uo;;...-"""•' ..0.2528. lae/opU1195/mo675-6108 •••••••••-•••••••••••• tbruout. Llvina room,,_•_·1185 _______ 1 room, coay rtreplace
1
onUl.laooe!
OPPOmNTY
ICNOCIS A&AIM
. "' .. liAND MIW aauna lo rear )'&rd.·· dfD1ng area $83 950 Cal Red Carpet Realton AllOI LAii Seawind dlx 2 Br condo, 2
tl2,SOO. CallM0-1720 Tarbell, RtTas: sU-8854 8SW380 Cbolce la~efront end 1 t Y • 1 ~ b a· r P 1 c •
JUlt Ustedl 2 Br with ·VA Mft 08 ... 4 IR+ D.. 8Toro 1032 unit-By owner. 49'--0lle UJlll'acled, encl patio, cl.a the ~'-'ttal comblnaUo.n or ........... •••••••••••• OWNER MOVES :•--------or5*12lt. to bch. $85,500. Prine
tars• loft atcenta lbla nu "" ooe year old condo In a new home In an OIJmHoUleByOw1lr.4br, Immaculate 3 bedroom. NEW •--------only. 1·998-6320; 646-76e8
eatabll11hed nelJh· (am.rm.---1~ ba, 23571 Brick fireplace, alate LISTl..i#.!.. $56 000 _eva_IW_k:Dda __ • ___ _ Cotta lleu. Brick 0....-A.....,
6.repLace. Kceftta llvinl 4 Bedrm, xlot locatloo.
f'Ola). Only $51,000, looks Upended tbnlout. Huae
U-.115.000. Thls wUl nae eovend patio. Waterfall
borbood, featuring all "tlln California" DurYea off Rockfleld. entry foY«, bandy built· "W' .. ..,.. W..W.t
the lates t kitchen --------1 ll.SSun.$72,500. Im. Not far from the TERRACE appolntmenta, overaJMJd 2:11 CedlPlace beach. Only seo.ooo. caU Super atarter In tbla
eanae. Iara• rooms, 3 lfShM,,..~. Tarbell,JU.TBB,962·9ie 2 BDRM., 2 BA. Catd.lft putt t area, 11
1 ldmmatculated, 1Ml. call 54NUJ. In,..,,. aid. t&S.000. Cl'flllllU•1IU~10•111<1•. I' baths, step down wet· Bii trees, bl1 )'ard, 'a ••v...._ 1034 Model, in mov•·lD aa • u Y •co ate •
bar mln1 ocea.o view. All covered patio J.bdrm 2 "" • "-1 POOL --...1r..•-Li"'•'" --ready to move lnto. Boat F':i" THr Rf Al
~Ji ESl A HRS
... , .. ·~1711
Waf ..... •I diataoce t · ' •••••••••••-•••••••••• .. vuouuuu. ..._ ........ =· comm pool •• bath.a, natural brick • and d.lniftC room ltave .._., • · private beacb. Only fireplace. Up1raded. SAYl•IYOWMll IMMEDIATE POS· beamed ceillnp. Bripa te famlly room,
$1G.OOO. ree. Price low at '70,000 for &xcepdonal •Br, saa. s Es s Io N on th ta ldtcben Room.y .. pri•ata bbeui .. rtl\>:.!'1-plac ce11. Delu.xe eooDPIOIATI c.1644-7211 rut tale. OWnet bouabt formal din rm, hu1e beautiful 4 bedroom, Pat lo . NI c el y M).1.;;;•· a today,
another. mstr sutte, '1no. new. ~~ ltol')'H • raod~ • .!t)'l laodlcaped. $72,.500
ftlOPKrllS SR "5,200. (114) M3 ... 7U 11UWe. :!• apanUn liSt Bly In 1tovsEs • r1ua. • · 9". =·bLn;~Pi~~~ ~~le' UPPERS. J:xcelfent -...,.._ -.-_.-1~---oel&boomooa. Move Miil Yadi! OPPortwalty lo make OeemviW cl•'"'-Will GE today -f19,9SO. Cal B9droOm nd mcaeyulovatonorr« bdnna ,avper -·· t-tftO MMN S•STrllevel,,BrSBa, ~'5 ·842• Auoclate :aJN11. Pri'v!t.b~·b ~'AdJl1~£a~EACL\Ly~ 2$ll8.5Gd.e.t:!Gt ... 1000 WOOCMMtt. =yrm,f:idllabaa.,_South __ eou __ t _B_rok_en_. --
courtyard entrance It ea.tan OOIAC. MESA VERDE 4 rm. ar, pool,
backyard. Great pfac WHATIS.11 · br 2ba. ramrm. lnxlot. ~~~E~RS ror cblldren. Neat Ir Arid whJ are they 1aylq nei,bborbood Del ~
clilanl See it do today. WA,...,.,~ all thoH alee tblnf• tll• entry Cuat · ~
OOtnd•t•low•.eoo. Pier/float.. C olce aboutlt?lt.'1tbecosiea 2 ihuttered le clfaped1 nr: B\'OWN•n 2 ... 4 8 ..
I location. 4 8R, 3 tba, 2 b4r.m. home le the to ceU'I Uled brk trpl ......., a..., r, • ~PEABI ~-~~::uron~e: brt•h&elt, llalltea\ 1· 2 e. ov•ci. ~01.' With ~~ ·~~Nrv
S si1uoo =:t.~Jr:I~~ MUCH. 11 mcJC"•. u &•te. pool 11 iot • ..._...,,,.._ UJit lea1t ~c-lve ln mHt , .. , •74 •90o. Aelwnable7~~Glloan. w. . •••n ~that'• w y OWDr/aa&. Nl-tOll · ... ..,. •sm.
Nlllt ....... ...._ * 671-7060 * $ll5,000 CelhlMIM ' 1024 ce. Mlle
U9·16SS """•.., ·~ g Cit Rwr f'IM51
tOZ4
•
UDOISU
U you 're lookln& for
aocneWng cheerful, eo11
Ir comfortable, tbeD )'OU
abould tee uu. cute doll "°'*on the lale's qmet
Eut eod. 2 Bclrma. + ...
den, beamed cell. Uvlq ~:ac,,'aiud frple ..
LIDO REALT Y
: I.'.\,', I ,.1. '\I\ * 1'>7J-7JOO *
. ..
~::;,'jf TH[ REA L
~ ESlA'ff:RS
30'BOATSLJP NEWLY 4 Bdrm.
18COUJNS ISLAND
Trade &/or Flnaoce
$308,000
873-7770 558-8
~"llGEL
l1/\ILEY ~ ..
l\SSUCll\TES
'" FORESTE
OLSON ... . ~ .
RIMTAL
LA~IEACH
lit Quality exec. bome. J ...;;........;__;.,:_;__....;;_ ___ ---------• BDRllS., f•m. rm.~ 2~ ··~-~ 1...;;..,;;:_;__ ______ , baths. 2 P'\replaces. All
~~~~~~~~~I blt ·in kitchen
WATllMOMT
DWI.IX
.. wttb pier • 1Up. Both unlta bne bl& deck•
frontil\I on th• water.
New crpt&, bullthJI, We"reMnfo....,_ trplc, BBQ lc 1u. Newly, ______ -...---'_
palmed.
Sltl,000. llnJltt leach
JACOISIW.TY j mg 671M'70 'l'TL --------PR 1 DE · 0 F · OMTHlllACH OWNERSHW. near
SUMSIT a SUlP
T
Papperwood Alth.
"Nttri Ir NEAR NEW"
Cpta., drps, bltu. lg.
patio. Wuber Ir d1"J9f'
btupa. l A 2 br'a. from szos. Ready 2/15/1T
e4&..QS2 or M5-tllMS
<lean 6Cbeerfw lbr SITS. o.kwood Garden Apt.a ck Bach, part tum, ass.
880Jrvtne {at 11th)
(714~
Cpta, drp1, blloa, Aft
S:30, '151-Wf .
OCC Special. 1170. UW..
1700lethSt (at Dover> pd,atv/ref. Fee
<714 >eU-8110 Main Rent.all, 540-5170
Yearl12 Br t Ba, SSSOmo. 3br, l~ba. ~.2br$Z:IO.
1 block to ocean. Cpt .. drps, atv. ChilcU9a
675-0475 OK. 548-9580 all. SPM
17
<
..,,.. .. Offices
Avall. 11M141
Exec. Ofc. Spectacular ._cf Newport Bub. le
&c:ean. Furn; Secy & recpt. aenlcea tncl.
PREGNANT? Caring confidential couneellng 4' re(erral.
Abortion, adoption &
~
BS018l.EIS
Dedroalc aaembb' ex-p er . Work w /
mlcro•cope. ImOled. opeidlt
NfuRAFEE
LocalAttu
TEMPO
Tempprary Help
17802 sty Pa(k lrvioe
54M415
Equal Oppor Employer
DPllllNCED
FUU...n ....
COMMllCIAL
TB.Lii -UMITID
CAUFOIMIAIAMI
231)1 So. l(aiJI
Santa Am
C714J 551-5117
AD Equal
Opportunity Employer
SAVINGS
COUNSELOR·
Pef..TWt
We are looking for •
sharp, people-oriented lDdJvidual wbo enjoys wort1ni with the public.
Tbb poslUoo requires ~3> boon a week and
applicants sbouJd type a
minimum 30 wpm and lje
able to use l O·key
l•-------•I calculator. New Ac · counta experience would
MSEMBl.EIS
2nd SbU\. Kuat like de·
tail won • be able to woritw/~=·
M fwlalag
7901 ClQ Street
CWtltallleach &
So.<¥Qufield, H.B.>
Equl()ppot. Employer
be b enefic\al a s
responaJblllties center on
opening New Accounts,
maintalnlni New Ac· coma Rq.laters. cross-
se1Un 1 services. and
amweril)g customer in· quirk19. We offer an at·
tractive ulary in a pleasant wortlna en·
W0oment. Pleue COD· tact Rex Perkins.
'18&-mt .
--------1 grp 1pecialty practice.
Good oppcw ror rt&bl cir I.
Only exper need apply. Nonamoker. '44 0585 __ ...._ _____
1
DIMTAL ASSIST.
a.rdtC•h•• CHAIJlSIDE-N.B. Ell·
20+ tln wit. Hunt Bch. P"'d.. 5 day week, 8:30 t6 -10 hr ...__. _ __.1~ J:IO. Pd vac • med ins.
-• .-n:1 ... ·~"""· ---1 cau 9am-4pm.~3SS7. -
COLLICTOll Dafl'AL Aallst
Local firm 1eeks Chairside/Ellpr'd . ~ele bone ~olleclor. Newport Bcb.. Seod re-
Bri • sharp, lndh1dua{ aume to Ad t186. Dally _... ,_ ....... , voice Pi.lot. Box uao. Cost.a requl;.~accep. Meu.CAsa&21 '
tabae .• Sman s>teua.a• o1. __;........;.-_,-,-as----•
fitea. X1at u.dtt ud col· 1ed.ioa carft't opportwll· cer .. Camls fl
ty. AP.Pt. ~. Call llr. No 1P9d*1 Uc. req'd 1tme:•-llacCre1oeYacbtCorp taJ.~a.C.M. Cocnpanloo P/Ume. S2I
Pti' day. MOil bn own .,...,..,...,.._ HOTEL PBX
s•••PUM ICDo'!'ledce ot pt...._
• supplies. P /Uae. Pro I r tt.-1 I v e e o . ~/chance for
advancement. 141-~
•
17
.,.. . '••2 .......................
LMll9*-...... btb. ,.., tltkllt .... Cati ....,.
•
-
For help with Your ad. Just call
842·5878 & a friendly Valentine
ed-Yitw wm be hlSlPY to aasilf You. MA lf ~ IMte. ~ Oii'\ dwoe '/04if Vllentlne ad or u.. YoUr ""Mater Qwoe ot Bank Amertcwd.
DAILY PILOT
r. L .·
. ...
mtrilCIP
ma7da
, ·---
)\
l
Optl
"--Mew·UMCI ovaaoo
MaCIDIS
1970 VW Fastback.Auto
trans. call .
9746 1--~~536-6071~~~~~
••••••••••••••••••••••• '63 VW Bug. Snrf. gd
'70 Kadel 1900 Automatic, transp. $600/bst ofr.
AM/FM. $600. 645-7507 or ~3-921M> &M-8174 l-----------------.-1'72 Camper fuJly equip'd.
Ponche 9750 new valves. Top cond
I •••••• • •• • •• • • • • • • • • • •• $2850 673-0287
I
• PORSCHE 70 91 I T '71 ~astback new trans
Sportamatic , PP. AM/FM 8-trk stereo:
AM/FM, mags , yellow, new muffler. runs &
xlnt cond. I ownr. loo)(s xlnt. 492·3467 or
1 646-5807 Stan, Mon-Sat. 8'2..6983
I S.S. $6,500 1---------
• ~BUA 68 Porsche. XJnt cond, Best over $300.
• low m l, Sspd , 911. 642-S15Saft.6PM
$.W>O/bst orr. ~1688,1--------
537-8220. Ask ror Dennis. '66 YW IUS
Le.J~ing Spccial1\h
Preoferreu R.itr~
L.lrgc~t Selection
of Nl·w & U\cu c Juill.ic~ in
01Jngc Count'
Open Sund.t\
~ Cadillac
Master Dealer
2fi00 Harbor BIH.1.
C..1l\tJ Mesa 5 lO-') I CK>
Nabers
Cadillac
CAD '75 El Dorado Cpe,
beaut. bm w/blege vinyl
top, many xtras. S7~.
A{t 6pm, 759·!>163.
•ss Porsche Speedster, $800. Needs Body Work. Cadillac: 75 ~oupe . de
• Xlnl cond. Nu top. pa;.nk , lrellt, 645-1700 Ville. fire Mist Cense.
tires, 10,000 ml on Nb • . . w/whlle cab lop & e ng ck trans axle i3 Bus. Mmt. $3650orof· leather. All options .
SS700/ofr. (21J) 287-( t;"r .. New e n g & Mint. $7,000. 551·5316 aft
(2l3) 286-5'1S9. lllichelins. 640-8766eves. 5:30evs, all day wknds.
163 9l2 Targa body ·ea Baja Bug. sun roof illness forces sale. '73 E
perfect new paui°t 2 new AM/FM. CB, $1200. Dorado w/C&briolet top.
tops, ~ •• llicbelhH, nfnal90.~ ~,g;r. Make offer.
2.000 mi on overbld mtr. "14 VW Soper Beetle. ---------1
Mustsell,6731510. 1',000 mi. Showroom Cod. '73 lldo $4250
'66 Porsc~ 912, s spd, new. must sell. S2590. Pvt. party, orig. owner.
AM/FM stereo. tape, S52..a.M? White w /~old top, gold
Targa rims, new radials, 65 vw Bug, xlnl running leather int. Im mac.
snow wbt xtra sharp, rood. S7SO Stereo tape, cruise cont ..
531-1'1'96 ' • e 5951 air-cond .. trunk lock, tilt
wheel. full power.
Showroom sharp! '74 914 2.0. Lo nule&J:e. gd 70 VW Bus, xlnt cond.
cood. Must sell, make Many was, $2500.
olr. <n•)Ml-3'7'1~ 4.95-5951
Mr Taylor 644-4910 Days
675-7957 Eve. &Sun.
ClOSIO SUHOt\YS
17
VOLVO
HERE MOW
"74 hapata. 4dr, Ht, AC,
Pwr( loaded, xJnt. fl9()0.
04-4825
'6~MOVA
suOD. 840-4971
'72 llallbu. Auto, air, New
tiJW • top. bef lOam o
art 6:-IOpm 498-2727
*..W coe,oas w Nova xt.nt cond. P /S, * ... MODILS . ::;~utoTrana. ta-t
T.,.._ 9765 me. savtDo • all re·
--•• .. -• .. •••••••• malnln1 new '111 6 '73 Monte Carlo, Landau
'11
TOYOTAs
HERE MOW --·~ ~
*MIWCOLOIS
Dema.1Dstock. U,000 mi, $2,. Al
MAlqUl$VOLVO Coad.c.u--.Evu1
JIISSIONVIEJO 77 ~ .. U-L-lll.Zll04tS..1210 ""9n" -~~~~~-1 , Ce..lc~ OI• .... COUNTY 350 V-I, Jl)tdra trans. air, VOLVO P /S,. P /B, Ult whl, radlall, 'Rally whls. Lie,
EXCLUSIVELYYOLVO 935RTP.
LarseatVolt0Dealer WALKAWAYCLOSED
la 0nq.e County! END LEASE •MIWMODll $ BUYorLEASE sw.10 mo.+ tu for
JliC•&avinponALLre-• Dl.RECT mo:~ on >J>proval or ~:;:,71• • 1!'11~m ·:~ MAl9UIStol'O~A _!J-=:~ ieoofi.tmc:oln,
lOSSIONVJEJO ·$. ~
IJl..Jll04ts-111t Anaheim ~-2011 nwa60
• • • A~ U.M ...... Uted ~UMCI ...... UM4 ...........................................................................................
GU ST AFSON
l tNCUL N Mt fH Ufi (
l t.oU-J U'"" Ii Blv<t
lh1nt1ngtCl11 Bt·.11 h
€4 / ij844
•MC 1/a TOM PM:~H6111 Chrome bumper,
gau995. muen lnOfel
IMMIDIATI DIUY .. Y
GMC v. TON 'HI SllllA' C AMl'll
WICIAL--111791. Auto . Pt'S. ,,, CO"O • lock dill
IU• llllk, H.O. bltt • gauges, campef •PfOl•I. •5-4 c I.
V-8, Lo.dedl Bliek bHllty ... ,
•MC~ TOM 4114 -.D/llMnng. H.O. brakes. &uJl
tank. buck4lts, gauges. v~. IOOCll lnOf•.
IMMIDIAll DIUVHY
•NC ~M -111111117 Siwra ClaSllC. front & rear lir, H.D. c:hUlls. 40 gal. tank. auto .. P/S, lilt
wtteel. c1oc11. RR IC>ffker. tr .. ter hitch, H.O. battery. erectnc,.., ~. 4&4 v-a, two-tOfl• ~1.
IMMIDlAll DatVHY
•MC ~ Tot4 PM:~lll741 V-8. PlllMring, H D tPtlnoe. H.O. thOckl. aux tank. AM ra<Slo, llec>
b\imper, 9:50 18lll tlre1, gaugee, mlrrort, 1t1b1Uzer blr .. ,. mucti mot9.
IMMIDIATI DIUVMY
WEEKEND USED I C·AR SPECIALS
''1 MUSfAHG 173 CHIVROLIT "72 OLDS '73 OLDS '71 OLDS
TOkOMADO CUTLASS flASTIACI VEGA Auto . P.8 • vlnyr tol:t po.-.r OMIGA ,"1°preme. VI. automatic. P.e.. VI. buck9t 1M11. R&H. IUIQNtle. Aut~le. '11dl0, hMlet. 30.106 wlndowe, air cond.. t Wlleel. Auto , P.S .. vlnyl top. air P 8 .. llr oondltlonlng, ~ top. wtlfte wd tlrw. (TXTlllJ mu ... (813HST) IOtded. ( 1 MEVEJ ~l593HNWJ 11071119)
51377 513f7 5.1377 51377 51977 ,..,., ... ~ ...... , ... UOl!let lllv•T•I"*""' l'twt Taal L-...... , .........
