HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-02-08 - Orange Coast Pilot17
' -I J-.
Lag~na Officer
tol·whipped
• In Jewel Deist
DAILY PILOT
* * .• * 10< * * . * ;
TUESDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUA RY 8, 1977
vo1.:1 •. HO."· 2 S•CTIONS, 26 PAOl!S
• ID uead Hit I
Delly~ ....... "' ........ ·~
OFFlCEA JtM LANSFORD SLUGGED FOILING HOLDUP
Laguna Policeman Wrestled With Gunman In Store
Off icer Slugged
In Laguna Heist
By PIRLIP ROSMARIN Ot , .. O.lly Pff9I Slaff
A Laguna Beach police officer
was pistol-whipped and shot at
Monday alter be walked in on the
armed robbery of a Jewelry
store.
The gunman fired a sln1Je shot as be struggled to take Officer
Jim Lansford's service revolver
from him. The bullet went Into
thenoor.
100 Cats Die
·In Home Fire
SUFFIELD, Conn. (AP> -Fire at a makeshift animal
boardloi house kUled more than
100 cats and injured a 58-year-old
woman Who tried to save them,
fire offtciala said.
The names b~ed out ot con-
trol tor more than t"o bour1 at the canverted 1choolhou e 1'here
the eata were kel>t by three out•
of ·town cat fanclen, orrtclalt
Hld.
Clara Nlemcyq, wbO tOot care . ot t.be antmala, wu treated at
Jhrtlord KoePltal for smoke In·
halatloa ad rel ued. Abc>Ut 10 were aaved, firemen said.
The robber wrenched
Lansrord:s gun· from lts holster
and clubbed to his knees with It.
He ordered Lansford to lie face
down and warned the 20-year
Laguna Beach policeman,
·•Don't move or I'll kill you."
He escaped, with the officer's
gun and radio -but without a
grocery sack of handcrafted
jewelryhecametosteal.
More than a dozen pollcemen
blanketed streets and beaches tn
a seven-block radius of the Jewel
Searchers, 1027-D N. Coast
Highway.
Lansford used the store
telephone to alert police.
Lansford wu taken by
paramedic ambulance to South
Coast Community Hospital. An
X-ray examination o( his skull
revealed no fractures and he was
released. He had a large lump
behlnd his ear where be was
struck.
The incident be11n when
Lansford picked up one of the
proprietors of the Jewel
Searchers on a .. Ttpay Taxl" 1:all
to drive the man back to the
store.
Laaalord waa taklnt Joel
Whitney, 25, half-owner ot the
bu.Lneu, tbroUlh the •tore nee
they pasted rfcht by the Nbber.
<SeeOFnCE&. PAO~~
'
-·~ --··
Victoria .
Flu Shot
Ban Off
WASHINGTON (AP) -'fhe
government's moratorium on flu
vaccinations was lifted today so
the elderly and the chronically ill
can get shots to protect them
from A-Victoria nu.
In the process. they also would
be vaccinated against swine flu,
sir:ice there are no separate vac-
cines for the two strains.
But Secretary of Health,
Education and Welfare Joseph A.
Califano Jr. maintained the
moratorium on vaccine contain-ing serum only for swine nu. He
said there is no immediate need
to lift it because there has been
no outbreak of the swine nu
strain in the United States this
year. There has been an outbreak
of A· Victoria nu in a Miami nurs-
ing home.
The shots were called off in the
first place because of the risk of
Guillain·Barre Syndrome, a
rare paralytic disease, among
those who receive them.
Califano said the risk of con-
tracting-that ailment is believed ·
to be about the same with any
type of nu shot. He said the swine
flu vaccine is not considered
more risky than ,ny other type.
Califano recommended that
people age 6S or over take the A-
Victoria shot.
.. At the first sign of an impend-
ing outbreak cl swine nu, we will
take appropriate action,"
Califano said.
He told a news conference he
did not know at this time what
would constitute "appropriate
action."
Califano also announced that
the moratorium would be lifted
for vaccine agalnst B-Hon1 Kong
nu, a milder strain that usually
strikes children and young
adults.
He 1atd the status of the B·
Uong Koni va~cine would be the
same a1 it w., before the
moratorium w6en health of·
flclal.s and pbyalclans could use it
at their dllcreUon. However. un-
(See nu. Page AZ>
PROCUJL4TION
A BIT TARDY
SAN DIEGO <AP) -Police are
'1'YiDJ to ftnd the thief who took
'88 from purses or two CltJ Hall
.-ol'ittn while me11en1era were
d1itribUtinc Mayor Pete Wllaon's
lateat pc"OClamaUoO.
The proc:lamaUon names this
"Crime Prevention Week" in San
D~to. ----------------~r5----
B
~' .,
A· Vietoria Flu
Inoculation Ban
IJfted by U.S.
Ro•anee Over
Fiance Departs With Ring
HACKENSACK, N.J. CAP)-A Fair Lawn woman
has filed suit to regain a $3,000 diamond engagement
ring she claims her fiance slipped off her finger while
she slept.
Randy Berniker said four days before she was to
marry Jay Cohen, a Clifton stockbroker, he canceled
their engagement and took the ring without her
permission, according to court papers filed here Mon-
day.
On Nov. 7, she was watching television at
her home with Cohen, her attorney Leonard Miller
said.
"She fell asleep, then woke up as there was a tug
on her finger. The next thing she knew, Cohen was
walking out the door with the ring and his explanation
at the time was the statement, 'I'm not ready',"
Miller said.
Miss Berniker also is seeking repayment of $700
she claims was deposited with a travel agent for the
couple's honeymoon, $500 she deposited on furniture
and $200 for her wedding gown. She also asked
punitive damages.
Home Fir e
Horrified Parents
Watch 5 Kids Die
HOLBROOK, N.Y. <AP> -
Five children r'111ing ln a1e from.
4 to 18 died early today ln a fire
that destroyed their family's
wooden, colonial-style home
here.
The parents jumped to safety
and then tried to re-enter the
house, butwereunabletodoso.
One witness said the father,
North State
Area 'FelUed .
~Dampne•s
B1Taie Alloclated Preti
Northern California was
tea1ed today by the first ralnf all
in &Jmoat a month, but amounta ••r• •m•ll and the N atloaal Weather Servlc* HY'I there la no
more Where that cam• from -1t
least for now.
Forecuten said about .25 Of an lncb dampened Martn Count)'
by 4 a.m ... whJle San Francisco
1ot .10 ol an lnch ind Redwood
City about .03.
The parched area 1ot about .10 of an latb Jan. 10, but the lut
1ubttanUal ralnlall -aeYeral ln·
cbes ln m...., areas -occurred
over tbe .New Vur'• week·
end. '
Michael Kenny, stood outside the
house in the snow screaming,
"My God, we've got to get my
children out!"
Kenny, 47, and bis wife,
Barbara, 38, watched in horror as
scores of firemen fought in vain to
reach the children, who were
burned beyond recognition. Some
130 vohmteer firemen fought the
blase.
Tbe Kennys were taken to
Brookhaven Memorial Hospital
in Patchogue, where a
spokesmao said they were auf-
f ering from smoke iohalatlon,
bruises and shock. Mra. KeDQY
also had a broken leg, be said. .
Offtclals ldentified the dead
children as Gary, 11; Karen, 18;
<Sees DIE, Paae .U)
BB Man Arrest4'd
ID~ultTry
A HUntt.nCton Beach man wu
JaUed oa auaplcioa of att.mpted
rape Monday alter ht alle1edJy
followed a woman lnto a ladles
,...troom at 8olaa Chica State
Bncb and tried to sexually U · u u It ber, Oran1• County
SherUl"1 ottlcen said .
Deputies ealled to the scene
toolt MJcheel ~Colwell , 2S, ot
127 etll St., into custody after "9 •••held by beacb1oen wbotold
offlcen they responded to the
!'oman'a acre.ama. {
II
,,
Drastic
Changes -
Promised
One or two companies seeking a
controlling interest in the Irvine
Comp.any intends to drastically
reorganize Irvine management if
its bid is successful, testimony in
Orange County Superior Court
has revealed.
Quoting Monday from a deposi·
lion taken before the trial from
Irvine heiress Joan Irvine Smith,
attorney Howard Privett testified
that representatives of one of two
bidders assured her they intended
to ''do away with the deadwood.••
Privett represents the James
Irvine Foundation In a trial that
will end with Judge James F.
Judge's approval of one of two
bidders: the Mobil Oil Company
or a consortium headed by Wall
Street financier Charles Allen
and Detroit developer Alfred
Taubman.
Mobil has o£fered $281.9 million
for the foundation's controlling
inlerestof54.Spercent. The Allen.,
Taubman offer tops that by
$800,000.
Privett's testimony from Mrs.
Smith's deposition reveals thali-
tbe 44-year-old descendant o(
Irvine Company founder James'
Irvine held a series of meetings
with representaU ves of the Allen-
Taubman lnterest.
Those conversations reflected
the views of Allen-Taubman
negotiators that the Irvine Com-
pany ls overstaffed and the con·
<See HEIRESS~ Page AZ)
Coast
Weather
Some locally dense
mornln1 fog near coast,
otherwise partly cloudy
through Wednesdiey. Highs ·
78 to 72. Lows 46 to 52.
I NSIDE T ODAY
TMJI .tUl caU U a Com-
munllt plot in iome circlc1,
ov.r 20 JltO" after the battle
ouer /luorldoUon wa1 f ir1t
Joined In C4lJ/ornio. For an
update, Nt 1!°'1f A7.
• Al DAIL y PtLOT s Tu.day. February 9, UJ77
~Man Takes Hostage ():ver Loan. 0£~;~~
Maebefl• 0'01niel. who wa! tending the shop, spottec
Lanarord'a uniform, she cried u
hlm, "Oh, I'm being robbed!"
INDIANAPOLIS (AP> -A
, man wbodemanded release from
a $130.000 loan took a loan com·
pany dlrector host.ace today and
forced blm. with the muwe ot a I sawed.oft •botlun wired to h1I neek, to drive a stolen police car
I
to the gunman 'a apartment. )IOlite said.
·1 Later. poUee uld, the 1amnan tbreateded to detonate
nitroglycerine unless he wu re4
leased from tbe loan.
: Police said the mortgage com· . -
pany was in t.be process of draw·
101 the release papers.
The hostage ·was identified as
Richard 0 . Hall, 42, president of
Hall Hottell Co. Inc., Realt.on.
Police said be was abducted
from his office ill the Union
Federal Savings and Loan As·
aoclation ~>'.rt.ti' a:• a.m.
A poUce sDOkesman ld•ntifted
the gunman as Anthony G.
Kiritsis, 45,. of Indianapolis.
Hall's brother, William, said
Kiritsis borrowed the money
three years 110 fl'om Meridian
Mortpge Co., of wblcb lUcbanl
Hall LI a director. The loan WU
due this month, the brotbersald.
"My brother, Dlck, told him
the loan WU comlnl up, that it
was due," William Hall 1&14.
"That must have aet him oft ...
Wltnes1e1 aald Klrttala wu
ann9d wi&b a p&itol as well as tbe
sbotiun. lte forced Rall to walk ln
shirtsleeves in near.zero weather
about four blocks to the Indiana
Statehouse. wbere Kiritsll
!River Towboats Collide ... .
Mishap Cl,oses Portion of Ohio River
MARION, Ky. CAP> -Por·
tions of the Ohio River were
virtually closed to traffic today
Jollowiq a towboat collision that
damaged a dam near here, an
Army Corps of Engineers
t;pokesman said.
The collision was the latest in a
string of troubles t bat bas
, plagued river traffic near here
1 and severely hampered delivery j of fuel and other petroleum pnl-
Front Page Al
.HEIRESS ••.
clusion that "we should keep the
good people and do away with tbe
deadwood."
The deposition contains the
comments: "the second best
should be eliminated."
It also contains the prediction
, from Allen.Taubman officials
that the restructured Irvine Com·
: J}any under new direction could
· Jead the firm to greater achieve-
ments in many areas of Orange
-County development.
. It is predicted that the com·
. pany's present income could be
qoubled under the new manage-
' ment although it would not be
,.possible to pay dividends ln the
(irst few years of the new opera-
tion.
The current trial was ordered
when Mrs. Smith took legal action
to halt the foundation's sale or ita
Irvine interests to Mobil for $200
million.
Provisions of the Federal Tax
Reform Act or 1969 compel foun.
dation trustees to dispose of those
holdings before 1983.
Mrs. Smith, with holdings of 22
percent in tbe lrvlne Company, is
recognized as the major minority
stockholder in the company.
f'ro• Page Al
FLU .••
like the combined vaccine
against swine and A· Victoria flu.
the federal government is not re·
com mendmg that it be used.
The combined s wine and A·
Victoria vaccine contains the on·
ly available immunization
against A· Victoria Clu, which
broke out about 10 days ago in a
Dade County. Fla., nursing
home
There is no sinele vaccine
: against A· Victoria remalnin1 m
: this county. AJI 27 million doses
: already have been miaed with A·
: New Jersey <swine) vaccine.
'
~Carter Says
• .
~Family First
. WASHINGTON <AP> -Pres!-
: dent Carter warned his Cabinet
: Monday not to let their jobs In·
:terferewiththelrfamily lives.
; "I don't want your famllles
: breaking up Jwst because you felt
·• loyalty to me." the President ~admonished his top orflclals.
, warning them not to ovetdo il in
jcarrytng out their Jobs.
, Carter has Issued a similar
lwamlng to members of his White
:lfousestaff.
DAILY PILOT
ducts to points in the north and
east.
Corps spokesman Marlin
Pedigo said lbe river al Dam 50
on the river's western stretch
was 16.6 feet early today, some 20
inches below its level before lbe
colll1ion Monday damated
wickets, devices that are raised
or lowered to control the flow of
water.
"Normally, when the river
DIES AFTER SURGERY
Robert E. Graves
Juice Company
·President Dies;
Rit.es Tlwrsday
TreeSweet Products Company
president Robert E. Graves or
Costa Mesa, died Monday in a
Houston hospital of complications
following surgery.
Graves, who was SO, joined the
Santa Ana·based citrus process-
ing company as sales manager in
1964, and was named president io
1973.
Graves was president of the Na -
tional Juice Products Association
during 1975-76, and was past pre·
sident of the Frozen Food Council
of Southern California.
Before joining TreeSweet. he
was with Stouffer Foods,
Johnston Pies and Swift and Com-pany.
He is survived by his wife,
Elaine, of the family home, 1779
Tanager Drive. seven chJldren
and seven grandchildren
Funeral services will be con-
ducted Thursday al St John the
Baptist Catholic Church. 1021 W.
Baker St., Costa Mesa, begmning
atll a.m.
The family has suggested
memorial contributions to the
Atheroeclerosis Research Fund,
in care of the Heart Association.
Bu~et Reviewed
SAN FRANCISCO <AP)
Mayor George Moscone bas
be1un the arduous task of review-
ing thecity'a 1977·78bud1et with a
pledge to hold the line on property
taxes.
falls below 11 feet, it indicates
that shallow points upriver are
impassable," said Pedigo, who
added that tbe channel ID some
such areas is just nine feet.
Pedigo said the extent of
damage was unknown early to-
day. but "it bas the potential ot
be in• fairly HriOUI ... He laid It
would be late today before of.
ficiall could determine when tbe
da maae could be repaired.
Dam 51, upriver, was damaged
last December in a collision that
halted tra.fflc for over a week.
Before traffic could resume, tbe
harsh winter temperatures al·
lowed the formation of a foot·
thick layer of ice that halted lraf·
fie for about a month.
Then came the Monday col·
llsion, just a tew days after
workers bad manually raised
wickets on dama ln a desperate
effort to 1et traffic moving qaln
on tbe ice-clogged river.
Meanwhile, the cold wave and
gas sbortqe, which bave put up
to 1,587,000 penons out ol work so
far, may return in full force next
week after a temporary break,
according to government
forecasts .
But the edge of the shortage
was being softened this week as
small additional supplies of
natural 1aa began nowtn1 into in-
terstate pipelines under pro·
visions of the new emertency act
that President Carter signed
Wednesday.
The Federal Power Com·
mission said Monday that some
380 million cubic feet of gas per
day already was flowing tmder
new emertency arrangements
and another 175 million cubic feet
a day was authorized and await·
ing completion of connecting
pipes.
The extra gas, transferred
from western areas with better
supplies or purchased temporari-
ly at prices above federally re-
gulated ceilings, represents only
about 1 percent of the gas re·
quired on a cold winter day.
But It helps, and so does some
933 million cubic feet already
flowing daily under earlier FPC
emergency rules.
The National Weather Service,
however, told Carter's energy
adviser, James R. Schlesinger,
that the break in the weather
may be temporary, lasting only
this week as a comparatively
warm air mass from the Pacific
crosses the nation.
Once it \a gone, says the
weather service, the previous
pattern is expected lo take over
again ''and to continue to direct
a rctic air toward the eastern
U.S. for at least the following two
to three weeks."
Subway Possible
CHICAGO <AP) -President
Carter baa promised to push for
federal funds to help Chicago
replace downtown elevated
tracka 1n the antrmath of the
rush-hour transit crash that
killed 11 persons. Mayor Michael
.Cilandic 1ay1. The Mayor said ·
, Carter offered to aaalst in the
city's effort.I to secure fund! for
the pJ'Ol>OMd $620 million sub-way.
j,
Rev. DUnst.an MyerscoUgh and Sister AM•, IUMYOra of
1 guerrtlla attack lri", RMdesla, t~ll newsmen bOw ter-
rorists lil'led up and ahOt seven whlte Roman Catholic
missionanes, lncludm_i four nuns. (Sec! story, Pase A4.)
' '
•
1rabbed the ke)'S to a police car
and forced Hall to drive to the
Crestwood VWace Apartments,
where Klrltals lives ln a third·
Ooor apartment, police said.
"There, ol' Dick, you're aonna
drive," a newsman heard the
sunman say as the two eot into
the markedpaUOI car.
They drcwe off with tbe car's
red light ftuhlng and several
police ca.rs following.
Once at the apartment build·
Ing, the gunman told police he
had hidden nitroglycerine w1Uun
the complex and threatened to
detonate it unless his demand for
release from the loan was met.
Manon County Sheriff'& Depu·
ty Ronald Beasley, an acqualn·
lance of Kiritsis, was in
telephone contact with him and
relayed the demand.
The man11er of the apartment
complex. who asked not to be
identified, said between 130·140
residents were evacuated from
the building. He said several re-
sidents refused to leave.
Finders Keepers?
Sigfrido Gurerra (right), 9, and his sister Jeanette, 11,
of Los Angeles display nearly $4,000 in cash they found
near a shopping center while walking home from school
a fter kicking a bundle -full of 'reenbacks. They
turned it over to police, and may clrum the cash if it's
not accounted for in 97 days.
OCTD Earmarks
Transit Corridor
By KATHY CLANCY
Oltfleo.ltyPll«IUff
More than half of a $377.9
million five -year spending
package approved by Orange
County Transit District (OCfDI
directors Monday is earmarked
for a lJ·mile mass transit cor·
ridor.
And while directors included
$201.6 million for the route
stretching from Santa Ana to Los
Angeles County line, district
Planning Director Tom Jenkins
said today there still are ques·
Water Cut
Works Well
CORTE MADERA <AP)
-Marin County residents
continued to do better than
expected in their efforts to
conserve water, officials
say. <Related story, AS).
Weekend water con-
sumption wu 9.3 million
gallom on Saturday and 9.4
million sallona on Sunday,
far below the 12 million per
day goal 1et by the Marin
Municipal Water District.
Diltrlct general
mana1er J . Dietrich
Stroeb said Monday that
the figures ~ere "especial· ly exclUnc' because they
came on day1 when most
people presumably were at
home.
tions as to when the corridor can
be built.
The district's five.year
Transportation Improvement
Plan calls for $13 million lo buy
the 13-mile Pacific Electric right-
of.way.
In addition, it includes another
$188.5 million for construction or
\he first· seven miles of the
transportation link between San·
ta Ana and Stanton.
District Director Al Holllnden
bas expressed fear that while
railway officials were preparing
to abandon that seven·mile
stretch, the remaining six miles
to Los Angeles may be lied up in
long·term railway commitments
to industrial concerns.
Jenkins said Monday OCTD of-
ficials silll have not learned if
such commitments are being
made. . He said ocrD would have the
power to condemn the property
for public use.
And, he continued, OCTD or.
ficials learned recently that the
staff of the Southern California
Rapid Transit District is renew-
jing its study of a transit corridor
·along the route from the Los
Angeles-Orange County line into
Los Angeles.
The five-year plan approved
Monday will be used as the basis
tor obtaining stale and federal
grants lo pay for the bulk of the
transit improvements outlined.
The plan is amended annually.
It also calls for adding 170 large
buses and 75 mini buses lo develop
an eventual fleet of 724 vehicles by
the 1981).81 fiscal year.
The otncer wheeled around tc
see a IUD PolAi.d at him. Tbc
robber ordered Lansford to un-
holster bis weapon.
Lansford instead trled to talk
the man into 1urnncter1Q1, police
Hid.
Police said the man, hold.in&
his gun In one hand, reached with
the other hand to try to pull
Lansford's revolver from the
holster .
Unaucceurw because of the
bol1ter restralntnc 1trap, the
gunman tried to ya,nk the weapon
free by grabbing it with both
hands.
Then Lansford, 50, grabbed the
man's gunhand and wreaUed fer
the weapon.
During the struggle, Mrs.
O'Daniel took the sack of jewelry
and ran into a back room.
Whitney ran to another area of
the shop and grabbed a .2Z·
caliber rifle.
By the time Whitney found the
rifle and ran back to face the rob·
ber,bewucone.
"Otherwise I would bavesbot at
him. Probabl)' would bave •bot to
klll," eaJd Whitney in an ln·
tervlew after lbe robbery.
"I didn't think about getuftg
shot. I ju.st thought, get the rllle,
cettbeguy.••
Whitney ran outalde the store
with the rtfle juat u police ar-
rived ln response to Lan,slord's
call that be wu tn trouble and an
at.med man bad robbed the shop.
PoUce Capt. Neil Purcell drew
his gun and ordered Whitney to
place the rifle on the sidewalk.
Whitney complied.
A counlywide alert for the sus·
peel, described as short, stocky.
with either a full red beard or
heavy muttonchop sideburns,
and possibly wearing a tlass eye,
was W\Successful in apprehend·
ing him.
Purcell said Laguna officers
searched local streets for about
four hours.
Froae Page Al
5 DIE .••
Michael Jr., 13; Ian, 1: and An·
thony, 4.
Three of the children were
found in the living room on the
first floor. Two others were found
beside a window on the second
floor.
Officials said Mrs. Kenny dis·
covered the Ore and alerted ber
husband. Holbrook Fire Chief
Robert Rogers said the parents
jumped to safety from the second
story. and other officials said the
parents tried to re-enter the
house but were blocked by
names. ·
A neighbor, Kathleen Alba,
said Kenny woke her up at •:30
a.m .:banging on her door and
screaming. "My kids are in
there! My kids are in there!'• •
She sald Kenny, clad in pa-
jam a s, and his wife, in a
nightgown, stood in her home
helpless, watching the fire bum.
"It was like a nightmare,"
Mrs. Alba said. "I couldn't stand
it." They kept screaming, 'My
children are in there!· "
Rogers, the lire chief, said he
received a cail at4:34 a.m.
"I live two minutes away," he
said. "I was on the scene im-
mediately. Flames were coming
out of every window. It just lit up
the sky. The children were i.naide
and entry was impossible."
Police said they received a 1:a1l
from Mrs. Kenny before 4:30
a .m .• but Wf:re unable to un-
derstand her because she was screaming. ·
Another neighbor. Jane
Waters, said she was awakened
by Kenny's screams. She said
her husband, Donald, raced out-
side with a six-foot ladder and
tried lo climb to the second-story
window where two of the children
were found. The ladder was too
short, shesald.
Two firemen surfered injuries
and were hospitalized, a nre de-
partment spokesman said. The
cause or the blaze was not im·
mediately established.
Meteorite Site Searched
--I..auisville Students Hunt for Fragments
LOUISVILLE, Ky. CAP> -
ProrellOl'I have thld hundreds or
collece student• to turn
Loultvllle Ul'Slde down In a
•earch ror fragments of a
meteorite that exploded over the
cltY el~t days 110.
"It's Uke looklns for a needle in
a haystack, but ... more rrag·
ment.a h•ve 1ot to be around,"
said Tom Boone of the Untvenit)'
of Lo'1hville 's Rauch
Planet.arlum.
The 1tudent.a were told to look
on 1'0Cftops and anow·covered
fttldl for etranae·looklnt black rocu. Th1'H tra11nenh of the
mfteorite aJread1 baH bttn di•·
covered. TMY were tak n to the
Smitb1ontan lnatHutlon in Wuh~ Boon .. id.
"Dr, ·~.:.O uon, curator or
meteorites at the Smithsonian.
1aJd he would be very surprised
tr there were not a large numbet
of pieces of this meteorite in the
Lo.ulsvllle area, for two re· uons, ·•Boone aaid Monday.
"The first it bee.use of the ex-
ten1lve number or stchttnaa and
the larce area over wblch lt was
obcerved. And the second reason
-the 1trencth of the exploalon or
lbe sonic boom waa tremendous,
which auggests that lhia
meteorite was a tar1e object with
many, ~Y pieces."
Boone sald hundreds or
persons reported setin1 the
meteorite explodo and "almost
everybody I've talked to beard
It." liundrtd.s of 11abUn1s were
reporwd over 1 200·m11e area ex·
tendlq lnto aouthern Indiana
and central Kentucky.
,bm it ex.plod.ct, Boone slid,
the meteorite rattled windows,
knocked houseplants off their
stands and dama1ed at ltut one
chimney.
The laraest fragment damaged
a roof In the west end of tht ell>'
near the Ohio River. The second.
about the sue of a table teMls
ball, pierced a storm wlndow af'\d
fell between It and the howio wlb-
dow. The third, midway In abc
bet ween the other two, was tOW>d
on the hood of an automobile.
Of all recorded meteorltel,
aclenli5ll estimate that only 3
percent hove hit bout or ~
man-made construcUon1. •
A sclrnlisl at the Smlthst)Qlin
1aid that. on the •vera1e, UMre
are about five mcteorlte l•ftd!r!P
worldwide ln any one year. 'l1d1
la tht llotb 10 the United Stalel
11nce rec:orda have been kept. ~ ..
,
! l
I l
I
ORANGE GOUNTY, CAL:IFORNtA
· COuntg S~.,.,oOJ Distriets Cool Pools
Weapons
Restraint
Urged
W ASlllNGTON CAP> -Presi-
dent Carter s aid today he
believes the United States and
the Soviet Union are roughly
equal ln military might and ad-
vocated initiatives on both sides
to restrain arms while maintain-
ing the overall balance of power.
At his first White House news
conference, Carter disclosed that
be is considering cancellation or
a projected sale of advanced con-
cussion bombs to Israel.
He said be is drafting a long-
rance energy proeram that will
"require substantial sacrifices
on the part of the American peo-
ple," and will bar any unwar-
ranted profits by the industries
involved. And he repeated his
... promise to bold two news con-
ferences every mooth.
_ Carter said either the United
States or the Soviet Union "cu
destroy a laree part of the other
nation," and the challen1e now Is
to maintain equity while curbing
the arms race.
The President said a major atr
tack by either side would mean
50 million to 100 million
casualties. He also said neither
nation could prevent the other
from retaliating a1ainst such an
attack.
The President also disclosed
that during a meeting earlier in
the day with a repr~sentative ol
the Peoples Republic of China
that the subject of reducing de·
pendence of the superpowers on
nuclear weapons was discussed.
On another matter, the Presi·
dent said he is confident that
Congress will produce an accep-
table version of h1a program lo
perk up the economy. but added
he will not hesitate to exercise
the veto when he decidu It is
warranted.
With some congressional
Democrats preuing for a sharp
expansion of bb Sll.2 billion pro-
gram of tax cuts and jobs, Carter
said he anticipates some amend·
menu but believea theiy will be
acceptable.
A-Viqgria
Flu Shots
.Ban Lifted
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
1overnment's moratorium oo flu
vaccinations was l1fted today so
the elderly and the chronically ill
can cet shots to protect them
Crom A-Victoria nu.
lD the proeess, they also would
be vaccinated aeaimt swine nu,
since the.re are ncp separate Yac-
clnes for the two s~alJis.
Bul Secretary of Health.
Education and W.Uare .Joseph A.
Callfano Jr. maintained the
moratorium on vaccine contain·
inl serum only for swine flu. He
aald there ls no Immediate need
to lift tt becaiwe there bas been
n() outbreak of "the swine flu
strain la the Unfted S...,tes this
yelr. Tbtre bu beell an o.tbreak
of A-Vlct«tanu la a Miami nu.n-
in1 bom4!!.
Tla• ~ were (!ailed off ill the
firat place because ol the rtak d
Guilf ain·Barre Syndrome, a
rare paralytic disease, among
t.bo11 wbo ~etve them.
,Califano aald the rlak of COO·
UJctlQI that aUmeftt II believed
to be about the Nm• with any tne of Ou lhot. Ht H)d the awtne
flu vaeclne la litot considered
~ON rtik1 tlieD dY ~.tJJie. • .~allfaao NC01DlD.ndtd1•1t.bat
p,ople ap ea or OHi' take tbe A· Vtctotta~ •
some believe endaneen .tk up-
~mlng b1'b acbool swi.Di aeasoo.
"I can't understand lt, I think
everyone ls panickine and tb.ey
should wait unW there la a man-
date," _.id Guy Bamicoat, a Mis-
sion Viejo resident and member
of several Amatuer Athletic
Union CAAU) swimming commit· tees. · ·.
He contended swim clubs in the
east are keeplnt temperatures
'·
"at full blMt" ~ have no int.n-
tion of cuttl.de back 00 the use of
natura11u.
Dean Crowley, admtnla~ratlve
ualatant for tbe Callfomla In·
tencbolastlc Federation (CIF),
Southern Section, the covernlng .
body for 400-plua Southern
California high school athletic
pro,rams, agreed with
Banucoat'a claims.
He said the CIF ls leaving tbe
Upholds r·
IH!ty l"I ... SIMt "'*•
LOSES APPEAL BID
Ex-Aaseaaor V•ll•rga
Rea ·Sclwol
Ey.edFor
Clublwuse
By STEVE MITCHELL
Ot tM Dally l"I ... Stat!
Costa Mesa councilmen said
Monday they will seek an opinion
from the Newport-Mesa Unified
School District concerning the
possibility of using Rea Middle
School as a new Boys Club.
But, at the urging of City
Manager Fred Sorsabal, the
council discounted a proposal to
use vacant land adjacent to the
Mardan School of Educational
Therapy on West 19th for the new
cluh relocation.
Councilmen received a letter
from Bo)'!' Club board President
Willard Jordan asking that the
city assist the club's directors in
relocating the old Center Street
branch on Costa Mesa's west
side.
When the city purchased the
Central branch more than a year
ago, board members told thy
council they would attempt to re-
locate the club on the city's west
side, which currently has no such
facility.
Jordan said ln a letter to the
council that the board bas been
unable to find a suitable location
on the west side.
A pe!tition signed by 478 resi-
denta of the west side asked lhe
eouncll to approve use of the
Mardan site for a Boys Club
factuty. The Mardan School, and
a city-owned vacant lot, are
located at West 19th and Pomona
<See CUJBHOUSE, Pa&e .U)
Ex-OC
Assessor
Plea Lost
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Former Orange County Assessor
Jack Vallerga's 1975 conviction
on three counts of selling county
property was upheld today by the
2nd District Court or Appeals.
Vallerga was sentenced in Ven-
tura County Superior Court to 60
days in jail and five years' proba-
tion and fined $1 ,000. The case
was handled in Ventura after a
change of venue from Santa Ana.
Vallerga was also a codefen-•
dant in another case with former
Rep. Andrew J . Hinshaw.
In the current case. Vallerga
was convicted of felony conflict
of interest, four counts of theft of
public monies and a count of em-
bezzlement of public monies. He
was acquitted on one count of
grand theft embenlement of
public ftlOl'.lies.
Presiding Justice John J. Ford
wrote the opinion with Justices
John Alport and Rodney Potter
concurring.
The case stemmed from the
s ale in April 1973 to Spar-
tanburg, S.C., of an Orange
County-developed computerized
property assessment system.
The County Board of Supervisors
had authorized the sale for $'2,045
in 1970 but bad not authorized a
costly test of the system at
Orange County expense as a con-
dition ot the sale.
Supervisors also did not
authorize the $714 consulting fee
Vallerga receive d fro m
Spartanburg or the $6,000 con-
sulting fee Hinshaw received and
split with Vallerga, who was also
charged with illegally billing his
Spartanburg plane fare to the
county.
He was not charged in the
Spartanburg case.
Candidates Speak
At School Forum
The public is invited to hear
and question candidates for the
Newport-Mesa school board
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in the
Little Theater at Corona del
Mar High School.
All 10 candidate1 for the four
seats to be filled in a March 8
election have been invited to at-
tend the meetine sponsored by
the Corona del Mar Zone Ad·
v1sory Committee, a parent
group representing six schools.
.
Rom.anee ·over
Fiance eparta With Ring
HACKENSACK, N .J . CAP)-A Fair Lawn woman
has flled suit to regain a $3,000 diamond eng"4.gement
ring she claims her fiance slipped of C her f mger while
she slept.
Randy Bernlker said four days before sbe wu to
marry Jay Cohen, a Clltton stockbroker, bf cance1" .
their qagement and took the rlliK without 11.r. ,
permisSion, according to court papP,.rs filed here Mon-
day. .
On Nov. 7, s he was watchinf television at
her bome with Cohen, her attorney Leonard MWer
said~ . ' ''She fell asleep, then woke up as there wu a M
on her finaer. The next thin& she knew, Cdheo was
walkipa out the door with the rln( and b1i uplanatlon
at the Ume was the statement, 'l'Jft not ~acly'." Mille~aaid. · MlA Berniker also ls seektnc ,_~ment of $100
she claims was deposited with a traftl ~ rot the
couple's himeymoon, $500 she d~teeUirl f.tilltun ~
and GOO for ber weddln& gown. SM ho ~ked
punitlv. Clama1es. •
respootlblllty of pool tem·
peraturea up to individual
scboolJ, even tbou&h theni have
been PUC blata that an order ls
forthcoming to abut off the beat
completely.
"Qultefrankly, they (the PUC>
have been very vague and our
member schools have been call-
ing ua ln droves," a aid Crowley.
The minimum pool tem-
perature tor competitive swim·
mine is 18 decrees. wltll t.be ideal
between 80 and 82, accordlnc to
El Toro Hlib School swim coach
Steve Farria.
He said the pool at ·bts school
will be lowered to 1'I decrees, and
noted that even a one degree
change in temperature can be
felt by swimmers.
HunUneton Bea~b. Newport.
Mesa. Caplstrano, .. Sllddleback
Valley, and Irvine Unified School
Dlatrict offidals say they are
Joinint la loweriD8 pool heat to
about 78 de&ree1.
Clyde. Lovelady. bla•lneat
manager for Laeun• Beacla
Unlfied District, said today he
will lower Laeuna Beach HlJb'tf
pool thermostat to 88 decrees and
await comments from swimmers
and distriJt\i:'ftctals. Dana lDlh School Vice
(See l'OOLS, Page A.%)
Fogoound at Airport
Passengers and crew membE:rs from this
Air California 737 were out of luck this
morning when fog forced a halt to flights in
and out of Orange County Aill><>rt. These
passengers got a bus ride t.o Ontario where
another plane -and clear skies -were
wajting. Early morning fog conditjons are
expected to continue through Wednesday .
. -.
-:
Heroin Factories Rftre ·
Ditig Officer Cites 'Built-in Safeguards'
By IDIARY KA YE
Of UM O.lly f'I ... Stat!
Federal agents may never un-
cover another "heroin factory"
similar t.o the one dise<>vered hust
weekend in the Irvine area, a
Drug Enforcement Administra-
tion (DEA) spokesman said to-
day.
"We have so many built-in
safeguards against such an
operation succeeding that people
would be very foolish to even at-
tempt it,'' said the spokesman,
an official ln the federal agency's
information department.
Federal agents burst into
Petrson Labs, 1810 Carnegie,
Santa Ana, Saturday and arrest-
ed company president Bernard
Berman, 52, Santa Ana, on
charges or conspiring to produce
heroin.
Berman was arraigned Mon-
day in U.S. •District Court in Los
Angeles.
A s-econd man, Joseph
Paladino, 53. was arrested in his
New Jersey home the same day.
Paladino is believed .to be the
financierflltbeoperatlon.
Paladinb will probably be
brought to Los Angeles following
a special t•ral hear\ng, ac-
cotd1nf to a s~eaman for the
U.S. Attorney in Los AJi.geles.
A Qlim m~ is tb0u1ht to be ln-
vol ved in the illicit operation, but
t he DEA spokes man said
charges have hOt yet been filed
against hlm and would not reveal
h1a name. He is an Orange Coun-
ty man and waa also found at the
lab Saturday.
The lab was capable of produc-inl more than $'2 milllon worth of
heroin each month, accordina to
federal agentt. However, agents
said they conflacated only a
amaU amount of the drug
because the firm wu not yet in.to
The NeWPC>rt·Meaa Pedera·
tloJi of Ttaehm la spontorlJll a
aemlnar on Quality Educatm&l
Sta,ndard'B in 'teachins
(QUEST>. Wtdneiday ttdm 1·7
p .m . at Cotta Meta "''b
School.
l>iatnc:t Truatte Marlen
BerJelOD eDd ~· · &uMrtn· tenclent rtora>a.D ~., Lioall ~ Wlll · '.be
amOftl UM r9re1tntattva of
· tbe'i·N~·Mtla ktlOC>l DIA· tiifl. 11lit Pi*IC li tarit.S. Fat
--tib'tDltbt. c:iall a. ...
Cull production.
The DEA licenses every com-
pany that manufactures or dls-
lr i butes any controlled sub·
stance.
.. The licensing is strict and
there is constant monitoring.
Each distributor must keep de·
tailed records of where the drugs
are going," the spokesman said.
He added that it is not extreme-
ly difficult to produce the illegal
drug, although a thorough
knowledge or chemistry is
needed, along with adequate lab
equipmen t and enough r aw
materials.
"That's the cat.cb -it's tough
to get the raw materials (opium)
here and deal with it illegally."
he said.
Berman had been issued a
license to produce morphine sul-
phate and paragoric, both legal ..
derivatives of opium.
"But there was no sign that be ·
planned to produce either or
(See HEROIN, Pace A!)
Officer Slugged
In Laguna Heist
By PIDLIP ROSMARIN
OU• Dally I'll« stall
A Laguna Beach police officer
was pistol-whipped and shot at
Monday alter be walked in on the
armed robbery of a jewelry
store.
The gunman fired a sbtgle shot
aa he •tru11led to t•ke Off\c:.er
Jim Lanttord's 44Jlvit:~ tevo&ver
from hln>. The buflel went into
the.noor.
T h e robber wre nched
Lanstord's gun from Its holster
and clubbed him to tds knees with
it. He ordered Lansford to Ue face·
down and warned Ute 20-year
Laguna Beach pollcernan, "Don't
move or I'll kill you.''
He escaped, wltb the offlc~r·s
gun and radio -, but without a
Jrocery sack of handcrahed
jewelryhecametoateal.
More than a dozen poltc,men
blan"eted streets and beaches tn
a aeven·block radlua of the Jewel
Searchers, l01'7·D N. Coast mgnay.
Lansford 111e~ t.he Ito.re
t»le~ CO al,ert pol!t~. ! Lantf'~rcl w111 talten b7
paramedic ambulance to South
Coast CommUDlb' llol&pital. An
X-ray examination of ht• skull
revealed l10 rtaeturet and be •as
releaaed. He blld a larae lump
bebtod bil Hr w!Mre be Vl'at
ltrvtk.
Th• 11\cldent be1an Wiien
Laotford pltked up OM rl the
proprietors C>r the Je~el Seareberl on a ·~fflY Tad" call
to drive * men back to t.M "°' . Lanalord WH takln• Joel \1r'bltMY, ~ Mlf-owaer ot tM
-···· ~ U.. ttore,.....
they passed right by the robber
When Whitney's grandmother,
Maebelle O'Daniel, who was
tending the s hop, s potted
Lansford's uniform, she cried to
him, "Oh, I'm being robbed!"
The officer wheeled around to
see1 a gun pointed al him. The
robber ,ordered Lansford to un·
hol~t~r bi• weapoq. • ''l.J'.Sf~ 1nstead tried to talk
<S.OFnCER, .. _,e .\%)
Coast
Weather
Some locally dense
morninl foe near coast,
otherwise partly cloudy
throup Wedneeday. Hi&hs
71 to '72. Lowa 46 to 52.
"
'.4 .I DAILY PILOT c
·Night of Birth, Death
f)/ficen Welcome~' Fail ID Save Woman
• 'l'OM llAaLET ... ....w-~-
"You win aome, you loee aome. ..
That comment wu offered tn tbe wa\ch
comaumder'1 office at the Oran&• Cowaty
Sbe.rift'1 Department today when Deputies
Joseph Machuca and Dennis Sulka checked in (rom their midnight to I a. m. patrol.
TBB atCBAaO NS dldn 't 1et any
farther than tbe famUy car at the fraat of the
-.Om•. 1'b«Y were Jolned there by dtP\lties
llacbuea and SWta ~helped the happy~
pie welcome a baby 1irl, who, Uke her mother
ii dolq well today lJa a nearby bolpltal. •
EVUYONE AGaBED it wu a pretty '
valid observation. Both officers were certain·
ty winners when they drove at high speed
about 2:30 a .m. in response to a call from a
home atm12 Redlands Drive, Costa Mesa. It
turned out that Shelley and Dale Richard.son
of that addraa had plans to drive to the
ho.pita) when Kn. Richardson became con·
vlnced ber prqnaney wu about to terminate.
Machuga md Su,lh aren't a ea1erto talk
about the Josln1 pOrtlon.olthelr ahlft.
. . THEIR NEXT call a tew minutes later w.u to a Tustin home where they did their best
tO revive a 65-year-old woman who ha.d a heart
attack 1bortly after the Rlcbardaon baby wu
born la the family car.
Emeriency mecJjcat aid proved fruillels.
The woman was pronounced dead at a nearby
boepltal.
River Towboats Collide
Mishap Closes Portion of Ohio River
MARION, Ky. (AP> -Por·
tions of the Ohio River were
virtually closed to tralflc today
following a towboat collision that
damaged a dam near here, an
Army Corps of Engineers
spokeamansaid.
T~.e collision was the latest in a
string of troubles that has
plagued river tralfic near here
and severely hampered delivery
of fuel and other petroleum pro.
.ducts to points in the north and
east.
Corps spokesman Martin
Pedigo said the river at Dam 50
on the river's western stretch
was 16.6 feet early today, some 20
inches below its level before the
collision Monday damaged
wickets, devices that are railed
or lowered to control the flow ol
water.
"Normally, when the river
falll below 17 feet. it indicates
that shallow poinll upriver are
impasaable," said Ped110, who
added that the channel in some
· •uch areas is juat nine feet.
Pedigo said the extent of
~amaee was unknown early to-
day. but "it has the potential of
being fairly serious.'' He said it
would be late today before of·
ficials could determine when the
damage could be repaired.
Dam 51 , upriver. was damaged
last December in a collision that
halted traffic for over a week.
Before traffic could resume, the
harsh winter temperatures aJ·
lowed the formation of a foot.
thick layer or ice that ha!ted traf-
fic for about a month.
Then came the Monday col-
lision, just a few days after
workers had manually raised
wickets on dams in a desperate
.effort to get traffic moving again
on the ice-clogged river.
Meanwhile, the cold wave and
gas sbortace. which have put up
to 1,567,000 penons out of work so
far, may return in full force next
week after a temporary break,
.according to government
forecasts.
But the edge of the shortage
was belng softened this week as
small additional supplies of
natural gas began flowing into in-
terstate pipelines under pro-
vision.a of the new emergency act
that President Carter signed
Wednesdav.
Mesa Man, Ci~
Firm Chief, Dies
TreeSweet Products Company
preaident Robert E. Graves of
Costa Mesa, d.led Monday in a
Houaton boepital of compllcaUODS
followina 1ur1ery.
Graves, who wu 50, Joined the ~anta Ana-baaed citrus process-
ing company as sales manager In
19&C, and was named president in
1973.
Graves was president of the Na·
tional Juice Products Association
d.uring 1975-76, and was past pre-
sident of the Frozen Food Council
of Southern California.
Before joining TreeSweet he
was with Stouffer Foods
Johnston Pies and Swift and Com'.
pany.
Company officials said today
Graves was instrumental ~ ob-
taining an arrangement wltb
football star O.J . Simpson to ad·
vertlse TreeSweet products.
"Mr. Graves knew .Mr.
Changes
Promised
For Firm
One ol. two companies eeeklni a
c0ntrollln1 interest In the lrvine
Comp&ll)' intends to drastically
reor•anlie Irvlne mana1ement ii its bid ll tuccessful, testimony ln
Oraqo County S\tperior Court
has revealed.
Quoting Monday Crom a deposi-
tion taken berore the trial from Irvine beires.a 1oan Irvine Smith,
attomey Howard Prlvett testifled
that representaUves of one or two
bidden usured.ber they Intended
to "do away with the deadwood."
Privett represents the James
Irvine P'oundatioll in a trial that
will end with Judie James F.
Judge's apptovaJ of one of two
bidden: the Mobil OU Company
or a consortium beaded by Wall
Street ftnanciu Charles Allen
and Detroit developer Alfred
Taubman.
Mobil bas offered $281.9 million
for the foundation's co.ntrollin& "
interest of Sil.I percent. :I'he Allen-
Ta ubman offer tops that by
$800,000 .
Privett's testimony from Mrs.
Smith's deposition reveals that
the 44·year-old descendant of
Irvine Company founder James
Irvine held a aeties of meeliJlls
with representatives of the Allen--
Taubman interest.
Those conversations reflected
the views of Allen-Taubman
negotiators that the Irvine Com·
pany is overstaffed and the con-
clusion that "we should keep the
good people and do away with the
deadwood."
The deposition contains the
comments: "the second besl
should be eliminated."
It also contains the prediction
from Allen-Taubman officials
that the restructured Irvine Com·
pany Wider new direction could
lead the farm to greater achieve-
ments in many areas of Orange
County development.
It is predicted that the com·
pany's present Income could be
doubled under the new manage·
ment although it would not be
possible to pay dividends tn the
first few years of the new opera-
tion.
The current trial was ordered
when Mrs. Smith took legal action
to halt the foundation's sale of its
Irvine lnterests to Mobil for $200
million.
Provisions' of the Federal Tax
Reform Act of 1969 compel foun·
dation trustees to dispose of those
holdings before 1983.
Mn. SmiUl. wilb holdin1s d 22 percen~ in the. Irvine Company, is
recoeruzed as the major minority
stockholder in the company,
Finders Keepers?
Sigfrido Gurerra. (right), 9, and his sister Jeanette, 11,
of Los .Angel~s display ne~rly $4,000 in cish they found
near a shopping center while :,valking home from school
after kicking a bundle -full of greenbacks. They
turned it over to police, and may claim Ute cash if it's
not accounted for in 97 days.
OCTD Earmarks
Transit Corridor
By KATHY CLANCY
Of .. D.il~P'll•Uteff
More than half of a $377.9
million five-year 1pending
package approved by Orange
County Tranait District <OCTD>
directors Monday is earmarked
for a 13-m.ile mus transit cor-
ridor. (Related stories Pages A3,
8). .
And while directors included
$201.6 million for the route
stretching from Santa Ana to Los
Angeles County line, district
Planning Director Tom Jenkins
said today there still are ques-
tions as to when the corridor can
be built.
The district's five-year
Transportation Improvement
Plan calls for $13 million to buy
the 13-mile Pacific Electric righl·
of-way.
In addition, it include&,tnot.ber
$188.5 million for construction or
the first seveo miles of the
transportation link between San·
ta Ana and Stanton.
District Director Al Hollinden
has expressed fear that while
railway officials were preparing
to abandon that seven-mile
stretch. the remaininJl six miles
to Los Angeles may be tied up in
long-term railway commitments
to Industrial concerns.
Jen.kins said Monday OCTD of·
ficials still have not learned if
such commi\ments are being
made.
He said OCTD would have the
power to condemn the property
for public uae.
And, he cdntinued, OCTD of.
flctals learned recently that the
staff of the Southern California
Rapid Transit District is renew-
ing its study of a transit corridor
alone the route from the Los
Angeles-Orange County line into
J;os Angeles.
Simpson very well over the last
year or so," said spokeswoman
Mrs. Boonie Reid. "lt was an
absolutely ideal partnership, a
mutual partnership," she said.
Simpson, a star running back
TONIGHT for the Buffalo Bills of the Na-
NEWPORT·M ESA SCHOOL tional Football Leaeue. makes
DIES AFT~ SURGERY
Robert E. Graves
f'rmra Page AJ
Suspect's Sallity
Doubted in Court
'the five-year plan approved
Monday will be used as the basis
for obtaining state and federal
grants to pay for the bulk of the
transit improvements outlined.
The plan is all)ended annually.
It also calls'for adding 170 large
buses and 75 mini buses to develop
an eventual fleetof724 vehicles by
the 1980-81 fiscal year.
It also calls for development 0£
maJor transportation centers in
Laguna Hills, Huntington Beach,
Laguna Beach, Santa Ana.
BOARD -Re1ular meeting, commercials for TreeSweet and
Costa Mesa city council cham· a car rental a~ency.
bers, 7:30 p.m. Graves is survived by his wife
COSTA MESA HOUSING AND Elaine of tb~ family home, tm
C O M M U N I T Y Tanager Drive, seven children
DEVELOPMENT COMMlTI'EE and seven grandchildren.
-Regular meeting, City Hall, Funeral services will be con·
fifth noor conference room, 7:30 ducted Thursday at St. John the
p.m. Baptht Catholic Church. lO'll W.
. ' B E H l N 0 T H E Baker St., Costa Mesa, beginning
HEADLINES'' -Or. Giles T. atua.m.
Brown lecturer. OCC Forum, The family has suggested
7 .30 pm memorial contributions to the
COASTl.lNE CC LECTURE-' Ather05c.lerosi.a Research Fund
"Investment Alternatives to incareoftheHeartAssoctation. '
Stocks and Bonds," Unitarian ·
Church, 1.259 Victona. 7 p.m.
"OLD TIMES" -South Coast
Repertory Theater, Tuesday.
Sunday through Feb. 19, 8 p.m.
WEDNESDAY. FEB. I
COAST COMMUNITY
COLLEGE BOARD -Regular
meellng, 1370 Adams, 8 p. m.
• OCC LECTURE -"CT'eate a
Ne• tmage," Fine Arts Bldg.
119, 7:30p.m. ·
COASTLINE CC LECl'URES
-• 'Claulcs of the Silent
Sc!reen," Zetancta Hl«b School
Forum, 7 p .m ... What You
Always Wanl«l to Know about
Travel. •. " l!:ttancta High· I School Choral Room, 7:30p.m.
<MANOI COAST c
DAILY PILOT
l1't °'~~It l'flll. "'"'-" i.c°"' ·-"-.... ~ ...... °'_ eoe.1-iw.,.~ ,...._.._,._.,.. !MllhMd ,,..,.., llvOlltll ,....., ... , ....
MoM ,.._, .. t<1'. N""1 ..... eo.t1111<01"' taut Valley lnlM, ,,...,..._, Y•'"' •flld ~ .. .CIV'-!llc...i ,. .............. HI.
I-It ""911-•....-..n -......... TM "'"" __ . .....,. ........ "'.-.... ~-.~.tNw.c.llltnlltN&. ............ ........,.._.......,.
,.,. c.....,
Vtte,,es--0.-el~
i.....~ ...... . . ~:::..~
°""'"·'-=~·--At114111n1W"'9 ...... ,
OFFICER • •
the man intoaurrendering, police
sald.
Police said the man, holding
his iun in ooe band, reached with
the other band to try to pull
Lansford's revolver from tbe
holster. :
Uuuccesaful because of the
bolater restrainln1 strap, the
1unman tried to yuk the weapon
free by grabbing It with bo...,
bands.
Theo Lansford, 50, crabbed the
man's l\Ulhand and wresUed for
the weapon.
During the atrug1te, Mrs.
O'Damel took Uae sack of Jewelry
and ran fnto a back room.
Whitney ran jo anotbet' area of
the shop and arabbed a .22·
calU>er ritle.
By the time Whitney found the
rifle aud ran back to lace the rob-·
ber, bewu 100..
''<>tblrwiMl would.have lbot.:
hlm. Probably would bave lbot to kill,,. aal~ Whltoey lo aa ID•
terview lftertMro*"l.
"I didn't tbli* •bout l«tinc
lbot. J )lit tboulht~ 1.t the rtfle, ••ltbelQ)'... •
Whitney ran oualde UM stare
"10a tbe· rUJe Jmt u pollc. at·
rived,.. retPGOl4t t. LaDlfOl'd'a
eaU that be w•Jn troubl• ud an
armed man btd ~ tbelbop.
Police Capt. Neil ~drew .
b.ll .t\11\ and ordered Wblto.t to Dlac• u.. rUl• oa tlllia aw.walk. WbJtney compls.d. A~ ilArt for tHIUl-
peet. delcribecl • ~ •tock.1. with either a tull red beUd ar
beavy muttoncbOP .W.Mnl.
and Pol'lbl,J ••arini ..... .,..
WU ~ ID appr1-mll--tn1 blm. ,
POOLS •. ·•
Principal Alan Hix said he ~lieves lowered temperatures
will probably restrict the swim·
ming prograf!l. Barnicoat, who is
connected with the Nadadores
Swim Club in ~ission Viejo, said
younger swimmers there
already are going through
.shorter workouts.
Dr .. Norman Loets, deputy
supenntendent of the Newport.
Mesa district, said a meeting of
school principals is planned this
week to work oul a 1olution to the
problem before tbe high school
swim season geta into full swing.
He said the district is considering
sbuttin1 down one or two or its
live pools and is taking a look at
switching to solar heatin1.
Two Barefoot
Bandits Rob
Pair in Mesa
A palr of bandits. one of them
barefoot. bunt Into a Costa Mesa
apartment Monday .artemoon
and threatened two men before
neeln1 wtth $500 in cub, a coat
and a pair of UO shoes.
The two residt:nta of the apart·
ment at 710 W. 18th St. told Police
th4t two robben armed with a
chrome-plated handgun forced open a broken door about 5:30
p.m., and ordered the two men to
lie on the noor.
The bandits took S5001:n cub
from Che two busboys, alone with
a leather coat and a pair of shoes
before neetna ln a •mall foreiin .~ .... Leoaardoc. Vall•Jo and JaYler l'anlda tbld ommw the bandttl
mlMI• o1t wttb 8llO worth ot cash
and cJothlnl.
deaCrtbed both •uapects u Latlna wltb lona tuck bal: ol m.Uwn hetaht and
bUUd aod about 28 Ytab old.
A paychlatrlst who once probed
the ment.cl condition of convicted
killer Sirhan B. Sirhan and
heiress Patty Hearst told an
Orange County Superior Court
jury today that accused killer
Ken Richard Hulbert Is not men-
tally competent to face trial.
Dr. Seymour Pollack, caJJed by
the defense to examine the
Fullerton man, testified as the
second psychiatrist in the sanity
h~aring that Hulbert accused
him during an intervi~w of being
Front Page Al
HEROIN ••.
those drugs -only the Illegal
heroin," said the spokesman.
Historically, drug trafttcke-rs
in this country have reatricted
their activity to smuggUng ln
already-produced heroin frQm
countries where opium poppies
grow, such aa Mexico, France
and Far Eaatem natlons, hesald.
"Rerotn Is contraband here so
the opium poppies need to be
shipped in from elsewhere.
They're bulky, smelly and you
nef'd 10 pounds of opium to make
one pound of heroin. It '1 not
euy," the apoke11oan conthu...,cl.
"Really, what t&ey tried to do
was a lot of hassle for nothing.
When you start orderip& your
supp Ji es (opium) from a
legiti~te source as they d1d, It's
just a matter of seconds before
we would catch you." be said.
Free Shot11
Set in Mesa
Free immunizations wlU be
available for children and adults
in t-.. Ccllta Ilea• area Ftb. IO
and Feb. 1'. The cllnlca are beln1
held by ihe Oranae Couaty
Health J)epattment.
The ftnt clln.lc wlll be at Moate
Vllta School, 390 Monte Vbta
Ave .. a.ta Mesa Feb. 10. It will
beopmlrom3p.m. toB_p.rn.
On hb. 1• a dlnlc WW be beld at WUier School, ltOO N. W1Jk..
...__. Geor1• J101coae -.. tltr A9'9., c.ta II•• ud wW be -·-t.bi UduD Wk olnnew. 9P9ll tor u.. .... 1aoun. iDI tMclb''lll'n·•...,_ wilba Pal"llll.I muat accompany t.belr PledcetobGldt.biUneoapr~ cblldNn to UM cllAlc and 1boWd m• · . tartq _, lmm\iiil.UUon retard.I.
•
ln league with the devil.
He agreed with Deputy Public
Defender Walter Zech today that
Hulbert is ''severely mentally ill
and psychotic although he has
improved in the last few
months."
If the jury rules that Hulbert
24, is sane be will be tried befor~
Judg~ William S. Lee on charges
that mclude murder, rape, kid·
nap, robbery and assault.
It is alleged that he raped and
strancled Whittier housewife
Gina ftfarle Tisher, 19, whose
naked body was found in the back
of a parked car by Fullerton
police on Jan. 7, 1976.
And it is alleg~ tbat Hulbert
attacked two more women ln
Orange County, one of whom was
raped and robbed before she was
beaten and left unconscious ln
the Irvine area four days after
the Tilher killing.
Dr. Pollack and a J>IYCbiatrist
who preceded hlni on the witness
stand were told by Hulbert that
hla attacks on women were de·
signed to force the dtlvll to leave
the bodies of hia vJctlrns and con·
front hlm 1n combat.
In those intetvlews, Hulbert
described himself as a soldier of
the Lord who should b'ave been
met with cheering crowd• after
committing the of(entes for
which be may have to face trial.
lnstead he was arrested by
Fullerton police and indicted by
the Grand Jury. He also was in·
dieted by the Los Angeles County
Grand Jury on criminal charges
related to bt. alleged attacks on
six women in that county.
Fullerton andAnaheim. ·
CLUBHOUSE
Avenue.
Mrs. Mary Jane Dougherty
who said s he collected th~
signatures, urged the council to
resolve the issue right away, say.
mg the Mardan site was perfect
for the clubbouae.
City Man.ager Sorsabal object-
ed, sayin1, '"My ataff does not
feel it is a suitable location."
He said he does not want to
splfl up the parcel wbkh, he said
would lessen it. value to the city.'
Sorsabal suggested instead
that Rea Middle School migbt ~
a possibility for use by the &,a•
Club.
Council members Norma
Hertzog and Ed &le Farland. both
membera ot a clty-acbool dlltrlet.
liaison committee, a1reed to
come back to the council April 5
wllh a report on the 1ch0ol dla·
trict '• attJtude toward joint use o(
the middle 1chool.
Red Craft Docks
MOSCOW CAP) -The Soviet
Unlon'a Soyuz 2.t apacecra.fl wit1h
two cosmonauts aboard docked
today with the orbiting Salyut s
apace laboratory, one day after
it. launchins, Tasa announced.
CRelal«l photo, A4) •
I
I 1
,
'
By MICRAELPASKEVICH
OflMIHllff>ltMCt.n
Charges or mismanagement
leveled by an an(ry maintenance
director agaJnat Orange County
.a Pair directors hesaya "Just don't
'fknow the facts" have ral~ed the
attention ol admlhJstrato.._ of the
• Callfomia State Division of Fairs ~ in sacramenm.
: Robert Anttelo, who w-. named
d IT ettor of
m aint~n~nce
and security
at the fair·
grounds in
Costa Mesa
last August.
made th e
charges in a
rec e nt in
terview and
ANGELO p r e s e n t e d
the m last Wcdnesdav before the
Yellow Cab
Lawsuits
R ejected
Lawsuits by three Yellow Cab
companies against the Orange
County Transit Pislrict COCTD 1
died Monday afternoon when the
C alifornia Suprem e Court
declined to accept their appea l
Acting Chier Justice M atthe"'
Tobriner in San Francisco denied
the cab firms' request to rile a
late petition ror a hearing before
the higb court, Deputy Orange
County Counsel Ken Smart said
today .
The companies had until 5
p.m. Feb. l to (1Je tne1r appeal
from a district court of appeal de
cision in favor of OCTD But the
messenger did not arrive until
after 5 p.m. because of traffic.
Tobriner could have accepted
the late filing, Smart said, but de·
· cided against it.
The suit began in 1975 when the
firt'Tll> SJ.led OCTD to force the
tran~district to halt its dial-a·
r ide program, charging it was
unfair competition.
Orange County Superior Court
Judge Mark Soden ruled in ravor
or Yellow Cab but the state ap
pellate court in San Bernardino
overturned Soden·~ r ultng last
December
* * *
Bus Changes
Okayed-With
Firm Warning
Summer changes in 13 Orange
County Transit District <OCTD l
bu!> routes were approved by
directors Monday, but not before
staH members were warned to be
pre pared lh1s time
"What have you done to pre
vent another debacle like we had
la ~t Septe mber'>" Bo ard
Chairman Ralph Cla rk asked.
And wh1lt-distnct offac1al~ as
!\Ured him the 14 driver:. needed
would bto out of training and on
dut). Clark asked them to come
back with \Hillen manpower
pla ns
In September, the day OCTD
offered increased !>ervlce by ad·
ding 75 bu!>es to its fleet, some
schedules were missed because
or ill dnvers and some who had
not yet completed training
The changes. starting in June,
will provide additional service to
beaches and to the new Fluor
Corporation offices In I rvlne.
Directors also aske4 staff
members to study ways to make
certain those commuters along
routes to the beach do not miss
their work schedules because of
bu11es filled by beachl{oers
Woman Killed
.By O wn Car
LOS ANGELES (APl -A 43·
year-old Simi Valley housewife
was killed when she was thrown
from a car she was backing from
a driveway and it rolled over her.
Poiice said the accident oc-
curred Monday •• Lots
Richardson waa leaning out or an
open car door wften her foot ac·
cldentally hit the accelerator.
She was tossed from the ear,
dragged several feet, then run
, over by the front wheel. police
~· said.
\
:: Guards Sou~t
AUGUSTA, Malnc CAP>
Gov. Jamee t.oncley and atate
Atty. Gen. Jos~b Brennan new
to Wuh.lnctoo today to ur1etbelr
1 con1reaamen lo 6fe1uard land
H purcbaaes and bond ulea from
~t the eftect ot Tndl.n clahns on eo ·~~rcentoftbeJanUD Maine.
,,
fair board and a repretentaUve of
the State Dl vision of Falra.
Angeloaaid:
-Minority en:u>loye1 hired on a
part·Ume basis were receiving
Jowerwages than whites.
-He received anonymous and
threatening phone calls ordering
him to di.amiss two newly hired
black security guards and to bait
investigations into employethelts
or fair (state) property.
-That construction priorities
set by fair management would
mean that a $15,000 drainage pro·
ject would begin after completion
or a $40,000 paving project, thus
forcinghlsworkmentotearupthe
new asobaJt.
George Gomes. program ad·
ministration for the State
Division of Fairs program and
acting director or the local fair
since the ftrlng of Jim Porterfield.
said Monday be believec A111elo's
charges could bring about a
posit(ve shakeup in fair opera-
tions.
He said it appears the fair board
is "concerned about correcting
injustices and improving opera·
lions." following Angelo's
charges.
Gomes admitted that Angelo's
accusation that minority workers
were victims of racial dis·
crimination regarding pay scales
m ay well be true. He said "every
step will be taken to correct the
situation ir it exists.''
Angelo has said about 15
workers or Mexican descent were receiving $2.50 per hour while
Angelos doing the same work
were paid $3.50 per hour
Gomes said the situation may
have risen while Jim Porterfield
was acting fair director . addmg
that he believes "Angelo is the
best qualified to determine the
pay scales of his employes" and
has the power to correct any pro·
blems.
However. board members were
not as positive in statements re-
garding Angelo's charges .
Fair Board President Clinton
Hoose refused to comment, say
ing, "We <the board> are tired or
be ing tried in lhe press."
In outlining the charges, Angelo
said he was only scraping the s ur-
face of what he considers deep·
rooted problems in fair opera·
lions
•·ft 's like th e dirrerence
between steahng a loar or bread
and murder."heclaimed.
Director Burr Williams said
Angelo i s d e alin g with
"manager·s business" and
shouldn't bother with any charges
unless he can substantiate them
Refening to comments that the
construction projects included in
the budget are not in prope r order,
Williams said. "I think the board
is a better judge of pnorities than
Angelo.··
Gomes said priorities m the
budget were established under
Porterfield's directorship and
added that Angelo's discussion of
the matter is worthy or fair board
investigation.
Porterfield was dismissed by
board members who claimed he
was not eapable of dealing with
the 150·acre fairgrounds planned
$16 million expansion project
When asked ror -. comment
rollowiog the presentation of
c har1es last week before the
board, Angelo said be had "re-
ached an agreement" not to dis·
cuss the matter further with the
press
Wate laing t h e B i rd Watchers
OAlt. V PfLOT tlf
Wife ~~.
· tEop , 6irl,
Herself
Police ln Orange reported t~
day t.hat a poUce 9fficer and his
I -year-old atepdau1bter were
abot to death by the officer's
estranged w!fe who theu com-
mitted suicide.
Pollce believe the slaying ol ~
fleer Beve R. Franklyn, 35., and
Brenda Avery, 8, aa weU u the
suicide ot Dorothy Franklyn, 31.
occurred sometime Saturday
morntng.
But it wasn't until officers went
to the Franklyn home in
southeast Orange in mid-
morning Monday that the double
murder and suicide was dis·
covered.
Members of the Audubon Society, Lee
Oetzel (left> and Frances Plesset, both
from 1..os Angeles. keep an eye on the
f eatbered friends of Upper Newport Hay.
while three ducks observe the observers.
FTanklyn and his stepdaughter
apparently died or multiple
gunshot wounds while Mrs
Funklyn was the apparent vie·
lim of a self-inflicted single
gunshot wound.
Police said the Franklyns, who
.bad been married a year, re-
portedly were having domestic
problems, problems that ended
Saturday.
Kidnap Figure Gets
Jail on Gun Count
LOS ANGELES CAP> -A
Bellflower man who was charged
last year in the kidnaping and
murder of Ross moor housewife
Joanna Stegman has been sen·
tenced to 15 months in prison ror
illegally possessmg firearms and
making false s tate ments to
obtain them
The kidnap-murder charges
against Ronald Lewis Ewing, 27.
were dismissed last December
by an Orange County Supenor
Court judge who said there was
too little evidence to convict him.
The two rifles he owned were not
used in the Seigman murder.
In sentencing Ewing Monday
for the weapons violation. U.S.
14 I n dic t ed
In New Yo rk
P o rno Ring
NEW YORK <AP) -A year·
long obscenity investigation in
which undercover police ran their
own pornography shop has result·
ed in indictment or 14 people.
Some were charged with dis·
tributing films depicting children
as young as 6 years old in sexual
acts.
Among those indicted was
Edward Mishkin, who bas been
d escribed in the past as the
kingpin of the pomogral)hy trade
in this country.
Asst. District. Atty. Pierre
Leval said Mi s hkin. 62, of
Tuckahoe, N.Y., and three other
New York area men were accused
or the wholesale distribution of
rilma involving s ex acts with
animals or other lewd activities.
They were charged with first·
degreeobscenfty, ~felony.
Leval said the motion pictures
involving children were filmed in
Delaware, California . Scan-
dinavia and "other foreign coun-
tries ··
District Court Judge Manuel
Real said he was not considenng
the dismissed allegations. But
various attorneys noted that il-
legal weapons conv1ct1ons usual-
ly brmg three· to six-month sen· tences.
Because he had pleaded guilty
in 1971 Lo a fel ony count or receiv
ing stolen property. 1t 1s illegal
for Ewing to possess firearms. A
jury found that he had falsely
told a pawn shop owner he had
never been convicted of a crime
punishable by more than one
year in jail when he redeemed
two rifles Aug. 6
'Dead' Fish
Dead~Drunk
BELGRADE,
Yugoslavia (AP) -
Thousands of fish thought
poisoned by industrial
waste have suddenly re-
covered. They were just
drunk , a Belgrade
newspaper said.
Experts said that after
the Podgorka alcoholic
beverage plant released a
quantity of brandy into the
Jadar River, many fish
floated on the surface with
strange, nnfishy-ltke looks
and without actually re·
aching the belly·upstage
But before charges
planned by environment of-
ricials could be brought
against the factory, the fish
suddenly sobered up and
disappeared.
Like her hus band, Mrs.
Franklyn was a city employe.
It was when both Fr•nkJyns
failed to report to work Monday
that police went to their home .
Franklyn had been an Orange
police officer for 3~ years and
was assigned to motorcycle
patrol.
The child was Mrs. Franklyn's
by a previous marriage.
Survives Fall
LANCASTER CAP> -A boy
taking a hike to celebrate his 14th
birthday plummeted 100 feet
down the shaft or an abandoned
mine in the desert near
Rosamond. Sheriff's deputies aJ1d
ambulance attendants rescud<l
the boy from the old Cactus Queen
Mine. He had suffered a fractured
kneecap, head injuries and facial
cuts. but was reported in good
condition at a Lancaster hospital.
Loans for Homeowners
CALIFORNIA
FIRST BANK
GOOD THINGS HAPPEN
IN CALIFORNIA FIRST
\\, " ,.,.., • 1\11
California First Bank makes good thinq-..
happt!n for you. the homeowner. At Cali·
fornia Fir::.l. the equity you've built-up m
your house make!> you eligible for a loan
' ••
Death Returns?
to pay for almo~t anything-like college
tu1t1on. vacations, home i mprovement::..
Borrow up to $15,000 at current bank rates.
It s easy to arran<1e at any of over 100 state-
wide offices of C.1lif orma hr<>t Bank. The
office near you probably has extended
hours and d rive-up teller'> lo make banking
more convenient. And the -.t..iff there 1-..
anxious to help you d1'>covf"r how good
thing~ really do happen in Cali fornia Fir..,t.
BUll Killing Ruling Sought
LISBON, Portugal <AP>
Death in the afternoon may re·
turn to Portuguese bull rtngs.
Matadors have asked the govern-
ment to end a ban on bull killing
which has extended over most of
the last 200 years.
