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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-02-17 - Orange Coast PilotTHURSDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 17, 1977 VOL. N, NO. .. I SCCTt«*J, M ~AOH • Co. Despite Pressure Viejo Lake Fill 'Will Continue' BJ WILtLUI SCllltEDEll Ot .. ~ ......... Mission Viejo Company Presi-l dent Philip J . Reilly said today · · firm will continue filling its . 2-billion gallon manmade lake pile political pressure from rou1hl-stricken Northern aliforma. Bat Bdlly told newsmen at the uta del Sol recreation cent.er that, • ~ today, all tbe water owiQa.ln:to tbe bum ii from the oloradO River aquaduct. .. We believe this ls an accepta- e alternative," Reilly said, aot- inc that it will be possible to cut olf all Nortbern California water feedina the Jake wit.bout affect· int supplies to the surroundin& community. .. While It will cause a deJa.y in • fiWn1 al the lake, we believe will be tolerated by those in lbe muntty and tbose who have traded t.o buy homes uodet' ......... _..,,...on,'' be aaid.. A apok•man lor tbe Santa i€arter Views ~uhan Policy WASHINGTON CAP) -Presf- t Carter la asklna that Cuba nue a policy ot restraint ltroad and respect for human ta at home u hla price for ndller U.S. relations With ftf/DL Cuba. in turn, II demandlna at tbe United Stales lift its e embar10 ~ tbeialand W ablqtGn wants an exteDs1an • an anti·biJackini aireement 1ta scbeduled April expira. lloia. . Carter took bis Whlte Bouse '-itiserw by aurpriM when be Mid Wectn-day lite bu neilftd fDdlrec:t word tbat Cuba tntiends to remOYe Jt1 troops from IA.niola. Mar1arita Water District, which serves Mission Viejo and its im· mediate surroundings, said facilities are available to supply more plentiful Colorado River water directly to the lake project without affecting delivery of the higher quality mixture of Northern and Soclthern California water received by re- sidential and other consumers. · During his IS-minute prepared statement. company President Jleill.1 bid that be was br•akinr a lonc·standing policy of the cor· poratioo by commenting on an is· sue that is pendioc a hearing before a aovernmental body. The late filllnr project will come before the state Water Resources Control Board in Sacramento Wednesday, to de· <See IAK.E, Pace At> Fire Tnrek's Brakes Fail; Omh Averted ' • • • Director uestioned; Medics Aid Victim hll't ................ ldllN ........ COSTA MESA PARAMEDICS• AMBULANCE CREWS REMOVE CRl,.fCALLV INJURED VICTIM Shota Jn Parking Lot FeU Former Nucl•• Plant Crane Opermtor Mesan Shot in Back Merger Voting Probed By TOM BARLEY Ol .. o.llY~-- lM'lne beif'ftl Joan Irvine Smith'• laW)'el' questioned an Irvine Company director throuebout the day Wedeneeday on the detall$ ol a board meeting Jul ·Feb. 8 Jn wbJch Mrs. Smith WU outvoted s t.o 2 OD a COD• troversJaJ merger proposal . Board member William Thornton White III told attorney Howard Friedman that the divided board refused to ad oo ' Mn. Sm.lth's resolution calling for 'l delay in board action ap. proving a takeover by the Mobil OU CorporaUon. Testimony in the Orange County Superior Court trial re--• vealed that Mrs. Smith wanted the delay because she had been as1ured by a competing bidder that the Mobil bid of $281.9 million lot' the entire company would be topped within the next two weeks. The competing bidder was identified as the Allen-Taubman combine, a consortium beaded by Wall Street finadcier Cbarle!f Allen and Detrolt dneloper Alfred Taubman • It wu teltifled that the Allen. Taubman interests were pre- pared t.o offer $33.60 a sbare for the lrvbie Compan~ holdings In a new all ca.th offer. The Mobil bid works out at $33.50 a share. · White tattfied that Irvine Company President Ra)'mCIDd w ataon and other manacement petlonnel .Utecl at tbe boarl meetin1 tllat Mobil ~1·d9 much more f'or tbe 1niM ~~ pany than tbe company.