'74 FOlD "74HOMlA '70COUaAa '73 Of.OS CUTLASS "74 CHIYY 1/J TOM PINTO RUMAIOUT HATCHI Ct( COMVHTllU Plcltup, ve. Po'llr ·~ "°"" • ~. auto.. P.8.. P.I .. air oond., Coupe. VI, IUto., P.S., 11.=o air brake~ automatlo, .. ,.,, Auto .. AM1'M radio . air AUIOll'4tlo llW1tm l11lon. UMH) GOnd1tton1no. <*"40CJ. rally• WllMll. r,w-' *ndowl. tllt cond.. ~ wtlffle. (IHH J (13341 wnaal. 1124AN I •
51977 51877 52277 52877 531T:J
,...,_ T• I LIOll'l9e ,..~ . ..-... ,.,., •• u.... ,._.T8111UO.-"-T•IU..
'73 AMC ~VllJM 740LDS .. '71 CHIVY "7)11HCK '7J CADILLAC
V8 ""°' Ral~ w •• all' oond • • MONZA 2+2 RIGAL 11.DOUOO . vlnyt ~· &H. bucket Hiii. 4 dOor. VI, ~ toe>, efr cond., (011 P.S" P.8., euto.. IH. ('4M1735l Auto., FM raOlo, heat•. rattve Air cond , VB. Mo.. PS.. P 8., ,u~ lncludlng 9111\ root wtlaall. (~) vinyl too. radlo. l'laatar. (868GLW) (24 ).
51777 5237.7 $2477 538D
~ l"llMT•I U.-
I • I
' .
~
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1977
}
• BJGAaYOL\NVILLE
'
Ol .. DlllfY"-'91\Mt Leu than a Q)()fttA alter firatfil-
' Ina it, Oranae County Supervisor 1 Pb1Up Ant.bony amended bis final
ieampaien dlaclotu.re statement
Monday to show the true source of
$8a,200 worth of campaip loans.
On bi.a original disclosure state-
.IQ en ts, Ant.bony showed the loans
to Friends of Philip Anthony were
f~m b.lmselt. ,
Bat tli·~ Westminster
supervisor) amended statement
shows the loans came from
former paid pollce Informant
Gene Conrad, Fullerton attorney
Michael Remington and RJO En·
terprlses.
In an interview last week, An·
tbdny said be showed the loans
coming from himself because he
believed he personally, not the
campaign committee, was
reaponstble for their repayment.
• · "I believed I borrowed the
money personally and, in turn,
lent it to my campalfll commit-
tee," the supervisor said.
He said that reporting method ·
was followed after consulUng
with political consultant William
Butcher, attorney Chip Nielson
and Certified Public Accountant
Ray Edwards.
.. .'.fbere certainly was no intent
Al'Wl,..._to
ICE FLOES FILL THE HUDSON RIVER IN THIS VIEW FROM THE YONKERS CITY PIER
Northeaat, Mktweat U.S. Still Locked In Grip of Punlahlng Winter Storm
11 ,·Frigid Fist Slams East
Buffalo Dutu1ter Cited aa 12 SUreuinb
BJ Tiie Auoelated Press
Winter kept its frigid grasp on
e Northeast and Midwest to-
ay, and a state of emergency
u declared in Buf!alo, N.Y.,
here 12 persons have died in the
orststorm in the city's hislOJ"y.
An estimated 75 deaths have
mal 'Roots' .
pisode Sets
·Record
NEW YORK (AP) -The erialization of .. Roots .. made
elevisioo bistory last week, ac-
ordlq to A. C. Nielsen ftcuns
ade available today.
Sunday's concludlni episode
u the all-time most watA:bed
how in' America. In additloo. four
t.be 10 most watched 1b6wl tn
he b.lstoey ol television wen
iaodes of t.be . sertaUutJon of
exHaley'1novd.
Wltb .. Roota .. lilted.I in tut ~eek'• national prlme-Ume
'••er .. eaaseven oltbetopMftll
• abow1. ABC earried the entire
weet endlnlJan.JOwltb all Uol
the top~lbowl. ·
been blatned on the bitter
weather in states hit by the big
freue. (Related story, A4 >
An Army engineering battalion
of JOO men was ordered to Buffalo
today to help the city clear its
streets or abandoned autos and
snow drifts. Federal disaster of·
ficials sald the unit was ordered
to fly with its equipment from Fl.
Bragg, N.C .. "8.5 soon as they
can get here."
The natural gas shortage
caused by freezing weather kept
many schools, factories and busi-
<See STORMS, Page AZ>
HB ChOice of Selich
Surpri'Jes N~ One
Edward Selich, the first choice
for the job all along, Monday
niabt was named permanent
plannin1 director for Huntington
Beach.
S.lich, 29, has .been acting
planninc director since last
Aqust when bis predecessor,
R ichard Harlow, was appointed
asailtantcity administrator. ~
Selle~ who beads a staff of
more tban 20, will be eamina $30,m anauaUy.
City Administrator Bud Belalto
Indicated be would appoint Sellch
to the post lut. Novetnber after
r«rv.it.ment inside the city Plan-
DJ!lC Department.
A decision wu made later to
recruit t.broqbout the state to
eliminate any doubts about the
welect.kln proceas, according to
Belsito.
Selicb was ranked unanimous-
ly as the top finalist alter an oral
review board interviewed can·
di.dates last week, Belsito said. Setieh b a araduate of Cal Poly
Pomona with a degree in urban
(See'SEUCll, P .. e A2) •
~..,.,.... ... ,.,,_.
OETSTHE JOB
City Pl1nner S.Hch
to deceive 8Q)'one, •• Anthony in·
slsted. ·
His amended statement shows
be borrowed $30,000 from in·
former·tumed-ftnaneler Conrad
in the flnal daya of hh campaign
against. Santa Ana CJty Coun·
cilmanH.arryYamamoto.
In a tape recorded interview
tbree weeks ago, Conrad denied
lending Anthony money and said
the supervisor probably got the -
Plan
..
Funds
• money from hill retirement fund
at Rockwell International.
But apparently Conrad lent the
$30,000 to an Anthony friend and
campaian ,.backer wbo, in tum,
loaned Ute money to the then
aupervlsorial candidate.
As for Remington, he agreed
wltb Anthony's original supposi-
tion that $28,200 worth of Anthony
loans were personal and not t.01Jfe
supervisor's campaign commit·
\
tee. ....._ :. To back bin\ up, the l"U.llertOO
attorney has coples of tbree An-
thony notes. all of them sla'ned
personally by the county
supervisor and witb no meoUoool
hi& cam~comm1ltee.
Al.lo, tbe three cbecka coverin.c
the SZS,200 worth of loans are
.J>AY ab1~io "Pbillp Ant.bony'' and
bear aslinilar endorsement. /
<SeeANTllONY.PageAl> / J
/ I
I
Simmers ~
Redev~lopment Work. DJlayed
I By ROBERT BARKER
04 , ... O.lly l'llol Stall
Downtown redevelopment, an
issue that inflamed residents last
October and November, was put
on the back burner Monday night
by the Huntington Beach City
Council.
Council members voted un-
animously to send the plan back
to the redevelopment com-
mission and planning depart·
ment for reworking that is ex-
pected to take su to nine months.
The council specifically asked
for a reworked plan that will
make minimum use of emlnent
domain proceedings and will
renect public criticism of pre-
vious development planning.
The downtown redevelopment
proposal originally called for a ,
project area of 688 acres al.)d was
met by near unanimous opposi·
lion.in three public hearinir.>'late
last year.
The decision to delay re-
development was not without a
hint of controversy, however.
Mayor Pro Tem Ron Pattinson
asked the city administrator
tq immedlat..elY b•1in enforcement of downtown build·
ing codes for the "health, aa!ely
and welfare'' of Huntlngtoo
Beach residents.
Pattinson said that detertont-
ing buildings pose fire and safety
hazards.
"If QDe goes up in fire. they'll
all go," he said. •'
''The buildings are v~ry old
and they haven't been updated
for quite some time," he added.
Councilman Ted Bartlett, a
service station owner on Main
Street, sald he would hate to see
"harassment of any kind in the
downtown area.
.. We have to be careful not
harass the business people and
shut them down.
"This confuses and worries
me," be said.
City Administrator Bud Belsito
said buildinp have been allow~
to escape code enforcement
while redevelopment was belng
considered.
"Some of the buildings are un·
sound and they are not up to
code," be said.
•'We would be remiss if we
didn't take this action. The city
could be cited for criminal
Second-Story
Thief Strikes
A second·story man invaded a
Huntlo1ton Beach victim's
apartment during daylight hours
Monday, 11tea1ln1 stereo sound
gear and cuh valued at about
$1,150, poUcesaid today.
negligence in case or injuries," minori=y up." .
he added. She sai her group opposed the
A decision to enforce violations modifi destination resort COil·
was delayed a week for a report cept. 5118 also asked that use ol
indicating. the extent of work to emineqt domain be eliminated
be done. and that people should be given.a
Monday night's meeting was chance to vote on any new pro-
the fourth public hearing on re-ject. ~.
development. .. Do not repeat tlie mistakes of
Two people spoke despite as-the past and ignore our desires.,.'~
surances that action couldn't be shetoldtbecouncil. .
taken because the plan has to be Mart Porter, vice president of
reshaped to conform with new HOME Council, said his group
statelegislation. belfeves revit.alization .is
Denise Jacot. a member of necessary but obJeCts'tO tax m-
Save our Seaside, said she was crJ'.mentfinanclng.
presenting a petition or 3,000 He also said that it is Im·
sigqatures opposing previous re· ~rative that the council avoid
development plans ·'to dispel the .mistakes made by other cities on
noti~n that we are merely a vocal / publicly funded projects.
Blood /Needed ; I
'Appeal M~ for Victim
' I Blood donations are needied for quit her job to be with her
dau1hter "because sh~ is afrai~ a 5-ye~-old Huntington 'Beach
leukemla victim, aacording to
her ,.-edl&. to be alone." ~
Jon Smith, 417 8th St., says her
stepdaughter, Donna Jean
McKnJgbt , entered tbe
Children's Hospital of Orange
County last Thursday and had
·used 24 pints of blood by Monday.
Those wishing lo give blood in
Donna Jean's name may contact
the American Red Cross at
835-5381 for appointment.
A friend, Carol Radcliffe of
Costa Mesa, says tfe parents are
badly in need or a~sistance in all~
forms. i
She also suggests that cards
could be sent to bonna Jean at the hospital. ,
Both parent11 have been
employed as seculrity guards but
their incomes aren't sufficient to
meet costs, according to Mrs. Radcliffe.
Mrs. Smith said she has had to
Soutlaklnd llnit
Mrs. Smith said the first ailnf •
of Donna Jean's ilJness became
apparent late last week and atle
thoueht at firat her daughter had the mumps.
''When I took her temperature
and it was 105 degrees, we took
her to the Santa Ana Commwrlty
Clinic.
"The doctors told us to get her
to thehospital immediately."
Mrs. Smith said her doctor told
her that the girl has a 90 percent
chance tor remission. She said
anot&er doctor said, however.
that she bas at most five to 10 years to Uve .
Mrs. Smith said that when the
girl is released Crom the hospital
she'll have to be with her con,.
stantly.
.. If she falls or cuts herself, lt
could be fatal," Mrs. Smftb said.
"She has no immunities."
I
Antismog ,piStrict
Fukds -~upported · ·
SACRAMENTO CAP) -
Legislation aut.Jiorizing a $2.93-
mlllion state loan to keep the
Southern California antismog dis·
trlct aftoat has been passed to the
floorofthestateSen.ate.
But another bill giving the dis·
trict a no-strings-attached,
J2."2·million grant was killed by
the Senate Finance Committee
Monda.vonal·lOvote.
posed to pay 70 percent ot tbe
bud1et. But the county's
supervlsors contend that if the
county provides most of the fund·
· ing it should have most of the
votes on the district's board.
which hu the Job of controlling
stationary source smog. ·
Coast
Arthur Jimenez. of 21071
Locblea Lane, dlscovered the
burllary when he arrived home
in \be early evenlnc and found
hil balcony alidlng glass door
standing open. The door had been
pried with a tool, police said.
Water Rationing Bits
In a 10-1 vole, the committee ap-
proved the loan bill, by As-
semblyman Jerry Lewis (R-
Highland).
The Lewis bill would provide
emer1ency fundln1 for Che
Southern Ca.Ufomta Air Quality
Management District.
Weatber
Variable hicb cloud•
throash Wednesday.
Cooler c1ap with hl&bs in
IOI. Lowa 45 to 53.
./
\v
. . .
Marin County ·Re.idenu Filling V ea1e&
The new district faces a revol•
bJ Los Anfeles County, which ii
refustni to PIQ' lll •bare of the
bade et.
Tbe district 1.8 mad, u~ofa of
OranreCounty, and the ous .
areas ol Loe Angeles. v de
and San Bernardino comttles.
Th• amcM,Ult a county pap de-
pendaont.ts PoPQJaUon. ,
I
Los ~County has '70 per-c:t'llt Oi the population and is aup-
A dem by the Mobtt Ott Como
pany that it ta the only contender
wtlllnc to make an all cash offer
for the Irvine Company was .-~ Mo&down Ka.da1 wt.en dte trial ot Jrt'llae berires1 Jom
fnine9mJUa._lnnft against the
• James lr'riAe Foundation re·
sumed ln Orange County Superior
Court.
&eprue.atatfvea of a COft·
sortlum Pleaded by wan Slree.\
Ciaander Charlea Alita HG
Detroit d~ Alfred Taub-man anno. thalebey are now
prepared. to off er S28Z..1 m.illiol\ in
caahfartbe lnineinterub.
Tile offer tops KohiJ•s $2&J.i
mil!im bid a.y .,,IOO. And il ap-
pea rs to mate the Allen.
Taubman interest tbe top CGn-
tender in what has been a bitter
battle (or control or the Irvine
Coinpu.y. Ht "''"~an'. lt!e Dag
lce-<Skatinltf JC) V4'111$ ~lit ~ ac&caritagtt of
~&Y' o~' IP'it.Jtt 1"°' il1de> ~Oftfl tlhe• frozen water, at 'd these mothers in Dover,
Del., are no e:xception. Equipped with a
seat and four Ytheels, their tots are kept In
tow with a rope while on a lake .
Jin. 5mllli. is bowa to ,..,.
the AJlm. 'JI ..... bid bee •
of 8JiWildwtbltlbewOQJdbeal·
lowedtonbla•zi.•ct'lfllt•
terat iD tllec~ ... rled bJ her pwdf.cJwr &Molferis._...
cemflll. •
AnothM.r Def enJanl.
I
tWal.ly,, ii! Jl.,,Jer
By TOM BARLEY
Ol llM o•n.~110t S•ll
OU.o0l>tcammew1wi101infllo~1
what the tri ab e.ooeeeato•r
dueft!Mlitc as' "u6,eak.att•t
tote.aft'\' oa •a •moor wtab . \A.I•,
New:Glia9si
Womiitgrirr
' Fe1RMCDtHdh1
I
beatM, k.i~. ~anadad aad
burned to death in a. J!lac:GU-a
a~L w.ae Im.and. &)Ii~ or
S6W>ltdlde&ra mw:<fal:.1~ Mall·
day.
An OJWl&fl C<l'lllt~ Suaiu:i or
Court jury ended. na~ fat.tr
dafS..Qf~ratiQn,b~ r~'ltg
tbat. ~in t.bA: W.1 ~ Qi ary
bt!lk,. 24. oS Gwng1oo. Jk 'NaS
addUiwaaUY.· fawicl &J.l~ Q.( as-
~ult..ohar•· ~ ~ SroiJ.b.~l'.i.>. 16
as the date he will sentence. Es-
~-ex to what could be nQl. lMS.than
l 1' years,,in state WiBOJt'IOQrtbie two
co uviot~'CleW&$tu ~pply them'()()RSeeutivety.
He ba&,alr~ady sched\lle• 4 Feb.
lO'aa~atllU.1w.ill&.wa111ce co-
defendtlnt' mcnard' ''1b'e acher"
McKa.v. 22, of Placeoti A, who
maJ v'dt.tiaw.· ~ UI e-tmmi ·!£ tlowing
his-eul \en'iW\\'~io.tW ~of fU'St
deereen1&W¥lw.
McKa•y , Essex, Je?ome
Dedricb. · ~ 11tl oli Com,ton
andliWi)' 'W~e ffAll,ms, 22, ol
Sanh Aaa, werte-arresled In C?en·
neetianf'WiU. tDl.J.1'iW.r'Ag of•Enm
Sutt«lr22, oC1G.adbo Grove, lul
AprihJllri
It wu tnt.Uied \Ma the rour
men.1 hetpedrt r:r. U. wo.nen .-ho
weie ci.oribett.Uy ~diilfeodallb
as victimsdlQ~"s nsocietien
Wida peltilee1offi ~ bQSt.Jed Sal-
too'tb.emk.ialaed.,1.stadeill aDd bnt
hi am
Sutton's ordea J, which incMled
beia~umped timwtMI Wt! down
in 1a 1bedatllhllfili]ed with water,
e nded when '° ne C•f the two
WOIUO inj~Ud & biattftry aokl Into
hiS!• veim~ aad:l v~y burned
hi ID tom..tll:'
Ou .. oUh-.two' tlOlften bu bftot1
identified by the prosecatlan a
Cymbb MtacUe ...U. IC, U3C
Avenida Del Mar, San Clemente,
who races a preli m!mary hearioa
"80> l't ·ur SMllaia'l .... m' c ....,
COattOCU'elat.edbu.atd.e.r ~
Arresting offic-eirs said Mrs.
Mendenhall prorided thee with t.,...••w•_....'* ftll taGle ar·
Teat oil ttt.• f u ...,., but
minimhed her ow.n role in the
kiWDg d Sutton.
U • 9eemed.I w1Wtul» ~ Mon·
_. lbat ~ 8t a.ttrial
on dtats.s or rot; bery, · assault
with a deadly we1 .pon and dls·
positilMt"af. belly.
F ..... P.,,eAJ
STORMS ••.
nesses closed, leaving up to 1.5
million workers off the job.
Coneress moved closer to
enacting Jegjslatioo to ease the
natural eu crisis. An emergency
bill proposed by President Carter
was approved by the Senate 11 to
2 Monday night. The House ap-
proved the bill today bat it -i
be recoosiled with tbe Senate
measure. Bufl-alo Mayor Slaaley
Makowski issued the emerpney
declaraUoo. for his city at. 3:30
a.1111. PST, banning all but e:sse.
tial vehicular traffic in the city to
enable federal and atate crews to
cle~r tbe streets, still cloJ&ed by
ECONOMY'S FREEZE
MAY OUTLAST COU>-t\11
abandoned autos and driflln&
snow.
The forecast included the
possibility of several more in-
ches of snow ror Buffalo today
and wind gusts as hip as•
miles per hour. But tbe winds
were apect.ed to drop to 10 tO 20 m .p.b. bytonigbt.