The National Union of
Portuguese Bullfighters said
Monday in a J..2.page report it
could see -no moral objection to
killing ln the ring. TM unioo aaid
introduction ot Spanish-style
righting would boost attendance.
Tbe union said it also would be
nobler for both matador and buU
than the present pracUce of tak·
inl the animal alive from the
arena 'and tdlllng it later at a
slau1hterbouse.
There wu no immediate reply
from Rogerio de Fteltu, aene.raJ
director of bwlfighUnc abowa
and the reclpfent of the nport. Some ln PQf'lusal, how•ver, pre·
diet lMt tbe pratU<'e will retum
to at leut some or the country's
40 bull rin~thls )' ar. Unlike Jn Mexico and some
other bu lfl•hung countrlea.
Portu•al forbids the matado~'•
Unal, fatal sword thrust, In Odd
lnttances ln Funce, bulls have been kiUl!d, but lt'IJ llle1at there.
The Marques de Pombal, Yibo
rebuilt Lilbon frC>m a 1155 earth·
quake, banMd killing arter the
son of a famous bullttpter wu sup~rted the ban ln tht lllb Ctn·
tury.
'KUtJ.nj returned txperimentaJ-
ly in the 1920's , but inept
bullfighters shed so much ortheir
own and their horses' blood that
spectators objected. The ban was
restored ln 1928 under the late
dictator Antonio Salazar.
Now, convinced they are final-
ly ready to kill, the country's 17
matadors have launched a cam-
paign In the courts and through
the bureaucracy
· · tt means something to me as a man to be able to kill with
dlgnity after a good fight,•· said
silver·halred Armando Soares,
43, who has killed bulls in SpaJn
and Mexico during a 15-year
career.
"It 11 a kind of lie not to kill in
the ring," Soares said in an in-
terview. "It ls also aometimes
genUer to the bull to kill im·
mediately than to let an anJmal
wounded by bandarllhaa suffer
unlll it ia taken to a
slaugbtemouse. U there 11 a de·
lay1 the bull may develop a fever
ana then the meat cannot be
uaed."
Soares ls one of four matadors
who killed bulls at a ring near
Lisbon Oct. 31 ln an attempt to
brine the luue to a bud.
Jubllant fans. accompabled by a
bran bUd. camtd tM four on
their •boWdera tor two hours.
The r•ultiq court case Is
pendtna. But a commission from the union, wblch represents
about 220 professional matadors.
horsemen and htl.~ra. is prepar-
lnt Or# ii.IJll fen-the rll\J.
-
ADAMS OFFICE IHlllltklgton Beach)
8899 Acfams Aw 7141962.007 7
BAYSIDE OfFICE !Newport Btacll!
1090 Bays1d<> Onvc• 7.141675·5121
COSTA MESA OFFICE 230 E 17th St 714 642· 1660
DANA POINT OFFICE
24671 La Plaza 714 496-1293
HARBOR VIEW OFFICE !Newport Buclll
1666 San Miguel Dnve 714/64.,8511
HONTINGTDH BEACH OFFICE
17122 Beach Blvd 714/847-9681
IRVINE OFFICE
179~1 'MttcArthur Blvd 7t4/fl49·9101
LAGUNA HILLS OFFICE (
23&11Paseod0Valenc1a 114/830"3200
ORANGE COUNTY AIRPORT OFFICE
2001 M1chol1on Drive 7141tJ33-3t11
M·Tl'l 10AM·5PM D I M·lh8·30AM·5PM
F 10AM • 7 30PM • • F 8. 30AM · 7 30PM
M ·Th 10AM • 5PM F,1
F 10AM · 7·30PM • : e
M·Th 10AM·5PM
F IOAM-6PM
M-Th 9AM-5PM
F 9AM·6PM
;n .. . M Th830AM·5PM
F 8 30AM· 7 30PM
M · Th 8 30AM • 5PM r 830AM·6PM
M· Th 10AM-SPM
F 10AM·6PM
·ff I M ·Th 8 30AM · 5PM • e F 8 30AM·6PM
M -Th 10AM ·5PM fl' M -Th 830AM·5PM
F 10AM • 7·'30PM • •• F 8.30AM • 7 30PM
M· Th 10AM·3PM .... M-lh 9AM· IOAM
F 10AM-6PM 3PM·5PM
M ·Th 10AM-5PM '" M ·Th g.30AM • lOAM
F IOAM·6PM F ·30AM • 10AM
M-Th 10AM·5PM M · Th 9AM·5PM F 10AM ·6PM F 9AM·6PM
,
t A.. DM.Y Al.OT
GM Tabs
Top Year
In Profits
DETROIT (AP> -General
Moton Corp., ln a dramatic
turnaround from a two;fue;: slump, turned ln lta beat .
clal performance In hlltory Jast
yea1' with net profits of $2.9
billion on sales of .. 7.2 bUUon.
Eaminp reported Monct.y by
the world's largest auto maker
exceeded by $700 mllUon the
firm's combined profits for
1974-75, when the nation's car in·
dustry was mired in a severe re•
cession. Sales topped tbe old re-
cord ~ $3S.8 billion set In 1973 by
32percent.
( INSHORT J
GM's 1976 profits. equal to
$10.08 a share. were more than
double the $1.25 billion, or $4.32
a share, earned in 1975, and sur-
passed by a wide mark the pre-
vious earnings record or S2.4
billion set in 1973. Dollar sales in
1975 were $35.7 billion.
.'\'ondnee Fare• Probe
WASIUNGTON <AP) -Adm.
Stansfield Turner, President
Carter's second choice to head
the Central Intelligence Agency,
may face tough questioning
from senators who would prefer
a civilian in the job, but the
nomination appears in no
danger.
Lab Link Likely
Soviet cosmonauts Col. Viktor Gorbatko, left, 42, and Lt.
Col. Yuri G lazkov, 37, were orbiting earth today, prepar-
ing to link up with the Salyut 5 space laboratory. They
were launched Monday aboard Soyuz 24. Soviet news
agency Tass reported the pair felt fine and the mission
was proceeding normally.
Guerri]]as Hunted
.second Mission Attack ljleported
SAUSBURY, Rbodet1a (AP>
-Securt\y forcea buni.d today
thro\llb tbe raln..oaked bulb for
black iuerrWu wbo ktlled lften
white mluionarl•&mday.
The government annowaced to-
day that auerrillu attacked a
second miuion, bum1q ud loot-tna offlcea.
A communique aald there were
no cuualtlea reported ln the raid
on N1uhanu ml.Ulon 125 miles
southeast of Saliabury near the
Moaamblque border. About
$S,400 wu taken aad a miaaioo
work1bop and office were
burned. \
THE GOVEaNMENT DID not
identify the denominaUon ol tbe
miasion or lDdlcate when tbe at-
tack occurred.
Black guerril)u. apparenUy a
different group, killed three
Jes ult.a alfd four Dominlcan nuns
in a Sunday night raid at St.
Paul's Roman Catholic Mission,
26 miles northeast or the capital
and about 150 miles from
Nya.shanu.
Today's commupique said 10
guerrillas had been killed by gov-
ernment forces in the past two
days and that eight African
clvllians were kWed by guer-
rillas. Two blacks died after be·
ing caught in a crossfire and
another died when hl.s car bit a
mine, it said.
SUPT. JOHN PO'ITER said
the 12 gunmen who invaded St.
Paul's, in the Musami tribal
area, were armed with Soviet
•eapom and were members ol
Ule outlawed Zimbabwe African
NatJOll81 Union (ZANU) "under
tbe alleged control of Robert
11u1abl!'
0 Tbe1 teem to do their own
thma. u they want to bum down
vWaaee. that 11 what they do, ..
Pott.er said.
The police belleved the same
band was NSponalble for recent
ldlllnp ol black clvWam in the
area.
• THE 7ANU guerrillas operate
in that:. area from baaea in
Mozambique while a guerrilla
army that reportedly answers to
Joshua Nkomo, the bead of the
Zimbabwe Alri~an People's
Union, operates in northwest
Rhodesia from Zambia.
The Patriotic Front, the
political alliance of Nkomo and
Mugabe, claimed the guerrillas
who killed tbe three Jesuits and
four Domlnkan num were IOV·
ernment agents in dtsculse.
There was no omctal rupc!ILte.
but tt wu believed the 1ovem·
ment hoped to capture the band
alive to refvte the claim.
Black naUooallata made the
same claim after a lone IUDIJl&n
ambuahed four white Catbollc
miaslonariea Dee. s ln western
Rhodesia and kllled three of
them. The government later pro-
duced a black man wbo 1a1d at an
arrailnmeot that ho wu a suer·
rilla lrom Zambia and did the
killings for money. but be
a caped before be wu tried.
The 12 guerrillas broke Into the
St. Paul's Misalon SUoda)' nlaht
when most of the European staff
was watching television. Tbe)' i.-
nored black nuns and wotkers
but rounded up tbe whites and
herded them onto a sandy road
running through the compound.
11 Million Jobless,
Private Firm Reports
MEDIA, Pa. (AP) -Three million more Americans lost their jobs
lD January than were reported by the U.S. Labor Department. a
private nsearch firm says, ·
The Slndllnger & Company also said true unemployment for the last
Wednesday was U.6 percent, or more than 11 million persons out of
work, and that unemployment
cold·relat.ed problems, and sur-
veys for Feb. U, tabulated Mon-
day. showed no change. Both Senate Majority Leader
Robert C. Byrd (D·W. Va.) and
Minority Leader Howard H.
Baker Jr. <R-Tenn.) said after
Carter made the nomination
Monday that they knew of no
strong opposition to Turner. No
date 'has been set for hearings
before the Senate Intelligence
Committee.
Army Backs U.S. Force
actually rose 1 percent from
December, while the Labor
Department reported January
unemployment had dropped one-
half of 1 percent.
THE GOVERNMENT failed to
account for those wbo lost jobs
due to the severe cold weather
because it used data taken
before the harsh weather began,
Sindlinger & Company said in a
newsletter Monday.
Sindlinger said his fU'ID has
conducted dally unemployment
surveys by telephone in all 48
contiguous st~tes at the rate ~
1, 100 calls a week for Ule past 20
years. Troops in Korea 'Essential to Balance' President Carter's Cabinet
was told Monday the weather
had caused 1.8 million layorrs.
Whal~ A utop•ies Due
MAYPORT, Fla. <AP)
Autopsies are under way to try
to determine why 200 pilot
whales threw themselves onto a
beach, after a frenzied two·day
effort to save them ended with
half of them dead or dying.
As the life-saving effort ended
at sunset Monday, nearly 80
whales Jay on the sand around
Fort George Inlet at the mouth
of the St. Johns River. Twelve
others were near death ,
breathing laboriously in small
pools of water near the beach
)OllHfl l'bft• ,~f~rfa
LAGOS. Nigeria <AP) -Am·
bassador Andrew Young flew to
northern Nigeria today lo see
\m o re than 3,000 warrior
tribesmen in a traditional
ceremony pledging their loyalty
to their emirs and sultans.
Young. on the last stop o( his
three-nation visit to black
Africa. met for an hour Monday
"1th Nigeria's chief of state, Lt
Gen Olesegun Obassanjo, to dis
cuss the situation in west and
southern Afnca where guerrilla~
are fighting lo <'nd white
minority rule.
h1(--ot•~ Fight Br""•
WASHINGTON <AP> 8atUc
line-. are being drawn in the
House O\ er a proposal to severe-
1 y hm1t members' ou~ide in-
come
A special commission working
on a new congressional code of
ethics Monday approved a pro-
posa I that earned outside in·
come be limited to lS percent o(
the <'ongressional salary.
WASHlNGTON CAP> --
Despite President Carter's cam·
paign stand in favor of withdraw-
ing U.S. ground troops from
South Korea. ·the Army remains
firmly opposed to such a move.
The Army's formal annual re-
port to Congress says U.S.
troops' presence in South Korea
is "essential lo the regional
balance in northeast Asia."
THE REPORT WENT to
Capitol HHI Monday under the
names of Army Secretary Martin
Hoffmann and Gen. Bernard W.
Rogers. Army chief of stat!. Hof·
rmann is holding the fort until
Clifford Alexander. the Carter
administration 's , Army
secretary, is sworn in. Rogers
will remain on as the Army's top
soldier.
The Senate Armed Services
CommJttee wJs opening hearings
today on the nomination of Alex ·
ander, a Washington lawyer.
The report's section on Korea
reflects the widely held view in
senior Army circles that U.S.
Army troops are essential to de-
ter North Korea's Kim Tl Sung
from attacking South Korea.
"THE PRESENCE OF U.S.
ground forces enhances regional
stability and provides a deterrent
to Soviet or People's Republic of
China direct military assistance
lo North Korea," the Army report
says.
During the election campaign,
President Carter said that U.S.
ground troops should be pulled
out of South Korea in a four-or
five-year peMod after consulta-
tion with the South Koreans and
Japanese. He said he would leave
U.S. Air Force elements in Korea
'Halftime Show'
Just Reckless,
I I Cowt Decides
BALTIMORE CAP> -A string
of witnesses testified that Donald
Kroner had promised them "a
Wh•t's th/$ I h•r •bout you
•nd Amy Cllrter go/fffJ stNdy7'
good halftime airs how.·'
Instead, Kroner crash-landed
his light plane in the upper deck
of Memorial Stadium Dec. 19,
moments after the end or a Na-
tional Football League playoff
1ame. He was found guilty Mon-
day of reckless flying and two
counts of malicious destruction
of property.
JUDGE J>ANIEL FRIEDMAN
delayed sentencing for the 33·
year-old Essex, Md., man until
March 15, pending medical and
psychiatric evaluation.
Kroner faces up to three years
ln pl'tson on each of the counts of
m aliclous destruction' of proper-
ty, and 90 days for the reckless
fiylng conviction. He may also be
fined as much as $5,500.
Great Lakes Get Snow
Record,. breaking Lotal Due in Ohio V al,ley
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to back up the South Korean
ground forces.
The United States has about
33,000 ground troops stationed in
South Korea, princi\>alty in the
Second Infantry DivJslon, and a
number of artillery and missile
units. The U.S. military presence
also includes several squadrons
of fighter·bombers and about
1.000 tactical nuclear weapons.
Carter has indicated he would
withdraw the nuclear arms.
Government calculating
methods and the use of in-
complete data also contributed to
the inaccurate unemployment
picture, Sin<IJinger said.
There was no immediate reac-
tion from the Labor Department.
THE LABOR DEPARTMENT
bases its monthly reports on a
sample week adjusted seasonally
according to historical data from
the past five years. \
SINDLINGER'S SURVEYS
for Jan. 12 to Feb. 2 showed 3.3
million workers laid off due to
Sindlinger does not use
seasonally a«ljusted figures and
claims the adjusted figures in the
government's reports can be
arlificallylow.
Many
Happy
Returns
to you
onourSOth anniversary
Our 50 years of growth since
1927. was made possible by
people like yourself. Our many
friends. who are savers.
borrowers, employees and
business neighbors.
Friends are essential for
success and for a full life.
We're grateful to our old
friends, end we're lool<ing
73/% hallz•
Now.am I• o 8 o· 6% on annual yl4ttd of • o
b'lc~dolly.
~1000 ~ Oai•"<" ( V"•' ,,. ""''"" f f(Mf .. ~&ttons flltnT';~ w.tf'ldt8'4illl """"
Citf'\>fil(',lrP ~C°"'"'~S DfiO'tl l'n>lf•J~'I tNI lhfl• .. ts,
·--·-., ......... "41'W'9•
****** RFS
11111111
• ~:STBl
CROWS
)'OURMONE}'
GROWS
forward to making new ones in
the years ahead.
Drop by any Republic office
to learn how you can put your
money to work in the most
favorable savings plan to fit
your needs. We've had 50
years of substantial experience
helplng people make better
tomorrows for themselves.
REPUBLIC FEDERAL SAVINGS
Mt* lot/f #fKI•,,.,. '°"' !owllont 11\ 0'91\tt COVflty
SANTA ANA 17th St. Weal of Newport Freeway (714) Ml~5286
ANAH!IM 202 Anaheim Plaza, 600 N. Euclid St. (7141 95G·82QO
LAQUNA NIOUIL 30232 Crown Valley Parkway (714) 495 OSSO
WUTMINITER 134 W11tmln1ter Mall/Solaa & San Otego Fwy ( 714) 894..0347 • tt.MOfllci.:Ai.TAOENA 7i•ett Ulk•AYL (213) '791·1~11 J111...e11
T.,..._ l.OCllU011t1 Al.TADENA • ANAHEIM• ARCADIA • UUA8ANI< CLAf'~MONT •HACIENDA HEIGHTS• lAGUNA NIGUEi. •LOS ANGELCS
PASAO(NA •PICO "lvtAA •SANTA ANA• WESTMINSUA
tnt11red. '"Mt•red afld 111~11.a e>y 89Mcl•s ol th• United St•IH Oovt rnmtM
SAVtM;S /JCCO(N(S INSC.RED TO $40.000 .~.
For your convenience, ell offices (except Downtown Los Angeles) are open Saturdays
• ,I t ' .
I
I
~her Held
S (AP) -An elementary
OD bond today afttr beiDI U•
counts in the anecect sexual
ut 11x present and tanner boy aae from 8to13.
the boys did not come forward
the man's violent outbursts. erer, 34, a bachelor, was
th Dine counts of child molesta-
tl.of unnatural sex acts. He was
nd by Municipal Court Judge
aet a preliminary hearing for
SACRAM 0 CAP) -One o( the most
' critical per1on aeainst nuclear power in
California. Dr. aid Doctor, has been reappoint·
'. ed to the state gy Commission until 1982.
Gov. Brown Jr. announced the reap-
pohltmeatMoadat.
Doctor, 41. a quclear engineer, was an original
member of the fi~-member commission formed in
1975. Hla term bad expired Jan. 7.
1
1 ... ia State Melee
RIVERSIDE AP) -Officials say a group or
Mexican-Ameoc prisoners, angered over al-
' •
le1edly beine i1 ed cold food in the county jail,
have been locked n their day cells after they went
on a rampage, breaking
State
windows and setting fire
to trash.
--~~~~~-+---'
Forty-one inmates
were barred from retir-
ing to their sleeping
night after the day-long d1s-
ates complained that their sec-
served cold food and that guards
q uarters Monda
turbances. The ·
tion of the jail w
were slow to res
fused to come o
nd to them. Eight-prisoners re-
of their day cells for court ap-
pearances.
The inmates ould remain locked in their day
cells Wllil the eig prisoners with court dates come
out, said Roger enman, of the Riverside County
Sheriff's Depart nt.
,,.ureter Sau
LOSANGE (AP)-Themanwhoallegedly
led officers on a Id chase ln which bis hostage was
killed by police bullets has died from his own
wounds, authorit s say.
Officers said hat Redeotor A Ayson, 38, of San
Fernando died nday of wounds he suffered in the
Jan. 19 incident. e died at the jail ward or County-
USC Medical Ce er, where he had been booked for
investigation of rder and assault.
Joint LeUe ltt•ued
Postal Bike? ...............
U.S. Postmaster General
Benjamin F. Bailar said
Monday in Sacramento that
he will ask for a postal rate
increase in 1978 even though
they bad an $85 million
op~rating surplus in the
fourth quarter of 1976.
State's ABC
Rules Against
Nude Dancing
SACRAMENTO <APJ The
Ca lifornia Department of
Alcoholic Beverage Control says
it's they, not the opinion polls.
who decide on nude dancing in li -
quor outlets.
The ABC ruled Monday against
a Santa Monica club called The
Ball and a San· Gabriel night club
('ailed The Other Ball, both or
whi('h petllioned for local oplton
on nudity.
Food.Cost
Hikes Seen
In Drought
SACRAMENTO CAP) -Get
ready,· shoppers. Federal of-
ficials say the drouebt in
California could mean hJ&her
prices for a wide variety of foods
from rtcetotrultcocktall.
U.S. Bureau of ReclamaUon
spokesman Jerry King said Moo·
day t hat the continuing dry
weather bas forced the bureau to
become even more pessimistic
about bow much irrigation water
it expects to be available to
farmers in the nation's No. 1
agricultural state.
Now the estimate is that many
growers will suffer 75 percent
cuts. And that means crop pro-
duction could sbrink anywhere
from 10 to 40 percent -which
King said will mean higher
prices.
LAST MONTH, the bureau
forecast water reductions of 25 to
SO percent.
King said that in addition to the
growers' problems, water sup-
plies to municipal and industrial
customers may have to be cut in
half.
The cuts would be in water
from the giant federal Central
Valley Project. It provides
almost all the irrigation water
for the two million acres or the
Central Valley, from Redding
near the Oregon border to
Bakersfield, northeast or Los
Angeles.
LAST YEA&. California's
farmers and cattlemen produced
record gross receipts of $8.9
billion, according to the federal-
state Crop and Livestock Report-
ing Service. The products, in ad-
dition to livestock, included 29
million tons of field crops. 11
million tons of vegetables, and 9
million tons or fruits and nuts.
The new bureau projections ON NUDITY, the ABC said the are based on the anticipation that
petition would have required watersheds feeding CVP re-
ea('h city or county to adopt or servoirs will receive 8.8 inches of
dinances if they wanted to con precipitation between now and
trot nudity. The petition April,Kingsaid.
therefore '"would be contrary to
public welfare and morals." 1t SO FAR Lake Shasta, the most
said. important r eser voir in the
system, has received only 14 per-In an unrelated case, the ABC cent or normal precipitation s lAP) Law enforcement of· also rejected a request by an ice s .34 inches compared to a normal
ficials and the p ident of the County Bar Associa-company that wanted to prohibit 34.96 inches _ in what King is
tion are urging p ents not to allow their children to liquor outlets from giving free calling the driest season of the
Tuelday. February 8. 1971 DAIL v PiLOT AS
UC San Diego
BamSmoking
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Based on views by many
students that smoktni is detrimental to them. the
UnJvenlty of California San Ditto will ban smok-
ing lo classrooms and teaohlq la be •tartlne April -4.
Cb.ancellor William Mcl:lroy said be. agrees
with nonsmokers that they abould not be forced to
inhale the smoke from other people's ctaarittes.
BE SAID enforcement ol lhe rule will be up to
faculty members.
M'cElroy concedes &ivin& leacbers the enforce·
ment task doesn't always work because some
teachers s moke and like to do so in their
classrooms.
INFORMS in the
DAILY PILOT participate in s ool boycotts such as the one ice to customers. century staged last montl n protest or busing to achieve in· -...===--====:::-----...:..:..:..:..:.::..:.::... ________________________________________ _
tegratlon.
City Atty. B
Kamp, police C
president Jack Q
day telling par
children as pa
troversy.
Pines, Dist Atty. John Van de
f Ed Davis and bar association
n issued a joint statement Mon·
ts they should not use their
s an the desegregation con-
DAILY PILOT
THE
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•Jl·~C..ICJN V I
L~9 2 ,.,..,,,"O tr Ir
495-040 I
t"Q..-lA~l A
t Nt#f" •t 8 >
642-1753
For fast elief from that stuffy feeling ...
''41rnmu 1
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MAIN OFFICE
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D AILY PILO T E D ITO RIAL Pl\.GE
Confronting· Racislll
1. ..
With unexpeded and ref reshinc candor. the top
chaplain of the Marine Corps, Navy and Coast Guard
last. week pinned incidents like Camp Pendleton's
violeqce on ''institutional racism" practiced by the
milit4ry.
Rear Adm. John O'CoMor, a Catholic mon$ienor,
said the mlUtary's hJgh command had been ignoring
warning signals until an explosive incident occurred
in which black .Marines attacked white Marines they
mistakenly identified as a Ku Klux Klan group.
He contended in an interview al El Toro Marine
Corps Air Station that the "sea services" need more
ch aplains to oct as listening posts and to defuse poten-
tially critical problems.
As a senior. Pentagon-based officer, O'Connor is
really several steps removed from the people who
must grapple with such difficulties from day to day -
like the commandant at Camp Pendleton.
Such officers are faced with situations that
become popular causes for fringe elements and ad·
vocacy groups seeking televised stages to further
their ideals. The KKK-related incident has generated
just such a retinue of hangers on.
If racism is the fundamental problem. it must be
dealt with effectively at all levels of military com
mand. O'Connor gives every indication of being an
ideal spokesman for his end of the chain.
Good Practice
The stale Public Utilities Commission acted wtth
commendable speed in arranging for the transfer of
natural gas from California to relieve winter hardship
in eastern states .
:; The PUC conservation order for gas users inside
.. the state. to bolster supplies for the transfer, should
occupied rooms. and we certainly can manage
without gas fireplace logs and decorative patio
torches. Reducing consumption of hot water may re·
• quire a little thought, but no real discomfort.
l'.beoretically the gas going east is a ·'loan·· but
whether we ever will get it repaid is doubtful.
One thing that apparently is not open to question
is the fact that natural gas supplies are not going to
reappear by mug\c
So perhaps lt 's as well for Californians to gel a
little practice.in the conservation habit. We may need
to be experts for a long time
R e warding Service
Youngsters from homes disrupted by accident,
illness, divorce or encounters with the law become the
responsibility of the county.
In Orange County, the need exceeds the capacity
of the 660 foster homes registered with the depart-
ment of Social Services. And the greatest need is
homes for inf ants under the age of two. and for young
adolescents. especially boys.
The county pays foster families according to
youngsters' ages, in fees ranj!in~ from $140 a month
for infants to $221 for teenagers above the ago of 14
To children deprived of family surroundings.
p~acement in a congenial foster home may mean thP
difference between success and failure in life . These
are years that cannot be recaptured.
To parents with room in their hearts and homes
for one more child. or older couples who miss the>
company of their own children. foster parenthood can
be a reward in itself.
~ · hardly make a dent on our comfort.
"'' Balmy weather makes the 65-degree heating limit ~ almost unnecessary. It should be no problem for t hotels and motels to shut off healing and cooling in un-
But applications to pat1icipate in this service arc
few and far between the county says. If vou
feel it's worth looking into, the foster horn<.'
coordinator at the department of Social Services
<834·2270) can tell you about it.
11 I suppose I should develop 6 bro6der bcise."
,.' ~· ~:
~;In Pra ise ~. ..
~:Of Good ... Ne ighbo rs
PAUL llAHVEY .. ,.
v "J Som<'t 1m t·~ somt• ont· of you 1~
M able lo say somelhin~ vNy pro·
.~ found so much better than "'''
professional word makers can
Mrs Chiu<' Drummond of
,, Chicago ha!t
"" written to me
a letter which
;, I have asked
perm1ss1on to
present
verbatim to
you.
t
• . .
• , • . • . . • . .
.. .
t ~
( • .
t l • • '
Dear Puul
Harvey,
I hve m one
of th<.' so
call<'d 'changing
neighborhoods of Chicago.
I am advised by the tax as-
sessor that the\. alue of our house
has gone do"' n from $20,000 to
Sl8,000 because of the people who
have mo ved into this
nl'lghborhood
But I kno"' that thev art· the
k indest. nicest <1nd mO.!it con·
siderate neighbors Wt' have l'Vf'r
h;1d since my husband and I grew
up in th1:. neighborhood morc
lha11 50 )Car~ ago
Now I am t•onfmcd lo my hQmc
ha'''"R had seven heart at-
tack:. and '''< <>pt>rallons in hH•
yf'ars I haVl' been in the hos pital
allofiteth<'r 14 tames since my
neighborhood started to ch:tnge
We have rented two upslam1
rooms to ~OUnJ' women lo help
with the balls And they and our
other neighbors are ltkt.' mttm·
bers of the family so con·
cerried about me. watching our
home to be sure nothan,:: is wronR
when I am away or alont.'
They drop by or call to makt•
i.ure I am okay
ALMOST EVERY day a
neighbor will drop in with some
home cooking.
I have relatives and fri ends
who do not come lo visit some
because the y say th e
neighborhood is now so bad that
they would not dare leave their
cars parked But our car Is
always at the curb and has ncv<•r
been bothert.'d
I feel so lucky to bt• when· J <em
So muny people talk about loving
Punch
De4r
·Gloon1y
Gus
Tonslant Weader allows
as how she is going to fwow
up all over your newstype
iffen she has lo wallow
around an any more news
items of little Amy
YAWN
c;ioo'"v Gu\ commenh '6rf h•bmitttd ow
rl .. d<'n .-no do not ntctu.1r1lv retiect 11'M:
•it'lllf\ ot U'lt nf w\p•,,.., Srnd your pret
Pf''fvr to Gloomy Gu\1 D•1ly Pt lot
their neighbors but these
neighbors of mine prove it by go·
Ing out of the "'ay to be helpful,
not just once in a while but every
day. •
T"''b women next door and one
across the street are also such
good cooks and they often drop in
with a whole meal dessert and
all.
It's hard for m e to get out and
when I must go to a doctor
there's always a neighbor eager
to take me there and wait with
me.
I try to reciprocate. but there is
no way I can keep up with the
constant kindnesses of these
generous and loving people
SO WHEN friends ask why we
don 't move to a better
neighborhood I tell them I can't
imagine a better neighborhood.
Because l have learned that it
does not at all d\$tress or disturb
my neighbors that I am whit<.'
and they are black.
Now we can·t send our children
to the school which my husband
and I attended, because 1t 1s now
'0 bad. Tt is an black And there
as so much narcotics and mean·
ness even though lhere are
policemen 1n every hall and
every classroom .
The black students are from
ghetto areas and so many of
them are v1c1ous and violent that
I dare not send my c hildren to
that school.
INCIDENTALLY, the black
neighbors I told you about all
came to Chicago rather recently
from Alabama and Georgia and
Mississippi, and they don't dare
l'lend their chll(1ren to those
sc hoots. either.
So I guess what it aU adds up
to. Mr. Harvey, is that there are
whiles and there are whiles and
there are blacks and there are
blacks. and I hope Mr Carter is
not misled by having known the
good kind.
-;_!.:.
· Collina lo be a bor•. Evtry damn H~ad of Stat•-And
how·-mv C)ld fr1t1nd lfrnry"'''
More Killings Than Ireland
'Death List' from Argentina
WASHINGTON Not long
ago. Argentina's handsome.
mustach1oed military dictator.
Gen . Jorge Videla. assured Pope
Paul melodramatically that his
government was dedicated to de
fending ··human life against any
unjust aggression wl}ich might
end it or curtail its dignily '·
Yet we have just received a
.. death list." smuggled lo us
from ins ide
Videla's gov·
e rnme nl. It
contains the
nam e:. or
several pro
minent
Argentinians
whom the
mtlitary junta
allegedly
would like
elifllinated. The list was brought
to us by couriers who ris ked their
own h ves in the hope that we
would raise enough clamor lo
save the doomed prisoners.
The couriers are not radicals.
with pohtacal motives . but
Argentinian officials and
clergymen. Even one t..: S .
diplomat quietly helped the in·
termediaries smuggle the death
list to us.
Part of the list. apparently,
was written In invisible ink on a
page Of an innocent book and CO·
trusted to an air traveler
Another section was carried
through the streets of Ruenos
Aires by a frightened but brave
(JACK ANDERSON J
cleric under has religious garb
We reported last Oct. 10 that
Argentina had become one of th<'
most dangerou!>, mos t chaotic
countries on earth Kidnupings.
killings and torlurl• ar<· ciaily oc
currences "Mor<' people are
killed tn one year in Argentina."
one State Department source told
u s . ··than in ft\'e 'tears in
Northern I re land · ·
THE MllJTARY d1ctalori.h1p.
ralhcr than JOtn in the murder
and mayhem directly. permits
right-wing para-police and para
military squads to roam the
cities and countrys ide, dispens-
ing street justice on the spot. An
extraordinary number of
prisoners, like Journalist Dardo
Cabo and trade un1on1st Rufino
Ruiz. have died during "escape
attempts." This style of execu
lion has become so common that
1t ts known bitterly among
Argentine dissidents as "la ley
d e fuga·· the law of escape
The 41 names on the death lii.t
are a tiny percentage of the•
15,000 political prisoners in
Argentina. They were put on the
list by the Argentine Commission
for Human Rights becauc;e of
their prominence and their am
minent danitcr
Indeed. !>Oml' m<iy have· bel·n
executed or tortured to death
dunnJ? the tame it has taken Cor
the death list to reach us. Most of
the people on the lis t an·
moderate democrats who are an-
l1·communist but also anti-Junta
They include such men as Dr .
Ernesto Villanueva. former dean
of the University of Buenos
Aires. Jorge Taiana. son of a
former education minister: and
Eduardo J ozami. a former pro·
fessor and articulate defender of
democracy
THERE ARE too many names
on the list for us to publish them
all But we have retyped the list
to protect the couriers and sub·
milled copies to the Argentine
Embassy and State Department.
We demanded to know what as
being done to protect the lives of
the 41 prisoners.
J•ootnole: We went over the
credentials of the couriers and
the backgrounds or the pnsoners
with a State Department source.
who vouched for the authenticity
of the list. High U.S. intelligence
sources confirmed that murders
of prisoners are occurring in
Argentine jails. Of such charges,
an Argentine spokes'man said "I
have to laugh." He agreed,
however. lo send the 41 names to
Buenos Aires.
COAL LOBBY -Preadent Carter
hai. promised lo support tough
Families Didn't 'Flee'
To the Editor
This 1s the first tame that I have
written a letter to the editor of
one of our local newspapers
However, I fell that the
circumstances surrounding the
Jan. 26 issue of your newspaper
warranted such a letter-
The issue to which I am refer·
ring carried a front page article
on the recent s lope "slumping··
In Mission Viejo. To begin with, I
felt that Bill Schreiber's cov-
erage was objective and factual
THE HEADLINES which ac·
companied Schreiber's article
<Viejo Famlhes Flee Slope
Collapses Threatening Homes>.
wete not only erroneous but
bordered on the irresponsible. I
felt that It did considerable in·
jUsticl' to both But Schreiber and
to Mission Viejo Company. If a
reader merely glanced at the
headline and did not read the
article. then lbat reader came away wilb a totally Incorrect im-
pression. If the reader did read
the article, lben he came away
wond..rtn1 What an the poise (the
htadUn«\) wu about, and pro-
bably experienced some con-
fUJion ovtr an article that was well done and deserved better
treatment.
The ta~ ol the matter l~ that
theae five famllie111 did not "n&e'' MJsslon Viejo. They Were
Hked by Mlsalon Vte.jo Com pany
repre1entaU~s to be our aueats
at the Holiday Inn even before
they reaUzed that there wu any
further problem with the &lope.
The company took this step
prlmarlly for the con\•enicnce of
tb llff famll1•. to spar them
tba dlic'omlott of noisy ulp
ment w0rklri1 on the slope Im·
( MAILBOX J
L•t1en fro'" reld~rl 1rt wtl<..,,. Ttw ''"'' to
<Oncleft\t ltllt" lo HI \UU or .i1..,1nat1 llto.l I• rt
Mn~ l..•llt" of JOO worO• or leu Mii to. •Ivon
p,..l.,.•11<t All 1•11•" "'u\I lncl..ot 11..,alurt -
ma111,.. •Of,..H ltul ., • ..,,.""''lie wllhlltld tltrt
-IH'•l 11 iuttlcltnl reuon I• •PtNrtftl Pott•' will
llOI to. IMll>lhhtcl
mediately behind their homes.
These fa mi hes dad not leave their
houses in panic as the headlines
sug~ested.
llARVEYSTEARN
Vice President
Business PlannanR.
Communication~ & Research
llot 1\lr
To the Editor
Your editorial "Warning
Ignored" on Jan 31 was corre~t
and timely.
The price or natural gu
shipped interstate has been un·
der federal price controls for
about 25 years and In mos t cases
it is no lonaer profitable to drill tor it .
What the Congre.a. environ·
mentalists. ecologist.a and con·
sumer croups must some day re·
allie ls thot no gas or oil producer
can stay In business without
makln1 a profit.
WE ARE already hearing
pohhciana occw Ing producers of
''ups>f.al" au wells and hold.Inf
it off lhe market aw•ltln' a pri~
Ille re
When lh Con~r sioaa1 wt&ch
hunt be« n:s to find lht )trsoM
reapons{bte ror our c~ent 11tua·
lion many of those in Congress
will only need to look in a mirror
to locate the culprit.
Most certainly, if the hot air
which e manat es from
Washington would burn there
would be no natural gas s hortage.
DALE JOHNSON
Tiie~ I• He lp
To the Editor:
Regarding the .Jan 30 article,
· · 1 ndignation Un leashed,"
although I am in total agreement
with what Mrs. Lindsey had to
say about tilrlcter humane laws
and more enforcement of these
laws with higher penalties, I
must take issue with the fact thal
she allowed other people lo die
tale their uncaring policies (not
to feed or harbor any animals>
and professing to be a dedicated
lover or animals, turned her back
on a starvin,-dog and did
nothing.
IT IS beyond my com -
prehension that anyone taking
the time to write a Jetter to the
newspaper complaining about
these atrocities. could not a\ least
have picked up lh~ phone and
called a humane organization or
her local animal cont rol (all are
fi8ted > to ·ask for help for this
animal. r wonder also about the
inju~ cat aod whether It too
wu left to Jl.lffer aod die.
Yea, it mall~ all of us who re·
ally care sick. But mo.o1t peoplt
do not.blng. This la one ol t.ht
thin s t.bat t! wrons with our
society today: everyone com·
plains. very rew do anytl\ln.t
about It.
MRS. HENRY SCHANNON
federal cont• .. ::-on ::.trip mining.
which leuves >t>hind brutal scars
on the land il :uu~cs. But the coal
mine opcratoi art' bringing qui<'l
pressurt.> 09 both Carter and
Congress to t'avt• ~trip mining
alone.
Virginia cod mine operators,
for example.arranged a private
meeting the ~her day with While
House energ~zar James Schles·
mger The~ =omplained that 1l
was imposible for them to
restore tht> ~rip-mined land. as
the pending *islataon would re-
quire.
The ball wt.lid force them to
give up slri mining and throw
thousands t or work, they
warned. Sch in~er seemed im-
pressed, Wh he met later wil.h
a citizens' roup. he echoed
many of t operators' argu-
ments. He particularly wor·
ried, he said bout the economic
consequence~
His visi rs replied that
stricter lane reclamation laws
have been Corced in Penn-
sylvarua wi out throwing peo-
ple out of k. They also had
!>lades showi how strip mining
has scarrc the contours of
Virginia an ouled the streams
with tons of
.. 1 guess l ust have been mis·
informed.·· d Schlesinger.
WELFAR ROLLS -Both
Riehard Ni and Gerald Ford
made a b1~ oise In the White
ll ouH ab~t r educing the
number o Americans on
welfa're. Yell secr et study shows
that the total have continued to
escalate
JlcJlth, Ed~allon and Welfare
Department documents show
that some thee million families
~ire rec<·1vinga1d for their depen-
dent chlldr•ti. Of these, an
as t onishing 12,000 families
have literal>' grown up on
welfare . They.ave been gettUng
assistance ff more than 20
years.
Millions htve been s pent,
meanwhile, 01 tudies to find out
how lo get peo e off weir are. T he
studies have n a total waste of
money. The l st study. like all
the others. is xpected to show
that welfare creased in most
categortes du g 1975 .
rootnote: Ii w sources link
the lnexorabl Increases lo the
nse In unem oyment over the
last six ~enrs
l
To .Fluoridate Br Not?
BJttle Still Raging in California Cities
SACRAMENTO (AP> -Some
caU it a C'omnaunist plot. Some Just daa•t want it ln tltelr wawr
Ot.bers say it figbts tooth decay.
For over 20 years, some
CaUfomfa citl~ have been ad·
d ing the dle~lcal fluoride to their water sup lies, and the pro·
cess is still on of the most con·
troversial issues around
NOW ABOUT 10 percent of
Calilomians live in areas with
fluoridated water systems.
But nuoridaUon -which sup-
porters say combats tooth decay
and critics say is poisonous,
disease-linked or ineffective -is
still I arfrom accepted.
Jn 1975 Los Allgeles voters de-
feated a fluoridation measure.
The same year a bill mandating
a statewide fluoridation program
was killed in the state Senate.
GOV. EDMUND BROWN Jr.
has taken what his top aide, Gray
Davis. calls a "cautious" ap·
proach on the matter.
Dr. Jerome Lackner. the
Democratic governor's health
chief, ca lls him s elf an
' "agnostic" on the issue.
Meanwhile, Lackner's Depart·
ment of Health appro ves
fl uoridation permits for local
communities if their applications
meet state standards.
LACKNER SAYS THERE are
many "righteous " people in the
pro· and anti.fluoridation caml?s
The anli·faction. he says, 10-
c I udes many people s imply
skeptical of government ex·
pertise. .
The California Dental Associa-
tion has enthusiastically en-
dorsed fluoridation. saying scien·
lists agree ''optimal
fluoridation" can cut tooth decay
by as much as 6()percent.
State sanitary engineer Hertry
Ongerth acknowledges that
* * *
(MEDICINE )
fluoride at high concentrations is
harmful but says so is anything al
high concentratithts, including
aspirin.
"THERE ARE NO document·
ed cases of people dying or being
ill from fluoridation," Ongerth
said.
"Fluoride has been used in ro·
dent poisons, and early an·
tifluoridation people made much
of tbis. They said we were adding
a poison to the water. ~ut the
point is here that anyth~g in
high enough conce!ltrallon is
harmful."
Oogerth, who has been work·
ing 1 with fluorida t ed water
systems since the early 1950s,
also says he can't understand the
heated opposition to it.
"I HA VE HEARD all these op-
position arguments for 25 years. I
don't have any more answers to
why people oppose it than I did 25
years ago. .
"It sure is an emotional issue
with some people, terribly emo-
tional," Ongerth said. .
At a 1975 seminar on fluonda-
tion which Brown attended, one
critic attacked the process.
John Yiamouyiannis, from a
group called ~e Nati<?nal .Health
Federation. said fluondahon had
not blocked the·increase or tooth
decay in the United States.
HE ADDED THAT tests which
appear to show fluor~d~tion ef-
fective are flawed statistically.
He also said studies have
linked fluorine with cancer and
chromosome damage, among
other ailments.
However. a National Cancer
Institute s t udy released in
Washington, O.C .• in 1975 found
no relationship between cancer
death patterns and natural or
artificial fluoridation in water
supplies.
STATE OFFICIALS SAID
fluoridation can occur naturally
in water supplies.
"The nuori<Jation is the same
whether it came from the
• chemical you add at the water
works or in the geoloitcal forma-
tion in natural deposits in the
ground," Ongertb said.
Los Angeles' water supply, for
example, is close to the optimum
level or fluoridation naturally
without any added fluoride, he
said.
LACKNE R SAYS THE
fluoridation debate "has more of
the emotional flavor or a
theological argument. There are
righteous people on both sides.
That bothers me. I worry about enthusiasm."
State officials say more than 40
water systems in California are
fluoridating. They are:
Alameda County Water Dis-
trict: Antioch; Arcata; Bene1ca:
Bever ly Hills ; Contra Cos ta
County Water District: Crescent
City; East Bay Municipa~ U.tility
District: Eureka; Fa1rf1eld;
Fountain Valley; four Fresno
County water districts; Gridley ;
Hayward: Healdsburg; Hunt·
tngton Beach; Loog Beach: Long
Beach·Northgate Garden: Los
Banos: Loyalton ; Marin
Municipal Water Distri~t ;
Martinez: Merced: Morgan Hill ;
Oroville ; Palo Alto; Pittsburg;
Placerville ; Pleasant Hill ;
Pleasanton ; Rosemont ;
Roseville; San Francisco; San
Jose -Evergreen; San Luis
Obispo; Scotia: Stanford; Valle-
jo and Vacaville.
Tests Needed ~RWEIGHT?
On Cavities
By The Associated Press
Greg Weber. an official in the Department of
Health's DentaJ Health Division, said no tests have
been run on fluoridation's effect on tooth decay
since the 1950s. ,.,. h .
"We haven 't had the time or money. e s1ud
He added the department was hoping to run
such a test in the near future
BACK IN 1950-53, STATE health officials
looked at eight areas with natural fluoride concen·
trations, Weber said.
They found the avera~e 17-year-old in those
areas had 5.4 decayed, missing or rilled P.ermanent
teeth. Those areas wer<' Coachella, Coalinga, part
of Los Angeles. Monterey Park. Sierra Madre, Mee ·
ca. Twenty.rune-Palms and Oasis .
IN 1952·5' STATE OFFICIALS looked at 16 non ·
fluoridated areas and found the average 17·year-old
had 11.7 decayed, missing or filled permanent
teeth.
Those areas. Weber said. were Sacr ame_nto.
Placerville. Acampo. Fresno. Morgan H_1lls.
Livermore. Pleasanton. Alameda. San Francisco.
Antioch. St. Helena. Santa Rosa , Healdsburg .
Gridley, Oroville and Palo Alto.
But Weber stressed the tests on fluoridated and
nonfluoridated areas were not matched for levels of
nuoridat1on
Brother Billy's
Quotes in Book
NEW YORK CAP) -"Redneck Power· The
Wit and Wisdom or Billy Carter." is the title of a
book to be released Feb. 14 by Bantam Books on
President Carter's colorful brother. . .
Jeremy Rifkin and Ted Howard ar~ comp1bn~
Billy's "quotes, quips, anecdotes, stones ~n~ opi·
nions on just about everylhin~ -Crom religion to
politics to peanuts." Bantam said.. .
A sample is Carter's reaction to the Wb1te
House and its billiards table: "I had heard what a
high·class place this was but the damn pool table
doesn't have any pockets."
Learn What Makes
The Lindoro Method
So Effective
A complete program to instruct patients
how to lose weight easily. then how to
mo1nto1n their lean we1glit
Doily therapy. with audio and sub·hm1nol
visual rnds to promote rnot1vait1on ond
encouragement
H CG, o fat mobilizing substance. makes
11 easier tor patients to lose we1gh1 w11hout
tat1gue or excess1v.e hunger
L1ndoro·s very special diet. designed for
rapd weght loSs and moroved eatng hd:>its.
8ehavt0r mod1ficot1on techniques to learn
we1ght·control
L1ndoro ::. eosv ·to~tollow maintenance
program to prevent rega1n1ng
The entire program is under the strict
supervision ot medical doctors. specialists
1n bonatric medicine
Coll 101 rn1ormcrt1on
Mondoy thru Fridoy
9 A M T0 1PM -2PM 10 6PM
NEWPORT BEACH
640·6831
~ a~--n ( t • J.
COSTA MESA
557·1893 ·.\. : . ,,,. . "
son Bernardino · E Long Beach • M1s~1on Hill~
1-lowthorne . Orange • Newport Beach
Gorden Grove • Long Beach • Pasadena
Lo Habra • Woodland Hills -Sherman Oaks · I
West Covino • Fullerton • R1vers1de • Santo Monico . 1
Cosio Mesa • Pomona • Cemlos · Hollywood I
Arcadia. Torrance
""TUnc:1ora MEOCAL CLNC
l tndOfO Medteol Clrntes ore owned
ond oc:Jm•ntSle<ed ov Med1co1 Doctor~
that restr\ct ll'lef prochce to 8onotrics
At L Clrnic PerS0'1nel, Doctors onci Nuises
ore llcensed by the Stole of Co~t0tnt0
TME W.LOPllG GROOMER HAS A GOOD llfllG GOING ... GOllG
RIGHT TO YOUR DOOR!
A llfft Of bright blue 1977 Dodge vans. completely o"!filted to
groom vovr pet to perfedlon rl,ght at your curb. aw11ls your
''" .. (714) 634'11'•!
Tit( GAUOPIR llOOM£R •.. lU'1S
flOIJS£ CALLS Otlll .. at Pt'ICH comp1r1blt to those In frl<ll·
110 .... 1 groomlnou1oni ... 1nd the GALI.OPING GROOMER
ellmtntlts 111 fN •usund bOthtr i,, tht berg.tin.
TMIS UllU( P£T GROOMllG S£1YIC£... Bri"9S 111 the
t1cllltlff of tht find• petpatlo\w to vovr dOor in• con'lt)l•t•lv
Mlf<ont1lntd "'°'tll• unit IN• Offers convtnienu to you Ind
11r c:onctltlOned comfort to your pet, who i• bllht<l 1n<1
oroomtct tO tht JOft atrt lnut "Wtlc.
NOii iS Tlil MT ... wtio "-• .,..,, oroomte1 t1V ,,,.
GAl..t.OPINC OROOMIER ... 1 lkllltd Pt'OffUlonll wf!O
ha• combined 1<ientu1< llnow.flOW 1nd
cru llve 1rU1try 10 provide I s.rvlce U\lt
wlll flht you Ind your pet t1e9olng for
mor. •.
Tuesday. february 8, 1977
By Bil Keane Cigarette Machines
•• I
"Got some room left in that hug, Mommy?"
Sudden Stop Bill: $24
WAKEFIELD. England (AP) -Micb.ael
Bostock, 18, made an unschedul~ stop al Wa~er1eld
on the Leed.s·London express tram. It cost b1m $24
in magistrate's court for pulling the emergency
cord.
I .
. ., .,
I
1' .I , '
Can't
mention
names •
but we
carry
only the
best :r ..
10 25% OFF
IGROUPSKI PANTS
100
PR. 50%oFF SANTA
ANA
ONLY
. SKIS
ROS.SIGNOL
AND KNEISSL 25%0FF
CHI LORENS
SKI CLOTHING
NEWPORT IEACH
40%oFF
DOWNTOWN
SAN MARCOS (APl -City CouncUm~
Charles Eatenaon want• eitarette vendtn,&!
machlnet outlawed except In ueu auch as tave""
where minors are kept out. ~
The proposal up for vote toni1ht drew im~
mediate criticism from tobacco lndust r~
spokesmen and those In the vendina machine bua1'-
MU. .
DR. DAVID W. GIBSON
Chiro-ractor
Anrl0ll1Ces the Relocation of his office
Coll for on appointment to
determine if Chiropractic con
help you. Positively No Oblic;pt1on
1731 Scmta Ana A••·
Costa Mna
, .. Mock..._ 41111 loc.et.il
for cCIRMltatlon, PltoM '45-1177
KN El SSL
ACROBAT REG. $165.00
HEAD FREESTYLE .
YAHOO REG. S165 00
HEAD FOX
.ssgso
.. sggso
REG. Sl75
s115 -OTHER
ODD SKIS AT
THESE BARGAIN PRICES
fl! I •'I
THERMAL (LADIES) UNDERWEAR
TOPS s3&0 BOTTOMS s3&0
Reg. $5.75 Reg. $5.75
TIRE CHAINS
JIFFY
MODEL % PRICE
/ )'
SKI SWEATERS 1t~
AND SKI PANTS
ALL FAMOUS
MAKES
30%0FF
UHAIRA
••fASIUOttSQ. (114) 111~5911
'
FAUIOlllSUMD -.2121 __ ,.,.,. ... ,_ ... ,,,
SANTAANA
111 L4ttl
M7-572J _...,, .. ,., ...
"", ...... ""'lit
SPORTING GOODS
SINCE 192• "
(11! ,!!'!P5'
MIN ... Ut
CERRITOS
#1UllAL1
(213) 124-1125
\
l
J A. DAILY PtLOT T~tday. Febn1ary a. 1en
~=· SOlons Opening Offices ~,
~·
ly Phil lnterloncU
i ~ ~ ~
BJ O.C. HUSTINGS a.u.o.11, .......
Open house will be the order ol the d y lhis Fri-
day for several Orange Coast lawmakers.
~ ~ AN OPEN ROVSE WILL be held Friday by Rep.
Robert E. Badham (R-Newport Beacb) in b.ls new
Conereaaional offices.
r, Badham and his wife, Anne, will be on ban<l to
:: greet vialtora durinc the Congressman's first trip
;, baek to the .oth district since taking office Jan. 4.
'" The orflces are located at 1649 Westcliff Drive,
• Newport Beach.
; The open house will be held from 4 to 6 p. m . . .
MEMBERS OF CONGRESSMAN Badham 's dis·
" trict office staff include Nancy Bettcher, district ~ administrator: Dianne Terzenbach. executive
• s ecretary; Jan Burton, case worker. and Howard
:: Seelye, district representative.
: Miss Bettcher, or Fountain Valley. was a member
of the Badham assembly staff for three years, serv-
• ing as administrative assistant in the district offic e
• for the past two years.
Mrs. Terzenbach. who lives in Costa Mesa, also
-was a member of the Badham Assembly staff, as
secretary in the district office
BOTH MRS. B URTON, OF Irvine, and Seelye, of
• Newport Beach, a re new members of Badham 's
s taff.
' Seelye retired from the Los Angeles Times last ~ • December after 10 years as a political writer in
: Oran ge County and 30 years as a Southern -! Califomia newspaperman.
.; People planning to attend the open house are
• asked to call 631·0040 . . ASSEMBLYMAN Dennis Mangers ( D·
Huntington Beach> has scheduled an open house
'· Friday at his new district offi ce at 16371 Beach
• Blvd., Suite 221, Huntington Beach. It will run from
3to7p.m.
The public is invited to come and meet As-
i: semblyman Mangers and his staff at the office In
• the Sand Dollar Financial Court south or the San
Diego Freeway.
•! The staff m embers are Ken Willis. ad-
• ministratlve assistant : Ardis Brown, office
manager; Kathy Bode, community affairs
representative: Shirley Dett I off, constituent
• services representative. an~ Barbara Parks, pr~s
chairman
Mangers' district oHace is open from 9 a.m . to 5
. p.m . durinG the week and from 9 a.rn. to noon Satur·
day .
AND REP. MARK Hannaford CD-Long Beach,
Western Orange County> has invited residents of the
34th Congressional District to an open house Friday
at his new home office location.
Hannaford tind his staff will be greeting consti-, , ~,~. ,,. ~ Deaths Elsewhere
~ ~ SAN FRANCISCO
~1AP > A former presi·
fJient of the California
r.t ate Bar. Julius V . t atrosso, died at a
~ ountain View retire
,_ ~nt home The retired ~Los Angeles Superior ~Court Judge began prac
;:,ticing law 1n Southern
~California in 1914 ~ (. SAN DIEGO !AP1
f Funeral service:. for Dr
•:Max Feder, a leader in ~Reform Judaism rn thl'
• l.Jn1ted States. will bt·
held Thursday at Temple·
·Rodeph Sholom. Feder, :76. died in Los Angeles
Sunday while attc-nding a
t egional conference or
°th e Union or American
Hebrew Congreg:.it1ons
C HI CAGO <AP )
JUcbard B. Austin, 76. a
lJ S. 01.'tnct Court j udge
for 15 vears. di ed Mon
.day aft;•r an l'Xtend~d 111
'neu. Jn 1969. Austin 1s-
1ued his most famous
ruling ~hen he found the :c h 1 c a g o II o u s i n g
:Authority and Depart·
:m e nt of tlousing and
:Urban Welfare gui lty or
•tac1al d1 scnm1nat1on
:•nd ordered 1l to build
•three of enry four new ;.. •
. ·. . ·.
"HfAMl\.Y
COC..OMtAL. RIHllA\.
HOMI
7801 Bo1sa A'le
Wf'stmm-;tpr
893-3525
'AClf lC YltW
Ml...OllAL. rAH
Cemetery Mortuary
Chapel
3500 Pacihc View Ori"e
Newport
Calirorn1a
644 noo
M<COIMIC•
...OITUAlllS
Laguna Beach
494-941 5
Laguna Hills
768-0933
San Juan Capistrano
495·1776
IALT'Z.H••no ..
fUMlttAL HOMI Corona del Mar 673-9450
Costa Mesa 646-2424
laLllOAOWAY
MOUUilY
110 Broadway
Co61a Mesa
642-9150
SMITH TVTHtU &.AMI
WHTCURI CH.t.rM.
427 E 17th St
Costa Meta • 648-,.888 S111nta Ana Chapel
518 N Broadway
Santa Ana • 547-4131
public housing units in
while neighborhoods
BOSTON CAP >
Sidney Foster. 60, a con-
cert pianist who made
~1s New York debut irf
1941 with the New York
Philharmonic. died Mon-
day at the New England
Medical Center. Foster
came Lo national pro·
m inence in 1940 when he
\\On the first Edgar M
Leventntt International
Com petition
f'ILIS EMMA M 'IL!S, ruld•nl ol
Nt•oorl llf!•<ll C.alllornl.a P.an ed
•wo F•Of'UMy 1 1'71 !>1'e h 'urvlv•d
l>v ,,., n••o El,..rior S. Alle<i o• Con.a
Me•• Celllornl.t Private ierviCO\ will
b• h~ld P•<tf te V tew Mortu11ry
Ntwoort BeKl\Oire<.IOO
WIU.S,
BE lll~IC.E L. WEll.S, o.au•d ew"v f•bru••r 6, 1'17 ~ •H • reiold*nl or Colt•~•. C.lllornl.a. Site is \urvlvect
by lier o.au.111er Cll•rlle<• Roo• of OU.an''*· C•,, tlv1'9 •liters. Pr1v1te
1ntermef"rt '•"Y•Ce'\ w•r• "'f''d For•·\t Lewri, G-... Ca. Oll"P<l"<I l,ly !ltll
llro.adwo Morl\1¥y M?·•ISO
lllUMMaTT
'IElllA I llllUMMETT. o.a••"G •••Y FH>ru.ary 1 1'71 ~ _, • •~•0.111 o•
Co\le ~.a. C•lllO-nl• Survived by
••sler l!tt,._, Oen lllA ~t• ~•• C•
Prlv•lt 1111 ......... 1 •••••CU ., 0-
~lleollerct Ce,.,,.ltrv Otr•<lecl 8t1I
8r0.tdwoMonJJ.M'f.M2·•tSO
MOlltTAOUI
Lit.ANO II MONTACWE. '"'"*M l"l•ont•ll• C.alilof"1.a Survived by hit
wife Marlon Moll!~ SoNl<e• Ptncl-
1"4 P.t< Ilk v-Mortu.ary, Newport
kKll flrwcto".
THW•
Jl!SSIE TETEll, NtWd •w.ay at •9t
11 YH n . llK!dffl4 Of ill CMrry Tr• I
L•ne, Newport 8•ttll. Calllor11I•,
formtr........,. of 111> Sel;tt1 '""r10ft,
S.111• ""-· (.allf-""•· PJ'6ad -·· I "ftnl•I'\' 1, tU7 $1/r>f\l!IM ll'f OM
de.I..-l!•lfltr i..aw~ Of N.-.0'1 I
•••Cll, C4 • th,... tr8fldCM141'_.,., Jtrrv
Uwf~ofte'IJIW!lc;.,,:tttr-.C•; I TWI UMttMUf........,. IH<ll. c..a .•
two er..t1•llll«JllktNI\, I.Ml" arid v.,. l.•'"""'9. MIO wMwct bv "IO"V I
,. ........ ," '".....,, '•''"'" ,llQ ... ,,. I t!llM Ill 11.., of 11_..., ~1101" may M mNt to Tiie A~ C•ntff So<a.h
Serwlco lo lie Mid on Wtc1""4•Y I ,.~ ... ~r••l lltOOAM•tSl'nltllTllllllll
L•mb CNoitl, ~t• Ar"'· Ca, Offltl41111 I J~ C•mootll •nd """or Eel 8011
''•te• 01~,, •• lly Sf'llltll Tlltlllll I
• L•rne, s.tlt• ,.,,. Clleoel, Sent• A11•. ,., .. 111 Vltlltllori to De htlcl °" tw•·
,., it~., t. tl"MI s·oo PM ro e·ao I ~. •4tflto ~ Ol.allel, ,,,,.Ill\ Tllll!lll ... J11.,,,...., .. ,.'°" .,, .. ui. I
•Ol.AND
tuents between 9 a.m. and the regular office closing
tlmeatSp.m .
The address lS: 5199 East Pacific Coast Highway,
Suite300N, Lone Beach.
* * .. HANNAFORD ALSO PLANS appearances Satur·
day at a pair of public forums. However, his Orange
County constituents will have to travel to the Long
Beach areato1ivehlm apiece of their minds atlhese
town hall type meetings.
The first is scheduled for 10:30 a.m. at the
Lakewood Service Center, 5510 Clark Ave.,
Lakewood.
The second will be conducted at 1 p.m. at the
North Long Beach Facilities Center, 633S Myrtle
St., Long Beach. • • •
THE ORANGE County Republican Central Com-
mittee has moved to new quarters al 200 Town & Country, 771 S. Main St., Orange
The phone number 547-8006 -remains the
same.
GOP central committee meetings will be held at
7 :30 p .m. on the third Monday of each month at the
Tustin Community Center.
OC Transit
Board Olis
SA Garage
. / """-, . , .___ ----/
f ~ ~-/' -:::-......_--.. ... ""',. .. .. ·~···· -,,,, .. _,...,. . ..__,.
·11 ·~ lhat bad up thcrt>? ..
FEB . HH J
ICE CLASSICS
PERFORMANCES' ON REAL ICE
5oath Coast ?lua
Orange County Transit -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ District COCTD) direc·
tors agreed Monday to
proceed with plans for a
700-car parking garage
in downtown Santa Ana.
At the suggestion or
Director Phil Anthony.
the board agreed to use
the proposed four-story
Civic Center area garage
as a tempor ary bu s
terminal while joint
plans with the city or
Santa Ana are completed
for a permanent transit
center.
Anthony suggested the
garage could be used as
a park and nde facility
for bus travelers. Any
parking spaces not im·
m ediately needed for
that purpose. he said,
could be leased to the cr·
ty or county for use by
employes.
Embezzler
Sentenced
To Prison
A man who pleaded
guilty to grand the ft
after being accused on
arrest of e mbezzling
$611,000 fr om h is
employers has been sent
to slate prison from
Orange County Supenor
Court for a diagnostic
study
Judge James JI
Walsworth will sentence
Theod ore J ose ph
Sc hwa rtz, 39, of Los
Angeles, to what could
be 10 years 1n state
prison when the defen·
da nt returns to court
April 25.
Schwartz was arrested
when his acts of em·
bezzlement were un-
covered by orricials or
the McCarthy Company,
an Anaheim real estate
firm
? . --------
Tuesdays at 7:30 p.m.
Do it yourself
ON
TONIGHT
700p.m.
EXTRA EXTRA EXTRA
------------THE TWO I
$9 95 SPECIAL . -. · · . STEAK AND CRAB LEG :
• ~~ ~~ DINNERS : Be~t Orn~ County s..~4m,ct \'cllue. ~ ,._ I
Don't mi~~ the tr.1inl Step aboard In 1h Century Li mite r
a uniq11t' dinirV! CXf'X'riC'ncc for two. Stroll I h1"0l.1gh yc~tcryc.v ~ I
mcl'l"Km'\bili.\ ,\nd d11~--f1n ~IMk ~\nd l\ir~ Crab U.g~ in <\n , I
dc~ont. pnvat~ di1"1v.: <'C\r '\bur two dinnt'rs \\ill al-..o induck· I
lucchmi 'fom~. Com Cu.-..1Md Cond1l'<I Cr,1b Apple-~. rn1~c<l g"·~·n I
s.ilfTHS' MOltU.UY
e27 Main St Huntington S.acn
&le 6539
l•~~::~~~ c:.~~0;.::!!:':~:~ I On-the-Mall at South Coast Plaza Near the Carousel I
~~~ ~:S,5Q" ... ~~~ I on the f"'lnt Levd. fOr iuervations call: ~ean I
"w\l<)(f. fr\'-,h f\'f1~h tmy ,\Ix! brc(~ ,\nd butter. I
Kofll 'kNIUt will lilt llelcl In , • .,., "'-·Pon ..;......I--'--'-•'-CL .... ~ ........ .;;..;. .............. -~.;..; (.--...J.'. • ....ll~L?&+ ... ) DN.f .I lt"lf•. 1..,. Sllefi.f ~ry l«ol L ""'1'I ~1n111AC-..u1....., .. "'~ •• ..,.__,, ~-OUl.,....,-w '..J!li _________ •rte•n•i11rt .. •oiillilll. - -• • • • • • • -• OlrwapiiNitFtltiNwyM, 11"1. • - -• • • -• • •
l •
Tonight's TV
Highlights
ABC fJ 8:00 -Happy Days. It's
graduation day and Fonzle. who's been
crammini in night school. is joining the
cap and gown brlctde -but Richie.
Potsie and Ralph leatn they've flunked a
course.
NBC 1J -Dean Martin Roast. Angie
<Police Woman> Dickinson ls the roastee
tonight, pre-empting Police Story for this
special.
KHJ 0 10: 30 -The Price of Peace
and Freedom. A study of comparative
military strength of the United States and
the Soviet Union is presented.
(TV DAILY LOG]
I TUBSDAY
I iVBNINQ
8:00
8 U (.I) f~ (ClT Cl ) llrn II lfll (f) (6 ()) m llewJ
D <a L1km luhtb1ll la~trS
'4 New Y°'k Knicks m "-rytt .,~. m Putrid&• Fa1111ly
a>M&m·l2
fl!) Electric Com1NnY m Or11111tic S4fies
IUl Mih Oov&ln m Utt1e 11uu1i
-6:30-u Dluhl Guests include Monty
Hall. Ortk Haymes. and I he Poinler
Sisters. ([) w, Griffltll
®l MtfT Grilfill Show m f amity Affair (CI.lJ (})) 6unJlllC>'t mz.o.
(~CJ)) f!ewttdlt4
7:00 fJ Dl!Wtl FROM VEGAS! * H1ll/Po111ters/Haynles
0 0111111! •
ou ~cv m m 11ews
Cl) MJ Th rtt Solt>
Cf) To Tiii Ute Trutlt
D Coftttnllltieft m I Lon LllCJ m Tit• ra1 m Amenca/bntl lnr1$h Hour
fl) MIClleil/lehrtr Report
( ~ ct ) The Partredce f 1m1ly
ft) McHale's lbvy
-7:30-
0 DINAH! FROM VEGAS!
• Hall/Pointers/Shorr
U Oinanl
U Candid Camm m The 1)dd Couplt
0 (fQ) (JV Cl) tlollrwood $QvN U m Tiit Gon1 Silo. D Tltt .loller's Wild m (!Sl CJ)) Bndy Bunch
(<Ill (l)) llash•illt Oii 11tt ROid
ED Chl111tl 21 T0111&hl m ro11ow t11t 511,.
'11 Lian aub m "f" Troop
8i00
U (U1l ) (JJ Who's Wlto Dan
R;ilher Charles Kurall and Barbara
Ho•ar a1e the rtPQflers o 'lll m ® m Bu BN llac:k
Sheep "'lht Lasl M1ss1on Over
~ngai" Pappy 8oy1ngton is ordtrPd
10 lace a m1hlary courl mar11al ~11
chilf&ts he falally 5t11ftd Un11eo
Stales ttoups while on a m1ss1on
(L Mov11: (2hr) "Sunsel
Bouloard" (dra) '50 Gloria
Swanson. Wilham Holden
U (1~ re ) >• Happy Days "lhe
Graduall on" Parl I lhP eve ol
a1adua1ton day amve~ and emo11ons
a1ow even higher when it 1s leirned
that ron/le will also be a eraduale,
bul the lesliv11tes are dampened
when Richie, Potsie and Ralph llunk a course.
D Movtt: CC) (211r) "Pichp on
101" (adv) '72-Jack Albertson.
Leslie Wu""· Marti" Sheen m Last of tht Wild
a> Pttry lllllOll m Ntws/l'W!i( AU11n
(2j) lrlM!t: (211r) "A P1tc~ of llut''
(dra) 66-Stdney Po1tm
fl!) Picudilty Clrc11s • lhe Author ol
Beltrafflo" A youn1 American
walches the dr1ma11c conll1c1
between 1n Cnahsh no~ehsl and his
wife lor lhe attw ions of thew a1l1n&
youn1 son
6) Va._ I Cilttar m PsJdlk P'lltfteftltnl
-1:30-e Movie: (C) (90) "S1t111's
Hamstn (adv) '65-l1pp1 Htdren.
C~1e Mool1omery
U ((BJ (U) (1(1 LHtrne &
Sllirlty Step111n' Oul" L.ne1ne and
Sh11le1 are 1sked oul by two dream
~Is. but when I hey start lo prepm
lhemselvts '°' a fun filled even1n1
everyth'"l IOU w1on1 m Cfou.Wlb
fB CfllllM ""'"" m Sltullioll ContffJ
9:00 e ((11) Clll (I) M•a•s•H ~n
outbreak of infectious hepalllut.
lt lhn& father Mukahy. th1ealens lht
t•n111e med1c1I stall ol lhe •Olllh
IM Hawkeye sees the b111hle1 side
of lh1n11-he's been elected lo e1vt
Hot Lips • 11mma &lobuhn shot
CJ MAH~E P1tOPOSAl
• FOR ANGIE TONIGHT! D @ (J) C11 Pthct Wo1111n
"lhe Killer Cowboys Du11n1 1n
1nltns1n su•ch fo1 1 bind ol
p~uedo cOtrboys who art respotts1blt
lor • st11n1 ol ~beries. Srt Pepper
Andt11011 is fomd to considei a
PloPOSll ol 1111/T!l&e hom an old nami (&uut f11n~ Coll¥tlst) • <• (()) QI) tic• Mu, ,_ 11111 Rlmona lttrllS she IS ~IYlllC
Billy's baby, wt11l1 Rudy's '°hhcal
Cllttf tan bt'iuined by Cslep·s m~•
to hne him ctnsuied
®' llOYI•: CC) (U1) ''1\• Wlht
luldl" (WU) '69-Wllh•m Holdtll -~~Q)Vlra•
• Mncll llftetr
CD ll1Jal: Mtrt U1t G.a Ale
f011111 Oocumentaiy eunuoes the
ms ol Nepah artists who hive
111oduced 1111ares of lheit ditties 111
bronte, slone. wood and In pain1inc
lor ottr 2.~J~ m a.a. w.rett11111
-9:30-
0 (Ci1l (1)) (J) 011 DIJ al l
llrne m Amerie111111C11111 ArtJm m Music.al SerttS
10:00
U (U]) (})) CJ) Kotlk Mo1e tact~
tome to h&hl rega1dine lhe bod~
~lulled 1n the lrunlo. of a Rolls·Royte
and lhert is more hushallon in the
•llemols to locale !Arla M11id who's
bent on w1c1de-1n the conclusion ot
this lwO·part episode. .
IJ llJl ({) m Dean Miron Roest
An1ie Dickinson 1s "roasted" by
celebrities 1nclud1nf [arl Holliman.
James Stewart, Orson Welles, Ru
Reed, Eve Alden. Lawanda Pace.