~ . <See BEiaESS. PaaeAZ) j SI Gaily PllM s .. H ....... MJSSIOH VIEJO COMPANY WILL CONTINUE TO FIU CONTROVERSIAL LAKE Th• 1.2·81Ulon Oellon Feclllty HH Become Focu1 of Crftlcl1rn In Northern Cellfornl1 Frot11P~AJ LAKE •.. termine lf the water usage is wasteful or non utilitarian. ReHly contended that the lake has become the focal point of people seeking to "simplify a complex issue to search for • some sentence or two that would state the problem In hopes that a quick solution would emerge." * * * North Told: ;.Show Need' For Water Aid FRESNO CAP> State Water ProJect contractors have been told they "must show need and \Jse" ror J00.000 acre.feet bemg frtted by Metropolitan Water District for droughl·parched Northern California. District offic1als, meeting here Wednesday to learn details of state project cutbacks. were urged to apply by early next week for a sha re of the Southern Califotnia district's aJ. location. Metropolitan has indicated it will give up part of its state project supply th1!> year and in- stead use more Colorado River water "You must . show your need and use,·' caut1ont'd Robin Reynolds, deputy director of the >late Department or Water Resource11 "Try your level best Awarded Points Kids, 9-13, Cited· For Sex Club Acts PROVIDENCE, R.I . <AP> -children in the neighborhood Two men have been charged with where Williams' apartment was sodomy for allegedly running 11 located on the city's south side sex c I u b ca 11 c d · ·Teen may havr been involved in the Challenge" in which bovs anc! <'lub. HI• said many of the girls aged 9 to lJ were 'reward~ungsters had-already accepted with BB guns and bicycles for prizes their performances "It was apparently a matter or "I don't know how this could go getting some of the kids that on without the parPnt~ getting were down and out and offering suspicious." police \aot Malton them gifts." Wilson said "Then Wilson said Wednesday "I 'd be they would entice friends to the first one to ask my kids where Join '· they got something like a b1cy Wilson sard police have a list or cle" children involved in the club. Albert Dub<ns. 46, and Harold The club met late in the after· Williams. 52, both of Providence, noon Monday through Thursday were arrested Tuesday at and the two adults and tht: Williams' apartment where the children engaged in homosexuaJ club's activities allegedly took and heterosexual acts, Wilson place. said "One youngster said they were He said the youngsters ap- a warded point s for their parently were not forced to performances and those that got participate and no other adults a high total were rewarded with were believed to have taken part. things like BB guns and Dubois was freed on bail bicycles." said Walson. "The kids earlier th.ls month after being who got the m05t points made the charged by Johnston police with '10 Most Wanted' hst. •· indecent assault on a child under Wilson said that as many ru. 20 16 there. ' Front Page Al HEIRESS CASE . • • in a narrative sense lo docu· ever hope to achieve with its ment your need for this watt!r " limited capitaJ. While tes tiCied that Mrs Smith and Watson tangled dur· ing the Feb 8 meeting on the is· sue of what she believed were the company president's con· nection with Mobil and an offer she believed was made to ham by the 011 company. Earlier lfl a day long meet· Wat.son was quoted as telling ing. contractors and the state the meeting that Mobil's in· had hoped to make their re. ternatlonaJ assets and business '.1Uests oraJJy then. but Reynolds acumen would help the Irvine >aid after consulting with Water Company lo look further afield Resources D1rtttor Ron Robie >Y telephone that written re· and "not put all its eggs in the Orange County basket.'' :iuests showing justiCtcallon At w ue in the lawsuit being .YOuld be required tried before Judge James F "This is too bag a thing not to Judge is Mrs . Smith's claim that 1a~e Ul writing," Reynolds ex the sale of the James Irvine Jlamed. . Foundation's controlling in· . omc1als from various ~Is· terest in the Irvine Company is nets indicated at the meeting ~air to minority shareholders. hat they want as much water Mrs. Smith owns a 22.4 per· 1s poss.Ible in the wake of cent stake in the Irvine Com· fuesday s state announcement p a n y . w h I t e , w h 0 s e >f .a 60 percent cutback to grandmother was the second 1gncuJture ar:'d 10 percent for wife of foundation creator iomestic and •!'dustrial use. James Irvine, Is a member of a Several offktals said they ex· family group that owns nine per- J e ct pressure from the centofthecompanystock. i...eg11lature and possibly federal Mn. Smith argues that it is .vater o<fiCtala in dftermlnlng unfair to compel minority .. ho geta how much of the shareholders lo dispose of their MetropolJtan water supply stock at a price that she believes Boat Burgled In Newport Newport Beach police are try- '"' to track down a nine-foot janghy, a nine·foot raft and a ;mall outboard motor lhat were taken off a boat docked in Newport Harbor. taor Olenlcoff. 