Makowski said only vebides
carrying necessary medicine,
f~ or fQel will be allowed to
travel. Violators will be anest.ed
and ~ and will be ob-
ject to fines and imprisomneot.
he said.
ANTHONY •••
~ aaict lie is pleased w.._ tbeWQ Alltbtw:ay buhandted
the transactions, iDduding tbe
i-edbtenpaymentGf a~
primal&)' e6edm ao. fn>• tile
proceeds or a'rund rat.er.
&ic.lasd J. O'Neil.I. •t.il llree
weeks ago chairmu of Ute
l>nMeratic Part7 ia Onlqe ~ ... utU lat ....... So1a~era California party
dudnm-. is a partaer ia BlOe.-terprises. ·
Uilletltec..-Mud Re•Prcton
la.na. ~ orisibltT sbOWll!d
the SS,000 RJO 108.ll aa cou ' g
fnm Mrmellf..
I.Mt week. An&l.cm:r1ns•ew
talltM with the Dbtricl At-
torney's Office and .. probably"
would amend his disclosure st¥e-
ment.
The freshman supervisor said
the stir caused bT bia re~
methods 1u11Nlsecl blm and Is some•.,tnc be.'cl .. Aike lo ~ to rest."
His4Wc• I ............... ort.-u,. f•all::.t.ed wM8 •--•-::Mc Jbma Coata Mesa ........ ...., .Ina
watacMt.brmPCoar.S. l'lte~f ... r.-lce h"* •..-ratl!MlnlGri_...,
Jm7'• ..._ Made of th
o,...iti-et ?st I ft ...... ~
A-S••lnill&Mlef 8rme.
controlL
fte~two~a,u.e
Inriae Company aeqaislUon
race att not prepaied to at.end
that pri~ to Jin~ Smilh. Slie
wOldd be CGmpelled to sell ks'
stodillbeJtooll O¥er.
Tbe AIJen.Taubman ~
tatiTa IUde it dear llClllda.y im-
med.iatdy after JDClge Jame 7 .
Knife Hrirled
~ HBSehool
Qnraa• ic b7 detectins ~
day .... Slor"e ror. "_.,,.,,,., Beadl,...... •bo alJecedly tllftw
• bite• a J"OllDC ~acher's ai*
at .. ~. atriltac her in the ......
Tk 'ridi:m GI Ck auault with a
deadly weapon at Newland
Elementary School was ooJy
bruised by the hurled knife ac-confin& lo i.nve.Ugaton. '
Newland School Prila~ipal
Stanley Thompson toTd
authorities the :>flack occurred
Thursday.
for cars wieft normal
accessory loads. $31 ~Slarfi"9P'OWM
Alles PA221", wlll'I ll'lftle·il?.
-.... ·.~ ....
•
Jadp 1esmned '~-. _.. • two·yearcourtbat~elhattbenew
alfswtllonly appl), Jf a system of
1ealed 1lids is ord·e.r~ by tbe eourt,
Allen-Taubman ofdir.la'9 ...
reeresentatlves or (."'amttac
Fairview Corporation ot •f oronto,
Canada. the other major t.ddder.
have reactecl WOAlb' '-P ao
earBero,ea '*14'a& proud•~•J.D
w"1da * news media ~ •
lurM4ol bid$ before U.ey ~
filed iDthe°""100m.
Lawyers for Uae fOlladalioQ
rrownon the suggested sealeCI ~
diDC ~iaU.&icJa&oltlaeir
repeated ••temen&.s> aw ~
wan1 to aeU ti.a Cowulat.ie•'s 5'.S
percat COllU'ailJia& i.nwest iA the Irvine~C.Ollobil
Mrs. SmiUl sued th~tou.nct.t.lon
two years ago at a time when the
defenc'aNs wue prepariD& to.sell
to ............
'fteFedenl Tu Refer9 Ad ol
119 ~· .............. to
clia.-e ol its Jnile ~ WMao•ms.. Taff....., a«ered Manda.Y ila.
clieated U... ta. lniae Cem-
paa,•s -.els Md Ilea •alaed al
S-million~ Wore llobl1
made •-millimoffwlhal was
dinned by Jin. SmiUr's nurt ac--
tioD.
Witaen Bowen M cC07. an
....,_witlau.eNewYorkiaftst-
mautfinn of Marca Slaaley. a ·
plaiaed tat allqiwa.ee f• IUCb
faeton • tna ..t tk Jntne eo..,_,..se.aanow,.....w'•L
IJ ft'dllced Ille $9 mQlim pme tac.
Two croaps of miaority ...... **• ....... fl dear
that tllie7 ,...... prefer ~
taee ol tbe llobil offer wee »-
lowed to ilaUnale la .. bi.a .. ...,. bul..., -ot.awn ol
thecaabwwwadioa.. TbeJ were Wen«ified to J.sge
Jadse as J"epraentatiwes of
Kalbryn Dillard Wheeler. a
grancldauCIJter of James lniDe
and the bftrs of Gloria Wood
Irvine and My ford Irvine.
Statemau b7 law,ers •• both
&rOUP5 ol ~kbolders iDdicllle
that the two ractfons hold Irvine
company shares currently value4
at rnoretlllul$40millioQ.
.............. ""'-.. , ... ··•·• . Fountain Valley J~ycees
have honored Chris Torres, cli~ of the Boys .club,
wilh a distinguished RrVice award.
Le~Slates
~'
Talk Nighu
Tile Oraoge County Leaeue of
Women Voters has slated f011r
local acbool board candidates•
nl1bta in Hunt1n1ton Beach,
Fountain V..Uey and Seal Beach.
Six trustee candidates for
tbe Ocean Y.ew School District
bocrd will square off Feb. 8 at 7: 30
p .m . al 11.ariM View School, Sl682
TIJburSDrive.Hllntinlton~cb.
Seal Beacb (elementary)
Scbool Dist.rid trustee can-
didates wiD meet the public at
1 :30 p.m. Pa 22 at McGaugb In-
termediate Sd1111 Ill. Seal Bea.ch
BoalenrdaDdeolsaAvenue.
A jailll un6JMes" nl&bt for Hunttactoa Badl 1Jnioo lngb
School District and Fountain
Valley (elementary) School Dis-
trict tnmee hopefuls has bes
slated for Peb. 23.
Tbe med.in& will be bdd ai 7:30
p .m. in tbe Foantaip Valley
Community Center, J03IO Slater
Ave.
Huntington Beach residents
can meet trustee candidates for
tbe Huntington Bea ch City
(elementary) School District
board March 2 at 7:30 p.m. at
Peterson Elementary School,
20661 Farnsworth Lane.
Irvine
EDITION
.·
T oday's Clo sla·g
... , N. Y. Stoeks
OL~70, NO. 32, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 197: TEN CENTS.1
..-h"Vine Conipany He~rs 2nd Cash Bid
A claim by the Mobil Oil Com·
pany that it is the only contender
wUJing to make an all cash offer
for the Irvine Company was
ciwcldy ahot down Monday when
.the trial of Irvine heriress Joan
Xrvine Smith's law~uit against the
.James Irvine Foundation re·
sumed in Orange County Su~rior
Court.
Representatives o! a con·
aortium hea(led by Wall Street
~
financier Charles Allen and
Detroit developer Allred Taub-
man announced that they are now
prepared to offer $282. 7 million in
cash for the Irvine interests.
The offer tops Mobil's S28l.9
million bid by $800,000. And It ap-
pea rs to make the Allen·
Taubman interest the top con·
tender in what has been a bitter
battle for control of the Irvine
Company.
Mrs. Stnttb ls known to favor
• the Allen-Taubman bid b_ecause
of a provision that she would be al-
lowed to retain her 22.4 percent in-
terest in the company founded by
bw frandfather if the offer is suc-
cessful.
The other two contenders in the
Irvine Company acquisition
race are not prepared to extend
that privilege to Mrs. Smith. She .
would be com~lled to sell her
stock if they took over.
The Allen-Taubman represen-
tative& made it clear Monday im·
mediately after Judge James F.
Judge resumed what has been a
two.year court battle that the new
offer will only apply ii a system of
sealed blds is ordered by the
court.
Allen-Taubman officials and
representatives ot Cadlllac
Fairview CorporaUon of Toronto,
12 Die in Worst Storm
In tory of Buffalo
ew Home in WoodfJridge
The Irvine Community Nursery School is
back in busines s with a new home in the
Woodbridge Inst a nt School, a portable
classroom on West Yale Loop. Jt was used
by Deerfield s tudents, but when their
school was completed they vacated the
structure. T he pre-schoolers were left
without a home last month when they left
St. Matthew's Lutheran Church, which
opened its own pre·school. Above, R .. J .
.... Wood , 4, and Melissa Rakey, 4, play while
teacher Susan Edwards looks on.
nti4i6crime Will Probed
lLo~~'::P~?:'~.~~~!~! 1!.!:~i!0w ~.
ear-old document which pledges comment and there was no back· ·document.
e Howard Hushes estate to the arounddetailedon the m . "It's a crazy ato1'1,'' he said,
task of fighting orsanlz.ed crime The document, purportedly ''but you can never tell with
in America is being considued a si1ned by all three men Feb. 11, these Hughes things," Altman
possiblewillbycountyoftlcials. 1966, aakS it was to be considered aald.
County Public Administrator Hugbes' last will and testam~lin Allman· said the document,
Bruce Altman said Monday that the event of his death within five which ls signed, witnessed and
the document, a contract bet-:een years. notarized, is more llkely to be
Hughesandtwoothermen,could Hughes died Aprils. 197f, 10 legitimate than any other
be deemed a testamentary docu-years later. but Altman said purported Hughes will he bas
menl fro m the ec centric courta~tignoretbeflve·year .seen, the San Gabriel Valley
billionaire and therefore binding provisionifnowillwaslocated. Tribune aaid. He said the docu-
ashlslastwuh. The document also states that ment has been examined by
The contract specifies that proceeds Of the estate are to be authorities and turned over to the
Hughesis topayS30mUUontotwo uaed to create a task force "for county clerk's office for
men, Edward M. Barbara and the purpose of combatting or-safekeeping.
:ltobert Morgan, for "certain ganised crime in the United "We uked our county counsel
personal aervioes . . . the nature States of America." whether or not It could be con-or wbi~l>are to be known only to The tukpce is to hire the Los attued as a will and they indicat-
Jioward R. Ru•bes, Edward M. Angeles abel'ifl and chief of ed 1t could be con.strued as a
Barbaraand.RobertMorgan." police al annual Hlarles of <SeeHVGHES,PaieAZ
Guard
To Aid
Cleanup
By The Associated Press
Winter kept Its frigid grasp on
the Northeast and Midwest to·
day, and a state of emergency
was declared in Buffalo, N.Y ..
where 12 persons have died in the
worst storm in the city's history.
An estimated 75 deaths ha ve
been blamed on the bitter
weather in states hit by the big
freeze. <Related story. A4 )
An Army engjneering battalion
of 300 men was ordered to Buffalo
today w help the dty clear tu
street.s of abandoned autos and
snow drifts. Federal disaster of.
ECONOMY's:'i:REEZE
MAY OUTLAST COLD-A11
ficials said the unit was ordered
to fly with its equipment from Ft
Bragg, N.C .. ··as soon as they
can get. here.··
The natural gas s hortage
caused by freezing weather kept
many schools. factories und busi·
nesses closed, leaving up to 1.5
million workers off the job.
Congress moved closer to
enacting legislation to ease the
natural gas crisis. An emergency
bill proposed by President Carter
was approved by the Senate 91 to
2 Monday night. The House ap·
proved the bill today but it must
be reconsiled with the Senate
measure. Buffalo Mayor Stanley
Makowski issued the emergency
declaration for bis city at 3:30
a.m. PSI', banning all but essen·
tial vehicular traffic m the caly to
<See STORMS, Page AZ >
Quake Hits
I.ake Tahoe
SOUTHLAKE TAHOE (AP> -
An earthquake rattled buildings
today in the area of South Lake
. Tahoe, but no damage or injuries
were immediately reported.
The magnitude of the quaJce,
which occurred at 10:48 a.m .•
was esUmated at between 3.5 and
4 on the Richter Scale, according
to Roy MUler, seismologist at UC
Berkeley.
A quake of 3.5 ls capable of
causing slight damage in the
local area, and a tremor of 4
could in.Oict moderate damage.
&vine School·
Hosts Session
OnBehaviqr
Water Rationing Bits
Marin CoUnty ·Reaideiw Filling V eaelA.
A behavior manarement
,,..orka.bop for parents •ill be held at 9 a.m. Wedoelday at Green·
tree School in lrvlne.
The public la .lnvited to attend
the (ree wotkshop, which will ati-temi>t to help f.&rentl undentand
t:lleir children 1 behavior, sibJini
l'ivalry, altern.Uv_e_,dlaclpUne 4H*unlquee and vanou1 co1n-
8unlty (WOUfeee avallabl to par~ •
The 1peaker .ill be BW Bem.
e .,.l'Cboloaift at Greentree ' ~bool, located at 14902 Sleety' Roll4'r SL • ~
ActJ..W wlll be provided fw .
• >r•·•cboolera brou1h t bJ,
parenta. ror .m« lnlOtlJlitLiL"
... lll~L ·. ' ~~
•
Canada. the other major bidder,
have reacted strongly lo an
earlier open bidding procedure in
which the news m.edia often
learned of bids before they were
filed in the courtroom.
Lawyers for the foundahon
frown on the suggested sealed bid-
ding procedure in the light of their
repea~ statements that they
want to sell the foundation's 54.S
percent cootrol,ling interest in the •
Thief With
Wnscience
He was a sorry thief. At
least he said he was.
Daniel E . Hendricks, 24.
of #3 Woodrush, Irvine. re-
• turned from night school
Monday al Univ·ersity High
in Irvine and found $16 mis-
sing from his car in the
parking lot.
A note left in the auto re-
ad. "J'm sorry. but I need
the money more than you.··
There was a postscript :
"Sorry, I left your wallet.
though.·•
Man Faces
2nd Charge
In Death
Irvine Company to Mobll.
Mra. Smith aut!d the foundation
two years ago at a time when the
defendants were preparing toseU
to Mobil for $200 million.
The Federal Tax Reform Act of
1969 compels the foundation to
dispose of its Irvine Company
holdings by 1983.
Testimony offered Monday in·
dicated that the Irvine Com-
(See IRVINE, Page A2)
Aritlwny
Clarifies
Loans
By GARY GRANVILLE
OUM Delly ~l .. tStatt
Less than a month after firstfil.
ing at. Orange County Supervisor
Ph a li p Anthony amended his final
campaign disclosure statement
Mon day to show the true source of
$63,200worth of campaign loans.
On his orifinal disclosure state.
ments, Anthony showed the loans
to Friends of Philip Anthony were
from himself.
But tt}e W estminst er
supervisor's amended statement
s hows the loans cam e from
former paid police informant
Gene Conrad, Fullerton attorney
Michael Remington and RJO En-
terprises. .
In an interview last week, An-
thony said he showed the loans
coming from himself because he
believed he personally, not the "' ByTOMBARLEY campaign committee, was OOfMOally ~llotSulf A Ith 0 u g h c l eared 0 r responsible for their repayment. ''I believed I borrowed the mans laughter charg~s by an money personally and, in tum,
Orange County .superior ~~rt lent it to my campaign commit-
judg.e, Laguna Niguel electn caan tee," lhesupervisor sam . .
Daniel Gon~es Guiman .faces He said that reporting method
new atie. ..... om O( second de.gree . was followed after consulting ,
murdertOOay. ·th liti 1 lt t w ·lli D t D" trict Allorney Paul wt po ca consu a!" ~ am epu Y 18 • Butcher, attorney Ch1p Nielson Meyers explained that the new . and Certified Public Accountant cha r&es are a renewal of lhose Ray Edwards.
abandoned when Guzman •. 32! of "There certainly was no intent 29821 Paseo de Ocaso, was mdact-.. .
d b the Grand Jury on charges to deceive anyone, Anthony m-e Y SJsted ofinvoluntary manslaughter . His ·amended statem ent shows Those charges stemmed from d SJO 000 f · his a lleged action in rigging a tnp he borrowe . • . rom tn· · · · d lh t I · ed former·tumed·fmanc1er Conrad ware an his front yar a ~ aim . th "fnal days of his campaign Lh e life of Kelly Michelle an .e 1 c· C McMullen, his neighbor'$ ?•year-a~amsl Santa Ana tty oun-
ld d ht ctlmanHarryYamamoto. . o aug er d d . le ·ew Guzman e~pla~ to sheriff's In a tape recor e tn rvi.
offi cers that the high voltage line thre~ weeks ago, Conrad dem~
was intended to keep dogs and lendmg Anthony money and said
cats off h1s now er beds. the supervisoi: pro~ably got the
He was arrested on criminal money from his reti~ement fund
ch a rges a nd late r s ued for atRockwell International.
$300 ooo in dam ages by the But apparently Conra~ lent the
M M u $30,000 to an Anthony fnend and ~e~e~plained Mona&y that campaign backer who, in tum.
Judge James o. Perez' dismissal loaned. th~ mone~ to the then
of the indictment counts \vas supervisonal candidate.,
based on a technicality that made _As for Re~inglof!. he agreed
prosecution of the indictment as it with Anthony s origmal supposl·
stood impossible. tion that $28,200 worth of Anthony
.. We have refiled charges or loanswerepersonal~ndnotto~e
second degree murder and supervisor's campaign~ comm1t-
Guzman will be arraigned Feb. tee.
28," the prosecutor said. Guzman To back him u~, the Fullerton
is free on his promise to appear in attorney has copies of three An ..
SantaAnaMunicipalCourt. thony notes. all of them signed
Judge Perez d eclined to personally b~ the co~nty
elaborate on his pre-tr ial de-S';Jpervlso~ and with !10 menUono!
· has campa1gn comm1ttee.
cisaon. Also, the three checks covering
Defense attorney J ames Stotler the $28,200 worth or loans are
branded· the continued prosecu-payable to "Philip Anthony" and
tlon of Guzman as "insane" Moo-bear a similar endorsement.·
day after commenting that his Remington said he is pleased
50· page brief and not any error in with the way Anthony bas handled
the indictment led Judge Perez to the transactions, including the
dis miss the charges. immediate repayment of a $15,00()
"Very simply, there is no case (See ANTHONY. Page AZ)
against this man," Stotler pro-
tested. "This prosecution is
idiotic and if the effort puts me In
my grave 1 intend to clear Mr.
Guzmanofthesecbaies ··
Turtle Rock
Park Naming
f
Wnte3tSet
Coast·
Weath er
Variable high clouds
through Wednesday.
Cooler da,ys with highs in ' eos. Lowa~ to SJ.
) INSIDE TODAY
Jolmtq/ Bench'• e1tra~ •
tDlfe gd1 Mr tum.at tM plate
a1 •"-i.u. 1lotD Mr'. all-1tar •
luub<md PloJlcd pfng pong
tofth hil but man on thdr 'r' tocddJno.fdgld.and nne1te<1 •
•"-• pou for HuaUer
magadtw: Sff eao• AJ. ..
.. ..