Cmcly W1lhams, Joey lllsltop, fost!I"
81ooks, ScattNn Crothe!S and Red
Buttons
DOllm
CJ) Celebflty llme U FAMILHSYCHO * llftORIZES NANCY u (lt en Q_tl flmllr ~some·
oot's W1lth1ng" TenSIOll builds in
lhe l~ience home wllen Nalley
1ece1vu 11tts hom a seuel admirer
111ho is obviously watch1nc the prelty
drvoicee at close rante
~Gu1111noh ED Mtebnc of the Minds (R) m £1 Blt11 Amldo
-10:30-
0 Tiit Price of Puct l freedom
Documentaiy based ol 1tnd1np of a
one veer reseaich p101ect on the
comparative trends 1n milila1y
~lren1th beh1oeen lhe United Slates
Jnd the Sovie! Union m Ill G)llews
11:00
0 U m t3tl News D ({) (jQl ~J (l) News
(I ((8} ) LCM Amtnan St1le
1 () $iit&1es Mitch Up
D Mavtrid
OJ Mary Cius.es Chaos At
• Tht fltant & lortlt•
Hat Her Oebut At Ho111e m at11r 111.-... 11ary KartiM• lll S4f1unt lllu
( (JJ) (}J) TM b lldl Show
2f Best of Groucho
fD Video V1S10nuies
-11:3-0-
0 < fl') CI'> cu cas ut• Mom
D Q1J ({} 10\ m JolHlny Clnol1
(~ 1 TM PTl Club
U (ill r• ) ll1 Tllftd1Y Motlt of lhe Wu~ I he Giant Spider
Invasion" m 11ews 0> Tiit Honeymooners
~! Tht 700 Club
fl) Movie
12:00
0 Besl of GrOU<ho
O Mcwie: 1 Ci "Honercomb" (d1a)
'17 Ger~ld1ne Chaplin. Pei
Oscarsson . m Movie: "Blockade" (drar "38-
Henry Fonda Madtle1ne Carroll
0> Mcw1e: "The hn" (d11) '49 -
Jeannie Crain. Ceorce Sands.
-12:30-e All·ll11h1 Sh41w: "Hullllfl ~'10." "Stu for A N1cnt." Hard, rut 1
Beautllul," "Pmdise Caqyon"
1:00
D !.?JI (f l t!9 TOlllOHOW
2:00
D litovle Ooubltfuture: "Tiit Olft
Co111tr," "lite Promisen m All·ll11hl Sllow: "Malin, th
Monster tf Terror," "Th• Mtt1," "Tht MUSI( llo1"
-3:00-
0 Mowit: "Arcll ol Triumph" (dra)
•8-Ch1rlu Boytr, lnend Be11m•o.
Chules laurhlon
DAmME MOVIES
ftlRUARY 9
Balow. f0t rour conwe11ience, are ~
d•1's lllCMts.
9.JO 11 ''Thi Uus of A Btlt&ll
l.a11m" (1dv) '35-Cary Cooper,
f ra nchot I on,
10:00 ~ "The Adwtnltr• of Mart
Twal11" ldrA) '44 -Fredrit
March Alw\ Sm1lh
IZ:OG ID "TIM C«n II Greta" (dral
•) Belle Dam John 0411,
N1ltl 81urt
I 00 a "Where There's lift"
(com) • 7 Bob !lope Wiiham
Btnd1\
G (C "Gentleman's Aartt·
1111nt'' (dr') . ., _Gre1ory Pee~
Dorothy Mt:Culrt. Joltn Galfltld. "'<tJ '11tt n see_. .. (mys)
~ llenntlh Mott. Tttna Elr.
Brt"da Dt8an11e
3:00 I) 1Cl "Cfallll Duer (wes)
'7•-ltt Van C1ttf <DJ <Cl "Br• lye lr•wnNll•
(tom) '68 Ceorce Setal. Jack
W1rllen. Alan ll1n1
J:30 . (CJ •r\111e1 .. ~ .,. ..
(ad~) f.11 Ql'rlton H,man lllm
Hunter. Roddy Mc Oowall,
Mau°'e lvans .
KOCE Television (50)
LM. Bogd
Mama's Boys
Reach Top
Note ll claimed ln print that all of the •
more auressive t; .S. pre&ldenta In recent
yean -· lbe men who !ougbt most com·
petltlvely to &et the bif job -bave been
"mama's boys." So described were Franklin
Di-Roosevelt. John F. Kennedy. Lyndon B.
Jobnaoo, Richard Sixon and Jimmy Carter.
Not so categorbed ln th la piece. however,
were Harry Truman and Gerald R. Ford,
neither or whom ac:tuaUy sought the pre-
sidency.
CllA.NNELSWIMMEA
Q. ··Who waa the rtNt person insofar as
it's known to swim the En,Cli!lh channel!"
A. A French soldier named Jean-Marie
Faletti. In 1815, he Jumped orr a BnUsh prison·
ship at Dover and made It all the way to
Bolope.
Q. "Why is a •heffling· so called!''
A. Comes from an old Anglo Saxon word
.. haring"' which meant
··multitudes.·· 11\ose fish,
as no doubt you know,
always swim in
multitud~s. There's no
s uch thing as a lonely her-
ring, I gather.
What's the most
musical phrase in all of
literature? Strictly a mat-
ter of opinion, sure enough.
But an Iowan nominates a
line from Edgar Allen Poe's "The Raven,'' as
follows: "And the silken sad uncertain rustl-
ing or each purple curtain ... " Any others?
If the tail or Halley's Comet could be com-
pressed into one lump as dense as iron, it
would fit into a little suitcase. Or so cont.end
the science boys.
Men nationwide shave ofr 500,000 miles or
whiskers everyday ... Only one out of every
nine raindrops hits the ground ... It has been
proved that gorillas laugh ... Way to brew tea
in Morocco is steep It with mint leaves ... Does
anybody know what a vitamin looks like?
Addreu mail to L.M. Boyd, P.O. 80% 1560,
Costa Me:KJ 92628.
''IN SEARCH-6i0
I edwards LIDO CINEMA J NOAH'S ARK" PLUS (G) ..... .,., .. ,. •Y•••ueo '"MYSTERIES FROM
... -0 " ....CM tlJ.ll\O BEYOND EARTH"
"UP" (X)
"THE LAST
TYCOON" (R)
"TWO
MINUTE ,_.., WARNINO"
T'U!!d!t· F!btu!ry I. 1 m DAILY Pft.OT ,t I
• 'Light Up Sky' in VWjO
The youneeat community
theater group on tbe Oranae
Coast unveils ill third productJcn
tbla week when Moaa Hart's
venerable comedy "lJ&bt Up the
Sky" goes on tM boards for the
Saddleback Valley Community
Theater.
The show opeo1 for a two-
weeltend nm at Mllslon Viejo
HiCh School -rather than El
Toro Jllgh School where tho Sad-
dleback players' lint two pro-
ductions were staged. Ben Jut.d
b directing and filling a recent
vacancy in a supportin& role.
HEADING THE cast are Jane
Nigh David.son u a prlma donna
actress. Joe Cord.lo u her hl&h·
voltage producer and Joanne Ap-
plegett as Cordio's wisecracking
wife. Others i.n the company are
Robert Trublar. Jean Spears, El·
lis Estes. Cynthia Logan, Todd
Humphrey, Dick Vara and Chuck
Logan.
"Light Up the Sky" will bepre.
sented Thursday through Satur-
day or this week and next with an
8 o'clock curtain in the high
school theater. Reservations
837·138Sor752·7300. Winding up its four-weekend
engagement with f i nal
performances Thursday through
e~J ... ------------Saturday la .. Butterma Are
Pree" at the San Clemente Com·
munitf Theater. Peay O'Hara
Gibble II directlq the Leonard
Genbe serlocomedy.
JOUN ELLISTON, Debbie
GatH, Joan Sidt-11 and Ptter
Htn comprtae the cut ot the
show, which wW be •lated at
8:IO at tM Cabrillo Playhouse,
202 Avenlda Cabrlllo, San .
Clemeatt'. Reservations 482-046:5.
Two other stage productions.
both by professional companies,
tonaUtute the only other theater
activity in local theaters th.la
week.
South Coast Repertory re·
sumes produdion of Harold Pin·
ter·a "Old Times" tonlgbt, play-
ing nlahtly through Sunday.
David Emmes directs the play,
wblcb features Charles Lanyer,
Cherie Patch and Irene RoHen.
CURTAIN TJllE ls 8 o'clock
with a 3 p.m. matinee on Sunday
at the 'lbird Step Theater, 1827
Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa.
Reservations 646-1363.
S.lllnc out resularll' .•' ~llu '1 Well DloDer' P(aybouae is
tbe ~en and Hammerstein
musical '1be Sound ot Mualc,"
allO p.layina tonl&ht tllrc>uih Sun·
day. Dan Verre ls d1rec:t1AC with
Jud1 O'Dea a.od Darrell Sandeen
lo tbe starrtns ralea.
Performance times are 1:40
tonl&ht through Thursday. 1:10
Friday and Saturday and 7:40 on
Sunday at the dinoer theater, 140
A venlda Pico. Sao Clemente.
aeservatJooa 492-9850.
CAU.llOARD -Golden West
Colle1e bu announced readlnp
for "The Sign in Sidney Brus-
telo 'a Wmdow" for next Mooday,
TuMday and Wednesday at 7
p.m . in the Actor's Playbox on
campus •.• tbe Lorraint-
Hanabury drama, directed by
Carolyn Denni.son. will open May
12 for two weeuncb ...
Tryouu for the rock opera
"Jesus Christ Superstar .. will be
held at Orange Coast College
Feb. 21·23 in OCC's Drama Lab
Theater from a to 10 p. m. • . Tom
Bradac is directing the rock
opera wbicb will be staged lD ear-
ly June ... musicians also are
needed and further information
may be obtained by calling
~5640 or 556-5972. • .
Mason Keeping Active
UAlX1' 1.rta.C K •'L a.I A
• I ...... • I I' flt . -. . . .... . . -
I.A. ,RWY IMANCHllTU• l!XJ
0 .0. 'RWY ICITY OR. IX.I
Q: What's comedian Jackie Mason doln1 stace
be made such an ausplcloul debut as a suU,bt ac-
t.or ID bis flnt movie, ••'J'be S&oolle!" Aad does be
still barbol' bitterness became Ute law Ed Salllvan,
misinterpreting as insulting u lnnottat gestatt bl
which Jackie pointed bis finger at bJm OD camera,
pubUcly banished bJm "rottver" from k1s &op·rated
mane wWa tbe William Morris lbealrical office! -A
Tbe Brent l'amlly, St. Loa.ls. "' -swMlllt PARTY'"
°'MAPrY H00nr Ill
. program? -Mr. and Mn. A. Goodstein, Brooklyn.
A: "Biller?" Mason scoffed . "On the contrary,
I always loved Eddie and cherish his memory ... so
much so I just taped a one-hour
TV tribute to Ed Sullivan with
many stars who once appeared
on his 'shoe.' 'Forever' turned
out to be a very short time. I was
back on the Sulliva n s how
several months afterwards. In
recent times 1 ·ve kept busy play-
ing the college circuit, doing
some stage shows and night club
dates and trying to arrange
backing so J can play the Man in ~4SON
the movie about the rackets kingpin. Meyer
Lansky.
"Right now rm performing at the Colonial Inn
in uptown Mi ami Beach for the entire season. Much
better than hopping from one place of employment
to another. I like to know where I am when I wake
up m the afternoon -after that silly sun sinks in the
West··
Jacki e also told us his "Stoolie .. film bas just
been sold to ABC lo help amortize his close-to-a-
million-dollar investment in the celluloid. lt wlll run
sometime in March.
Q: Is it true that Betty and Gerald Ford, tbelr
three sons and daughter Susan have si1aed en
-----~ All C_,.AS-U.ll<IAIHMAU IVUTOAY'T1l2.JO~ •II 1i
-oot..£•AC K P'LAZA •, .. ,. .. ,.,I 1t 1n 'Roots II'
A: Yes, through their personal representative,
Norman Brokaw. The pact for the pack, we're in· n:-~19''91ft''lli~-~
formed. wlll lnclude their memoirs, TV guest ap-
pearances and specials. Also ftlms, if any.
Conversation with George Burns at a party
hosted at Toni and Jan MWTay's home in Beverly
Hills. ··How.·· we asked the Sunshine Boy, "with all
the success you're having at this stage of your life.
do you sleep at nieht?" George shrugged and .,..,...,""l"r"'!"'9"P!ll"!~""P.n---i
answered: ··On the rightslde ! "
Q: I've beard tbat Rod Steiger, wbo I tblnk bad a facelift several years ago, dlaapprovea or aacb _.&.ieillai~t.mliillM~
surcery. If so, wby? -Emily Polter, Fort
Laaderdale, Fla.
A: Observes the famous actor : "People who
ponder this kind of surgery should think twice. Un-
less they think young and feel attractive inside, a
new race isn't going to make them any happier .··
Q: I at&ended a dinner at lbe Century Plaza In
Hollywood the other evening at wblcb Bob Hope re-
ceived what the toastmaster described as Ute
l,Htda honorarium of bis career -tbe lt71 PaUiots
Award of lbe Coagreulonal Medal or Hoaor ~le·
ty. Hu America's favorite com~lan ever ex·
plained bow be counts hla honors? -Gloria J., Long
Beacb,Cal .
A: Yes. Bob bowed. "We use a gold engraved
computer -also an honorarium!··
Send your qiuataona to Hy Gardner, "Clad You
Aaked Tbo1." care o/ tins newipaper, P 0 . Boz 1560,
Costa Mua. 92626. Marilun.and Hy Gardner will an.noer
aa many questions as they can in their column, but the
volu~ of moil makes penonal replies impossible.
Producer to Get
··"~_.............. . .. \••
Wnsidered Thalberg Award
"HOWfUHHY
CAHSDlr UMt+t O
"SIX WfTH A
SMILI" ..• ,..
NEW YOllK CA P > -
The producer of the
landmark t e levision
series, "Roots.·· says he
may produce a sequel if
author Alex Haley wants
it.
LOS ANGELES CAP) -Producer Pandro
Berman will receive the Irving Thal.berg a.1emorial
Award, and the films "King Kong'' and "Logan's
Run·· will receive Special Achlevement Awards for
visual effects a t the 49th annual Academy Awards
cere monies.
The Academy or Motion Picture Arts and
Sciences made the announcement. The ceremonies .
SO COAST PLAZA
~·1 ... 111U1Mafll1 1111 ... .-c
11ROCKY11
7:>0 & t :4S
SAT ~UM-t:JO-l:40-
S:4M:OO·I O:IS
CINEMALA 0
lfttS.lb!N ...... u:s1~1
MfllAICY AllDA Y .. 1e1
~,,._ ,,,,..,,....,.. , ........ ,....,,,,.......
.-"CHIP'tilDALE ..
CINEMALAND
, ..... JO
~, ....... ,. ... 1~t.ff ,,.., ...
...,..._-. ·------
.. ' ,...,.._ ... --. \,~.;.~=..
A sequel would be
based on material from
Haley's book that was
not used in the original
12·hour. eight-day serial
and on material from
Haley's work in pro·
gress, "My Search for
Roots."
to be broadcast Ii ve by A BC, will be held March 28. ll~llD:iieiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiii~
Berman produced such films as "The Gay
I --C#r " .. .......... -.....
The fastest draw in the
West. . a Daily Pilol
C'lassi fied Ad. Phone
642 5678.
The series, which ran
for eight consecutive
nights and ended last
Sunday, bec ame the
most watched program
in television history.
" ... Nothing less than
the most exhilarating
entertainment of the
film year to date."
1 • ""' t .1 "' NtW YORK Tf.\ff 5
Divorcee ... "Of Human Bondage," "Morning ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ G lory.·· "Top Hat.·· "Gunga Din,·· "The • .... ___ -·-'""'" "" ... ••·--•••
Hunchback of Notre Dame," "Blackboard Jungle" •·-=::!.~'':!:.':=.-~=•-
and "A Patch or Blue ... '"'·i-octNT"· itm1a
H D
.. MONTY PYTHOM & THE
GUIL"IPGJ
11NETWORK11
••• 11'HI SUNSHINE IOYSN
.. CLOCKWORK ORAMGI" CRI
.. 2001 A SPACE ODYSSEr CPGJ
.. SILVER STREAK" ,,.,
Bii i5s~ I :~:.:~.:.::::
nM •INNOCINr rtn111
SLUMlll PUTY 'S7C'I)
"'"' TMI HAPftT HOQIJllm
......... e au CU,_
••
.•
I
I
Wiiia.-It. Ueraeyer bu beeft· 1ppo~nted vtct-pree~ J)ftlOftnel relaUcina. Cor Air C&lltorata.
Newpicd BeaQ. He 11 r pomUM lot tdmlllistra·
ttoa of tllle corporate pertonnel luDctioft, formula-
Uon ti m•aeement develQPment PrQll'&mJ and
bar1alilln1 unit ne1otl1tlons. He .11 fornaer maoaaer. employe rel1Uona, at 20th Cesitwy Foz. • Sa•• 1· FUul&Jma~ Westminster, vlce presi-dent and manqer of Ian ol Amerka'• Wilshire·
Ve'1Doat brMch tn Lc>s Angeles, observed his 2'lh
annlvenary with the bank in January.
Fukuahlm•. who Jolntd the bank as 1 teller ln
1952 and was promoted to officer status in 1954, bas
been Dlalla8er of the Wllahlre•Vermont branch
llDce October. Prior to that, he sernd as m anager
o1 several Los Aftleles area branches including,
most recenUy, the Rosecrans-Van Ness branch. • Blaale Alwine has bee n appointed ad-
minlJtraUve coordinator at the Newport Beach
headquartttl facUlty of Transworld Media COJ'P.
She prevlously held an administrative post in the
%00logjcal department or ~ Country Safari.
* Nonnaa D. Ward, Huntington Beach. bas been
named president and chief exe<:ulive officer of
Robena ConloUdated ladutrtes. lac. He presides
over the board of -Olrectors and is chairman of the
executive committee. He joined the firm in 1971
from Champion International, where he had been a
vice president.
JdeaSaotollalb
Mrs. Trudy Eisen,
an' energy-minde d
Omaha housewife, is
credited with ma king
a few telephone calls
that snowballed into
a camp a i g n t o
s horte n bus iness
hours o f su p er
markets and s hop-
ping centers.
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
l.KrowNo. ltUAt!C MUNICI PALCOUAT
NOTICE TO CAt!OITOAS Wt!STOAANGE COU NTY
01' a ULIC TAANSl'EA JUDICIAL DIST
(Seo . 6101°6101 U.C.C I 1144 w .. lmlft\lor Aftnue
Nol le• 15 "8rtby Olftn lo tredltot\ ol WoltmlMttr, C,,lllorftlo
tlle wltll(n n.tm.O pertles 11101 • 0..1~ Ploinhll transl•• Is Intended to bt m<1de on SARA E LEAHY
Dersona1 propt'rly her•lnol Oeftn&Jnl
lerclucrlbed CAt...PACl FIC 'cORPORATI ON ••
Tllen-•ndbu\lntH•dd•fnol corporation. RUSS MILLETTE
Illa lntenmdlr..,Sl9roruro LARRY l<ENEMOAE. JR OOES I
OMER M YORK. l&'M towa Sl•tl'l, t11ro119l't V, lt>elvM""
Costa ~. C.llfo,,.1. '11>1•. SS NO SUMMOHS
344·11·1031 C,,soH-r: :M1Mt
MARGARET H YORK. 16'M Iowa HOTIC•t Ye.I llllW ..... llMCI. TIM
Strfft. Co\t. Mew. C.llto•"I• .,.~ SS court may IM<IO. ... IMt y0>1 witMvt
H•T·;!.:.}'!;!!!J_ ~ .•. -,. eddr••• of your "'1"' ,...,d ""~' you re_...,
.,. ·-·-· ~~·~ • • wll!ll11 JO .. .,.. Road Ille ''"°""''*" Ille lftttndld l•anslertet ort M low
J ACK P . BROOKHART ll01 AlllSOI U51 .. M51*-nCl-. IEI Costll~n Orlw. Hllftllnc)lon Beau• Tri""'•' _. *<141r <-ro Uc!. alft C.llfornlo~ 0 IMftll> ...,. U!I r"-c.t
JEAN P 8ROOKH~A'I'. &JO? Jt .U.~. Uo lo r11twmaciel
c.utlll•n Orlve Hunll"919'1 auc11. , ... ...._.
Cotllornlo._ I TO THE OEl"ENOANT A civil
Tiit P•OCMrly CMrlontnl ller•lo " <°"'Pl•I"' hes btefl flltd by Ille Pl••ntlll
dU<rllled lft -ntral ., ~lttlel\. ~••ns1.-1Sufootno1e·1
s"C>Pllrs, ,,,.~""''° e<W•Qfl'enl, I••· • ti "°" •1\1110 .. ,""' tru• tawwll
'"'''· """lt11re, llu\tntu •ncf VO<lmv\I ""'"'nl0unattor1t11\\11•'11-Gooc1wlt1, k-~ REM()!> PtlZA mon\ 1< w-.i Ol'I VDU, tole with lhl\
•nd 11 toc~td81 1075 El C.tmlno. Co\I• court • ""'""' pt-1"9 on resoonse to
Meso CAlllorn1at1'1' '"" comp1.in1 111 • JVSlo<t C:Ourl . you
Tll•I YICI """~ " .......... " lftl-d lo ........ hi• W•lll Ille courl ........... pl MO·
b• con\um'"•l.O •I Ille 011 •<t' ot ·no or ,.., .. .,. or•I t>IUd•nq to"" "'
UNI TEO BUSINESS INVESTMENTS ·~··a Ill"" dO<kel on,._,. lo Ille
IOH Alo,.dr• Blvd P"'•'"ounl compoo1111 ••llwll lO days •lier thll C•hlornoa 'llnl. 111)1 6J.I 1010 ,,,. or \umm°""' ._,.....,..., .,.,..,
•lier Fe-ry t~ 1'71 b Untn\"°"10resPOnd yourO.loull
So fl>f' •• '' --to \O•d "'''""°" ••II w tfl!H9d "°"" oPOl•<•toon of IM Tr•n•lt~ 1.t•d lnl-TrMt\ll'Or\ Platnloll and lhb col.rl may enlff a
u'iOd followlnq •ddlllOn~I b.,,,,..\\ f<ldOmtnt 6Q•inst you for'"" rtllM de· """"~'and -resw\ "''""" '""' th<ff m•ndt<I In Ille complaint, wlllcll could .,...,.,, 1 .. 1 PMI ,N-rPt.,ll In QA•ni\llmenl Of weve•. 1a111nq
OoltdFooruory? . .,11 of m,,,.,.,., llf'l!Pl!rty or other ,..nef re
.Joell. P ••-hart ovt\lt<1 l11 '""'°"'°'"'"' , JtMI P. llrootlllart < 11 ~ ~llto,..... -.... ice et on
1111-.t Tr........... •ll•'l'O In 1111 .. nlltl", .,." Wtlld '° ..
UNITtfO•USINEHtNVllTMENTS ,,.mllilY ••"'9ty.-wn 11 .. ,""-·
ltltA-•alvd lf•n1.m•y M lli.0<tt1mo.
... ,.-. Colll-l• "'" O.tttd No~ml>tr 1. l9H
h t: lllJJ ~JtJt lllCHAllOJ WACK co.,. 111•)..,._11. &yaa..NIESMITH Deputy '°""to,_ Ore<>oP C:O.\I 0.lly Piiot ·~£ALI
l'eb<.,.rYl. ltll .,, II 'Tl\O _., '<Ofl'IPI"'"'' lll(l\ICl4\ crou
-------------~-;100111 .,,.,nllft'• lft(llldh crow
PUBIJC NOTICE
Ml9tl
NOTIC. Of' TIIUSTll''t.ALI
TRUST NO 1214
Oft , ... llA•'f .. 101~ .ti I I Gt o CIO<l
A M ,IRST '°'Ml!"ICAN TITLE
INSUAANCI COM"'°'"y •• Irv~ ..
.. \IKU•-''"""' ., '"b\lllvlM 1nn1 .. •YU.,..,.,,. o...IOI Trv\l t•·
e<ultd rt l'llAHK W ltUICHIE -
Jl!"'N llUIE04£ -re<or-Ocloti.r IO. ttr• •t ~ Ht 91.a lft a..
n u t. p ... H3 M Offklot Re<O-d\ ..
Or....-C""'Y. CMtt-."'4_......nt
t• !Ml <t'1_... 'Wice of Oeft'Uft Me l tocUOft lo Seti 1-....-r r11;.,_ Auoint s. 1m lft ._ 1 ,.,., ,...,. ,,. .,
0.ClltMftl ........ of Offlclot ""'""" .. Or111 .. C:-ty, Wiii WllCH• Alld
11Yn 1141nl to Mid 0..0 of Tr"'I tell •I
fllllllc e11«1.., .., cesll. ,..,,..,1 -Y
.. IM United s..-, ot •-•tc,., •I Ille
n11l11 Nerlll llftlttft<t lo tll• ISlrst
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M lldlllCJ loctteo et 1,,. 5ov1,.,..,, <.9"·
"'1f of ISlllll lWld 8ll!ofl "r""· In Ille <hv of Senta Ana, Collftrnle, •II 1"-1 r1;111.
llllt o!ld lnt•r..t corovtYfll to •<let now
lltl411 l>Y JI _, Mid Ot9d of Trv11 '"
tr. ..-...rl'f tllwtH In tM Countv •no 'lloltff\trllledn ·
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ii' lltlef, ., to I ... Ill ... -MUIOft or .,._
c11!ftWMU& 10 Wll"'' U. -•lnlllCJ
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bY "1411 o..d tf Trllf\ 10 wit. MUOO 00
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Delltf: J~1t. "" fl lMT 1oMl!.-1CA'N Tll'U
INSUUHClf COMl"~Y
''91ttY*-<1 ....... Ofttc ... ~ISllH ~ COitf Oflty .......
Jtn. '' •Nt ~ t.t. ,,,, -.n
comp1eir111,..1 ·~t•na•nt' oncludH <f.,,_.,_, "flll<llltr ln<ludt's""'
p1.,,.1 •nct-ullnt In< i_. f.,,.ln<IW
""4 noulPr A wrlCleft Pl~ad1119 tn<IUO
'"'en an, .. , de"""'•' ti< mlftl tie
In "'° '°'"' '"""eel tw ttw C..tllorn•• llutt\ Of ()ou'1 Ynur OrlQ•l\01 ote..ilnq
"'"" De fll«I In I"'\ CO\lrl wotr. proper
1111"9 I .. \ -pr(l&f l"el .. tOOY llwreoi
-· .. ,WCI 91\MCfl pttifltilf'\ .tllorntY
........ ffCll .,. .. ""'' -r-Mnlfd by .,.. .. ..,...., T,,.11,..._n•wmmon'
I\ o.e.....i --°"a IN'ty mo ,,,.,.,
-lllq oro -,...,_ ef wrvlce.
l'Of' •••-· -GC" OJ 10 l"'ouOll Ot•
l..wOf"'-" ".llU\.M MOllOAlll ..... ..,....~~ ... ~ .....
N .. ,.,. .. OCll, C.lllorlll•• ...
"4/M+Mn Altor ... y ... : ......,.lff
Plil>llWld ~..,.. tlMl\I U•1ly PllOI,
l"•ll<11arvl 1S,71.-Marc111, 1'17 4'·17
ISICTITIOUS aUSIN•lS
NAM• STATaMIHT TM lo4towl119 P9f'IOllS t ro doCnc) bu•I· .......
NOYl;S INVIE~TMt!NT CO . ll07
lutton\lltfl L-Newi>Of't !leach, CA tl..O
Sltptltn I. MtrO\I ond Hedd• Moro_•~'" IHI lllllOn\11•11 Ltnlt, H.-_. 8Hch. ~'2'60
Hat .._ 1n1 No &•o.MJWoy t..ot A"9t ..... CAtea)I
Iott 0 •if.-... 10 .. s..n.11111
Ori .... lltwrtvHlll1,CAW1IO
Ric...,,, A H......, •4'd Gery Iii
Ne111o11,on, 4" Mo Comden Orlwt •
lolPfflyHIHs.CA
TlllS Wt~l IJ (911-IH by I
ttMtot ~nor1'1111i' ,_k,_,.A H.tndt!t
Tiiis Iola!.-! w~ fllld Wllll Ille
C-IY ~-Qr~CounlY,tft .....
t.1t '7.
Mauel . Peres bu ~Jned Ardll+Tektola,
Ne wport Beach plaantn11 a rchitecture and
en1lneertn1 firm. He la a former staff member ol
the Buildlna lndu.stry AUoclaUon • Graphic artist Gau aot»esu, Laauil• Beach,
baa been promoted to assistant graphic arts
rnana1er for Baaao/BOltmaa, lac., Newport
Beach. She is a former ~lance arttat tn Oran1e
CouAty. • Jerry W. Neely, president of Smftb Intern•·
tlonal, ~ .• has been elected chi~ executlve of·
ficer, replacing aobert Fl,yue. who w)U continue
as chairman of the board and cbaJr~an of the
rmance committee. FJynne will.retire ftom the
chairman of the board p<>St at the end of 19'17. at
which time Neely will become chairman and con·
tinue to serve as president or the Colllpany.
Neely started bis career with Smith Interna-
tional. lnc. In 1966 and has served as president and
chief operating officer since January, 1976. • Dula A. Bee.rbower bu been named manqing
partner o{ Cal·Wesien Data Sya&etu. Newport
Beach. The company also bas annouoced addiUoo
of computer services for tile legal profession. • Oxoco, Newport Beach, bas announced election
or two new officers. Job.D C. FUtoa. Conner chief
geophysicist. has become vice president for in-
ternational exploration. Patrick C. BaleJ, former
president of IDS Oil Programs, Inc., is now viee
president ror North American exploration and pro-
duction. • Steve Wagstaff, Irvine. has been named
Southern California district sales manacer for
Eledroole Enelneertne CompUQ' of CaUlonala. lie
has worked for the company for 16 years. most re-cently ln marketing and fi eld aalet. • Ray Eugene Baum, Balboa lsland, bas retired
after 42 years with the Coast Ea.elope Company.
He bad been division manager of the Coast Book
Cover Company for the past 31 years. • Donald E. Kueny, Fountain Valley, has been
named vice president of Bertt11e ln1nnce
Service, Inc. He is a former casualty marketing
manager for the firm and has been in the insurance
business since 1952.
* Randall Cbrlatlao, Costa Mesa, has been
licensed as a representative or Mutual of Omaha
Fund Manage ment Company. He ls a represen-
tative of the Alex Ba rt division office in Tustin.
PUBLIC NOTICE
SU,.ERIOR COCJRTOI' THI!
STATE O P:CALt l'OANIA 1"0 11 THE
COUNTY OISORANOa
...... toJ.
NOTICE 01" H E AR I NG 0 1'
P t!TITIOH !SOii PllOaATI! OP Wlt..L
AHO !SOR LETTE RS TESTAMI N·
TARY ANO FOR AUTHORIZATION
TO A OMIHISTER UNDI R THE
INOE,EHDI HT ADMINISTRATION
OIS IESTATIES ACT (PROaATI! COOESt1ETH OI
Esltl& of C.AAOL p FLANLEY.
Oecened
NOTICE IS HEREBY GtVEN 1"81
M'°')(JNE SMITH AKA MAXINE
MOUSE SMI TM l\ds lilt<! tlero4n e e>«lo· Hon for Probat• Of Wiii •nd for hwtn<t
of lrller\ Tt\la-ntar; to ""' pell·
tootler -'°' "'ulnorilallOn 10 "'d· m1nl\1tr .,._, 1"-l_,,.,.O.nt fod
monl\fr•llon Of E't•lt> Act !Prob.tie
CHO")fl et wql retoronc. to wlloell " m•~ for h1t11\er 1»•tlcu1er\ ..,d tllal
Ille tome •nd DI.Ke of "4!.tflnq tlle .Om•
"H .,..n "'' '"' Ftoruary IS. 1971 ill 10 00 o l'I\., In IM <OU'1room of Of<Art
m•nt No J ol ,..,d <ourt. •I 700 Cl•oc
Cent..,. D"•w WP\I '" lhtC•tv of Sn••• Ana C.•hforrtta
O•t•d Jtnuary 1• 1•11
WILLIAM £ SIJOHN
Cou<ll.,Clert
l'loyd H Horn1
A"OrlltY Al L.ow
1\f Sowlll Hiit $1., S~olp tOS t..•• •"••••>.CA Tet9PllOM UIJJ U4--
Alt.,llef I ft Pro"-'
Publtslled Oro,.. C.O." Dolly Pilot,
Feb•uMv l 8 'I IOll 1n 11
PUBLIC NOTICE
(P·Utt
NOTICE TOCR•DtTORS SUPt!lllOACOURTOl'THI
ST ATIE 0 1" CALI l'ORNCA l'OR
THE COUNTY OP ORANOt!
No A·-19
E\IAtt ot 'SMI ZUKll SHIMllZU,
0.<H ....
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lo IM
credolOt\ ol , ... •bOv• """"'° ""<ed•nt
'"'•' ell °"''°"' "*"'"0 cl••m' •O•tn\t ttw ..,,., dO(odent ••P rtGUl•td to Ille
lllem woo. mot neuuarv VOll<lltr\. In
'"" olllct of ,,,,. <l•rk OI Ille ebOve tn·
totleo co..•I °'to P<t"'"l IMm, wltll IM
MCeU8•1-•Cl .. r\.10 I,,. lmdef\'9ne0
el Ille TrU\I Oei»r1"""' of CROCKER
NATIONAL BANK UO Newport
C•nttr OrlVt N••DO•I a •• ,,,,
,to.,,
PUBLIC NOTICE
fllCTlTIOUlaUStHaSI
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE OIS au LI( TRANSPER
(100 6101-4101 U.C.C.l
NOiiet' I\ ll•reby Qlven to the
Crtdllon o l S•unlfr• Gordon,
Tr•M•tror. Wl'ICIMt bu$fM\\ •OdrHS IS
"29 WHl~ly PIKO. Suite I 12. N•WP0'1'
8HCll, County of Oroft99, St•te ol
C•lltornle, ll'Wlt a tkllk tr.,,sfer '' ebout
to Ix' madltto OAVIOSTOHECIPHER,
Trtll\ltrff
Tiit property to be tronsfered Is local·
ed al .olQf' We~Hly PC..:o. Sllllt In.
Ntwp0rl BelKll, COi.iniy Of Or..,119,
St tit ol C..llfor11I•
Seid P<OllttlV l$dtt<rlbed I" gtMrOI u All '1oct In tr-. lhrturn. equll>
ment -QOOd wfll of 11\et b1J1lnen
k"°wn •' FINGERS ANO TOES •nd
louted M «12' W.Sltf'IY Pleet. Suite
I tl, NtWllOrt lleacll, C.0...fltY ol Ortf198
St•t~ of CAllll0tftlt
Tiie b<Mll. tr.,,1ftf'wlll C.~mel·
eel ori o• olltf' the 19111 dav of Ftbf'vary.
1911 •t FOt'e""'11 IE.crow, Inc , tll2 S.E
8rlitt1St .No.•,s..n1•Ana,C-yol
Or•noe. St•ttolC..lllornlt
Soler .ts k-lotM TrM1,fertt, •II
bu\lneu ..,..,., •n<I ..,.,,., .... und bv
Transterorlof ,,.,. lllrM Ye.tr\ IHI PHI
11 dollert~llrom tlw i!Oove, ••t n 1e
Ootta FeONorv l , 1•11
O.viaSlonteoPM•
Tr•~Ptf'ff
l"O•IUllOST ESCROW, IN'
UJlS.E.artstollt. attt.
S.llfoA,..,C.n107
ATtN: 1"7-<s E1trowHo.t"7
Pub0$11N 0!'•11119 Coast Oeoly Pilot, l'tb.t .1977
PUBLIC NOTICE
I
LONG SERVICE ENDS
J1mDeckerRetl,.•
Decker Retires
As Gas Finn's
DUtrict Boss
Jim D ec ker, Southe r n
California Gas Co. Laguna Beach
district manager since 1958, ta re·
tiring after 37 years with the
utility.
A native of Santa Ana, Decker
joined the company ln 1940 as a
fitter's helper in Orange County .
He was'district manager for the
coastal area from 1956 to 1967,
when be was on temporary as-
signment in the public relations
department in Los Angeles .
Active in numerous Orange
County civic organizations,
Decker is past president of the
Laguna Beach Rotary, the Sad·
dleback Valley and Or ange Coun-
ty chambers of commerce, and
the Orange County A~demic
Dec•tbel.on and Big Brothers of
Orange County.
Decker and has wi fe. Lucile.
plan to live in Laguna Beach.
·G
WASIUNGTON (AP> -Strip mlnlna lellalaUoa twice 'fetoed by\
former President Ford and now back bo!OH COQfell wduld bave Ut.:
Ue effect oo either coal prodllctlon or untmplo,yment, aceordbic to «
new govemment studf. . 14~~~!!,~~:~rac:::~~ told a Senate au~tnitte•,?
th' p.J'OP05ed coal strip tmJoinc the nation's drlve tor ener1y self.: I standards to cover other sufficiency. , minuals. ,
BUT. WBILE ANDJlUS and
several members or a Senate In·
te rlor subcommittee were in
general agreement on elllendln&
the standards, the emphasis al
the subcommittee hearing was
on swift passage of the basic coal
strip mining control legislation.
President Carter has s aid be
would sign the bill and support
seems so widespread that some
senators want to attach their own pet projects to a bill cert.am lo .
pass.
The study by the Environmen·
tal Protection Agency and the
Council on Environmental Quall·
ty disputes claims by Ford ad·
ministr ation officials that the
measure was so restrictive it
would throw tens of thousands of
m iners out or work and hamper
Solar Heat
To Cut Costs
RAMONA CAP> -The
developer of the 3,200-acre
San Diego Country Estates
says he'll cut the price by
$1,000 on new houses with
solar heating.
Ray Watt said be made
the offer because of uie na·
lion's fuel shortage.
SEN. J. llENNE'IT Jol\nst.oo.' ,
Jr. <D-La.>, llld Monday he •
thinkl legi1latlon opening ~· way to coal-carryiq pipelines~
1bouJd be lnelUded 1n the strip-•
minin1bW. ,
Subcommittee chairman Sen .. •
Lee Metcalf (D-Mon&. >, repll~
that be would resist attempts tQ~
a dd anything to the basic
package. :
Metcall said his subcommittee'
would seek to expand the con-;
trola, once they are aiped in.to I: Jaw. to apply to reclaJming all, ·
manner of abandoned open·plt
operations, from copper pits to: ,
marblequarria. · ~ • • WHEN SEN. FRANK Church'
<D-Idabo), asked Andrus if he
would work for expandine the bill'
the secretary replied: "Yes. sir::
twill." ~;
The new government study!
said the C06t for the industry to'
comply with the legislatiod
would not be ereat. And, it said;;
·'These cost impacts are not like••
ly to significantly affect national.Z
coal production, coal con.sump-:
tion, coal prices, employment or~.
electricity prices." 1 •
U Congress passes the stn~> S
mining bill in rou&bJy the same ...
form as the earlier versions, the-'
price of coal will rise about $1 per~ !
ton by early UnB in Appalachia: !
and the Central West and 50cenl$;:
per ton in the rest of the nation, ! !
the council said. • I 'fl. . ' .. :
•I
: I ............................................................................................... ,. ,, I
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AllCO It>< .... ·~ Olxn Crv '°" 11 KlnQ Int 70 0 l'-Aooen Pr l'lo ) • Ty\Oft I' ll' 1 ll« .., AlltrO Ph 12'·'> no, Oo<ulel S"' S'• 1(1\ .. p VOQ 16't 11''> A•~all C '1 1 '1°• Un MrC,.I 10 I' U" •
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_,ALL 0. IW& aBYZNUal Aaz conilaf from.
IMN ......_ Ja faet.. 1811 now dutvu balf of lta bu&iness in. 2
,,., .. u.-..States.
Oil .. ,.. ...... it WU aJs0 another ~ )'QI'.
SM ' r ,.. Zl ,ettmt to re&ch •·• billion. Tbat meiri1t
.................. mWloe ~ da, -anct .... after,.,.....,.., •. supplltn wl tu tolMctorl. ---a-s a fil?'l.llii ... GI ~--··wldi all tW --..:· Y" ml"9litllla •..-. b1.,.11111t . ..-n•• 1tuck wtartc·llalteom· puM9.....,. tilda a
Money
Tree
cub )Die -It to bQ other aoal!e ..... ..,...Yer. lBll La forecJOHd rrotn that OI>' Uoo bJ 11111111..t CO!Oefkler~. The conmmmt alruesy
t.blnU IBM Iii toe Ms. and It bas a 1ult in the court.a 1~
to bre811Ptlae ccirponUon.
SO 1811'1 llONSY. ITS aETAINED •amina1, ls out
there ~ mcin money than it really needs. Last year
the com,pany'1 .. other lneome," mainly Interest eal'1led on
its moo~. rose to the lofty level of $49' million, up 37 per·
cent over 1115. IB¥ mues !DON money on ltJ money than
most comp.anlea, or banks, make on thetr total operations.
One thinil ~ can buy la talent and IBM la ee(tainl)'
adept at this nere:lse. Just bow adept became almost em-
barrua~y clear when President Jimmy Ca.rtu u·
sem bled bis Cabio.et. •
Three ol the,,.,,, Cabinet membenl know one another as
members ol the board of dlreeton ol 1811: S.Cntary ~
state Cyrus Vance, Secretary of Defenn Harold Brown and
Secretary ol Housine and Urban Development Patrfda
Roberts Harril.
Now was that all. '
ANOTHER IBM BO&a9 ME--Ea, DuPont chairman
Irving Shapiro, was in the nuullal fort~uury secretary.
Nor was that all.
President Carter's first choice for commerce secretary
was Jane Cahill Pfeiff er. a former vice president ofIBM.
Nor was that all.
' WARREN CHRISTOPH.ER, NAMED undersecretary
of state, comes from a Los Angeles law firm that represent·
ed IBM in the Weal.
Nor was that all.
Atty. Gen. Griffin Bell comes from an Atlanta lawftrm
that represents IBM. As a result, Bell Hid he would dll·
qualify himself from an involvement in the IBM antitrust
suit his department ls now proeeeutlng.
Heading up IBM's defense ln this cue la Ill 1eneral
legal coansel. Nichol.a deB. Katzenbach, who al1oalts on \he
IBM board. He uaed to have Griffin Bell's job: attorney
general of the United States. R-ltw t.M 8 11 ttllo • \Ii TrlCftof 2.to.. 4 3'• '> • '•>
RotlrlSll 1.liO 6 17 2S • • • !rls.M . . • l'I• ....• , ROiiins .a.11 llJ U -Ito rl911lltd •• t •11 + 1'a
Rod1G I.Jiii • 1' "'·-.... rlaPa< .S21tn • 11 . . Aoctlfel .. I 64 14'"+ ,_. rllltyl11 IO ' DI n~-1'" Stocks Unaffected
By News Conference
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NEW YORK <AP) -The stock market was mixed to-
day, showing no strong response to President Carter's first
news conference. Trading was actlve. •
The Dow Jones average of301ndustrial stocks, up more
tban3pointsduring the morning, lost4.07lo942.24.
Gainers and losers were about evenly balanced among ·
New York Stock Exchange.listed issues.
The President told report.era he hoped that the White
House and Congress would settle on a mutually acceptable
version of bis proposed program to stimulate the economy.
He also said he was drawing up a long.range enerty
program that would require "substantial sacrifices" by
Americans. SFalndl'f.SO .. I IO''t..... U"B~r plA •• I 13'1!-1-\ WllF91ftt .l01t SOt so .. -t'• U"ll .17t.. U IO'lo ....
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Fight Promp,ts
Kings to Seek
Investigation .
KANSAS CITY <AP> -s.,tns
he does not. want the NaUoaal
• Basketball Aaaoclation reduced
·to a "boxing leasue," Joe Ax·
elson Of the Kansas Clty Kings
baa u~ed the NBA for an in·
\'eaUgatioa of a brawl between
the Kinp and Detroit Pistons.
.. This is the third incident In·
~olving l)e\roit in six games,"
Axelson, Kansas City's president
a.nd general m.anager, sajd Mon·
«Jay in reference to Sunday's
fight between the teams during
\be thlrd period of the Pistons'
130-111 victory in a regionally
televised game at Detroit.
"The fact that a lady spectator
could have been severely in.lured
during the ensuing scuffle dis·
turbs me equally."
The Pistons' Bob Lanier was
ejected irom the game alter sw-
inging at Jim Eakins of Kansas
City. touching orr a bench·
emptying brawl that eventually
boiled over into the stands. Seven
Pistons aod six Kings who left
the bench were fined $150 each.
Axelson said he asked NBA
Commissioner Larry O'Brien to
look into the matter after view·
ing films of the fight and talking
with Kansas City Coach Phil
Johnson.
Lanier sajd he struck Eakins
because it appeared the Kansas
City center was preparing lo hit
him.
.. l f someone is standing in
front of you hke he's going to
punch you, you 're going to double
up or try to get in the first
punch," said Lanier. "And I
don't like ducking.·'
Detroit, with a reputation as a
physical team. also was involved
in fights Jan. 29 against the
Chicago Bulls and Jan. 30 against
the Indiana .Pac.ers.
Sports in Bri~f
Sticking to Business AP~
Atlanta's Willi Plett (right) uses his stick to try to keep
Philadelphia's Bob Kelly away from the puck in Mon-
day's National Hockey League game at Philadelphia. It
didn't do any good. The hosts won, 7-4.
Tennessee Beaten;
Wolverines Rally
GAINF.SVILLE. Fla. <AP) -
Al Bonner scored nine of his 19
points in the last n~ minutes
Monday night to lead Florida lo
an 80-76 upset over 11th-ranked
Tennessee in a Southeastern Con-
ference basketball game.
Bonner1s last two points were
free throws with three seconds
left that iced the Gators victory
over the Volunteers. He rut the
foul shots after being fouled on an
inbounds play by Tennessee star
Ernie Grunfeld.
After trailing 41-36 at halftime,
Florida turned loose an ag·
gressive offense that outscored
Tennessee and grabbed a 48-47
lead on center Larry Brewster's
10-fool jumper with 16 minutes"
remaining. •
The Lead then seesawed for five ·
minutes, with Florida taking a
64 -59 lead on back-to-back three-
point plays by Richard Glasper
and Bonner with 10 minutes left.
Florida then held off repeated
Tennessee e(forts to rally.
The victory boosted Florida's
SEC record to 7-4 and overall to
lA-5. Tennessee is now 11-1 in the
SEC and 16-4 for the season.
Big Money Spill
ls Worth $52,459
Mldaigan, 86-80
MINNEAPOLIS <AP> -Steve
Grote drilled a baseline jump
shot to snap an 80-80 tie with one
min~e. 33 seconds left and then
made a key steal in the finaJ
minute lo give fifth -ranked
Michigan an 86-80 Big Ten vic-
tory over eighth-ranked Min-
nesota Monday night.
NEW YORK -A spill involv-
ing four horses in the ninth race
at Aqueduct Monday created a
$52.459 triple payoH. the largest
in New York since Aug. 22, 1974
at Saratoga when the return was
$63,624.
One bettor at the track held
the winning ticket, which he
bought for $12.
One horse, Grand Gamble.
was destroyed after the spill, but
none of the jockeys are seriously
injured. The other horses in-
volved were Johnny Champ,
Catch PoPPY and El Bundle.
Olfl•PI<' T\I Pla111
NEW YORK The National
Broadcasting Co . labelin1 the
1980 Moscow Olympics potential·
ly ·'the bl1gest event in
telev1sion history." dlscJosed
plans Monday for 150 hours of
coverage of lhe Games at a cost
.. or upwards of SlOO million.
• or the proposed 150 hours or ~coverage -approximately nine ,
~ 1uc1~ SoCal .
lFace Rivals
! UC lrvine, strugglina to reach
:lhe .500 mark this season, will
f h09t UC Riverside tonight (8l in
•Crawford Hall In a rematch or an
'-earllerUCI vlctorv.
: Coach Tim Tift 's UCI An·
!tdters defeated Riverside, 89-66,
:in a 1ame al Riverside earli,er in ~the campaisn. UCI is currently
'9-12 for the season.
: Coach Freddie Goss' Riverside
hours a day from the July 19
opening ceremonies through the
Aug. 3 closing ceremonies -
about 65 hours will be prime
time. ABC televised about 75
hours of coverage from Mon-
treaf'last summer.
ln11tn-Win•
Bruce Jenner didn't bite the
hand that rewarded him, but he
did suggest lhe Am ateur
Athletic Union could make im-
provements and improvements
will be necessary to keep the
Unlt.ed St.ates competitive ln the
1980 Olympics in Russia.
The 27-year-old who won a
gold medal last year with a
world record performance in the
grueling decathlon at Montreal,
becam~ the 47th winner or the
AAU 's James E . Sullivan
Trophy emblematic of the na·
lion 's outstanding amateur
athlete of 1976 .
Jenner outdistanced swimmer
John Naber and figure skater
Dorothy Hamill .
eo..te.ra,,
LONDON -The Soviet Union,
Czechoslovakia and Hun1ary,
which all 1taged poHUcal
walkouts rrom the Federal Cup
women's team teft.nts tourna·
mellt in Philadelphia Jul
August, finally bowed to dia·
cipUne Monday.
Tbe tllree countries paid
$10,000eacb in perialUes.
The victory catapulted the
Wolverines, now 11-1 in the Big
Ten and 18-2 for the season, into
the driver's seat in the circuit ti·
tie race. Minnesota dropped to
7·2 in conference and 16·2 overall.
The Wolverines jumped to a
12·point advantage in the first
half, but had lo come from
behind in the last three minutes
for the victory.
Phil Hubbard led Michigan
with 23 points, John Robinson
added io. Rickey Green had 14,
and Tom Staton and Grote scored
10 apiece. -
l..Ult Win
SOUTH BEND -Notre Dame
rolled to an easy 94·63 college
basketball victory over Xavier of
Clnclnnati Monday night.
The lrlsb outscored the
Musketeera 19-6 in the first seven
minutes and rolled to their 13th
lrlu~ph in 18 games.
Former Marina High (Hunt·
in1ton Beach> star Rich Bran-
ning, a freshman, scored eight
points for the lrlsh, with a field
goal and slx-for-six from the free
throwUne.
Cage Ranki~gs
,,,. foe> T~y '""''In ,,,. Atso<i•t9d Pren c.ii. lle1Uttl.ill POii. wllll llt\1-ot•u 'l'Ottt In
Nrtntllt-. SfflOll re<Ortl\ _,,., lCll•I POI 1'16.
1 VI' CSll U·O 1 .. ns 11. T-1~ t1S
2. UC.LA 161 1a.t l.OOt II C.ln<y 1 .. ) ts.I l 1Ct"'11ith 1 .. 1 IOO U Ari!-1 .. 1 245
4 Wll ,_'11 .. 2 •ll H No, CW 1M IQ
S Ml<lllOtll IM ... IS, C...,.Mlft 11..S tit • l tvll.. 11 t 1'S 1t Ptvlft 1t.l ~
1 Al..._ 11·t '2S 11 Syre<ldll 1•t ..
I MIMI Ill 16-1 4M IL Arlt-t .. S st t M.-..tw \fol )SS 1'. Ott .... t tt-t SS
10.H .. 1,V •t -JO, VMI "°' 11
•1 aooaa CAllL80N °' .. ...., ...... -...--Bon basketball HUOD ln Cll'
Southem Section htsb 1cbool
circles baa been cut by three
ween and Umlted to 20 &amea
rather than 22 11 ouWntd in the
im · '18 ClF apoiU calendar.
Other aporta, too, have been af-
fected by an edlct wJllch brinas
alrls sport& in line with boys' re-
1ardlq lenstb of seasons and
numberaof1ames.
Tbe new format followed a
Jan. 20 directive by the CIF
Council to equalize the seuons.
The new format alleviate.
most overlaps for bor aporta
and eirla sports. bu several
overlaps remain re1ardln1 boys
vs girls athlettcs.
ReacUona varied from "boys
basketball coaches around tM.
OranaeCout area. Here are tbeln
comments:
ELMEB COMBS, in his 19th
year at the helm of the Hunt·
ington Beach Oil era: "I'm not op-
posed to it at all, l think the
basketball sea.son has been too
long. This stops a lot of the over-
lapping in boys sp()l'ts.
"They Haven't solved the pro-
blem of SOD\e contlicts between
the boys' and girls' use of the
gym, however. I think this may
chan1e the tournament situation.
With each tourney counting as
two cames, tl)ere may be more
18-team tourneys and the
ellmlnaUon ol others-which is
good.
"And one scrimmage is
plenty."
GARY LARSON, bead coach at
Tustin High : "This will surely
hurt us. The only sport that
seems to lose out is basketball.
As it stands now the girls have
the use of the gym by almost two
knonths more than the boys with
volleyball, badminton and
basketball. This just further
restricts us.
"I know a couple of coaches
who are thinking of resigning and
the girls aspect of this are major reasons. Somewhere along the
line someone is going to have to
push for equality among the
boys.
"The fact is that a boys coach is hired under the pressure of
winning and losing. Women are
not. but every man is under that
pressure ... that's reality."
JACK ERRION, a veteran
coach from Long Beach's St. An-
thony High, now in his first year
at Corona del Mar High : "l
wasn't anticipating a curtail·
ment of the season, but It does
eliminate the overlap between
football and basketball with the
later start of practice.
.. I b• to lOle any 1amt1, but I
IUppoM "'ll hav• to ~Ult to lt. I don't know lt it wJU hurt boya baatetball, but it surely won't hel~ of tournaments mar
be or c:ooaolldated."
DAVE CA•USLE, tn &ta ftnal
season as head coach of Colla
Mesa '1 Eltancla m,b after a aix·
year tour: "Maybe tbla will
make people realize basketball
should not be played year-round.
••Now's a Cood time for all the
coaches and •dminJatrators to
set together and deelde to play
basketball during basketball
season and let the kids have their aummentoUlemaelves.
.. Football and water polo are
1ood examples. Kida don't have a
chance to diversUy themselves.
Kida should have a chance to do
other tbings and participate in
sports that have a carryover
value after school. Basketball
and football .do._not ha¥& this
value for most of.the athletes."
DAVE BROWN. coach of
Fountain Valley High 's Barons, a
team with a 20-1 record and the
No. 1 team in Orange County:
* * *
..
"Loalnl two sames from.,.,_
aeaaon II tUly, You lolo money
derived from tbe 1euon. Nothl.DI .la dOM to the football HUOQ
because lt'• the bll mone1
maker.
.. A few women have won. but
tbl1 la 1Wl better than the pro-
po11J to combine the boya with
atria tn bultetba.U. From tbat
standpoint we've won.••
STAN DellAGGIO. Saa
Clemente Hl&b coach: .. lt'a reaJ..
Jy a shame. We had 22 games and
the &lrla had US. Bt1 deal. Tbls la
Just another step in teal'iQg down
boys sport.a. TiUe IX WU not~
posed to brinl one down to briDf the other up •
..Thia la reverse dlscrlmlna•
tion. I bate to aee the season lose
two weeb at the start, it gives m
only two weeks to prepare an4
it's bard to eet things together aa
it ls. And in an eight-team
leaaue, ~ou'll be hurting to get all
of your ca mes in after the finl of
the year wlthout some sort ol
tripling up during a week.
"The de-emphasis should be
aimed at summer leagues, Do\
our regular season."
* * * ..... lt~U,"9rtt71·111 , ...
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Girl\ so~ll prattle" becilns M•r 6. ''"' "'""'
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lt•h·-""~ Girt• ~ PBCll<• be91M Mar. 'l. fwtl
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')u\on -12weeks. 9conl&jlS. ci•mo. one tcrlmm•ve
Bartow Says Bruins
Are Ready for Trip
LOS ANGELES CAP> -UCLA
coach Gene Bartow has his
Bruins on top of the Pacific-8
Conference basketball race and
said Monday he feels a touch of
confidence.
After a 75·65 victory over
. 1l.:·
..
Washington and a 72-59 triumph
over Washington State, the No.
2-rated Bruins head north this
week to race the s ame Pac-8 op-
ponents
UCL A goes against
Washington State at Pullman on
Thursd:iy night. then goes to
Washington Saturday night.
"We are in a good position,'•
Bartow said. "We reel ready right
now to go on the road, beca\lse
from the physical standpoint
we're sound."
The Bruins have seven games
remaining on their schedule and
Bartow said, "We know if we win
all our games, we're OK. We
have the opportunity to control
our destiny."
A rte r the two g a mes in
Washington, the Bruins return
north the following week to visii
Oregon State and Oregon, lheli
return home to host Stanford and
California before closing out the
Pac-8 year at the Sports Arena
against Southern California.
"We feel right now the next two
weeks are so vital, that if we can
go north the next two weekends
and play well, we can solve a lot
oC problems,'' said the coach.
"Our road play has gone ex-
ceptionally well up to this point,
and I see no reason why we
shouldn't continue to do as well.'•
.. And," said Bartow "I have~
feel we're playing very, very godd
down the stretch.''
Rustlers in Action '
WHITTIER-Golden West
College's basketball team bidt to
climb to the .500 mark In
Southern California Conference
play tonight, facing Rio Hondo
College, here, at8o'clock. ,
G WC's Rustlers surt1ri~ed
Harbor, e&-58, Friday, runnfos
their SoCa.l record to 3-4. Rio
Hondo has a 3-5 conference
mark, inc.lud.in& an 84-73 set.ba~k
toGWC.
1 ~. lghlandera are sparked by 6-5
rward ~ Wills (11.7 points
r 1aane> and M 1uard Clyde
• oblnson Ul.7). ~ fmne l1aa one other 1ame this ~·~eek, viailinl Cal Poly (San Luis
bllJ)O) Saturday nliht to face ~ oach trnie Wheelers Ml,lStanp.
The Soviets, Czechs and
Hunaarl.ans pulled their teams
out or Phlladelpbla at short
notice bee.a~ South Africa wu
partkipatine. 11>e ILTF ordered
them to pay $10,000 eac" in com-
pensaUon to the tournament or·
111\.lun. Part of the money cov-
er• alrf ares or their oppona>ts.
EVl1Sf!Ueld
CINCINN~1'1 -Tbe Cincln-
nati Reds annO\lncecl Monday
that tbetr aoaaon opener acalnst.
the San Dieao Padree hu been ~old out, 111arkln1 tht earlle.t
date ln history t)lat the tradi-
tional opcnln& game of the Na-
tional Leaaue baaeball aeuon
No. I Barons lnv.ade DB Toniglli
~ v f. LA MlRAJ)A:-Coacb Pau.I
~eak'a Southern California
olle•e Vancuarda basketball
-.m .joumtes to Bloll Colle•e
itOn.ltht. C8) for a non·conf ere
a,aakatball out~J. f The VIAIU_~nts droppecS 1 71-41
'de.:11.lqo to Stoia earflir, hJ th
kampaJlft 8nd are currently S.-15
:tor the HllOCl.; ~ 'l'ed ~Stnqn, wttb • :1'1.0
tac'Or1nc av ra1e, lucta th• ·v anfU,ardl. "
baa beed a Mlloot.
' eomeane elM t.onlO~ 'I'm 9Qt aure.•• . •
Coacb· X.arr1 Sunderman••
llUltaaP, ~wbll~1 who have
,.-Qb <and lOlt) OSJ me boards.
have avfnied a 59A·57.7.Svan·
t.e1eov•~r1val.L
Sundenlan ••'9 1dt -team••
tuk ol eoatatnl.Da •T Alex Bl~ ._.JactTVI llaC1 IUArd faul AtJa: ........ ol UmJt.IQ .. Sea KlnO to .. lhot .. ,..... l>aei cm cWeme to stop tbe __.
tlal Cdll fU$ break.
to three eeaaou, Sun~nnan•s
teatn1 have wan aa4 la.t b)' tour
polnta, lCJlt t-'ee by one po<
and b7 tbrw polata ea.rti• UU-sealOll.
Mesa 1'111.les oo a ftye.man &ont
of ~ Wills, !tne Patti.no,
Stan Miller, Dou1 Dyaut and
Fred MUiDO. JD leaaue play, on· ly 16 polQta have been scored by
tbeMlweoltbe.crca.td. .. We've played well the 1-
couple ol games, .. says Sun-
derman, .. bat we mlgbt .,n
··omdatJna ~ be Important_ too,•• aaya SUnderman. -
BJ.act ._.the Sea K1np of· teue -.rith an 11.9 average, tbe
venatileTba .. lllttlna·at 18.1 and
Attn bal ua ll.l leque average.
Releai\linJ[ for 1978·79 in Orange
County 6.i&b -school circles is not too
tar in the future and if past
performances are any indication,
tbercf 11 be plenty of controversy since
the matter is put Into the bands of
principals who may or may not juggle
it to suit their own needs.
Assigned to head the releaguing
committee by the CIF Southern Sec·
tion is Costa Mesa Higb principal Bob
Packer.
Later in this column you •ill find
this writer's idea of what the Orance
County setup should look like with the
number of classes, thla year's enroJJ.
.meot according to the CIF metn·
bership directory and an average
-'ienior class (dividing the number of years into the enrollment:
(In some cases, where it's known
that the enrollment will change due to
ROGER
CARLSON
I
new schools: the enrollment bu been estimated with an uteriak)
This is bued on enrollment, 1eo· graphical placement and 1trenath
(primarily football) ot. schooll.
There are ao1ne unique problems
such as the fact some scbooll are
three-year, others four-year, soq:ae
dj.stricts wish to be toietber. others
want to be spread out.
The SWlH& Leac .. e
Although Loi Alamitos and Cypress
are smaller In enrollment, neither bas
taken a backseat to the balance of the
league competitively. Geoerapbkally
they fit in well and only one other
school in Orange Counly is larger in
average senior attendance -Hunt·
tngton Beach, which will dwindle from
the pull of Ocean View Hiala.
A ~s-,...,.;.1 ""-H SunMI l ....
Fou,,l•lnVatl•v Edl'\Of\
We\tMln\tf'r M•r•n• Cvp,.~\
LO\ "lam110-
• ueo tt0t~1 ~., .. 110..l
• 1716 l~l • •100 00101
l1l501111ll
l ·11SO 111&1
Tbe Empire Le1gue
Competitively. geographically and
in terms or size with the exception of
Huntington Beach. this setup 11 com·
patible. An Interesting matcbup of
Huntington Beach schools fHunl·
an~ton Beach and Ocean Vlew). Newport-Mesa acbools (Est•ncaa
and Newport Harbor>. Anaheim's
Loar a and Santa Ana Valley.
~ ...... ,.L-l'f--1...__
HUflll ,,.iOft llM< I\
•i~nc•• O<••nV-l.O•r•
Sant• AM Vtli.v
• J1501 .. 11
•>HO ••Ill • 21'11 1~1
• 0'10111 S!Ol )1000 ... ,,
• 1110 , .. ,I
The Gardea Grove League
1t should remain as lt atands.
Tri.tons •1'19 ·-.._. .... °"" ....... BolsaGr.,..
Gerden~ LaOulft!Jt
Los Amlp ' ::: Ubpredi~le Lapna
l-21u Beach, twtc. a lOMr to Pecllke • !~::: Dana Hllla, ~· 41·39 FreewaJ Leape victor aver na del
Kennedy, 8 stroaier and larger Mar In Sou b Coast
Aenc"4> Alaml ... Sanuaeo
h l l Lea1Ue buketball ac· sc oo ,torep aceMacnoUa. Uon, invades San
Anallelm ..,..._.~-ayl.M1119 S.11!0(931 Clemente mgh tonight
Kennedy !~: l~l with a starting time of 1 ~r::i.... »1ao "111 o'clock. =•r,-~:::::: TbeArtiltaotEd Burl· s.v.,... s.1uscs.s1 Ingham. cm a two-game
'-'"'"' •noocsm wlnntnc atreak and
Orange League ~wlna steady lmprov•
Ma,IDOlla, a school comparable to meat behind the play of
Canyon, to replace the latter to ac-Ben Bacon • Terry
commodate Canyon'• wish lo be Haught and BW Gompf,
placed witb ita 1iater acboola in the wlll be trying to Improve
Orange Unified School District. their 4-6 league record to
ei~.-~""'---......,._ ._1,,.1ut1 the point of challenging
1..eM.-• •1100"m El Toro <M> for third a,.. ~:::::: place. ~:",. ..it• CAl1l San Clemente. under
~=:~~::, !l::l!:U the hand of coach Stan
1MtM1i. i-1t001si>1 DeMaggio, are locked in
Crestview Leape a tie for first place with
Givini Orange Unified and Tustin Corona del Mar with a
Un!fied districts their wl.sbes, this 9·1 record, lncludinl an
league would allow both to keep their 81·72 verdict over the
schools together, augmented by geo-Artists.
graphically and competitive Sad· "We know we have to di b k ff" h r s d stop Bacon." says e ac 1g C> anta Ana an DeMagglo, "but we have
KatellaHighofAnaheim. to atop Hau.,bt's
.......-Ct'fttYlew .L.NIW D
Foo111111 Hsoo <61s1 penetrating moves, too. r.:_ W~ ::: Gompf hu been scoring
v111a Pa~ ,.2000 1 ... 1 well, too. Laauna Beach ~.~~.. ~}.': :m: is a very danserous team
s.ct<111M<k ~2600 1.i.01 to us."
Ka•11• >1t00 cwi San Clemente Is the Century Leape 1 , hi b Keeping Corona del Mar and Costa eague s g est scoring ... the d team (66.0 per came)-'"esa toge ran Irvine's Universl· while Laguna Beach bas ty and Irvine together. this group of 1 six is compatible in a ll three aspects. I ven up Uie most (60.2
ElToroandSantaAnaprovldeanex· per start). Turned
cellent cross section and all are com· around, San Clemente petltlve. bu allowed 46.2 wbile
,,...._ Cefllllry LI .. .,.
s.ftta AM •USO Ul11 CotoM dtl Mat 4-2110 1 nn CCll1a ~ 4-1000 (9001
Unl..,.rsllv •·1900 <•JS>
'"''"' ···1IOO (llO) Et TO'o ... 1IOO COOi
South Coaet League
This setup needs no explanation.
Geographically, competitively and
enrollment-wise, it Is equal.
Tbts proposed format allows
stabWzation with only the Century
and South Coast leagues facing some
alteration in years to come with at
least four more schools in the Irvine·
El Toro-Miasion Viejo-Capistrano
area capable oC beinl absorbed by these two leagues.
Other features Include tbe saUsfac·
lion of the desirea of the Orange and
Tust1n diJtricta to remain together
and for the ample distribution of San-
ta Ana and Anaheim schools.
Laguna Beach has
1cored at a 58.8 pace. ·
Burlin8ham la down to
an eight-man roster with
·ankle injuries to Bandy
Smith and John
Brotherton.
"We had five players
on the floor with four
peraonal foula each Fri·
day," says Burllngham.
Gompf has been the
core of Laguna's rise, ac-
cordina to Burlln1bam. "Gompf is the catalyst
we need," says Burl·
ingham. "He's super ag.
gresaive, plays good de·
tense and motivatea the
team. He missed a few
games earlier with a
thumb inJW'Y and that
hurt UI."
Gompf ICOl'ed 20 points
Friday, including 14 of l7 ·
from the free throw line.
Sparkling for Sao
So. Coast Eagles Duel S4
Clemente or late has
been suard John Mac-
Donal<1, who scored 24
against Costa Mesa.
"Our three off the
E st an c i a H l.I b •a
Eacles will be trYIDC to
EI Toro High • s maJntaln their one-game
Chargers. trying to edee on Tuatla tn tbe
maintain an edae fpr race for the Century
ht d l · s tb League buketball crown t " P ace 10 ou tonidbt at th• Costa Coast Leque basketball • circles, meet vl11tlnc Meaa-bued Ea1les in·
'University tontiht. vade Santa Ana Hilb
. Tipoff is at 7, as 11 the School. 'Mission Viejo-Dana mn1 Tipoff 11 at 7· and the
• fli h' b · 1ame matcbea the best ~on ct, w ac as at defen1lve team in the .Dana Hills. Mark Hill ls back in league (Estancia, wbJch
the lineup for the baa allowed 48.8 poin'3
'Chargers and his pre· per laaue), a1a1111t ttie
aence, along with gu.ard aecond biiheat scorinc
Bob Charles, glvM .&J team (Santa Ana, which
Toro tbe ectte over the bu avenced M.t point.a
Jrvlne-basecl Univenlty pewf:n~· of aeveo of ~intet. which fell by 20 their lut etcht ltartl,
;Fives Vie "W 1 ...... to 1 bench~" says DeMagsto, •were uc".., w n "have really helped. at home in the first Glenn Frank Mark
r,ound," 1111 Carlisle. S h err y a D d' J 0 b n
Santa Ana made a cou-Stephens have come off pl~ of l~ mlatakes. the bench and wbea they ~ We U be lucky to wJn do. we don't drop off, we *' Santa Ana. It bu H · •et better ..
cellent height acrosa the Oppoe~c Bacon Jeff
front lin~~ la quick and Greenough and the rest
pby1leal. ot the Artists ls a front
Pacini E1tancla In line from San Clemente
1cortq bu been 1uard con1l1tln1 of 8·6 John
Ray Orlill (1'.t polnta Caraon, 8·1 Ted Het· per game) and Pete thtga, e.1 Bill Neely,
Neumann, who averages lhcDoaald and auard
12.1 poinU per 1ame and T I m D u n h a m a
Is a maln1tay on the abal"Plbooter with a '18.7
boa.rda. scorfn1 averqe.
MD~ Servite Claah •'t:.ii:me~~ round coach Due Carllll~'t
Charlee acoted H Ea1Jt1 b1ve 1otten • Mater Del Hl1h'1
~
DAILY PILOT A II
S~t
C~ers
To Play
Newport Harbor
Htab'a reJuventatecl.
S•llora, workln1 on ' four-came Sunaet
Lea1ue Winnlnl 1treak
and sole occupanta of
second place. face
We1tmln1ter Hlall
lonl8btatNewport.
TiPoft la at 7, the Mm•
· u t6e other leaaue COD• IJJc t-Hun tin a•oa
Beach'• Marina at Nwt., lqton Beach's Edlaan.
Coacb Jerry DeBUlk's
Sailors, after rolling up
94 pointa In roullnc
Edl.aon Friday, have • chance to equal tb'l
1onaeat wlnn1nl streak for a Newport Harbor
team stnce 19'71 when the
Sailors won a game ln
tourn•ment play, then
opened the Sunset
Leaaue with four
stral&ht victories.
The Sallon are second
• only to Fountain Valley
in scoring (68.0 polnta
per 1ame>. but have aJao
allowe4 the most points
(66.5> tbrou&h six leaaue
tests.
W estmlnster, M, ls led
by the 1·2 punch of Mlke
Soddens and Tim Page
as oppoeed to a five-man
front from Newport.
Harbor, which bas
clicked around Rob
Galey, Rolf Schwalbe
and Steve Timmons.