33, of Los AQ1eles told police the lt.ema were aecured to lbe yacht he keeps at the Bayshore Marina. He last saw them ob Feb. s, but when he returned to hls boat fuuday, they were missing. dftANOI COAST can be Improved given more time tolffk bids and more com- peUlion for Mobil. White testlfied Wednesday lbat NobU officials have re- peatedly made it clear over the years tbat they are onJy in· terested id t.ak.ine over the com· pJete Irvine Company and not Just the foundation 'a 54.S per· cent cont.rolling tnterest. Frltdman arped Wednesday that lt would have been more ethical and buaioossllke for Mobil to seek cofltrol of the lrvi.ne Company a step at a time rather than apply what he described as a "corporate freeze out" on Mrs. Smith. "It L~ clearly illegal to take over the minority shareholders stock in thls fashion," he told Judge Judf'e. Whale said Watson told the heiress that he had no such con· nection with Mobil and that he simply wanted the best deal that could be obtained for the Irvine Company . And the witness quoted Mrs. Smith as telling the board: "well. this looks like a pretty good deal for the (Irvine Com· pany) management.'' White testified that the Irvine Company was hav41lg problems In retaining top management and personnel as a result of the unrest created by the trial and several takeover bids . And he indicated that Mobil was a clear favorite among management who believe that their positions and future will be more secure under a Mobil Irvine administration. Earlier trial testimony in- dicated that the Allen·Taubman interests, if successful in the take over bid, intend to "clean the dead wood" In the Irvine Company. Mrs. Smith haa repeatedly claimed that the company is top heavy in management and that many of its senior personnel are featherbedded and overpaid. Warning Issued LOS ANGELES (A P) Persons encouraging a boycott of city schools to protest busing for Integration may face felony charges, police ofCicials say. $27 ,ooo Fleece Crime -Stutly Ca/,led 'Crime' Task Force Cites Early Tapping WASHINGTON (AP> A federal task force has concluded that natural fas reserves on federal land in lb• Gulf of Mexico could be lapped sooner than acbeduled trom some areas, sources said today. The sources said. however, thaLcompanies' decision not lo pu.f"'the fields into production sooner is complicated by t~chnical and eeonom1c factors. The task torce study was being released today by Interior Secretary Cecil Andrus On the basis of the report, Andrus may recommend a broader lnvesti&a- tion Into the offshore reserves. The study by ·a Slx·member eroup focused on four ga$ fields in the Gulf, and was viewed by Andrus as only a preliminary ex· amination llimed at fmdin1 out Whether further study would be wortbwblle. The staff d the Federal Power Commission concluded Dec. 6 that gas fields containing some 401 billion cubic feet of natural gas. already committed to even- tual delivery lo interstate pipelines, coul~ be produced earlier than scheduled by the gas compani~ that control them. But the FPC staff acknowledeed 'there may he legitimate reasons for the com- pany scheduJes and said the com· m1sston should make a judgmenl whether production should be BC· celerated. The Andrus team studied the East Cameron Block 271 field. the Tiger Shoals field : the Grand Island Block 43 field. and the South Marsh Js land Block 48 field These fields are leased from the federal government by these 10 comparue!