,
~ Jt.2 DAILY PILOT
I Pi,peline
·Prop<Med
WASffINGTON CAP>
A edltral Power Com·
mlutan heartnc omcu to-
day recommended •P·
proval of a 4,000·mlle
,1pellne across Canada lo
carry natural 111 from
n6rthern Al11ka to the
lower Uni~ States.
Administrative Law
Judae Nahum Utt aald the
trans-Canada 1ystem pro-
poted by the Arctic Ga1
Study Gtoup' would be
clearly superior lo two
competing proposals by El
Paso Alaska Co. and Alcan
Pipeline Co.
Litt'• recommendation
goea to the full Federal
Power Commisaloo tor re·
view and a final recom-
mendation to the Presl·
dent. due by May 1 ·
One of four men who inflicted
what the trial prosecutor
de.crlbed as "\.lnspeakable
torture" on a man who was
beat.n, kicked, strangled and
burned to death in a Placentia
apartment was found guilty of
second degree murder late Mon· day.
An Orange County Superior
Court jury ended neatly fou~.
day1 of dellberatjon by returning
that verdict ln the tttal of Gary
Essex, 24. of Compton. He was
additionally found &uUty of as· sault charges.
a ew Trash System
'(:.on/uses Irvine
Irvine's new trash pickup
system is a mess.
City officials told everybody last week that the new system,
under contract to Dewey's Rub·
bish Company, would go into ef.
feet today -the first of the month.
But Dewey began collecting on
Monday -the first day of the
workweek.
Hecause or the confusion, some
Ji',.... Page Al
ANTHONY .••
primary election loan from the
proceeds of a rund raiser.
Richard J. O'Neill, until three
Weeks ago chairman of the
Democratic Party in Orange
County and until last weekend
Southern California party
chajrman, is a partner in RJO en-
terprises.
Like the Conrad and Remington
loans, Anthony originally showed
the $5,000 RJO loan as coming
from himself.
Last week,, Anthony said he had
t~lked with the District At·
torney's Office and '·probably"
would amend his disclosure state· ' ~e~. •
The freshman supervisor said
I the stir caused by his reporting
methods surprised him and is
, something he'd ''like to lay to
rest."
His disclosure statements were
originally challenged when
I $10,000 shown as coming from a
Costa Mesa building supply firm
was traced through Conrad.
The 42-year-old former police
informer is under a federal Grand
Jury's scrutiny because of the
operations of Pension Funds of
America, an Irvine-based ftrm he
controls ,
Along with county Supervisor
'Ralph Diedrich's role as a volun-
t eer •campaign fundraiser for
~arlous political candidates last
fall, Conrad's and Remington's
parts in the campaigns of An·
tbony and Assemblyman Dennis
Mangen (D·Huntington Beach>,
are under scrutiny by the Orange
County Grand Jury.
I The county Grand Jury re-
J>Ortedly also is lnvealigating
leeblliqua used by [)jedricb to
aoliclt campaign funds from
bullders, developers and others
•bodo busmeH with lhe county.
Conrad, Remington, and
Couad aid~ Loran Norton are
•moni those subpoenaed to •J>-
arbdorethejurythJaweek.
"' Pipe Explodes
ANTIOCH <AP> -Repairs
1>eein today on ah underarounct
PG&E natutaJ gas line near here
aft.er a brief but spectacular ell· Joa.loo and fire.
1'be 1u line blew up Monday l~ht in an aspara1us field on fi erman Island ln the
ramento-San Joaquin Delta
ottheastof Antioch.
folks 1n the Greentree, Racquet
Club and California Homes areas
of Irvin.e did not put out their
trash Monday as they were sup.
posed to under the new schedule.
They are the only ones who
were assigned Monday as a new
trash day. The other Monday
pickups were also assigned Mon·
day under the old system and so
they put out their trash as usual.
City aides said today that the.
Racquet Club and Greentree re·
sldents should put their trash out
Wednesday for pickup and that
Dewey would make the extra
pickups lo straighten things out.
But the California Homes resi-dents, whose old day for pickup
was Tuesday, should"phone
Dewey's, at 64.2·1191, and ask for
service if they haven't had their trash picked up yet.
Also, any other resident con·
fused about what his new day is
'should phone the rubbish com·
pany for information.
Outer: Cut
Dou:n Trips
WASfUNGTON CA P> -
President Carter has told
his Cabinet to "cut back
drastically -cut out the
ostentatiousness of trips."
In another of his in·
creasingly familiar ex-
hortations against the
emoluments or public of.
fice, the new president
cited Monday what he
considered bad examples
from the Ford ad -
ministration. His depart·
ment heads, in tum, told
him how they were saving
money.
One week after cutting
out door-to-door limousine
service for White House
start aides, Carter told his
Cabinet: "I'll hope you'll
go the sec.ond mile. I
don 't want to be
superficial about this.:•
Bandit's
Apparel
Good Lead
If he hasn't changed his
clothes yet, Costa Meaa police
have a pretty good chance of cap-
turina an armed robber who took
tT7 at 8UJ1polnt from a conve-
nience market Monday mornlne.
It was the aunman 's apparel
that stuck In the mind of the
UTotEm Market clerk, police
said today.
DAILY PILOT
The male bandit-was wearinf a
black silk <1t nylon jumpsuit wilh
bib top and strap, no shirt. a
brown jacket. and carrylne a
• }'rown leather purge.
The clerk at the market. 2271
Fairview Road, said the tall,
dark and thin suspect displayed a
1maD black JUD with a white ban·
dle beforeescapln• into the early
momlng darkness with the cuh.
Ji',.... Page Al
IRVINE •••
pany'a assets had been valued at
$380 million shortly before Mobil
made a $200 million offer that was
diverted by Mrs. Smith's court ac-
tion.
Witness Bowen McCoy, an
analyst with the New York invest·
mant ftrm of Morgan Stanley, ex·
plained that allowance for such
factors as taxes and the Irvine
Company's cash now substantial-
ly reduced the $380 million price tag.
Two groups of minority
stollcholders who made it clear
that lhey would prefer accep-
tance of the Mobil offer were aJ.
lowed to intervene in the trhll
Monday but only as observers of
the courtroom action.
They were Identified to Judge
Judge as representatives of
Kathryn Dillard Wheeler, a
granddaughter of James Irvine
and the heirs of Gloria Wood
Irvine and Myford Irvine.
Statements by lawyers for both
groups of stockholders indicate
that the two factions hold Irvine
·company shares currently valued
atmorelhan$40mlllion.
Viking Cr.~t
Near Phobos
PASADENA (AP)-Vilcingl'S,
orbiter bas maneuvered into an
orbit that will take It wJtiµn 43
mnea ot Phobos, one of Man'
natural aatellltes, officials at Jet
Propulsion La~ratory say. '!'he 1pacecr._tt should come
close to .Pbobotl by Feb. 18 when
earthbound 1clentfsta will direct
it to take pictures of the Uehted
surface of the body, officlala said
Monday. The pbotoirapbs, elc· ~ted to be the beat ever t~en ot
the· body. will be used to map
Phobos. ,, ..... _ ....
HUGHES •••
. Solid --lif~ testamentary document. which
. means tbe last whhea of• persop who dled," AltmaJuafd.
Terms Urged
~ SACRAMENTO <AP) -A
• Jtc111a&Gr who o,eosea capital
punlahment want&"wflnt•dtlNO
. murdse'I~ eo 'pend the rest of
their lives tn prlaoo, with no
cha"ee ol a '°"emor abort.In• ~tr terms. (Related story. M>
. · -'State Sen. Mlltoo Marks (R·
:· ~n Fra.Ddlco>. tnll'oduced the ., .. le•talatlon Monday.
•. · T•'fll pro1pect of llft Im· ·
prllGnmeat without ev r rttttnC
out of prilon would, lD mt opt·
nlon, bd a ~a&er deternnt to
crlJ:ne than tbe ~eat.h ~nilty. '
b& Hid.: .. It would ma • _,.
tblt ll!t meana lire;" be •daid.: •
A spokesman for Summa
CbrP., wbJcb conm>Js 'Hucttes•
holdinp,...id tber'e would be no
comment.
·'Altman 1at4 ho received the
document from llorlQ lut fJll,
·He aald 'l)if! s-ubllc ad· n,ln.taerat.~1 office eo¥1dfted tt
the raPomlflllitJ of t1'01enamect ~&>roveehed0Cume9t'1 validity. . '
..
.~ ............. ICE FLOES FILL THE HUDSON RIVER IN THIS VIEW FROM THE YONKERS CITY PIER
Norttieaat. Mldweat U.S. Still Locked In Grip of PuntahJng Winter Storm
Police Car .
Rear-ended;
Woman Held
An Anaheim police offi~er was
seriously injured Monday night
when a drunken driving suspect
slammed iflto the rear or his
parked patrol car, knocking him
to the ground.
According lo police. officer
Rick Cabrera, 30, suffered a
broken leg in the 8: 15 p. m. acci-
dent in lhe 2200 block or South
Harbor Boulevard.
Police said Cabrera had
stopped another vehicle along
the roadway and was standing
beside his car when it was rear·
ended by an auto driven by
Deborah Stack, 32, of Anaheim.
When California Highway
Patrol omcers investigated the
accident, they arrested Mrs.
Stack on suspicion or drunk driv·
ing, a CHP spokesman s aid.
Cabrera was treated Jt the
scene by paramedics and
transported to Anaheim
Memorial Hospital.
..
F,....PageAJ
~·
STORMS CONTINUE • • •
enable federal and state crews to
clear the streets, still clogged by
abandoned autos and drifting I snow.
The forecast included the
possibility of several more in·
ches of snow for Buffalo today
and wind gusts as high as 40
miles 'per hour. But the winds
·were expected to drop to 10 lo 20
m.p.h. by tonight.
Makowski said only vehicles
carrying necessary medicine,
food, or fuel will be allowed lo
travel. Violators will be arrested
and prosecuted and will be sub·
ject to fines and imprisonment,
he said.
At least 11 states -including
New York -had already or·
dered emergency measures to
deal with the weather and energy
crisis.
The federal energy legislation
would give Carter authority to
divert natural gas lo areas where
It's most needed and would free
some natural gas from federal
price controls through Aug. 1.
Industry has been hit the
hardest by the gas shortage, and
officials in Ohio and Indiana ex-
pressed fears of more workers
being laid off amid a deepening
shortage.
lndlana Employment Security
Divi3ion Director John F. Coppe$
said a new cutback announced
Monday by the Northern Indiana
Public Service Co. could mean
layoffs for 100,000. Gov. Otis R.
Bowen estimates 50.000-60,000
state residents are out or work
and 3,100 firms have been affect-
ed by curtailments. Northern In-
diana announced cutbacks to
2,500 more firms.
Pmoor Plant
Foes Seized
NASHUA, N.H. (AP) -Six
M assacbusetts residents were
arrested outside a New
Hampshire state liquor store
where they were collecting
signatures on a petition against
the Seabrook nuclear power plant. ·
Police said the two women
and four men were arraigned in
Nashua District Court on
charges of criminal trespass
and ball was set at $200 each.
Good values on
tires and teries.
Atlas 42-month Pacesetter 1 IA
$31 ~~l~!r~l!~:~~6,C:,,. ~~r
accessory toads
Alias PA22F, with rrade·111.
Atlas Atlas CulNanift Pacesetter'" s2449: s3349
'1t,. t1.12 FK Ea. Tu fOf P1111 '2.29 Fed Ex. Tu lot
A71o13 bledi-11. wtlll lrtdl-<11. E7'-14 blllck•1ll, with trade•tn.
Four<pty polye•t•r cord Pplyeeter cord body with
fore emooth ncs.. twin llberglats cord belts . ,._. .... ... t:: ......... ,., ...
• 1 • .....,. •• r .. I~ ~-'"· ,·,: .. .. u-.!,:•,. , .. . ,,.. .. tu ... t 11• ,, .. ,.. P7At Jt., ,,...... • ,, ••• ~ j l l ,,, j 0 1'1-14 ...... JN
011olf. IUI , s.J 01111 40.0 2M
019-tl 14.41 , .. l<lt ,. •u• uo ..,..,. -· 11.4' , ,. .. , .. ,. 4Ut t.M
Atlas 60-mo11th
Premium PoWer $39 ~6~~~~~ ~~~~t
for big accessory loads.
/\tin PHD22F, ""''~ I rad"""
• Atlas SS Exxon._ a.II
Economy Radial Belted Raclll 78 s4199 s47e9
Plue 11.M Fed. E•. Tu lor
AIHIH3 wfllll•.all, wHll lttcle-1n.
Radial performance.
economically priced
'"' . ...
'""'"
1-!:!=::...+-c~,--1---' .. Ullloll l H
Phil u.oe F9d. Ex. Tilt ..,
OR78·13 w.til1ewa11 • ..i111 lrede-ln.
Our beat tire. Topi In
mli.ago and performance.
a..-.._• olllef ...... Ctlec4I ow•-°" otfMlf .ia... ClltcJi ow Ml~ °" efMf lllH. ............ p.oo_,. Hell. WM!ewe ....... ti.OOlllOf'INCll.
'
7
.
'
Lag"na/South Coast_
EDlTl1) N
•
I. * * ~
. voa.:. 10, No. 32, 2 secr10Ns, 26 ~AGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNlA
· 12 Die .ill Worst
..
StOrm
I • • •
tory "of Buffalo llln f
,•
A,.WI .......
ICE FLOES FILL THE HUDSON RIVER IN THIS VIEW FROM THE YONKERS CfTY PIER
Northeast, Mldwe1t U.S. Still Locked In Grip of Punishing Winter Storm .....
Irvine Company Not a Drop
' Second Cash Off er To Drink
California may be in
the midst of a drought,
but there was water to
spare Moaclay in the
apartment of Ann
Morteson on Avenida De
La Grulla.
I
1, • \1
Unveiled -in Court
A claim by the Mobil Oil Com-
pany that it is the only contender
I, .willing to make an all cash orrer
for the Irvine Company was
quickly shot down Monday when
the trial of Ir,ine heriress Joan
Irvine Smith's lawsuit against the
James Irvine Foundation re-
~umed in Orange County Supenor
Court.
Representatives of a con
sortium beaded by Wall Street
financier Charles Allen and
De~oit developer _ ~lfl"ed Taub-
man announced that l.hey are now
prepared toofrer $282.7 million in
cash for the lrvlne interests.
The offer tops Mobil's $'281.9
million bid by $800,000. And it ap.
pears to make the Alle n .
Taubman Interest the top con-
tender in what ha,$ bee. a bitter
battle for cootro4 or the Irvine
i Company.
l .Mrs. Smith ia known to (avor
the Alim-Taubman bid because
of a provision that she would be al-
:I LB Liquor
I .. Store Robbed
A man lfbo wore hla black hair
tied ln • pollY tail pointed a blue
steel revolver at a Laiuna Beach
liquor store clerk Monday and
robbed him ot $860.
He escaped in a car driven by a
•partner and eluded. police cap-
tur e.
Tbe clerk told pallce the man
ea me lnto Spicot Liquor.-1802 s.
Coast Highway, and asked.
"Where~ your ch~late milk?'"
before producinl the aun .
Another witness said t'be
getawa:r car 1puttered slowly
awu, withoutJJahts.
lowed to retain her 22.4 percent in-
terest in the company founded by
her grandfather if the offer is suc-
cessful
The other two contenders in the
Irvine Company acquisition
race are not prepared to extend
that privilege to Mrs. Smith. She
would be compelled to sell her
stock if they took over.
The Allen-Taubman represen-
tatives made it clear Monday im-
mediately after Judge James F.'
Judge resumed what h~s been a
two-year court battle that the new
offer will only apply if a system of
sealed bids is ordered by the
court.
Allen-Taubman officials and
representatives of Cadillac
Fairview Corporation of Toronto,
Canada, the other major bidder,
have reacted strongly to an
earlier open bidding procedure In
which the news media often
teamed or bids before they were
filed in the courtroom.
Lawyers for the foundation
frown on the suggested sealed bid-
ding procedure in the light ol theta'
repeated statements that they
want to sell the foundation's 54.5
percent controlling interut in the
Irvine Company to Mobil.
Mrs. Smith sued the foundation
two yean ago at a time when the
defendants were preparine to sell
to Mobil for $200 million.
The Federal Tax Reform Act of
1969 compels the touadatioD' to
dlspose ot its lntine Company
holdings by 1S83.
Testimony offered MoKday in-
dicated that the Irvine Com-
pany's usets had been valued at
$380 million shortly before fdobil
made a $200 million off er that was
divenedbyMrs.Smitb'scourtac-
tion. •
Witness Bowen McCoy... an
-<See J&VINE, P a1e AZ>
Her waterbed burst.
San Clemente firemen
were called and used
water vacuums to dry up
the flooded apartment.
'Gag Gi/~'.
Roms County
Bomb Squad
A gag glft. a "bomb" fashioned
from bundled emergency road
flares. led Laguna Beach police
to call out the Orange County ·
bombaquadaU:30a.m. today.
The packaee was left on the
sta1e of the Laguna Beach High
School auditorium. The student
stage crew bad pt"esenled it to the
staee manager Monday as a
joke.
School officials said the man
worked late and forgot to take the
· gift home with him.
:>omeone saw the package and,
apparenUy tbinkini it would be
even funnier, called police this
morning with a bomb threat.
The realistic device prompted
Laguna police to call for expert
help. Attached to the flares,
made ·to resemble a bundle or
dynamite sticks, were a clock
and battery. ..
Search Futile ,
SAN DIEGO (AP) -An un-
iden tified 'young man jumped
ttom the San Dle10-Coronado
Bay Bridie Monday evenin1, but
search crews did not locate his
body. police said.
Wat~r Rationing Hits
Marin County ·ResUlenu Filling V eue&
Tbe K arfn Municipal Water District bas
laid down harsh financial peflaltles for anyone
who exceeds the daily allotment ol 41 galloos
per penon starting today.
llBANWRILB, AB TIU; STATE faced the artm p 'Qlpeet U.at the 1eat Will be the drieat
on record, tM weatherm an 'had btd.~ewa tor 11 Northern Ca.lifomla. R8'n t.b1I moG1h ls ex-
. peeted JD tbe places •ben lt will do Uw leut
~ ,
8rnatrilis look very Jrl_m," k• Woodward,
head ol the atat.e Droqbt lnfOl"inaUOD C...t.C",
ukl .._. the NaUoo~ Weather Si!mce re-. pc,:rw taa 31May toreeut Prid.leta bekrif.
DOl'1llal i'alnfall ln NoltMrD Callfonlao
'l'M faNcaat. bOwenr.-. there wW be
aboY•ilanaal ri1D ln Southem Callfom.lL
Guard
To Aid
Cleanup
By The Associated Press
Winter kept Its frigid grasp on
the. Northeast and Midwest to-
day. and a state or emergency
was declared in Buffalo, N.Y .
where 12 persons have died in the
worst storm in the city 's history.
An estimated 75 deaths have
been blame d on the bitter
weather in states hit by the big
freeze. <Related story, A4)
An Army engineering battalion
of 300 men was ordered to Buffalo
today to help the city clear its
streets of abandoned autos and
snow drifts. Federal disaster of-
ECONOMY'S FREEZE
MAY Oun.AST COLD-A11
ficials said the unit was ordered
to fly with its equipment from Ft.