Trying to avert a aub-.~ pace. the Vik·
in1s of Marina (11·11 for
the year and 2·4 in
lea1ue) will be tryin1 to °"'" ...... ,..... _., 1uc._. "..._ avense a 62-50 lacing at
SOUTH COAST HOSTILITIES -Costa Mesa's Stan Miller (52) and the band ol Edison in the
San Clemente lfigh's Bill Neely are in action tonight. Costa Mesa first round.
tangles with visiting Corona del Mar while Laguna Beach is at Tony Warren bu been San Clemente. . the moat consistent ~~~~~~~~~~~-..~~~~~~~~-..~~~~~~~-..~ scorer for Marina,
:3 Sooth Coast Teams . . .
Share Wrestling Title
Mi11ion Viejo, Dana
Hilla and Corona del Mar
wound up in a three way
tie . for the South Coast
Conference wre.tllng
championship as each
school won Ila final
league match of the
year.
Corona del Mar euUy
defeated Costa Me-.a
41·20 as senior Cbrl1
Crouon improved bis
season record to 23-5 by
pinning Costa Meta's
Nick Kincaid ln 1 :05.
In other league action,
Dana Hilla downed San
Clemente 42-~ aa de·
fending league champion
Terry Mccann upped his
season record to 22·3, de·
ci1ioning hi.s opponent
3.0.
Mlaalon Viejo also
earned a share of the
conference title with a
49· lS win over El Toro.
VA Ml TY
Canu ... -1411 C•I C:..laMH• .. __,,,._,, .. ICM) dK S.ltt>aPWrO
4.Q.
106-1 molo CCMI plMtd Htwfll 1 ·00. ns-erOOlttm CCMI p1,....4 Orr J:20.
1?3-Scl\~ CCI dK Imoto 1 .. 1. 110-Cr~*' ICI ~l(lftCaldt:OS.
11'-EllM IC)plnnedHNdt:IJ.
U1-Broellens CCMl •Sm11t1•2. 1'8-C419las CCI,._ Tef't9"1 "4.
1S7-Gra~ ICI Pill!IMIEftt!l111J:SJ. 1"-ev .... 1c1•k«1Mt ,,_,,
Ull-'GMt'fflt ICI fK 1.IOlla M . ......0.911 CCI plfllltCI ~I .to.
Hwt...._ICCldKWllM,
DIM MIMI (QI f111 Sell~·
..-ltote CSCI won by forfell. 106-lh-11 ISCI dK Olllo<t s-4.
11 s -Arreola (OH I dee MendoH ~.
1u-1.a.-COWi pl""«I cr-3:l3,
IJO-T.McC-Cl>Wldt<Gl•Hnl•O. 11'-ltUQOles IOWI dee Shee>ardl-0. U1-J~ret1 COWl-bylorltll. ,.,_,__ COWi dK Brrd l-l.
U1-ltallef1'11>Wlwonbvtorlell.
1 .. -MttMnmllll ISCI dK S.tteob'(
1-2.
111-~ IOHI de< Edwarcft 1.0,
194-acll IOHldt< 91,i,•.J.
Hw1-1.o .. 1 COHI p lnntd UUlt'f 5:n .
.......... Vieje 1 .. 1 CUI •I Tn•
.. ~lenlla IMVI di< Y•IUW 11.0.
1~-ltl'tlett IMVI dK ~ 2-1. , ,,_ll<hell IMVI dK Taylor U-1.
123-l.._ CETI dee Pls<lltlll 7 ...
1l0-CHll'I) CETI pll'WMd Colfl I :l6.
116-PICllel CETI plnMd R09trs 1:19. 14~Mor,_ (MVI won by forfeit.
Ut-Truett IMVI OK Sl-1 7.0. tJ1-0C-IMVl dee Younge Mo
1.._Wll'lte ('MVI pl,,,,.'1 Olton 1: SS.
111-NtllOfl IMVI pinned l.anQlol• a:,..
1'4-CllHtllla IMVl won by forfeit.
JUNIOlt VA.-SITY
C.,....MIMMUJIC1UC.1teM1s.
'9-dollbl• forfeit.
106-ltffl CCMI de< Grttr19uard 10·5.
1 n-,.wr CCMI won ltf lor'fell
UJ-lt091n ICI dee Mc"lllsltr 6·2.
1>0-0• CCI won by lor'fell 1:i.-AOQerl ICI won by lwleit.
1'1-H...,..,.. CCI wonbYlorlelt.
1Al-14attfol'd CCI tied ~It 1·2.
Ul-Hoblon CCI won by forftll.
141-+4al'tford ICl tied Po.anlt1·1.
is1-a..-rd ICI dee Arbuckle •·2.
1 .. -G.utNn IC)wonbylorlall •
111-ooubl• lorf•lt.
tt4-oouble lor'fell.
Mwt~lorfell.
S.11 C .......... IOI 1161 Dafta Miiis
.. -H19QlM ISCI wonbylOf" .. 11 •
106-<:--.ll ISClwonbylor'feil.
11$-0r•Pt'IOHldeeAUKkll..O.
12)-Uwls IOtil tied KtesOlck 2·2.
1~~11 COHI clK Pl'flltY .. ).
116-Mceo-tl 1 ISCI won b'( lorlelt.
U1-Smllll 10t0 tied FltmtnqO.O.
1t4-Swan$GI\ IOHI plnM<I SOIOftWln
1:44,
Dove Sparks Gauchos
Saddleback pitcher
Bob Dove retired tbe
flnt 17 batWrl he faced
and tbrew a lix•innJQI DO
hitter u Saddleback col·
lege poeted an a-2 bueball win ovet host
MiraCosta of Oceanside
Monday.
Maxwell also performed
a double steal for the
Gauchos as Key stole
home after Maxwell
stole second due to a late
throw. The win over
MlraC0eta evened the Gauchos' pre-season re-
cord to 1·1.
•• T-"" rm Ml•i.. v1ei. 9'-Ftldmeft IMVldeCY•fu\01·0.
106-T'*""'°" CMVI dK Palterso" 1.0. 11S-Fetl• CMV) dK l"IWtftO'I S-0.
111-Grotll IMVI dK Blttdll1.0. 1311-'fl'la'l'lt CETlde< Plll•J.0,
136-Vera CMV) dee ~kllr 5.7.
Ul~~CMVlae<HleelnS-O.
141--C0-1 IETI p1,.,ecs Ottenerv :ll. u1-..-IEndecMllwM.
1 .. -0lcll CETI dec Hut<llllO<I 2.0. U'l-K-IMVl~Albrltfll?.O. 1M-5-IMVI dee ltayf'llOM ).0, . .... a....... (441(11 Ulllwnlty
"-'S""'*' CSI won by lorlel I • '°6-0lmM41 ISi won by forfeit.
11S-lhnskll ISi wont>v forfeit.
123-'#ootwy CUI dK Kief beck 4·2.
130-dollele fcwfel I.
I~ !Uldec °"9slevJ.O.
W-Fl-'"Q CS> dee Dosier 2-1,
1--.Clat\ ISl...,11¥tontll.
1S1--..tll•forf911.
161-Relm CUI lied SCMnl)fllll IMI.
111-Edwanh CSI dee &•renowskl
f.O •
'llOIM·IO'H C-. ... Mar 1161 CUI o..i. Mesa "--..tll• forfeit. 106-Btal ICMlwanbYtorltlt.
11$-Klrk ICldee FtrvtlOll M .
123-L•nt ICMldlk Cfttyl.O.
130-Merry CCI tied SorlOll l-4.
U6-t<ol\ltr IClwonbvlorftll.
IA •-Mtlbon !Cl pinned Snell ·JS
1 .. -0ennll CCI pinned Martin .11.
IS7-S1ewart CCMI de< Hor\t .. 2.
161-0t.-.e <Cl p1Med81unt 2:41.
111-ttothon ICMI dM PeltuSK4 1.
Sa"~ U21 C1'1 0."• Hiii• '9 -<SouOlelor1tO.
106-Wtlbtl !SCI won 11Y IO'fell.
11S-V09flwno IOHl wonbytorftlt.
1U-a'-Y COHI dlC M<Go•en
l(H).
1311-or11Yetft10Hldee Hewitt 14-0. 1l6-Sml1"COHlwonDVlorlell.
141 -••U-IOHI won..., lorlell, l~YllY <Kl dK St-.-0.
Ml ...... ~ citl C14111Toro "-HffMMll IETIO.C ltuSllM.
10.-Klety IMVI *<Mint 2.0.
11S-Ftll• IMVI dee WH,,., l:MI.
1U-.lenfll1'9' IMVI dee lle<K H).
1JO-W""-CMVI dOC Gvrley 4-0.
1J6-eeret I ETI dOC Mallr Ml.
141-fhnll IMVldtcWonerf>.4.
1 .. _,_Old CIT I dllC Oen4lff t.O.
U1-ffOllP CMV>dlc PtltrlOfll•._
1 .. -Wll IMVI tied Smltll J.).
111-MarlllolMVldeeNellOflM.
1'4-s.Ml1119 llETI dee OrHr •·t.
JC oot.P
AtHalMdlff ~ CJI) 1111 °"*" w ...
Howard COi dlf u .. 71. *' I.all• 12.
C:.saldy CGI M, dlf Schlom es.
ltOdr1tW1 ICI n. def~-" H. Mevff CC> 1t, dtf Mlflltf' M. Mc boNtd CCI ... dtl MM 11.
1.....,.1c1 ........... "
avera&lng l.S.2 pointa per
garne.
The Vlkes of coach
Steve Popovich have,.
been flnd1ng it touch to,
score-with a 48.6
averaae the lowest ofi
an1 Sunset League team.
Opponents are finding:
the tame problem.:
however, as the alowei-
tempo employed by!'.
Marina has allowed six foes to average 55.3 per
issue.
Athletics
For Girls
4NRUUlltllTUU.
VAttttTY ..aclfka t»I CMI Hwt. lleecil
Pllllll~ nJ F If) Loc:kl'lart HOOll 111 ,. ~CUI Wr•y
CMl•lll 1171 c m e11rr-
Lont Ill 0 C21 Veledtl
Tllet,,.,,, fll G ltl Cady
t1 H9 K«lllCJ llllK: Ooyte 12, 8'oWI\
Hllltlmr. H8. lf.17. JUNIOR VAltSITV ~aclf~ CUI 1411 Mtllltt. hecll SltOI.,. C2I F IW Palm .. rf
C•ll-ey C•I ~ W Jeall• Hoo~ CU c 191 w1n1w
Collrell C4) G 11> 80-I
Monlft0411 Ill G 10 ltObtnon
HlhcWl"'Jtub: ~OOkt 1. •
Hellttme: H8. 1'·S.
VAltSITY c. CQI ISi 1 '"'"' vaney Partier m F Ctll ~ Ei~IO 121 F (I) e1u1 ..
GM9911 W c 1121 Jacll'°"
Torre• (10) G l•l l.of>Olell-
Hendri• (191 G Ctl A-.rts S<ortne Wll: CdM -....,., 2.
Wlnla""2·Tlla9ard1 l'V-luSlll.
Malit""': l'V. 21-IO.
JUNIOR VAHIT't
CMll C»I (GI"'"°¥....,. '
9ucll Ill F '61 Devis
'I-en Cll fl UI "Ollef1s
Halli91111 IO C C2I WllliJ caru m o cm........,_
C11n111,._ COi G I., Havlllatt
S<O'lftg IOlbl: °""' -c-t S.1411\ 4, Macllet. N -Hatt 11, eouu. Ovs-
lnQ1.
Halltl-: l'V.20-U.
G•ucllo1 third·
baaeman John Bro· r=======================================~
den 1ed th• saddle· E~CWSIVE back scorln.i by drlv· ~
tn1 in two nma with an HEADftlUI A BTERS eighth innin1 triple..t1MK·I • Gary Key and Chrl1
* * * EXCWSIVELY YOURS.
Corporate Plaza In NiWport Center.
A limited oppomnfY to bullet
your own corporate headquarters
polnta Frlday • J>q01l fl'OID 1-7 Jultr, MOGal"chl, IWl within re-
, . Mlallon VleJo, trYinl Deua J.-..... wbo ~ ac-. el MCODd place ln
tQ rebound from a a. avtrqld 18.0 po&ata per tbe =lua Lea1ue
point lactn1 to vl1ltiq naneldllMttwoatutf. Mak nee and a
Corona del Mar, poate4 tn fhtliouad letion UM pot~ble Cir 4•A pJayoffa
·1\1 only Win of the leque Eaalea edfed Sailta ~ ~. lavade Aqabelm '• cempatain over Dana 54·b Clll th• winoe.r • SenitelUC)ltonllht.
Leadlq Kater Del are
suarct Jlm Schult.I an4 &-5 Junior John Garcia. .... ...... ,.
SCbultl, the •ll·tlme CJ F Southern Section
leader ift' _..ts, ba a
11.1 •cortna averqe nd
Garcia bu bHn ln dou·
In"* preetlge ~ Lush~ Ample partclng.
JJ,Ula In the first round, Ooor and Jardine bad Ttpoa LI at 7:30 and a bit ftiuns tha ·~ f1ft sta!U for Mater DM.
COlmOR~TE PlAZA.
~""5. • four points. vlctoty for the Santa
Ana·bued Monarch• of~~:;::=~====~· coach Jerry Tardie Colle!iate BUketball
0!1\%1 lll::..,1'
:1\:111111111 1111',j
\I 11 ~·'' I ,. . would move them to
within one 1ame of
Sernte Wltb Ulree 1ame1 r•malnlilC ill le_,ue. ~ .... _ ...... ~-·--Del• thefii'ltround. ................................... J
Tuetday. l"eblUlry 8. 1917
Sex Therapy Jor We~ht EuSs~'
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Ao ex-ccmvict
hu been arrested on charges tllenunlni
from complaints tbat bia b)lpnoUe
welsbt reduction scheme involved ~·
ual •eta with women under hb 1Pfl,l,
autboritiee said.
Raymond Steaaatl, 44, of Loomit tn
Placer CoQnty was ~ak'd bY rlacer
OoUnty Sberiff'• lnveaU<ora after a
woman complained that be sexually U · aaulted her after use of bypnoala.
ROlevill• And S.cr&Dlento areas.
Scott nld h• aeot police women under
~-.er to anew..-8teacatr1 eds after a
ZS.year-old AubUrn woman reported she w•• subj~ to •e•ual a~u while under~ fr,idQ Dl8b~
their tioinet and tel~e numbent to H t up m4etlnJt wltb proapectlve
employes, Seott i ald.
He•• .._.ed (dr tnves\1= of••· aault wtth lfttent to do areat 'harm
lfld&aud.
• SBE&IFF WILLIAM Scott ot Placer ~li~'Y'J County said Steagall, after b' was taken '"" to the Jail in Aubum, tried to conceal .-.n. Of an address book wttb the names ''!' nearly 30 women from the Auburn,
S'l'EAO~ WllO ill~ burned
women Wt'th elaarettts to detinnlne
wMther UWj Wft"e bypnoti.aocl. Jlad been
under tnve.Uaatioli -1h~ce Au1uat ln
Sacramento and Placer countl•, Scott
said. T~ ada aouiht youne women to work
in a weiaht reduction buaJneu Steaaall
pldfted to ven. Se.veral women com·
plained they were offered $MlO to use
OFFICE•& Ta..NS.l'Eaaso Stea1all to Sacra~ento County JaU
wtie;re he wes also cbar,ed with viola·
lions ol tbe bua1nes1 COde, lnclud.lnt
claims that be wu a psychologist and
healer.
Sacramentq aut.b0r1ties said they also
were boldina &e•c•ll l9r fUrther Placer
County c-arce• ot repe and sex
Got a problem'' Then write to Pat Dunn. Pat wilt
cut red tape. getting the answers und action you
need to solve ineqUities in government and busi·
ness. Mail your questions.to Pat Dunn At Your
Service. Orange Coast Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560,
Costa M esa. CA 92626. Include your telephone
number. The column appears d~ly except
Saturdays.
Afds Gfl'ftl Fafr Hearl ..
DEAR PAT: I saw a teteviaion advertisement
for a new $70 Japanese bearing aid. ay the time I
got my pen to copy down the buying lilformation,
the ad was finished. Would you know anything
ahout this bearing aid? My sister ls hard of bear-
ing and she bas limited funds, so I know she would be
interested in this particular aid.
L.W., Newport Beach
A YS bas no Information about tbJs bearing
aid. Your sbter would be wise to follow the advice
of the NatJoaal Hearing Aid Society and have her
beariDg tested by a licensed physician before she
lDvests In a heartnc aid. She also shoWd contact
, the Veterans Administration IDformatlo• Office,
1 Wa1biogton, DC 004%0, and request the current VA
report on hearing aids. Each year the VA
, pablls~ results of Its own evaluation of bearing
aids it bas purchased on bids for uae by military
veterans. 1be devices are rated on the basis of ef.
fectlveoesa, price and other factors designed to
help the consumer learn about hearing aids before
making a parcbase.
N~..e Searclle• tor Pet
DEAR P AT : My c ompa ny re centl y
••transferred me to this area. Upon arrival, my
family and I were impressed with Orange County,
and we decided to reside in your fme city of Cost a
Mesa. We are now in the process of buying a house
bere and we would like to adopt a dog and a cat.
Can you let us know where the closest animal
shelter is located. and what price we might expect
~o pay for our new pets?
J. W .. Costa Mesa
A YS Su"ests that you visit the Humane Sode·
ty of Ruotlagton Beach, Z163Z Newland. Cats cost
$S plaa tax and dogs are priced at SJI plus tax.
Low·C'Old spaylag and neutering also can be ar-
raag~ through the ~lety as well as reasonably
priced sbo&s given at the time of spaying or neater·
lag. Other pet adoption soarces yoa HD contact by
pboae lncJUde: Pet Assistance FOUJtdatloa, 54%· i530;
Pet Saven, 530-3170; AnJmal Assistance Leape, •·Z., ud Ms. Georgia S&eveu, H lDdepeadent
a aim aJ weUare worker, 838·Mt3.
S.me Slo"' Slli~t• 01ca,,
DEAR PAT: Are a ny items excluded from the
new Federal Tr ade Commission's ruling that mail· o~er merchandise has to be shipped within a cer·
tam time? I've heard that mm processing is not in·
duded. ls that true?
A. W., Newport Beach
T11e FTC regalatloas govenllac mall-order
•ercluiMlae are limited to mercllaadlae oDly and
do ao& loclllde services conaeded wit.. mercban·
cllse, IUCh u maJJ-order pboto fla.ishlq. Also ex·
eluded are aay s eeds and 1rowla1 plaats,
111 acalines and other aertaJ deliveries except for tbe
iattlal deUvery, COD orckn. ud necatlve opUoa
tdaulftlaaaboollcl•bt.
n.tR nles do reqalre &ha& merchud.J.se be
slal'pped wldala • d111 after rettl,& of the enler.
Tllie b.yer •at be ..wted ol UJ delay beyond tha&
U•e Ud Onn u epUea to cueeJ and set a refad.
If • term fa reqaested, it mast be bsaed wit.bl•
MYH 48y1. Tiie 11eller alao h required to ban a 0 Na1G8ab1e baala fer claims'' about 1bipptng
tl•n. A btt,yer'1 tau.re to ftSPODCf to a aella"1
M&lce ot lllelayecl ddlvery ud option to cancel
WHkl be c.sldered e.aeo& to a »day delay. For
delays loqer tbn tllat. the hayer mut 1tve ..U es-
~11 coaeo&.
Cock of
1
Rooster Keeps His Cool
SAN FRANCISCO (AP>-Amldthecacopbony ot cac~. crowina. cluckina and cussing, the
calm Md eootenkd chicken was cool .. a crispy cueuiber.
-1L He WM the Champ. CbampioG, tbaL ls, ol the
um Padf'lc Poultry Growen Show mldwinter at the Ctt Palace. ..
. '
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•' 1' ~ ~ I
r I
I I
Susie Donnelly and her
70-pound chow Ronnie walked
away with best in show,
first place for funniest dog
and third place for best
costume at the jl.J{1ior dog
show.
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
Tuesday, February 8. 1977 81
Beagle Hilda, clad in first-rate
farmer attire, won a trophy for
best costume. She belongs to
Tina Deal. Letting sleeping dogs
lie (far right) is Denise Russ
and Rusty, who won laughs from
the audience at the Pet Faire 's
junior dog show.
• • •
BJllAltCIAPORSB~aG °' ....... .,~"-"
It bad to happen. Oranae Coun·
ty la '*'to the doss.
· One freckle.faced tyke was sc
excited during the Kal Kan
Junior Doe Show at ttie fall'· ·croundl that his abredaed and
doa-eared entry form was barely
le&lble.
Another youneater hopped
from one foot to the other and
bounded the judges, pleading,
"Didyoudecide? Didi win?"
Tba dog-eat-dog competition
occurred $aturday momint as
pt1rt<Clltbe 1971 Pet Faire, an ex-
hibit ~ esotlc animals and pet
products.
More than 40 entrants pUt on
the dog wblle vying for coveted
trqphies, each cleverly faabloned
with a gold winged victory
figurine resting atop an empty can of doe food.
Contestants pa r aded their i
pooches across the floor of a
Fashion Going· to. Dogs
1 BJ DENNIS McLELLAN t Ottlllo.lty~ .....
• It bas Just stopped rainln1. The
I backyard is a wet, muddy f wasteland. The only 101icaJ thing
1 to do, before venturing out, is h
I
': I I
For those rainy
days ahead,
why not get
Bowser a
raincoat with
· matching hood?
1 And a pair of .
t boots? f:le mfly l not like the
boots at first,
but think of all
the tracking
they'll save.
slip on a pairofrtinbooU.
Alter all, who wants to cet wet
f e et and ris k catcbi n c
pneumonia?
Butaq?
Yea. there are rainboota for
WINTD 8UN81DNE beamed
tbroqb • white lattice-work
canopy and fell upon mutts,
moqrels and show do11.
One pup vamped outrageously
in a bright red slicker with
matching rain boots. Another, of
questionable breed, wore a Count
Dracula black cape and top bat.
A beach.going canine's get-up
was sunglasses, towel and
trunks. Two others a\)orted
flower leis and Hawaiian print
bikinis.
You mitbt not be able to teach an old dog new trick.a, but most fl
the talented hOunda responded
alertly to their owners' com-
mands to play dead, speak, ro1-
over and sit up.
One bappy-g&-lucky doa ended
up in the dog b<M.14e for friakjng
around on stage, obviously mwe
interested in getting acquainted
with bis competition than perfonnm,.
SOMEBODY LET the cat out
of the baa and he showed up wav·
ln« an American flat and
1owned tn Betsy Rosa toss. 1be
I eline'a owners claimed be fan-
clet doe food over cat chow.
It seemed to take a dog's age
for the Judges to narrow the field
and pick the winners.
The best costume trophy went
to 10-year-old Tina Deal and her
bea1le Hilda, both of Irvine.
Hilda'• farmer ouUit was eom-
ple\e with colorful scarf and.de-
nim overalls.
Second. and third places went
to Jami van Ameiiqer, Co.ta
Mesa, and Susie Donnelly?
W eal!ninster.
Beat trick doC'Was poodle Prin-
cess, whole somenault cinched
tbe title. Owner Dou1 Hill of
Westminster said, "I was SW'-
priaed. I didn't think I was going
to win." · .
MOST OBEDIENT was Jon
Lovell's champa1ne colored
Smok~described by his·maater is Pe ese-sebnauzer-mutt.
"I bad a good lime," said Jon,
a 13-year-old from Orange. 1be
doc heeled, aat and came when
called. .
Taldng second 'and third for
moat obedient were Kris Fit-
ta r ar, Newport Beach and
ColleeQMltchell,CoronadeiMar.
Longest tail competition re-
sulted in a tie, with honors going
to hounds with J.8.incb tails. They
were Bear, belonging to Sue Seil·
mg of Newport Beach, and Khan,
owned by P.J. Rossiter of Mis·
sion Viejo.
Said P .J . of his Siberian
buak)"s tail, ''It's curved so you
can't .tell how long it really is.
I'm aoing to put the trophy with
the others. Khan won once before
for obedience and I won for
baseball."
Second and third place winners
were J on Lovell, Orange, and
Jami van A mering er. Costa
Mesa.
THE AWARD for shortest tail ·
went to 9-year-old Kim Lovein of
Costa Mesa and her tiny black
schnauzer, Scott. Scott's tail was
~ of an inch short.
Taking second and third were
Karen Weber, Villa Park, and
Mandy Fransen, Newport Beach.
Winning the trophy for funniest
dog. as welJ as best in show, was
Ronni. a 70-pound chow with a
close resemblance to Smokey the
Bear.
"Me's my swee'1teart," said
10-year·old Susie Donnelly of
Westminster.
Second and third places went
to Randy Brant, Huntington
Beach, and Ruth Nardi, Cerritos.
By the time the day was over ,
most of the kids looked dog tired,
but all agreed they had a doggone
good time.
• ~i DAILY PILDT
d Ecce
~ .
~· DEAR ANN LANDl:RS
0
:
'Yesterday I looted out °'" my ~ ldtcbaa window and could have
awom I uw an old cow acl'Olll the
way, ml.IDdUDC crau betwema
two boules. I wu Juat abcMll to
about to my husband and tllll hlm
mlnutel later I HW my buabud
w~ toward the tramp. When
Uley eamraced I nearly fainted.
Tbe ''tramp'' wabb mother.
To put It 'bhmt11. AllD. the womaloibto~ at tbe Mei.
that lt .._ me llek. lbe aJlo
acarestbtctayllcbUoutof*De. lly mother-In-Jaw a..,, years old, bu
DEARANNLANDERS: lama.
lf.)'e&f'oold girl whose 1.5-year-old
brother la drlv1nf not only ME aufl, but the whole family as well.
All be tblnb about la bis hair. n.ere la only one full bathroom
In um boule ••• all have to wait
to set In beeause Erle ls either
abampoolng bil 1olden locks or 1 • cow had wandered out ot the
pasture and to fto put her back tn.
, Thank beavens I wu tnterrup~
~by a~ ~all. A •eeond loot
. out the window and I dlacovered
, the •'cow" was my mother·ln-law
• Nearins saddle paata.
plent~~toapend and ls in Jood . Wba1 cu l do about
tbla revolUD• 1ttuatlon t -
FARGO,N.D.
DEA.a .PAaGO: NodlS.C. At
1m a,.llletiNlllbl1 .. ebale. ... ,.. ..... M. lllae7· J.JM&
· uatnt the blow-dryer. Would you
believe be aoe• tbrouch this
routine every llMIC'Dln1 and every
eveninl and C)ft weekends it's
three times a day!! I
f Tbree weeka a10 I was
friabtened by tbe alibt of a tramp ! ban11n1 around lbe machine
: abed. It WU dusk and I quickly
locked all the doora_. A few
..... ,...~ ..... ----· aH U..-._ft'tll ,... area>&
Erle belPIS hlDlfflf to all my bair
•pray, rouera, pins, ahampoo,
coaditloner -whatever be can
Jay bl.I hands oo. Tb.La kid ia in
front ot tbe mlnot about 80 per-
I
..
~
..
&1111.....,,,.
Stephanie Erkeneff, Dorothy Lloyd
and Jannette Gies (left to right) work
Dell•Pl .......... lllYRk ...... K_..let
with John Paul Gies at Early In-
tervention Center, Laguna Beach.
Staging a Benefit
Shakespeare's "Two Gentlemen of Verona "
sponsored ~Y the O~ange County Chapter ~
Clipped Wings. United Airlines Stewardess
Alumnae, will be presented on Sunday March 6
at the South Coast Repertory Theatre Cost~ Mesa. '
A no-host reception will begin at 1:30 p.m .,
fo_llowed by the play, described as "a delightfully
wally comedy classic." which will begin prompt· ly al2.
The annual event provides proceeds to help
support the Early Intervention Procram of
Orange County, a training facUJty for develop-
mentally disabled children, and their parents.
Door and raffle prizes will be awarded.
. Clipped WiQls, a national philanthropic as-
Sc;>etation, supports the mentally retarded, in ad-
dition to being a social orcanization.
Tickets are SlS per person. Checks should be
made payable to Clipped Wings and mailed by
Feb. 19 in care of Mn. Gall Preston, 24201 Puerta
de Luz, Mission Viejo, 92675.
Further information ls available by calling
Mn. James Preston or Mrs. Michael Smtth of
Mission Viejo, Mrs. Louis F. Abel of Huntington
Beach or Mn. John Littmann and Mrs. Sandi
Grahlmanoflrvine.
In its three yea,ra of existence, the Or&Qge
County chapter bo donated more than $4,851 to
charily.
Cancer Views Vindicated
WEDNESDAY,FEBRUAllYt
By SYDNEY OMA&&
ARJES <Marcb 21•April 11): Involvements
are intensified. You rucll bc)'ood present posl·
lion. Auraslve persou may attempt to in·
timid ate you. Key la to Aud taU for principles.
TAuavs <April 20-May 20>: Followinl "old
path" could be an error. Wait. lilteo, observe,
detect subtle slanata and alpu. Ac~t on
partner, mate, conditlora ol COGtnd. Obviously,
some revisions are in order,
GElllNI (May 21-June 30): Emphasis OD
baatc issues, security, emplo_yment and health.
Long-distance communlcatlon could nail down
decision re1ardlns travel, vacation or special
educational project.
~ANCEa <June 21-July 22): You mv have
cause for celebration. Some .-fews are vlndlcat.-
ed. Social Ule accelerates. Popularity increases
-someone "attractive" may wilM and dine you.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Steer clear ot le1al or
partnenbip dlaputes. If married make con·
cession to mate. St-.y out of au~ operated
byoneltill "celebraUni"thenewy._,.,
flaGO (Aq. 23-Sept. 22): Cballqe is Lf.
sued. Know that clash of idea can be mealla1
;nd bealtby. Malyze data.~ podioG
'1lettma1deu on paper. · ~
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 22): Count your
"chance." Someone seems to want something
for nothing -at your expense. Home decoration,
remodelln1 could be subject of family dis-
cussion. Be a comparuon shopper.
SCOaPIO <Oct . 23-Nov. 21): Your ex-
truemory perception could be working over-
time -you !mow what ls to occur and you're
capable °'" acting on foreknowledge. Taite in·
itiatlve.
SAGDTAUUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Path is
1moother Ulml miiht be apparent on surface. Know It and oraanlze -persons 1'in ·charge"
are dqe to pave way for you. FlWT)' of actlVtty
occurt bebtild tbe 1cenea.
CAP&lCOaN <Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Flnisb ntber than Jnltlate project. Wish 11 f ulfUied if
you leave no loole ends. Long.distance message
alth In cementlhg pact. What seemed financially
beyond reach ti now obtainable.
AQtJUIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Impulsive ac·
tlon could be COltly. Know it and act accordingly.
Do not ar1ue with those "in charge ...
Profeulonal auperior may feel that you should
aerve u an example of what happens to one who
la imubordlnate.
Pl8Cl'.8 (Feb. 10-Mateb »>: Lunar aspects
Point to communJcations problem, tendeocy to
jump to c:Ondmicm. Know It and tab ptoper P."ff•uUonl. txpr .. , younell in direct, mean· illlfUlm...,.
. .
.
StorY Not·'$ver ·at '30'
!Jj • •
8>' DllA BOMBBCK
Havtni someone complaiD to
me about being 30 is Uke havinc
King Kona compla1nina hls bouae
is too near the airport.
What do people want from me?
Compa-slon? Empathy? Iron
tablets?
A reader from Westminster,
Mass., s.tiid ace 30 WU a downer.
1 'll match you down for down.
She wrtte.. "Thirty ia bavtna a
friend whole 3-year-old reads at
a aeccJOd-arade le\fel." (Fifty ls
bavinl a FRIEND wbo reads at a
secona·endelevel1) "Tbirt.Y ia readfn1 your alum·
nae D)aguine and wonderinl
who all thole people are." (Fifty
it seetna one line written under
your year: See "IN
MEMORIAM.">
"Thirty ls wearing support
panty hose under your hot
pants." ·(Fifty ls never having to
ny, "Tuck in your blouse." It's
always on the outside.)
''Thlrty is not g'etUng huffy
when a truck driver whlaUes at·
you." (Ftfty la moiltenina your.
Ups and •uctlni In your atomach:
when the teakettle warms up.)
.. Thirty· ls when your voice
. whlaperin( bUiSkilY ln the rtl&ht
means one ol the kids just threw
up.•• (Fifty is when a voice
wblspering huskily in the night
means someone ls rlppina ofl the
tricycle in the garage.)
"Thirty is dancing all night
and recovering all week." (flfty is
organizing a car pool to the
carbage can.)
"Thirty is no longer being able
to mouth off about the bouraeoil
establishment because all you
talk about is the price of lettuce
and lbe wallpaper in the
bathroom." (Fifty doesn't want
to believe that Shirley Temple
Black is toilet-trained.>
"Thirty is geWng your last kid
in nursery school and being
bored with people who talk about
Montessori." (Fifty doesn't care
what kids do so long as they have
clean hands.)
,
,
AT
WIT'S
END
' " . ....
•'Thirty is being the same
welcht you were five years ago,
but the tops are looser and the
bottoms won't zip~" (Fifty is ad-
juslina to a world without mir· ron.) ·
"Thirty is being flattered to
have your ID checked at the bar
for age." (Filly wouldn't show
her ID to her parlah priest even if
he swore to r egard it as
privileged information.)
How do I know so much about
SO·year-oldS, you ask?
I've gained their trust and they
confide in me. Few 30-year-olds
can pull that off.
California Defined
By DENNISMcLELLAN
Olt• Dell• PINIS!Mf
Defining the "Real
California" ls not easy.
More than anything it
is a land of contrasts:
Mountains, desert,
seashore and above all, in
the 20th Century, urban
sprawl.
These and other facets
of the Golden State are
the subject.I of ..n Orange
Coast College jecture
series, appropriately
titled 'tile Real
California.
The one. we6kend a
month Hri", whi~ in·
eludes a ~e1 on Fri·
day everdngs1 followed
by a fic!~d trip on
Satur.dayl, begins Feb.
18.
Jon Brand, associate
professor of geography at
the college, is the lec-
turer. The idea for the
class. he said, grew in
part out of students' de·
m ands for field trips.
pres1lve field trips will be
to the Carrizo Plain,
three hours away, where
atudenta will view the San
Andreu Fault.
\
doing to it." He added
that the burning question
is should It be an ex-
tensionoftheLos Angeles
basin or should the coun-
ty aspire to something
better.
DESPITE ALL its
great natural features -
the tremendous
urbanization.
"I strongly suspect it
will be the amazing
population growth," he
said, noting the popula-
tion of California has
grown from about 150,000
in 1848 to 22 million today.
Brand said it's the best
place to view the fault.
"You can walk right
tbroOgh it." He added, "it
has stwming examples of
offset stream patterns.·· Mt. Whitney. De al h -;-=-.r;::;;;iiii;;m;;;;;o:;;;::;;::;;:;;;;;;;;;;;:'
• Valley, agricultural land • RUfff[l'S
THE LAST meeting -and its lifestyles and· UPHOLSTERY
may be a trip to Magic fads, Brand feels the pre-
Mountatn, which Brand dominant focus in history W1-v .. We11t
admits ls somewhat books in200years will be ..._ a..e
''ridiculous.·· But, he 1922 H.,._. ll•d.
said, there• s probably ;;;;;==--iiiiiilil;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.!=;!c.~ .... $!~M~...-~~5~41~.0~2~5~t :;;!
~otbing more typical of
CaUfomia than visiting a
pla)'land area. TENNIS LESSONS
8 £E8SONS • •J2.M
81QN l!P T•ll WIBEK.
COSTA MQA TENNIS CLUB
557 .. 211
"It IS the state or the
superlative. Californians
are always escaping. I
thought it would be
singularly appropriate to ~::=::====;=============~ do that.'' ,. In terms of land in GRANDPARENTS• UNCLES • AUNTS
Orange County, be
believes, ''the most excit-
ing thing is what we're a wonderful gift for
Brand plans to showr;=======::-1 ...... -~ them "what I feel ls the
our High School
real California. Jn a way I
want it to be a course that
reflects most of what I
love about California and
to abare 1ome of the
places I have been."
Graduate! ..
Grad Week on Maui '77
TOPICS INCLUDE w an all-expe,n~ tour -airline, meals,
weather and water, fac-hotel, all activities, college creditclasses-
torlee In the fields , everythingexcep_tpocketmoneyfor7mar·
vegetation and earth-veloua c:lay1 on Maui ... an appropriate
quake country. Field ~~after 12 Y.ea.ra of schooling. Super·
trips wW include hikes v&MQ by teachen tlom the students' own
through some of the achool. A aift that·will be t'emembered for
Irvine Janda, visits to the a lifetime:-'rotal coa'-$579.For complete
greenbelt, desert and the detaila phone (213) 479-4401.
San Andreu Fault. ~·
Brand said they also
will do tbinga that aren't S
scheduled sµch u vlalt· GAAD WlllC Oft MAUI •
ing a million doUar home !'M'l'llM Office;
in an atnuent area and .1113 Wtetwood aw., LOI'~'" «>024
one of tbecounty'1 pover· i-:------:-----~~~-:-'"-----------------..!....-=. tyareu.
One of tbe me>*t Im·
J..
' I
J r • A.·•" .. ·.\!.
RJMKY WIMKERIEAN
Record Roundup-
It's nice to see BOO
Dylan back in farm
the' Prince of Protest'!
Tm neii album is as hard:
hitting as ever. as be
protest.s everything fmn
the ~ af tax 1oophole.5 far ~ ~181s to the
Ull8.Vai18bilit of Rolls
Royce parts!
•
byToml.tflk
f I
NANCY by Ernie Bahmller
IT'S TOO MUCH
TROUBLE TRYING
TO GET THIN
IVE DECIDED TO BE
r:AT AND JOLLY INSTEAD
TODAY'S GIDSSIDID PUZZLE PEANUTS
UNITED Feature Syndicate MoncSar'•PlllUl9SctYec1·
ACAOSS
I Su1taDle •
S FOf mt n
only
9 Pvt>llc
37Welk
through
Wlltf
J8M1as com·
mun1ty 39A11froad
tif'llbtr 8111
40C«1111'1
penaltl ..
4 I ProeecvlOr 4 "l~lndtng
44 Young
1nlmat
•SAswen
46Sand ndge
'1 F1111
CO\llM I
'I) Uneowfl 2 woros
53 Gonoo11ers·
57 ~ng
S!t::..IH
IU'!>Wn II
59 Slon• 54iffa • ' Red,.,.,.,
Of llldll
62 C>iveritOn
S A 8 0 T H L T L 1r
T II 1u P ~ I l • I
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S H E A I F ~~ S l C S
IJ l l (-H • J
T A ~ t iliilll ~'iftM!Eftfrnil'MI A~·~ T T~Ac: AN --~~. f S ; C ll A l irmn1 C T s
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83 Aecw...mation 9 Did 10me 3 7 Slefllw•e
64 Hird llllow" l1N111119 item
Sleng t 0 Fortifl8d 40 The end
65 Colcndo W1U1 l9l"lS 4 2 MIU a h·
petk I t Soft In Ull QUld ftow iec;.,.,y a•y 8lbte 43W«1tay
S."9 t2Fuet Mfitl
61 .\Dlde I 3 Se .. agln 4 5 Honon With
21 Of oc.-n WOfd&
mcwemenls 4 7 Fr!Qflten
DOWN 23F1ench 48Gohf's
I Fl19renl
"l Weiotitun11
3Glb10n 1n-
gred1ent 4 Blaall!f'a
ICCHIO'y
5 A1w11nen
Mu1te
6 Sod
7 PertutMin·
gredlelll 8---····
Malont prob6em
25 Curler's cap 50 Woodlln
28 Toronto Of slloe
Cf11c1go 51 NftYork
30 Narrow SCale city
peaHoe 528f1'1<
J 1 Mian port 53 o .. mon
32 Bt~ IH I feature
33 ()lore 54 VOdelef's
34 TOllelfY renge case 55Mob
35 Storl9Ct VIOience
1tr11cture 58 Henry Vi's minimum 36 Bill··-; us. COiiege
tneome humorist 80 Outar edge
ti
I~ .. \\ i~
~! ·' . \ • t~
JUDGE PARK&
~ FALSE IKM. IOCU.D
SEN? I-UM SllOIN6 DOWN
TO HIS DEATH ! WHAT
A PREDICAMENT !
by Charles M. Sddl --------.
l'M NOT '(OU~
Sk1EET BABSOO !!!
b Hsolcl Le Don
STI« ~ lQ.I~ UHfl. TME
AM&ULAHa GETS ~!
THE GIRLS
H -""" • '"Oh dear, now the ver1ic:ll liDc s-tterna have aiveo ap ..,.. lo
make me loot thin."
DENNIS THE MENACE
CMllt!Dr
:::::0.1'"1-worller
MlllwrlQllt
S....Fller
Table ~S..Ooeo'ator ~ fll.ittrorf'ower$t_,...
Allof IA-.rflf~ 8'Mgltor Otct<~,.,-
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OM
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l'renlh""'9YIH$alllnfay1,.....,.",-llell9Yt: Do<lbletlme.
Crelt: Tiie Setter
fttf: Otl-0001..001
Det.,.,,.Mtloft: 013°20-n• 1
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IS t 00 per "Our wttt>lleld trom ·~ tftd Mftt to"-'°" r-.
t>Eecll contreclor <.Oftltlbutn • minimum ot Sl4 per "'°""' to JOlflt A-'lattllp Tl'\ltt JIUNI. -":'"°""et •l••ltfll llme. Mondtvtllr°""' Fr!Ny °""""""•: Time end-41911 IM IMtl< "'~·tlme llwl1Y '*It o-Mtor Ille ltr\t O'l'fr11me llOuf All olllet time _.,ed !ft ellUU of t ~ Is~ el ?I Ille
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Pension· '2. tJ oer "°"' S.vlfl9• Plan lnthlded In bnlc strelgllt.tlme "°"'1'1' r.te e Trelnlf!G 1lf11tt'-fworl<ed.
a1n of gron wegn wltlllM!d eflCI \ellt to Sevlftlls Pia"
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Olt~·OIO-Ot·O·I
PUBUC NOTICE
,.CTmou••ut.t .. HS
NAMt ITATWIMMT T~ toll ...... __. It 'W"' IMI "'" .. ' C)O"OON o•uot. \ ...
W..IMll\tWf A.,., -lmlMl9f. CA
'*' Oenlel Oulli.H ~ace'f. ,....,.
~e. l,A>fl4 9M<ll. CA 'Ot03
Tiils IW\I-It ~leCI Cly aft If\ Cllvlduat. CHl\lel Gui"'"' ••• ..,
""' .... ~ -flied ...... , ... Coulll'f Clett! Of Or_,. Couftty ttt ~11,1m ..,...
Pvbll"'94 Or .... CMll 0.lly PllOf
Jtft. u. ~ ~D. 1.1. u. "'' ·~'
PUBUC NOTICE
l
..
...
OM.V"-LOT
ThtS new~pa~r "111 nol ltnow1n~I> anl'pt Jn.>
i&d,·c r tli-in J: for real
cstale wh1rh .., 111 '10IJ , uuo orthe IJ W
Houses for Sale ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••
TRANSFER
MUST SELL
4 BR ·2 STORY
POOL· $67,500
Trl'l' l1nt•d :.ll'l'l'I 1n
IJ lllOl' ht•Jl'h
11c1i.:hh11rh110'1 f11rmJI
t•nlr~ lo l..trl(l' 1.1m1" II\
1nl( room ttru k floor to
l"l'lhnl! I 1rl'pl.tl't' Coun
t r' k 1 l l' h l' n I> 1 n ,.
,.. , ·a I! ' I n n l' t 1 • r 1 J l' l'
lhdea1hl\ m,1.,11·r ""'''' J b111hs. i:r 1.111111, l'nll•r
1a1nmC'nl 1111101 \I .tll\
dt•rorJl1on tlt•m' 1 1•
1·ustum 'h111t1·r-. .111d
llrap•·" ll11rn · \\.c111 t
l;i,.,t L'all ~.:J iKKI
Mesa Verd~ 4 Bdrm
\;\l'.\:'\I & Hl-:\U'I
FOR )Ill I' 1-..:-.1'1·:1·
TIO'\ ~u p1•1 I .1111 II'
l:omt' "1th 1,• H<l1111'
. tit.I hr11I. flll'l.li!l"I'
ht'JUI I .11 p1•t' ho ,1 \ \
'hakt: 11101 IJJl\11\ 111011
;,nd mot·h m1111· 1:110•1
IOl'JllOn 1111 (!Ull'I 'l l l'l'I
one bloc:lo. tu p.11·1.. .ind
:.l'houh llurn cl()n t
m1i1.-. this ont• • :; Iii :111811
~·HERITAGE
. ,. REALTORS
SANTAANA
SAVER-$49,950
FULL PRICE
Super ('lt'..tn rrJch to llH•
in lum1h h11m•· 1n 1h-.,.r;1
bit: a rea \ \ ~·11 \ 1 t·rm;,
unbt'lic' ,1111 .. that 1111-. ''
undl'r :).)(I'""' (.ill lo~l.1 \
1i4& i lit
OPPOltTUHITY
• k~I Ohf'n Whf'O \OU
UM result gl't&Jn.: l>u1ly
Pilot Cla&llr1cd Ad:. to
reach tM Ora njll' Coa:.t
martift.
Phone 642 !;ti78
~ • °"" ... o.ilr"9t """'"9Jl9 .... .._.. _ ... JVltt toe••
~ ... -.,.,
a.t mimll
SURROUNDED
IYWA.Tet
HEW OH MARKET
Lido:. f inest. Elcl(ant 5
Ddrrn hom e \\1tb a
hcauu rul pool and bn<'k
patio. Oul:.land ini; large
home on l! full lot:. a nd 2
'tnitu~ ~am t•ctlin~:. &
..
Hoa"ForS.1
OPIH HOUSI. Tues., '}.'hurs. & Fri.. 1·5
319 Avenida Cerritos. On the bluffs
edge in The Bluffs. A beautifully up.
traded Delores mod~l. 3 bdrms .. 2'h
baths, wet bar & a view that won't
quit! $149,500. Brmg your binoculars.
67).4400
BA YFRONT, pier & float. lots $165,000
to $295.000. to build your own custom
home. Several areas to choose from.
ATTRACTIVE Linda Isle 5 BR, 4'h
ba .. ram. rm. & formal dining; lge.
tile patio & waterfront deck. $285,000
BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR
341 Boy\•d" o, . ..,, N B 67S blb1
GeMrol 1002 GeMral 1002
••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
bJkun} w1lh \\ r1>ughl ---------•
41EDROOM BEAUTIFUL ANO J og lo beac·h from th" 1ro11 .1n<l l ht· pcrfct'l
homi· fur lht• <'Xl'l'Ull\ c
fJm1ly who en1oys 111·
door outdoor ll\'lnl( and
l'nlcrta1111111: Shown b~
uppl ont~
-
WAnRI RONT
HOMES
REAL ESTATE
631-1400
CALLUS FOR
Twnhses Condos
In Tustill & Irvine
From S39.0W to 569.000
F:XCELLF.NTT E R:'\1S
THE HOMESELLERS
Ph: 872-5353
I If o u ' 1· .., o n a I o l .
1.Jkt'" ood I nl·om t• 5900
monthh S72.000 as l!'o
Look JI 1 lliOO W8lh St Off
ol P ium•t•r Ownr "111
1· 1>11-.1 d l' r "Jr n h Jc· k
IMPl'' \gnt 1; 1;; !1!1:-.0
VERY You .... G t>eauu rul h lghly up-DA.HA POINT
R·2 LOT-VIEW
50xl00 In lht• heart
Diln a Point Pnl'cd
" graded home llui:e II\
of 6BR, 6BA-OUPLEX 111g room w1lh 'aulll'd
~3.000
fi73·3663
lH Nearl) li.000 sq rt . n~ll1 n gs. ~ournH·I
:;tut.1111 l) pc w 26 fl high kitchen with formal dme.
vuulh·il n:ilinns E..tdi A:.~um<Jbll' \'.A pa)
umt 1:. tlkt• u \\\ o-~lory men ts s:l76.00 per monl h
associated
BROKERS-REAL TORS
101~ W Cal boa 6 ll JO l
3 +FAMILY
ROOM + POOL
V.A. TERMS
Prime llunl. Beach lo<'a
lion. ~eluded on pri' ale
cul -de·!>J l' :-.l rl'td
Cu:.tom built r.1m1h
room. Counln k1tl'hl'n
Sparkt mr.: pool Th1i.
home :.ho"s like ..t modd
hom l' G I nnh S:! 000
nt•c.-dl'd to pu1 t"ha.,t• lh1~
home CJll !l<i:I 071,;
BAYFROMT
\ l'hOll'l' Balboa lul·a
l 11m' I.uh of l'lllJbOJ rib &
1'11>M'l '>PJl'l' Ill lhl>• Im l'I.>
I lxlrm . 2 bath <'Ondo
Poot & !>Ulldl'l"I. luo'
home with u den und Hurn' Call 963-tiiti7 formal d1111·n~ room. 2 c·~,,·,, .,. • ',,.,, · · ·" •
dt!ck~ rm:pll' Wl'I har [~ I bwlt;~ .... 1nl· t·~mpattors. 11:ytjl,i\!
etl· SeparJll' !Jund ry :;ll\nii;
rms. 2 O\(•rs1tt•d dnublej~~~~~~~~·~ gara~ci. All -.urroundl.-d
by n1l'l' IJnd,l·.i111ng ---------• 1w11h :.prinlo.lt·r-.1. and
rlt'h lookini.: ~lump i.tone
walk!> Cto:.c to :.hopµing.
S?40.000
JACO IS REAL TY
67S-6670
Monsieur
& Madame
Pa rl ei · ,·ous F r en t' h
Quarter" 2 &drm Con
do. !>le~ to pool. prl\ all'
courl}ard TJk11tJ.: d1•
po~1h Ou\\ .ii ;);l I llUll
5-49 86:).5
~UPERB
HOMES REALI 11'1
FIXER UPPER
tri-ptexes
01\ :"1d,1•1, .. 11 1 •• 11~
1'1 I l'l'il JI ..XU IM)ll .111d
S!h 111111 h1·r•· , '11111
lht)ll 1' 111 h11tfd Ill' 1•q111I \
f .,1,1
'm' 1Jk111i.: rl''l'nJl1on~ Pnl'e~.ooo·
1111 tu'" , 11nnnm1n111m:. 111 Balboa lay Prop.
'""' ,ult• \ o't .1 '.\h-..11 m :.
.._s.1ForS-. HottNI For S.
ONE SOUTH OF I 0 I
South of the Highway <State 101) in
Corona del Mar ls a new Unique
Home. Red bam·like exterior. shut·
ters. croM paned windows and heavy
s hake roof. tnslde you'll find
fireplaces in the living room and f@\i·
ly room. fresh paint throughout ~d
two bedrooms end two baths. Stressed
for expansion. This is a cottage on a
hill by the bay: one south of 101.
U~l(JUI: t1()Ml:S
REALTORS'. 675·6000
2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del Mar
also 1n Mesa Verd~. at 546 5990
GeMral 1002IG..,.ol 1002 ....................... •··············•·•••···
BLUFF OWNERS
THINKING OF SEUING?
We have 4 very professional salespeo-
ple living in Bluffs condomlnlums,
who have established 1plendld record.I
in your ar e a . Any or these
knowledgeable s alespersons will be
happy to provide you with an educat·
ed estimate of the current market
value of your property. This oUice.
with a great 28 year record. ln
Newport Beach , offers a variety of
methods for buyers to meet your re·
quirements. We're here to help.
WE'VE MOVED
To larger quarte rs in the Great
Western S&L Bldg .. 450 Newport
Center Dr .. ground floor.
ftu( ~ 759-08 IOtR
Guo! Wutwt 'BUg.
450 NEWPORT CENTER DRIVE 759-0611
G.-rol ,,. I 002 GtMf'OI 1002
ANYONE NEED AN
OFFICE BUILDlNG?
SpaciCMIS, A /C, 2-1t04"Y ofc. bklcJ. Oft a main
1t ...... frwy. It hot bHft YOCant and ftffCh
a CJood coat of·poW and a~· 8600
Sq. ft. w /37 parkl1t9 spaces and additlooal
prilg. GYall. lus stop In froftt, COl'Mf' loco-
Hon, ~ for GoY'Mt., or priYate CllJ""
cy. ocMt Khool, or you nmM It! A.t an od-
dnss you can't for¥t: I 2345 wes...-shf:.
GardeftGron. .
CALL NOW 752-7315
DONALD M . BIRD
Associates, Realtors -------------G~rol I 002 GeHrol 1002 ···········•·•········· ....•.............•....
DECORATOR'S
4 BEDROOM
ChJ rmmi.: t l!l'tlroom .!
ha1h honw \\ llh tJll\lf\
l'IMlffi ,111d fitJtl" 111 p.111d
I 11 t.: \\' ,1 I 1)1 I 1111' f 1111
'"" 'h tOlll' 1·11l11r' and ..1
,1111T11 ~ 'hJI.•· root l'X
I t'I 1111 l.n\\ ( 011111 \ l U ,t'.,
.rnd J hm lcm pn 1·l-"\ ....,~! :llHI <"\LI. qutt•lo. I\
;,:-,.; :!1;c~1
C:::SELECT
RAMBLING RANCH
FIXER -POOL
$64,990
ABANDONED
l' 1 1 1· u I ,, r cl r 1 \ 1• l u
drumat1l· home b1111l on
.. 111i:lt• lt'H'I llugl' lam1I~
'ltt'tl II' 1111! room Coun
11 ~ kitdwn Dmc Fam1
I\' l'lllt•rl ain mt'nl ,, rl'J
I;\ l' I" I 11 II k '-l" 0 \ l' I' (' d
l'a\ 111011 Jnd ... parklrni.:
pool Sl'IJJl'Jll' \\Ill).: IOI
ma-.sl\1' m.i-.ll'I' ~u111
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
WESLEY N
1\YLOR CO.
REALTORS sllH'L' 1D4H
llG CA.HYON TOWHHOMES
Brand new! Countless amenities: Golf
course ~i ews. picturesque split levels
l& l level) with t·cdur shingle c:-.:
terior. Choose from 2 & 3 bdrm home.
For s ale from $136,000-$159.500.
; 21 I I Sall Joaqul11 Hilb Rood
NEWPORT CEHTER. M.I. 644-49 I 0
1002 Getterol 1002
••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
New Listing:
$49,000.
MODOWM
PAYMT.
:...pal'1ou-. :1 hl•droom ol
lt'I ' fJl'l\al·~ ancl 1\1\lll'\
Jl rl'asnnahk lllll'l· '\;o
dn l)J\ mt Lem mo111hl)
p\mt1o T ruly ,1 <ll•liithl tu
Sl'l' and t'lllll) l lulT)
plt·ast' t·all
898-7855
EXUDES lUXURY
Thl• rtoor plan h..t' a
n:lrc~hllll! orii:1nalll~
lhJl i.. -.pl'<'lal'ular'
Family Hoom. Formal
Dm1n,.: Room and lhrt'l'
lkdroom" ar<' w1th111 lh1'
1kt·OrJlor homt· 111 1k
s1rJblt• :'\1 es01 \\·nit· Tlw
u11~ra.cl•·' ill"l' t1111
numl•ri111s lo l1!-ol \'1111
l' 11 l l' I I h l' \I a s I l' I
lk'dr1111m thrnui.:h clo11hlo-
dt10r' "II h .1 st•1>aru11·
l'lo,1•1 Ii.1th and p<md1·r
room J' l•1ri.:1· ,h 'onw
I~ I h1·cln111m' ·1 \I\ I·: ,\I> WJJiff #/). (:~~~.:;;t; ,,,,'.'":: '''
[~IHftlll VA NO DOWN
l lld~jo .. Realtors ST ,.:n ·: ~n > n
HELH'\HP ET 1:,11'.!0:l * 675-7060 * ~ \CllE \ll'\I H \'\Cll
&Cl~i:i!~ Prapm--~!~·~... MAGNIFICENT
I PROPERTIES
.ind th1ldrens 1111.11 tt·1·:-
T1 l'mendou!'o hJr~<iin for
t lw ha nch II urn "1111 I
IJ"t ('Jll i*i3 lt!8t . Owner Anxious Balboa Penlnwla I 007
ESTATE SALE
1----------1 /ll'Jr :":l'" pnrl ' BJtk UJ\ Fnr nwn· dt•!J1h
BUILD I I UNITS l'atl Stl'' t· .11
9'00 04,IAll St HtW .. ORl llACH VIEW EASTBLUFF
llw 1·ourl SJ)'> 'Sdl 11 '
<;rc-.11 -.t.1rtl'r horrw tor
H11111i.:. fJmlf\ \rt• \011
h.m1h "1th J l""nl hri1'h
Jntl l<MJI' ' I lt•rt• I' \ 0111
OllpOrtun1l\ ICI hJ\l' u
run· hom1· m Jn up ,ind
111m10.,: .ir1•J lh·tll•r
h u r r ' 1 l' ..t I I \ 11" '
1~15 0303
On lh1~ pn rnt• p1et·c ol Hl-:OC.\Hl'l:.I ,511:m2 ---------·
land & t'llJO~ lJ'< :.heller. --• -"HURRY!!
apprcl'1at1on 111 1n('()mc COST A MESA
lii<''"l'k d"tam·t• tu ttw 4 BEDROOM ~~~~ ~·l~~~rr:'o f~~~~ be~t·h Ju-.1 l13tl·J F.in1u-.t11·fam1h h11m1•1n \,·nk Counln C:luh
646·7711 l'o:.l ... \I l'!til ' 111n''' 1;rand p1,1n11 ... 11~·d II\ 1111(
-area I l.1ri:l' hl'tll11<11n' room 1.1ri:e !>l'par,111·
FORESTE
OLSON
Walker & lee
Real tsr111e
\\llh. m,1,,1\\' ni..t-.lt•r tam1fy room .... mpll'lt'
-.u1tt• Ell·i.:ant <linm~ \\llh Wl'l har h11(
llu~t· hfll'k hrcplan: 111 bedrooms and hc:i' y
lu>.ur1ou' I l\·1ni.: room . :.h.ike roof. Co' l' rt•d
.... ..-...__,.._.,.,_..__......-..,Call nu\\ 1Hll7171 SSl!.~S.l patio and bl'.111111111
full pn<'c' !(rounds :.urro11nd 1\11 .,...c ...... .._ ..... Hwatington Beach
ON Tilt: EASTSllH:
l'or t h t' )lt'rl t>!'l 1tin 1!'ol '
"'''' ,., ... '"'''''"'··' thony fr~t:'fnrn1 pool [ ~ -e,:~ 546""' loo '"" "'
SPANISH ESTATE This ts tor t he mun \\h<l + GUEST HOUSE \\ a n 1 " j 11 c r r l' c t
+ POOL-$57•500 "orkshop to ~o \\1th lhl'
J)4!rfe('l hom" t-.:a:.li.tdl' ~
\ulht•nt1t· rt'd tile roor, br 2' i hit :1 l'Ur ~·r
SP AMISH VILLA
$49,500 ·BEACH
~HERITAGE
··•. REALTORS
Shcllert'fl '>l't'llldl'd entr\' " 1 t h " -c p ;.i n cl t' cl W 1nd1 n i: " J I k \\ a y -----
In r1 nt'-.I "' 111~ room' \\Ork!'> hop \II n 'Int lhroul(h Ca:.lllllan court ---------·
1.·a nl111J l.1h:h1.'ll plui. ilin c'Ond ~ 000. b~ Jl'Pl \Jrd l\'.1d<, 111 .1111lwnl1l'
IOJ.!' Thr<'\.' a.1ndu1n <;I/(' "'<I Ille• roor .ind Sp;1111sh
hedroom' plu"I ne' l'r PETE BARRETT bJkOn) • Scl'ludl'd l'nlr )
b-!f1ll t' ne' t•r .it(Jlll \\me -REALTY-to Runcho h\ mi: room • rl'll.1r .md v.ork 'hop t'1ei.lJ d111inl( ptu ... Can Sparlo.lln~ -.ummt•r fun 642·S200 tina bar Jnd gour met
11nul 11n .18 .tl'rt• ~ k1tt•ht·n· , miles tu
!-.t>p.1r.ilc i:ue't house' --pn11nd111~ Par1f1{' Pool
Pendl<> \'tllJ mui.t ha,el•---------1 plu!'> tcnni., make t hii.
2ON1
LOT
Easts1de tn<'ome proper
l..V with a J bedrm homt!
+-a t be<l rm rental
Consistent income
!625.mo. hH't! ht're don t wall for C11.tom Home 1tardt.'n htlme living :.t llS ttus rom.inl1l· dd\enture IU' finest· Trv ~.950 T ot.
Callq u1t'k847 60to Only 4 11 yeo rs old on• 1-·or riu1ck a ppoint $87,500.
Spt•t\J1•11l,1rh lot·:i1ed
o\t•rtooloni: lh(• mnun
lJlll' Ufll)t•r hJ~ and
111 Ith I I 1 I! h t S l h I (' l'
'P•H'lllll' ht•cl room' J ncl
d i' I 111 t 1 1 ' t' F J m 1 I '
Hoorn fh1' l'l .. l:Jnll~
1·u ... 1nm11l'<I hnmt• 1-. nl
tt•n•<I .11 ::.lfi:) IHHI ShO\\ n
It' a11pn1 ntn11·111 C.111
tii:l ~;,!",(1111 \ il'\\
BLUFFS CONDO
ChJrm1nl! :i ht•1lr1111m
h11me lol'.tlt•d d1rt·tll}
.11· ru'' .. 1 .. l't·I I rom
'l'" port Hl':ll'h Tl·nn" rt uh Ul'lri:hll ul pullll
l<ll'l'' <1nle1 'l'•ll IOU'
,:1 t't•nhl'll F11rm.1I din
mi; :!': hath!' upi:rudt•d
t·.irp1•1-. Jnd dr.1pt.'~
$110.000
640-6161
~
COATS &WALLACE
o-IN '"'' '''''' ,.,,,' Located ON the M esa mentc;ill 8476010. · ~ (~IRllll ~~~~:i}£: [i)_"tijfSI ~ --~!~"~~0-iM~E-~~--
D1sr•Ess SALE Se ( 'I ilh l ~
REAL ESTATL,INC.
P um. Y r m w w~ .... STSIOE Ide ally l ocut cd ror Immediate posset-~1on' 3 bar. Kit chen I s a r:A PRIME
bd " ... th r h · · d 1· h r 1 CRl,,.M •uFFll children anoi.!-rrom ... 11a . rcs pu1nt 1n womans e 1g t. ormu A r MES .a. VERDE Greenbelt. Grral fa mil)
s1clc•&oul.Ownerneeds d ini n g . Pri l't•'1 Il l tmmac ulote F.o slsld e '"' homeon cornrrlot Only
lu11t sale. 646·771 I $187.$00. Coste Me11n family hom e Lovely shake roofed 4 bd 2, 2 years old Pn<'l' l!i
• •• 1 Bedrm. ,1n1 lm·Jtmn I ~-~ Lp1:1.1dctl lhrunul llui.:t•
, <'OH'll'd p.1110 WJ !crl ull
• 111 rl'ar yard SliS.000
'"'~~~~ Huntington Beach
:1 Hedroum . 2 bath. 2
!>tOQ "llh no wa \ '111) I
rtoori.. plu~h CJrpeun,.:
and dr<tPt'" ExlrJ' in
dU'1c. hu1lt111 hunk hell!>
1n the children':-. room
,\II ya rcl work d one h)
Commun1tv As~oc1al1on.
1-'ull pnt'l' .s.13.500 Ci\LL
i51 3t!H
C:SE.LECT
I PROPERTIES
UNDEMl.AILY
OESIGMED
FOR LIVING IN
MESA DELMAR
Wo\\' Loads o( rh,1rm 111
this beaulllully dt.>l'or..11
cd home Your 1.1m1h
will hH 1n "armth four
Bedrooms and Famll,\
Room \\1lh \Crsa11h1~ for
the creat1H homeowner
Connect.init door between
GOOD PR OBA TE
PROPERTIES
1 1cH·~1-;s & F I Xl-:H
l 'P l'EBS E'<<'l'lll'nt op
por1un1l~ lo mJkl' m111w~
a!> '°' cslor' 111 tor in
d I v Id u •• I' (' " I: L
SA VA G 1-; H l~ ,\ I. T \' .
642-9601
FIXER UPPER
WITH POOL
Bring vour pa111l tu u.,h
and 10111, and turn !hi'
homl' ha1·k 1nlf• th<'
c·harm1'1 11 -.hould lw
l..11<·..tll'd 1n 1;ardt•n GroH•
.irca 3 Br 11lus lur~t.' II\
mi: room Pnl'l·f1 to \t'll
at SSS.900 Cd 11 t·ol ll'l'I
171.J I !W2 253S
...,. ., Q . ,, 'f .. , ti, , ,
!®IRIHd
two Bedrooms and )'OU ---------• have a playroom Do .)<OU
need a Den? \'ou have
one w it h three·
BedrOOm l . The pri<'e •~
nght al 512.500. Separall'
:'t1as t er bedroom and
close lo schools and s hop
Ptnl!. Qill now S46 2:113
1e1s&itl
Mesa Verde
.....•.......••........
2 BR . den ::.129.500
4 BR. den S139.500
Duple-< nr Lido :Sl40.000
~larshall R('all~ fi75-~6(HI
Corona d~I Mor I 022 ..••..••.••.....••.....
LITTLE H 1-:0 llOVS E
:! llr :! Ba. S of ""'· ~!•K.OOll l'aut :\I art 111
lkal f':,tatC' IHI i3113 .....
BRAMDMEW
4 BR+ DEM
t ht· 1tlt!al t'omlu11al1on of
a new home 111 an
1• s la b I 1 s h <' d n e 1 ~ h
horhnod. ft>alur1ng all
tht: 1~11 1•sl kitchen illJ
po1nt mcnts. overs17.C'd
~ara.:c. )ari:e room,. J bath~. sll•p down \H'l ·
bar. m1n1 Ol'Can Vlt'\\ All
w a I k 1 n g d 1 ., t a n c· c• l •
prl\ at•' hcat'li. IJ11h
StGS,000 I t'l'
Cati 644-721 l
/Jn NICJ[l
()AllfY f...
ASSl:lCIATES
DUPLEX
Spacious 3 bdrm . & 2
haths. eurh unit L:.iri:e
m!ltr. bdrm • beamed
cc1I. i.lnt r ent ab'.
Sl :ll .500
P AUL MARTIN
R EAL EST AT I:: 6"4·7:1H:I
PRIVATE PARTY
Local res1d c n l wants
duplex or t ri ·plcx 1n
CtlM. Lag u na or
C11p1.;tranu Bch un·a.
Pr111 onl.v ol!J.I 4420
. ~ 546·414 I ofl quiet <'ul de sac 11treet. MV h ome. L11c m s t r St32.500 Call now ror ap
3 Bdrms .. 2 baths. lgc. w a trium. 2 hui.. counlry pointment to ln!>pt•ct • ---------• -
Walker & lee
Real fstetl! ~ fam1l) rm . w1\h frplc .. kitchen. cuthe<iral ccil Call fli3 ~SO
2STORV S!l5.!I~
Luxurious 4 bedroom on
quiet cul de !ta<: w1lh
formal d1 n1 n l( room,
large family room.
k1tt'h c11 eating arra
Park·hkc oven111rcl yarcl
with I lowers. fnul lrt't'S
bai.kethall 1 ~ court. 111110
s p r 1 n k I C' r ~ . t' o v 1' r <' d
patios. and yarll l1i:huni.:
\\!'oll'rn Looks llkc .1
rnodrl hnml'. hurn \\110 l
la:-.l Call510 11~11
N 1-:1\1! :'\: EW 4 Pl.J~X
Xlut lm-.1111111. Sl 95,00fl.
l'nn1•1111I\' !lli:!·ll555
IYOWNH
LAKE FORfo:.'\T II
R F.DUCED" Lakefront
+ docl<. 4Br. 3Ba. a ir.
5111-8115 Oprn Wt>~kendl'
COATS !. WALLACE
n ew kit<"h en. 2 c a r •nRs & m ore' Tt•rm-. l ••'• ~" , ,, • , , ,
l(lltlljtC S hows like a arn1table. Vets Wl'IMmc. , a I ~~~'' 1-'asl p O:t)CSS $15·9491 . ~ ltitdl\t
LMmrion s-::-~i:.tr£:1:~:~10 ~ Ci .. -;.~ ... .-... 11 •••
b n --llema. small Items or
REAL ESTATE. INC.
~5b0. Down!
;\Ir rondtlJ(lncd. :I hdrm
beuuty w ith hurdwood
noors. ~.ooo full pm·c
Call
531~
Westt.avflt Reottor1
Int"! RE H.twork
~HERITAGE ·
REALTORS
N<'lll. airy 3 hdrm. 2 ba
home 111 old CdM All nrw
apph l'> ·525 Un1qu•·
lfom.-~ Rc•altor!> 675·6000
1002 GreMf'ol 1002
••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
HARpvRVIF.WHOMES GtMrtll . 1002 1ooi any ite m . Jus t c all
If you llkt the finer ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• S42·S&'78. ~~~~~~~~~~I tlungs Ill o home. this is macnab I Irvine
realty for you! Custom quality
thruout. Color coordinat.·
ed, wall ro,·erln,s.
drapes & carpeling. 5
Bedrm. lam1l1 rm with
full wf'l b•r. formal din·
Inf rm. 2 t1reptacC?S. New
paint. inside and out. Li ~overed patio. 3 c.ar garage. See to really ap.
preciate ! ! Sl 14.HO.
6'.4-'1270
bi,n•t drop the ball I O•l a
Job w1lh • low..:oat O:iUy
l>llot ClaUlfltd Ad
Phone "'2·$678.
SWiii UDO HOMI •
A 2~tory atttum ls the foca1 polnt of
this custom built comer home with
fivt bedrooms & baths, den.
sep.-rate dining & family rooms.
$275.000 I
GaMrol I 002 G....... l 001 ...••••.••••........ , .. ····•••··•·············
HARIOR VIEW KHOLLS
Prime location -condominium on
fee land -New England feelln1 -
sycamore & pine trees -swimming
pool, tennis court & near new sbop·
ping center. End-unit with park-like
s urroundings. Plank floor ~ high
ceilinjCs -2BRS+den $122 ,750.