> Tenneco Inc., Gulf Oil Corp , Mobil 011 Corp . Amoco, Union Oil Co . Texaco. Cities Service Co . Getty 011 Corp . At1ant1e-R1chfleld and Continental Oil Co The Andrus team was hN1ded by Leo Kruhtz. an aide to the secretary, rumored to be in line for appointment as the depart· ment 's sohc1tor. Other team members were P 1ul MarUn of the \J .S. Geoloetcal Survey, an &eency of tbe Interior Depar&ment. Victor Zabel and Larry Kruy1man, both sttlf melJlben of tt\o Federal Power Commission ; David Sc:bwaru, of the Senate Antitrust and Monopoly subcommittee staff and George L. Donkin, a prlv4te economic c:onaultant. ll WU not known bow M\lCb gas n.tI&ht be available in the field$ studied by the Andrus team but •pparentfy the quantity would not bo nearly •nou1h ellhet-to accoant for or lo eUmJnate such ahort.,es~•tt experienced this winter. The 401 billion cubic f of re- serves which the FPC sta oeat· .ct ln December as bavinc n· tJal for accelerated development could produce, ll wu eathnated1 only about 6T bUUon cubtc feet or 1as a year, lhe equivalent of a Ut· tie more \ban one normal winter day's demand. House Vote Sought Congress Pay Hike Appears Certain WASfllNGTON (AP) -The House refused today lo approve a weekend adjournment. thus strengthening the hand of mem· hers trying to force a recorded vote on a pay rajse. Unless the House votes specifically on the pay raise. the increase wilJ go into effect automatically at midnight Satur. day. It will apply to senators, representatives, federal judges and high officiaJs. By blocking adjournment, op ponems of the raise kept alive a chance of votmg on it and putting each member on record either m favor or against the increase Under the increase. salaries for members of Congress would be hiked from $44,600 to.$.57,500 The vote against ad1ournment was 224 lo 109. Members objecting to the pay raise or to the method of putt1og 1t into effect argued that the ad· 1ournment vote was in effect a vote on the main issue. But Speaker Thomas P. "Tip" O'Neill told rcP'\)rters, "If anybody thinks the folks at home will inh:rprel a vote on adjourn· ®QUALITY TELEVISION ment as a vote on the pay ralae. he's JUSl whistling Dixie." An attempt to force a recorded vote m the House failed Wednes· day. Members who object to the raise then focused their efforts on O'Neill. They Instated O'Neill has enough clout with the Rules Com· mittee t.o push through a speciaJ procedure allowing a vote on re· solutions to kill the rai$e. Under regular House rules, there could be no vote before the deadline. The Post Office and Civil Service Committee has not voted out any of the resolutions and a subcom· m1ttee recommended against them Wednesday. O'Neill, who favors the raise and has said he would vote for it on the record, 1ns1sted the speaker has no power to take the resolutions out of committee Jurisdiction and send them to lhe floor. The issue is already dead in the Senate, wtuch 1s not in session· this week. The House is scheduled to adjourn for the weekend today after hearing a speech by President Jose Lopez Portillo of Mexico. Trans1t1onal stylP.d console Cas1e1s Genuine Oak veneeis and select hardwood solids on top and ends. Fronl and base of March 1st is coming soon and we need to reduce our inventory before floor-tax day. sun1Jtated Oall. 13" and 17" diagonal PORTABLES 19"-23"-25" diagonal TABLE MODELS VERSATILE. COMPACT .COLOR TV The MALIBU • H1310C Our most compact portable with 100% Solld-Stato Chassis with Power Sentry. Brllllant 110° Chromacolor ln·Llne Picture Tube. Solid-State Tuning SV-· rem. Ebony color cabinet. 3W'!'f • I . ... . Call tor Clearance Prires .... _ .. "I ,, By STEVE KITCHELL OttM Delly l'lletS~ A Costa Mesa man w,s shot several times in the back late Tuesday night as he returned to his apartment from !\is car. Victim Ronald Edwin Me1x· sell, 38, of 550 Paularin Ave .. Park Mesa Villas, was r ported in critical condition a Costa Mesa Memorial Hosplta' today after undergoing surgery for a spinal in1ury caused by bullets from a large caliber automaUc pistol. Costa Mesa investigators who responded to the 10 30 p m. shooting said witnesses gave several descriptions of the gun. man. Police put out a bulletin to other agencies asking them lo be on the lookout for a male Lalin suspect. The cunman is d~criboo as standing five feel nine inches tall, with a slim build, shaegy hair worn in a bun. and weanng a ~ ____ .., .. nor white levt Jacket .. -. ltllttrl'I .............. ., .k ...... 