Bragg, N.C., "as soon as they
can get here."
T he natural gas s hortag<>
caused by freezing weather kept
many schools, factories and busi·
nesses closed, leaving up to 1.5
million workers orr the job.
Congress moved c loser to
enac;ting leg~slation to ease the
natural gas crisis. An emergency
biJI proposed by President Carter
w•s approve<I by Lbe Senate ~l to
Z Monday night. The House ap-
proved the bilJ today but it must
·be reeonsiled with the Senate
measure.
Buffalo Mayor Stanley
Makowski issued the emergency
declaration for his city at 3:30
a .m . PST, banning all but essen-
tial vehicular traffic in the ci ty to
enable federal and state crews to
clear the streets, still clogged by
abandoned autos and drirtmg
snow.
Tbe forecast included the
possibility of several more in·
ches of snow for Buffalo today '" and wind gusts as high as 40
miles per hour. But the winds
·were expected to drop to 10 to 20
m .p .b. by tonight.
Makowski said only vehicles
carrying necessary medicine.
food, or fuel will be allowed to
travel. Violators will be arrested
and prosecuted and will be sub-
ject to fines and imprisonment.
be said.
At least 11 states -including
New York -bad already or-
dered emergency measures to
deal with the weather and energy
crisis.
The federal energy legislation
would give Carter authority to
divert natural gas to areas where
<See STOR~, Pa«e A2)
Coast Panel
Okays Laguna
Fest Building ··
The South Coast RegJonal
Coastal Commis sion has
•uthori1ed the Laguna Beach
Festival ol Art.a and tbe city to
proceed with plans for a new
festival administration bullding.
Com misaioners meetlnl lo Huntlnlto~ Beach voted •P·
proval Mcoeby for demolition or
thre.e.x:istlng buildinp at the old
School of Art.a at 650 Laguna Ca-
nyon Road.
The lite._wfll UMm be occupJed
by a S!00.000 1t:ructure housing
featlval operations, with two
stories and J,193 square feet ol
•P•ce. Located on• elty parlt site, tbe
Jayo..t wJll feat¥?e 45 oa-alte
parld.nt a paces, 13 mdre than it
baa presently.
o.lly PiloJ St.ti .......
SOUTH AMERICAN TAYRA NEEDS HOME
But He'll Prob•blY Try to Eac•pe From It •
'Tiger Bird'
Is Tayra the Animal for You?
By PIUUP ROSMARIN
OI ttw O.lly Piiot St•lf
If you've wanted an aviary but
are allergic to bird feathers.
Suzanne Howa-rd , Laguna
Beach's animal services officer,
bas an animal for you.
If you've wanted a tiger but
can't stand loud noises, she's &ot
an anlmalforyou.
It's a tayra. a South American
forest-dwelling meal eater that
roamed two weeks in the Art
Colony before somebody threw a
parrot cage over it Saturday and
Mrs. Howard took it to a holding
cage.
She's worried about that cage.
which was made to transport a
dog. The tayra has already made
short work of at least two other
cages.
The brown-eyed weasel-like
creature, which when unafraid
s hows a gentle nature, just
doesn't like small cages.
A week ago Saturday the
animal services department had
set a trap for the animal in
Heisler Park, hoping to catch it
before some frightened or un-
friendly person did it }\arm.
The trap, baited with fresh
tuna. worked nicely. It worked ~
nicely all the way to the bottom of•
a 20-foot cliff. where the tayra
rolled the cage -and himself in·
side it-and escaped the trap.
The parrot cage proved no
more a challenge to the spunky
animal. While Mrs . Howard
·drove her truck toward the city
animal yard, the tayr a blithely
grabbed bold of two adjoining
sets of 1f.i-inch thick metal bars
and squeezed the dickens out of
them.
<SeeTAYRA. PageA2>
Electrician Faces
New Slaying Count
ByTOM"IJARLEY
OI tlle Oally Pilot S~lf
Although cleared or
m-anslaugbter charges by an
Orange County Superior Court
judge, LagWla Niguel electrician
Daniel Gonzales Guzman faces
. new allegations of second degree
murdertoday.
Deputy District Attorney Paul
Meyers explained that the new
charges are a renewal of those
'abandoned when Guzman, 32, or
29821 Paseo de Ocaso, was indict-
ed by the Grand Jury on charges
of involuntary manslaughter.
Those charges stemmed 'from
his alleged action in rigging a trip
wlre In his front yard that claimed
t h e life of Kelly Michelle
McMullen. bis neighbor's 2-year-
old daughter.
Guzman explained to sberirrs
officers that Lbe high voltage line
was intended to keep dogs and
ca ta ol!hi.s nower beds.
He was arrested on criminal
cbarees and later sued for
$300,000 in d amages by the
Mcllullens. M~ explained Monday that .Jud~ James 0 . Perez' dismissal
of the indictment counts was
based oo a tectmitallty that made
pr01ecut.loo of the indi~eetu lt
atoodlmpossihie.
"We have J:efi1ed cbar1es oC
second degree murder and
Guzman will be arraigned Feb.
28,' •the prosecutor said. Guzman
is free on his promise to appear in
SantaAnaMuojcipal Court.
Judge P e r ez dec'lined to
elaborate on bis pre-trial de-
cision.
Defense attorney James Stotler
branded the continued prosecu·
lion of ~an as "insane .. Mon-
day after commenting that his
50-page brief and not any error in
the indictment led Judge Perez to
dlami.sa the charges.
"Very simply, there is no case
against this mad," Stotler pro-
tested. "This prosecution ii>
idiotic and if the effort puts me iQ
my grave I intend to clear Mr.
Guzman of these charges ...
Coast
Variable blgh clouds
· t h r ou1h Wedn esday.
Cooler daya with hlabs in
809. Lowa 45 to 53.
I I
• AZ DAILY PILOT L/SC
Artifact .
A demand lbat. an envlronmen.
tal impact report be written on
San Clemente':. l'ffentlf macted
sewer fee increases wU coof ""1l
the Ctt)' Coun~ll meet1ni at '7:30
p.m. Wtd.neldly tn city haU.
Howard Mushett, presldent of
tbe San Clemente Homeowners
AuodaUon, tn a letter to the
council clles a recent San Fr-an·
d1co cue where the court re.
quired an impact rfport on a
larieJy economic matter.
Mushett arcuet that extension ol this rullq would requJre lbe
city to write an impact report on
the recently pa11ed bikes of
sewer fees from SC to $9.25 mon· • tbJy.
Richard Ahlman, director of
building and plam:Un1, however,
maintains that no sucti report Ls
required. In a memo, Ahlman
notes lbat a negaUve Impact
declaration h~en made for the rat.e incre .
The issue lat.eat in a
series or criti ms made by the
homeowners a latlon against
the city.
Other city business includes:
-Presentation of a commen·
dation and certificate of serlice
to former City Manager Kenneth
Carr, currently finance director.
Carr will leave soon to assume
the post of city manager in
Alhambra.
-A request from the San
Clemente Golf Committee lbat
the golf course administration be
given nexiblllty to allow reduced
fee play at other than early
morning and late afternoon
hours during "slack time" in
startings.
Top Citizen
Sought by
SC Chamber
The San Clemente Chamber of
.Commerce is seeking nomina·
tlons for the 1976 Citizen of the
Year. • Community members m ay
1nominat.e one San Clemente resi-
dent, man or woman.
Judging is based on t.he
personal contribution or the
nominee to the city, through ac·
Uvtties, service and leadership.
A selection committ~ made
up of former winners of the
award includes Max Berg, Stan
Herring. Robert P. Beasley, Paul
Presley, Clifford Murray,
Donald Hansen, Walter Lelbig,
James Slaven, Leon Riley and
Ralph Klaasen.
Nominations must be·received
by Feb. 28. The winner will ~an·
nounced at the chamber's officer
installation banquet April 2, at
the San Clemente Inn.
Nomination forms are availa·
ble at the chamber office, UOO N.
El Camino Real, or by mail.
F,....P,..eAI
IRVINE •••
analyst with lbe New York inveal-
mant firm ot Marian Stanley. ex-
plained ~t allowance for auch
facton u taxes and the Irvine
Company's eub now subltantiaJ-
1)' r~uced the S380 milUoa price
ta1-t
Two groups of minority
· ~lockbolden who made tt clear
that they would prefer accep-
tance ol the Mobil offer were aJ.
lowed to intervene la the trial
.Monday but only u observen of
the courtroom action.
The)' were identified to Judp
.Judae u repreaent•ti•ea ot
Kathryn Dillard Wheeler~ a
grenddau1bter d IUD• Irvine
.. &lld · tbe beln ot 'Gloria Wood
Irvine and Myfordlrvlne.,
. Statements by lawyers for both
aroupe of stockholders lndJcate
that the two I actions hold Irvine
comp8DJ 1bara currenUy valued
•t more than $40 mllUon.
DAILY PILOT
•
0..lly ~let St•f l'Mto
THE PROBLEM: A TIGER IN HER TANK
Animal Control Officer Suzanne Howard
Anthony
Changes
Statement
By GARY GRANVILLE
OtllleDellyPtleCllaff
Less than a monlb after first ru-
in• it, Orange Counfy Supervisor
Philip Anthony amended his fs.nal
campaign disclosure statement'
Monday to show the true source of
$83,200~ ol campaign loans.
Oo his origmal disclosure state·
ments, AnLbony showed the loans
to Friends of Philip Anthony were
from himself.
But the We s tminster
supervisor's amended statement
shows the loans came from
former paid· police informant
Gene Conrad, Fullerton attorney
Michael Remington and RJO En· terprises.
In an interview last week, An·
thony said he showed the loans
coming from himself because he
believed be personally. not the
campaign committee, was
responsible for their repayment.
·' l believed I borrowed the
money personally and, in tum,
lent it to my campaign commit-
tee," thesupervisor.§..aid.
He said that repoftlng method
was followed after consultlng
with political consultant William
Butcher, attorney Chip Nielson
and Certified Public Accountant
Ray Edwards.
"There certainly was no intent
to d eceive anyone," Anthony in· sisted.
His amended state ment shows
he borrowed $30,000 from in·
former·turned·financier Conrad
in the fmal days of his campaign
against Sant.a Ana City Coun-
cilman Harry Yamamoto.
In a tape recorded interview
three weeks a10, Conrad denied
lending Anthony money and said
the supervisor probably got the
money from his retirement fund
at Rockwell International.
But apparently Conrad lent the
$30,000 to an Anthony friend and
campaign backer who, in tum,
loaned lbe money to the then
supervi:sorial canclida te.
Demolition
Job Delayed
Action on a proposal to de·
.molilb existing old concrete pU·
tngs, a retalnlne wall and old
structural foundations for a pro-
Eed 21·unit cond~lnlurn ~· \ in San Clemente wu de· ayecl two weeks by the So\a(h
Coa~ Regional Coastal Com·
mission Monday.
Arica ~elopment CoMpany,
lnc., aeeks•permJsslon to build
the 21 unlta in a tbree-stoty
st~ucture at 407 Pasadena
Court.
The FOJect would include a
swimming pool and rec:~atlon
area and featurd paUo balconies
IQI' the units. . . ·
FroaaP~Al
TAYRA •••
The tayra spent the rest of the
trip free in the truck, zipping
about Mrs. Howard's bead.
She's now trying to (ind a zoo or
wild animal park to take the
fellow, but so far has had no suc-
cess. ·
She m ay have to look for a
private citizen "who understands
wild animals" and has a permjt
to keep them.
She suggested that the ideal
caee would be as large as an
aviary -at least 10 feet in all
dimensions -and with very
strone bars, s paced closely
together. It should have a con·
crete floor so t.he t.ayra can't dig
his way out with his powerful
paws.
Even an automatic feeder will
have to be something special,
Mni. Howard said. A feeder she
uses that is made for large
animals was made short work of
when the tayra pried loose its
stainless steel spout.
All in all, she said, the cage
should be stout. "Oh. you know.
something suitable for. keeping a
tiger in."
Laguna Scout
Post Planning
'Past' Night . .
An "Olcl Timers and Parents
Night" will be held by the
Laguna Beach Fire and Rescue
Explorer ~out Post at 7:30 p.m .
Friday al Top of the World Fire
station.
Old members and affiliates are
invited to meet with current ex-
plorers and reUve the old dayS of
the post founded in 1967 under the
lhen·sponsorsbip of St. Mary's
Episcopal Church. Currently it is
sponsored by the Firemen's As-
soeiation.
Ouri.dg its 10 yea~s. the post
has assiBted with various civic
functions including first aid, traf.
fi e control and communications
at city parades and events, and
has planted and maintained pine
trees on Park Avenue.
The poet annually sponsors a
sci.mile bike hike. Post members
receive training in first aid,
climbing and search and rescue
techniques, communications,
wildernesa bildng and camping.
Prospective members are in·
vited to attend also .
.
~nter Boycotted
PARIS (AP> -Som e
Americans aniered over the re·
tease of Pai.1t111lan 1uerrtlla
Abu Daoud boycotted the open·
Ina of France's maintnoth
Geor111 Pompldou National
Center ot Art and Culture on
Monday ni1ht. Critlca praised
the 1tructu.re as practical or
decried it.Al qly.
• •
• • •
to
Growth, Buy
The San Juan Capistrano City
Council will consider two Issues
of special interest to city resi-
dents Wednesday -residential
construction allocation~ and
possible purchase of Capistrano
Union Hllb School.
Th~ council meeting is
scheduled to begin at 7 p.m. in ci-
ty of!ices, 32400 Paseo Adelanto.
San Juan councilmen adopted
a growth managtnneot ordinance
Dec. lS, limlting home building
permits in the city to 400 a year
The ordinance require• that a
three.year residential building_
allocation schedule be adopted
for a pproved projects every
February.
Because the ordinance is new,
the council will have to allocate
home building permits for four
yeaia.the first time around. On
Wednesday councilmen will con ..
sider a planning commission re-
commendation which specifies
all 400 permits to be issued in
1977.
All but 27 permits arc assigned
to specific builders for 1978 in the
commission's recommendation.
Fifty-eight permi'ts are tagged
for 1979, leaving 342 yet to be al·
located.
The recommendation specifies
no particular projects for 1980,
but the ceiling for that year has
been set at 350 rather than 400.
The resolution proposing city
purchase of Capistr ano Union
High School anticipates possible
demolition of the buildings.now
Microwave Oven
Stolen From Bar
A microwave oven valued by
the victims at $400 has been
stolen from a bar in San Juan
Capistrano.
Orange County sheriff's offi .
cers said the theft was reported by
said the theft was reported by-·
operators of the "Whistle Stop"
bar at 31952 Del Obispo St. They
said the oven was carried from a
back room of the bar while
employes were busy in the serv-
ing area.
used for fifth and sixth 1raders and called Capistrano School.
If the resolution is passed, the
City of San Juan would offer to
purchase the school buildin1s
from Capistrano UnJfied Scbool
DlJtrict for an amount as yet un\
determined and the land for $1.
The city would offer to lease
back the buildings lo the school
district for $1 a year for the next
two years. at which time the city
would take run control of Lbe pro-
perty.
City officials have mentioned
the old high school site as a possl·
ble location for a San Juan com·
m unity cent.er.
A school district spokesman
sai d today,dis tri c t ad·
ministrators are aware or the
city's lnt.erest 1n the site. No in·
depth discussion bas taken place
to date on possible purchase of
the property by Lhe city, she said.
F,....PageAI
STORMS •••
it's most needed and would free
some natural gas from federal
price controls through Aug. 1.
Industry has been hit the
hardest by the gas shortage, and
officials in Ohio and Indiana ex·
pressed fears of more workers
being laid off amid a deepening
sh_ortage.
Indiana Employment Security
Division Director John F. Coppes
said a new cutback announced
Monday by the Northern Indiana
Public Service Co. could mean
)ayorts for 100,000. Gov. Otis R.
Bowen estimates S0,000·60,000
state residents are out of work
and 3,100 firms have been affect·
ed by curtailments. Northern In·
diana announced cutbacks to
2,500 more firms.
Probe Under Way
LOS ANGELES <AP> ·-The
record industry is under federal
investigation for possible an·
titrust violations.
ESTATE PLEDGED
Howard Hughe•
Crime-Fight
Pledge Seen
Hughes Will?
LOS ANGELtS CAP) -A 10-
year·old document which pledges
the Howard Hughes estate to the
task or fighting organized crime
in America is being considered a
possible will by county officials.
County PubUc Administrator
Bruce Altman said Monday that
the document, a contract between
Hughes and two other men, could
·be deemed a testa mentary docu·
ment from the eccentric
billionaire and therefore binding
as his la.st wish.
The contract s pecifies that
Hughes is to pay $30 million to two
men, Edward M. Barbara and
Robert Morgan, for "certain
personal services ... the nature
of which are to be known only to
Howard R. Hughes, Edward M.
B,_rbara and Robert Morgan."
Neither man was available for
comll'ent and there was no back·
ground detailed on them.
The document, purportedl y
s igned by all three mcl) Feb. 11 ,
1966, said it was to be considered
HugKes' last will1nd testament in
the event of his death within 'ive
years.
#. Good values on
tireS ) and batteries~. ,,,.. .
• uxon·Sllel
CushionaR Pachetta-'• E.conomy Racial Belted Rdl 18 s2449 s3349 · S4199.. s4799.
Plue Sl.72 Fed, Ee. TP lor A71-13 blrtc:-.11, wltll lflt "•
Plu• 12.29 FM, Ex. To for
E7t-14 b~kwll!, with trt~I'. P111t 11.U FM.£•, Tiii 104' '617f.13 whlltWtll, w1111 lrlde<ln. Pluw 12 oe F«I. flr. Ttx '°' 8117 .. 13 wt11i....111, ~ tt~
Four-ply ~tst•r cord
for a amooth ride.
Polyltttr cord body with
twin llberglaaa cord belts.
l:: u M .~~ .. ....... ;;._.
irn-14 NlM tf '2
011-U JUI '" °' .... 40At ·-,.
"' .. " 4t,4t ,.
""''' 4J,At , ..
RllOltl performance. ecor1omf~ally priced. ... loh• • •• ....
UIJl.11 I tt
CMdt OW""'" Oii Ollltf .....
Our best tire. Tops In
mileage and pfrlormance,
PrlcH NY vary at participating
Valuec.nw ata\lont operated DY Independent Eiocon dMllHI who .. t
thtlr own prlc ... PrlCM and Oflt,.
ahown tfe In affect tt1r1>11gh March 31 at !non~· 1tatlon1 fd9r11lllld
by a ValueCentef csoor .ion rNCSlnf,
"Opereled by E1ucon Company, U.SA;•
In areu where they or• localld •
• ,.
• '•
(
I .
••
-
·orange coast .
EDITION
•
Tod ay's Closin g
N.Y.Stoeks L
j
VOL. 70, .NO. 32, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY,FEBRUARY1,1W7
" I •• e Co1npany. ~ears 2nd Cash Bid: .
\ .
' A claim by the .MobU OU Com-
lpany that it is the only contender
willlnl to m~e an all cash ofter
'for the Irvin~ Company was
quickly shot down Monday when
.the trial of Irvine heiress Joan
Irvine Smith's lawsuit aaainst the
James lulne Foundation re-
sumed in Orange County Superior
Court.