Barbara Aune 642-8235. CC46>
'42·123S '44·'200 901 Oovu Drive H•rbor Vltw Ctnttr
I rvlne •t C•rn!IU' Velley Center
751·1414
---
1
I
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....._.,..,,._ ........... ,. Hi•",...Wt ........... ~ ........ Wt Tueedlly;. DAtLY"LDT ., •• • ••• • •• • •• •••••••• ... •••••• •• •• • •• .......... ••••••• •• • • •••• •• •••••• ••••••• ••• • ..... ••• ••• • ••• • .. •• • • • • •••••••••••• Ul!X " 'W11 co........ 1024 IW ... •IMdt IMO.,..... 1044 ....,._ 1044 Ma111pert~ t06t ..._..,.,,._ ......,..._ "°°"'tf 2000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••• .. • .. •••• .... ••••••••••••••••••• .. ••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••• .. ••••••• '9rWt 1 I 10 ••••••••••••••• ••••••• llllJ~------... MESAVERDElmmae.4 2br,l~hM.1~t.cl.woodbrld11e Plue, •C:AMYC>tt S.Cla••• 1076 ....................... l ·UNITS. aood Coat• MISAVaDI br, 2 ba, tam rm. ln xlnt. Ntce a ... a . SSl..500. B ONmbriar Pla.n. 4 Br. ~Ml.Ua VllW ••t1 000 .......... ,,.,,,,,..... Meu uea. Exchanae up
1 ~ r ll neJibbortlood. Del PQo owar.-.7m. hin rm. z ba. Call In the Rancb. a ••r v•a .., • -•8 u.a.•1 ... -s lx40' P1amlnso In nic~ poulble. Ail 6'5-4288 -·· am 'Y room. tile efttry. Cuat. 1h1.1t· .. ... WN R '40-Zlll. lh&rp POOL home that It ""'* , .. ewport •'Y to l'IVW' ~ park pool lblu N ur,.a drape•. rr••tl t.ered at dnoed. nr. to anVB BY 0 E · muat . a 1111\l to behold Cal.Una! Iron aate en· POINT ru · • c .'~ 0 2 House1 o n a lot
pei,n&,; ~Uo. Iara• yard. ctil'f used brt. rf'Pt .• 2 ~· tC:Up&r•f!d !. ~· w.avaous Goraeous lancllceplna. try. Mammoth nv1n1 CUSTOM vllW ~10 13750 cu h CNewpon) 2·28r at.UC
Fri.tlltneal STl.000. cov d patto1. With .. ..,.c, me · -·· · .. fal'IUly home. w1th 1t1 Now it can be yours ror room with VlEW! Mar· • AatS4&-3166 l!lf~C:.... M'UCH. MUCH more. U Open t/Sun,68$2Shan· 1tatelyentt)'.largefam1· only19'7,900 ble fireplace. PaMled HOMI C:OSTAMISA __...;; ______ _ ~ tllOMewport must ue ! au.too. nonDr.aaz-8908 ty rm .. apacioua mstr ~ ribarorma81 di~~~! roo1 mh. W~ Conatructfon to be1tn ·n Skyline uxse. new 1~ ~N~ ~t~ ~~· c:OlteMna 541.7729 OWDrJqt..~1081 JUS:f USTID aui"-wlth It.I own trplc. & , pac.-k k en • January '11,. 3100 Sq. fl Coach. Adult park. walk , n . . , a, ~~~~~~~~~ covered deck. 3 Bdrms , w pantry. ltJCtra tar1e •BR 3 Ba contemporary to supermarkel t79e8K> e I br. lnr. 138,edO. Price _ 8TON 1032 GraciOOI Uvlna await• 2~baU\S;tormaldlnlna. master wlna. Glassed ranchstyS.hbme.Many. Amerlcu Mbl Hma m>.ooo.Trade00K.p!1n.
••••••••••••••••••••••• )OU! Spaclou.t 4 bdrm, M.OOOLandlncluded. view patio. Loads of ma.ny xtraa. Plana & $$7,9380 only, please. wnr/nlt
Alll IASTSIDI OoenHcuM ByOwnt. 4br. i-. bath, lldO' fam ~ atoraae. 3 Car 1ara,p. apeciflcallor\$ Mvail. In 6'2·9666
R•aht location! R~h (am rm. 1"4 ba. 23571 room. Numerous UP· Call now Cor perto11al o1nce. ll5e.llOO Ml. HOA~ WOSP. .. _av
... ! D,..... · • e n... rr R .. ,, Id srades. too many to llat 552 7000 _-.., m 1700 ~ -.•~ pnc.. " ..,,.ryea 0 oc .. e S74.llOO. Anxious. submit • . • ... ....,.H ...... ,TY ~;:-;:,,,;"°''o•-•· '71 Skhylinedl2lxt44. N~ North Eaat eo.t.a Meaa bnllllJel a.net toots. Bia tJ.SSun STUOO. olf .... llWl'll THE ~ -! , coar . a u par. locabon. Spaciowl. aolld i*?.~E"ib". ~~k -LM Oplloo VILLAGE. . : •. 551-2000•••1 :=',i,t:,encan Mb1 <•••~[~,:!:·~''. ~e.. Uae your 1m. Gr.at z Br Lake Forest REALTORS ....... ltac._ 1048 .~::W · ~-••••-·-~for .. 1200 :=!qwckncrow. Alt --~.~·~-but hurry! Townboule. A/C, 2 ca •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 8'5-UOS Olll~ ...-.~g~Uo+waaher& Woa&tlclgtArttortaM ec..va.wco.do Baycrest 3 br. 2 ba. s.AC:llS --------
*Yer Pool tennis jac Luxury 2Br 2ba Condo ram.rm, din.rm. Open South of Oranrie County. Loh fw 5cM 2200
,-·ORESl E
OLSON
tlk.CaJIArtorGe0rg~OWNER 'S PRIDIEI : SH.500. Call (213) J8dtm .. 2._1>abooths.dtbobn.b2 &Jn H. $150.000. 1806 You•ellFOI Fa ntast1r v•w. ru11 ······················· ror detalla. ~J.lOOO 0 P r o f e s s I o n a y 9'l-44'7$ aft 9 PM. Prin firepiacea... ua y Leeward Ln &42·'7889. By ~ ~ -.188SAgt landscaped arourida. only room. Cata.Una 1utu1ets; <>war. -Wl&OTIT price Sll,SOO. Xlnt 'IJAC:RI
· covered pa t lo, 4 · walk w beach. IN.SOC>. S ul · terms. Btr. 1141522·2080 Level, all wiable land.
••---~upgraded Condo. 2 bedroom•. 1~ baths COIJ.EGIPAAkYAU NOllMSIEALn f=·~e:r:"o1v:i: or876-S117 ~lding site or brlnJ BR. tar. AJC. pool, Need Family kitchen. delux BY OWNER 49..-•057 END UNIT CONOO with 14.4 Arres. Riverside your mobllehom•. all By Ow.._.ER fHt escrow. S.'4 .900. bu.lit-Ina. S'lS,900, call Beautifully decorated * .... * everythlntf from sunken Close In. l6000 per ac: animals OK. Loaded
" Owner. Prine. only. Tarbell,RLTRS,962·5* 4&-, ram rm, din rm, R llGC:AMYOM pa tlrep1t. remodeled Zonedforhorses.Terma, withtreea.Terms. Bkr.
J BR+fam Rm, 2ba. 4U8-2108 SlrSIEAUTY 2"'Ba· rrplc, upgraded C-1.lrMO E View Sunset a nd IUtcbenWJTHPANTRY, call898-S645 7lt/S22·2080orl71-S11T
COLLEGE PARK. New· Foat•V.._ t0l4 thrwut, cpts. no street.a fl Frotltage. ai&btllgbtafromtbisout· 2 full recreational•---------• ly Hdec. S79.500. Must -r Bea&itUul Helms men toCN)5Sror..i.1nnn11achJ, c:-~H~-· standing 4 BR. Broad· racU1Ues. Can walk lo 400 ACRES West ofltiMi*-u•t•• 0.....t. .... u.7_.,~ .. 1orM>'t·ll""' •••••-•••••••••••••••• __., S I lb t .,..,,..,... _.. -r moor home Featunn· I r~ T.... R~-1 .. AA ... ........ ...""' ..., ...... pac ous ruou • lod1cpd. Prin only w/3 room 0 nee over · sbopolngandtennisclub """"'"a. •oa property is --. .,_,, ~3 000 ..... ramUy rm .• Jfrplc. asoo. 559-5327 garage & sep. 28R home. formal dinina. gourmet A MUST ror active fun not ready for developmt ..................... ..
Eltra• Include central Wbwater views & beach kitchen. master suite lovers! SQ,000. al Uul lime. however at a INDIAN WELLS CONDO.
' • &II. lluat see, anxious. ncrossthest. Sl'tS.000. overlooking atrium, pool price ol S1SO per ur , it CM Casa Dorado· 3 • z. ANXIOUS IUbmit! ~l SAM JOAftlllN "Z" REALTORS and Jacuul. First time would make an· extreme· golf tennis poolspa bill:·
V•Coedo
ltttwnc..H.w!
SUper sharp condo with comm. pooi, tennis and
ptay area. 2 bdrma +
den. 2~ baths, formal
cbiq, air conditioning
118..500, call 540-1120.
B I( l T'b ..,.. offered. shown by ap· ly gd · t t l '"-Id • ' ' d
Townhom e. 2 hug for the future. Low taxes. mands sale. Sl6,000. eaut u uron LOWESTPRICE 494-8e11 pol ntm e nt on ly .,& ·~I~ .on..,m . O •N ong. Pen. •Oluatlon •·
bdrma, ram. room, din· llOl~.lff:csea:~r:::..uc. $2JM,000.6'7s-EOOO • Terms avl. For further furn; unf. (1141 34e·SZ83,
ini rm. Must see. submit ---------•Pl.....,.. Hiia lnfor. please rail Ernest 346.9837 , ... ol.fers. 16103 Mt. Kenya, Uon. cboo5e your own de· ~ Spyglau Hill-Village of -w'9Si-"'20 ~khoff. Eclthorr & As· ---------
963-5811 OWN!!; R 11 OV IN r.: cor. ' ' • ~-Harbor View Sbr 2\.la ba MOOGUMK MACH 90<' .• lnr .541·2621 10Ac House&Traller ...,. ..,,, r · · -Newberry Sprgs SZS,SOO Char min& hom e . GotfC:O.WView llAI. ISTAt~ onnaldlnrm&fam.rm. 4PLEXw/Frplcs C:.•hryLots 5 Ac with lake & r~h ~
Walker t; lee
Rllal lstatc
m6autes to the beach. 3 You'Ulovetheview &the tOO"~lt. Prof ess l _nd~cpd . Ocean View. Near ten· Crypti 1500 Newberry Spri n gs Bedrooms, dining area. gotr course too! Pror de· 4N--ten ~ w/Jacuzzi. firepit & 2 rus. golf & surf. 2 Br's ••••••••••••••••••••••• 112.500. "'M'I• e. C:allfontla" giant carpets, no· wax corated 3 Bdrm, 21;\ ba. covered patios. Beautiful each. $139,500 Companio n c ry pt I n Drake & Associates ----------1 noon. slate entry, wood 752--0283 640-0166A v·ctor• B h pa~oraml c view o r Pacific View Memorial 838·5700 GRIEHVAWY burning firepJ.a ce. or gt I IQ C Irvin~. Ai,r~rt & a~r-TRIPLEX Near all Pk forinfo644·7443 SPACIOUS
AND
_.HO""'E'' 9>.~. Tar~ll. RLTRS. 06plex located one blk roundmghi s. Wlk'gd11· shoppin1 .Ideal Pen --·-------..._.. ... IMZ-8854 SPAHISH from the steps. A pair of lance from tennis court thou.se unit with mother: lncon. Property 2000 Out of r--. Step from our mstr bd ---·------1-bdrm. apartmts with & pool S195 000 Show .._ -·1 GRACIOUS suite into jacuzzi & pool. 4.... SPLE:HDOR good vus. Beam ceilings · · · lo-law s tudio attached. ....................... .........., 2550
Btl1 3 bd w Jfam kltche College Park Corne I I & f1repiacea. 1149,500 by appt. MO--&S43· Garages. ll29.SOO. ••••••••••••• .. ••••••••
•IMCOMEUHIT• & frml din rm. marbl DllllilgorD.. model. Ideally located. ~-..&h End Early Bluffs "J" plan. POIMTRIALTY DistressProperty! lOACRESESCONDIDO Tallored for an active entry, step dn llv rm. Close lo ever ything! Completely upgraded nurJ end unll. Canyon, Faab. Call 496-5600 I can rind it for you. Bstate area. view, owner
family, this ~arvelous, model home condition. Quiet street. huge patio. and SUPER tandscap· Seclusion. loaded with IAI view 3BR 2BA dn' Beach area specialist. broker. 714·222·03SI
fl lbl 3 b 3 Comfortable noor plan. i A BONUS It · 2 b i k . I ' ' S. .,.._ Probat ..... foreclosures, 1---------ex e e room, Just listed & best buy ng. room to be amen 1 es; r c rm. pat o. As t rotur ,.-" t 1078 ... ~ RESIDENTIAL BLDG bathhomewithhuge llv· market. $'74,950. Mus large formal dlnina proud or. Call to see. patlos.vu,blgtreee&top dec'k . poo l. O wnr . ._....,uawo Bankruptcies.Divorce.
Ing room. formal dining see.96S·33Tlor~.1754 room,aah woodcabinets, &500. or the line quality Sll0,000. 644-7641. Prlo •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• lnvestmentpropertles. PROGRAM Loe In N.E.
room, 3 car garage with hearty brick r1replace . t.hruout. S16S.OOO only IUILDER"S HOME Below market pnce. San Diego Co. Sm Invest.
shop space and loft, pool. 168.000. Call Tar be I I. .. ~" , , D"4_,,. '.·· When a contractor bUllds k• .lot.soa. lroker gd return. Contact Len AND GUEST HOUSE, ls RLTRS. 842-8854 Seawind dlx 2 Br condo, his own home he fre· Call (714>67~5 Liiiy, exclusive bkr for
10 one o r our best sty, 1~ ba, (pie, up· North American .,. __ Id I R SSl.toO are;.~ graded. encl paUo, c•-to quenUy puta In many ex· Development Co, Inc £.Oat.I e ocations. en· r--.ur Sal "" ~ traa. Right now we have Bi h S Su ta1 unit in back. Sl.2S,OOO. ~TIU e · ; bch. SSS.500. Prine only. such a home to show: 4 For sale by owner Santa 4020 re l, 1te l 11.
home, 1..,.. baths, cozy ---------1 eV11/Wknda. rormaJ dlnlnf. rm.: living 1104.000. 642· 1960 92660. (714> 75&·0213. 3 IR·3 IA fireplace in the living UMCH REALTY p R 1 VAT E DR 1 V E -l--------•I nn. & fa mi y rm. with Rcmches. farwls. Pr~-\~? ==~~~~j~c~:~t~ ~~~;::: :~~~tr~lab~ii~' 551-2000 Ocean view. privacy & UDO ISLE frplcs.: over 2600 sq. rt.. Newport Beach 6'°0•es 2700 ·
1-"''""ST .. , U",.. ---------• pot"ntial. 2 BR +den, If you·re look1"ng for on 8 large lot. Call for a ••••••••••••••••••••••• --" -" patio. & recreational patio. deluxe buill·lns, ... list r S6 t b It 4.rlEX large Yar d '· Quick E--l. large fireplace. d~ks, 2 someOung cheerful,cozy 0 amem ies w AVOC:ADOC:OUMTRY MES .VERDE .facili 1es Onil
0
S74.500 In by owner Price A --• possession. call Tarbell, car garage. Sl29.SOO. & comfortable. then you S19S.OOO · p ll 1 o E . o F 3BR 2BA home on 8
1782 K.mglet Ct . 3BR. 2ba 1 11· RLTRS. 962·S566. Condo li"vi·ng ~ should see this cute doll ow NE Rs H l p . near acres. Fant a sh e view upgraded Buccola home • ~-~ CWI M house on the isle's quiet Hoag Hospital Spaniilll 4 Acres mature trees
in beaut nbrhood near iMl~~!t'!!ll!!!.I PRIVACY A This two-story 4 year old - -East end. 2 Bdrms. + , 1 1 ~ roofs. Pr 1 v ate Owner must sell. Won't
golf course and park LUC:kYGI 2bedroom,2 balh Condo den.beamed ce1l.living balconies & patio•. lust l o n g . Bk r ,
Lots of wrou.llhl·iron & UseyourVA lopurcbase PRIORITY? can be yours If you act 939Glenneyre494-8519 rm .. raised rrplc . ---------enclosed gara ge1 of 714/S22·2080or676·5717 briclc.. CALL nice FV home. 4 bdrm. fast! Shag carpeting and S14S.OOO In the Casitas. Spacious 2 course All 2-bedroom. :z
A&ent 673·7601 21~ bath, xlnt condition. Sprawling leisurely un· warm Autumn colors FIXER UPPER bdrm. 2 bath townhouse bath. 2-story units. Will UHDER THE OLD
S76.000. 968-3371 or deraheavyshake roofts Fenced back yard with Ocean view house. on wtth fireplace & patio. consider exchange By OAKTREE
546-1754 8 dauling, near-new 4 garden area PLUS patio. 100' x 100· lot. close Lo SS4.!i00 ::ippo1ntmenl o nl y no 100 Yr. old stone house. FIXER UPPER
lN Sll0,000. NBRHOOD.
Seller willing~ do
aPSW"ox. Sl.000. worth ol
off·titet. ASking $51.000.
AGENT. 673-7601
USTSIDE GEM
Sharp 3 BT, 2 ba on lrg
lot. Reduced to $71.500
Bk?'. 963-8377.
VETERANS
JUST L ISTED. two
~
Walker & Lee
Real (state
PRICE REDUCED
To $67.SOO. Sllr wants
quick sale, nice 3 bdrm.
Xlnt. FV location. Lge
yard. See today. 968-3371
orS46-1754
=..-::
bedroom, 2i,, bath home visible from dining area market. SllS.000. dnve by's ptease . old nos ta lg 1c 2·story
completely surrounded Only SSJ.950 JA y W. YEA TS barn. windmill, lots of
by a ruQed used brick I--" 499 22~71~~~~~~~~~) AMCHOIACH IJ!llGuail out-bid~. mobltehome
six root wall. This family . WWWIOl'I • ., HARIOR VIEW IMVISTMBfTS ii •Place~ for caretaker or in-laws. l:.:'. ~· ,!~~/~~·;.~'. • &. ji!!L3-. VIEW! VIEW! PORTOFIMO 171414H-7711 Prllfil!rti9a ~l°I':= '\':~r'~~1
ken Uvlng room accented ~IUf!'_ Contemporary wood & 3 Br. 4 ba + bonus rm. t'==========-752:1920 tastic view. S. or Orange
by a unique arched ..-. ~ ~-feus, 2BR. den. split· Plush 1 ndscpn . g & t6000UA1LnHt 11ACN Co. Ownr anxious & will
fireplace opening and a 7'2·1920 evel. Upper 3 Arch Bay. magnificent pat.to area. HEW carry. Bkr. 714~·2060 ~1~~:dowBn w~ed TV MOOGUAM.n llAOI Sld.~REALTV KATH y TR Ac y . SPAHISHESTATE MESA VERDE _or_~_s._sn_1 ____ _
..,....e! y appointment RANCHO SAN JOAQU\N 83l·~ll Eve493-46'7S REALTOR, noo Quail, Ideal for the large fam1· 4-PLEX
only. 189.500. Best 2 Br +den on golf Npt Bch. S48 ·192T or ly. S Bedrooms. 3"'1 L.ist phase. All have Rtfttds
coune/lake.833-3613 C:HECkTHESE 7S2·2887. baths.Jfireplaces.large f'P .. J.).W .. F.A. Heat.•••••••••••••••••••••••
beautiful Eut:ude IHTHEC:OLOHY Walker 1; lr.e
Real f i;lafll ~~O down. CALL I'· ~ A 4 bedn>om home with
RJTieraExdusl•H family room; aJI on ap· 1600' 3 Br. 2 ba own"er's HousesFMmlshed
proximately \.'2 acre in unit + 3 1130. 2 br. 2 ba ••••••••••••••••••••••• For1olid OMTHllEAC:H exclusive Hacienda uruts Agt.1175.000 Cor"OftOdetMcr 3122
54"-3666 very pleasant family "'° l11i11i140111Hda 1040 Prap•1 U.a room and formal dining
real estate investrnen\ SUHSIT & SURF Cap 1s t ran o a r e a of
4 Oceanfront lots, heart ~ Lots wide al corner. fa b I e d Sa n Juan
ol Laauna. with units & Lge wailed patio & Capistrano. $225,000
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Day642-8550eveS46·1081 F\im. 2br. 2 car garage,
patio, rrplc 1 blk from ---------1 · .. •••••• .. •••••••••••• 7S2·1920 room. This Is probably
L..a....-~ S6S Resale Spedallata. 3, *°OUM rt MACN tbe moll fantaatlc Plan nursery. Ripe for de· velopment. Sl.07S.OOO garden. Outdoor brick CJ Coldwell ~anker llOan"V 4 sbdrm model ·1 400 available. You must Vft'"/ desirab e. 3 Bedrm. or s avai .a---------•I Me il to appreciate il frplc attached. 3 BR. 2 Ba. room for expansion. COSTA MESA beach. S4SO /mo. SSS-4414
days, 67S-4S60 eves.
chni.nl & family room. IOIDeW/pool.a.968-4602 v...a-til ' HURRY Huae stone fireplace. Peorungton Properties ~ 8 $ ! M ,500. Large oceanfront home,
downtown Laguna. Com·
mercial pos11bilities.
$.150,000
Multiple zoning. $275,000. 3 Monarch Bay Plaza fQURPLEX
B P .. _ M Laguna Niguel Y owner. uvne on· 496-7222 8l1·08l6 Just ri>paint ed. new •••••••••••••~•••••••••
Costa MftCI 3124
Elec bllns. upgraded Hate Seactlfr 4 Br,
t b r u out . L ove I y w/POOI. $12S,OOO. 6882 Lit·
~ndacapi.ng. Call quick. tJe Harbor Dr. S36·Sl10
WIOll't last long! Asklnt Owner/Ai\
•.900. Call 540-llSl TflE 1..AN __ D_lN_G __
-~ s -HERITAGE . . REALTORS
Mdl 400 on huge cul·d~
sac lot. Rm for pool 4c
boat gate. Perf SlZS,000.
--------.. 913-8371 Bkr ---------...... P•••• I 00 lcAoo '"'lnsllla I 001 •••••••••••••••••••••• .......................
Barr White Realtor
2901 ,..ewport Blvd --------........
lllPWl)()rl 8NCt> CA 92663
{J.nWula Pow
EXCLUSM
S Bedroom, 2 Bath. near bay
beach. Dining room. fireplace.
$129,SOO.
1024 ..............................................
QIJP.t!!
Super. 'affordable pool
hollle . Large, airy 4
bedroom. ideal ror enter
t.ainiQg. Gas BBQ. Loads
ol deckln&. All for only
$72.500
Fri. 6pm -10pm, wknds carpets and drapes. Will E·Slde $200. Utll pd. Kids
Sam·llam. <'1H )67S~ consider exchange. ok. ~ee
Ocean view building sHe TradlliooaJ Hme. Much Tdln I 090 Pri vale. patios. extra Mam Rentala, 540-SJ'lO
Exclust ve area. Also wood & used bnck. See ••••••••••••••••••••••• large units. Greatinvesl · L.alJllna Hms l t 50
Beach; less than 300easy this. By ownr. prin only. BY OWNER Laurelwood ment potential Sl20.000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• steps~lhesand. S80.000 PM,6'73-1417 Townhouse. 3 br. 2 ba. 3 Br. 2 ba. air cond. w fw RANCH REALTY upgrad.,ed cpl. Oshwshr. cpta. dshwsr, fncd patio,
551-2000 L•'I•· o<eon ,;,w 3 11!EBLUFFS·ll8.000! """'·. patl ... Call '°' MJ'!Ut~~ view. pool, dbl gar . MOO. bdrm .. 2 ba. condo apt 3 BR. 2...., ba, din. rm. appt. SS1-0493or 830·9693 , ---768·5823. Mother-in-law's M#-.-...&...1.a-.., ..... _. ..... Close to s hopping & Greenbelt.Agt640·SS60 .-...,_. --------..,._.._,..,,,...._..._ beac h , with many MewportBeach 3169
Dream Super upgraded 2 Br. lux amenities . Priced at HARIOR VIEW IUUTIFUL 752•1920 ••••••••••••••• .. ••••••
2 Master suites, 2000 ~~os o~::rn!~te P~~~: m.ooo C:AAMB. IROADMOOR MOO OUAIUT. 'llACM nlnt 3 br 2 ba, frpl. etr
, I 1 d 8 3Br. 2Ba. ram rm, lg. lot 3 Bdrm home, highly up-TRIPLEX. Just listed. $450 mo. Wntr only. NO ~~d:~o r!!~. u 18e:g: SS9·1833; 499·2109 Y -~IPel on quiet cul -de-sac graded. Pool & Jacuzzi. North Costa Mesa. (J> 2 PETS673·7368
....,.te famlly room at _Owner __ ·------• IB»tn~ tastefully upgraded, $78,iOO bedrm units in excellent South•--3186 ._._ ol Pool d Sl3'1.~. By appt. only. Tht Holnesellen d p · t· & ......,...., .,.. at.oraae. an THl-.. "'C:I 499·2800 644•5573 con . riv pa 10s ••••••••••••••••••••••• RV access on beautiful 11::11Liu. 752·5353 en c l oi1e~ garages . 3 Arch Bay, 2 Br. WW
(Ul·de ·aac. for only New on the market, the ---------IBroadmoors Village o S89.950. Call 545·8424 c pts, drps, rptc. pvt $78,~. popular Cambridge POETRY? Seavlew, 3 Br 3 Ba Broker. beach, ocean view, $525
llAberts
Realty ..I ....... ... .., ....
model home near com· The aooa ol a bird can be Hampton , beat lot & Ot11efo RHll lltat. TRAO£~N mo. 5444418 mun I t Y Po o I a n d beard view. lse. 11100 mo. Sel ••••••••••••••••••••••• clubhouse. locludea 3 Th' t hit •-ortrade 644-0997 bd b h e wa en-w e Ol • Mobletto.1 Will ex"hange 2·3 nr 4· Homelu.tw.lsMd rm 1 . • 2 a l s . green can be seen ....... For 5de I I 00 ' flrepiace, formal dlni.oa 3 er & 3Ba could give r--HSULA n . Ptex for your home or •••••••••••••••••••••••
rm. and beautifully de· many laughs A doll house! z BR. z ba, ....... ~............... rental G ... rd 3202
corated lbruout. Great A bright & c heery comp. redone Incl. new, Cozy 28 trlr in. Newport •••••••••••••••••••••••
location and a great artist's loft modern kitchen. 2 Car Beach park. Kida & pets 4 Br. wtrumpua rm. 1•
•---------• priceolonly $78,SOO Adda a lltlle more to the gar. Used brick paUo. ok. llSOO. S48·2SS6 ~ Orange '395 mo. For Info
I 042 COil Only 1128.000 3 Br Mobile home. S• call 545·7434 aft 6PM
Almoat2000 sq ft-0wner!AaenlS41H290 Park. El Toro Many ii\ i-·--.r-1.1~-·y ' BELMONT SHOl\.ES 0ta red hill-*-
552·7soo
Could it be! amenities $26,000 Drakv ·--..... -c COd D.a.Vlb.IPORT y th i 64S•9161 waler, ape , 11m
AT5" Sl:;M e pr ce 111 Just TOWNHOUSE &A.uoc1atos838-5700 deck 3 Br FR. tpk. •Ts
ISLAND 1~~~~~~~~ mo 12131 891 ·S3Sl. .. --------------.. 1 Beauttrul 6.SOO sq ft.I-DOL.rHIH R.E. Ir loat Dodi SELL idle 4tems with a CLEAN, L.GE 4 Ul\ll Apt. tlM·1828 Spanish l!'.atate on two STYLED <;di 494-811 I 40' Boat dock. off the sun Deily PUot Classified Ad. House!. by owner. ti 8. -------Grand Opening
TERESITA VILLAS
CONDOMINIUMS
t'6 Luxury Towa.'lonle1 °"" ., ..... lt'eaturing Spacious 2 Bdrm & 2
bath, with fireplaces. balconies and
private patios.
FROM $58;500 .
11
Iota. All cuat.om features, --------•I paUo. Lge 3 BR. 21.\ BA. &42.v78. ll:k>.000. 847·571 3 C:Of'OM cW Mer JJ22 , b J d I h FOR THE t tl h II ---------•••••••••••••••••••••••
a u ous rear yar w t l.ogmla HHh I 050 ~!:ruu~~ ca17ror dlr~c· -----------~-----ol Hwy. newer. 3 br. 2 ~.JCC.W.1ro~~t~~ TIMES '"•••••••••••••••••••• Uons S@~lA-l£°~lrS.. ba, frpl. lndry, no petis.
formaUon. " bom that pto Lei.lure World 2br. 2ba 645-3474 T'-I W rd G h C'-'-ret .. gu .. M9S.17S4IOO
aopblatlcated, modern Kilbourn arnt58t..,.179 Ill'"~~ .....,...,a.t.,, POI.WI-----DELUXE 3 Br 2"'11 Ba, " ie ves Condo. New . great view -no# n"1guifltJ o am• wit a nucl(_lt
ID
REALTY INC.
714/146-1371
1044 •••••••••••••••••••••••
"
at.Ylina can be beaull!ul. • I ~ dplx. 615~ Marlaold.
For $11\,$00, enjoy 3 l..CllJl-Nh)Mt 1052 I • O~·:~:..:, i:: MMmo.644·lMOS bdrDll .. 2 bat.ha. a ram .••••••••••••••••••••••• , to. ... '°'"' •ewi .. "'Pio_..
rm. wtt.h F.P. Firat class EL NIGUEL Terrace. Lg.1~-~~~~~~~~ 3BR 2BA ho me, nice condltlool 2 br. 2~ ba. twnhse..i~ I R £ C It 0 M ocean view. Bulltlna.
Lodlcpcl, wood panel'g. ••••y ILUR&S I I' I' I I I flreplc. dbl aar. S.W5/mo.
OP~OAILY 8A.M T08P M
comm. pool. •AGO By ...,.... rr . . . . . . Prestlge Homea~
owner . 640·0254. Ope11 Defonis Mdl. 38t. '"" ba. t I NeweT' 1paclCN1 " airy House Sun. 1 SPM End unit on 1 rnblt . S l A E E hn
1067 =:.0~0!iu:~n only ~ I I' J* J ~ ~1!?ia~:~i:':.~e
By Owrt~r 2 n '"'l•--------Cordovu. upard'd llSTIUIF'S
WjpaUoa. AtC. 152.500... Early area. RedO(!()f'Aled
1&7.500 fld t~rm6 3bdtm .. "bayfronl"wltl\
<213>421458'l walt'r vlew. Sll2,* Or *Omonth
AiflJl •
\
, rtn. 2 car 1ar. 1475. mo
I ME L A R I ~ Call6'7S-07Meveson.lt.
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• • • • • "'1~• tC>eQ. Now ,.,.., llMI 11 ocean. no children or ~,--F-t_T_C_E_N_ .... , io m•~• tOOP -I' pe!a, 61S..0119 eve
11 I I I I" 1 e c-..... "" '""'~la.,.... oLoEc.o.M.
• • • • .., 1·•"'9 ........ _, _.. Very eltan. haht "
-...... w '--He 3 ._._ cbeerllll Dupltx Walk to •s;.. r r r r r r r r t r r I ~'SIG/mo. At nt. •= I J I I I I I I I I I J South of Hwy. Grut J • BR..3balhs S580 Mo. SCIAM-ll'fSA.wwt•~IOIO AaeolM4 '841
•• DM.YPK.OT Tu.d&y,Fel>Nliryl.1971 Uwfa '1tr1• Aflc lm•l1"9 'O.• ................. A,uh1 .......... 1¥1wahu.fww. .......... I' ,,, •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••• .... •••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••• ... •••• •••••••••••• .......... 1 .. 11•_,._ "•d H .. ".,..., •• d ttu1au. .. 111t1d .._.. Jl6t MIN 1714 C.•adllW. Jill~_.._.....__ ... 14~---u~-31241.....,. .. ..-..J140 .............. -....................... , ........................ ---' ----.......... . Ciil9...... 322 --··.················· ....................... '"············ •••••••• ····--·········· ••••••••••••••••• •••••••••• ••••••••••• • ..... SJ40 ~~ u..a Poil.aH5oOiltlvu Av I u-···-·Br Ba 1N-·oo-·-L1n•e ....................... _ ......................................... w Newport: 3 br 2 ba 1 8r. sno. uUl. pd. Cpta. _... "' • ~ BRAND NEW 8 """' .. -ruur lr:A> Mb • Dr, tBa. MU So. •M.wlHdt"-e u--..u•••--·u adl ClUM4Mllll ' ' dnll; i:-uo. quiet aduttl: ~ MP an ,.,., -r•~-. O••. ~ ca. Coal\ Plua $0.S mo nvv-.._...I -~ mo. AetftL &Wft!T D/W •• ••Nlll a . I nplex.
<JU) OMaU or evh Get 1relldy for summer LA9UM411ACH BLUFPSOONDOS Lene It nd 28R WS/ SBR '3e0. WJ>4M-O&l7 now.Walktobeacbtrom WQualitytJtee.home.3 Lea.es alanlna •l 1&5e&lalol'Cl.tlnn. bach apt, YEARLY. 2 BR. l btt., a •TmACt.Nor ... ---------c here. Walk to 1r1de BDIUIS .• fim. rm .. 2~., M.ont.h. AaeotM4·U.33 El Ntdo Tuller Park. w/lie. •UDd9ck + patio. --1 b r t 0 w 0 .. 0 u • ~. CUSfOal 3bf', tba, trpcl Kbool 6 bJ&h •cbool. 4 bat.bl. a Fireplaces. All 1640N.,_pe>rt 81vd. Cll. Oeraceap. («tear. Lhe It a "
OOOl w11pa, nu ll"L c br. Iba, bup •u.ndeck. bilt·ln kitchen w/elec· Bit Cyn Twnhae. up· AMforCathf Waaber/dryv, reilrt1 Is ill dt)Js. Wik to ubooll, dbl 1ar. $$50 mo. 814 20lh tronic equip. Outsland· graded 2 Br. den. 2~ ea. lWiwlw leoch 3740 WIWAM WlMTOM 1tove au~. mo. No
cburch 4' ahop'I· 147 SL W.1711 tn1 ocean ll C1talln DR. pool. Jae: • t.enn.ls. ••••••••••••••••••••••• REAL ~ATE 11~1 Scroll !ht• ~rhw,'Y' ol ,1 pl~ fort>)t M~nd~ pa)I chilctr,n. a-.tt.at "'°' locl pool aervtce as. z br. l•T. klda. pela, vtewa. Home valued •I a1(). 040-8l4B 1 Br twnhle, pqoi, patio, &um.y 3 Br 2 Ba w/bay A tumbling lol/\1tvrfolli and 4u1~ pools l.J~h..n 10 1tw a Bil. a Ba ov..-lookh:l&
tDG05 llalbok. P'ee sus.ooo. Rent fOf' as 1235. 2 br T.H. Pool. carport. no pet.s. Avail oetao vlew. Quiel S. of IOUnd ol bubbli'lg strwim& 1md 9f<'M1"\l lhnl\J9 Metdowlarlc 1olt c .... No
x.&Del Mu, 4 Br, bltDI, lilaln Renal1.S40-5370 :'= Relerenctis r e· Slftl)esok. Fe. Feb.1$, OSS. 981-7000 Hwy nbrhood. L 1ar 'tbur t\dult l'lpnr1ment home nt PlnetttNk \Altog. ls ~s,J 3 0 0 ,m o ·
G85 mo. Ref'•· $4.S-7 4 BR. a Ba UPIHded new Malo Rental•. 5'().51TO L9IJllllCI IMct. J 741 apace. S37S mo. 67S·7498 a tocnl rvtrel'lt t'll'h! you C'M ~nje)y u11u~al p11vacy
or?ll-4080 1450. mo. w /grdnr . l·Bdrm, • deo. older BEACHHOUS£ e.•••••••••••••••••••••• Ocean aide of H.-y. 1 BR. and lu~ry. · '"°'" 3144
PreaUse 4 Br, aot 8*<*181G·l461 June. ~~~ n~~· 3br, pool, frpl, bar. pool Neu ocean SUl5. Utll pd, 1 Ba. frplc. avail. 3/1. A RECREATION PARADISE. Twv l<?nnis courts. ••••;;;;;;;;~~;;·••• Roenoke '495 mo. Veryclean:SBR JS. n "l' Ir t.uoa•2 BlkP' tbl, l blk bch.. po pet.a. Sln&leaok:F.. SM>.mo.rD-1148
Jeanlne, 753-1820 or Oeo. Wettmln&ter Jiau. ms. &!on:i ...... -Noatb.a. frly '5Z:S. _.., Main Rentals. 540•5370 2 Br 1 Ba. new cpts, drps, SIMmmulQ pool plus unlqutt vol~ll pool. Jocuut. Pl.NES APTS
wtc111,UM1ll mo. 9U·Z811 evea. o MISSIOMllALn BroadmoorSe1vtew. New 1 BR .. fireplace, 1 bllt. to S. ot Hwy. Rent or lae. Sanchol~ll court. Mountain lodge clubhou~ ~.:,:n:d ~~': ::~lay
Pteocb Quarter. 3 br. 2~ !P!'77days. 4t4.07ll 2 Br wJden & all'ium. beaeh. UH + uttta. S285mo.&40-9808 Agt. ~hfl~.eotiwnat1onplt.bllll1irds.~ . ..,uno Caltrornl• bunsalow11.
be, dble encl. aar. lBRCondo,lmmac. con· Pvt,tennls&comrnpoot. ~ YEARLY. Beaut. 2 BR .. Hunytoth~goodllfeandttwnrel<lx From SITO . 11 $ ~/retrie. Pool & rec vtnlent to everything. 3J:lll.28a.oceanviewhlll ~mS:..,Z~S-3622, L.ofllla... l7IO 2..., ba. unlt wlth •s>ee· FROM$26ST0$3SS Pinoat.one. Ofc hraJ.5:30
nter, S375. Ask fo 1i35. mo. 863-12A2 side home. Avall. March. • •••••••-•••••••••••••• u.cwar view of bav & ~W:30wltnda. Jean. 98Nl91 or MH412 1. "25, Also 2 BR. East ' ' ln(ludlng ~ m.<MOO ---------•i Br, l~ ba SUrfside Con West Condo's. from 1376. Harbor Vu Hms. CarmeU AUCIA PLAZA ocean. 2 Deck.a. frplc. It *· 3ba avail now. X1n do. Frplc pool patio. Fausta Vitali Realtor Br + PR, ftr P•rk ft Seenlc Mounttia Views car. Walk. to beach. S550 v 01"· lk-druom. ~ Boih U.,.. .._.. 3148 loc lltt• .,e aar pool • . acbool ~I: 7" .. -11 L A) d Per IDOl'.ltb \..I,!.~ Two Botdruum. Two 8e1h •••••••••••••••••••••••
•catl9G--OaOalU 83l.fl87Sor531>-lB27 498-22Al ·-... mo._....., ~·A~~hi!1t1/!~ WllUAMWIMTOM 1300AdamsAw .. lnC<>MaMaa Chum1n1 Ceatnlly
Br NEW 4 Br. 212 Ba. fpk. ~Has 32505-.hlca rum REALF.STATE 875-3331 c)CT()65fTomOrangeCoastCollege located ZBr. 2Sa. a blks 3watf ~~n~\1=· din area, wetbar. l blc ·--.................. ec.l•tr.o 3Z7I PoOI. Jacuut. BUUards Coda.....__ bl-tween H<lrtior and faltViw.I rrom ti.ach, all uW. S33S.
No..,_,,_ 2 ...... OK bch. Landac. No pets. Spac 3Br, 2ba condo. Lota ••••••••••••••••••••••• S8l-6UlorS81-6130 --3124 1714) S40-l:JtX> mo."7·1340eves .
.....,..., 11\iW> • .-mo.968-0652aft-tPM ofprivacy&re<:Cblldren 25211 Stockport. Lag ....................... NOW.........O
mo. Ml-M20 welcome.$350 768·1222 or 3 Br, 2 ba, new cpts, drps. Hills West.aide a br $220. Cpl., ~=================m~ An. IEMT ALS M~ VERD!: 3 B.R 4br. 3bal 3 car car. 763-0'120.Aet. Ocean view. MOO /mo. Sorry DO"""ts drll8 stv. Children OK ~_......_.....__ -·.a~....._-•••.a LAGUMAllACH • years, ndmarlt. 1475. Avail now. 544·9411 no • ,.... · · _,. · ----•.. ---S., aewcrpt.a,drpa, ne Manyxtras.TI4-821'3T19 LGIJllllCI....... 3252 fee Evs832·8200. Me....,...leeci. 3769 548-95110an.SPM ·--•no••••un•n•••••••n•n••H•-• .. ••• STUDIO APT .. localed
paint lo/out. d1hw1br ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• 2 Br .-Jbalcoay Close to ;fa. ~~t:e~c:.h~c\tt~ bltm, frp!c . lit fam·rm. 3 BR. 2 Ba. Catm fem rm 4 B 2 b t hs 3 BR. 2 Ba. $385. New. partr .. abopplng no pets ftS nQ/ "50. mo. 54().6757 w/frplc. Fenced doi run S r. t a e;ecu •v;45:· Rec. fac's. Avail Mar. 1. llST IUY or c h ildren please . CM, HI from 1boppln1 • bus.
,.,.,, ... e Part 3 br 2 ba $W. Pb 894-4287 ~7~e.'~.o~ • · 496-5593 Some people aay you get 752• ~or 548. 7964 \JI I SUIS Mo .. incl. uUUUea ) · • what you pay for! We of·----"~------~. yard, bltns. pool, 3BR,2BA.fplc,auperu ....._Vlefoi 3267 Beautiful new 4 Br. 3 be fermore.Aodtbepricels Lge2 Br. Fam Rm. 2 ba, AwlnnlngcQmblnanC>n
dbl gar. 1395. S48-4471 lfd, bltns. DW. xtra I ••••••••••••••••••••••• house on cul·d-sac. Lge less. Membership In a paUo. fplc ln triplex. Nr of odUlt aponment homll
OCCS lat Sl65 UUI pd back yd. Slater/Beach. A ·1 N 2600 ft fam rm w/frpk & wet-Health Club. A tennis shops no pets. 637-8828 wtthluxuryoppolntmenlland St ,;:re F . . Vacant. $395 /mo . 5v~ ~w& tr.~:!s .n~w bar.Frmldlnrm.M1t~r club.Freeteoolsleasons . (714) ptl1> eollonat premlu ~aln ~ t!f 540_5370 1st/last. Agt, no fee. k·· 1 • EZ l pe s, Br suite w JClreplace. Billiards. Swimming. ---------~. ::.. • _ ~ ..__ m n 1• 846-Qll;eves968-2884. ~ ~~ <7141 erms. S:WS/mo. 768·1947 Golf Driving R ange. 2 Br, 2 Ba. Mesa Verde, .,... .. _ __,
S250. 2 br. aaraae. Fncd Deluxe 4 Br2 Ba,DinRm, · SantoAna 3280 ~·~,anas + great ac · F/P. DJW. encl. garaae. spo•awtmmtng•bllorda.
Cork!da. Fee bltn.s, dshwahr. dbl gar, 3 Br, 2_bu Aliso Villa Con·••••••••••••••••••••••• llVlties: ~nd!!Y BBQs. Adults, no pets. S215. One &lWoBedrooms,OneBoth 1'
Large 2 bdrm. duplex un·
it. Sxc. North end aec· Uon. Close to everyUUng.
Has Oak hdwd. floors.
Bllt·ln kltcben. 2 cal" aaraae. A bl ~lua .ren·
tal. M25 Month.
MISSION llALTY
494.0731 Mam Rentals. 540-5370 n r Ma I l . Imme do, single story. A JC, Spring Special! $165. 2 br. Parties with Uve bands. _546_·1_08_1 _____ ___, ~· PAllk~\llM
MESAVERDE ·Attrac· poueulon. 605 ~·~~.~&pool. Kl~s/peta/sngls . 1.-ee. FreeSundaybruncb. 2 Br garden apt. frplc, Q._. "_.,. ~·.,..-lBr,NorthLaguna,walk
Uve38r 2Ba W/W cpts Hardwick Cr. Spr pe · MaanRenlals540·5370 y ldoll patio,d&bwbr.S'l45. 950PaularlnoAYe .. Coltallllo 1IS'M9lll to beach & stor u,
d d• h .b f I • ingdaleJWeatmlnster BR b •·d Bl ourren arsgoeven 5$7-2841 -======-==:=sa:a:::=-=---••t rps. s ws r, rp c , Union Real Estate 4 orJ r.,. en. tns., HouwlFurnhMdor fur.ther .. •A terrific ---------• ... . =c>mo. (213).780-5428
gar.S420 mo.S.0-"88 81M-5583Eva.537-1018 ~· ~ palioi3~~v~:~ Uftfwahlled 3300 ma1';\tenance crew, pro· Spac.3braptoruaeitas2UllDll ...... lh ~atw ... .......
Pvt 2 br nice yard B h.i m~. 886 a ....................... ress1onal management br & den. Frplc, patio & u••••••••••• .. •• .. •• .. ••••••••••••• .. ••• .... • Newport leocll 3169
+patio.• S250. Fee. Hut11Ha:....."40ft 124 :;a: n:,· 54 . 7 or stafr that cares, and pool. Adults. $325. N ColtaMeao 3124 CoetaMeso 3124 ••••••••••••••• .. ••••••
Beac:hcomber.8Sl·20l1 1Cli"DOUI' • friendly neig_hbo r s. pets.S45-338lor8S7·9517 .............. ••••••••• ....... •••••••••••••••• , .... .,M.-IT
---------••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 BR 1"2 ba A/C bltn Models open dally 10-7. -•"'~
$315 mo. Dix Twnbse. 2 3 Br. 3 ba townhouse. ~t view' Co~ at~· Sorry. no ooe under 21 & 3Br. 2Ba $295. Fncd yd Casa de Herrnoaa Now renting 2 br $225. & APARTMIMTS Br, 2 Ba. new cpl, dbl Sparkling new cond. w/fir ·l s.Trs zissp y1 REALTY COMPANY no pets . Roommate kids ok. no pet.s, patio Zbr •pl w/(lrepiace, 11,;, $235. Adults. no pets. tor2Bedroomsand
au. pool. 546-6299; S470. Call "Lila" San;'M~a 549~0 SHORECLIFFS service available. Mon· New cptsJdrps, S?alnt ~lh·,,!~0li!;f:· P~.crpts,drps,atove6 Townbouaes SS7~ M&-13TlorM&-54.56eves. 5SHJOO • VIEWHOME th-~moolhoccupanc:y. Mgr at: 766 Shahmar (waa~:.>....,0 r refn1. Next to all shop-FromSl'9.50 ----------1 ________ ...,. Enc:hanUng 3 BR w/lg. • Apt U . U2·5717 o sep . .,.... -· · Png. 313 17lb Place at Ope 9~Dall
MESA VERDE 38r, 2ba, Lux 2 Br Twn~e. Pool Mtwpwt-.C.Ch 326 bright kitchen. cozy OakwoodGardenApts 536-1857 180W. Wllsoo SantaAnaSLM2-J4M Spl·P~ls-Ten!ts
Crml dln. outdoor BBQ. Tennis. ftplc. No pets.•••••••••••••••••••••• fireplace, 2 private 2Br nl •· I I .... A"rosa f"""m Fashion $595 lncla &ardener Child OK ,....., 2231 · •-· 8801 1 h Spacious 3 Br 2 Ba. ne • ce .. c ean, c ose.., Lee 1 br Sl95. Meu del '" '" · -~· · BOATSLJPW/CONOO. paUos"' a super view. rvne<atl7t > ,._ u 1 shopping. Ad.ults only. Mar area, nr ....... ~la.._ bland at Jamboree on
S46-JJ&6Agt. '"'-3244 BR. 2'<a ba. Like new F\im. $700/mo. Unfum. (714~ ~:':i·';dj~e~:c A'/i' Nopeta.645-8939 shopping998-0659'""' .. SaoJ~uinlllllaRoad.
4Br,2Ba.S43Smo.kids& •••••••••••••••••••••• PS.Agt.644-1133 ~ard/emnoe-;<Can7clll. water & 170016lhSt<atDover> prel'd. 186 E. 21st St. ""Ice l br frpl" pool 171 1644-1990 pets OK. fenced yd, tRVlNE • A t A A 11 I d l" • '"• • 2 Br studio. uUI pd. Bllna. M'r-0237 2 BR tt.<J Ba BIG ~ANYON1 .glbra1nd n1e BelleC~~ Lee (7t4)64Hl170 :J.9oeo· va mme adults. no pets. $230. mo. crpts, pool. S'l40. 1978 Ma· 3brcoodo +bonus, 2 ba. 1
$400. Freshly painted 3
Br. 2 Ba, breakfast/din·
in& area. 3100 Samoa. 644.1836
• · · · · · · · · · spai.:•OUS. s n e eve 644.._.,., 548-4757or646·371l8 ple.fKS.5647 yr. oJd model. Back Bay.
22 BBRR, 21 BaBa ...... ,;.;.,·.. BR. 2 ba. townhom Ylearbl,!!k2'~!:!eBana .• S350 mo. Clean, 2 br. 1 child OK. n .. .:ault E "''de 1&2 b •· Cpta, drpe. bltns. 1425. · · · · · · · ...,,..,, wJsweeping golf cours "'" """'" pets. $230. 792 Shalimar . nu -<>< • rap...,. New Dix 2br, East C.M. 64.S-9543.646-1164 2 BR. 2 Ba .......... SS view. Lease at $700 per 675-0475 apt 1or3. Open . 549-9492 ~cl gar. patio, pool. Flrplce. dabwahr. lae•---------3BR,2 Ba ....... $435/ mo.;sa).eat$125,000 HEEOAREHTAL? Like oew. no pet s. paUo adults no pets 388 2 Br. 2 Ba tux. apt over·
3 BR. 2•, ba. · · · $550/ Agent640·SS60 Be~c~ut:x~ yr.~ 2 ~ 2 BR. t Ba, encl patio, & 644.Ql78 BaySUl42--046lafU.' looklna Newport Bay
Beal.IUCul 3br, 3ba. FM, 48R,2Ba ........... S46 TENEX can help you ~-or894~2· · single gar. no kids or £..sa.RtW...,xe wllhbalcony&fireplace. FP, FD, nr bch. Only 4 BR. 2•, ba, furn .. ~9 NEWPORT BAY. NEW find the beach city rental pet.a. SU). 846-7129 Large 4 Br 2 Ba, lndry 833-92'4
S750. mo. 646·1035 4 BR, 2.,... Ba ... SSSO/ CONDO. double view you need. EXAMPLES lBT + lg. deck. complete t.ownbousea. Frplc. encl. are•. encl gar. balcony.1---------------------1 SBR.3Ba ..... .... waterfront exposures dlxfum,slepstosand. l 1&2 BR. all ulll pd. Ha-gar. 2 br & 3 br. 2 ba. $400.MS-1091:645-7782 llACHRENTALS
3 Br. 1 ba duplex, rncd yd, 810 CANYON from private balconies, CM, 2br hs luda ok S2SO adll yrly. S48-634l clenda Harbor Apta, 241 from $325. 642-1603 WINTER . StJMMER
gar. no pets. S285. 1st. 3 BR. 2...., Ba ......... S700 off huge llv-rm & mstr SJC 3br bs kids ok S37S Avocado, 64&-1204 Part rent for services, lge YEARLY
Jut. SlOO cln'g ree. bdrm.2650.Sq.fl ,2BR. CMlbraptutilpdSlSO NEARBAY&BEACH $315mo.DlxTwnbse2 Br. ALl.$295M0, 2Bt.beams,nr storea. 28ryrly.Unf.$400. 8C-OT28. den, 3 Ba. all elec. FV2brcottagegarS260 Winter large 2BR, lBA. Brandnewtownbouses.2 quietadlt3.S21S.642·1276
Meu Verde 3br, 2ba. 2
c ar a ar. Co ed yd .
Large 2 br. 2 ba. $275. 'tSZ31' .... -..L..t-.n moot.h. 337 E. 21st St. Go ~Mr.tf\'f'111fE
direct anytime
kitchen, sk yll gh led D PT2bddup view $300 Jj31~or646-1555. ~.· .. !!,e!'..!~. ~,..7d-0848bl gar. Br.11,; Ba. lnslant move· orfKS.2610
atrium. pvt marina. NB blk .. Ah 2bd ..... " .....,. .............., "" In. Peta & infants ok. ---------SlOOO. mo. (213)691-2170 1 lo.,.,-_... DECORATOR'S APT. Fenced patios. encl. <213)442 3801 HB cotta&e chUd ok 1245 View of bay. Boat slip 2 Br. 1 ba. bltns. S250 mo. garage, dishwashers, air 2 BR Townhouse. lge
or · CM3br2badblgarS32S avail. Beaut'ly rurn'd. 1st & luL 121 E. S.y. cond. 1922 Meyer Sl. See patio. 1 ~, ba. gar,1-----------
Modern Townhse Duplex. L :fl'2~b: ~~u~ ~ S75()fmo. Al\. 673-7601 714IS49·3826• 2131431-3568 mgr. or call 642·6612 Easts1de. $250. 631-0995 MEWPORT MAllMA
3Br. frylc. pvt patio. 1 ~ WANTED BACH"'' .nR 919 ---&AA "-l blk to bch. Wall rurmsh. CM 2br hs Cplc _kok S275 2 BR Condo w Jpool /jac. : .:.&Al 2 Br 11,'J Ba bit D/W -,--vn•e LAG H 2br dp kid ok S2.SO view of the bay. patio. APT for clean cut, quiet ' ' 05• ' Dana Poiftt 1126 NEW 2 br Ir 2 br w /den ~~.~· 6'6-0468 or NB2brhsepool CpS325 ga r . w sh r 1 dry r . student. about $1$0. cpts~ ~.J:{.· ~~':; ••••••••••••••••••••••• waterfronl apts. Luxury
S375+util. Tom B 846-1463 no · • Very large 2Br. 2ba appointments . pvt
lhr r Wh1t( IL .dt~r
• '1'' No'W lil) 1 Bi .,! ..... B
I •'..\I •• ,• , \I• i(
OPEN DAJ Ly PLUS M a..1y MORE & fri N be _ .. bo t ti ·1 t Waterfront-Dock . 4 BR. A" 546-3693 dys. Wknds 2 Br, l Ba apt. R-'ng. UP· Foxho&low VIII-w stove re g. ew a..,., a s ps ava1 . o 3 br, 2 ba. Near schools " I! A M TO 6 P M B r I "" -,-t vt b I 1 t t ts Ad lt.s ........ shopping. Kids, small ---------1 a . rp c . new c rpts. _645-9975 stairs, garage, xtra 621 W Wilson St paan . P a cony. s. enan . u .no.-~.
pel..$, singles ok. $39S Vtew. Turtleroc:k T err drps,bltns S700 644·99 TENEXhas 1oo·s_or con· s.tlal.ogllM 3786 park'g. s~ .. ~t maybe 646·2010 _last&dep.496-0195 • 673-8414 646-~1 Br & Fam Rm. beaut. or7S2-8686 firmed vac. daily all ••••••••••••••••••••••• OK, 728 F W. 18th MODELOPE~ 10.SPM Sunny, sparkling clean 2 LJOONORD
---------• $800mo. 752·0617 BLUFFS TOWNHOUSE areus ull pncos. Rental 2 BR. 2 ba on the ocean. S22S.call: 646-1246 Enjoy the privacy or BR. bltns. gar . ocean BAYFRONT
Newport Hgts. 2 Br. gar, --3Br. 2Ba. balc on y (•OtJnselor!I on hand till c...m. $700., unfutn ...,..,., your own home w/lge view, no kids/pets. $240 Lg 3Br. 2Ba. pvt b h NO PETS Z77 Knox St . Turtlerock Glen Plan 4, 9pm 7 days a week ru _.,., West.side newer t br apt med pal1o. alt. gar. wood ~no> 7231 . . hide ·
$295. 673-2256 Sbr, 3 car ~ar. pool. ten· w/vlew. ample -storage. Prompt courteous serv: Total sec_u~ty, elevators. wJgar. S195. Will con· burning Crplc. pool & ...,,.. OpanorK _a;!1•c v671e5w7687c rn
------• rilil. S795. mo. &40-1044 S475. mo. «13·4426 ° CALL NOW ror more in· rec. faciht1es. 499-2835 sider kids/pets. 646-0176 Jacuul. 2 br. 1 ~ ba start· ..._.fwcJon leach 3140 • _,,, se. · 3 Br, Halecresl hme. • 642-4463 f S r 1 .... atS3SSmo w/lge yd S395 mo For 4 Br. 2 Ba. FR. cpls drps, o. m ee ~nts Westside newer 2B r ..,. . ••••••••••••••••••••••• High on hill! SlSO. Util pd
utfo 545.743,._rt 6PM prof lndsc:pd. SG2~. 5 Nwi:it Crest tux 2 Br 2 Ua, 898-9891 898-9891 u..fwftished w /encl patio, gar. Will Singles ok. Fee
· Mornlngdew. $52-7350 ; split level <.'Ondo. Green ••••••••••••••••••••••• consider kids/pets. S24'5. •OUVEPARK* Maln Rentals,540-5370
0-'cN.t MS-2330 ~ .. ~~~~~·:~~~~ TOW'llllouM GeMf'Clt 3802 646-0176 APT HOMES Hear the surf! Bach. All
•••••••••••••••••••••• Turllerock Glen, new 58r. beach. $450. 64S-8277 U.ftwnlshed 3SZS ••••••••••••••••••••••• S:Z30 2 IDRM.. Nu 2 & 3 Bdrm .• blt·tna. util. Sngls ok. $175. Fee.
Tennl•. Swlm 'a. aauna as.. ram rm. tennis. pool THE -u~s ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bui2~1tins. WATERFts RdOpMs T8 Clean. cpts, drps, stv. cpt.s.,7drpe141 84. e7n7c~a1r0., all Beachcomber631·2011
pvtromm 2Br28acon· ownrSllS0.640-2418 -rr DRAMATIC ,crp . r .. reCrlg. P urified wtr. nu. ....,.., am·s I I 2B ~ ~~~678wshr Jdryr Near new 4 Br 3 Ba. cpts. 3 Bdrm .• family rm .. 2 h Ocean Vu Townhouse. ~'.huge deck, garage. Laundry. Green lawn 5pm. 7dys. f~o~,; ,4!!d, gre~i.
---------. .i~ thruout Children. ba. S68S. Lease. brand new. Lease or mo 3601 FINLEY AVE N B Cov'd. garages. Off Sl -..-,,..am:r.r.r vu, yrly, adlts S48-634J 8 Toro "'"" 3 Bdrm.. 2 ba . single · · · parlclng. Adults. No pet.s .-."-. ~ •••••••••••••••••••••• =~ ~~~~·d. level.S485.Lease. t.omo.t650.S44·S91l JACOISREALTY 2020 Fullerton Ave. < UVESUP •Al•w~ltcMMs 211•VIEW•DLX
1 >MO FREE RENT CottllH ASSOC. o.pleu1 Unfwn 1600 675-4670 Blk. E of Nwpt. Ave. & TO ITS MAME ~~°b,.~ act;p:.::: BLTNS·ADULTS·$29S. a 11&«y 4 br 2 ba cpta Super value' S395 Per mo Redlrors 759.0226 ••••••••••••••••••••••• blk. So. ol PaY> 642·8000 encl. garages. cpts & 548·5419 DAY$
drps i cd ' d '3 ' 4BR 2ba Pool&tenn11; JBR 2...,BA 2 car gar BUENA PK -New, t "2 OverSOOlalltreesand tO I.: 673-0512Evs/wknds md Fr~r s::; mo l.i 1lie Colony Paul M.1rlln ~ Bu1lllns. No pets. $265 Br •pts, clJls, ~rps, bltns. Duplex 2Br lBa. adults streams with waterfalls drpe. Move n now & &et ---------
Ru t 548 t.i R E &44 7383 W•'" Mow looll'-per mo 686 Darrell St pool. The Villa Woods no J>eU, fl50 mo. lat/last create a relaxing setting $100. off lil mo. rent. 2 BR Townbouse. patio, sy, · ___ -...., '81824thSt.(714)521·7072 64&-~ foryourspac:lousnewl 847-7566lOAMto5PM pool.jacuut.lMi.from
Fauh•Y.-., 32J4 ~~p""a~~n~38~2 S.nwwwrlewtal1 3c: 7 ea67tn R~f Reqd 1 ...._,.._.. 3806 STUNNING 2 Br2 Ba lg or 2 bedroom apart· Lge 1 & 2 Br, 2 ba. sec ocean. Avail. 3/1. 1365.
-••••••••••••••••••••• • ,.. . 5" o r · PV yar . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 d t Pool e menls. From $2(0. apts. Adults only, no 646-1958
3 8DRM. l~ Ba. rrcsua pets. S3M 642 9799 _ _ LEASES ctuld; no pets MS-1759 l·BR bit-I ri ar e!~:pn.o w l8t. hrSt Furniture available. peta. A/C & Oahw1hr .• ::~.-~.-~~.-~~~~~~~~.-• • ..,,.. A'" A k 2 Br. 2ba. encld "Or. Cot.to Mesa • carp, ns, P v. area...-.. · SmaU ....... OK AduJ•· p I •· J I Fr •• fare~-. .... -th,...mol3.17 ... 11 3 Br. 2 be. frplc, country " deck . Garage. Year CM. ....... · .. 00 "' acuzz · om .... IH:POIMT
or n.ci ....,.. etec. kitchen. patio. encl. steps t.o bch, ameiuues. An• t ...,. --1-a.....~ leueonly. ms Mo. Bkr. V 0 OC E only. Office open 9:00 to S220 mo. 19132 Magnolia, 2 BR, 1 ba, furn wntr S350
STORY back yd dbl gar S400 Ubl pd. $400/mo. ,. '-""•"'"' -844·23439To 5 I EW F AN 6·00. 2300 Fairview Rd, 962-UIOO 2 38r,38a,bonu 14761~ k . 3Br . 2ba. patio .••••••••••••••••••••••• CITY Ille bright airy Costa Me•• Phone ---------• OCIAMMOMT
nn.dn,frpk,D/W.s:as. --rpar 543·4471 Park /bcb nearby . .._.Island l706 lc6oaP1• ... a 3807 new2br.Zba,dahwabr 545-23()1) • Newlwi1Br.S21S.3Br lBR,lBa,wntr.SUIO
114·9'3·._ or 531·9 ,, MO. FREE RF:NT 14.!SO/mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• gar .• jacuuJ. S3S5 mo. Ba. bltns. $37~. ChUd, 2 BR, 2 ba, yrly S4SO
A(l.mof'H 3br,2ba.famllykitcben, 3Br w/woocby lntenor. ITTLE ISLAND. D11t Newly remodeled rm & M5-R56;979-337G ZBr,2 0.,denunfW"D•pt smlpetOK.l-82S-4818 38R,2ba,yrly$700
P'plc J Br 2 Ba bltns un· fncd yard. Newly painted blk t.o bch. Vacanl & re· rum 2Br, lba, aundeck. kit. ~ blk to bch. Util pd, wJpaUo. Mature •dwts STIPS TO IEACH
f\n.'bonua m' tncct'yct Inside SJ65 mo. Call adyS50(). Avail Marl $375/yrly Stove&refrig Shrbllb BRAND new bach. apta onl)'.Nopeg. Townhouses 3BR,2ba,unf.$425 ~ 1315 r '551 lOIO • Rualy, 549-1862 2Br. 2 ba East Ocean· Adlta, no pets'. G73-431M · Sl~mo. 673-lUl aft 3PM · Frplc. Refrlg. incl. S2l0 Mw lkd.-~ #2 Uke new 2 & J bdrm1. 3 BR, 2 ba, wntr S350 r . mo. · front2Br, 2ba, "50 yrly 6'5-825&or979·3376 275E.18tbSt. C.M. S32S & R r · 2 BR, 2 ba, wnlr $375
llodlm 3 br z ba r le •Brand new fenced 3 br. West Ocunrronl 38r, lc6oa....._.a 1707 SUSYrly2br,2ba,2storJ1 6ll-300l J 8 up.37 ecS ads. · ow 00 .... nra' :~ 2ba, cpt, frpcl, CJm.rm, 2ba, $700 yr ly ••••••••• .. •••••• .. •••• 2 car encl. gar .. balcony. JUSJ'Completed. Beaut. oan 46·1 l, on r a ctrpi 1115/mo MS accas t.o Jacmzi & pool. Turtleroc:k Clen. New Yrly 3 Br 2 Ba, w/fplc va· 642-1603 br apt. Freestandln Loft ldrwAlt _&46-__ 1452 ______ _
m..S.U Alt n0fee $450.mo.768-0647 . 3Br on be s t street cant. $47S mo. l blk to Br ~~· bltna. Many win llr 21awA..a u 2 Br bltns refrlg
' ' . 175()/mo lse. beb.213-332·3270aft8PM 2 l"' Ba Studio. S320 uuwt. $IS$. 645-8258 o ' 1-·· 1ar .• baicony, $1ns. 1 blk
3 br. abMed Jard, vacant. Greentree 3 Br. 2 ba Oceanfront sBr on Prime Yrly, mo. to mo. No pets m.33'18 lmmedlate occupancy. bch. 536_3947. 536-2??4 OnlJ SZ!lt. Fee houae. Lrg lot, cul-de· Penln Point Sl200 mo. Xtra l11e 2 br. 2 ba, ulil In· 97M878: 873-6880 Pvt paUo, gu frplc & • ~~~~~~~~~
Beacbcomber.t31·20ll uc:.S3llOJmo.f44-4648. yrly. cl. '32S. Wloter. 1115 W. Spa~l=Zoc:!~ 1 stove. full kttchen Incl. Bloclqo beach 1180. l br,I·
---------•Woodbridie Pia~ close W.,.. f; Giit HotMt Bel boa 962-0505 $210 Nke l br • res P br ~ refrtg. Pool & rec room l pet ok. Fee l Br 1 Be. Weatclllr area. 2+"~~?!11 _t.ol.ake. 3BR. 2 &. ram-Cal 631·1400 Newly rum. Sl8$. uua pd. ~=~~·ri:te!~tt~·v:. to~•coi1e';:.·Ac~.11 yr~y~,TA;JS1· Main Renta.ll.S40-uro =-.:.=r or pets.
•h•a. bllH; A trl um rm, dln·rm. Flblsbed Sin&les ok. Fee Balboa Penn. Mtt. ht. Ne kJds or peta. 283 Avocado C 111 l br, encl. aar. laundry ---------
pe&; el~ aarace opar Ma~h 15. Leue 9·12 MalnRentala.540-5370 C.-clllM• JI Fr.$210.M-0073 Mon·FrlS 'to7S>in rm. 2 blks from beach. 28r 10. frplc. Eastblulf.
cbild ()K\c view Mil ~.:00~/oPllon t.o buy. ~ba.v::: Portol~4 Coro9d .. Mw J722 •••••• .. ••• .. ••••••••• 3 BR. 2" BA Studio, els. Sat•C'1<M 960-1017 NB. AdlllLs. 801 Dom· ~~ P · mo mo tennis & c~d~~ ok'. ....................... lO tc:bls. 6 1bop'1. 645-0143 3 Br. 2\.'J a.. rp&c, dlft rpl, lnlo. 112-Q43/84-4·l6Sl
NOWAmMG! S595tmo.9fi0.5272. l Br Apt. 'BakoDy with mo.-.. . . 3 bllts bch. no pets. SS35 2br, newl.Y redecorated • ............. J24 28r,S32$-S425permo. new ol ocean 6 harbor. ..,. NEW 1.. l4e 2 br mttqe •• E-sule mo. wtr pd. Avall oow. all We kltchen Is bath.
-·•••••••••••••••••• JB1'.131S-tnSpermo. 38r,din rm,den,famrm, Utll furn. $245. 2500 ~ "'v ltore .. •~91~~ ~i::l;.be::mu. 968-0M2 pr,1M119towater . ..-.
Nu S bdrm 2 ba + bonus 4 Br. $MO-SSS per mo. f1rot.ur~~~%:t:tn°: SearieW lDCfAptll. fl i1:tr~.'. F~ 6 Nwpt Bfvd. • • . l Br. pets O.K. 3 blka lo mo. &42-$225or844).5eSO
rm, Twnh&o. 1~ ml frm 4 Br.pool,apa,S700. out, cul·de-aac •trHt, COINMet4t J724 S28Smo.Cal1Slcf8:» oceai>. 3218 JJtb Sl. 8210 s.a..."'' 3176 ::1~mo.Referencea I lteclitBeyAtea.64&-sa39 ....................... ~flONADBLMAR or~ eesla1l1rCo••0 mo . 213·411·5118 ; ..................... ..
Blufts condo-View. Lov· M0.00 wm & .,, 2 UC" Townhouse. rrplci. '8R down1tain. Wat.er " Towlln&M 7l4-981MUZ Near New 2 Br. Oen Vu, *· Zba. 2 ·~ twnble ely 3 br. l'Ai b• Trina •Sl\adio618RAptt ~·f:olS.j°'11•ocean ps paid, No children/• Rent tbla 2 atory 3 BR 2 Ba watt-In avail. Pvt deck. bltn.. ~.1~t ocatl~n. Model. Prof. decor. *'IVliM.aldServAvall a na ews. CIOM pttl.-1$48 TownhouH-privet cloaeia cllhWabr h'plc dlhwebr,refrft. -.,.us
• Avail. now. Lowoat •PhoneServ.Hldpool toahopplqAfloobtach. paUo-2 l>edrm-•II pvt .,.'tio Ownera apt' W.Canada,49::l-l98'7
'BR. newly uparaded. ..~ • pr1ced view. 644·SOtO 2376N=Blvd,CN MHlll 28fl,l&a.w;enclpatio• bllns-u• b•lb-alr Cloeo to .bet\. Children Apsfwtlh...,...W
C1o. to beacih. SQ!mo. a.ce.a......._ evea. 548· orl45-318T f:.?:1c:i.r,5sa,:it,~11~ =~ ~1:n~ "/p~l~>· OK. $37S. mo.192-G'745 .. .WW:J ... d 3'00
AtkforKetth.968·1317 111.zooo' Townhouso. Split •~vet : SUSCAMTAS ~ orea·~eve1wknda days~••· ...................... .