1( ..... COSTA MESA PARAMEDICS, AMBULANCE CREWS REMOVE CRITICALLY INJURED VICTIM Shots In Parking Lot Fell FOftlt•r Nudear Plant Crane Operator -Cou:..en Deeltties _To Hear Developer City Manager Fred Sorsabal said today the Costa Mesa City Council will not hear Arnell· • Development Company's pre- liminary plan for a controversial build.bll project next. Tuesday night. Instead. be said, the cquncil might select a date at it.s T ay meeting for a ss>«ta · e.etlng over the Costa Mes •'The council may decide to hold a special session Just for that development," he said today in response to a letter from Costa M~a homeowners opp<>sin& the I Tuesday hearing. ment. located at South Coast Drive between Bear Street and San Leandro Lane. The homeowners group, which is oppo6ed to the 48-acre housing project. said they will be unable to attend Tuesday 's council meeting due to a candidates' night they scheduled for that night. · --· ht his letter lo Sorsabal, the l\omeowner group leader said "it would be improper for tbe City Council to hear this item before the planning comm lss 1on mmutes wouJd be available" to the bomeownef's. e Charges Costa Mesa vice officers, along with Orange County Sberilf'S in· vestigators, arruted two women thev alle.«e were involved in a call tirl operation in the city. Officers arrested Sharon Patricia Collins, 21, o( 969 Mis· Slc>h"1"1'Ne •. A.pt. 2, Costa. Mesa, and Julie Sheree Nichols, 20. of Seal Beach. at a local motel Tuesday night. Vice and narcotics Sgt. Gary 0 . Webster said the two women are being beld in Orange County JBJl with Miss Collins facing charges of pimpine and soliciting for prostitution and Miss Nichols facina charaes or prostitution and possession or dangerous drues. But Costa Mesa police Lt Georee Lorton said today detcc· tives have rec:eived conructmg reports frolJ\ witnesses concern-ing the ldenlitv of the gunman ·'We're going out to rein- terview those witnesses and. hopefully. come up with a better description," he said Victim Meixsell told officers he did not know who the assailant was. nor did he know why anyone would shoot him "He told us the last th mg 'fte re- membered was bemg sh9t in the m felli~ do ancl \QC sfiot some more, ·Lorton said Police said Me1xsell was re· turntne to his home from his aut6mobile in a well-ht carport at the apartment complex M eixsell. who is separated from his wife. moved to Costa Mesa from Dana Pomt severaJ months ago. police said. He worked for the Bechtel Power Corporation as a crane operator at the San Onofre Nuclear Plant until last Sep· tember. according to Edison Company officials Lorton said he and other in- vestigators returned to the scene today and reinterviewed several witnesses., "We're still getting some con- flicting reports." he said, "but we 'retrying to sort it all out." He said police will talk to Meix· sell. "in a day or so," to see what information he can shed on the mystery shooting. "Until then we'll be following up every lead we get," Lorton said. POLICE CHALK MARK SURROUNDS EXPENDED SLUG Mesa Man Shot Several Tlmea In Parking Lot • Foul Play? Newport Heiress Reported Missirig By JOANNE REYNO~DS Of T1M o.lly Pilot Swlf Sara Barlholomae, widow of oil millionaire William Bartholomae or Newport, Beach, was reported missing toda.y un- der what family members described as s uspicious circumstances. Mrs. Bar'tholomae, 61, was re· ported missing by her slater Imelda; a Santa Ana resident who told police she believes foul play is involved. · ,InitiaJ .police reports did not speci(y what the circumstances · lvtn& .foul lay · Ill& ~ough-the polf ce report noted Mrs. Bartholomae was wearing a Sl0,006 diamond ring ct the time of her di.sappearan~ Mrs. Barth lom e, a millionaire since t e death or her husband. has lived in a Santa Ana mansion since 1964. She divorced her yachtsman husband tn 1963. That divorce was not rinaJ, however, when Bartholomae was stabbed to death in his bayfront Balboa mansion in January 1964. He was stabbed by the half· sister or his brother's wife who was acquitted of manslaughter m an Orange