Representative's or a COD·
sortium head~ by Wall Street
:ltl&mat ch
financter Charles All~n and Mrs. Smith is known to favor
Detroit developer Alfred Taub-th• Allen-Taubman bid because
man announced that they are now • ' of a provision that she would be aJ.
prepared to offer $282. 7 million in lowed to retain her 22.4 percent in· cashfortbelrvinelnt.e'"!~ts. terest in the company found~ by Tbe olfer lops Mobil s $281.9 tM-grandfather if the offer is sue·
million bid by $800,000. And it ap-cessful.
pears to make the Allen-The other two contenders In the
Taubman interest the top con-Irvine Company acquisition
tender in what has been a bit~ race are not prepared to extend
batUe for control of the lrvme that privilege to Mrs. Smith. She
Compan)'. would be compelled to sell her
' lt wasn't much of a ~ht when this
Volkswagen collided with a hool bus to-
day in front of N~wgort arbor High
School. Police said the driver of the car,
Karen Pa rsons, 16. of Newport Beach ap-
parently lost control of her vehicle which
collided with the empty bus driven by
William Lutes, 55. of Laguna Beach.
Police said only minor injuries were re-
ported in the mish a p. . •
r.• ,.•
Frigid Fist Slams East
Buff aw Disaster Cited as 12 Succumb
By 1be Associated Press
Winter kept its frigid grasp on
he Northeast and Midwest to·
ay. and a state of emergency
as declared in Buffalo. N.Y .
here 12 persons have died in the
orststonn in the city's history.
An estimated 7S deaths have
.'Mos t W ateh e d '
been blamed on the bitte r
weather in states hit by the big
freeze. (Related story, A4)
An Anny engineering battalion
of 300 men was ordered to Buffalo
today lo help the city clear its
streets of abandoned autos and
snow dnfts. Federal dis aster of-
f 'Roots' Conclusion~
Breaks All Records
NEW YORK <AP> -The
serialization or "Roots" made
television historr last wttk. ac·
cording to A. C. Nielsen fiaures
made availab1e today.
Sunday's concluding episode
was the all-time most watched
abow in America, In addltion, four
of the 10 most watched sho't'S in
the history of television were
episodes of the serialization of
Alex Haley's novel .
"Roots," Jan. 25: "Ed Sullivan
Show,'' with the BeaUes in 1964,
and Super BowlXJ last month.
ABC said that during the eight
nigbt.s "Roots'' was aired starting
Jan. 23, it was seen by 8.'S percent
of tbe potential viewing audience,
or 130 miltloo persona at one time
or another.
It had an average 44 .9 rating,
wbicb translates to 32 million
homes, and was seen by an
averaee of two-thirds of "the
television audience all week.
ricials said the unit was ordered
to ny 'tith its.equipment from Ft.
Bragft": N.C., "as soon as they
can get here."
The natural gas shortage
ca used by freezing weather kept
ECONOMY'S FREEZE
MAY OUTLAST COLD-A11
many schools. factories and busi·
nesses closed, leaving up to l.S
mi Ilion workers off the job.
Congress moved closer to
· enacting legislation to ease the
natural gas crisis. An emergency
blll proposed by President Carter
was approved by the Senate 91 to
2 1'fonday night. The House ap~
proved the bill today but it must
be reconsiled • with the Senate
measure. Bu Ualo Mayor Stanley
Makowski issued the emefltency
declaration for his city at 3:30
a .m. PST, banning all but essen·
Ual vehicular traffic In the city to
•nable federaj and stale crews to
clear the streets, still clogged by
abansfoned autos and drifting .
snow.
The forecast included the
possibility of several more• in-
ches o( snow for Buffalo today
<See STORMS. Page A2)
.
stock iftbey look over.
The Allen-Taubman represen-
tatives madejt clear Monday im·
mediately after Judge James F.
Judge resumed what has been a
two-year court battle that the new
offer will only apply1f a system of
sealed bids is ordered by the
court.
Allen-Taubman officials and
representatives of Cadillac
Fairview Corporation of Toronto,
"
Canada, the other major bidder.
have reacted strongly to an
earlier o~dding procedure.in
which tht news media often
learned of bids before they were
filed in the courtroom.
Lawyers for the foundation
frown on the suggested sealed bid-
ding procedure in \he light of their
repeated statements that they
want to sell the foundation's 54.5
percentcootrollinginterestinthe
Irvine Company to Mobil.
Mn. Smith sued the foundation
two years ago at a time when the
defendants were preparing to sell
t.oMobllfor$200million.
The Federal Tax Reform Act of
1969 compels the foundation to
dispose of its Irvine Company
holdlnJS by 1983. Testimony offered Monday in-
dicated that the Irvine Com·
<S.IRVINE, Page AZ)
State Imposes
Gas Use Liinits
Relie.f
Action
Taken
SAN FRANCISCO CAP>
California imposed emergency
restrictions today on the use of
natural gas -includin& a ban on
all luxury uses -to help relieve
the crisis in other parts of the
country.
,, Robert Batinovich, president
of the California Public Utilities
Com mission, said the restric·
lions may place Californians
"below the comfort level," but
will not impose hardships as in
th& Mid west, East and South.
~'The ~ergy critia is indlvisi·
bJe." he explained. ''What affects
other parts of the country affects California. The steps are being
taken because jobs are being lost
and people are dying."
Southern California Gas Com·
pany last week said it could
make 2.S billion cubic feet availa-
ble to Cities Service in Oklahoma
.. nd Kansas through the El Paso
Natural Gas Company and
Tra nswestern Pipeline Com·
pany.
Pacific Gas and Electric bas
offered to loan Southern Natural
Gas Company in Birmingham.
Ala., up to 100 million cubic feet
of gas per day for a month for use
in Georgia, South Carolina,
Alabama, Mississippi, Ten-
nessee and Florida.
Balinovich said the gas will be
s ent "on loan" lo hard-hit areas
and will be replaced later
this year as the supply situation
improves. But he added, "even if
we shouldn't be able lo get it back,
it's one count.cy." Besides encouraging the
transfer of gas supplies by the.two
major California utilities, the
PUC order, eUe clive im-
mediately:
Sout hland lJnit
AMENDS FUND REPORT
County Supervisor Anthony
Re quires a ll utility
cu s t o mers to se t their
thermostats at 65 degrees during
the day and 55 degrees dll,ring
sleeping hours and suggesls iJddi-
tional sweaters and clothing or
·'other mean s or keeping
warmer'' be used.
-Orders a .halt to all luxury
uses of natural gas in th~ st.ate, in·
eluding heating swimming pools,
gas fireplaces, decorative light-
ing and similar uses.
-Restricts space healing tern ·
peratures of commercial and in·
dustrial establishments to a high
of 65 degrees. and requires heat-
ing be shut off during non business
hoor& except those areas where
minimum temperatures are
needed lo keep pipes from freez-
ing or being dam aged.
-Requires all hotel. motel and
similar businesses to shut off heat
in vacant guest rooms and forbids
use of heating or cooling facilities
until the room is occupied.
i\ittisf!lc)~ ilistrict . .
' Funds Supported
SACRAMENTO CAP) -
LeaWation authorizing ~ $2.93-
mllllon state loan to keep the
Southern California antlsmog dis·
trict afloat has been passed lo the
noorofthestateSenate.
But another bill giving the dis·
triot a no:strlngs-attached ,
$2.42-mlllion grant was killed hy
the Senate Finance Commillee
Mondayonal-lOvote.
AnthQny
Clarif~es
Loans
~ ByGARYGRANVILLE OllMDally~l ... Sl•ll
' I'
Less than a month after first fit.
ing it, Orange County Supervisor
Philip Anthony amended his final
campaign disclosure statement
Monday to show the true source of
$63.200 worth of campaign loans.
On his original disclosure slate-'
ments, Anthony showed the loans
to Friends of Philip Anthony were
from himself. •
But the Westminster·
supervisor's amended statement•
shows the loans came from
former paid police informant
Gerfe Conrad, Fullerton attorney
Michael Remington and RJO En-
terprises.
In an interview last week, An-
thony said he showed the Joans
coming from himself because he'
believed he personally, not the
c a mpa ign committee, was
responsible for their repayment.
"I believed I borrowed the
money personally and, i,n turn,
lent it to my campaign commit~
tee," the supervisor said.
He s aid that reporting method
was followed after consulting
with political consultant William
,_Butcher, attorney Cbip Nielson
and Certified Public Accountant
Ray Edwards.
•'There certainly was no intent
to deceive anyone." Anthony iJi.
sisted.
His amended statement shows
he borrowed $30,000 rrom in-
former-turned-financier Conrad
in the final days of his campaign
against Santa An a City Coun-
cilman Harry Yamamoto.
' In a tape rec4Jrded interview
three weeks ago, Conrad denied
lending Anthony money and said
the supervisor probably got the
money from his r etirement fund
al Rockwell International.
But apparently Conrad lent the
$30,000 to an Anthony fri~nd a~9
campaign backer who, in turn,
loaned the money to the then
supervisorial candidak? ·
As for Remington. he a·gre¢
with Anthony's original suppo&i--
tlon that $28,200 worth oC Antho~
<See ANTHONY, !>age A2)
Coast
Weath er
Wlth "Roots.. listed in last
w~ek's national prlme-Ume
averagesassevenofthetopseven
ehows, ABC carried the entire
week ending Jan. 30•Ithall16 of
tbe top 16sbows.
ltslowest-rankedabowoff;Trat·
cd programs was tied with CBS'
••M•A•S•H." It was "The Cap-
tain and Tennille."
. Water Rationing Bits
In a 10-1 vote, thecommitteeap-
proved the loan bill, by As·
semblyman Jerry Le wis CR·
Highland>. The Lewis bill would provide
emeraency funding for the
Southern California Alr Quallly
Management Dbtrict.
Varlabl6 high clouds
throuah Wednesday.
Cooler days with highs in
60s. Lows .fS lo 53.
Raped 26th, "The Captain and
~nnille" was seen In an estlmat-ea 1.58 million homes.
The' concludina episode or
.. Root.a" posted a 51.1 rating,
meaning· it was viewed in 36.4
million bouleholds.
A Nielsen ·spokesman said it
outpaced last tall 'a record-setting
broadcast of ••Gone with the
Wind'' oa NBC. He saJd the rank· ws of the top sboWI in teleYisfon
bl1Wtynow1toodthl1 way:
.. Roots," Jan. JO.: "Gone with
tile W1nd -Pan t · '• ••oone with Ute Wlnd ~ Pm It:'' ••Bob Hope ·
Cbriltirlas Special.'' 1970; ''The
ualtlve," tM'1 aad "Roota,' ..
an. 28., tied in llflh place:
• Rooti," Jan. 27; .. .Bob Hope •
Cbrlltmu Special.··-!,!11: ·
Marin County Reaidenta Filling Veneh
SAN RAFAEL (AP) -Strict water ra-
tiooin& began in parched Marin County today,
after residents hit the slo'tes iii a last-minute
rush for anything that would bold water.
"It's been phenomenal," aaJd manager
Blll Daniels of United Markets in San
Anselmo. "We'.-e completely out of b\lcketa.
·They're buyin1them t~ and three at a time."
The new district faces lio"volt
by Los Aqeles County• fthicb ls
refusinl to pay its share of the
buqet.
The district Is made up of all of
Oranae County, and the populoos
artas ot Los Angeles, Riverside
and San Bemardlno counties.
The amount a county pays de-
' pendsooitspopulatJon.
Loi An1e&es County has 70 per-
ct»t of tb• popUlatlon and II sup.
PQied to pay 70 percent ot the b-•diet. But the county'• 1a~ contend that lf the
coonty providta most of the fUnd.
i•I lt l1'aukt hav& mollt of the
vot.. an Ule diatiiit't bOard,
wtdftl laM CM Job OI Com.tollinl 1tauan.arrsomcum<>1.
I NSIDE T OD4' Y
Johfm11 Bench'• ettranged
U1i/t gd1 Mr tum. at the p4ate
QI •he uu.r how Mf'.oll-.tar
liubola:f plaJ/ed ping pong
t.Dith tail bt.C man on tta.ir
Wftfding night .and ~lted
ah• pou for HuaCler
mogadne. See P.age A3.
l •tleJ:
'
--
:.4.1 DAIL 'f P1LOT N
B1 TON BA&LEY
OI .. Mly .. u .. ti.ff
One ot tour men who tnructed
What the trial prosecutor
•scribed as "unspeakable
rture" on a man w~o wu
aten, ·"!eked, atranafed did'
rned to death ln a Placentia
artment waJ (ound gl.lllty ot
cond.degree murder late Mon-
y.
A• Orift1e County Superior
Co.urt jury ended nearty four
days ol deliberation by retumlnc
that verdict ln the trial ot Gary
Essex; 24, of Compton. He was
additionally found guilty of as-
sault cbarces.
.hsdce Walter Smith ae\ Feb. 16
H the date he will sentence £s.
sex to what could be not less than
11 years in state prison on the two
•
eoa..tdlonl U he deddet to apply
them cuisecuUvely.
He hu already 1cbeduled Feb.
10 H the date he Wiii sentence co-
defendant Rlcbarc,t "Preacher"
McKay, 22, of Placentia, who
may draw a lite term f ollowmc
hJ1 e,a.rUer Jury eonvtctton of f'lnt
desreemurder.
• p,... P.,,e .4J
McKay, Easex , Jerome
Dedrick Toles, 19, of Compton
and Billy Wayne Hollins, 22, of
Santa Ana, were aReSted In con·
nectlon with the killing of Ervin
Sutton, 22, of Garden Grove, last ~ONY STATEMENT. • •
April2S.. ·
It was testJfied that the four
men, helped by two women who
were described by the defendants
as victims of Sutton 'a association
with police officers, hogtied Sul·
ton then kicked, slasbedGtnd beat
hlrp.
na were personal and not to the
pervisor's campaign commit·
t .
i o back him up, the FuUertori
orney bas copies of three An·
ny notes, all o( them signed
rsonally by the county
~ervisor and with no mention or
Jilli campaign committee. .
f.lso, the three checks C01tering
tOe $?.8,200 ~rth of loans are
payable to" lip Anthony" and
bear asimila ndoraement.
.Reminetoa said ... he la pleued
\Vith the way Anthony has handled
t he transactions, \pcluding the
immediate repayment or a $15,000
;Caner: Cut
Dou:n Trips
WASHINGTON CAP) -
1Sresident Carter has told
his Cabinet to "cut back
drastically -cut out the
ostentatiousness of trips."
In another or his in-
creasingly familiar ex·
horlations agains t Ute
emoluments of public or-
fice, the new president
cited Monday what he
considered bad examples
from the Ford ad -
ministration. His depart·
me~ heads, in tum, told
him how they were saving money.
One week after cutting
out door-to-door limousine
service for While House
staff aides, Carter told his
Cabinet: ''I'll hope you'll
go the s econd mile. l
don 't want to be
superficial about this."
STORMS ••.
and wind gusts as high rus 40
miles per hour But the winds
were expected to drop to 10 to 20 m p .h. by tonight..
Makowski said only vehicles
carrying necessar y medicine.
food . or fuel will be allowed to
travel. Violators will be arrested
and pr06ecuted and will be sub-
jttt to fines and imprisonment,
he said.
At lea.o.t 11 states -including
New York -had already or-
dered emergency measures to
deal with the weather and energy c:risls.
The federal energy legislation
would give Caoer authority to
d .. ert natural 1&1 to ar•as where
lt's meet needed and wttuld free
some naturJ) gas from federal
price controls throu1h Aug. 1.
I Industry has been bit the
liardest b_y the gas shortage, and
1cr!iciala ~ Ohio and Indiana ex-
pressed fears of more wortcen
betnc laid ort amid a deepening
ebortace.
I Indiana Empl~yment Security
Division Director John 'F. Coppes
aatd a new cutback announced
Monday by the Northern Indiana
Public Service CAP. could mean
layofls for 100,000. Gov. Otis R.
4 ' Btwen estimates S0,000·60,000
~tale resident& are out of wor~
arat 3,100 firms have been affect-
ed! by curtailments. Northern ln-
iana announced cutbacks to
,JOO more firms.
DAILY PILOT
._, .. _
~ ........... __
w.~~= .. ..._ -·-.... • "="..:.i\. T.::-....... .... ~ _._. ........ ........ ._..-....,........_.
primary election loan from the
proceed.sofa fund raiser.
Richard J . O'Neill, until three
weeks ago chairman of the
Democratic Party in Orange
County and until last weekend
Southern California party
chairman, is a partner in RJO J?n·
terprises.
Like the Conrad and Remington
loans, Anthony originally showed
the $S,OOO RJO loan as coming
from himself.
Last week; Anthony said he had
talked with the District At·
tomey's Office and "probably"
would amend his disclosure state-'
ment.
The freshman supervisor said
the stir caused by his reporting
methods surprised him and is
something he'd "like to lay to
rest."
His disclosure state ments were
originally challenge d when
$10,000 shown as c'oming from a
Costa Mesa building supply firm
was traced through Conrad.
The "2-year-oJd former police
informer is under a federal Grand
Jury's scrutiny because of the
operations of Pension Funds or
America, an Irvine-based firm he
controls.
Along with county Su~rvlsor
Ralph Diedrich's role as a volun·
teer campaign fundraiser for
various political candidates last
fall, Conrad's and Remington's
parts in the campaigns or An·
thony and Assemblyman Dennis
Mangers (D-Huntington Beach),
are under scrutiny by the Orange
County Grand Jury.
The county· Grand Jury re·
portedly also is investigating ..
techniques used by Diedrich to
solicit C·ampaign funds from
buiiders, developers ..and others
who do business with the county.
Conrad, Remington, and
Conrad aide Loran Norton are
among those subpoenaed to ap-
pear before the jury this week.
Cable Splice
Blamed/or
NB Blackout
Otricials at the Southern
California F.dison Company to·
day said ~failure or an under·
gr"Ound cable splice was the cause
of a two-hour power outage that
left 2,800 Newport &each
customers without electricity
Saturday morning.
A spokesman for the company
said the affected area was alOl}I
Newport Boulevard from 1Slh
Street to Balboa Boulevard and
along Pacific Coast HiChYlay
from Newport to Jamboree Road.
The outage occurred al t : 14
a .m. and power was r-eatored by
8:39 a.m., an Edison Company
spokesmansaid. ·
Newport Beach police officer:s
directed traffic on the two
thoroughfares during the outage.
a policespokesman said.
Sutton's ordeal, which included
being jumped on while held down
in a bathtub filled with water.
ended when one or the two
women injected battery acid into
his veins and virtually burned
him to death.
One ol the two women bas been
identified by the prosecution. as
Cynthia Mendenhall, 24, 143C
Avenida Del Mar, San Clemente,
who faces a preliminary bearing
Feb. 17 in Santa Ana municipal
court on related murder charges.
Arrestine officers said Mrs.
Mendenhall provided them with
the information that led to the ar·
rests or the rour men but
minimized her 'own role in the
killing of Sutton.
It seemed unlikely late Mon-
day that Toles would go on trial
on charges ot robbery, assault
with a deadly weapon and dis·
position or a body.