2.8r' as. Uparaded sp0Ue11 3 BR., 2 bu., Minutes to ND. l BR ~p~~ °1fr~ 8~·12.bJ !:" 1 br bllnl ~. THBEXCrrlNG
do'Meurlty wahr/dryr RAMhoS..J.JBr2BaSan carp,. drapes."blt·lna, furn. Adull11 no ~t1. l&(qe clOM1.o:.ior:-. m;.,•!fi""nopeg'.falk PALMMISAAPTS. tariahrec.53wtss ' Lui• ,Rey, solr crse t bdWd. nrs .. 3 car aar. 2l10Newport Bttd. CM. bAcb. ... TS pee-mo Ast toiboo"al. IUO&tl·l'M'f MlN'lrrESTONPT
N..r IJeU" Beach. .sbr + labva. '800. 541.7044 ~.f ~Jp~C:~~'t·v mJNNJNG lie l ~ trdn ror~~!.:...._· BCH.
bOn"8 room. Frl)k, cp TUrtJaocJt Glen Plan 2... $400. Rltr. 842,sm •ro· Poof• rec rm. mo. ~-..n.w.n.--.-.....; e.,::n:=:_R. •
drlle. '31S. lat• lat. 8r, Fam Rm, tenni~. 70W.l8lh&. C.11:751.Wfouppt. AduJts,NoPe'-...
... .,14, ~. pool • .x>.547-7°"4 T 0 ll Pll t ·-.... Zlr Z8'. 2ba W/fantaatJc "'· -$205. Ready 2/15/1 • 1MlM .. 0r. ry • • ..a a Y o ....-p.v.t.. fut ll. awl . Ml-Gaor169543 NEW l bl', bltna. trple, ~SBlka!utofNft'POr\
WUdlilltima MJ..$111 W•Adu.Jp? OasaU-.. Ad to b\11. sell Bltm, w/W, ~· AdlU. 9350 /wntr. $500/yrty, SIU. lltJ. ltttN WJa a pool,..,!~J.!.)'baJI, 1 ar. Bl d > eu.r;m orreDtaorn«biq. ~pcta.sza:s. Im ma:l5"7S..altA DlliPUCl&ClaillneclAd WutAdJWpT .. _ ~
associated
, • .J ) ,. f ~ '1 IJ f ,, • '"" ; . " ~ ' ..
f
1
Youn1 acUve prof ........ ._... '*"°°' 23 aeel1ng Hm lo find and lhate 2br •
'" Newport lkb. t'laJ, m... ev•
N£WPORT BEA CH1-=:--~~~~~-1
STORE
2IS.10 Avon St. •1mo
'Jtrr1WYM WJM77·T701
CANNERY VlLLAOE MOSQ.rr. m..o; M:dys 1·3:30
lo ati 11,_.. Typist
For pubUc accountln& otc. Oranae Co. Airport
'l
I
a.c. .....
endAdufta' a..... ......
Tep
Jul ... room
Dlweheque
Tumbllft9 .
Dence ExefCtM
""*8tComedy
CAU
FOR
FREE
BR09f\JRE
lpec:iel BalMt/fep Coniblnlldon Cle ....
' 2750 HARBOR BOULEVARD. SUITE 7·8
COLLEGE CENTER, COSTA MESA.CA 92626
Phone: 714-540-5953
·"
Y0G1\ . M~a Clel$n tll~ I :J
7:00.t.
"FOR HEAL TH ANO VITAllTY"
BONNIE HICKMAN
SCHOOL OF YOGA
Offering a total prOCJra• of
H atha Yoga. Thnl yoga . Y• cm
achieve healthier body and lniltd
by rellevlng anxiety, stress,
tension cmd faffc)ue. ·
675-6972
254 VICTORIA COSTA MESA
Sllort Term or Year Coorse
for Associate in Arts Degree
c:1nancing Available
200 Newpan Center Or.
Sulte200
Newpart Beach. Ca.
Phone 64C>-0500
PESIGl'I PLRZll OESIGtt Pl.RZA l>E51Gn PLRZA l>EstGn Pl.Rlfl
Free Organ lessons
F.or Beginners
& Intermediates
PRIVATE· PIANO
INSTRUCTIONS
By Teacher With 10
Years Experience.
~ HOME-<;osta Mesa
Also. Will Do Piano Accompanyirtg
r=or Soloist or Choral Groups
' Catt 642-4630 Evenings
I H~ CLASSES STARTING
MONTHLY
,......., ..... Wc:Hw c ........ WectfoR
Mfcrow•n Accnsorin
'\uni ti rally ne,.... e.-llmtllt•l"
We teadl every phase of MICROWAVE COOllNG
MH ts .• Fish .. Poultry •. Vegetables
Candy .• Party FOOds •• BBQ •• sauc,s
Baki ng .. Defrost •. Browni ng
Recipes •. Etc.
COMPLm 71/2 Hour
lWHkCCMW
Aft..-.ooes Ii ~"' !P ONLY$30
ENROLLMENT & INFORMATION
768-5011
2400 I Alcla Play, Wte 226
(Up1tafr1) MISSION VIEJO
I IOth's of alllhNo. of Ge.co
111.ANcla .. -.c.....
J'or t\atbet lnfonn.Uon tf1rardlnl =m•t o:. adverti.du lD th• J>e.ll1 PUol Sci and fu&.roc&Joa Direc:tory
CALL 642·5678, EXT. 325
•
Irvine College
of Business
••••P• .. •• 9ld Clllfld•~• .. ,_.s wttla • Wat .... Ml ,... ~At ......... c .......... ,.. .......... .-od lelt ..... ,..
__,tollaft. We'IW,ymtoglt...., TIM~cWceofc......t
SICUTAIY • l~ST
SllMOGliptlll • IOOIOCWa
G84aAL OFFICI ASSISTANT
~AL SflaAUIATIOM
TYPl*I; • SHOITHAM) lltUSM-UP
DAY AND EVBOMG PROGRAMS
A ,..... .ct cornet ...... ••II I 11-.I. loclltd Ill ...... of ttt.
M.wport-l"hle ...... mid ....... C .... L Jolt ,_ ..... ~•7 Mott c.taW,.t Ill .._last 15 w11ts o..-400 '""'"'" 1 haft ra ... sfe.d lrYllle 9' INlnleL c• MOW for lllCft W. llNlllOll cmc1 br:ocllmes.
1700 E. GADY AY.
SANTA ANA 92705 ,.....,_. ..., ... Dyw 14.J
556-8890
.-9
Newport Air Associates
Flight School & Flying Club
LEARN TO FLY
$650
tR11-lfit .......... ,
•
ART CLASSES * FAA APPROVED * c-w hM:IMtc
35 Hours flight ltme in Cessna 1so·s with 20
hours dual Instruction. Club membership. Free
dues. lnd1v1dual 1nstruchon. tailored to YOUR
ab1l1ty.
NEWPORT BEACH
Oft Painting Drawing
Chi .. e-Teees-Aclults
20 AIRCRAFT AVAii.AiLE AT
LOWEST RA TES IH ORAMGE COUNTY
LHrft to fly now - -and hon fwt!
• SpKlal Rates for Connercial or
lnstn.Meftt»*wh.
For COfftplet• Details Call HOW
979-1155 .
1971 I Airport Way So.th ........... , ....... .._ o,_,. C-'ty....,....
ADULTS-
PIANO LESSONS
FROM 9-2 .. .
Call Eleanor Baldwin
NaUonally Ce1:un~ Teacher
551-5332 "" .....
by ELLEN CREEi.MAN
Motecl Artist of the
Impressionist School
(9 .A. Univ. of Ariz. Post Grad)
Maintaining the same degree of
instruction from individual to group &
association classes.
For WorntatlOll c•
644-5485
• become confused easily
• daydream in school
• feet lost ...
• feel like a failure
• have poor grades
• learn slowly
'
WE SPECIALIZE IN 01SCOVERING
AND HANDLING THE BASIC
BARRIERS TO LEARNING.
~. '---( ;. . we can help
THE STUDENT
IMPROVEMENT CENTER
Cal I 901 Dover Orive
642-9088 NewPOrt Beach
19'\'M EOUUTfUAH CIN"n"
n.Eat~H ..... Cofofttdtt Mer, e.fff01'1161tltZ6
HalpW..eed noo •••••••••••••••••••••••
Clerical floJble ~ time, could
beeome full time. Ap·
Utude oumbera. typtna. f1Hn 1. Irvine area. 'ISi·dl&
CLl!U
BookkeeplAI Dept. 10
Key addtJ by touch. f /Hine. ,4pply, Pen·
rl)isaver, 1660 Placentia. C.M. 642.0SU.
CLERK for HB Drug st«e, P /time. min. age 24, eicper not necess,
841-2563
CLERKS
FILE CLERKS
SR. TYPISTS
REPRO TYPISTS
STAT TYPISTS
SECRETARIES
Long&Sbort
Term Assignments
VOLT
111. l\.U .. M•Al4 • •.1 11\lll t f,
3841 Campus Dr
546-4741
(Across From Orange Co. Airport)
Equa l Oppor Employer
CLERK TYPIST
Pos. req 's figure a P·
tilude, lite typing, min t
yr business exper. Night
shift 5pm·1: 30am. SSOO
per mo. XJnt working coods & co. benefits
w;growing financial
firm. Call alt Spm,
644-4360.
Cook full time, breakfast
,& lunch. Coffee Shop &
Dell. 842-1426
Count.rHtlp
l ,1AM·3PM. exper
help!Ul. appty-in person
only. 2233 Fairview Rd.
CM.
Count er Girl, P/Time Fast service sandwich
shop. Call blwn 8·3PM.
833-8919
DATA.ENTRY
OPERATOR
The Jolly Roger. Inc. is
taking applications for a
Data Entty Operator.
Min. of 1 yrs exper. on
the IBM 3741 or 3742 ls re-
quired. Permanent
C /time day shift. Pay will
be based on exper. level. Apply In person SAM·
SPM Monday thru Fri·
day, 1700 Gillette Ave,
Irvine. •
DEIURRIMG
Drill Press. Lite as·
sembly. F;x per. pref'd.
Hrs 7·3:30. 5574381.
DELIVERY /Phones
Part time. 20 hrs week
S3 hr. Ph 675-1105
Delivery man. early AM
Times route, Costa
Mesa. No collecting.
must have dependable
car. 546-4481.
DELIVERY MAN for ear· ly AM. LA Times, home
defivery route. Adults
on y. No soliciting; no
collecting. Must have
economical car. Good
supplementary income .
683-0126
DellYery jNewspopttr
Permanent part·lime joh
delivering early morning
LA Times to homes in Irvine/NB areas. Must
be reliable & have depen·
dable transportation.
Salary $.100 mo. 546-0235.
DENTALCHAIRSIDE
ASSISTANT
Part.time, 4 morns wk.
543.5504
Dent.al Recept, Ex~. X ·
Ray lie. req'd. Fln Vly
area. 968·1648
Dentlll Asst. exper. to fill chair side position in
busy 4 day wit practice.
XJnt bencCits & salar y await the, right in· dlvidual. Send resume to
Ad. No.697, Dally Pilot, '
P .O. Box 1560, Costa
Mesa, Ca. 92626
Dental Chairside Assis·
tant. Exp'd + X-ray he.
nee. 4 Day wk. Costa
Mesa. 546·3000.
Dental Assistant for ln· surance work & choir 11lde. Part lime. Ask ,for
M a.ry 645·4500
DENTAL ASSIST.
CHAI RSIO E·N. 8 . tx ·
per'd. S Day week, 8:30to
5:30. Pd vac & med In·
surance. S48·S002.
DENTAL Assistants, n, &
Pt time, busy H.B. pc-ac·
Uce, exp'd w /'ll.·raY ttc.
Outitandlng start • ~
tteneflts. 962· 7797 t
Defttal Ole. lteceptkinlst .•
exper1d. Solid oppor.
w /H.B. pvt practice.
Secre \arlal re11ponsl·
bUlties, Call 84.o:Q4.
X>ental FTont otflct
X·Ray experience. fion-
• tn o k er. Newport C:.ntet.833--1471,
IFYOU
haV••-lel'vin to offer.or aoodi LO .. u. piece ~ ad
fn : the OaHY p t\01.
C1UaUled Sectlon • . • ftione IG-5178.
17
,-~~' ... •oo_,~e:! ..... !!!! !!!t~~~.~ ..... !~~ ~~== .... ~! OM. y flll.OT 81 J
IMOAY CHAaM SQll'MY •
APF'y bt ,._, hit m Gitt Of~. Need ... w· _. ...... ft :
&a'*1or C.v. lla.p., • • t,....: O.f""ofc UNIQUE ANTtQU Bl~IOlat~ "'"'_.., ,
KO·a.,.._ Aft. N.B. 4MM tor 1m1ll eltc CKUltCK P,BW. I> ea =•· n.J TOP CJ\Sli DOLLAR ~~. ~t.s.~ary ror PTYIM?;etl :S .. me.:~:~ PAID l'OR YO~ ~~.:0~,r.: ~.t.~ "arm!~ ~ •J::· ~J ... ----. French Armolr• sus. :: ~· ta:J:· •t" uo· ~~~~Lo.·
Hnlce. M /F. Full abllti. San Clemente SICllfAIY ~f:':e~~!.~'515. •I.II a. ""Pl'· Sit.VER SIRVlCE
PAlaMNMlN General Ha.pitat C714 > Fash laJ ~1 serv SECIEJAllES 1140. OaJt Gatel•a tb f18::1~o~abl:~ FINS PURN. • AN:
-t::ltctrcate tntl R 1---.1122ExtZl4 ~0o~"'S-:n~~ .1220. Secy M21. P .P bookcase, barrel or nQUES.14S-210e D*hS~.::;n_ln OwwY ... Oww ROBBJE-iRAGn'MOP Dr.N.8.sutteioo TIJ,..SJS 8*8le9. wtnad·bac~ cl\alnt1nm; LUCiGAGITAGS
•trumeot mri r11G'S ' ........ _, t•a , .. ..,.... Mature women needed --• --In PalnlltVamlahl'.'emoval. ::.~· ~e;p ona ™*~butwcard.
cn.tl¥itdaap Noap~d.Ml'llwbik StnlM"CQef*ofcar· for houaec leanln1 S.C.ltrOfflcer STAT TYPISTS alloc:om~ntlinlabln&by · Send one card ror each W/ID~t potea J'OU._,., 10Ul'PN-'-I t0r ole8Nnt Mml· M'Vtee. Gate Pll'ICJMtl, varied expert.a. Low prices fl Full slae bed, mirror. t.aa plus one spare. Wt
"81. • aval MlllJobwb!M lnvatid. Cook. llt.ehtwrk. ~ ahlfll. Mu.t be alert. Ulf' I & II lmmed •trvlce. Day, bdbrd, new mau. Ir box return permanenttz tor a 6; D ~h. r.-11111• • i:e Uve in nice atmocpba-e. -nMt fa QSalure. a.tired """' 752-5858. Evea.8'75-30IM aprinp.M8-8llQI -.Jed •ttT&cUve tai ~ c.or,. ....... ... 5G-OOIT SA!!.M•._.s we le o aa •. A pp I y , CLOIS 1trap, meeUn1 alrDne • ~etle'people\:nob lda..I 112-1147 Full·Ume,SG~ Newport Duon, 1131 .... •n• ........ II l.D. ttqldrem~. Pl'e· C ...... --1.....&. I'-•••""'·DR-SHOP, B•et Bay Orlve, Da)'·W•·Montb ••••••••••••••••••~••• -10 vent lou •tbeftl For-a _, --,_ ,.,. MllS8~ __._ .E.oi> Ne 1Bt•..., Orliont REFRIGERATORS •M••••.••••••H•H••••• penonaliMd ta& encloM ~uw.l5Mil'fl WculwOet'J B' l!:JrDiw'I. f/tlme. Mature Mature atrl. ZS-IS for~PllF = tt'1Youri>ec-r..c,n WASHERS-DRYERS f'REE GARAGE SALE wallpaper, fabric or
.: ISCaOW MAMAGM :::~ tv.~~ male. QVer 21. fl Daya ln·= womens ...... ~ Jrbopa p·/W~· . s.e~ ~ired pro!~~~ YOU DOWr PAY ReconcUUona-Repn>9 ac SIGNS. Call Century 21 :.~y 012" ~~ 6: we C llf clwll "' Sat/&ln Work . ........ ... .-,,-..aameto~ WIP•YYOUI Frgtl>am•-.Guar/Del. We1tcliff Realty Co. W141 bac ... w•ID your • ornl1 Eaerow dependant deei1net. n. · nnH.8. s-aeann1. May haw .,,. -v 161221 tap. Or try two cards
Ml"\'lce bu lmmed Cl auu ottered . •/lll&Dtllttrees. ts Hr C.AttK ou&lidt Job. 8omt cook· CallorComelnToday 29Yraln0t~Co. b9cktoback. '°' lll~row II~. n4-731-4W ~?~eA~:!ce!::i •--,.. hta * r.. eacts tor room IE~ DUMLAP"S Kil ranie. refri~ rdwd PlUCES: ~ .. ~~CTOWn' EIUOR Plant Main· -..1at Laguna Hills ._.."°''"~°"· •'boerdoraal.at7 Wrtw 1811Newport8l.CM peUofurn,bvydUt7,tbU aeacr3/'5 • ..,. ... _ , .. ~ ,...,.. lnc El T du dHt. ?UUo~al Owified ad no. ao e/Cl CALLS.-'7'780 benches, 2 chra, rod col 4/St,apll.eoea. ~.be a eett .. tarter. Ad tenance. Mu•t be ex· S::::..· · oro. Ot'faQl1atlon. North ~ PUot. PO Box iseo •• •. i;~11o44•1a tbl. blender, wet ault. l/l"-11 Sl .. .50ea. ~ detalla Barbar per'd. Pbooe4M-089. E .. t Anabelm. Xlnt eo.taar .... eaasa. ' •r ~kl':o am~~ 2·3/4 beds w/aprd1 A 10ormore$1.40ea.
llalaaraJ.JOU Janltoral Wor-. N.B. MUISISA.IDI company beaetlta. EOE ASALIS-.sae abeeta. BBQ, rcto mwr, SU.Tulndllded
Pait Food Service le u Need exper'd cpl. Ap. 1....aliia. £aper. pref'd. T1U»l400 ~cl. ~it ~tendp/\i:!· ~ :Z~i l9IM Amok1 NO CARD? ~ appljcatJons f, proa 4 bn eves.~. lieu \'erdeCc.Y. lbp., SALESLADY ror ex-~.::iy Atto Station lnh TYPIST Kenmare Gu Dryer 985. ve. · Draw )'Om' OWll or e..t day1 , nlfbt• 6: 1rav ISCIOmo.213192'1.0W tllc.&erSt. CM ctuaive ehlldreftl •tol'e ~ • lfyou can type 50 wpm I Wslogbte Gu Dryer name. addreu. pboee •
yarck. Apply at Nau11ea.j · · So. Coat Plua., uper 6 Irvine. C.11. wtll pay YoU to learn $75, Frl1ldalre Elec "°"" 8060 we'U make one cud per
11401 Brook.hunt, Hunt K.EYPUNat LUV'>.~~SISt.,..••. only, 59«5115 S.nlce Station Allen· compu&erlaed J.hoto Dryer $3.5, Whirlpool -••••••••••• ... ••••• tq. Add25' eacb. llllal~ lkb. DA•• -y •n • ,,_.., dant. Hper'd. Day .\ ~1tUlq, Art rU'flll, Wuber $85, Kenmore Fantutlc Appy. Geld. Send~ or money OI'·
tA .. '" NU1'1111S • ~~~ Evee. PUU & pJ\lme. Ap-~poalq Room, wuber-5. Pbs..es72 Prof. trained. Spriled. derto. i P~IOOUIB'IR 1 OPaATotl -~v:.~~l...;_ bU.ery, · ply,SbeUStatlon.17tb& Kenmore Waeber $65 • .-0.~ PU..OTPllMn• ,1. Newport Center> The Jolly Ropr, Inc. Ls ~~ ~ '-V ~. Irvine.NB. TYPIST-Accurate for J)ryer"5 cu GoodCOG:-P.0 .BoataeO 1'n T. Bel. 6 P'lunclal tating appllcatJoas for a 1655Suipedor-Aw. N.B. monp,. banking ftrm dldoo. (ib ~ Qtr type llOrT'el ,.adlq, C... ar.a. Ca. lmS
amt&. l:qiw'donlyneed Data Eatry Oper.ator. ~M6-T11C &nice Sta. Help P'ull or In Newport Financial . gentle. xlnt trail or...._ ... _. ...__ • ..._ lL.,
•1 apsily, ..... Alt for Min of J )'T'l Upel'. oa the .,.._<R_ A.IDIS SALES ptt.hne. Appty, 990 E. Ctr. Exper'd 00 IBM ex· 11 cu fl rtfrig, copper p&euure. Sl()O. 581-&528 ~ .... uer, -.,. net
Ju. IBM 3741 er 3742 Is re· .._._., CoMtHwy,N.B. ec typewriter Send re-bruu:e 1115.Callbetw-. cl beer, new cood. GOO. ----quired. Permanent All •bifta. E:llper. pre('d. Multi-Million SS Corp. le SH AR p • FAST sume & salary . ....,...d to JZ,.4pm·~ .__._. 8070 m.me.CallaftllAll. fltimeday shift. Pay will Apply in penon, Park atamq new office in -~... ---.,
P' .. Pakl/AlaoFeeltbe bebasedonexper.!evel. Superior Conv. Hosp, Irvine. We need en-SECRETARYtrYPIST. Claaalfledadno.819,cto Allctlolt 8011 ••••••••••••••••••••••• CUSTOM Bkk~tConstnac. 9800+ A'liply ~raon 8AM-14'5 Superior Ave. NB. thualaallc. co•ltlve For design rlrm. call Daily Pilot, PO Box 1S60 ....................... WA~ED "'-~-•Card to-,._,.,.,,. l d d t l Dt.elle644-l000 CclstaMeu,Ca92826. "1 WOVEN WOODS •Jt-, .. _ •• 5 M M . tbru Fri· ....... _ m n 8 peop e o n-EST'•'JES•LI TOP CASH DOLLAR
S«Tetary tolll2S day 170'2 Gillette Ave troduceanlnexpensive& <R~ u.u TYJUl-Oeneral fc wok "' "' 50%TOIO~OFF G.0. /Accountlng to fl lrvlM ' 2 19'76 Olympians, need nationally known pro---• M ""' phone 0 r • 1029 w. Carlton Pl PA f D F 0 R Y 0 U R Over 40 in·atoclc pauern.s
Irvine Penonnel Agency · aponaorabip for 1980 ducL Pleuant surround-MIC*MIC 546-0taJ & variety. Call Santa Ana (off Baker, JEWELRY. WATCHFS, AlaoMINJ-Blinda
· e81!ll7thCoetaMesa Moscow Qlympica. Tax ina• In a relaxed al· Mln.Synexper operat-· nexitoBriatol). ART OBJECTS. GOLD. M5.a950 83J.mO
SUiteZM 642-1470 •&al Sec'ty-Recept. deductible.487-3158 moephere. Available hrs ing abear brake & strip-T-&.&~._.. Febl/9,110 SILVER SERVICE,1--------
c.ompeiUmt-exp tor busy 3 30-9 30PM XI t d ~ 'd. Sal ,.,,_., _ _.. ""' . G "-'-s·ao FINE FURN & AN · FUm, hsehold items. ~~!!!111!!!-..-~-!!11111!!!---~•ll!!~~!!ll.-11!!~~!!11•11!_._~,I • OPPOITUNITY : : • o • . )'"• req ary com-A Laguna Nl1uel ore. &,me. arage._._., . nQUES.~2200 ty~,addmach, ---------t trial lawyer-varied prac-v a n c e m e n t o p · mensurate wtth educa· TeJextrwx & fillnl Llaht Howie Sale: 9 A.JI.
lice. Mr. Stewart. S501nfreeCJotbeeor$2S portunWea. Uon&exper.Xlotbealth t.nJ'ng. Salary baaed 00 ~ ...... Goet!! "'Carat, xlnt quality ecabnt,refria.
&M-N.50 in cuh. Ju•l rerer a CALLNOW! & educatiooal benefits. aaP.lh.M.4111-1.880 M-...i... table 4' 4 ...A.-1-diamond weddinc rinl Call675-1203. A NANCE
SECRETARY friend or nel1hbor to ----""'···-Co p 1006 w -......... UGAL TIA.IN& ......._or___.. ru..... r ·• · -OJb' TV. MaPie bUl.ch, set. White gokl, oranae EAITHWOIMSALI
For Newport Ctr LH ~-=~~}:!.i!~~ AatForJenniter Hoover Ave, Orang•. Usec1Ccrti'9ch le maple twin hilla:poat blOll&Om aettinl. •lie 7, FORGARDENS. Lett.be
llnmediate openiq for Firm. Beclnnina Feb _lnf_o._1163-_·1_470_. ____ 1 us1::mrNC. G-18U. Bdrnuet. F.dilontalklftl $350. Call after 8, worm be1pyou cuWvate.
MCnUlr)' w/miD i yn 21.t.Cal1'7S&-OW.. --.__, F.qualOppEmplyrmlf VAllTIMll'YIS • E x~DLH~E NT :.u~.=:tt:. Um-•~ IOfS-1ooororM. 3000-SlO. Also aper. Heavy atatlaUcal ---~•-•• I~~~~~~~~~ Jt'slotaoffun&yoocan WORKING Bra --.-worm caatlnaa. B'S lJPinilrpublJc~tact. ~~~.Lx1ni~.!!!'!:~ Localbnsl,...maalook· earn•mormoreln2 CONDITlONS •:;oijEANTIQUES ....................... Worm Farm, 11382
ExceOenteo.beneflta for;....oP.*:-:OMag ~.~1a:z:t0 =:: i~¥f~ER~~~v~~~:i orleYeaperwt.Noexp •PRJNGES te.elMOLAMD MorpJlmare,broh Gotbard,HB.M1~1'1
C•644-3319 II typewriter In N.8 . P/timebutsm-4788 ui nee. We educate you to Jlustbaveowntoola to ride as drive, bile llecbanlc's chest lockina
IAM 't11 NOON eatate planning cor-eq pm~ CIOGduet style abowa for Ask ror: 8020 parade Morgan &ekllq. I-drawer Waterloo In·
Til!:IRVINECO. pocatelawpractlce.Mag PEOPLEPERSON •----~°:1tn~:::~t~~l TwryEdwards ....................... Eng. Western <714> dudln& 4" roller ptat-
SSONewpottCtrDr II exper. pref'd, but will Exec needs pJtlme U · SALIS havecar&pbone. For in-e new Hurry men's 10 338-1011 form. ~ .. ratchet. Equ~= t!~~oyer train. Call <n4> 833-9983. ~~~=-~~:'in Fu_, I· ~~peoplble Vlalooe wllalllnh~rlntotog troductory interview call :J"y~~· ~9381 aft Mad±:• y 1078 :f8!:• ~nJU::d Slti;>Sx ---------it.et us help you build a ..... knds 9113-7470. ••••••••••••••••••••••• • c. o . . Bus or your own. WOl"k •venlap & w 8040 LATHE 21" Mort11tekl Callalter2 p.m.6Sl·208'7 ..,'LL TIME L dy tor In the Mission Vlejo -"'CHER
r u a Husband & Wife can are a . ch a n n e I 1 '~ •M•••••••••••••••••••• $12,000 or reot for 1393 3 way mirror. full 1lze. Women's Apparel shop work together. Outstnd PHONE SALES SHOWTIME ·MOVIE Temporary Elem. LOO ham p 1 on AK C mo.CaU981M69ev•. Ideal for me n 's or
in Lagun• Bch. 49HIO~ income pou. Will train, PAK Call 493-28S7 Equal requires specialist learn-Doberm•n Pups. Great ....._.
1
.,_
8
-
010
women'• store. 70 yds dlx
'-&l'L OFC to $750 M2-0843 Phone Sales people n--E n1..... ing handicapped creden· temperment. show quail----cnt'g, must sell. M2·7288 w ---------• --• f al 16 to.,. "'~ m..v• tial. Submit letter of ap-tu. *'10. 751.-. C.M. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..;;s:..:. ----.,~ ..... -..... _ lo •• ..,.,. LO• .... SERVICE UJAle or em e, "" pli ti •-"" .. -n..-. _. f It I ~ ...... ,~. .,_,., """ yearsolage. Guaranteed SEAMSTRESSES ca on. resume"' con· UTOTEM ---Udo Village Coin N.B. """""uor urn ure, 11 ·or T>:Jl990Accurately For mort1age loan wages or commissions. "'111-Ume fl42-M56 Cldentlal placement me RETAJLCLERKS Paya ~la for Mu. let.I. Color TV tBO. Refrig EmptoyersPayAllFees broker firm near Fuh 250 East 17th Street, to : Personnel Ofc, Wanted. Opportunities Goid,Jewelry,885-UIOO S70.&48-d55
UaRelndenAgency ion Isl. Some exper re-Suite O, Coeta Meea,I•-------• Laguna Beacb Unirted for advancement avail. -Bo I th 1"1 .. 402081rchSt Stel04 'd c II tor appt ..._._. s 00 .. 8 -sacan••y School Dist., 550 Blu-0.--IRn• .___ ________ Wshr/dryr $50 ea. 2 end YI c 0 es, H V" ... Ne•r,:~ Beach m.81110 q · a · .-ween : • =-p.m. . -mom. Laguna Beach, Ca ~~~m.lGn ardCosetan GMroesvae. orltle pups, champion tbls, wardrobe. desk, m~e lier table, pot '*1y Cal ··or A~ """"•·b_.... ~-ll46-4ZZ3 Hunt. Bcb Branch "'......,' .1-..1 male le f Will t 11 I d ,, ~,~ ... ..., Equal()pportunlty •Flill·nDM 921S5L &Westminster. ._...., e em. Ebony console TV, a ove, . ae rp1 "'-al c w h H I LYM J.t I Employer •Good"""""'... ------,,,_,.2•7702 be ready for ValeoUoe's 548-8213 75WJdl!SL. 531-5258. ......-ar u e p. Full Is P /time. Team •ri.........:.!!:::'• Telepbone Sales People, 1----------day. 962-8'Tl7 Apply Blrch A Dove Leader. lleH Verde •~e"p~~d (3) posiUooa. PAime & Practically n• Sear'•
• SU..U, Newport Beach. Con v. Hospital, Hl 1---------......, .. F Jtime shifts avail New Veta"8ey Hosp. pups, yellow. AKC. WANT SERVEL GAS wateuoft.ener. Make cl-•
Apply an penoo T Recept. Ir Gen'I Oft: champ. lines. maJes & REFRIG fa-. Pb. 963.5197 ...._... OIRCE CellterSt. CK. se-S58:5 Pit Sale9, ~ wk up. Penonnel Office & repeat orders. op Work. 38&8 E . Coast fem'1. P'1t pty. 968-QJ72 fl46..5076 I t t ' Ill Meo. ladlea, etudenla. ....,.... .,....ST .. TE pey.~. u-.. ,........ Jr. or sm. adult whl. n •res •n1 poa on MA.ID, pJtlme J daJS per Eves/Sat. 554·7851, ___.. .,,. .... ,,...u. C Golden Retn·ever ____ A .. &,~ FA'"'-• ·"enew anawennc student '!'· week. Call ~7445, or __ IAMI TB.LB UIAU· ~ • ..-•
quiries by mall. Req 1 aPlllY at Sea Lark l&Altel, ,_-_._, __ . -----umos. Paramount Bl E1tper.. full time. VetwfewtY Assist. IPupetps, ~~~t:SU:~-Cir tv 7.enith Poft .• w/stnd, SlOO S46-T848
rmture Judcement. ~ood z:li4 Npt Bl, Cll. Dowoey,Ca llOXl Pa....._. Fedttal Sav-Eves & Wknd Hn. Apply Y , .. w uva-play-; gd SJ 2!l Port t v
memory, detail ability.-----------R£CEPJ10NIST (21J)~ iDI•. Irvine office. ln penon. I?over Shorea AKC Samoyed puppy, B&WS32.646·1525.
typ1n1 4S+ wpm . llAIDSWANTED EqualOppEmplyrm f SSl-OlllEOEM-F Vet Hospital. 20301 male. 8 wits, xlnt CARPET.NEW106yards SCRAM-lEJS Cuatomu aerva~ back· Topw~espaid! Tbelnn Xlnt pogilioo for indlv. ~~~~-~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I lrvuie Ave, Santa Ana pedigree $175 m'2934 brown 1 hort ha cround v.-y helpful. Ap-at Laguna, 211 N. Coast w / g 0 0 d t y p I n g -Heights. ' . I fr1 on~ I f· Hl~s
ply Nataooal Systems Hwy . Lag. Bch. lll:ills-&-70 wpm. Xlnt S.Crelary & a11l1t. to THI IEST A. Teacup Poodle 12wka Sacr ce. ust ire I . ~Ria
Corp .. on Birch Sl. N B. benefit pkg. Sal flOO+ pres. ror small manur. PHOME JOIS Wa.ltreu Food Cocktails. old champagne color all _67_~_5006 _______ 1 Mocker.· lMse <Nr. O.C. Airport>. MAJUMG DIP'r. Sb lOO t 70 Tri Apply al\ 4pm. Sid's Blue shots 673-2430 n-.. "-" l80 0 _.. I I Realm .. fofed TRAINEE co. ' ype . m IM CAUF. Beet. l07 21at Pl. N. 8. . vaa .....,,.,.., • -aw ve COMM BRCIALS GORDON'S J•welers PoaiUoM nall for both nn-SECRETARY e:ireonal appeara~ce . WeHaveAll'l'hese: to You 8045 cha.Ir. MS. Oak straight Years aao theJ used I~
wanta P/\lme. rnendly male• fem. applicants. IA'll. Ill req. travel nf. Loogl>istaMeLlnes WAITRESS&otherdutlea ••••••••••••••••••••••• back chairs, 12(). Oak to m&lce ~·Now they
aalea oriented . 8-ymalldep&.. various SecytoPrel.olexpand· Salary open. Ca I lndlvldualDesks forOrlctnalPlua.NwptBe ur I d r claearoom desk. SU. useattomakeaoapCOM· Cubier!Credlt Clerk. dutm. sa.14p_.'br. Good ing lrv1De localed firm. 642-7840. Hou.rl)'Wages Bch. $2.50hr +Ups. Call au u spaye em
1
....:..646-..;;...;;.M9.:.;;..:..1 ______
1
MERCIALS.
WUliq to work evea t.. benefits. AR..>.v NaUonal Sb 100, t~a 85+. Xlnt Bon~mlaalons 67:H451 Golden Lab to lllnt home J lli;=;~::i;:;~:;;~;i;:ii;:r;::~;;;~~~~i;iil .__.,._ Co be -nla 6 .,.....,. ..__, .. _ -+ SICRITARY Na'"--al n-...auct only. 540-0583 •·-· · n .. 11 Systems Corp., 4361 -..-. ·....., · uuu .-rvu w~-,.. _ _._
dl1counta. Apply In Birch St. Newport ~ ~~ ToSdesM•ll'f Fully pa.Id training lllllTwa--Female St. Bemard. Lov·
penon. 280 Weetmlnater Beach . <Nr. O .C . ' ~ P/timeevea3:30-9:30pm So. Laguna. P lime & es kids. Needs good llall. Wmmlnlter. ~). Im med. opening. Top Student.a. Housewives & Flllme. Cocree shop exp, home536-9844 ~ t)1lb'I( & sh eq'd M·l-M--Ugbte find I Ref1 please. Charlie's ---------• Oovernaa1Houaekeeper. llAlNTENANCEllAN ''Y'ilROMA 'iOCIAl(<i electrOQJcs ~. 0loc;t;;'d 1<1e7"Jo1Ho':myou.t an 01ill,Ofc 714;549-0351 LAB Golien. "LIJc1ty'· 1l
lia.htror21lrla.a1"1l P/Ume. Apply tn penoo. '•H•tatAglttcr near O.C Arr port &3H095or833-8098 WAJTRESSES Months old. Loves ever·
14LDN.B.XlnloPpor.ror Ala Baba Motel. 2i50 37Z381rcbSl,N.B Previoussaleaofcexper. ContactJennifer Lun c h 11 .3 lncld yone.673-0653. fAorf:'!mercan'tcm~lt bateavcehe,er_. Nwpl. Blvd. ea.ta lleu 557-4045 pft{Uon 't ~~tsco .. "!peEqnsuaa·I TUIEIJFE k d E ... --• .,.,..a, ...... LlBRARJES,INC. ;,e;:r;'!:, s. xper nee. Darling 4 mos old
ft u n • I ate re 1 t n MAT U R E WO MA N 1~ Employer ()ppor. Employer Equal Opp Emplyr m/f · Shep/Lab Mix female.
dlddren,en,oyspomac. p/llme to welcome~~~~Retalned~~~~~I Ci!lBecky M0-7311 WAREHOUSE ~ .. Jondaft
7
.home-Free. llvitles • have an In-newcome~ A contactr: --------....-..-
ttftlt 10 the uta. 4 yr merchants. F1exible hn. llC8'1'10MIST SICalTARY·SAUS Typesetter for public•· ~~~~k~~~=~ BlackLabMale9moe. de1ree pre f·d. Mua Need car. lite typlna. Fash lal. P1nanclal Serv. Uoos. AttU.racy & exper
9
68-0
604 drive; car la provlded. S47-la. ftrm Recept!Sec f Jmme d . opening. on Pboto·typesettlng toSpm.
Should t>to rtulble re· desk. E Re/· ~t Secretarial dutiea . equip, Full time steady e need people sharp & Blue Korat Burmese Cat
lardlna wknds Lovely Maturewomantocarefor Ty~ .:':;m. ~~~ Heavy cuatomercontact. employment. <714> neat,tomakethe1rlivlna Affectionate nature. hse :::.~·.~:~rd. =!~ditl~~i. ~~~ Mipel Dr, N.B. Sult• ~ 60-10. M-r-e~':c; _~_._5088 _______ , on their feet. worktnc catonJy.631.211&4
Send res ume to: M. have CaUf. Drive Uc. • 200. tro ca0 corp. oca outside door to door, the
"-1-. PO Box l"'" .. 7, loc ref1. Hunt. Hbr. Call our .C . Airport. TYPIST job la fwi U)e money's ........ 8050 """""' "'' ...,. • 0 M F 0·~...;i....1-•1typ111l Previous aalea ofc exper. • .. - A au-r wage •· lrvtaeCal27U. C:Zl3) 77v·483 • . '""-~r--TECHNICAL ...... ....-• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------1 l" • 30 Front ofc Jlrl for NpBch pref'd. Good compensa. bonus too. total income ia
,,.....'. de. 60 wpm minimum A Uon & xlnl benefits. An up to you. rr Iota of cuh --------•I GUARDS MICHAMICS MUST. Various o fc Equal()pPQr.Employer. TYPIST alvel)'()Ualhrill.callua
NallonMde co. T~f!Y Recent eq>er. Apply dullea. Exper req·d. 0.11 Becky 5'G-73ll up and ask for Phll ·<2~> 66-~tol artaned.ie Shell Station, 17th & M4-5080m for Mary S"'"'RETARY Challen"· Typist for t~bnlcal & 751·5'11 I_.. N .,. Be"' ""' • staUsllcal documents.•--------interview in your area .... ne, w..,.. n. Reciepttoni9'. Sa lea & Ing bard worklnl ofc. Must type 65 wpm. will WHOLESALE FLORIST
Secretartal openings In Send your beat written tralnoowork proeeulng Drtver-Salespenon GUAIDS MEDICAL ASSISTANT Onnae Count¥'• larrr:t reply to Collins Aa · equip. Proficiency ln 548-1960 8·5 CostaMeM HunUngton Beach Phyal-a&hlet.l~ dub. Good rs, social.ea 561 San Nicolas grammar req'd. For.._ 11 II
Pwmanent. ~II & Part-dan. Reply clustned ad frinJ!beoefits. 7~ Dr., Nwpt. lkh. apptrontact. -c-•-•
time. Phone & tran.p r•· #1111 Dally Pilot, P .O l.iiiiiiiiiiiiiii:i;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;~j George Taylor ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• q'd. Retired wetcomei. Box 15e0, O.ta Mesa, R.E.SALES VCO .Mfl•H · 8005 Cal1~4.ofchrs10..a. Ca.821S26. DON TYLER It AS· Toplaceyourmessage A ...... •••••••••••••••••
OOMCIWednad1y M-tc•• SOCIATES REALTORS, befonathe f.iMaclal Senk:n Ul.--:;.;...a-.a..-....a
s.v -basPGSltlona~tor ex-....t•--bU , ... ,. ••oo "~ HAl&STYUST TIAMSCllla perltnted hall time re-..pu c, _._ ~ ODl.Y the belt Daytime bra. Exper'd salespersons lntere1ted orPUot Equal Oppor Employer
Med lll)l)ly w /foUowln.c only nffd apply. San I a e • t a b 11 1 h I a g Y
oref'd. Xlot oppor. H.8 . Clemeate Ge Der al themselves la ule• 4c 0 •utl\ed,IC-M78 ., .......... ~ HoepltaJ, 714 /ut·Wl, rell&aJI oo Balboa lat 6 ________ 1_-_._ ___ C_al_l &U_·-.5878._1 Ham:l1man ror landlca m 2'11. Harbor Ate.a.
me. bid& • re pain. w8i Mm. perm., p/Ume ror '1--11 ...... • \taia.M7~7ao LA Tbna bomedeUvW7 ' _. -.
Help Wanted Male • la Newport 6 Costa •
.r.cD. Over 18. Apply ln ...... Mutl ban~ .M•.o;
,...., It.turn f'rted ~ car • be ..euaba..
-Qlct.a, t..aiuna beach. _;sm_to~SllO_mo. __ 1e1._11_40_.~;;;;;;;;;·~~-
Steepen from $165
Ind Ctn IOI a· love USO
Naua. recllnen '145 Wood Game aeta $385
MUCH MOR& AT THE
FURNlTURE
CONNSCTION
73S1 Hell. Ste L, KB
CaUIM2·1.M
This Valentine's Day tend your love
a greeting all the wortd can lhate
wtth a Daily Pilot Heart of L<:Ne.
It's easy, comPOSe your P8f"I0081imd
greeting & we·u set your message in
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°' your own handwl1tten thoughta
may appear in the border YoU seted.
Bo."'ders come In 3 Sizes: $15. $8, & a
special chlld's size for $2. (You must
be under 12 to Qualify fOfthia one). If
you wish to create your o wn
greeting, use a black pen & write
yoor message in the heart below°'
draw yaur own Valentine of this lfze.
For help with your acs. Just caU
&42·5878 & a friendly Valentine
'act-Yiser will be h8f>P'I to asllt ~And. if YoO like. vou con charge vour
Valentine ad or use yoor Mamtr
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DA I LY ·:PIL"OT . . . .. .,
'73 Encinada 20. Trlr. Mtot * Sde
bead, 5.50/B & xtras. ••••••••••••••••••••••• =~ l(UJ u~::.. ~:u. 9520 aaoo. . e n ........................ .
Pb640-Ml9 London Taxi 'S7 AllStin, 3
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knot,· falbometer, furl business 10 yrs. $3500. or jib, dsl. 125,900. 997-8062 ofr. 873-Dn
~-~~~~~~-·
ERICKSON 21, inboard, '53 BENTLEY R·type.
clean-& well equipped, RHD. Snrf, 2 tone silver,
$14.000. 55M'846 Pvl pty 846-3848
32' Sloop
P.C. cllW $4.500.
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17
'Bundngton Beaeb-
Fountain Valley
. . ·. EDITtON
I
. ..
=--4@L .-. ....
,VOL 701 NO. 39, 2 SEcTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1971
!~County School Districts
•
€001 PoolS
B1 MICllAEL PASBEVICH OftMo.ll'y,..... ... H
School officials along the
Oranie Coast are turning down
tbe beat in swimming pools as
low as 68 degrees in an effort to
conserve natural gas.
Altbougb there has been no of·
ficial mandate from the stale
Public Utilities Commission,
most school districts have cooled
off pools to 71 degrees. a move
some belleve endangers the up--
coming high school swim season.
"I can't understand it. I think
everyone is panicking and they
should wait unW there is a man·
date," said Guy Barn.lcoat, a Mis-
sion Viejo resident and member
of several Amatuer Athletic
Union <MU> swimming commit-
tees.
He contended swim clubs In the
east are keeping temperatures
.. at full blast0 and have no inten-
tion of cuWna back on the use of natural p,s.
Dean Crowley, administrative
assistant for the California In·
terscholastic Federation (CIF),
Southern Section, the governing
body for 400-plus Southern
California hlgb school athletic
programs. agreed with
Bamicoat's claims.
He said the CIF is leaving the
Wheels Spin
Skateboard Park Talks Stall
By ROBERT BARKE&
• Of Ille o.lty ll'llot S~ft
Plans to develop the first
skateboard park in the city were
debated Monday night before a
full house at lhe Huntington
Beach City Council meeting.
Arter lengthy testimony from
well-mannered young people and
older homeowners. the council
members spun-their wheels when
it came time for a decision and
asked for additional studies on
the effects of increased traffic,
noise and night lighting.
Dennis Vinciguerra, a 2<>-year·
Romance Over
Fiance Departs With Ring
HACKENSACK, N.J . (AP )-A Fair Lawn woman
has filed suit to regain a $3,000 diamond engagement
ring she claims her fiance slipped off her finger while
she slept.
Randy Berniker said four days before she was to
marry Jay Cohen, a Clifton stockbroker, he canceled
their engagement and took the ring without her
permission, according to court papers filed here Mon-
day.
On Nov. 7, she was watching television at
her home with Cohen. her attorney Leonard Miller
said .
"She fell asleep, then woke up as there was a tug .
on her finger. The next thing she knew, Cobell was
walking out the door with the ring and his explanation ·
at the time was the statement, 'I'm not ready'."
Miller said.
Miss Bemiker also is seeking repayment of $700
she claims was deposited with a travel agent for the
couple's honeymoon. $500 she deposited on furniture
and $200 for her wedding gown. She also asked
punitive damages.
Pre.school Controversy
old Huntington Beach busi-nessman, is seeking approval to
build the park on Beach
Boulevard. north of Hamilton
Street.
His plan was wholeheartedly
supported by the younger set in
the audience. A petition said to
be bearing more than 3,000
signatures was presented in sup.
port of the l lh-acre development;,.
But a sizable number of res}.
dents protested the park develop-
ment, citing potential harmful
effects that it would bring to the
neighborhood in the south central
partofthecitv.
The park could accom-
modate 150 skateboarders at one
time. It would operate from 9
a.m. to 10 p.m. Admission would
be Sl .25 per hour. •
Vinciguerra said he plans to
develop a nursery on part of the
project "to cover myself" if
things don't work out.
If the park failed, he said, he
could bulldoze it for $300.
The facility would consist or
mounded areas with concrete
pathways or runs on which
skateboarders would ride.
A conditional use permit w as
previously denied on a 4-3 vote by
the planning commission.
The majority of the com-
mjssioners said the park would
have a detrimental impact to the
health, safety and welfare of
citizens residing and working in
the immediate area.
School Funds Delayed
By &AYMOND ESTRADA JR. Of 1119 0.11, ll'llet Slaff
Ocean View (elementary)
School District trustees delayed
action Monday on an application
for federal funds to expand
services at an existing child de·
velopment center.
The board is expected to re-
coMider the preschool proposal
within two weeks, district of.
flcials said.
The delay came after parents
representing privately run
cooperative preschool said the
proposed tax-supported ex-
pansion eventually would put
them out of business.
Helen Reichman, child de-
:velopment center director and
author of the expansion pro-
posal, said the school district's
existing preschool program is in
its last year of federal funding.
Mrs. Reichman said the new
proposal would take tbe
strongest elements of the exist-
ing dbtrict preschool program
and, lf it is funded. expand upon
Coast
those services.
Currently. the district's child
development center diagnoses
leammg problems in 3 to 4·year-
old youngsters and alerts kin-
dergarten teachers about them.
Preschool co-op parents said
they support the services the
district. currently provides.
But expansion of these into a
Council OKs ·
Encyclopedia
l..Dts Project
Huntington Beach City Council
members have ordered city of-
ficials to proceed with a re-
development plan for a 15-acre
project at Gplden West Street
and Warner Avenue.
Council mem ben, acting as
the city's redevelopment agency,
voted &-1 Monday to assist de-
veloper James A. Christensen in
eUorts to build a shopping center
at thatlocalion.
Officials say the agency will
lu9lp the developer lo acquiring
the vacant, substandard lots (25
feet by 100 feet).
full-scale preschool operation
would infringe •·on private en-
terprise," they said.
The existing child develop-
ment center serves 92
youngsters. The proposed pro·
gram with its expanded services
would serve about 200 children.
Mrs. Reichman said.
"The proposed program is just
another option for parents in our
community," said school board
President Marianne Blank, the
only trustee to vote against tabl·
ing the matter.
"We are not in the business of
trying to put anyone oul of busi-
ness." Mrs. Blank told the coop
preschool parents.
"We can't make a decision for
children based on the financial
status of a private agency," the
board president told coop pre-
school parents.
Gwen Reed, 1pokesman for 56
parents of the North Huntington
Beach Community Nursery
cooperative, said, "The pre·
ac hool must remain separate
from the public school system
whJch ia more bureaucratic and
pushes children into academics
earlier." .
Mn. Reed proposed limiting
(See SCHOOL. Page Al)
responsibility or pool tem·
perature1 up to iqdtvidual
schools, even t.bou'b there have
beeo PUC binta that 1!D order is
forthcoming to shut off the heat
completely.
"Quite frankly, they (the PUC>
have been very vague and our
member acboola have been call·
ing us in droves," sald Crowley.
The minimum pool t em·
'Pel'alure (or competithe swim·
mlo1 ls 78 degrees, with the ideal
betwem 80 and 82, according to
El Toro BJgb School swim coach
St.eve Farris.
He uld the pool at his school
wlll be lowered to 78 degrees, and
noted that even a one degree
change in temperature can be
felt by swimmers. HunUngton Beach, Newport-
Mesa, Capistrano, Saddleback
valley, and Irvine Unified School
Dl1trict offlclals say they are
Joining in lowerina pool heat to
about78dearees. Clyde Lovellidy, business
manager for Laguna Beach
Unified District, said today he
will lower Laguna Beacb Hlch's
pool tbennoetat to 68 degrees and
await comments from swimmers
and district offtclals.
Daria Hill$ ffith School Vic:e
(See POO~. Page Al)
Fogbound at Airport
Passengers and crew members from this
Air California 737 were out of luck this
morning when fog forced a halt to flights in
and out of Orange County Airport. These
passengers got a bus ride to Ontario where
another plane -and clear skies -were
waiting. Early morning fog conditions are
expected to continue through Wednesday.
Heroin Factories Rare
Drug Officer Cites 'Built.in Safeguarm'
By lllLARY KA YE
Of Ille.,.,, ...... "'" Federal agents may never un-
cover another ''heroin factory"
similar to the one discovered last
weekend in the Irvine area, a
Drue Enforcement Administra-
tion (DEA) spokesman said to-
day.
•'We have so many built-in
safeguards against such an
operation succeeding that people
would be very foolish to even at-
tempt it," said the spokesman.
an official in the federal agency's
information department.
Federal agents burst into
Pearson Labs, 1810 Carnegie,
Santa Ana, Saturday and arrest-
ed company president Bernard
Berman, 52 , Santa Ana, on
charges of conspiring to produce
heroin.
Berman was arraigned Mon·
day in U.S. District Court in Los
Angeles.
A second man, Joseph
Paladino, 53, was arrested in bis
New Jersey home the same day.
Paladino is believed to be the
financier of the operation.
Paladino will probably be
brought to Los Angeles following
a special federal heating, ac-
cording to a spokesman for the
U.S. Attorney in Los An&eles.
A third man is thought to be in·
volved in the Ullclt operation, but
the DEA spokesman said
charges have not yet been filed
against bim and would not reveal
his name. He is an Orange Coun·
ty man aqd waa also found at the
Jab Saturday.
The lab was cap•ble Of produc·
ing more than $2 11lillioo worth of
heroin each month1 according to
federal aieota. However, agents
said they confiscated only a
small amount of t'he drug
because the firm was not yet into
full product.ion. •
The DEA Ucentes every com·
pany that manutaclurea or dis-
tributes any controlled sub-
stance.
"The licensing is strict and
there Is constant monitoring.
Each distributor must keep de-
tailed records of where the drugs
are going," the spokesman said.
He added that it is not extreme-
ly difficult to produce the illegal
drug, although a thorough
knowledge of chemistry is
needed, along with adequate lalt
equipment and enough raw
materials. "Th•t's the catch -it's tougb
to get the raw materials (opium)
here and deal with it illegally,"
he said.
Berman had been issued a
license to produce morphine sul-
phate and paragoric, both legal
<See HEROIN, Page t\2)
Biin Lifted on Shots
For A-Victoria Flu
WASfUNGTON (AP) -The
government's moratorium on flu
vaccinations was lifted today so
the elderly and the chronically ill
can get shots to protect them
from A-Victoria flu.
Io the proceas, they also would
be vaccinated against swine flu,
since there are no separate vac·
cines for lhe two strains. .
But Secretary of Health.
Education and Welfare Joseph A.
Califano Jr. maintained the
moratorium on vaccine contain·
ing serum only for swine Ou. He
said there is no immediate need
to lift it because there has been
no outbreak of the swine nu
strain in the United States this
year. There has been an outbreak
of A-Victoria nu In a Miami nurs·
ing home.
The shots were called off In the
first place because or the risk of
Guillain-~rre Syndrome, a
rare paralytic disease, among
those who recelvetbem.
Califano said the-risk of con·
tracting that ailment is believed
to be about the same with any
type ol Ou shot. He 1aid the t•ine
flu vaccine ii not considered
more risky than any other type.
Califano recommended that
people age 65 or over take the A·
Victoria shot.
"Al the first sign of an impend~
ing outbreak of swine flu, we will
take appropriate action,"
Califano said.
He told a news conference he
did not know at this time what
would constitute "appropriate
action." ·
Califano also announced that
the moratorium would be Ufted
for vaccine against B·Hong Kong
nu, a milder strain that usually
strikes children and young
adults.
He said the status of the B·
Hong Kong vaccine would be the
same as it was before th8'
moratorium when health or-
ficials and physicians could use ft
al their discretion. However, un-
like the combined vaccln~
against swine and A-Victoria fltt,
the federal government is not re-
commending that it be used.
(See FLU, Page A2)
Weather
Some locally dense
mornina fo1 near coast,
otherwise partly cloudy
: throup Wednesday. Highs
• 78 to 72. Lowa 46 to sz.
· .. The lots are commonly called
encyclopedia Iota because they
were given away to purchaaen of
set.a ol encyclopedias years ago.
Mayor Pro Tem Ron Pattloson
sald about $17,76S in city staff
time in preparing and im·
plementing the plan ts to be paid
by the developer.
Night of B~b,_ Death
Teen Surfer
Badly Injured
In HB Mishap ·
INSIDE TODAY
T,.., niU c:aU ft o Com·
muntd Poe In ~ circlf1,
owr 20 .,_.,.oft~ IM bottt.
OHr fhM)rfdalfon IDOi ffrtt
.JoiMd In CoUfomJo. For on
updol•,.-l>ogeA7.
Costa for off.site improve·
meut.s for 1treeu. curbs and
sidewalk• are estimat ed at
Stlt,000 and would be ne1ot.iated
later.
Christensen aald the shopplba
center would lnclode · a market,
drurn::re and aoothel' m~
b\&I • Councilwoman Norma Gibbs
caat the onl)i disaenUnc vote
11alnat the project. She aald
tbere are too many sbopplUC cm-
tera in the area now.
A dtdllon on the final adoption
of tbe redevelopment plan ls not
~ untJl1i.x montba.
Officers Welcolne IJabY, f ~l ID Save Jf oman A 14-year·old 1urrer from
Anaheim suffered what one
lifeguard described u the worst
cut he'd ever seen when tile )'OUlh
fell on a surfboard ekeg while rid-
ing a wave near lhe Huntington.
Beach pier Monday afternoon.
Brian Clvatia.no auffered a
deep cut on the back of hi1 thigh
when an unld"1Ufled surfer
tumed over In the youth ·a path
and the Anaheim te.anc•r Cell on
the board. Ltrel\W'(is said lb: surfer was
able to hobble · to 1bore where a
Hf e1uard ln a paulng Jeep
•potted blm and took hlm into
nta.rby lifeguard hcadquarten.
He was taken to Pacifica
H0tpltal whare the wound wu
aUtcbed.
:t A.Z DAILY PfLOT H/F
f.::lw;nges
Promised
•
For Firm I One of two companies seekin1 a
eontrollins intereat in the Irvine
Company intends to drastically .feorsamze Irvine manaaemmt lt Ua bld II successful. teatlmOQy in
Otanie County Superior Court ._revealed. I Quoting Monday from a deposl-
.tion ta.ken before the trial from ~lrvine heiress Joan Irvine Smith,
attorn.y Howard Privett testified
. £hat representatives of one ol two
. 'bidders usu.red her they intended
I to"ctoawaywiththedeadwood."
,, Privett represents the James
·lrvine Foundation in a trial that
-wW end with Judae James F.
·J'Uke's approval of ODe ol two
bidcf ers: the Mobil Oil Company
or a consortium headed by Wall Str~et financier Charles Allen
and Detroit developer Allred
Taubman.
Mobil bas offered $281.9 million
for the foundation's controlling
interestof54.Spercenl. TbeAJlerl-
Taubman offer tops that by
$800,000.
'Privett's testimony from Mrs.
"Smith's deposition reveals that
the 44-year-old descendant or
lrvlne Company founder James
lrvine held a series of meetings
Tith representali ves of the Allen-
'taubman interest.
Those. converqsations renected
the views of Allen-Taubman -
negotiators that the Irvine Com-
pany is overstaffed and the con-
clusion that "we shoUld keep the
•ood people and do away with the
deadwood."
The deposition contains the
comments: "lbe second best
should be eliminated.•·
It also contains the prediction
from Allen-Taubman officials
·that the restructured Irvine Com·
pany under new direction could
Jead the firm to greater achieve·
ments in many areas or Orange
County development.
• Jt 1s predicted that the com-
pany's present income could be
doubled under the new manage·
ment although it would not be
J)Cssible to pay dividends in the
lirst few years of the new opera·
tlon.
1 The current trial was ordered
when Mrs. Smith took legal action
to halt the foundation's sale of its
Jrvine interests to Mobil for $200
Jnillion. I Provisions or the Federal Tax
1Jleform Act of 1969 compel foun-
clation trustees t.o dispose of those
Jioldings before 1983.
I Mrs. Srnitb, w1~ holdin81of31
J>erceotin the Irvine Company, as
J'ecognized as the maJor manonty as toe kholder an the compa ny.
f'ro• Page AJ
HEROIN ...•
d erivatives of opium
"But there was no sign that he
planned to produce either of
those drugs -only the illegal
heroin.·· said the sookesman.
ll1slora call y. dru~ lraHickers
an th1~ country have restricted
their activity to smuggling in
;1 I ready· produced heroin from
countr1e!> where opium poppies
,row, such as Mexico. France ! and Far Eastern nations, he srud
• "Ht>rom 1'1 contraband here so
·the opiu m poppies need to be
s hipped an from elsewher e.
'They're bulky, smf'lly and you
' need 10 pounds of opium to make
, one pound of heroin. It's not
·easy." the spokesman continued.
, "Really, what they tried to do
·was a lot of ha!!sle for nothing.
, When you start ordering your
• s upplies <opl um ) from a J legitimate source as they did, it's
: just a matter of seconds before
; we would catch you," he said
I .
~andy Sale Planned ~ Members of \he Marine High
~bool Drill team are holding a
-candy sale until Feb. 23 lo raise
itunds for their annual banquet.
:Price of the candy is $1.SOper can.
\Yor more information. call ~3-6511. extension 252. \----------. ORANOIE COAST » ~
DAILY PILOT
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Finders Keepers?
Sigfrido Gurerra (right>, 9, and his sister Jeanette, 11
of Los Angeles display nearly $4,000 in cash they found
near a shopping center while walking home from school
after kicking a bundle -full of greenbacks. They
turned it over to police, and may claim the cash lf it's
not accounted for in '51 days.
OCTD Earmarks
Transit Corridor
By KATHY CLANCY
OI a. e>.11, Pli.t SC.ff
More than half of a $377.9
million five -year s pending
package approved by Orange
County Transit District (OCTD)
directors Monday is earmarked
for a 13-mile mass transit cor-
ridor.
And while directors included
$201.6 million for the route
stretching from Santa Ana to Los
Angeles County line, district
Planning Director Tom Jenkins
said today there still are ques-
tions as to when the corridor can
be built.
The dis trict 's five-year
Transportation Improvement
Plap calls for $13 million to buy
the 13-mile Pacific Electric right-
of-way.
In addition, it includes another
$188.5 million for construction of
the first seven miles of the
transportation Link between San-
ta Ana and Stanton.
District Director Al Hollinden
h as expressed fear that while
railway officials were preparing
Women's Auto
Clinic Carded
South Coast Junior Women's
Club members will hold an
automotive clinic for ladies at
the Fountain Valley Community
Center, 10200 Slater Ave., Feb. 19
at 10 a.m.
California Highway Patrol Of-
ficer Bill Moore will give safety
tips for women stranded on the
freeway due to auto failure.
Tire. headlamp, tail lamp and
fuse·changing are some of the
other minor repair Items whJch
will be discussed. For more in-
formation, call 1139-3770.
Fro.P~Al
FLU ..•
to abandon that' seven-mile
stretch, the remaining six miles
t.o Los Angeles may be tied up in
long-term railway commitments
to industrial concerns.
Jenkins said Monday OCTD or-
fici als still have not learned if
such commitments are being
made.
He said OCTD would have the
power to condemn the property
lor public use. .
And, he continued, OCTD of·
ficials learned recently that the
staff or the Southern California
Rapid Transit District is renew-
ine its stu4y or a transit corridor
along the route from the Los
Angeles-Orange County line into
Los Angeles.
The five-year plan approved
Mon day will be used as the basis
for dbtalnAne st.aw and federal
grants to pay for the bulk of the
transit itrlprovements outlined.
The plan ~ended annually.
It also calls for adding 170 large
buses and 15 mini buses to develop
an eventwd fleetof724 vehicles by
the 1980-81 Oscal year.
It also calls for development of
major transportation centers in
Laguna Hills, Huntington Beach,
Laguna Beach, Santa Ana,
Fullerton and Anaheim. f',..,. Page A J
POOLS •.•
I
Prlnclpa1 Alan Hix said he
believes lowered temperatures
will probably restrict the swim·
mlngp!' am. Barnicoat, who is
connect with the Nadadores
Swim Clu in Mission Viejo, said
y ounge r swimmers there
already; are going through
shorter workouts.
Dr. Norman Loats, deputy
superintendent or the Newport·
Mesa dis~ct, said a meeting of
school prlncipaLs is planned this
week to ~rk out a solution t.o the
problem~ore the high school swim se aets into full swing.
He said district is considering
shulllng own one or two or its
five poots and ls taking a look at
switchlnt.tc>solar heating.
Pllreats Belp'lea Water Cut
Five Children .
Works Well
Die in Blaze
CORTE MADERA (AP>
-Marin County resldenta
continued to do better than
expect.eel ln their efforts to
con.serve water, officials
SI)'. (Relatlld~tory,A5).
HOLBROOK, N.Y. <AP> -
Five children rancina ln aee from
• to 11 died early today in a fire tbat destroyed their fa.ml.b''•
wooden. colonial-style bomo
bere.
The parents jumped to safety
and then tried &o re-enter the
bouae,butwereunable&odoao.
One witness said the father,
Michael Kenny, stood outside the
bouae in the snow acreaminl,
"My God, we've got &o get DlY
cbildrenout ! ··
Kenny, 47, and bis wire,
Barbara, 38, watched in horror u
scores offiremea fouab\ in vain to
reach the children, who we.re
burned beyond recognitloo. Some
130 volunteer firemen f ougbt the
blaze.
The Kennys were taken to
Brookhaven Memorial Ho.pit.al
in Patchogue, where a
spokesman said they were suf-
fering from smoke inhalation,
bruises and shock. Mrs. Kenny
also had a broken leg, he said.
Offici"1s identified \be dead
children as Gary, 18; Karen. 16;
Michael Jr., 13; Ian, 7, and An-
thony, 4. ,
Three of the children were
found in the Uvtng room on the
first floor. Two others were found
beside a window on the second
floor.
Officials said Mrs. Kenny dis·
covered the fire and alerted her
husband. Holbrook Fire Chier
Robert Rogers said the parents
jumped t.o safety from the second
story. and other officials said the
parents tried to re-enter the
house but were blocked by
names.
A neighbor, Kathleen Alba,
said Kenny woke her up al 4:30
a .m ., banging on her door and
screaming, "My kids are in
there! My kids are in there! " .
She said Kenny, clad in pa·
jamas, and his wife, in a
nightgown. stood in her home
helpless, watching the fire bum.
"It was like a nightmare,"
Mrs. Alba said. "I couldn't stand
it." They kept screaming, 'My
children are in there!· "
Rogers, the rire chief, said he
received a call at 4:34 a .m .
"I live two minutes away," he
SCHOOL ...
the district project to children
who require it because of "socio·
economic factors, high ris k
status or developmentat pro·
blems."
But school district Trustee Jay
Rivera said, "That might be dis-
criminatory."
Spencer Hatch, operator of
California Pre-School in
Westminster, told trustees, "The
private sector is ready to move
in any time and fill anv need."
He added, "In my o·pinion this
new proposal is a crash program
-an effort just to get additional
federal funds."
. Hatch asserted that "A
private preschool does better
th;in a public·funded program -
studies prove it."
Jazz Band Plays
The Marina High School jaz.z
ensemble will perform ln the Hun·
tlng\on Beach High School
auditorium Wednesday at 7:30
p.m .
The 20-piece big band's
performance will include jazz.
rock selections. Admission is 50
cents.
aaid. "I wu oo tM aceoo lm·
medJatdy. Flamw were comine
out ol r1ery windOw. It just lit up
tbe lkJ. The cblldren were tmi"' and entry WU tmpoulble.''
Poltee laid they received a call
from Mrs. Kenny before •:30
a.m ., but were unable to un-
derstand her because aho wu aereaudn& .
Another nei&hbor, Jane
Waters, said she was awaltened
by Kepny'a screams. She aaid
her buaband, Donald, raced out-
side with a six-root ladder and
tried &o climb &o tbe second«ory
window where two of the children
we.re found. Tbe ladder was too
abort, abe Mid.
Two firemen suffered injuries
and were hospitalized, a fire de-
partment spokesman said. The
caute of the blaze was not. im-
mediately established.
W••keod water coo-
sumptlon wu 9.3 million
sallona on Saturday and 9.,
lnWion-'.UOOS on SUnday.
far below Ute 12 ~on per
day &091 fet by tbe Ma.rUl Municipal Water District.
District general
mana1or J. Dleh·icb
Stroeh 1aid Monday that
the flCW'ea were "eaJ)eclal·
ly excitma" because they
came on days when mOfit
people presumably were at
home.
Spelling,
Math Get
Juice Company ~!:.30.!~~~
Pre ! ;.i _ 'D . Districtoffleials have initiat.ed ef-SKrenl ie1; forts t.o raiae low math a~ spell-ing scores as reflected 10 the
• Callfomia Test ol Basic Skills Rif.es Thursday (CTBS> examinations given last October.
Tr~weet Products Company
president Robert E. Graves of
Costa Mesa, died Monday in a
Houston hospital of complications
foil owing surgery.
Graves, who was 50, joined the
Santa Ana-based citrus process-
ing company as sales manager in
1964, and was named president in
1973.
Graves was president of the Na·
tional Juice Products Association
during.1975-78, and was past pre-
sident of the Frozen Food Council
of Southern California.
Before joining TreeSweet, he
was with Stouffer Foods,
Johnston Pies and Swift and Com-
pany. ·
Company officials said today
Graves was instrumental in ob-
taining an arrangement with
football star O.J . Simpson t.o ad-
vertise TreeSweet products.
"Mr. Graves knew Mr.
Simpson 'very well over the last
year or so," said spokeswoman
Mrs. Bonnie Reid. "It was an
absolutely ideal partnership, a
mutual partnership," she said.
Simpson, a star running back
for the Buffalo Bills of the Na-
tional Football League, makes
commercials for TreeSweet and
a car rental a~ency_
Graves is survived by his wife.
Elaine of the family home, 1779
Tanager Drive, seven chjldren
and seven grandchildren.
Funeral services will be con-
ducted Thursday at St. John the
Baptist Catholic Church, 1021 W.
Baker St., Costa Mesa, beginning
atll a.m.
The family has suggested
memorial contributions to the
Ather06clerosi~ Research Fund,
in care of the Heart Association.
Weighty Program
At Valley Library
A program on nutri tion and
weigh\ loss will be presented al
the Fountain Valley Branch of the
Orange County Library Thursday
at7p.m.
Betty O'Donnell, an Orange
County Nutrition Council
representative, will discuss the
nutritional value of weight loss
diets and how popular diets can be
evaluated.
Admission is free. The library
is located near \he Civic Center at
17565LosAJamosS\.
Although second, third, flfth
and eighth grade students
performed about as well as last
year on the CTBS language arts
testa. spelling was an area which
showed some deficiencies, said
.Tack Macon, district curriculm
direct.or.
Seventh crade students bad
lower math test scores than those
last year. Seventh graders
performed at a level of about
three monlhiJ slower than those
who took last year's CTBS math
test.
Macon said "areas which need
strengthening in the second, third
and fifth grades are spelling, use
of capital letters, subtraction,
problem solving and division.
Teachers will attend special de·
moostrations and courses to im-
prove students' knowledge oC
these skills, Macon said.
In general, Macon said be
believes the test results are
good. "They give you a red flag
when something is not up to par,"
he added.
"But test scores are, at best,
just indicators as to a student's
actual achievement," said
Macon. "There are many other
factors involved. Too often
parents accept test results as
gospel truth."
Macon said this year's CTBS
s cores indicated areas of strength
in reading, science, social science
and English.
The district official explained
that not all students are tesLing in
all the basic skills each year.
Second graders are tested in
math and language arts, such as
spelling, writing and vocabulary.
Third grade students are tested
in reading, language arts and re·
ference skills, or how to use die·
tionaries and encyclopedias.
Fourth graders are tested in
science and social science.
Fifth graders are tested in read-
ing, language arts and math. Six-
th grade students are tested in re-
ference skills and social science.
Seventh graders are tested in
math and science while eighth
grade students take tests in read·
ing andlanguagearts.
Overnight
Fun Planned
The combined swine and A-
Victoria vaccine contains the on·
ly available immunhation
against A-Victoria flu, which
broke out about 10 days ago in a
Dade County, Fla .. nursing
home.