Judge Smith set Friday for a
court appearance that may re-
sult in Toles' filing a plea to the
allegations. Hollins bas pleaded
guilty to reduced charges or be-
ing an accessory to murder and
faces sentencing at a later date.
,,...., Pflfle Al
IRVINE ..•
pany's assets had been valued at
$380 million shortly before Mobil
made a S200 mUllon offer that was
diverted by Mrs'. Smith's court ac-
tion.
Witness Bowen McCoy. an
analyst witl\Mle New York invest-
m ant firm cAtorgan Stapley, ex-
plained that allowance for such
factors as taxes and the Irvine
Company's cash now substantial-
ly reduced the $380 million price
tag.
Two groups of minority
stockholders who made it clear
that they would prefer accep-
tance or the Mobil offer were al-
lowed to intervene in the trial
Monday but only as observers of
the courtroom action.
They were idenUlled to Judge
Judge as representatives or
Kathryn Dlllard Wheeler. a
granddaughter of James Irvine.
and the heirs or Gloria Wood
Irvine and Myford Irvine.
Statements by lawyers for both
groups of stockholders lndlcate
that the two factions hold Irvine
company shares currently valued
at moretban'40 million.
Coins, TV Stolen
Burglars who entered via an
unlocked door took coins and a
television set with a total value of
$387 from a Newport Beach area
home, Orange County sheriff's
officers said. Deputie& .said the
theft was reported by retiree
Thomas Gerald Norr, 61, or 2285
Tustin Ave. He was away from
home at the time.
Park Laml Issue
I
Review, SchedUled
N e.-por.t Sea ch Park1,
Beaches and Recreation com-
missioners will review a pro-
poud ballot ton~ht mea1ure
that calls for residential de-
vel9pen to dedkate more land to
tbe city ror parks.
A petiUon aubm1tted to the city
council by Dr. Gene Atbertoo,
calla for a increue in tbe park
dedlcattoa staodard from the
curreot two ac:.res per 1,000
popuJatloo to five acres per 1,000
people.
COUDdl.IMn decided to put oll a decillc)e on the iniUatJve in Cll'der
to &ive the cily'1 Rlan.n.ui, Com·
mlllklll aDd the Pub, S.aches ·
and Recreation Commlaalon
US11e to ltqdy lbe propoeaL
Tbe comcU la expected to take
up the matter aiald h b. H . .Clb' ...... Robert ·~,...
ported lo the clt,y CCMdlCU tbat.Glii
averap ~ty paitr. witllrout any
fancr lanclle~ or atehltec·
tura f eatuns COila '3.000 an
acre a year to maintain.
W1"ft allC) •Um•i.d that tbe
dedk.U. 1tandard could ftllult
In t!W. dedication of up to uo
acres b)' tbe time tb cll1 ,.
Mbes lt.t projected populatkln ol
~·-by 1115. ~ Mberton bu dilpwd Ullil
pOioL lie~ the .mOlt the d-ty, wwld set out OI tbe new11taa.
dard would be 100 aua.
He explained that his Initiative
carriea provlaions for developers
to pay a fee to the city ln place of
dedicating pukland and this fee
cpuld be used to develop parks.
Tuesday niabt'• re•ular meet·
inc of the PMJ\ commlaslon
be1ln1 at 7:30 p.m. in council
c bambers. Plannlna cC)m·
miaaionen are expected lb dis·
euaa tbe lnltlaUve •t their Feb. 10
meetl.q.
Sewer 1,ine
:Vote ~elayed
. ...
RelN!hi ng Old Dept hs
Pacific Telephone repairmen are working
~8 feet under the ground at the comer of
Bristol Street and Santa Ana Avenue,
splicing telephone ~ables for Costa Mesa
customers. Officials at the utility said 14
concrete ducts. of conduit cable. some put
in years ag0-for future use, are now being
spliced into operation. The utility expects
work on the project to be completed
within two weeks.
Mtirder Charge Refiled
Niguel Man Cleared in Mamlaughter
Alth o ugh clear e d o r
manslaughter charges by an
Orange County Superior Court
judge, Laguna Niguel electrician
Daniel Gonzales Guzman faces
new allegations or second degree
murdertodav.
Deputy DiStrict Attorney Paul
Meyers explained that the new
charges are a renewal of those
abandoned when Guzman, 32, of
29821 Paseo de Ocuo, was indict-
ed by the Grand Jury on~arges
or involuntary manslauifiler.
Those charges stemmed from
his alleged action in rigging a trip
, wlrelnbistrontyardthatclaimed
the life of Kelly Mirhelle
McMullen, his neighbor's 2-year-
old daughter.
Guzman explalned to sheriff's
officers that the high voltage line
was intended to keep dogs and
cats off his flower beds. He was arrested on crimanaJ
charges and later sued for
$300,000 in damages by the
Mc Mullens.
Meyers explained Monday that
Judge James 0 . Perez' dis~ssal
or the indictment counts was
based on a technicality that made
prosecution of the indictment as it
stood impossible.
"We have refiled charges of
second degree murder and
Guzman will be arraigned Feb.
28," the prosecutor said. Guzman
is free on his promise to appear in
Santa Ana Municipal Court.
Judge Perez declined to
e laborate on his pre-trial de-
cision.
Defense attorney Jam es Stotler
branded the continued prosecu-
tion or Guzman as "insane" Mon-
day after commenting that his
SO-page brief and not any error in
the indictment led Judge Perez to
dismiss the charges.
"Very simply, there~ no case
against this man," Stouer pro-
tested. "This prosecu\lon is
idiotic and if the effort puts me in
· my grave I intend to clear Mr.
Guzmanofthesecha!ees."
Man Burns SeU
MOSCOW (AP> -A man set
l\lmself on fire in Red Square · · ·
Monday and is being treated for
burns in a Moscow hospital, a
Soviet official said today. He
descrlbed the man as mentally
ill.
Good values on
tires and J>atter.ies.
. r
•·i ,
Atlas 42-rnonth
Pacesetter ' for < ,,, ::o w1tt'I norm.11
acc~ssor y lo..id::o $31 Quiel< slnrting poy,rr
Atlas PA~2F. wolh tradn·on
. Atlas 60-month '
Prenium Power ' s39 Our best battery , Power to spare
tor big accessory
loads.
' .
Alloe PH022F, with trado-ln.
Atlas Atlas Atlas SS Wm. SIMI
Cuslionalre ,, Pacesetter Economy Racial BeHid ..... 78
s2~49 s33~9 s419~ s4799
1"1111 $1,7i Fed. Ef. Tai' lor • Pin U.29 F~. EJ<. Tax for Pllll lt.14 '" Ea Tu lor Ph1t U Of ,ed, Elr Tu for A7'-13. blacki..all, will\ u.-.,,._ £71-14 blac~wall, with tr•·on. A.A1a.1' Wl'lll wall, wnh l•1do·1n 8A7&·13 ...,ltewall, wllh lt•·IJI,
Fouri>fY polyeat•r cord Polyetter cord body with Rad lat performance, Our beat tire. Topt In
for• •tnooll\ ride. twin ff berg less cord ~Its. economlcally priced mlfeao• end performance.
SUI
UI
I U
uo
7•1' ct.•• ....
C.... our •llNat °" olllff .,,...
WllltewaA• Maledta.oo-. ..cfl .
. .
: .
" ,
_1
1 •
..
SaddlellBek
. ..
Afternoon
N.Y.Stoeks
• VOL 70, NO. 32, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 19n TEN CEN
·'
7
Changes. Tune on
'BJGABYGBANvlLLE
Of-Delly "'-'•&eH Less than a month alter flrat fil. . hlflt. Orange County Supervisor
Philip Anthony amended bia final
campaign disclosure statement
Monday tosbow the true source of
$63.200wort.b of campaign loans.
On bis original disclosure state-
ments, Anthony showed the loans to Friends of Philip Anthony were
from himself .•
,
the We at minster responsiblefortheirrepayment.
aupe •a amended statement • • "I believed I borrowed the
shows e loans came from money personally and, ln turn,
former aid police informant lent it to my campaien commit·
Gene ad, Fullerton attorney tee,"thesupervlJorsaid.
Mich mington and RJO En· He said that .. porting method
terpriSes. was followed after consulting
Io an interview last week, An· with political consultant William
thooy said be showed the loans Butcher, attorney Chip Nielson
coming from himself because be and Certified Public Accountant
believed he personally, not the Ray Edwards. \
campaign committee, was "There certainly was no intent
to deee.tve anyone," Anthony in·
slated.
Hi.a amended statement shows
he borrowed $30,000 from ln·
former-turned-financier ·conrad
in the final days of his campaign
agalnlt Santa Ana City Coun·
cilm an Harry Yamamoto.
In a tape recorded interview
three weeks ago, Conrad denied
lending Anthony money and said
the supervisor probably got the
112 Die 'in Worst Stonn
"
-In tory of ;Buffalo
. ·
"
o.lly PllGC St.ff PllotH ~T. LtNtn(CASAREZ STANDS TALL FOR INSPECTION AT EL TORO HIGH ROTC CLASS
Lt. Col. L•ny Kaufman Conduct• Checkup•• Platoon L••der Ronda LanaH Takes Note• ..
ROTC 'Builds Leaders'
ff., Toro High Studenu Defend Military Training
By LAURIE KASPER • Ott• CNlilf '11M Sl.tff
1 Some other students look down
1 on them because they wear un·
I iforma. drill. shoot and are part of the military. But members of
the Marine Corps lunlor Reserve ~Officer Trainln« Corps (R<Yl'C>
program at £1 Toro Hi&b School
think thdr peen are .. aliahUy en·
vlous." Furthermore, these
critics just don't underst.and.
All they •~ are the proeram 's
accoutrements. • . the uniforms.
drlll foutines and rifies ... not
what's happening in the classes
and amona Ule cadets and their
advisers, sevenl members ex·
plained.
People who poke tun at them
don •t see tbe fun cadets have and,
niost important, they say, the
personal &TOWth they feel in
themselves.
.. lt'1 so great. It's hard"4> real·
Jy ·get down to explain f• but I
thlok lt'a areat. really," said
Letter FuzeJI, • senior who's
~in tbeprocram two years.
lL's IC>methln& be dld.n 't want
to get into. He thought peop~
would lauah and say things like,
"Look at the jar head."
Besjdes that, be explained, be
was active in the Fire Rescue
Explorer Post. "My big goal was
to become a fireman. The
mllltary was the farthest lhiQf
from my mind."
But tben, be had a time slot to
fill in his schedule of classes.
ROTC was the only thing that fit.
He still wants to be a fireman
and ls assjstant chief of the E>t·
plorer Poll. .
But he's allo booked on ROTC.
He's moved up the ranks to
second lieutenant. By progress·
tng through the stages of ROTC,
he said, he's learned to be a
leader and a better person.
As a fireman, he intends "lo
climb to tbe top" and he expects
ROTC's leadership training will
belp.
Other students also talked a lot
about leadership and bow the pro-
gram belps them work well.with
• olberpeople.
Citizenship and leadership
techniques are stressed in their
lnstrucUon. explained Sergeant
Jack Coberly, one of two ROTC
instructors on campus.
In fact, the ROTC course is
called Leadership Education and
the text is titled Adventure in
· Leadership.
During the second semester,
cadets are required to volunteer
a specified humber of hours in
community service. And, said Lt.
Col. Larry Kaufman, a civic
service ribbon is one of the
highest awards given in the pro-
gram.
Coberly said their philosoohv
Is that "in order to enjoy the
beneflta of a country like this,
you have to give something too."
Some people believe tl\e
purpose of ROTC is to recruit the
students into the service. "It's
not," Coberly asserted.
Recruiters aren't even allowed
into the class except for inspec·
tions.
<See ROTC, Page AZ>
Water Rationing Hits
Malin .Counly ·Reaid'!im Filling Veueh
I' SAN MPAEL CAP) -Strict water ra·
tlonlq began lo parched Marin County today.
an.er resident.I bit tbe stores in a last-minute
rush fe»8A)'th1nc that would bold wat.er.
"lt'a been phenomenal," said mananr
Bill Daniels of United Markets in San
An1tlmo. 0 We•N compleltly ou\ of buclceta.
'Tb1y're buylna theJ:n two and three at a Um•."
The Marin Municipal Water Di1trlct has
laid down hanh financial penalties for anyone
who exceeds \he dfilr allotment of 47 gallons
per person starting today.
' MEANWHILE, AS THE STATBlued the
,.-lm proepeet that the year will be tM drie&t
on record, the weatherman had .,_d news for
Northern Calitom.la. Ralf' this month 11 ex-
pected ID UM places where lt wlll do the least
,ood, I
"Tblilp IOot very grtm," Ken Woodward~
head of the sate Drou1bt InformaUon Cent.et.
1Aid after tbe NaUonal Weather Senice to-
potUcl lts a;Mfay fOt'tCdt predlctl below·
dOrmal ninlall lb North•m Callf omta.
Tbe forecut. however. nya tbef9 Will be
•bove-oonnal ra.lo In Southern Callf omJa.
Guard
To Aid
Cleanup
By The Associated Presa
Winter kept its frigid grasp on
the Northeast and Midwest to-
day, and a state of emergency
was declared in Buffalo, N.Y ..
where 12 persons have died in the
worst storm in the city's history.
An estimated 75 deaths have
been blamed on the bitter
• weather in states hit by the big
freeze. <Related story, A4 > ~n Army engineering battalion
ol 300 men waa ordered to Buffalo
today to help the city clear it6
streets ot abandoned autos and
snow drifts. Federal disaster of.
ECONOMY'S FREEZE,
MAY OUTLAST COLD-A11
ficials said the unit was ordered
to Oy with its equipment from Ft.
Bragg, N.C.. "as soon as they
can get here."
The natural gas shortage
caused by frttzing weather kept
many schools, factories and busi·
nesses closed, leaving up to 1.5
million workers off the job.
Congress moved closer to
wiacting legislation to ease the
natural gas crisis. An emergency
bill proposed by President Carter
was approved by the Senate 91 to
2 Monday night. The House ap-
<See STORMS, Page A2>
Police Car
Rear-ended;
Woman Held
An Anaheim police officer was
seriously injured Monday night
when a drunken driving suspect
slammed into the rear of his
parked patrol car, knocking him
to the ground.
According to police, officer
RJck Cabrera, 30, suffered a
broken leg in the 8:1S p.m. acci·
dent in the 2200 block of South
Harbor Boulevard.
Police said Cabrera had
stopped another vehicle alone•
the roadway and was standing
beside his car when It was rear·
ended by an auto driven by
Deborah Stack. 32, of Anaheim.
When Callfornla Highway
Patrol officers lnvesUgated the
accident. they arreated Mrs.
Stack on suspicion of drunk driv-
ing, a CHP apokesman aald. •
Cabrera waa treated at the
1ceqe by paramedics and
transported to Anaheim
Memorial Hospital.
Quake Hits
I.ake Tahoe ,
money from bl$ retirement fund
at Rockwell International.
But apparently Conrad lent tbe
$30,000 to an Ant.bony friend and
campaip backer who, in turn,
loaned the money to the then
supervisorial candidate.
As for Remington, be agreed
with Anthony's original supposi-
tion that $28,200 worth of Anthony
loans were personal and not to the
supervisor's campaign commit·
Pipeline
Proposed
•
WASHINGTON <AP> -
A Federal Power Com.
mission bearing officer to·
day recommended ap.
proval of a 4,000-mile
pipeline across Canada to
carry natural gas from
northern Alaska to the
lower United States .
tee. To back him up, the Fulled.on
attorney bas copies of three An·
thony notes, all of them signe4
personally by the county
supervilor and witb no mentipo dt
bis campaign committee.
Also, the three checks covering
the $28.200 'NOl'th of loans are
payable to .. Philip Anthony" apd
be'r a similar endorsement.
(SeeANTllONY,PageA2)
'
2rul Case
To Open
In Death
ByTOM BARLEY
OlllwDallrPllMStllff
Althou gh cleared of
manslaughter charges by an
Orange County Superior Court
judee, Laguna Niguel electrician
Daniel Gonules Guzman faces
Administrative Law
Judge Nahum Litt said the
trans-Canada system pro-
posed by the Arctic Gas
Study' Group' would be
clearly superior to two
competing proposals by El
Paso Alaska Co. and Ale an
Pipeline Co.
. new allegations of second degree
murdertoday.
Lilt's recommendation
goes to the full Federal
Power Commission for re-
view and a final recom-
mendation to the Presi·
dent, due by May l•
New Off~"·
For Irvine
Finn Made
A claim by the Mobil Oil Com-
pany tbat it is the only coo tender
willing to make an all cash offer
for the Irvine Company was
quickly shot down Monday when
the trial of Irvine heriress Joan
Irvine Smith's lawsuil against the
James Irvine Foundation re·
sumed in Orange County Superior
Court.
Representatives of a con·
sortium headed by Wall Street
financier Charles Allen and
Detroit developer Alfred Taub-
man announced that they are now
prepared to offer $282. 7 million in
casbforthelrvineinterests.
The offer tops Mobil's $281.9
million bid by $800,000. And it ap-
pears lo make the Allen·
<See IBVINE, Page A2>
Deputy District Attorney Paul
Meyers explained that the new
charges are a renewal of those
abandoned when Guzdlan, 32, of
29821 Paseo de Ocaso, was indict-
ed by the Grand Jury on charges
of involUJlt.ary manalaugbter.
Those charges stemmed from
his allesed action in rigglng a trip
wireinhisfrontyard th4\tclaimed
the life of Kelly Michelle
McMullen, bis neighbor's 2-year-
old daughter.
Guzman explained to sheriff's
officers that the high voltage line
was int.ended to keep dogs and
cats off his flower beds.
He was.arrested on criminal
charges and later sued for $3~0,000 in damagh by the
McMullens. Meyera explained Monday that.
Judge James 0 . Perez' dismissal '
of tbe indictment counts was
based on a tecbnicallty that made
prosecution or the indictment as it
.Stood impossible.
"We have refiled charges of
·second degree murder and
Guzman will be arraigned Feb.
28," tbeprosecutor said. Guzman·
is fr« on his promise to appear in
Santa Ana Municipal Court.
Judge Perez declined to
elaborate on his pre-trial de·
cision.
Defense attorney James Stotler
branded tbe continued prosecu·
tion of Guzman as "insane" Mon•
day after commenting that his
50-p.age brief and not any error in
the indictment led Judge Perez to
dismiss the charges.
Marine Colps Aitls
Viejo High School
Mission Viejo High School was
back in operation this morning
with the help of two generators
on loan from the Marine Corps.
thegeneratorsuntil3p.m. today.
The school was closed Monday
because an explosion in the un·
derground electrical cable
system Sunday cut off power lo
three buildings at the school.
This is the second Ume in the
11-year history of the school that
a cable explosion of this klnd has
caused a power failure at the
school. Normally, school officials
said, the underground cable
system ls expected to last at least
30years.
'l'be cause of the explosion has
not been determined. Tbt con·
tractor doing the repair work
said the cable wu a top grade
quality and should not have ex·
plod ed.