1,
Riv.er Towboats Collide
The Fountain Valley Recrea-
tion Department will sponsor a
series of overnight activities for
children 8to12 years or age at the
Recreation Center this Friday.
The evening of supervised ac-
tivity includes games. movies,
dinner snacks and breakfast. The
activity begins at S p.m. Friday
and ends at8:30a.m. Saturday. There is no single vaccine
against A-Victoria remainine In
thla county. All 27 mlUion doses
already have been mixed with A·
New Jeney (swine) vaccine.
Survival for Rape .
Attack Course Set
A course in survival for rape at-
tack will be.offered Tuei,day and
Thursday a>o1'1lings from t:ao to
11 :30 a .m. at the Kuntlnston
BeachBoysClub,319Yorktown.
The course, sporuored br_the
Huntingtoo Beach Unlon Hllh
School Adult Education Depart-
m en\, teaches methods of
physical, emotional,
psyctiologtcal and acUGg forms of
rape survival. Any Orang Coun·
ty resident may take tho class, •c·
cordln1totnstructor Pat Downey.
Directory Offered
The Fountain Valley Clwnber or Commerce lm Industrial
Director)' 11 avaUabJe tl the
chamber oftlce, 1113$ Brookbursl
St.
Cost of tbe dlre.ctOry I.I $3. 7S Cor
chamber memben and S'UO for
non-members. For more In·
f ormatl«l. call 96U«l. I
Mishap Closes Portion of Ohio River
MARION, Ky. (AP) -Por·
Uons of tbe Ohio Rivet' were
vlrtually cloted to traffic today
tollowtna •towboat colu.ion that
damaged a dam near here, an
Army Corps of Enelneers
spokesman aaid.
Tb• collblon was the latest In a
1trln1 of trowblea that bH
plaiued ri•er tra(ftc near here
and severely lwPpered delivery or futl an4 other petroleum pro-
ducts to poln&a in the north and
eut~ ,
Corps •pokuman Martin
Pedl10 aaid'.tbe rivu at Dam 50
on the ri•er-•1 west.em stretch
•u ie.efe1tearlYt.od•y, some20
inches ~ it. level befor. the
col111lon Monday 4amaaed
w1cktla, dmfff that are railed
or lo...nf to 'c&tlrol the flow ol
water. ·
"NormUJY, 'when lho rlftt"
fall• belOw 17 Ce«, lt. lndJcates
that ahallOw polnt.1 uprtver are lm~e." aald Pedl10, who•
added. Uait U.. channel iJ1 aome
such are. II J t n.IM reet.
Pedl•o uld the extent or d.im• .,.. unkno.n earl.1 to-
d af, bUt •• lf, bu the POt.tD&lal Of
bein1 fa1fu Hrioul.'~ S.~uicl tt.
would a.·~la&e t.odq Won of· • 6
I
ticials could determine when the
damage could be repaired.
.Dam Sl, upriver, was damaged
Jut December in a colUsioo lbat
halted traffic for over a week.
Before traffic could resume, the
harsh winter temperatures al·
lowed the formation of a foot-
thick l~er of lee that balled traf-
fic tor about a month.
Then came the Monday col-
tlslon, Just a few days arter
worken had manuatl7 talsed
wickets on dams In a detperate
effort to 1et traffic movtng qaln
on the ice.clogged river.
Meanwhile. tha cold wave and
I•• attonaae. wbJcb havo put up
to 1,5457,000 persons out or wortt so
fat. Di~ return ln ruu rorce next weeli: after a temporary bteak~
accordlna to covernment
forecut.1.
But tbe .clae ot the ahorl&I•
WU be6Jlll IOft.ened t.hJ.I week U
small :addlllonal suppl!•.•• of
HUU'al fa& bepn Qowint UW1ln· tentat. )Ip.Jin.. under pro-
•llloee ol the new esner1mey act
&bat Prelldut Carter •lJDtd ... .,.,..,.
Tbe Federal Power Com• m....,_ Mid ll<lncll)' tbllt some
r) , '
380 million cubic feet of gas per
day already was flowing under
new emergency arrangements
and another 175 million cubfc feet
a day was authorized and a\lPalt-
ins completion of connectini
pipes.
The extra gas, transferred
from west.em areas with better
supplies or purchased temporari·
ly al prices above federally re·
gulated ceilings, represent.I only
about 1 percent of the 1as re-
quired on a cold winter day.
But ll helps, and 10 does aome
933 million cubic feet already
fiowina daily under ciarlier FPC
eme~eacy rules.
· The National Weather Service,
however', told Carter's enet"SY
advller, Jama R. SchJe1tna'er.
that tbe break In the weather may be temporary, lastlnat 9'111
thll week as a comp1raUvely
warm air mus from the Paclllc
. croue. the nation.
Onu It 11 10.ne, says tbc
weather aervtce, lhe previous
pattern la expected to take over
acaln "an<l to contlnoe to dired
arctic air tow1.-d th• eutern
U.S. for at least tbe folloWl.n& two to ltir.Weeb. ,,
~ •
· Children should bring a sleep-
ing bag and pillow. Registration
js required in advance and is
limited, officials said. A $3.50 re-
gistration fee is also required. For
more information. c:all 963·8321.
118 Man. Arrested
In Assault Try
A HuntJnJtt.on Beach man was
Jailed on 1u•picloo or attempted
rape Monday arter he allegedly
followed a woman into a ladies
restroom at Bolaa Chica State
Bea~b and U-ied to sexually as-sault ber, Orange County
Sheriff'• officers said.
OepuUes called to the scene
took MJcbael ~ay ColweU, 25, or
927 6th St .. lnto cuatody af\er he
was held by beachgoers who told
officers they re$panded to the
woman's screams.
ERA Kill Urged
...CARSON CITY, Nev. CAP) -
Tbe slate Senate Judiciary Com· tttee, u expecte:d, voted M~
lo lend the coa\ronnlal Equal
Rl1hta Amendm~ to the Senate
boor with a rtt<>m mendatlon that 1t1>etm .
JI 7
I
'-•
. ' ·,VOL. 70, NO. 39, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE C,OUNTY, CALIFORNIA
. .
• By WILLIAM SCBREJllE& • Oft•.,.. ... "''•"' ...
: Flaring tempen sparked
: verbal fireworks Monday night
: as Saddleback College trustees
·failed again to muster enough
·votes to choose one of two poten·
tial J:vine·Tustin ,satellite cam-pus sites.
. Four votes art required to
. authorize such a purchase but the
: board split 3-2 after more than
O•lly ~llot St.ft .......
LOSES APPEAL BID
Ex-Assessor Vellerga
A-Victo ria
Flu Slwt
Ban Lifted
WASHJNGTON <AP> -The
government's moratorium oo.nu
vaccinations was lifted today IO
the elderly and the chronically Ill
can &et shot.a to protect them
from A· Victoria f4,i .
In tbe process, they also would
be vaccinated against swine flu,
since there are no separate vac-
cloes for the two strains.
But Secretary or Health,
Education and Welfare Joseph A.
Califano Jr. maintained the
moratorium on vaccine contain-
ing serum only for swine Ou. He
said there is no immediate need
to lift it because there has been
no outbreak of the swine nu
strain in the United States this
year. There has been an outbreak
of A-Victoria flu in a Miami nurs-
ing home.
The shots were called off in the
first place because of the risk ot
Gulllain-Barre Syndrome, a
rare paralytic disease, among
those who receive them
Califano said the risk of con-
tracting that ailment as believed
to be about the same with any
type o( nu shot. He Hid the swine
nu vaccine IS not Considered
more risky than any other \ype.
Califano recommended that
people age 65 or over take the A·
Victoria fthot.
.. At the first sign of an impend·
jng outbreak ol 1wine nu. we will
take appropriate action,"
Califano said.
He told a news conference he
4id not know at this time what
would con1titute ''appropriate
action."
Coast
Weather
Some locally dense
mornm, foe near coast.
otberwlae partly cloudy
throu-" Wednesday. Hi1hs
78 to 72. Lows 46 to 52.
INSIDE T ODAY
Th'l/ atiU coJl ii .o Com-
munile Jll()( In aom. c:in:lu,
' ONT 20 llfO"I, Q/Cer fM battle
0'1tr flUorida1ion '°°' fif'fl joined m CaUfoml4. For. on
Updol•, MC~ A1.
two hours ot meandering dis-
cussion.
With one board seat vacant and
the seventh trustee, Dr. James
Marshall, critically ill and
hospitalized, it now appears like·
ly that the decision will be de·
layed until well after the March 8
election.
Top administration officials
said if that happens, it is "highly
improbable" that the northern
area campus could open~ as
pl4UlJled in the spring of 1978.
Two weeks ago, trustees de·
adlocked at 2-2, with an absten·
tion by Mission Viejo's Donna
Berry. The only difference this
week was Mrs. Berry's decision
to join those favorin& a site at
Myford Road and Bryan Avenue
on the unincorporated Irvine Ranch.
Trustees Larry Taylor and
Norri.sa Brandt back a site of.
fared by \be Irvine Company late ·ill tbe site selection proeesa. That
jlt.emate location ii 3.5 miles
~th ol. the Myford-Bryan lite at t'IM comer ol lrvine Ceoter Drive ,
and..httrey Road.
Mra. Berry Joined Patrick
• B~tkua and P'rank Greinke la
sueport of the other parcel, "le~ already bad been •l>-
... <See SITE, Pace AU
Sentence Stands
Court Rejects Vallerga Appeal .. .
LOS ANGELES <AP J grand theft embezzlement of sultingfeeHinshawrecelvedand
Former Orange county Assessor public monies. split with Vallerga. who was also
Jack Vallerga's 1975 conviction Presiding Justice John J . Ford charged with illegally billing his
on three counts of selling county wrote the opinion with Justices Spartanburg plane fare to the
property was upheld today by the John Alport and Rodney Potte.r county.
2nd Dutrict Court of Appeals. concurring. Hinshaw, defeated in his
Vallerga was sentenced in Ven-The case stemmed from the primary re-election bid last
tura County Superior Court to 60 sa le in April 1973 to Spar-June, wati sentenced to state
days in jail and five years' proba-tan burg, S.C .. of an Orange prison on two counts of bribery
tion and fined $1,000. The case County-developed computerized and later for misappropriation
was handled in Ventura after a property usessment system. and petty theft of public funds
change of venue from Santa Ana. The County Board of Supervisors while serving as Vallerga 's pre-
Vallerga was also a codefen-had authorized the sale for $2,045 dttessor as Orange County as-
dant in another case with former in 1970 but had not authorized a sessor.
Rep. Andrew J. Hinshaw. costly test of the system at He was not charged ln the
In 'the current case, Vallerga Orange County expense as a con-Spartanburg case.
was convicted of felony conflict di lion of the sale. Vallerga also was convicted
ofinterest,fourcountsoftheftof Supervisors also did not last April of misappropriating
public monies and a count or em-authorize the $714 consulting fee county funds by ordering his staff
bezzlement of public monies. He Va 11 erg a rec e iv e d from to work ln Hinshaw's 1974 re-
was acquitted on one count of Spartanburg or the $6,000 con-election campaign.
Romance Over
Fialree Departs With Ring
HACKENSACK. N.J. <AP)-A Fair Lawn woman
has filed suit to regain a $3,000 diamond engagement riJli she claims her fiance slipped off her fibger while
she slept.
Randy Berniker said four days before she was to
marry Jay Cohen, a Clifton stockbroker, he canceled
their engagement and took the ring without her
permission. according lo court papers filed here Mon-
day.
On Nov . 7, she was watching television at
her home with Cohen, her attorney Leonard Miller
said.
"She fell asleep, then woke up as there was a tug
on her finger. The next thing she knew, Cohen was
walking out the door with the ring and his explanation
at the time was the statement, 'I'm not ready',"
Miller said.
Miss Berniker also is seeking repayment of $700
she claims was deposited with a travel agent for the
couple's honeymoon, $500 she deposited on furniture
and $200 for her wedding gown. She also asked
punitive damages.
City Asks Comment
On 3 Fee~ Districts
Developers in the Northwood
region of Irvine will have a
chance tonight to tell the Irvine
City Council what they like and
dislike about the proposed fee
distrlc:ta in Northwood.
A fee district is a mechanism
by which the city can coJlect
from developers the coat o( im-
provements such as storm
drains, roads and traffic signals.
The c0tu1cil will bear the com-
ments at a public hearing
scheduled near the beginnina of
the 7:3>p.m . meetin& at city ball.
The city's public works staff ls
suegesting that three separate
fee distrlcts be set up -one for
drainage improvements, another
for traffic sienaJ Improvements
and the third to pay the costs of
an overcrossine above the Santa
Ana Freeway at Yale Avenue.
Northwood ta located north or
the Santa Ana Freeway, between
CuJver Drive and Jeffrey Road.
It includes 4,400 atres to be de-
veloped by 20 different de-
velopen, building different types
ol l'M1deftU& units.
Trash Dumpster
Torched in Irvine
In order to be heard tonight.
protests had to be turned in at ci-
ty hall by the close of work today.
The city clerk had received only
one protest by this morning. It
was from the Irvine Ranch
Water DL9trict.
The water district is planning
several projects in that area and
is asking to be exempted from
<SeeCOMMENT, PageA2)
Irvine Co.
Revamping
Discussed
One ol two eompanjes aeekiol a
controlling interest (n the lrvlne
Company lnteoda to drastically
reorganize Irvine management if
its bid I.a successful, testimony in
Orange County Superior Court
has revealed.
Quoting Monday from a depo6i·
tion taken before the trial from
Irvine heiress Joan Irvine Smith,
attorney Howard Privett testified
that'representatlves of one of two
bidders assured her they intended
to "do away with the deadwood."
Privett represents the James
Irvine Foundation in a trial that
will end with Judge James F.
Judge's approval of one of two
bidders: the Mobil Oil Company
or a consortium headed by Wall
Street rinancier Charles Allen
and Detroit developer Alfred
Taubman.
Mobil has otrered $281.9 million
for the foundation's controlling
interest of 54.S percent. The Allen·
Taubman offer tops that by
$800.000.
Privett's testimony from Mrs.
Smith's deposition reveals that
the «-year-old descendant of
<See HEIRESS, Page AZ>
Red Cr aft Docks
MOSCOW (AP) -The Soviet
Union's Soyuz 24 spacecr aft wtth
two cosmonauts aboard docked
today wtth the orblUng Salyut 5
space laboratory, one day after
its launching, Tass announced.
(Related photo, A4 >.
LAGUNA
BEACH
SAN JUAN
CAPISTRANO
o.llyl"llttN_,.,...
POTENTIAL CAMPUS SITES -This map depicts the two
parcels of land under consideration for a new Sad-
dleback College District campus. The blowup at top
shows the Myford Road·Bryan Avenue location originally
chosen by college trustees last fall. The other blowup
s hows the site at Irvine Center Drive and Jeffrey Road,
offered by the Irvine Company late in the selection pro·
cess. Trustees are deadlocked as to which site to buy.
The existing district campus is at lower right of map.
~e-time Thing?
·ffe•oiu F1aetory
Raid Rated Rare
By llILARY KA YE
Of Ille o.lly l"IMt S ... H
Federal agents may never un·
cover another "heroin factory"
similar to the one discovered last
weekend in the Irvine area, a
Drug Enforcement Administra-
tion (DEA) spokesman said to·
day.
"We have so many built-in
safeguards against such an
operation succeeding that people
woulCS be very foolish to even at-
tempt it," said the spokesman,
an official in the federal agency's
information department.
Federal agents burst into
Pearson Labs, 1810 Cameale.
Santa Ana, Saturday and arrest·
ed company president Bernard
Berman, 52, Santa Ana. on
charges o( conspiring to produce
heroin.
Berman was arraigned Mon-
day in U.S. District Court in Los
Angeles.
A second man. Joseph
Paladino, SJ, was arrested in bis
New Jersey home the same day.
Paladino ls believed to be the
financier of the operation.
Paladino will probhbly be
brou1ht to Los Angeles following
a special fed~ral bearing, ac-
cordlnC to a spokesman for the
U.S. Attorney in LOI Angeles.
A third man ls thought to be in·
volved in the illicit operation. but
the DEA s pokesman said
charges have not yel been filed
against him and would not reveal
his name. He is an Orange Coun-
ty man and was also found at the
Jab Saturday.
The lab was capable of produc•
Ing more than $2 million worth of
heroin each month, according le>
federal agents. However, agents
said they confiscated only a
s mall amount of the drug
because the firm was not yet into'
full production. ,
The DEA licenses every com;
pany that manufactures or dis-
tributes any controlled sub·
(See HEROIN, Page.\%)
Irvine Street
Stooepers Not
Too Effective?
Street sweepers in Irvine ~
too irregular, too fast and Just..
don't pick up enough dirt.
That's the verdict from Irvin~
Public Works Director Brent
Muchow, who Just sent a letter to
AAA Sweeping Company, Inc~
tnrorming them their contra -
will be terminated next mon
unless their service improves.
Muchow said he 's had
numerous complaints from resi·
~ents and from bia ataff mem·
bers about the quality of work
fl'om the South El Monte street
1weepln1 company.
Accordi.n1 to Muchow. letters
ha ve been sent to about ei~ht
other sweeplne firms asking
them to submit proposals so tha'
a new company Cart' be choseQ
next month If AAA Sweepinc
does not \Q>Cl'ade its servic..
ID the letter to AAA sweeping,
ttucbow aaya the coinpany has.,
daya to improve. 1
. A I DAIL v PILOT
~11,ulbert
If
Called .
I;
Psychotic
A psychJatriat who once probed
the mebtal concUUon of convict.ct
killer Sirhan B. Sirhan and
, hei.reas Patty Hearat told an
1 Orange CoWlty Superior Court
jury ~ that accaued killer
., Keo RJcbard Hulbert la not men.
. tally competent to face trial.
t Dr. Seymour Pollack, called by
the defense to examine the
Fullerton man, testified as the
. seco~d psychiatrist in the sanity
hearing that Hulbert accwsed
him during an interview ol being ·
in league with the devil.
He agreed with Deputy Public
. Defender Walter Zec:h today that
Hulbert ia "severely mentally ill
and psychotic although he has
improved in the last few
months."
If the jury rules that Hulbert
24 . is sane he will be tried befor~
Judge William S. Lee on charges
• that include murder, rape, kid-
nap, robbery and assault.
, It is alleged that he raped and
strangled Whittier housewife
'Gina Marie Tisher, 19, whose
naked body was found in the back
oC a parked car by Fullerton
police on Jan. 7, 1976.
And it is alleged that Hulbert
attacked two more women in
,Orange CoWlty. one of whom was
raped and robbed before she was
.beat.en and left unconscious in
• the Irvine area four days after the Tisher killing.
Dr. Pollack and a psychiatrist
who preceded him on the witness
stand were told by Hulbert that
bis attacks on women were de-
signed to force the devil to leave
the bodies of bis victims and con-
front him in combat.
In those Interviews, Hulbert
·described himself as a soldier of
the Lord who should have bei!n
met with cheering crowds after
~ommitting the ofrenses for
. which he may have to race trial.
Instead he was arrested by
Fullerton police and indicted by
the Grand Jury. He also was in-
dicted by the Lo5 Angeles County
Grand Jury on criminal charges
related to his alleged attacks on
six women in that county.
fi'Nllll P~ Al
COMMENT. •
the fee district because it is a
public agency, not a private de-veloper.
A public works official said to-
day he expected other protests to
be tufned in throughout today.
Several developers are con-
cerned about the third fee dis-
trict, which would pay the cost of
the overcr0&10g, be said.
Walter Nollac, a public works
staff member. said they beUeve ~he state should fund tbal pro-
Ject. not developers.
According to staff estimates,
the overcrossmg will cost about
$1.9 million. the drainage im-
provements about $6.3 million
and the traffic signal improve:
ments about S614,000.
Developers would be assessed
after they begin developing their
·land. which differentiates a fee
district from an assessment dis-
tJict.
, Nol lac explained that, in an as-
sessment district, property
owners are assessed immediate·
1y. whether or not they have de· veloped their land
Other items on tonieht 's agen-da include:
Another attempt to appoint a
committee to formulate a city
pohcy on eucalyptus tree pre.
servaUon
. -A redefmit1on of moderate rncome boo.sing.
-~ reading or the pro.
posed ordinance to restrict the
operation or catering trucks near
parks and schools.
Budget Reviewed
SAN FRANCISCO (AP>
• Mayor George Moscone has
; begun the arduous taak of reView-
ing the city 'a im. 78 b\&d1et with a ~ledge to bold the line oo property
taxes.
DAILY PILOT
,,.. Or-c..nt .,.. .. """'· "'.ll'.-00 .. , ..... ... _ .... _~"._.,_..,_Or_
()le4'--.~ "-'---... r :::"::'..:,"\.~ ... .::%'....:..,-:.=~
..... VOH•y, l"'W... ~-¥-y -,_ ... ~-C.t• .................. ' _,.__._,..,._,...... T ...
=~c:..:=~~:=-l~~DI •.i ...
. ,
' I
l
"-·-... ~ ... ·---, .... Qortoor. v1c ...... ..-~,.,...o.-.,~ -0 ....... ldllw
<
Oally l'llOt l"'-'4 •Y Pltlllp llown•rf11
OFF1CER JIM LANSFORD SLUGGED FOILING HOLDUP
Laguna Policeman Wreatted With Gunm•n In Store
·€op Injured
.
i·F oiling Theft
• By PHILIP ROSNARIN Lansford p(cked up one of the
Olu.o.11,,.. .... ,." proprietors of lht Jewol
Searchers on a "Tipsy 'taxi" call
to drtve the man back to the
store.
A Laguna Beacb police oft'leer
was plstol·whipped and shot at
Monday after he walked in on the •~med robbery ot a Jewelry
ffore.
The gWlman fired a •inlle shot
u he struggled to tah otftcer
Jim Lansford'a service revolver
from him. The bullet went into
the noor.
The robber wrenched
Lansford'• gun from its bolater
and clubbed him to his knees with
it. He ordered Lansford to lie face•
down and warned the ZO.year
Laguna Beach policeman, "Don't moveorl'llldllyou."
He escaped, with the officer's
gun and radio -but without a
Jrocery sack of handcrafted
Jewelry he came to a teal.
More than a dozen policemen
blanketed streets and beaches in
a seven-block radius or the Jewel
Searchers, 1027-D N. Coast
Hifbway.
ansford usel! the store
telephone to alert police.
Lansford was taken bY
paramedic ambulance to South
Coast Community Hospital. An
X-ray examination or his skull
revealed no fractures and he was
released. He had a large lump
behind his ear where be was
Lansford was taking Joel
Whitney. 25, half-owntr al the
busiJM:ss, tbroqb tbe lt<>N when
they passed right by the·!l>bbe.r.
When Whitney•s crandmother.
Maebelle O'Daniel. who was
tending the shop, spotted
Lamford 's unilorm, she cried to
him, "Ob, I'm being robbed!"
The officer wheeled around to
see a l\Ul pointed at him. The
robber ordered Lansford to un·
bolater his weapon.
Lansford instead tried to talk
the man into surrendering, police ·
sald.
Police said the man, bolding
his gun in one band, reuhed with
the other hand to try to pull
Lansford's revolver from the
bolster,
Unsuccessful because or the
bolster restraining strap, the
gunman tried to yank the weapon
free by erabbing it with bOth
hands.
Then Lansford, so, grabbed the
man's gunhand and wrestled for
the weapon.
During the struggle, Mrs .
O'Daniel took the sack of jewelry
and ran into a back room.
Whitney ran to another area of
began when the shop and grabbed a .22· caliber rifle.
struck .
The Incident
Plea Stills f'rotaP~AJ
By the time Whitney found the
rifle and ran back to face the rob-
ber. he was gone.
Din of Debate
Only Briefly
VOTE STALLED •••
Saddleback College Trustee
Pat Backus sat quietly with a
look of disbelief on his face Mon-
day night, listening to the verbal
duel between Board Chairman
Norrisa Brandt and Tus tin
Trustee Frank Greinke.
Greinke was emotionally de-
f ending his preference for a
northern district campus site and
had just told Mrs. Brandt to
"shut up" until he was finished.
Mrs. Brandt chided Greinke for
"innuendoes" in his presentation
and declared she would soon or-
der him to "shut up" if he didn't
end bis tirade.
Al that po.int, Backus leaned
forward and took the noor.
"This board is geuing out of
control," boomed tbe normally
quiescent Dana Poin\ trustee
"As chairman, you're doing a
lousy job." he said to Mrs
Brandt. "You're chairman and 1f
you can't handle it. turn it over to
the vice chairman.·•
Mrs. Brandt gestured toward
Greinke saying, "but he's vice chairman."
proved by the full board last ran
until the company came in with
its proposal.
Until about 90 minutes of Mon-
day's meeting had elapsed, the
most interesting byplay con-
cerned n ew financial
breakdowns or the company's of-
fer.
Then Gremke arrived, blaming
his lateness OJl a "business ap·
pointment" that kept him over-
time in Los Angeles County.
The Tustin trustee resumed his
attack on the company's offer,
claiming the people of bis com·
munily would be the big losers if
the site is moved farther south.
He intimated that the Tustin
City Council, which took an am-
biguous position on the site selec-
tion issue. didn't want to offend
the company because of its ongo-
in g negotiations to annex 450
acres of prime company-owned
land.
Greinke accused the council of
playing the role of "Judas"
because of those "450 pieces of silver."
He also warned that if the
Myford-Bryan site 1s not chosen,
Irvine and Tustin might secede
from the SaddJeback distnct to
OCTD Earmarks
Transit Corridor
By KATHY CLANCY
OftlW O•llY Pilot Stall
More than half of a $377.9
million fhe-year spending
package approved by Orange
County Transit Di~ricl COCTD 1
directors Monday is earmarked
for a 13-mile mass transit cor-
ridor.
And while directors included
$201.6 million for the route
stretching from Santa Ana to Los
Aneeles County line. district
Planning Director Tom Jenkins
said today there still are ques-
tions as to when the corridor can
bebullt.
The district's five-year
Transportation Improvement
Plan calls for $13 million to b\zy
the 13-mile Pacific Electric right-of-way.
In addition. it includes anolber
$188.S million for construction of
the first seven miles of the
transportation link between San-
ta Ana and Stanton.
District Director Al HoUinden
bas expressed fear that while
railway officials were preparing
lo abandon that seven-mile
stretch. the remaining six miles
to Los Angeles may be tied up in
long-term railway commitments
to industrial concerns.
Jenkins said Monday OCTD of-
ficials still have not learned if
such commitments are being
made.
He said OCTD would have the
power to condemn the property
for public use.
And, he continued, OCTD of-
ficials learned recently that the
staff of the Southern California
Rapid Transit District is renew-
ing its study of a transit corridor
along the route from the Los
Angeles-Orange County line into
Loa Angeles.
The five-rear plan approved
Monday wil be used as the basis
for ob~g state and federal
grantl to pay for the bulk of the
transit improvements outlined.
The plan is amended annually.
It also calls for adding 170 Large
buses and 75 mini buses to develop
an eventual neet of 724 vehicles by
the 1980-81 fiscal year.
It also calls for development of
m ajol' transportation centers in
Laguna Hiils, Huntington Beach,
Laguna Beach, Santa Ana,
Fullerton and Anaheim.
attend schools that are closer to
home.
Taylor, who represents
!.aguna Beach, said such
secession comments are "un-
founded" and said he doesn't
think "anyone will be spinning
off the Saddle back District.''
He said there are no political
"under or overtones" and that
the decision on a northern cam-
pus site should be based on •'the
price of the land and how best to
serve the area."
Front Page A I
HEROIN ...
stance.
•'The licenaing i.s strict and
there is constant monitoring.
Each distributor-must k~p de-
tailed records of wbere the drugs
are going,'' ft-se spokesman said.
He added that it ls not extreme-
ly difficult to produce the illegal
drug, although a thorough
knowledge of chemistry is
needed, along with adequate lab
equipment and enough raw
matenals.
"That's the catch -it's tough
to get the raw materials (opium)
here and deal with it illegally,"
he said.
Berman had been issued a
license to produce morphine suJ.
phate and paragoric, both legal
derivatives of opium.
"But there was no sign that he
planned to produce either of
those drugs -only the illegal
heroin." said the spe>kesman.
Historically, dnig traffickers
in this country have restricted
their activity to smuggling in
already-produced heroin rrom
countries where opium poppies
grow, such as Mexico, France
and Far Eaatem nations, be aaid.
"Heroin is contraband btte so
the opium poppies need to be
shipped in from elsewhere.
They're bulky. smelly and you
need 10 pounda of opium to make
one pound of heroin. It's not
easy," the spokesman continued.
Ff"091PageAJ
HEIRESS ..•
Irvine Compey founder James
Irvine held a aeries of meetings
with repreHDtaUvea of the Allen-
Tau bman lnterat.
Those conversations reflected
the view, of Allen-Taubman
negoUaton that the Irvine Com-
pany ia overstaffed and the con-
clusion that "we should keep the good people and do away with the
deadwood."
·Night .of Birth, Death
Officers Weloome Baby, Fail to Saoe Woman
''Otherwise I would have shot at
him. Probably would have shot to
kill," said Whitney in an in-
terview after the robbery.
"I didn't th.ink about getting
shot. I just thought, get the rifle,
get the guy."
Whitney ran outside the store
with tbe rifle just as police ar .
rived in response to Lansford's
call that be was in trouble and an
armed man bad robbed the shop.
Police Capt. Neil Purcell drew
bis gun and ordered Whitney lo
place the rifle on the sidewalk.
Whitney complied.
A countywide alert for the sus-
pect, described as short, stocky,
with either a full red beard or
heavy multoncbop sideburns,
and possibly wearing a glass eye,
was 'unsuccessful in apprehend-
ing him.
Purcell said Laguna officers
searched local streets for about
four hours.
Juice Company
President Dies;
Rites Thursday
TreeSweet Products Company
president Robert E. Graves or
Costa Mesa, died Monday in a
Houston fiospitaJ of complications
following surgery.
Graves, who was 50, joined the
Santa Ana-based citrus process-
ing company as sales manager In
1964, and was named president in
1973.
Graves was president ofthe Na-
tional Juice Products Association
during 1975-76, and was past pre-
sident of the Frozen Food Council
of Southern California.
Before joining TreeSweet, he
was with StouCfer Foods.
Johnston Pies and Swift and Com-
pany.
Company officials said today
Graves was inalrumental in ob-
taining an arrangement with
football star O.J. Simpson to ad-
vertise TreeSweet products.
"Mr. Graves knew Mr.
Simpson very well over the last
year or so," said spokeswoman
Mrs. Bonnie Reid. "It waa an
absolutely ideal partnership, a
mutual partnership," she said.
Simpson, a star nmning back
for the Buffalo Bills of the Na-
tional Football Leaeue, makes
commercials for TreeSweet and
a car rental aJ(ency.
' Graves ta survived by his wife,
Elaine of the family bome, 1779
Tana1eT Drive, seven children
and ·~en crandchlldren.
Funeral· service. will be coo·
ducted Thursday at St. John the
Baptist Catholic Church, um W.
Bater st., Costa Mes~ be11nn.ing
attla.m.
The family bas suefested
memorial contributions Lo the
Athen18Clerosia Research Fund,
lD cueotthe Heart AAsociation.
''You win some, you loscilOIDCt. ••
Tb.It comment was offend ID tie watch
commander's office at the Onqe County
Auditions Tonight
·· For Colleae Show
• Sberfff'a Department todQ when Deputies
Joseph Mach up and DeD.nJs 9ulb cbec:ked In
from tbeU' mldn.11ht to a &.m. patrol.
\ nDYONE AGRBH tt was a pntty
vi.lid ol»er'Yatlon . .Both omten Weft eertam· '7 ~ when they drove at hilti 1Pff(I
abou& 2:30 a.in. in response to a can from a
bome at 20fl2 8edlandJ Drive, Costa Mesa. It \&D'Ded GUl I.bat Sbtlley and Dalt BkbardloG
of that adillreM bad plau t.o driv• to the
ba1pf.lal whin llra. Bldlardion. ~am• COD· •meed bet pnpaoey 1HI abOGt co temi.J.ftac..
,
AaoUMlr audttlOn senkJO for
Saddleback Collea•'& 1prlng ........... ~.m
~~ j>lace ton.111\t at 4 o'clock ln
B1l»d)q R to Oil '" rol• atilt opea aft« tbetnttiU cuttna .. • T.bt pnadDctioa, a rot Ir m\9lcal
callid .. Your Own Tblq,'' rt·
qalnl some a:lPt rehears• bat
colleee cndit can be obtalDed by
putidpeialtl. Dtrector Rkbard Am••-............ trJIQa oat l•ta..ran•\af parts~ be pRpared for n....,, .....,,..,
and mo•1•IM--tryoata.
•
Delly l'O .. Si.ti -o
TEACHERS' CHOICE
C•ndldate OrHnwood
SuppOrt
Of Faclllty
Underlined
fEditor'1 N9te -Thia .article is
porl o/. a &erie1 profiUng candidates /or thtte open seats on tM Sad·
dleba.ck College Board of Tf"Ultees.
The. at-large election i.f March. 8. and
the top vote-getter Jn each trustee
area wUl win. J
Dr. Alan Greenwood of Tustin
makes no secret of the fact thal
his campaign for a seat on the
Saddleback College Board of
Trustees has the full support of
the college faculty union.
He had the same backing in
June of 1974, when he ran aaainst
two other men for thal post.
Greenwood loet that election to
John Birch Society member
Robert Bartholomew. but he did
poll more than 14,500 votes. He
still contends he might have won
if the third candidate, Jeffrey
DuBowe hadn't taken nearly
11 .000 votes out of the pool.
The Tustin dentist, who main-
tains an office in Anaheim where
he specializes in dental surgery
for correction of facial de-
formities, has lived in the college
district for 12 years at 2032 Salt
Air Drive.
"I started getting interested in
the college when my wife
(Evelyn) was going there," he
said. "She got her associate in
arts, went oo for a bachelors
degree and is now working on her
masters."
Greenwood figures that's a
pretty good system , particularly
for students either uncertain of
their ultimate educational goaJs
or seeking adyanced training in a
vocational field.
The candidate is a bel~ver in
steady, structured, well -
reasoned growth or the district
and is a "strong supporter" of a
satelfite caropus serving the
Irvine and Tustin area. He also
supports the longstanding "pay-
as-you-10" method or financing
campus growth rather than
bonded indebtedness.
Greenwood is clearly com-
mitted to higher education. He is
on the part-time dental school
faculties of UC Irvine and Loma
Linda University and has
enrolled at USC to earn a
masters degree in education.
Four of his five children are
collei::c graduates and the firth is
a semor
·'I have developed some
degree of sensitivity to educa-
tion. which is a quality I might
impart as a trustee," he said. "A
community college offers the stu-
dent an opportunity to look
around and get a valuable educa-
tion in the process. particularly
in vocational areas.''
Though Greenwood charac-
ter i zea himself as a "con-
servative person," he said he
doesn't hold to the brand or arch-
conservatism pructiced by
Bartholomew. The dentist er
siderssuch politics "passe."
And though he has great
respect for the current college
adminJatration and its efforts to
improve the school, he is aJso a
firm backer of the faculty and its
desires.
Paul Bre'hnan. head of the Sad·
dleback Faculty Association (an
aUlliate of the California
Teachers Afaociatioo), con-
firmed that bis group will sup-
port Greenwood and provide
some financial aid. 1o that end,
Brennan said, the CTA bead·
quarters in Burlingame bu been
asked to rendtt ltl endonement
as well.
"We loollfd l ato Lbe back· grounds of i number or people
and decided he would be best for
the comnu.mltf," Brennan said. ..
Greenwood 11Jd he is 11m·
pathetic to Che faculty because it
is an essenUal element in the
educational process.
"The board &f trustees should.
bridae the chasm that I aee de·
wloplna betYtftn it.self and the
faculty." Greeftwood added.
''Though the dedsloaa mml
It.ID be made by the board. the in-
nlvemmt al the f~lty IA ach
dtclaloDI lboGJcl be comldend
•aenUal."
..
EDITION
Afteraoon
N.)'. Stoeks
VO(... 70, NO. 3'1 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES .. ..
ORANGE C UNTY, CALIFORNfA TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1977 TEN CEN ·
CUSD Rules Seniors Can Stay Put,
By ANNE COOPER Of 119 0.11• Pli.tlt.ff
Edward Westberg, Capistrano
'Unified School District board
·president, assured a crowd of
more than 200 Monday that no
11th grade student will be pre-
ssured into attending Capistrano
Valley High School next year.
But, tru,,tees voted 6-0 to open
Capistrano Valley in Mission Vie-
jo with a _senior class in Sep-
tember. The dialrict's Growth
Planning Advisory Commislion
(G PAC) had recommended the
school open without seniors the
first year.
Commissioners said a poll of
this year's juniors at San
Clemente and Dana Hills High
Schools indicated that about 80
percent of those surveyed pre-
f erred not to transfer to the new
school for their senior year.
A committee of parents
clalmed Monday 81 percent' of
parents whose children would be
affected by including a senior
class at Capistrano Valley sup.
ported the advisory com-
mission's recommendation.
The board's approval of open·
ing the new school with seniors
contained a provision allowing
intradistrict transfer for 11th
(See SENIORS, Page AZ)
Laguna Officer
Foils Gent Theft
[ Cop Hurt
o.ity Pltoe Pllol• lty 1'1111i, •ftftlarl~
OFFICER JIM LANSFORD SLUGGED FOILING HOLDUP
Laguna Policeman Wrestled Wlth Gunman In Store
Ban Lifted on Shots
For A-Victoria Flu
' WASH1NGTON <AP) -The
govemmen\'s moratorium on nu
vaccmabons was lifted. today so
the elderly and the chronically ill
can get shots to protect them
from A-Victoria nu.
In the process, they also would
be vaccinated against swine nu,
since there are no separate vac-
cines for the two strains.
But Secretary of Health.
Education and Welfare Joseph A.
Califano Jr. maintained the
moratorium on vaccine contain-
Coast
Weather
Some locally dense
morrun. fog near coasr.
otherwise partly cloudy
through Wednesday. Hiehs
78 to 72. Lows 48 to sz.
INSIDE TODAY
TMJI dill oaU U a Com·
munilf J)lol in .amt <ircZ.•,
OOtt 1iJ fl'Orl.O/tn' IM bo.ttk
Of)tr /l~ion 1001 J'r•t
joined -CaU/tmda.. For on 14pdote, ut P.Ollt A 1.
l•tlex
•a Alt
ing serum only for swine nu. He
said there is no immediate need
to lift it because there bas been
no outbreak of the swine nu
strain in the United States this
year. There has been an outbreak
of A-Victoria nu in a Miami nurs-
ing home.
The shots were called off in the
first place because of the risk of
Guillain-Barre Syndrome, a
rare paralytic disease, among
those who receive them.
Califano said the risk of con·
tracting that ailment is believed
to be about the same with any
type of nu shot. He said the swine
nu vaccine is not considered
more risky than any other t)tpe.
Califano recommended that
people age 65 or over take the A·
Victoria shot.
"At the first sign or an impend-
ing·outbreak d swine flu. we wUJ
take appropriate action,''
Califano said.
He told a news conference he
did not know at tbis Ume what
would consUtute "appropriate .
action."
Califano also qnounced that
the moratorium would be lifted
for vac:eine aeainat B·Honi Kong
flu. a milder strain that usually
strikes cbUdreo apd young
adulta.
He said the status of tho B·
Hona Kong vaccine would be the ·
same as lt waa before the
moratorium when health of·
fidala and physiclans could uae lt
at lhelr dlscreUoJl. However, un·
Ute the combined vaccine
.,a.lntt 1.tM and A-Victoria nu. t.b• f edcral aoverrunent ii not re--commtindlnl tbM St be used.
Tbe mm.bined awlJM and A-
Vldoria veedMcont.alnt U.. an-
ly &Yallabl• lmmunl11Uon
•l•ln.at A·YJctorla 11u..
J
• o.ity ...... SUtf ...... By Bandit
In Store
CROWD OF PARENTS AND STUDENTS DEMAND EQUAL EDUCATION OPPORTUNITY
Capistrano Juniors Want Dl1trict Bu1lng To High School of Their Choice
By PIDLIP ROSMARIN
041 .. O~oly Pilot Sl•tl
Realignment Promised.
A Laguna Beach police officer
was pistol-whipped and shot at
Monday after he walked in on the
armed robbery of a jewelry
store.
Irvine Company Bidder Plans Face Lift
The gunman fired a single shot
as he struggled to take Officer
Jim Lansford's service revolver
from him. The bullet went into
the floor.
The robber wrenched
Lansford's gun from its holster
and clubbed to his knees with it.
He ordered Lansford to lie face
down and warned the 2Q.year
Laguna Beach policeman,
··Don't move or l 'll kill you.'•
He escaped. with the officer's
gun and radio -but without a
grocery sack of handcratted
jewelry he came to steal.
More than a dozen policemen
blanketed streets and beaches in
a seven-block radius of the Jewel
Sear chers. 1027·0 N. Coast
Highway.
Lansford used the store
telephone to alert police.
Lansford wa s taken by
paramedic ambulance to South
Coast Community Hospital. An
X-ray examination of his skull
revealed no fractures and he was
. released. He had a large lump
behind his ear where he was
struck.
The incident began when
Lansford picked up one of the
proprietors or the Jewel
Searchers on a "Tipsy Taxi" call
to drive the man back to the
store.
Lansford was taking Joel
Whitney, 25, half-owner of the
business. through the store when
they passed right by the robber.
When Whitney's grandmother,
Maebelle O'Daniel, who was
tending the shop, spotted
Lansford's uniform, s he cried to
him, "Oh, I'm being robbed!"
The officer wheeled around to
see a gun pointed at him. The
robber ordered Lansford to un-
holster his weapon.
Lansford instead tried to talk
the man into surrendering, police
said.
Police said the man, holding
his gun in one hand, reached with
<See OFFICER, Page A2)
One of two companies seeking a
controlling interest in the Irvine
Company intends to drastically
reorganize Irvine management if
its bid is successful. testimony in
Orange County Superior Court
has revealed.
Quoting Monday from a deposi·
tion taken before the trial from
Irvine heiress Joan Irvine Smith,
attorney Howard Privett testified
that representatives of one of two
bidders assured her they intended
to· 'do away with the dead wood.·'
Privett represents the James
Irvine Foundation in a trial that
will end with Judge James F.
Judge's approval of one of two
bidders: the Mobil Oil Company
or a consortium headed by Wall
Street financier Charles Allen
and Detroit developer Alfred /
Taubman.
Mobil has offered $281.9 million
for the foundation's controlling
interest of 54.5 percent. The Allen-
T au bm an offer tops that by
$800,000.
Privett's testimony from Mrs.
Smith's deposition reveals that
the 44-year-old descendant of
Irvine Company founder James
Irvine held a series of meetings
with representatives of the Allen-
Taubman Interest.
Those conversations renected
the views of Allen-Taubman
negotiators that the Irvine Com·
pany is overstaffed and the con-
clusion that "we should keep the
good people and do away with the
deadwood."
The deposition contains the
comments: ''the second best
should be eliminated."
It also contains the prediction
from Allen-Taubman officials
that the restructured Irvine Com-
pany under new direction could
lead the firm to greater achieve-
ments in many areas of Orange
County development.
It is predicted that the com·
pan)t's present income could be
doubled under the new manage-
ment although it would not be
possible to pay dividends in the
Romance Over
Fiance Depart,s With Ring
HACKENSACK, N.J. (AP>-A Fair Lawn woman
has filed suit to regain a $3,000 diamond engagement
ring she claims her fiance slipped off her finger while
she slept.
Randy Bemiker said four days .before she was to
marry Jay Cohen, a Clifton stockbroker. he canc,Jed
their engagement and took the ring without her
perinlssion, according to court papers filed here i.ton· day. •
On Nov. 7, she was watching television at
her home with Cohen~ her attorney Leonard Miller
sald.
''She feU asleep. then woke up as there W81 a tug ,
on her finger. The next thin& she knew, Cohen wu
walking out the door with the ring and bis expl•nation
at tho time was the statement, 'I'm not ready',"
Mlller said .
Miss Beni.Uter also is seeklnc r~ment of $700
Sbe cll.lms WU de~itecl with a ~ril a&ent !or°"
couple's tii>fte)'t,'lloon, $500 she de~ ed on furniture
and D>O for her wedding aown Slii 81Jo alked puniUveclam1a1es.
first few years of the new opera
lion.
The current trial was ordered
when Mrs. Smith took legal action
to halt the foundation's sale of jts
Irvine interests to Mobil for $200
million.
Provisions of the Federal Tax
Reform Act of 1969 compel foun-
dation trustees to dispose of those
holdings before 1983.
Mrs. Smith, with holdings 0£22.
percent in the Irvine Company, is
recognized as the major minority
stockholder in the company.
One-time Thing?
Heroin Factory
Raid Rated Rare
BylDLARYKAYE
Ol IM O•lly Piiot Sl•lf
Federal agents may never un-
cover another "heroin factory"
similar to the one discovered last
weekend in the Irvine area. a
Drug Enforcement Admm1stra-
tion <DEA> spokesman said to-
day.
"We have so many built-in
safeguards against such an
operation succeeding that people
would be very·foolish to even at-
tempt it ... said the spokesman,
an official in the federal agency's
information department.
Federal agents burst into
Pearson Labs, 1810 Carnegie,
Santa Ana, Saturday and arrest-
LB Doctor's
Widow Dies;
Rites Tonight
Maurine V. Whightman, widow
of the late Dr. Ardath Whightman
Sr .. died Sunday at South Coast
Community Hospital. Mrs.
Whightman and her husband
cametothe Laguna Beach area in
1930 and he established a as.year
praqice.
Rosary will be recited at 7:30
tonight at St. Catherine's Catholic
Church in Laguna Beach. Mass
will be celebrated at 10 a.m. Wed-
nesday. The Monseigneur Harry
Trower of lbe Orange County .
diocese will officiate.
Mrs, Wbigbtman, 71, of 221
Emerald Bay was a p.11st presi-
dent d the Council of Catholic
Women, a paat president"'' the
Ebell Club and a past presWent of
the OJ.-81\ie County Medical Aux.
Uiartes.
Trained as a nurse, Mrs.
Wbightman often assisted her
husband in hf5 medical practice.
Mrs. Whightman l5 survived by
brother, Ray Miccolls of Orange
County; sisters, Wilma Wyckoff
and Dorothy Clark, both or San
Jose : son, Dr . Ardath
Whi1htman, Jr., of Fullerton;
d1u1hters. Mary Ann Salamldaof
HunU.natoo Beach and Judith
Mc:Qu.ae of PittA.bur&h. Pa., and
nlne crandcbildten.
Burial ii at Ascenalon
CemNiry In El Toro. l'tmeral .,.
ran1emuu are, directed by
McCGnnldr Mortuar1 ill J.....,•
Beacb. ..
ed company president Bernard
Berman, 52. Santa Ana, on
charges of conspiring to produce
heroin.
Berman was arraigned Mon·
day in U.S. District Court in Los
Angeles.
A second man, Joseph
Paladino. 5.1, was arrested in his
New Jersey home the same day.
Paladino is believed to be the
fin ancieror the operation.
Paladino will probably be
brought to Los Angeles following
a s pecial federal hearing, ac·
cording to a spokesman for the
U S. Attorney m Los Angeles.
A third man 1s thought to be in-
volved in the illicit operation. but
the DEA spokesman said
charges have not yet been filed
against hlm and would not reveal
his name. He is an Orange Coun·
ty man and was also found at the
lab Saturday.
The lab was capable of produc·
ing more than $2 million worth of
heroin each month, according to
federal agents. However, agents
said they confiscated only a
s mall amount of the drug
becaU5e tht? firm was not yet into
full production.
The DEA licenses every com·
pany that manufactures or dis·
<See HEROIN, Page A2)
'Merit Pay'
System Set
ForCUSD
Capiatrano Unified School Dis·
trlct trustees announced Monday
that school administrators are
now on a ••merit pay" system.
with l!'lcreases or decnasei1 ln
pay refiecUngjob performance.
Superintendent Jerome
Thornsley said admlnistrators
will be evaluated this summer
and appropriate Rcommenda-
Uons made for salary ad.lust·
men ts.
For the current year, the board
awarded adminlst.raton an 8.4
percent salary blke. retroacUve
to July 1, Ur781 the Hme Increase
ne10Uated by the Capistrano
Unified Education AsaoctaUon
for teacben. ·
In addlUon, administrators
wbo are not at Ute top ot the.Ir pay
•cale ha•• rittJved a step I.acre-
: (8ee80IOO.l..'1PA2J
A 2 riAILY PILOT USC
Air Study
,.Appro:ved , . Forsc
The Sao a.meote City Coon-. fr took twin actions Monday to ' larily the city'a murky aewage eH.
, .Altboulh annoyed by stale air
q_Ualll)' rwtrietSou lmp()Sed OD
membe~ 'of the South East
)le1iooal Reclamation Authortl)r
1• ,.(SERRA> as a condition of grant
lunds, the council voted to pro-
.eeed with • R,700 air Qualit;J
atudy. Tbeclb''acostla$300.
Pro-development council
members have been anaered by
what they see as state cllctates
to curb growth within the db' if San Clemente is to participate in
the naicmal sewqe treatment
system, a eondition all but forced
cin the dty by the State Water
Quality Board..
In its secood action, the coun-
cil voted to proceed with an ap-
peal oo a sewer connecUoo curb
clamped on the city by the San
Diqo Regional Wat.er Quality
· ~ntrol Board.
: , The appeal to the state-wide ~ater board, has been held for
several months as the city tried
to work out differences with the
regional board.
City Manaaer Gerald Weeks
said it would be several more
tnonths before the city can get
the necessary material together
to make the appeal.
The regional board bas been
doling out sewer collection al~
locations to the city on the ha.sis
of. San Clement.e's progress in
improving its sewaie collection
and treatment system.
The restrictions have aJowed
development in the city.
Fro•PageAl
OFFICER • •
, I.he other band to try to pull
Lansford's revolver from the
. holster.
Unsuccessful because of the
holster restraining strap, the
gunman tried to yank the weaPon
free by grabbing it with both
hands.
Then Lansford, 50, grabbed the
man's gunhand and wrestled for
Lheweap()n.
During the struggle, Mrs.
O'Daniel took the sack of jewelry
and ran into a back room.
Whitney ran to another area o(
the shop and grabbed a .22·
caliber rifle.
By the time Whitney found the
rifle and ran back to face the rob-
ber. he was gone.
··Otherwise I wouJd have shot at
him. Probably would haveshotto
kill." said Whitney in an in·
tervicw after the robbery.
"I didn't think about getting
shot. I JUSt thought, get the rifle.
get the guy."
Whitney ran outside tbe store
with the rifle just as police ar-
rived m resp()nse to Lansford's
call that he was in trouble and an
armed man had robbed the shop.
Police Capt. Neil Purcell drew
his gun and ordered Whitney to
place the rifle on the sidewalk.
Whitney complied.
A countyw1de alert for the sus-
pect. described as short, stocky,
with either a fuJI red beard or
heavy muttonchop sideburns,
and possibly wearing a glass eye,
was unsuccessful in apprebend-
tnf: him.
Purcell said Laguna officers
searched local strttts for about
four hours.
Niguel Thief Gets
Sl,607 in Loot
A burglar who twisted on t.be
front door knob to gain entry took
, property valued at $1,fJOT from a
Laguna Nlguel teacher's home,
Orange County sheriff's off1cers satd.
Deputies said the theft of
stereo equipment and a
television set was reported by
Jerry Dyer, 37, of 2'378 La
Hermosa, He waa teachlnl at
Saddleback High School at the
time ol the break-in.
DAILY PILOT
LAGUNA
BEACH
SAN JUAN
CAPISTRANO
Dally ""' .. ..._
POTENTIAL CAMPUS SITES -This map depicts the two
parcels of land under consideration for a new Sad·
dleback College District campus. The blowup at top
shows the Myford Road-Bryan Avenue location originally cnosen by college trustees la.st fall. The other blowup
shows the site at Irvine Center Drive and Jeffrey Road,
offered by the Irvine Company late ln the selection pro·
cess. Trustees are deadlocked as to which site to buy.
The existing district campus is at lower right of map.
Site Vote Deadlock
Irks College Board
By WILUAIW SCHREIBER
Ol U• O.lly ..ii.t it.llff
Flaring tempers sparked
verbal fireworks Monday night
as Saddleback College trustees
failed again to muster enough
votes to choose one of two poten-
tial Irvine-Tustin satellite cam-
pus sites.
Four votes are required to
authorize such a purchase but the
board split 3-2 after more than
two hours of meandering dis-
cussion.
With one board seat vacant and
the seventh trustee, Dr. James
Marshall. critically ill and
hospitalized, it now appears like·
ly that the decision will be de-
layed until well after the March 8
election.
Top administration officials
said if that happens, it is "highly
improbable" that the northern
area campus could open as
planned in the spring of 1978.
Two weeks ago. trustees de·
adlocked at 2-2. with an absten·
lion by Mission Viejo's Donna
Berry. The only difference this
week was Mrs. Berry's decision
to join thoc;e favoring a site at
Myford Road and Bryan Avenue
on the unincorporated Irvine
Ranch.
Trustees Larry Taylor and
Norrisa Brandt back a site of· rered by the Irvine Company late
in the site selection process. That
alternate location is 3.S miles
F,....PageAJ
SCHOOL •••
ment, based on additional years
or experience.
Thomsley said information on
salaries of individual ad-
ministrators, reflectln& varying
merit raises, will be public ln-
fo rm ation. He said all ad-
ministrators. lnch.ading blmaelr,
must be beld accountable for the
kind of job they do.
"We have cbolen to be ad·
m.lni.ltraton," he said. •'To be
an administrator is a privilege,
but the poeitlon carrlet certain
responsibWtles."
The pel1bborlng SaddJeback
Valley Unified School District
has refUsed to dlscloee individual
admlniatrators' raises, based on
merit pay, claimin1 such
publlcatlon would violate
penonal privacy.
Tbomaley's salary was recent·
ly boosted from $31 ,500 to $42,SOO,
effective Jan. 1. The 13 percent
salary bike was called a 6.5 per·
cent raise by trustees, since the
superintendent had not bad a pre-
vious raile in the 18 months he
had worked for tbe diltrict.
Trust.eel announced Monday
contNeta bave been approved for
the followlnc top ad.mlnlatraton:
-Truman Benedlet. deputy
superintendent. now earns
sae.200. • 6~ pereet lncreue
over llllt yaar.
-Sam Cblcat, a11l1tant
auperlatendent, la makSn' ae.eoo, alto • ~ percent in-
ereaae. -Pblllp Orlp.011, a11l1tant
tuperinten4ent for lnltrueUonal nm• la earnlftj '52,DO in lm flnt )'ear' ln dilutct·wld• ad·
mlnl•U'atloa; Orl1non w11
f onnertJ Dana Rllla Blab School principal..
-lt.oblm L. Knew. dlreetor ol pertGDDll ...met, le •anl!DI
llO,toO ia ... ttnt 'JUI' ..... ~ oaabed wllh ~ d1a-
south of the Myford-Bryan site at
the comer of Irvine Center Drive
and Jeffrey Road.
Mrs. Berry joined Patrick
Backus and Frank Greinke in
support of the other parcel,
which already had been ap-
proved by the full board last fall
until the company came in with
its propoeal.
Until about 90 minutes of Mon·
day's meeting had elapsed, the
most interesting byplay coo-
c er n e d new financial
breakdowns of the company's of-
fer.
Then Greinke arrived, blaming
his lateness on • "business ap-
pointment'' that kept him over·
time in Loi An&eles County.
The Tustin trustee resumed bis
allack on the company's offer,
claiming the people of bis com-
munity would be the big losers if
the site is moved farther south.
He intimated that the Tustin
City Council, which took an am-
biguous position on the site selec-
tion issue, didn't want to offend
the company because of its oogo·
ing negotiations to annex 450
acres of prime company-owned
land.
Greinke accused the council of
playing the role of "Judas"
because of those "450 pieces of
silver."
He also warned that ii the
Myford·Bryan site is not chosen,
Irvine and Tustin might secede
from the Saddleback distrlct to
attend schools that are closer to
home.
Taylor, who represents
Laguna Beach, said such
secession comments are "un·
founded" and said he doesn't think "anyone will be spinning
ort the Saddleback District."
He said there are no political
"under or overtones" and that
the decision on a northern cam·
pus alte should be bued on "the
price ol the land and bow best to
serve the area.''
During hi• presentation,
Greinke traded barbs wlth
several fellow board meniben
and with one audience niember,
Rob Greene of Tustin, who aald
the people of bis city want the
most economical site, even if it
means driving 3.S mllea farther.
Before Greinke'• arrival,
Taylor outlined tbe four options
open to the dbtrf ct for acqulsi·
lion or the site offered by the
Irvine Company.
He said the original offer pro-
vides for purchue of an initial 20
acres at Ms,000 an acre, plus a
five-year opUon on up to90 more
at the same price. If all 100 &Cl'M
were acquired, the total cost
· would bl M.5 mUUoa.
Tb• othtl' option.• are mere!r
adJuatmenta of the lnWal J*1o
acre coet 'and the fixed price for
the remalnlnf acre., ..
For exaraple, Ute district could
buy the !ll"lt 2IO acres for $30,000
an ami and set a frol.eG price of
$60,000 an u... for t.be other *>.
That would place the total coat at 15.4 D'llllkJD.
CoU.C• a4m1DJ,ltra&on b«T•
lndlcatid u.e_, pi'Obab17 WOll't enr aeed a tull 100 ac,., 1>11-
trlct Sui>erlatendellt Bobtrt Lom bardl lalcl lloact., the area
could bl MIWd P1'0Petl1 with u.oco•aa.."
Pllrea,,S.:Help"les•
' ·Five Children.
·nie iii Blaze
HOLBROOK, N.Y. (AP) -
Five children raniing in aie from
4 to 18 died early today in a fire
tbat destroyed their family's
wooden. colo11lal-1tyle home
here. The parents jumped to safety
and then tried to re·enter the
house, but were unable to do so.
One witness said the father,
Michael Kenny. stood outside the
house in the snow acreamln•,
.. My God. we've 1ot to get my
cblldreoout!"
Kenny, 41, and his wife,
Barbara, 38, watched In horror as
scoraofftremeo fought In vain to
reacb tbe children, wbo were
burned beyond recognition. Some
lJO volunteer ftftmen fouabt the
blaze.
The Kennys were taken to
Brookhaven Memorial Hospital
in Patchogue, where a
spokesman aaid they were suf·
ferint from smoke inhalation,
bruises and shock. Mrs. Kenny
also had a broken leg, he said.
Officials identified the dead
children as Gary, 18; Karen, 16;
Michael Jr., 13; Ian, 1, and An·
thony,4. ·
Three of the children were
found in the living room on the
first floor. Two others were found
beside a window on the second
floor.
Officials said Mrs. Kenny dis-
covered the fire and alerted her
husband. Holbrook Fire Chief
Robert Rogers said the pa.rents
jumped to safety from the second
story. and other officials said the
parents tried to re-enter the
house but were blocked by
names.
A neighbor, Kathleen Alba,
said Kenny woke her up at 4 :30
a.m ., banging on her door and
screamin~. "My kids are in
there! My kids are in there!"
FrontPageAJ
HEROIN .••
tributes any controlled sub-
stance.
"The licensing Is strict and
there is constant monitoring.
Each distributor must keep de-
tailed records of where tbe drugs
are going," the SPokesman said.
He added that it is not extreme·
ly difficult to produce the illegal
drug, althousb a thorough
knowledge of chemistry Is
needed, along with adequate tab
equipment and enough raw
materials.
"That's the catch -it's tough
to get the raw materials (opium)
here and deal with it illegally,"
be said.
Berman had been issued a
license to produce morphine sul-
phate and paragoric, both legal
derivatives of opium.
"But there was no sign that he
planned to produce either of
those drugs -only the Illegal
heroin," said the spokesman.
Historically, drug traffickers
in this country have restricted
their activity to smuggling in
already·produced heroin from
countries where opium PoPPies
grow. such as Mexico, France
and Far Eastern nations, he said.
"Heroin is contraband here so
tbe opium poppies need to be
shipped in from elsewhere.
They're buJky, smelly and you
need 10 pounds of opium to make
one pound of heroin. Jl's not
easy,'' the •Pokesman continued.
"Really, what they tried to do
was a lot of hassle for nothing.
When you start ordering your
supr.lles (opium) from a
le11t mate source as they did, it's
just a matt.er of seconds before
we would catch you," he said.
Plea Stills
Diu of Debate
Only Briefly
Saddleback College Trustee
Pat Backus sat quietly with a
look of disbelief on his face Mon-
day nJiht, list.a.me to the verbal
duel between Board Chairman
Norriaa Brandt and Tustin
Ttilltee Frank Greinke.
Greinke was emotJonatly de-
f endin1 his preference for a
northern diatrtct campus alte and
bacl Just told Mrs. Brandt to
... hut \q)11 unW he WU flnished.
Mra. Brandt chided Orelnke for
••tnnuendoee0 ln h1a presentation
and decl&r9d ah• would aoon or-
der b1m to "•but up'' lf tM didn't endblatlrade.
At that point, Backua leaned
forward and took th• noor.
.. Thia board ia &eWna out ot
control," boomod \.be norma1Jy
quiescent Dana Point trusteo.
. .. A• cbalnnan, you•re dolnr a
loU..1 Jo~1'' be aald to Mn.
Brandt. "You1N chairman and If
10\l clll't bmdlelt. turn It over to
the vice chal.nnan." .Dmtna the momtnU,, 1Uence, ~.ebioclJ l'Hllled that Backus'
aa&cutloD probablJ wouldn't
IOIH~ ·~ .... ~ towarcl ONIAke antlur ''but be'e Tice ....... tt"~'"i?·
She said Kenny, clad ln pa.
jamas, and his wife, in a
nlghtfown, stood in be.r home
helpless. watcbina tho fire butn. un wu like a nl1htmare"
' Mrs. Albf..sald. u1 couldn't st~d
it." Thef kept scr,amlng, •My
children are ln there!' "
Rogers, the fire chief, said he
recelvedacalJ at4:34 a.m .
"I live two minutes away," he
said. "I was on the scene im-
mediately . .-iames were coming
out of every window. It just lit up
the sky. The children were inside
and entry wu impossible."
Police said they received a call
from Mrs. Kenny before 4:30
a.m., but were unable to un·
derstand ber because she was
screaming.
f'rGIRP~Al
SENIORS ••.
graders.
Students who are juniors this
year and live in the new high
school attendance area may
·make application beginning
April 1 to stay at the school they
now attend.
Capistrano Valley attendance
boundaries were established at
the Monday meeting. The new
school will ~aw from the Portion
of Mission Viejo lo the
Capistrano di.lltrict and from San
Juan Capistrano eut of the San
Die10 Freeway or north of Del
Obispo Street, west of the
rreeway.
Before submitting transfer ap-
plications. students will be re-
quired to meet in small groups
with other students and their
parents to discuss with Principal
John Smart the educational pro·
gram, co-curricular and athletic
activities available at Capistrano
Valley.
Westberg said transfer will be
automatic for any current junior
who applies to stay at bis preseht
school after attending a parent·
student discussion with Smart.
The board postponed con-
sideration on whether
transportation will be provided
by the district for next year's
seniors who choose to stay at San
Clemente or Dana Hills high
schools.
Jn his recommendation to the
boatd, Supt. Jerome Thorn5'ey
proposed that transportation be
the responsibility of parents
whose children opt to stay where
they are.
Attorney Daniel Bucknum of
Newport Beach said failure by
the district to provide trans Porta·
lion would be a denial of equal
educational opportunil)•. He said
tbe district would be diserhninat·
ing against families who could
not provide transportation for
their children.
As an attorney, he said, he
would not hesitate lo take a case
against the school district in the
event a child forced to make his
own way to school were injured.
··Besides, how would any one
of you feel If one of these students
had lo hitchhike to school and
didn't make it?" he asked.
License Talk
Slated in LB
Increased enforcem ent in
Laguna Beach of regulations
governing business licenses wlll
be the subject of a study session
of the City Council, meeting al
7: 30 p.m. Wednesday.
Barbar.a Moore, business
Ucense clerk, said she will ex·
plain how the business license re·
gulatioos are enforced, how they
are applied and what happens if
a business owner doesn't pay his
llcenae fees.
She said plans are being made
to rewrite the business Ucense
code and to Pose stricter enforce-
ment of penalties.
Auditions Tonight
For Colle2e Show
Another audltl0n session for
Saddleback College's sprint
semester drama product.ion will
take place tonight sl 6 o'clock in
Building R to fill two roles still
open after the Initial CHting.
The production, a rock mualcal
called "Your Own Thmc," re-quires tome olght reheanals but
colle1• credit.can be obtained by
partlclpanta. Dir.ctor Rlchard
Andenon sald tboH trytn1 out
for the remal.nlnt part.a shoQld be
prepared for readln1, aln&ing
and movement during tryout&.
India 'Fight' Slated
NEW DELHI, India ~AP) -
Prime Mlnlater Incllta Gandhi
and her rulJftC eoniraa.party is-
sued a eampatp manllllto to-
da1 ~ ladt•'• e10 mllllon people. eomPnbenliv. IOd.aliat
attatllr oa ~ and eceeom1c
dllpartti. . .
l
.,. ... ,.. .. ~Wft .......
TEACHERS' CHOICE
Candkf•t• Greenwood
Support
Of Faculty
Underlined
•
f Editor's Note -This . article is
part of a stnes profiling candidate:f
Jor three open seats on f~ Sod·
dleback College Board of Trwttes.
The,at-J.arge election ia March.8.and
the top vote-getter in each ttU1tee
area wiU uin. J
Dr. Alan Greenwood of Tustin
makes no secret of the fact that
bis campaign for a seat on the
Saddleback Colleee Board of
Trustees bas tbe full support or
the college raculty union.
He bad the sal"e backing in
June or 1914, when he ran against.
two other men for that Post.
Greenwood lost that election to
John Birch Society member
Robert Bartholomew. but he did
poll more than 14,500 votes. He
still contends he might have won
if the third candidate, Jeffrey
DuBowe hadn't taken nearly
11,000 votes out of the pool.
The Tustin dentist, who main-
tains an office in Anaheim where
he specializes in dental surgery
for correction of facial de-
formities, has lived In the college
district for 12 years at 2032 Salt
Air Drive.
"I started getting interested in
the college when my wife
<Evelyn> was going there," he
said. "She got her associate in
arts. went on for a bachelors
degree and is now workiog on her
masters."
Greenwood figures that's a
pretty good system, particularly
for students either uncertain of
their ultimate educational goals
or seeking advanced training in a
vocational field.
The candidate is a believer in
steady. structured, well-
reasoned growth of the district
and is a "strong supporter" of a
satellite campus serving the
Irvine and Tustin area. He also
supports the longstanding "pay·
as-you-go" method of financing
campus growth rather than
bonded indebtedness.
Greenwood is clearly com·
mitted to higher education. He is
on the part time dental school
faculties of UC Irvine and Loma
Linda Unive rsity and has
e nrolled at USC to earn a
masters degree in education.
Four of his fi ve children are
college graduates and the fifth is
a senior.
"J have devel oped som e
degree of sensitivity to educa·
lion. which ls a quality I might
Impart as a trustee,·· he said. "A
community college offers the stu-
dent an opportunity to look
around and get a valuable educa-,,
lion in the process. particularly
In vocational areas ''
Though Greenwood charac-
terizes himself as a "con·
servaUve person," he sald h&
doesn't hold to the brand of arch·
conservatism practiced by
Bartholomew. The dentist con-
siders such Politics "pasae."
A"d though he has great
r e"pect ror the current college
administration and its efforts to
improve the school, he is also a
firm backer of the faculty and its
des Ir~.
Paul Brennan. head of the Sad·
dleback Faculty Association <an
affiliate of the California
Teachers Asaoclatlon ), con-
firmed that his aroup will sup-
port Greenwood and provide
some financial aid. To that end,
Brennan said, the CTA bead·
quarters m Burlin,ame baa been
asked to render its endorsement
as well.
"We looked into the back·
grounda of a number of P4M>P1e
and decldtd be would be best ror the co~unlty," Breouan said.
Greenwood said he ls sym-
pathetic to the faculty because it
Is an essential element in the
educational proce11.
"The board of trustees should.
brld10 lho chum that I Ht do·
velooi~ between ltaelf and the
faculty,• Green°"·ood added.
·~houah t.be deti.aleo& must .un be made b)' th• board, tM lA-
VOl\'eaMml of \be tacult.y t.n such
declalonl ahO\lld. be eonalderecl
entJal." I
'7
l
. ... ... • --.,.. ........ • .
__ ____., ... , ....... 7 .
Tod•y•~ Cleebai ,j
N.V. S&oells ·l
ORANGE C<i>UNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESOAY,FEBRUARY~1977 N TEN CENT
I
·County. School Districts , Cool Pools
By MICHAEL PA.SKEVICB
0t•De1lyl'lletlt.ltf
School offlclala along the
Orange Coast are tumlng down
tbe heat in swimming pools as
lbw u 68 degrees in an effort to
conaerve natural eaa.
Althouib there hu been no of·
ficlal mandate from the state
Public Utilities Commission,
ttaoat school districts have cooled
Off pools to 78 degrees, a move
some believe endangers the up-"at f\llJ blast" and have no inten-
comlng bi&b school swim season. tion of cutting back on the use of
"I can't understand it, I think natural aa.s. "
everyone is panictini and they Dean Crowley, admlnbtrative
should wait until there is a man· \l assistant for the California In·
date,'' aaid Guy Barnicoat, a Mia· terscbolastlc Federation (CIF),
sion Viejo resident and member Southern Section, the governing
of several Amatuer AthleUc body for 400-plus Southern
Union (AAU) swimming commit· California high school athletic
tees. programs, agreed with
He coot.ended swim clubs in the Barniooat's claima.
-east are keepin9 temperatures He said the CIF is leaving the . I
Court Upholds
We apon.s
R estraint
Urged
WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi·
dent Carter said today he
believes the United States and
the Soviet Union are roughly
equal in military might and ad·
vocated initiatives on both sides
to restrain arms while maintain·
ing the overall balance of power.
At his first White House news
conference, Carter disclosed that
he is considering cancellation of
a projected sale of advanced con-
cussion bombs to Israel.
He said he is drafting a long-
range energy program that will
"require substantial sacrifices
on the part of the American peo-
ple," and will bar any unwar-
ranted profits by the industries
lnvolved. And be repeated his
promise to bold two news con-
ferences every month.
:-Cart.er said either the United
States or the Soviet Union "can
destroy a large part of the other
nation," and the challenge now is
to maintain equity while curbing
the arms race.
The President said a major at·
tack by either side would mean
~O million t o 100 million
casualties. He also said neither
nation could prevent the other
from retaliating again.st such an
attack.
The President also disclosed
that during a meelinl earlier in
the day with a representative of
the Peoples Republic of China
that the subject ol reducing de·
pendence of the superpowers on
ouclearweapons was discussed.
On another matt.er, th.e Presi·
dent said be is confident that
toniress will produce an accep·
table venion of bis pro1ram to
perk up the economy, but added
be wW not hesitate to exercise
the veto when he deeides it is
warranUd.
With aome congreuional
.Democrats pressina for a sharp
expansion ol hls $31 .2 billion pro-
1ram ol tu cuts and jobs, Carter
aaid be anticipates some amend-
ments but believes they will be
acceptable.
A-Victoria
Flu Shots
Ban Lifted
WASHINGTON <AP> -The
aovemment's moratorium on nu
nccinatlonl was lifted today so
the elderly and the cbronically ill
can 1et sbott to p(Otect them
from A· Victoria nu. ·
In the pn>ee11, they also would
be vacdnated aalinlt awine Ou,
aince there are no separate vac-
cines forUM!,twostraJ.m.
But Secretuy of Health,
Educatia:I and Welfare Joseph A.
Califano Jr. maintalfted the
. moratorium oo vaccine coataln· tq aenun Gilly tor sne flu. He
nid there la no immediate need
to lift it becauae then bu been
·no outbreak of tbe swine flu
strain in the United Stat.ell th1a
)ear. 1ber'e bu been an outbreak
of A· Victoria Ou iD a Mt amt nun-·
ln&home.
Tbe lbota were called off in the tlrat plan MellDH oUb• rtN d
.Gutlfaln·Bane 8yadrome, a ran paralyUe d.leeue, amon.a u.. wbO ~ .. tbelD. .
Cali!ano ~ iaid tM rilk cl COO•
tractiq ttu.t illmmt ii beUintd
to be about the j8JDe Wida UY
t1pe of flu 1bOt.: & s.W tM IWIDe nu .. eclM la aol .-1dend
., ... rllkt .... ,.,~Jr'· Cilltaao Nell9 tbat ~··•~taketbeA· Vldortaaot.
Dally Pl..C St.ti ~·
LOSES APPEAL BID
Ex-Aneaaor Vallerga
Irvine Co.
Revamp jug
Discussed
One of two companies seeking a
controlling interest in the Irvine
Company intends to drastically
reorganhe Irvine management if
it.a bid is successful, testimony in
Orange County Superior Court
haa revealed.
Quoting Monday from a deposi-
tion taken before the trial from
Irvine heiress Joan Irvine Smitb,
attorney Howard Privett testitied
that rei>resentaUves of one of two
bidders assured her they intended
to "do away with the deadwood."
Privett represents the James
Irvine Foundation in a trial that
will end-with Judge James F.
Judge'a approval of one of two
bidden: the Mobil Oil Company
or a tmscll1ium headed by Wall
Street financier Charles Allen
and Detroit developer Alfred
Taubman.
Mobil bas offered $281.9 mUllQn
ror the foundation's conlrolling
interestol 54.5 percent. The Allen-
Ta u bman offer tops that by
$800,000.
Privett'• testimony from Mrs.
Smith's deposition reveala that
the 44-year-old deacendant of
Irvine Company founder James
Irvine beld a series of meetings
with repr"eNDtatives of the Allen-
TaubJUD in~.
Thole converaatlonl renect.ed
the views of Allen-Taubman
netotiaton that the Irvine Com·
pany is oventaffed and the con-
(See H£JaES8, Pace M> I
Ex-O C
I
Assesso r
Ple a L ost.
LOS ANGELES CAP> -
Former Orange County Assessor
J ack Vallerga's 1975 convict.ion
on three counts of selling county
property was upheld today by the
2nd District Court of Appeals.
Vallerga was sentenced in Ven·
tura County Superior Court to 60
days in jail and five years' proba·
lion and fined $1,000. The case
was handled in Ventura after a
change of venue from Santa Ana.
Vallerga was also a codefen-
dant in another case with former
Rep. Andrew J . Hinshaw.
In the current case, Vall4P"ga
was convicted of felony conflict
of interest, four counts of theft or
public monies and a count ol em·
beulement or public monies. He
wu acqµitted oo one count f1'
gr.and tbetl embezzlement of
public monies.
PresidinC Juatice John J. For•
wrote the opinion with Justices
John Alport and Rodney Potter
concurring.
The case stemmed rrom the
sale in April 1973 to Spar-
tanburg, S.C., of an Orange
County-developed computerized
property assessment system.
The County Boatd of Supervisors
hacl authorized the sale for $2,045
in 1970 but bad not authorized a
costly teat of the system at
Orange County expense as a con-
dition ol the sale.
Supervisors also did not
authorize the $714 consulting fee
Vallerga received from
Spartanburg or the $6,000 con·
suiting fee Hinshaw received and
split with Vallerga, who was also
charged with lllegally billing bis
Spartanburg plane fare to the
county.
He wu not charged in the
Spartanburg.case.
Candidaie.t Speak
At School Forum
The pllblic is in-vited to bear
and que.tion candidates for the
Newport-Mesa school boatd
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in the
Little Theater at Corona del
Mar High School.
All 10 candidates for the four
aeata to be ftlled in a March 8
election have been Invited to at-
tend the meeting 1ponKored ·by
the Corona del Mar ZOne Ad·
vi1ory Committee, a parent
group representin1 alx schools.
Rolnanee Over
Fiance Departa. With Ring
responalbllity of pool tem·
peraturea up to individual
schools, even thoueh there have
been PUC hint.a that an order la
forthcoming to abut off the heat
com,11letely ..
"Quite frankly, they (the PUC>
have been.very vague and our
member schools have been call·
in& us in droves," said Crowley.
The minimum pool tem·
perature for compeUtive swim·
mine is 78 degrees, with the ideal
betwem 80 and 82, accordin1 to
El Toro }fjgh School swim coach
Steve Fania.
He said the pool at bis school wm be lowered to 78 degrees, and
noted that even a one degree
change in temperature can be
felt by swimmers.
Huntinston Beach, Newport·
Mesa, Capistrano, Saddleback
Valley, and Irvine Unified School
.Vall~rga
FogfJound a t Airport
District offlclal.s say they are
joining ln lowering pool heat to
about '18delJ"eea.
Clyde Lovelady, business
manager for Laeuna Beach.
Untiled Di.strict. sald today be
will lower Laguna Beach Hiah's
pool thermostat to 68 deereea and
await commenu from swimmers
and dl.atrtct offlcW.s.
Dana Hills High School Vice
(See POOLS, Page Al>
Guilt
Passengers and crew members from this
Alr California 737 were out of luck this
morning when fog forced a halt to flights in JlnP out ol Orange County Airport. These
passengers got a bus ride to Ontario where
another plane -and clear skies -were
waiting. Early morning fog conditions are
expected to continue through Wednesda)'.
Heroin F actOries Rare
Drug Officer Cites 'Built-in Sa/ eguanh'
By HILARY KA YE
Of* o.lty ......... " Federal agents may never un·
cover another "heroin factory"
similar to the one discovered la.st
weekend in the Irvine area, a
Drug Enforcement Administra·
lion <DEA> spokesman said lo·
day.
"We have so many built-in
safeguards against such an
operation succeedin& that people
would be very foolish to even at·
tempt lt," said the spokesman,
an offU:ial in the federal agency's
information department.
Federal agents burst into
Pearson Labs, 1810 Carnegie,
SaJlta Ana, Saturday and arrest·
ed company pr~ident Bernard
Berman, 52, Santa Ana, on
charges of complrln( to produce
heroin.
Berman wu aJTaJgned Mon·
day in U.S. District Court in Lo8
Ange lea. •
A second man , Joseph
Paladino, 53, was arrested in bis
N.ew Jersey bome the same ~ay.
Paladino Is believed to be the
flnancterofthe operation.
Paladino will probably be
brought to Loe An1eles following
a speel81 federal hearing, ac:r·
corcttni to a apokeamM for the
U.S. Ataomey to Loe An1eles.
A third man ia thouaht to be in·
volved In the llllclt operaUon, but
the DEA poke am an said
cbargea,havt ~ yet t>.en filed
a1ainstlWn and would not reveal
bil name. U. ls an Oranie Coun-
ty man and wu aho found at the
lab Saturday.
Tbe lab was.c-.pable ot produc·
tni mon than • million worth of
berola acb moatb, accordlaa to
federal acet.'*-· However. aieata
aald tbey c0oft1cated only a
small amount of tbe dru1
becaUM the nrm WU not Jet into
full production.
The DEA licenses every com·
pany that manufactures or dis·
tributes any controlled sub·
stance.
"The licensing is strict and
there is constant monitoring.
Each distributor must keep de·
tailed records or where the drugs
are going," the spokesman said.
He added that it is not extreme·
ly difficult to produce the illegal
drug, although a thorough
knowledge of cbemtstry ls
needed. along with adequate lab
equipment and enough raw
materials.
"Tbat's the catch -it's tough
to get the raw materials (opium)
here and deal with it illegally,"
heeaid.
Berman had been issued a
license to produce morphine sul·
phate and paragoric, both legal
derivatives of opium.
"But there was no sign that he
planned to produce either of
<See HEROIN, P,age AZ>
Officer Slugged
In Laguna Heist
By PHILIP ROSMARIN ota. o.tlY ...... , ....
A Laguna Beach police officer
was pistol·whipped and shot at
Monday after be walked ln on the
armed robbery of a jewelry
store.
The gunman fired a sinale Jhot
as be stnJUled to take ~
Jlm Lansfonl'• service revolver
from him. 'lbe bullet went l.nto
the floor.
Tbe robber wrenched
Lan1tord 'a gun from 1ta bolster
.and 'clubbed blm to bis knees with
it. H'e ordeud Lanafont to lie face1
down and warned the 20-year La1~BeacbpoUceman, "Don't
moveorl'llldllyou."
He escaped, with the officer'•
cun and radio -but wilh9ut a
rrocery sack of handcrafted
jewelrybecameto1teal.
More than a dozen policemen
blanket.d ltreeb and t>.acbel 1n
a aeven·block radius of the Jew~
Searcher•, 1oar.D N. Coaat
IDlhwat.
Laolford used the atore
telepbo9e to alert pOlice.
, L•n•for4 ••• taken by
'Daramedic amWlance to South tout. Community H01pftal An
X·ray aata.Jnatbi Of bla i1u11
revaaMd DO ft'•clur• ud hewn
. releded. &I heel a latf4 lump
behind bll ear wheN be was
suuet. ·
Tbe lac1dHt beaan wben Wufocd pkbd VjJ \)De r' tie proprtetou or tti• Jewel
Bearcbm'IGl a '"nPIJ Tu.l" call w clrhle the ma badt 1o tbe •tor• . tlusford wu tekln• Joel
WbltM;r, JS, billf-GWMI' Cit UMi ---.~ ...........
-
they pa.s&ed riaht by the robber.
When Whitney's grandmother,
Maebelle O'Daniel, who was
tendinJ the shop, spotted
Lansford'• uniform, she cried to
him, "Oh, I'm belng robbed I"
The officer wheeled around to
see a IWl pointed at him. The
robber ordered Lansford to un·
holaterhll weapon.
Lanaford instead tried to talk
(See OFFICER, Pase AZ>
Coast
Wea&ber
Some locally dense
morntu foe near eoast,
otberwfae p~rtly cloudy tbroup Wedneaclay. Hilb.a
78 to 72. Lowa 41to52.
( Al· CWLY PILOT N
: Nlg•t of Birtfl, De&th_,' Hulbert
Officers Welcome llfWy, Fail to Sa. Woman Called
lh 1QJI •A.al.SY -"bf .. ..., ........
"You win some, you loae aome. 0 TID alCBAJlDIONI cllcln~t. ··et uy farther than the family car al the frobl ot the
home. 'Ibey were Joined there by depuUes
Maeba1a and Sulka who helped th• happ)' eou·
pie welcome a .,_by elrl, wbo, llke !\er mother,
is dome well today ln a nearby hospital.
That comment wu offered ID the watch
commander's office at the Oranae County
Sberiff'a Department today when Deputies
Joseph Macbu1a and Den.nb Sulkl checked in
from their midnight to 8 a .m. patrol.
Machusa and Sulh aren't as eaaer to talk
abouUbe loelng portion ofthei.r ablft. BVEJIYOHB AG&EED it WU • PrettY
valid obMrvatiOQ. Bolb Officers were certain-
ly winners when they drove al high speed
about 2:30 a.m. in response to a call from a
home at 2I0272 Redlands Drive, Costa Mesa. It
turned out that Shelley an<i Dale Richardson
of that addras bad plans to drive to the hoa~ital wbeo Mn. Richard.son became con·
vinced her pregnancy waa about to terminate.
TllEJll NUT call a few minutes later
was to a Tustin home where they did their best
to revive a 65-year-old woman who bad a heart
attack shortly aft.er the Richardson baby was
born in thetamily car.
Emergency medical ald proved fruitless.
The woman wu pronounced dead at a nearby
hospital.
River Towboats Collide
Mishap Closes Portion of Ohio River
MARION, Ky. (AP) -Por-
tions of the Ohio River were
virtually closed to traffic today
following a towboat collision that
'damaged a dam near here, an
Army Corps of Engineers
spokesman said.
The collision was the latest in a
string of troubles that has
plagued river traffic near belle
and severely hampered delivery
of fuel and other petroleum pro-
ducts to points in the north and
east.
Corps spokesman Martin
Pedigo said the river at Dam so
on the river's western stmch
was 16.6 feel early today, some 20
inches below its level before the
collision Monday damaged
wickets, devices that are raised
or lowered to control the now of
water.
"Normally, when the river
lalls below 17 feet, it indicates
!bat shallow points upriver are
Jmpusable," said Pedigo, who
~dded that the channel ln some ~uch areaa is just nine feet.
Pedigo said the extent of
damage was unknown early to-
day. but •'it bas the potential of
being fairly serious." He said it
would be late today before of·
ficials couJd determine when the
damage could be repaired.
Qam Sl, upriver, was damaged
last December in a collision that
hailed traffic for over a week.
Before traffic could resume, the
harsh winter temperatures al-
lowed the formation of a foot-
thick layer of ice-that baited traf-
fic for about a month
Then came the Monda:-col-
lision. JUSt a few days after .
workers had manually raised
wickets on darns in a desperate
effort to get traffic moving again
on the tce-tlogged river.
Meanwhile, the cold wave and
gas shortage. which have put up
to l ,567,000 persons out of work so
far. may return in full force next
week after a temporary break,
according to government
forecasts.
But the edge of the shortage
was being softened this week as
s mall additional supplies of
natural aas began flowing Into in·
terstale pipelines under pro-
visions of the new emergency act
that President Carter signed
.Wednesdav
Fro• Page AJ
HEROIN •••
those drugs only the illegal
heroin." sa.td the SDOkesman.
Historically, diu1 trafficken
in thls country have restricted
their activity to smu11ll111 in
already-produced heroin from
countries where opium poppies
grow. such u Mexico, France
and Far Eastern natJOl'\I, he said.
"Heroin la contraband here IO
the opium poppies need to be
shipped in from elsewhere.
They're bulky, smelly and you
ne~d 10 pounds of opium to make
one pound of heroin. It's not
·easy," the apoltesman conUDued.
DAILY PILOT
............. ~ .... ,_..__
, .. ~. c.to¥
Ylo "'~"l•""O.•lllMl-
'r_ ll_ ••• .,..,..,.. ........... ........ ,Mor.
a....."·'--~~ ..... ""'"'""'"'-.... ~
The Federal Power Com-
mission said Monday that aome
380 million cubic feet of gaa per day already waa flowing under
new emergency arrangements
and another 175 million cubic feet
a day was authorized and await·
ing completion of connecting
pipes.
The extra gas, transferred
from western areas with better
supplies or purebas .. d lemporari·
ly at prices above federally re-
gulated ceilings, represents only
about 1 percent of the gas re·
quired on a cold winter day.
But it helps, and so does some
933 million cubic feet already
flowing daily under earlier FPC
emergency rules.
The National Weather Service.
however, told Carter's energy
adviser, James R. Schlesinger,
that the break in the weather
may be temporary, lasting only
this week as a comparatively
warm air mass from the Pacific
crosses the nation.
Once it is gone, says the
weather service, the previous
patttJ"D is expected to take over
again "and to continue to direct
arctic air toward the eastern
U.S. for at lea.at the following two
to three weeb."
Mesa Ma"' Citrus
Firm Chief, Dies
TreeSweet Products Company
president Robert E. Graves of
Costa Mesa, died Monday in a
Houston hospital okomplicatioos
followingaW'gery.
Graves, who was ~. joined the
Santa Ana-based citrus process·
ing company as sales manager in
1964, and was named president in
1973.
Graves was president of the Na·
tional Juice Products Association
during mS-76, and was past pre-
sident of the Frozen Food Council
ofScNtbern Ctlifornia.
Before joining TreeSweet, be
was with Stouffer6 Foods ,
Johnston Pies and Swift and Com·
pany.
Company officials said today
Graves was instrumental in ob·
taining an arrangement with
football star O.J . Simpson to ad·
vertise TreeSweet products.
"Mr. Graves knew Mr
Simpson very well over the last
year or so," said spokeswoman
Mrs. Bonnie Reid. "It was an
absolutely ideal partnenhip, a
mutual partners.hip," she said.
Simpson, a star running back
for the Buffalo Bills of the Na·
tional Football League, makes
commercials for TreeSweel and
a car rental uencv. Graves is survived by his wife,
Elaine of the family home, 1779
Tanager Drive, seven children
and seven grandchildren.
Funeral-services will be con-
ducted Thursday at St. John the
Baptist Catholic Church, 1021 W.
Baker St., Costa Mesa, bestnnlng
at 11 a.m.
The family has suggested
memorial contributions to the
Atbel'OISclerosis Retearcb Fund,
in careoltbe Heart A&soclat1oo.
Budget Reviewed
SAN FRANCISCO CAP>
Mayor George Moscone bas
besun the arduous tuk of review·
ing thedty'• um-'llbudgetwitha
pledge to bold the line on property
taxes.
DIES AFTER SURGERY
Robert E. Grave•
FroaPageAJ
POOLS •..
Pr.incipal Alan 11ix said he
believes lowered temperatures
wlll probably restrict the swim·
mine program. Barnicoat, who is
connected with the Nadadores
Swim Club in Mission Viejo, said
youneer swimmers there
already are going through
shorter workouts.
Dr. Norman Loats, deputy
superintendent of the Newport·
Mesa district, said a m~eting of
school prtncipala is planned this
week to work out a solution to the
problem before the high school
swlm season gets into full swing.
He said the dlatricUs considering
sbuttine down on4 or two of its
five poola and la taking a look al
switchlne to solar heating.
Horrified Parents
Watch 5 Kids Die
HOLBROOK, N.V. CAP) -
Five children ranging in age from
' to 18 died early today ln a fiTe
that destroyed tbelr family 's
wooden, coloolal-1t1le hom•
here.
The panirta jumped to safety·
and tMG trted to re-enter the
hOU•e, but wereunabletodoao.
• One .t~ said the father,
MlcbaeJ Kenny, stood o\rlafde th~
howse in tbe snow screaming,
•·yY ~ we•ve cot to aet my
cbUdrenCNtl ''
Keno)', 41. and bis wlfe,
Barbar-.•· watd*t lD horror aa ICOC'et~ fkaltn fOUSbt tn v*1n to
reach the cblldre11, who were
bumed bdyODd recopltion. Some
130 volunteer ftremen foulbt thtl ·
blue.
The Kennr-••re t.ake.n to
Brookhayp llemodal Hoeoital
in Patebo•ue. wbere •
apokiiamaD Mid tbeJ were M · fCrllaa ~ emok.• lnh•l•Oon,
bnalla aDd lbock. Jln. KBlY
allob.t a ~le,. M •akl Offtdala jdMtJl'ed the dud
cblldra M Oery, ll: Karttlt ll;
Mlehael Jr .• 13; Jui 7, and An·
thony,.,
Three of the children were
found Sa the Jitin1 room on the
firlt l1oar. Two atben were found
beside • ~ on the second
uoor .
Offlclall aald llra. K&tny ~s
covered tbe fire and alerted her
b"Utbadd. Holbrook Fire Obief
Robert Rogers aaid the parents
Jumped to safety from \be second
atory. IDd otber olftdab aaid the
parents tried lo re-enter the
hou1e but were blo~ked by flam.-.
A neilhbor, Kathlten Alba, •aid~ wok., her u.p at •:30
a.m., banab>I on btr d()()c' and 1crtas;nin~. •'My tid• are ln
tberat My kl~ ~lb ta>trel ''
Sile eald KtMY. clad In PB·
Jamu, and bl• wUe. In a
aithf.IOwn., lt60d in her home
btlpleu, watdllrif the ftN bum.
''I& YU Uk• a ..!!f:,!Jtt&re." Mn. Al._ aaid. "I •t NDd .t: .. TbeJ bpt ecn.amillf, 'My
dUklnD ... lDtblr91' 1' .
Psychotic
A ~cblatrilt who once probed
the mental condition ot conYicted
klller Sirhan 8 . Sirhan and
beireaa Patty Hee.at told an
Orante County Superior C.ow1 Jury todaJ that accused Id.Iler
Ken Richard Hulbert la not men.
tally competent to face trial.
Dr. Seymour Pollack, called by
the defense to examine the
Fullertoo man. teautied as the
second psychiatrist in the aanity
bearina that Hulbert accused
him dwina an interview ol belni
in leaiue wit.b the devil.
He aereed with Deputy Public
Defender Walter Zech today that
Hulbert is "severely mentally ill
and psychotic allhou&b he bu
improved in the last few
months."
If the jury rules that Hulbert,
24, ia sane he will be tried before
Judge William S. Lee on charges
that include murder, rape, kid·
nap, robbery and assault.
It is alleged that be raped and
strangled Whittler housewife
Gina Marie Tisher. 19, whose
naked body was found in the back
of a parked car by Fullerton
police on Jan. 7, 1976.
And il ia alleged that Hulbert
attacked two more women in
Orange County. one of whom was
raped and robbed before she was
beaten and left unconscious in
the Irvine area four daya after
the Tisher killing.
Dr. Pollack and a psychiatrist
who preceded blm on the witness
stand were told by Hulbert that
hla attacks oo women were de-
signed to force the devil to leave
the bodies of hi5 victims and con·
front him ln combat.
In tbose interviews, Hulbert
described himself u a soldler of
the Lord who should have been
met with cheering crowds aft.er
committing the offenses for
which be may have to face trial.
Jnstead he was arrested by
Fullerton police and indicted by
the Grand Jury. He also was in·
dieted by the Los Angeles County
Grand Jury on criminal charges
related to his alleged attacks on
six women in that county.
Open Space
Group Plans
Picnic Fri~y
Newport 'Beach residents who
are backing passage of the S7 .1
million open space and park bond
will hold a brown bag picnic Fri·
day at the Castaways.
The picnic will be held next to
the Newport Harbor Lutheran
Church at 16th Street and Dover
Drive from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. The
Castaways is the property that
runs alongside Dover Drive from
Pacific Coast Highway to
Westcliff Drive.
The bond issue, which will be
on the ballot March 8, seeks
money to buy open space ln nine
locations throughout the city, in·
eluding part of the Castaways.
A slide show describing the
other properties proposed for
purchase will be shown at the
church throuebout the picnic.
A spokesman for the commit·
lee backing the bond proposal,
Yes {or Newport Open Space.
said the public is Invited. Bring
your own lunch.
Woman Hurt
As Auto Rolls
Over in NB
A Tuatin woman reported
minor iJ\Juriea after th• car in
which abe wu ridine swerved
out of cmtrol and rolled over on
Jamboree Road Monday nlebt,
Newport Beach police aatd to·
day.
According to police reportl,
the driver of the car, Theodore
John Chriatemen, 26, of 22432 Via
Platino, Mission Viejo, lost con·
lrol of the vehicle when a Ure
blew out. '
Police said the car swerved in·
to the divider near Eutblwf
Drive North, then eroued the oa-
coming lanes before rolling over.
Susan Luter, 127 S. L,yon St.,
Tustin 1utf ered cuta and brui.MI
in the mlabap. Police aald
Cbrl.atenaen reported no Injuries
in tht 11 p.m. accident.
Judge Lifts
Ban, on Tuna
SAN DIEGO <AP> -DOtyin1 a
hl1berfederalcourt, U.S. Dlatrict
Court Judl'e WlIDam B. Enrttbt
aa71 tuDi' ftabermfn e•n ig:ooiN a
ban Oft fWllni ~r yello~ '*
the accidental kllllns of'
po~. ... , ... ,.... ~ to be bouad bJ
It,•• bfScMtlldoftMprobibWon
order iMUed Ju. • by tbe DY·
trid of Cohunbla Circuit Court ol
ApPUlJ,
O.lly ,, .......... .., •ldla .. •.-..r
Winner for Health
Eight-year-old Jim Gilbert of Corona del Mar displays
his award winning dental health poster during award
ceremonies Sunday at South Coast Plaza. Jim, a third·
grader at Harbor View School, is the winner for the
Newport-Mesa District in competition sponsored by the
Orange County Dental Health Association. He is the son
of Mr. and Mrs. David G. Gilbert, 1528 Seacrest Drive.
OCTD Earmarks
Transit Corridor
By KATHY CLANCY
Of .. DellYl"lleUi.tt
More than half of a $377.9
million five-year spending
package approved by Orange
County Transit District (OCTD)
directors Monday is earmarked
for a 13-mile mass transit cor·
ridor. (Related stories Pages AJ,
8 ).
And while directors included
$201.8 million for the route
stretching from Santa Ana to Los
Angeles County line, district
Planning Director Tom Jenkjns
said today there still are ques-
tions as to when the corridor can
be built.
The district's five-year
Transportation Improvement
Plan calls for $13 million to buy
the 13-mile Pacific Electric right·
of-way.
In addition, il includes another
Sl88.5 million for constructibn or
the first seven miles or the
transportation link between San-
ta Ana and St.anton.
District Director Al Hollinden
has expressed fear that while
railway officials were preparing
to abandon that seven·mile
stretch. the remaining six miles
to Lo6 Angeles may be tied up in
long.term railway commitments
to industrial concerns.
Frot11 Page Al
HEIRESS ...
clusion that "we should keep the
good people and do away with the
deadwood.''
The deposition contains• the
comments: "tbe second best
should be eliminated."
It also contains the prediction
from Allen-Taubman officials
that the restructured Irvine Com·
pany under new directiQn could
lead the firm to greater achieve-
ments in many areas of Orange
County development.
It is predicted that the com-
pany's present income could be
doubled under the new manage·
ment although it woold not be
poaaible to pay dividends in the
first few years of the new opera-
tion. p
The current trial was ordered
when Mn. Stnith took lqal action
to bait the foundation•a sale of its
Irvine Interests to Mobil for $200
million.
Provisions of t.he Federal Tax
Reform Act ol 1969 compel foun.
da11on trustees to disP03e of those
holdlna before 1*1. Mrs. Smith, with holdings of 22
pefcent in the Irvine Company is
recognized as the major mlnorlty
stockboiderin U.. ~mpany.
'
Water Cut
Works Well
'
CORTE MADERA CAP)
-Marin Cowll7 residents
conUnued to ao better than
expected in &heir efforts to
couaerve water, ofnclals
HY. (RelatfJd story, AS).
Weekend water con·
aumptloo was 9.3 mllllon
iallon1 on S.turday aDd 9.4
mJlUoo &-11on1J oa Sunday,
fat~ the 12 million per
d"1iloal Mt by tbe Marin
II uala,el Water l>latrict.
Dhtrlet ·l•iural
m aoa1er: 1. Dietrich Slroefl IAiiit Mooday t.bat
tbe ncur-were "especial· 11 nettb:lt': because they
came 0111b1a when moat
l>eOole pntumably were at home.
Jenkins said Monday OCTD of-
ficials still have not learned if
such commitments are being
made.
He said OCTD would have the
power to condemn the property for public use.
And, he continued, OCTD of.
ficlals learned recently that the
staff of the Southern California
Rapid Transit District is renew-
ing its study of a transit corridor
along the route from the Los
Angeles-Orange County line into
Los Angeles.
The five-year plan approved
Monday will be used as the basis
for obtaining state and federal
grants to pay for the bulk of the
transit improvements outlined.
The plan is amended annually.
It also calls for adding 170 large
buses and 75 mini buses to deveJop
an eventual fleet of724 vehicles by
the l98G·81 fi scal year.
It also calls for development of
major transportation centers in
Laguna Hills. Huntington Beach,
Laguna Beach, Santa Ana,
Fullerton and Anaheim. ·
Tennis Cltu1s
Sigrwps Set
Registration Is open for the
newest session of tennis lessons
s ponsored by the Newport
Beach Parks, Beaches and
Recreation Department.
The classes, which are held
every Monday and Wednesday
al Manners Park tennis courts,
will begin Feb. 21.
Adult lessons run hourly from
9 a .m. lo 1 p.m . and youth
lessons are available later in
the day. Enrollment is limited
to eight people per class. For
further inform a lion , call
640-2271.
Frma Page Al
OFFICER • •
the man into s urrendering, police
said.
Police said the man. holding
his gun in one hand, reached with
the other hand lo try to pull
Lansford's revolver from the
holster.
Unsuccessful because of the
holster restraining strap, the
gunman tried to yank the weapon
free by grabbing it with both
hands.
Then Lansford, so. grabbed the
man's gunhand and wrestled for
the weapon.
During the struggle, Mrs.
O'DanieJ took the sack of jewelry
and ran into a back room .
Whitney ran to another are1t "' the ahop and grabbed a .22·
caliberrtne.
By the time Whitney found the
rt.fie Jnd ran back to face the rob-
ber. be wauone.
"Otherwise I would have shot at
him. Probably would have shot to
ldll, ·• said WbJtney in an in·
t.rvlew atlerthe robbe~. •
"I dldD't tbln.k about 1etth\g
shot. J Just thought, get tbe rift,e,
1ettboauy."
Whitney ran out.aide the •tofe
wltb tho rifle just a~ police ~
rived tn retpoase to Lanai~ s
oatl that ht wu tn trouble and an
armed man had robbed tbeabop.
PolJce Capt. Nell Putcell dNp
his 1un ad ordered Whltn.eJ en
olace tbe rtlle on *"'e tidewalk.
Wbitn.y complied.
A ccuntywtde alert for tbe SGS·
pect. deeeribed ~ .. abort, •tock>' •
with tblr a fwt Nd beard..-
heu)' muttoncboP ahtebu.rD*.
and poalblJ wuriq a 1Lau e;t, waa unauceeMfw ln appreblllcl·
ln1 him. •1
•
Saddlebaek
EDITION
Afternoon
NA'. Stoeks
,.~OL.1 70, ~O. 39, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1977 TEN CEN4
·cusn Rules Seniors C·an Stay Put
By ANNE COOPER °' ... o.lty .........
, Edward We.tberg, Capistrano
Unified School District board
president, auured a crowd of
more than 2oo Monday that no
11th grade student will be pre-
saured into attending Capistrano
Valley Jngb School next year.
But. trustees voted 6--0 to <>pen
·Capistrano Valley in Mission Vie-
jo with a senior class in Sep-
tember. The district's Growth
Planning Advisory Commiasioo
<GPAC) had recommended the
school open without seniors the
first year.
Commissionen said a poll of
this year's junior:; at San
Clemente and Dana Hills High
Schools indicated that about 80
percent of those surveyed pre-
f erred not to transfer to the new
school for their senior year.
A committee of parents
claimed Monday 81 percenf' of
parenta whose children would be
affected by including a senior
class at Capistrano Valley sup-
ported the advisory com-
missioo's recommendation.
The board's approval of open-
ing the new school with seniors
contained a provision allowing
intradistricl transfer for 11th
<See SENIORS, Page A?>
Voting Delayed
Site Deadlock Angers Board
By WILUAM SCHREIBER
Of IM Dall• l'llol ~l•ff
Flaring tempers sparked
verbal fireworks Monday night
as Saddleback College tr~lees
failed again to muster enough
votes to choose one of two poten-
tial Irvine-Tustin satellite cam·
pus sites.
Four votes are required lo
authorize such a purchase but the
board split 3-2 after more than
A-Victoria
FluSlwt
Ban Lifted
. WASHINGTON (AP) -The
government's moratorium on flu
vaccinations was lifted today so
the elderly and the chronically ill
can get shots to protect them
from A· Victoria flu .
In the process, they also wouJd
be vaccinated against swine flu,
--since there are no separate vac-
cines for the two strains.
But Secretary of Health,
Education and Welfare ,Joseph A.
Califano Jr. maintained the
moratorium on vaccine contain-
ing serum only for swine nu. He
said there is no immediate need
to lift it because there has been
po outbreak of the swine nu
strain in the United States this
year. There has been an outbreak
of A-Victoria nu in a Miami nurs-ing home.
The shots were called off in the
first place because of the risk of
Guillain-Barre Syndrome, a
rare paralytic disease, among
those who receive them.
Califano saJd the risk of con-
tracting that ailment is believed
to be about the same with any
type of nu shot. He aaad the swine
flu vaccine ia not considered
more risky Uuua any other type.
Califano reciommended that
·people age 6S or over take lhe A-
Vlctoria shot
"Al the first sign of an impend-
lnl outbreak ol urine nu. we will
take appropriate action,"
Califano said.
He told a news conference he
did not know at this lime what
would consUtute "appropriate
action."
Califano also announced that
the moratorium would be Ufled
for vaccine aeainst B-lfone Kong
flu, a milder strain that usually
strikes children and young
adults.
•He said the 1tatus of the B-
Hong Kone vaccine would be tbe
1 ame aa lt was before the
moratorium when health of-
ficials and physicians could use it
at their diacretioo.
Coast
Weather
• Some locally dense . • morntna fog near coast, otbenriae partly cloudy
through Wednesday. Hiahs
76 to 72. Lowa 46 to 52.
two hours of meandering dis-
cussion.
With one board seat vacant and
the seventh trustee, Dr. James
Marshall, critically ill and
hospitalized, it now appears like-
ly that the decision will be de·
layed until well after the March 8
election.
Top administration officials
said if that happens, it is "highly
improbable" that the· northern
area campus could open as
planned in the spring of 1978.
Two weeks ago, trustees de·
adlocked at 2·2, with an absten-
tion by Mission Viejo's Donna
Berry. The only difference this
week was Mrs. Berry's decision
to join those favoring a site at
Myford Road and Bryan Avenue
on the unincorporated Irvine
Ranch. <See SITE, Page AZ)
<1aUy l'I._ PlllM• llY l"!lllltl It-I"
OFFICER JIM LANSFO~ SLUGGED POILING HOLDUP
Ulgun• Policeman Wreajled With Gunman in Store
Officer Slugged
In Laguna Heist
By PHIUP ROSMARIN OltlltO.ltrjlji.t.._.,
A LalWla Beach police officer
was pistol•wb.lpped and shot at
Monday after he waU'ed ln on the
armed robbet'y of a jewelry
store.
Tbe gunman fired a single shot
u be stniu.led to take Officer
Jim Lamford'1 service revolver
from him. 1be bullet went lnto
theOoor.
The robber wrenched
Lan1rorc1•1 eun from ita bolster
and clubbed to his knees with It.
He ordered Lansford to lie face
down and warned the 20-year
Laguna Beach policeman,
"Don't move or ru kill you . .,
He -~. witb the omcer's
1un and radlo -but without .a sroter)'. ••ck C)f handcrafted
Jewelry&ecarnetoa.al.
More thD a dozen policemen
blanketed atreeta and beaches ln
a 1even-bloct r•diua ol the Jewel
Searcbera, 1027-D N. Co11t
HJ1bw_,.
L•nlford uaed the 1tore
telepbone to .iert pol lee.
Lau\ford wa1 taken by
parallMdlc ambulance to South
CoaU Community JlolpltaJ. An
X·taY eUmin.atloo Ol h1I atull
r .. ealed no fractmes pd M wu
tel.u.4; Ht had a luae lump
bebln4 .bis .... ••• be ... 1truck; •
• The incident b•l•D whea
Lansford picked up one of the
proprietors of the Jewel
Searchers on a "Tipsy·Taxi'' call
to drive the man back to the
store.
Larrsford was tjlking Joel
Whitney, 25, half-owner of the
business, through the store when
they passed ritbt by the robber.
When Whltney'a grandmothet',
Maebelle O'Daniel, who was
tendln1 tbe shop, spotted
Lanaford's uniform, she cried to
him, "Oh, I'm bein1robbed!"
The olftcer wheeled around to
see a eun pointed at him. The
robber ordered Lansford to un-
bollter hia weapon.
Lanaford 1natead tried to talk the man lnto surrendering, police
aald.
Police said the man, holding
bis run hr one hand. reached wUh
the other hand lo try to pull
Lanlford'e revolver from tbe
hol1ter. ,
Unaucf.eaful beeaule of the
bol1ter rettralninl atnp, the
1unman tried to )'lllik the weapon
I tr.. by StlbbiJll it With botb
banb.
Then L&nlford, ~. lf•bbed the
man'a l\fD.ba,nd and wrestled for
thewupon.
Durla1 the 1ttu1ale, Mra.
O'Damel took~ 1ack ol Jewelry
and r.n Into a back room. Wbi~ ran tO another area ot
CSieOJ'nCBa, P••• ill J
o.lly ...... Sia" ""'9
CROWD OF PARENTS AND STUDENTS DEMAND EQUAL EDUCATION OPPORTUNITY
Captatrano Junlora Want Dtatrlct Busing To High School of Their Choice
County Pools Cool Off
Sources Claim Back-ECUJt Swimmers Bask
By MICHAEL PASKEVICH
Of"'* Dally l'llOUlaff
School officials along the
Orange Coast are turning down
the beat in swimming pools as
low as 68 degrees in an effort. to
conserve natural gas.
Although there has been no of-
ficial mandate from the &tale
Public Utillties Commission,
most school districts have cooled
orr pools to 78 degrees. a move
some believe endangers the up·
coming high school swim season.
"I can't understand it, I think
everyone is panicking and they
aho.uld wait until there is a man·
date," said Guy Bamicoat, a Mia-
sion Viejo resident and member
of several Amatuer Athletic
Union CAAU) s~imming commit-
tees.
He contended swim clubs in the
east are keeping temperatures
"at full blast" and have no inlen·
lion of cutting back on the use of
natural gas.
Dean Crowley, administrative
assistant for the California In·
terscholastic Federation (CIF),
Southern Section, the governing
body for 400 -plus Southern
California high school athletic
programs, agreed wil.,Jl
Barnicoat'a claims. <See POOLS, Page AZ)
For Ad•infstrators
CUSD Adopts Merit Pay
Capistrano Unified School Dis-
trict trustees announced Monday
that school administrators are
now oil a "merit pay" system,
with increases or decreqes in
pay reflecting job performance.
Superintendent Jerome
Thornsley said administrators
will be evaluated thjs •ummer
and appropriate recommendJ· lions made for salary adjust-
ments.
For the current )'ear, the board
awarded administrators an 8.4
percent saluy hike, retroactive
to July 1, 1976, the same increaae
negotiated by the Capistrano
Unified Education AHociaUon for teachers.
• Jn ad<lition, administrators
who are not at the top or their pay
scale have received a step incre-
ment, based on additional years
of experience.
Thomsley said information on
salarles of individ\lal ad-
ministrators, reflecting varying
merit raises, will be public in-
formation. He said all ad-
minlatrators, including himsetr,
must )>e held accountable for the
kind ofjobtheycto.
"We have chosen to be ad-
minlatratora." be said. "To be
an admlniatrator la a 'prtvUege,
but the poeition carries certain
responalbilltles."
The neighboring Saddleback
Boiler Room
Attendant
Robbedof833
A YOUlll lntruder who limul•-·
ed P'*estloo ol • wetpod took
$33 In cub from a boiler room at-
tendant at$&ddlebactQ.CommunJ·
ty. Hotpttal earb' today, Orance Count)'~'• offlcetl Hid.
Deputl.. uld matnt•D&noe
en1f neer Daniel Kalman, G, ot
Weatmtnater, totd tbem the
holdup -.. f Mced hie wa1 lnto
th• boll• room at 2 a. m. arMI °""
dered blm to band over all the
cub 1D bb poaeulon.
DepUU11 l&ld the vtcum told
them tbe buctit tba lleid..Clll foot after ,,...., Kalman Dot to call
poUe.. TW 1md iai .. wu
unbanMCllDdtbe ........ •• no attempt to contact oUHkr
apllal ptr1oueL
Valley Unified School District
has refused to disclose individual
administrators' raises, based on
mer it pay, claiming such
publication would violate
personal priva~y.
Thomsley's 11alary was recent-
ly b®sted ~rom $37,500 to $(2,500,
effective Jan. 1. The 13 percent
salary bike was called a 6.5 per-
cent raise by trustees, since the
superintendent bad not had a pre-
vious raise in the 18 months he
had worked for the district. .
Trustees announced Monday
contracts have been approved for
the following top administrators:
-Truman Benedict, deputy
s uperintendent, now earns
$.16,200, a 61f.a percent increase
over last year ..
-Sam Chicas, assistant
superintendent, is making
(See MERIT, Page A%)
One-time Thiag?
Heroin Factory
Raid Rated Rare
By IULARY KJ\YE
Of t1M 0.lty l'li.t Staff
Federal agents may never un-
co~r another "heroin factory"
similar to the one discovered last
weekend m the Irvine area, a
Drug Enforcement Administra-
tion <DEA> spokesman said to-
day.
"We have so many bullt-in
1afeguards against such an
operation succeeding that people
would be very foolish to even at·
tempt it,•• said the spokesman,
an official in the federal agency's
information department.
Federal agents burst into
Pearson Labs, 1810 Carne1le,
Santa Ana, Saturday and arrest-
ed company PN&ident Bernard
Berman, 52, Santa Ana, 011
cbaraes ~ conspiring to produce
heroin.
8etrnan wa arraip~ Moa·
day tn U.S. District Court tn Lot
Aneeles.
A second man. Joseph
Paladino, $3, was arrested tn his
PROCUMATION
..4 BIT TARDY
SAN Dl'EGO (AP) -Polle. are
trJlnt to flDd t.M thJef who took see from punee ol t1ro ctty Hall
worlrera wblle mesaen1en were
dittribUUU MaJOl' Pete Wllaon'a
la tat pnefamatloil.
T1M j)tOClamatJOO names dlil ••cnme erriatSOD Woet1' lll su I>McC>.
New Jersey home the same day.
Paladino Lii believed to be the
flnancivoftheoperation.
Paladino will probably be
brought to Los Angeles following
a •J>ee!ial federal hearine. ac-
cording to a spokesman (or the
U.S. Attorney in Los Angeles.
A third man ls thought to be in·
volved in the illicit operation, but
the DEA spokesman said
charges have not yet been filed
againat t4m and would not reveal
his name. He ii an Orange Coun-
ty man and wu also found at lhe
lab Saturday.
The lab was capable of produc-
ln1 more than $2 mllllon worth of
heroin each month, according to
federal aaents. However, agents
aald they confiscated only a
small amount of the drug
because the firm was not yet into
full production.
The DEA licenses every com-
pany that manufactures or dls-
tri butea any controlled sub·
stance.
"The Ucenalnl ls strict and
there is constant monitoring.
Each diJtrlbutor must kMp de.-
tailed record.a of where the drugs
are 1otu. '1 the spokesman said .
He added that It ts not extttme--
ly difficult to produce th• llletal
dru1, altbou1b a thorough
knowled1e of che1nl1try 11
needed. atone wlt.b adequate lab
tqtaipm.nt and enou1h raw
matmala.
"Tbat'• the catch -lt'• touah
to I t the raw matertab <oPlwn>
be.re and deal with it Wecal.11:•
dee mGIN, h .. AI)
~
••
,41 DAILY Ptt.DT SB
A JJQchlatrtst who once probed
ttie mental condition of convicted
killer Slrhao B. Slrban and
heiress Patty Hearst told an
Or&JlMe County Superior Court
Jury today that accused killer
·..Xen Richard Hulbert is not men-
tally competent to face trial.
Dr. Seymour Pollack. called by
' the defense to examine the
Fullertan man,· test:Wed aa tbe
second psychlatrtst In the aanlty
1hearinc that Hulbert accused
hlm during an Interview ~ beioi
in le ape with the devil.
He acreed with Deputy Public
·Defender Walter ~b today that
Hulbert la .. severely mentally ill
and peycbotlc altbouJh be bas
improved in the laat few
months."
If the jury rules that Hulbert,
24, ii sane he will be tried before
Judge William S. Lee on charges
that include murder, rape, kid·
nap, robbery and asaault.
It is alleged that be raped and
•strangled Wblttier housewife
· Gina Karie Tisher, 19, whose
-naked body was found in the back
of a parked car by Fullerton
policeonJan. 7, 1976.
And it is alleged that Hulbert
attacked two more women in
Orange County, one of whom was
raped and robbed before she was
beaten and lert unconscious in
the Irvine area four days after
the Tis.her killing.
Dr. Pollack and a psychiatrist
who preceded him on the witness
stand were told by Hulbert that
bis attacks on women were de-
signed to force the devil to leave
the bodies of bis victims and con·
front him in combat.
Jn those interviews, Hulbert
described himself as a soldier of
the Lord who should have been
met with cheering crowds after
com milting the offenses !or
which be may have to face trial.
Instead he was arrested by
Fullerton police and indicted by
the Grand Jury. He also was in·
dicted by the Los Angeles County
Grand Jury on criminal charges
related lo his alleged attacks on
six women in that county.
E'rona Page Al
OFFICER • • the shop and grabbed a .22·
caliber rifle.
By the time Whitney found the
rifle and ran back to face the rob·
ber,hewasgone.
"Otherwise I would have shot at
him. Probably would have shot to
kill,·· said Whitney in an in·
tcrview after the robbery.
"I didn't think about getting
shot l just thought, get the rifle,
get the guy."
Whitney ran outside the store
with the rifle just as police ar·
rived in response to Lansford's
call that be was in trouble and an
armed man had robbed the shop.
Police Capt. Neil Purcell drew
his gun and ordered Whitney to
place the rifle on the sidewalk.
Whitney complied.
A countywide alert for the SUS·
peel, described as short, stocky,
with either a full red beard or
heavy mullonchop sideburns,
and poasibly wearing a elua eye,
wag unsuccessful in apprehend-
ing him
Pur<'ell said Laguna officers
sear<'hed local streets for about.
four hours
Fro• PapAJ
MERIT ...
$36,600, also a 6'-'t percent in·
crease.
-Philip Grianon, assistant.
superintendent for instructional
services, is earning $32,520 in bls
first year in district-wide ad·
ministration; Grianop was
formerly Dana Hills Hi&b School
principal.
-Robert L. Knapp, director of
personnel services, la earning
$30,600 ln his ftrst year under
separate contract with the dis· trict.
DAILY PILOT
'
TU!!d!y. Febn&!ry I , 1 m
'DeaawoOO' Blasted·
1
Irvine Company Changes V.~d
One oltwo companJes Het:lni a
controlllDc 1Dt.erest iD tbe Irvine
Company Intends to drastically
reorganfze Irvine mana1emeot if
its bid ii successful, testimony in
Orange County Superior Court
haa rnealed. 1 Quotini Monday from a depoal-
tlo.n taken before the trtal from
Irvine heiress Joan Irvine Smith,
attorney Howard Privett testified
that representatives ot one ol two
b1dderi assured ber they intended
to''doawaywitbthedeadwood."
Privett represents tbe James
Irvine Foundation ln a trial that
wUl end with Judge James F.
JudJe'a approval of one 9f two bidden~ the Mobil Oil Company
or a comortium beaded by Wall
Street ftnancier Charles Allen
and Detroit developer Alfred
Taubman. ·
Mobil baa offered '281.9 mlll!on
foT the founctauoo•a coolrolllna
io&eteltol~.$pcccent. TbeAllen-
Taubman offer tops that by
$800,000. .
Privett'• teatlmony from Mrs.
Smith's depoeltiOll reveala that
tbe '-'·1ear-old descendant. of Irvine CO&npany twnder Jam•
Irvine beld a ser1ea o( meetings
wltb repreeentaUvea ot t.he Allen-
Taubmaointereat. ·
Pare11ts Belples•
Tboee eooverutlons renected
tbe views of Allen-Taubman
ne1otiat.on that Uie Irvine Com-
pany la oventafted and the con-
clusion that ••we ibould 'keep the
good people and do away with the Five Children deadwood." ·
Tbe deposition contalna the
comments: "tbe second best
should be eliminated."
Die in Blaze
It a1ao contains tbe prediction
from Allen-Taubman officials
that the restructured Irvine Com·
pany under new direction could
lead the firm to greater achieve-
ments in many areas ef Orange
County development.. HOLBROOK, N .Y. (AP) -
Five cbildreo ranging in see from
4 to 18 died early today in a fin
that destroyed their family's
wooden, colon1al-styJe home
here.
The parents jumped to safety
and then tried to re-enter the
house, but were unable to do so.
One witness said the lather,
Michael Kenny, stood outside the
house in the snow screaming,
"My God, we've got to get my
E'ro91PageAJ
HEROIN •••
he said.
Berman bad been issued a
license to produce morphine sul·
phate and paragoric, both legal
derivatives of opium.
"But there was no sign that he
planned to produce either or
those drugs -only the illegal
heroin," said the spokesman.
Historically, drug traffickers
in this country have restricted
their activity lo smuggling in
already-produced her<>in from
countries where opium poppies
grow. such as Mexico, France
and Far Eastern nations, be said.
"Heroin is contraband here so
the opium poppies need to be
shipped in from elsewhere.
They're bulky, smelly and you
need 10 pounds of opium to make
one pound of lteroin. It's not
easy,'' the spokesman continued.
cbUdrenoutl"
Kenny, 47, and his wife,
Barbara, 38, watched in horror as
scores of firemen foutbt In vain to
reach the chlldren, who were
burned beyood recognition. Some
130 volunteer firemen fought the
blaze.
It la predicted that the com-
pany 'a presmt income could be
doubled under the new manage-
ment although it would not be
possible to pay dividends in the
first. few years of the new opera·
lion.
The Kennys were taken to The current trial was ordered
Brookhaven Memorial Hospital when Mrs. Smith took legal action
i n P at c b o I u e , w b ere a to ball the foundation's sale of its
spokesman said tbeJ were suf· Irvine interests to Mobil for $200
fering from smoke inhalation, · million.
bruises and shock. Mrs. Kenny Provisions or the Federal Tax
also bad a broken les, be said. Reform Act of 1969 compel foun.
Officials identified the dead dation trustees to dispose of t.bo5e
_c-.hildl'f'SlJLS Ga~ 18: K•N!f'. JR : holdingabeforel983. MiCliaeJ Jr., 13, tan, 7, and An· Mrs. Smith, with holdings of 22
tbony' 4. tin•""-Irvin Co . Three of the children were percen. Ula e mpany, is
found in the living room on the re.:ognized ~the major minority
first noor. Two others were found stockholdermthecompany.
beside a window on the second
floor.
Officials said Mrs. Kenny dis· Fro•PageAJ
covered the fare and alerted her SENIORS hus~and. Holbt'ook Fire Chief • • •
RotSert Roten said the parents
jumped to safety from the second
story. and other officials said the
parents tried to re-enter the
house but were blocked by
flames.
A neighbor, Kathleen Alba,
said Kenny woke her up at 4:30
a. m ., banging on her door and
screaminll. "My kids are in
there! My kids are in there! "
. She said Kenny, clad in pa.
Jamas , and his wife, in a
nightgown, stood in her home
helpless, watching the fire burn.
graders.
Students who are juniors this
year and live in the new high
school attendance area may
"make application beginning
April 1 to stay at the school they
now attend.
Candidate Claims
F ac.,,.lty Support
Capistrano Valley attendance
boundaries were established at.
the Monday meeUng. The new
school will draw from the port.ion
of Mission Viejo In the
Capistrano district and from San
Juan Capistrano east of t.M San
Diego Freeway or north of Del
Obispo Street, west of the freeway.
Before submitting transfer ap-
plications, students will be re-
quired to meet in small groups
with other students and their
parents to discuss wlth Principal
John Smart the educational pro-
gram, co-curricular and athletic
activiUes available at Capistrano
Valley. f Edllor'• Note -Thi4 artic~ i&
port of. a &~• profiling candidate&
for three OJJt'fl seat& on the Sad·
dleback ~ Boord of Tru.&teea
The al·Jar~ election ia March 8 and
the top vote-getter In each '""'tee
area will win.)
Dr. Alan Greenwood of Tustin
makes no secret of the fact that
his campaign for a seat on the
Saddleback College Board or
Trust~ has the full support of
the college faculty union.
He bad the same backine in
June of 1974, when be ran against
two other men for that post.
Greenwood lost that election lo
John Birch Socaeh member
Robert Bartholomew, bul he did
poll more than 14,SOO votes. He
still contends he m"faht. have won
if the third candQ:iate, Jeffrey
DuBowe hadn't takeh nearly
11.000 votes out or the pooJ.
The Tustin denti•t, who maJn·
tains an office in Anaheim where
he specializes in dot.al aurgery
for correction of facial de·
formities, bas lived 4Jl the college
district for 12 years at 20~ Salt
Air Drive.
"I started getting lnterefled In
the college when my wife
(Evelyn) was go1ng there," he
said. "She got her associate ln
arts, went on for a bachelors
degree and is now working on her
maaters."
Greenwood figuree that. 's a
pretty 1ood system, particularly
tor students either wicertain of
their ultimate educdonal fOals
or seekin& advanced tralnlq in a
vocational field.
Tbe candidate is a \.uever tn
steady1 structured, well
reasonea growth or (fl• district
and ii• "st.ron1 suppOrter" of a
satellite campus 1r.rvln1 the Irvine and Tustin are.. He also
support.a the lonptandina 'l>a.y·
U·YOU·IO" method cil~financlnc
campus 1rowth ratller than
bonded indebtedneu.
Gree)lwood is ctwly com-
m.lttod to blaher oduclfiOn. He la
od the part-time dental school
faculUes of UC Irvine d Loma
Linda Uftlvcrsity ind b•s
enrollecl at USC t9 earn a
masters detree in eduall'tJ011. Four ot hla ftve chll41ren are
cones• eractuates and \fte IU'lb. la
a~. I
"I tiav• deveJopfsf aome dqne ~ Mn&ithUy to educa·
tJoa, whldl 11 a qu.allt.J I ml&lrt
impart at a tlv.ltee-,'' b4 Uld. ''A
comml8\lt.y collue ot'fdl the stu-
d Ht an O,PPoriun~t1 109k around and .. & •al llduea·
t1on .hi t.be proeeu, p 1'
IA YOCalkmal a.rua.''
'
Dally l"li.t ttlttt ,.......
TEACHERS' CHOICE
Candidate Greenwood
Though Greenwood charac·
terizes himself as a "con·
servative person," be said b&
doe an 't hold to the brand of arch·
conservatism practiced by
Bartholomew. The dentist COO·
slderasuch politics "passe."
And though he bas 1rut
respect for the current college
administration and its efforts to
improve the school, be is also a
firm backer or the faculty and its
desires.
Paul Brennan, head of the Sad·
dleback Faculty Association (an
arriliate of the California
Teachera AuociaUon>. con-
firmed that his group will sup·
port Greenwood and .PtQYlde ·
eome ftJ;l&MlaJ aid. To that end,
Brennan said, the CTA head·
quart.rs J.o Burlingame hu been
uked to render Us endonement as well.
•·we looked Into the back·
1roundl ol a number ~I ,people
and decided he would be best for
tho community,'' Breuc Mid.
Green.wood said he is qm-
pat.beUc to the f acult.1 *aaa• It
la an -..ent.lal ele:ment in tbe
educational proceu.
"Tbe board ot trulteel liouf4.
brid1e the cth.um that. I '" d• velopiq btt..a ltlelt and the facull1.1 ' GreentroOd added. • '.TbOUlb the ChellloU mu.t
1dU be miidt by the boa.rd tbe 1ft.
YolTtiMlit OUM ftculty lQ tueb
d.daicm llwluld be couldend
esaeDtlal.0
Westberg said transfer will be
automatic for any current junior
who applies to stay at his present
school after attending a parent-
atudent discussion with Sm art.
The board postponed con·
slderatlon on whether
transportation will be provided
by the district for next year's
seniors who choose lo stay at San
Clemente or Dana Hills hiiJ'l
schools.
In his recommendation lo the
board, SupL Jerome Thomsley
proposed that transportation be
the responsibility of parents
whose children opt to stay where
they are.
Attorney Daniel Bucknum of
Newport Beach said failure by
the district to provide transporta-
tion would be a denial of equal
educational opportunity. He said
the district would be discrimmat·
ing against families who could
not provide transportation for
their children.
As an attorney, he said, he
would not hesitate to take a case
against the school district in the
event a child forced to make his
own way to school were lnj ured.
••Bestdea, how would any one 9' JOU feel ii one Of these students
had to bJtehhike to school and
didn't make It?" .he asked.
POOLS •••
He said the CIF ls leavtni the
reaponalblllty of pool tem·
peratures up to Individual
schools, even thou1b tbete have
been PUC hlntl that. an order is fortb~minl to abut of( the heat completely.
''Quit.eftankly. they (the PUC>
bave been very va1ue and our
member scbooll have -n call-
ing us ln droves,•• said Crowle1.
Tbe minimum pool tem·
petature for competlUva •wim· mrni la 18 dell'ffl. wlth the ldea1
between 80 and 82, acco1"dhl1 to
El Toto Hiib School swim coach
steve Farria.
He 1-sd tile pcd at bis ~
will be low.-ed to Tl deil'ft9, and ·
noted that .V1ft a one _..
dlanp bl tAllDperatue CID M
feltbyntm..,...
Buntlqt.Qn S.acll, Newport.
Neu, Ciolatruo, Silddloback
• V aUey; ud lntDI U•lftid School
Dtatnd omclall NJ tbey are
JcQ1Aa U& JondDa pool beat to .Ahoiit,.._. ...
LAGUNA
BEACH
SAN JUAN
CAPISTRANO
oau,.,...,. .. ,.._
POTENTIAL CAMPUS SITES -This map depicts the two
parcels of land under consideration for a new Sad-
dleback College District campus. The blowup at top
shows the Myford Road·Bryan Avenue location originally
chosen by college trustees last fall. The oUler blowup
shows the site at Irvine Center Drive and Jeffrey Road.
offered by the Irvine Company late in the selection pr<r
cess. Trustees are deadlocked as to which site to buy.
The existing district campus is at lower right of map.
Hopefuls
Drop Out
Of Voting
Two ol the 14 candidates for the
Saddleback Valley Unified
School District Board of Educa-
tion have dropped out of the elec·
tion campaign.
They are Gregory Brebner, a
small business owner who lives
in Miuion Viejo, and Arthur
Kraus, a retired business consul-
tant and resident or Leisure
World.
Both of their names, however,
will appear on the baJlot in the
Marcb8election.
The county Registrar or Voters
office said the ballots ~dy
have been printed. That otfice
aJso reports that neither of the
candidates has formally told
them that they are withdrawing
from the race.
Brebner said he is dropping out
of the race because he soon will
be having an operation on his
shoulder. "I just didn't feel like I
could campaign properly," he
explained.
He said he will try again for a
trustee's seat during the next
election in two years. Although
Kraus sometimes still sounds
like a candidate, be said be won't
accept a trustee's seal even if be
wins the election.
His name is listed last on the
ballot -a favorable position, ac-
cording to some political cam·
palgn vet.erans. -
Kraus said be decided not to
actively campaign because the
support be was promised fell
through soon after he filed as a
candidate. He refused to identify
the people who, be said, initially
encouraged him to seek a
trustee's seat.
He also said that he had pro·
mised to spend five days a week.
fulltime, in the trustee'sJ"ob if he
was elected. Now, be sal , he has
other community activities to
keep himself busy.
But Kraus, who is active in two
retired executives' groups whlch
help small buslnessmen In this
and other countries, still sounds
like he's campaiinina as he talks
of the kind of people be believes
should be elected.
"I don't want the Job but I'd
like to *a.ken the people In th.is
area to the fact that the achoo!
board ls the nearest thine we
have to a government," he ex-
pla loed during a recent ln·
terview.
He said he is tryin1 to aenerate
lntereat l.n the election among re-
sidents or the private Leisure
World retirement community.
Voters wW choose two trustees
to serve four-year terms during
th• election.
Tbe candidates amt actively
seeldn1 one of the seats are
Geor1• L . Bennett. Mtchael
P•tdclt Clancey , Juoeann
DeCua, Stewn L Hackbart.h,
WUllam· L. Kelly, War,...,. G.
Keasler, Gerald Klein, WUUam
Kobler, James T. Manion. Mary
Phllll.Pa. Marvin Silver and Den·
nia Stbith.
Murder Charge
F,....Pi.geAl
SITE •••
Trustees Larry Taylor and
Norrisa Brandt back a site of·
rered by the Irvine Company late
in the site selection process. That
alternate location is 3.S miles
south of the Myford-Bryan site at
the comer of Irvine Center Drive
and Jeffrey Road.
Mrs. Berry joined Patrick
Backus ancl Frank Greinke in
support or the other parcel,
which already had been ap·
proved by the Cull board last faJl
until the company came in with
its proposal.
Until about 90 minutes of Mon-
day's meeting bad elapsed, the
most interesting byplay con-
cerned new financial
breakdowns of the company's of·
fer.
Then Greinke arrived, blaming
his lateness on a "business ap.
potntment" that kept him ovt!r-
llme In Los Angeles County ..
The Tustin trustee resumed his
attack on the company's offer,
claiming the people or his com·
munity would be the big losers if
the site is moved farther sot.Ith.
He intimated that the Tustin
City Council, which took an am-
biguous position on the site selec·
tion issue, didn't want to offend
the compcviy because of its ongo.
ing negotiations to annex 450
acres of prime company-owned
land.
Greinke accused the council or
playing the role of "Judas"
because of those "450 pieces of
silver."
He also warned that if the
Myford·Bryan site is not chosen.
Irvine and Tustin might secede
from the Saddleback district to
attend schools that are closer to
home.
Taylor. who represents
Laguna Beach, said such
secession comments are "un-
founded" and saJd he doesn't
think "anyone will be spinning
ofr the Saddleback District."
He said there are no political
''under or overtones" and that.
the decision on a north em cam-
pus site should be based on "the
price of the land and how best. to
serve the area."
* * * Plea Stills
Din of Debate
Only Briefly
Saddleback Collete Trustee
Pat Backus sat quietly with•
look or disbelief on his face Mon-
day night, listentn1 to the verbal
duel between Board Chairman
Norrisa lirandt and Tustin
Trustee Frank Greinke.
Grelnke was emotlonalb' de-
f endln1 his preference for a
northern district campua site and
bad juat told Mra. Brandt to
''shut up" until be wu ftnl•ff4.
Mrs. Brandt chided Greinke (or
"lnnueodoea" ln hil pruentati
and declared 1be wauld 1oon :'..
der him to "abut up" if be ~l
end bta tirade. ·
At. that point, Bactua I~
forwardandtookth•fiOOI'. h
"Thia board it •etlln8 out 9f
control," boomed the normagy
quiescent Dana Point trust ...
. "A5 chairman, you 're dolna a
lousy job," he aald to lC1'1,, •
BELPAST, Northem Irelartd Brandt. "You're chairman aD64l
<AP) -Police announced Mon· you can't bADdle tt, tum ltoverto
day tbat a Londonderry man baa the vice cibalnnan... .
bffn cbarced •llb tht murder of Duda, the momeatiry all4!iit4.'1
Jeffrey Aaate, manalina dlrec· somebody re1Uied that 8-etua(
tor of the U.S.-owned J)uPontfac-1u11e1tlon probably wo~dtt\
tory near l..ondondern. Ap&.e, a solve anythlq, · 11 •
st-year.old Brlto1', was ahot Mn. Brandt a tured toW11Wt
down Feb. 2 as he left b1J bolne Greinke faying, "but he's
oo the outtldrta of Londonderry. chairman.''
• t '
-• ·•
NYSE COMPOSITE
' .,....,, .... , .. ., s
Ciq.itol Raid8-
Talents of IBM
--TON-..mnn wen. tm9 ..._. oat i. be aDOdMc' 1CMO year toa: ln·
..._..... • ' n• ••~ (JBM>, world'• lur•t ftm= ..... · _.,.... wderatety, movtnc up to $18.3 bJWon.
oolr lS ptrHllt ...._Ulan 1175, That meant IBM was tak· Inc m 1Dm17 llt &lit na. of "4.8 mlllloa a day. lta aalt1 in·
Cl'eae i.t Jar WD p-ater tbaa \Ile tG4ai lal• of IUCb
eomJNlllMI • R. J. ~"'· ~ Paclftc, Amedcan Altllallf-~-~lll.
NOi ALL or 'l'llOU 8VENVU A8E comtni trom
these ........ In fact, IBM nowr derives half of its business fl'om OUllSdetbe United States.
On tbe profit level. lt was abo &DOtber ho-hum year.
EarninO rose 21 pereent to reach $2.4 billion. That meant
IBM wu .,.,um, about •.a mWioa every day -and that's after~=--supplienandtucolledon. Jf 1 • • of
Money
Tree·
eoune, ·what io do with
all that money. You
aJgbt ...uab IUcb a pro:
blem. but )aOCIC' 1811 Is
stuck ,.W. lt. Kost COID•
panld lltUq On aueh • eada lode use tt to .,._,
other comoanies. However, IBll is foree1osed trom that op-tion by anlitnaat considerations. 'Ille govermqent alreacay
thlnb IBM ls too big, and it baa a suit in the courts seeking
to break uptheco.rporatlon.
so IBM'S MONEY, ITS Krl'AIN'ED earnina's. is out
there earning more money than It really needs. L&Jlt year
the company's "other income," mainly interest earned on '
it$ money, rose to the lofty level of $(94 million, up ~ per-
cent over ms. IBM makes more money on 11$ money than
most companies, or banks, make on their total operations.
One thine mooey can buy is talent and IBM is cettainly
adept at this exercise. Just bow adept became almost em-
barrassingly clear when President Jimmy Carter as.
sem bled his Cabinet.
Three of the new Cabinet members know one anotber as members of the board of direct.on of IBM: Secretary of
state Cyrus Vance, Secretary of Defense Harold Brown and
Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Patricia
Roberta Hanis.
Now was that alL
ANOTHER IBM BOAR8 MEMBER, DuPont chairman
Irving Shapiro, was in the running for treasury secretary.
Nor was tllat all.
President Carter's first choke for commerce secretary
was Jane Cahill Pfeiffer, aJormer\'icepresidentoflBM.
Nor was that all.
WA.BREN CHRISTOPHER, NAMED undersecretary
of state, comes from a Los Angeles law firm that represent-
ed IBM in the West.
Nor was that all.
Atty. Gen. Griffin Bell comes from an Atlanta Jaw firm
that represents IBM. As a result. Bell said he would dis~
qualify himself from an in'volvement in the IBM antitrust
suit his department is now prcsecutlng.
Heading up IBM's defense in this case is Its general
legal counsel, Nichols deB. Katzenbach. who also sits on the
JBM board. He used to have Griffin Bell's job: attorney
general of the United States.
Exxon Discount
Program Praised
WASIDNGTON CAP> -Congress, at the request of con-
sumer groups, made it easter twi> years ago for merchants
to offer discounts to consumers who use cash instead of
credit cards.
The discounts have not caught on since then and no
companyotrers them nationally.
NOW, HOWEVER, THE EXXON Corp. is experiment·
1ng with discounts in a program praised by the 1 con-
gressional sponsor or the legislation.
Rep. Frank Annunzio CD-Ill.), chairman o( the House
consumer affairs subcommittee, says the Exxon plan may
lead to wider use or discounts by other companies .
.. It is a perfect example of how much consumers could ·
save lf similar programs were started by businesses all
over the country,•• Annunzio told the House Monday.
TUE THEORY BEmND THE 197S legislation was that
since a merchant has to pay a fee to the credit·card com-
pany for each transaction. he should be willlng to gtve a
cash customer an equal discount.
Contracts between credit·card companies and
merchants had forbidden the merchants from offering
cash discounts, but the two-year.old law banned such pro-
visions. · .' . '
Merchants aUll
were hesitant about of· '
,,-----------.... rerlng the discounts. ap-
( C'fl~C'V'UE'D J parently fearing they · Vl"fJ iri£.tn would hurt profits.
Exxon, however, is
-----------gambling that they will help the company as
well as consumers.
IT DESIGNED AND BUILT GAS pumps that indicate
prices for either cash customers or credit·card customers.
Tbeae pumps are being used in Charleston, S.C. and
Abilene, Tex. Exxon bas advertised the discounll heavUy Si
the twoclties.
If the tests prove successful, the out on company will
betin offering the discounts elsewhere, Exxon rnarketing
executive Nick Tlngtey said in Houston.
Anmmzio aides have visited Charleston and report lbat
'reaular gas ltw cash customers COits 52.9 cents at the Exxon
stations. Jt is two cents higher for credit·card uscn.
ANNUNZIO SAID OTHER g110Une dealers in
Charleston have lowered prices to stay competitive and the
city's motoriJts have the lowest gasoline coats in the state. · I
0 M01t Charleston <Exxon> dealers report entbusiasUc 1
customer reception to the program and out-of ·•tete I
customers W011der why a proJram such u th• one tn Cbarlestoo ls not av1Uable in thfltr area," Annun1k> aald.
Swedlow Gain Falters
Swedlow Inc •• Oardtn Groft, has repC)t'ted earnings
from coodDuln1 operaUons of Sll8.000. or 29 ceata a •hate. fw the a1M .,,._ eadld Dec • ._ ·
Tbta compare1 wt.th earninla rrom eonunum, oper.-uou ol. t5IO,OOO, or eo eents a Share. for tb4t D1M moaU.
ended Dec. a. ms.
Sala were $11,031,000 eom~ared with $10,l.M,OOO tM
ynr before.
For the nine molltbs, Swedlow bad net eai'ftlnp ol
$(tl,.,, or 80 tents a share, fndudina $202,000 of eamlap
from dUccml1nuod operatlonsJd1eet=Uftu.stne11 UMt1'11~ ttoD lnautance pr~ lrom aa o that oee1&1Ted al
the contpaqy' • formtt: acrylle lbeft vial.on la JW, m5. ~
Thlt compll'Cll wlt.b net. eunlno ot 12.887.000 .,, $2.'14 •
1bare. fc. the 1lmllar G1ne mCIDlhl ol 1175.