However, Principal .John
Daywalt r.aid the explosion was
powerful enougb to blow a
manbo!e cover off and th• con-
crete cable' ca•int wu ''totelly
bumt.'' Tile explosion was cHscovered
Sunday after a custodl!:ound ·
an eleetrtc.i 1wttchln1 uel ln
tbe social 1deoce bull • bad
burned.
A mJnimal amount of JIOW~r
••• returned to th•. buUdlnp with tho bel-p ' of two dl4'del
1eDtrat.I brou&ht to tho M:hoo\
from the MariM COJPS Air Sta-
Uoo al El Toro. "l\'1 I~ bUt we bave lllhts ...
Daywalt aUt He added Uaat tho
•ci.oot•s t6Pbooet were wol'k·
ln1 oDl.1; oeculonall.Y today ·
because ot tbe Umlted a~ ot po"•· Danrau sU4 &he •ntem wu re~red Ma ready to 10 \b1s ·~·~r,1ince,ttu11 aboUt~hOUntobookup~ . !1 •. ~!MtioOlwu&ooe,eu~Wlb
Gilbert Moreno, the district's
business manager, said the
damage and repair work will
probably cost the district about
$20,000.
Although the explosion is not
supposed to occur, he said, the
district. is not able lo recoup the
cost from the school's original
electrical contractor. Since
working on the school, the firm
went bankrupt, he explained.
Coast
Weather
V arl•ble high clouds
throu&h Wednesday.
Cooler clays •itb blabs in
t!OI. Lows '5 to 53.
•
. .
I
•
•' OM. Y PllOT
WASIUNOTON •CAP) -
President Carter has told
hit Cabt.Mt to "cut back
draatJcalb' -cut. out the ~tntatiomnen of trt~.··
In another of hia In·
ert1as1n1ly famUlar u .
bol'tatlons aialnat t'• ,ruohtmeoet ol ,...,_, of•
flee, tbe llJW "'•ldeot tlttd llondar what he
considered bad examples
from the Ford ad·
mlnistraljon. His depart-
.. ment beads, in tum, told
him bow UM, were IHiDI money. ·
One week after eulUU
out door·to-door Urnousl.ne Httl~ for Wb1te1 "°'*'• •tall aidtt...Carler wlcl hl1
cabinet: 1111U hope rou'lt
10 the second mlle, l
d 0 11 I t W a n t .~l! b •
superficial about UU11. 0
Ww-se•
t.J; •
=i!or Adults
.Get Study
By TOM BAKLEY . o. .. o.i.., ..... ,.. .. "
One at totQ" mtn •ho lnn1ct.ed
wb•t tbe trial proaecutqr
described as ••unspeakable
torture" on a man wbo was
beaten, kicked, strangled and
burned to death iq a Pla.~entJa
apal'tment wu foU.nd 1unty or.
second delree murder late Moo·
de)'. .. An Of ante County Ru~w
Court JUH ended nearly fou~
day1 ol deliberation by ret11fnlng
that vetdlet in the tl'laJ at Oary
SJltx, 14, ol Compton. He was
addltkiutly found tullty of as·
HUJtcltara•.
.JUdl• Wal .. Smith set Feb. 16
•• the date be will sentenee &·
sex to what could be not less than
11 years In state prtson on tbe two
coovictioos if be decides to apply
them consecutl\felt.
He has already scheduled Feb.
10 as the date be will sentence co-
def endadt 81chard ''Preacher"
McKay. 22, of Placentia, who
may draw a life term foUowirtg
his eatller Jut)' conviction or firat
dettee murder. McKay, Essex, Jerome
Dedrick Toles, 19, of Compton
Saddleback Valley tJnltled and Billy Wayne Holllns, 22, of ~chool District trustees will be Santa Ana, were arrested ln con-
a s k e d to approve spring necUon wtth the klWna ot Ervin
semester classes proposed for Sutton. 22, of Gatden Grove, last
the 15 divisions of the Adult April 16.
EducaUon Pro1ram when they It wu tesuned that the fo\lr
meet at 8 p.m. WMl!esday In the men, helped by two women who
mulUputpOBe rootn of LOI Allsos were described by the deft!ndants Intermediate ~bool, as Victims of Sutton •s aaa<><1lation
The list of closet Includes a with police ofncers, bottled Sut-
n ew Environmeblal Science ton thea kicked, slashed and beat
C!ourte wbJch will lncl\lde a btief · bim.
e>vetvlew of the 1lobal environ-Sutton's ordeal, •hlch lnctuded
ment and a detailed study or bein1 jumped on While held down ~ban1es that have r esulted from in a bathtub filled wllb water,
actlona by man. ended w)len one of the two
Tbe eeUmated cost of the pro-women ln]etted battery a cid into
gram, "95,400, la ••peeled to be his \lelns and vlrtually burned
defrayed by state aid. · him to death.
Jn other action, tru1tees will One of the two women has been
eonsider walvln1 a second identified by the prosecution as
etmeater of schooling to allow 81 Cynthia Mendenhall, 24. 143C
etudents to graduate In the mid· Avenida Del Mar, San Clemente,
)'ear. who faces a preliminary heating
Trustees also will consider al-Feb. 17 in Santa Ana municipal
owln1two1tudent11 to attend the court on related murder charges.
r e1ldentlal Clauroom for Arl'fftlbf offlc~rs said Mrs.
oung Americana ln Washlnston Mendenhall ptt>vlded them with
.C. in March. the information that led to the ar·
, Cruh Victim
IJackie Hohl
:Rites Today
Funeral aervlces were held lo-
1 day for EJ foroJl!Jh School &tu·
dent Jackie Lynn Hohl, who died
'when her car collided beadon
w ith another about mldnl1ht Fri·
day. She was 18.
I .. J ackle was an excellent stu-
dent and terrific person.i· said
Gloria Quave. Mlsa Hohl a home ..
economics teacher. uShe Wiii JO-
ln1 to be my alde next year. Sbe
WH really a cute tlrl and •el')t, ~ery sweet. Everybody llked
her."
"J ackie was such a happy 1person," aald Janet Peavy,
descrtbld by Ml'I. Quavt aa Mi.a
:Uobl's clolat trlebd. "Shi was
interested in a lo( of things and •as lctive In lht SaddJeback
Vallet YMCA. "'9 planned to tie
a matrt lltendant or a home
ieconomics teacher."
I Today'• euvice. ••re Mkl at
1
0 ' C o o n or La I u n a H ti Is
Jlortupy. Mw P•avt 7•ld • 9'UlftbU rA Mltl Hohl 1 riencls
~fl'oan lM blah 1cbool plabned to
ttend.
Miss Hohl ls survived by her ..... nw, Nt. and 111'1. John Hohl,
,•nd broUatrt John and Jeff'nJ. ttbt lalnily Uvn at M'4l l\tcllen lt:..ln El 'JWo,
The C.Utomla Hl1hwa1 Patrol
ald Miu Hohl 11 Hr appat.atly
ero119d the Moulton Pitllway
center median south of Lake
onat Drive, 11trt1t1nc a car
riven b)' Robin Leslie Funlre ol
uaUqt.oa Beach.
SI
DAILY PllOT
r es&a of the four men but
mlnlmlled her own role In the
klWng of Sutton.
,,.._P-.e..41
STORMS ..•
proved the btll today but lt h1Ust
be reeonsUed with the Senate
meaaure.
Buffalo Mayor S tanley
Makowski laaued the emer1ency
dee!lataUt>n fot his city at a :30
a.m. PST, bamtlnlJ all but esaen·
tial Wblcular traffic In the city to
enable federal and aiate crtwa to
clear the 1trffl1, 1Ull clotltd by
.abandened autos and drifting
!1now.
The forecaat Included. the
• poulbility ot several more In·
cbet of SAOW fot Buffalo today
and wind gusts as high as 40
miles per bour. But the winds
·wtte ~t.d to drop to 10 to 20
m.f.b. b>'tonlaht.
Makowski said only vehicles
carryin1 necessary medicine,
rood, or f\Jel wlU be allowed to tta~el. \101atats wm be arrested
end praseeuted and •lll be sub-
ject to rmes and imprisonment,
he aaid.
At leut 11 1late1 -lnchldlng
Mew Yorlr -bad altead~ or·
d•Nd emer1M»c7 mea1uree to
deal .nu. the weather and energy
trials. /
The federal enetct JeitslaUon
•ould itve Catter authority to
dlvert natutal ••• ta •teas where
tt '• ma1t nffd«I and would free
1ome natutal ta• from fldtral
prlce control• tJU'CMa&h Au11 1. ..
..
It seemed unUblt late Mon·
day that Toles would go on trial
oq ellat9. ot robbery, assault with a ad.tr wempon and dis· p0eftlcb • bOdy.
Judge Smith set Friday for a
court appearance that may re-
sult in Toles' filing a plea to the.
aUt1aUons. Holllnl h11 pleaded
guilty to reduced cbarget ol be-t.n• an aeeeuort to mbtdet and
fad• 1ententlll1 at a tater date.
, ....... .41
ANTDbNY .•••
Ren:un,toD 111d be lJ ple.,.ed
with the way Anthony bas handled
the transactions, including the
ipi mediate repayment or a $15,000
primary election loan from the
proceeda of a fund raiser.
Rlebard J. 0 1NeU1, llntll three
week• •fo cb•ltltlan of tbe Democra le Party in Orange
County ancl until last weekend
Southern California party
chairman, is a partner in RJO en·
terprise9.
Like the Conrad and Remington
loans, Anthony originally sbOwed
the '5,000 RJO loan as comm,
from him1elf.
• Last week. Anthony said he had
talked with the District At-
torney's Office and ·•probably"
would amend his disclosure state-
ment.
The freshman auper\tisor said
the stir caused by his reporting
methoda surprised him and is
somethln1 he'd "like to Jay to
rest."
His disclosure statements were
origin a lly c hallenged when
$10,000 shoWJt as comint from a
Cotta Me1a bUildint supply firm
was ttaced thtough Conrad.
•
The 42-year-old former police
informer is under a federal Grand
Jury's scrutiny because of the .
operations ot Pension P'unds of
Ariierlca, an Irvine-based firm he
controls.
Y'iejo High
Wma CounJy .
Cheas Crown
<
Mlsslon Viejo High School bas
unseated perennial powerhouse
team1 from Marina .nd Edison
HI1h Schools to take Ill first
Oran1e County cheas cham-
pio~bip.
The 13th annual competJUoo.
wblc:h featured varsity and
junior varsity chess teams from
ei1bt county schools, took place
over the weekend at. Marina
Hl1h.
Leo Cotter,'Misaion Viejo team
adviser, 11ald his youngsters took
firat place ln botn varsity and JV
plf"r~ef• championshlpa have
betn dominated until this )"ear by
the blt 1choola llke M.firina and
Edliori, '1 Cotter aaid. '!'hie was
a bli Win tor"'· 11
Mlaslt>n VleJo varsity players
had a .perfect match scor e of S.O
in the tourney, which was pl~yed
wlth "Swiss style pairlbfs." Tbat
means •lnneu play •inners
over the two-day competition. -
The teafn from Ca111011 IOgh &bool ln Anaheim waa 1ecomd in
the competition, followed by
Servile Hilb and th.;n Marina
atnd EdllOll in a \le for fourth.
Besides the team honor, Mis·
slor\ Viejo plJYet Marlt Pender
Wiie cited aa the top plllyeJ' {n the
tourn11ment. As hls team•s top
. aeed, be defdted the bes t
players on the other teams., in
head-to-head competition.
Be1ldes Pehder ~arslty
pla)'ere lntlude John Whltt,
Mlcke1 ~bner, ken Delano and
Dan Diesel.
.. .
• ' ,
'IMltf~ ...... " ....
M!MB!RS OF EL TORO HIGH SCHOOL'S "OTc UMfT MOVE OUT SMARTLY IN DAILL
1he Emph•ll• II on Lead•rthlp, Not Preparation for Mllllary ea,.., ...
,.,....p..,..tJ
ROTC AT EL TORO HIGH SCHOOL • • •
The ROTC 1tudenta do learn
about the rnWtary oraanlaation
but that is not a mlJor part of the
course, the instructors said.
The cadets admitted the
military isn't exactly popular on
campus. Some or their fell.ow stu-
dent• complain that the military
makes war.
"We don't make war," said
Carol Petrlng ... Politicians make
war. 'rhe military wages it."
Other students dislike the fact
that cadets learn to shoot rifles.
They are au required to qualify
o p the ran ge and so m e
participate on the rifle squad, an
extracurricular actlvlty.
But the cadets Hy they're not
tearP-lnt to klll somebody -
tllat 1 done by the person behind
the rt.ne. Jn1tead, they concen·
trate on markmanshlp and
1alety.
The)' complain that people
don't undentand tflelr drilllng
eltber. "J think when you see us drill, you tutn us Into robot!,•·
said Sue MeJla. . ...
For some, like Tom Llndser,
•ho also Is In the school .s
marchin• band, thl1 Is serious
bUslness. The drllls are an u -
ercHae ln thinking. One has to
conatanlly listen a nd follow
throulh on comlt'ands.
"You listen to learn and learn
Atlas 42-month Pacesetter ."
tor cnr1 Wllh normol
oocessory loads. $31~ Quick atort1ng power
Aiits P.AU,, with lrsde·1n.
• I
to listen,·· explaltted David An·
drltch.
The cadets also are aiven
physical fitness training and
h ave a color guard which
participates i n community
events.
,This is the only Marine ROTC
unit In the county. (There Is a
Na V)' ROTC at San Clemente
High School and MIS61on Viejo
High School once applied (or a
Naval unit.) One hundred stu·
dents -about a third of whom
are girls -are enrolled In the
program. •
The cadets wish more students
would enroll in the pro1ratn.
They say It has done a lot or
good ror some or their members.
They teU of a mentally han-
dlupped boy who often Is teased
by bls rellow students. Since Join-
ing ROTC. the cadets said, he bas
more self-respect. His •rades
have even Improved.
But this, apparently, Is not Just
became or the pro1rem. It'll
because they share· what some
ma)' call eaprit de corps. Tbutu.
<ft!nta 1linply call it carln1.
"You can rely on each other lo
help each other1
1' Andrltch said.
This, the caaeu said, ~xtends
to the Instructors, both of whom
are retired from the Marine
Cor.ps.
1'They Ual'en when you need s~
meone to talk to;' said one. , · ·
When a cadet baa a personal
problem or trouble in . school.
another added, "You can talk to
them and they'll t alk back and
help you much more than the
counselors and other teachen.''
111 think a lot of people nre cry·
inl for guidance/' Cobetly said.
Rut above all, the instructors
and cadets agreed, ROTC is fun
even when you're called upon
to crawl through the mud in ah
exercise at Camp Pendleton.
"It's lntere~Unf. 1t•1 di(.
ferent.'1 M1aa Petrin• laid. ..
Double Talk Told
ANCHORAGE (AP) -Fortner
U.S. Atty. Richard McVetah d.lti·
cuHed ways to avoid the arrest
of prosUtutea while plannlnl a
vice operation on the trans-
Alaska plpellne1 an undercover
11'81 agent testified Monda)'.
11\'ou 1ot to be real caref\.11
when you work the broads ln a
bar," was the word frorn
McVellh, according to Graham
Desvemlne who testified in the
vice conspiracy trial of four
Alaskana.
Atlas 60-month
Premium Power ~ ' s39 Our beat battery. l , Powerlo spate
tor big accessory
loads.
,, • All .. PHDt2F, with trnd.i·ln.
Tue&day'a
Afternoon Prices
~
T l.!!!C!g. F!!!N!tX 1. tm s DNt, v pt LOT A 11
Ee...._,e Questions
Ice Vice Shivers
May Outlast Cold
BJ JORN CVNNll'F ... ,. ...... .....,. .·
As the l~ vice crushes tho local ec:ollOO\Jcs of various
areaa ln the Midwest, South and »ast, resident.a are
awakening to the terrible realluUoo that they have UWe
am mediate defense.
It f11ls riven with ice, roads with snow cmd mllUona o(
people wtth fear. It closes thousands of plant.a, idles bun·
clred.t of thousands of workers and causes families to dip ln·
to uvinp to pay fuel bills.
wrrR FUEL BILLS RUNNlNG AT least $:50 a month
more for many homeowners. Presidel\l Carter's carefully
planned $50 tax rebate per person suddenly begins to look
like a paltry sum. It migbl easily be called the fuel bW sub-
sidy. ·
Administration economists are said to be using a figure
of $2 billion to $3 billion as the cost or the big freexe, but
there is hardly an ecoQomist alive who is certain the real
flaurewon't be much blah.er.
• While the country
was ill-prepared for a
,, ,,
I•
•• ., ·. ...
..
big freeze, il ls just as ( J ~r~y t~8::':n-:mais~ NEWS ANALYSIS ~
s i g n i fi c a n c e . T h e _ '•
figures vary by the
billions of dollars.
QUICK TALUES OF THE ECONOMIC toll include
malnly closed plants, layoffs, damaged crops, high fuel
bills. obvious damage to beating and plumbing systems.
and lost retail sales.
But there is other damage too. There ls that lo river and
harbor docking facilities, lo roads that will be badly pocked
by spring, to wildlife, to shrubs and tr~ that cannot grow
in the salt-saturated soil near highways.
There is the potential damage lo local economies by the
probable removal of factories to warmer climates. There is
the uncertainty that reflects itself in retail sales and which
many people gradually were overcoming.
~
>J ;.
~ .
PEIUIAPSTHE MOSTOPnMISTIC views barning as it ~
must seem to those with cold apartments and no jobs, is that
there isn't a terrible energy shortage at all. and that what :
damage hu been done will be quickly overcome. •,
1be fll'St or these viewis is said to be contained in an up. :,
coming report by energy e'xperts that the nation's Gross Na-
tional Product (GNP}, or output of goods and services, can !
continue lo grow without parallel growth in energy supplies. •
Business Week Magaiin~stales that the report to Prest.
•dent Cart.er will suggest that it is even likely that the GNP
could triple over the next 40 years without significant •
energy growth. ••
HOW! TIIROUGH INCENTIVES AND plant-design im· •
provements that would promote efficiency while aiternative
sources or energy are being developed. •
The question of overcoming the economic damage .:
already done might be viewed as equally unrealistic by ;
skeptics. Still, some economists maintain that lost produc· '
lion will be made up before the end of the year.
The assumptions underlying such expectations are that •
the icy conditions won't continue, that there will be sum-•
cient fuel to gear up operations to make up for losses, an<J.:
that retail spending has been delayed but not lost •
altogether. .
I
SUCH ASSUMPTIONS MIGHT ASSES.5 too lightly the ;
true situation. There are some meteorologists who believe ~
we have entered a prolonged period of cold, just the fear of .
this could depress expansion plans of co~rations.
There is a serious question also aboul. future spending
plans of consumers.
Scores of millions of doUars that would have gone into
retail purchases have been spent on fuel instead, bringing •
up the question: How can this loss be made up? Where will•
the money come from ?
When the final bill is in, it might be larger that what is •
now being tallied. Well after Uie eastern two-thirds of the •
nation gets over shivering it might be left with a serious ·
case of economic shakes.
WIWAM COLEMAN WIWM .. SCAANTON
HAROLD BROWN CYRUS YANCE
Revolvini DoorSpi.ns
.._in Cabinet S1uiffl,e
l