County Superior Court. trial that year. The B .. rtholomae family has had a·hlstory or bad fortune since the oUman'sdeath. Mrs. Bartholomae's second marriage in 1966 to Montebello manufacturer Ernest Launder lasted 57 days before he filed for divorce and she filed for annul· ment. The family's 95-foot sailing yacht Sea Diamond as well as the bayfront mansion were both sold. Ditty '"'"' ...... MISSING IN SANTA ANA Sara Bartholomae after she was attacked by two gunmen in her Santa An(! hnmed and robbed of a $3,000 diamon ring. · .... · · She has remained active ir) business, watching over her fortune. which she said she was amassing to pass on to her two children, William and Sarajane. firs recently as 1975 her children unsuccessfully initiated legal action to force her to hand over control, of the fortune to them. Police indJcated they wouJd be intervtewint family members tn mvestigating Mrs. Bartho~111- North Costa Mesa Homeowners Auociation Presi· dent Paul Diehl asked Sorsabal ln a letter this week to delay the"' hearin1 on the project Wttil his .... 1 or1anization can "rearoup. •• Bomb Slayer Cites Second Bombing Plan "We received information that a call girl operation was working out of the Misston Drive apart· ment," Webster said today. Ethics Panel Votes Rules The mansion was sold. de· molished and the land subdivided after the death of William's brother Charles a few months after his sister-an law's trial. ae's disappearance. 1 A poliee spokesman said ~e was last seen Tuesday by her sis- ter. Imelda, who told officers_5he failed to show up for two apl>Qint- ments since then. Police said a searctf or her home and neighborhood had proved l')egative. i A Costa Mesa Planninl Com· mission recommendation Mon- day night approved prellmanary plans for the Arnell develop- NB Candidate ·Quits Race · PHOENIX. Ariz. <AP> - Confessed slayer John Harvey Adamson has testified he dis· cussed planting a bomb In the of· ftce of Nav~o Tribal Chairman Peter McDonald with Phoenix at· torney Neal Roberts 'tth1\e a former aide to forau~r ~· Sam stetger (Jl..Arb. >,listened. AdamlOll is Ute admitted bomb 1Jayer ot Arizona Republic re- Porter Don Bolles INt June. Two others have also been charged in tbealaying. Adamson made the testimony Wednesd~ during a preliminary JHt.arJns for Roberts and Chandler pNi~er Jimmy Robison, who are charged with violating federal explGSlve &rid conspiracy laws in an unsuc- cessful attempt to blow up a U.S. Public Health Service bulld.ln& in Pboenix last year. He said investigators, posin& as potenUal customers, contact- ed Miss Collins for a ''party" at a local motel where an un· determined number of women were t.o show up. He said only two women ar- rived for ~ party, and were ar- rested after allegedly discussing the fee for their servtcea. "We were expectin1 more women, but they told us the others were busy." Webster said, adding. the operation included bu1lnns cards and • i>hone number. Miu Collins' bail Is set at $2,500 and M.iss Nichols is beinl held on $1,000 bail. WASHINGTON (AP) -The House Ethics Committee voted on Wednesday to require mem· hers to keep an accounting or everything received rrom friends as well at lobbyists. Even the value of dinners, whether in ._ restaur~n~ or ln a friend's home, would ~ave to be accounted for by Ho\ls~ mem· bers under the ptopo•al. When the total value of all -Consldera- Uons trorra one lndlvldual r~~ ached $l00, a 1ist of ea<;h ite"'. .-.would have to be filed wltb the <:lerlt of the House. Mrs. Hartholomae, who m· herited SlO million frorn her estranged husband's estate, was hospitalized for a week in 1.966 crackdown Set WASHINGTON (AP> Agrlcu1tue Secretar)! Bob Berjland said today he wiJl crack down on food stamp cheaters who do not deserve emergenc:y free aid. At the same Ume. he promised quick ~livery of stamps t.o those wbo havesuf· lered because· of tt\e severe weather. Kid Sex €lob Raiiled Pair Held ~in 1RhOde Island ''JJeen Chslle~e' . ... Mrs. Bartholom ae was described as standing four feet, 11 inches tall and weighing J.60 pounds. She bas brown hair-end eyes and w•s slJiving a beige Chevrolet station waion. DAILY PILOT c ~llDwtiUa:"~!,IM Contract neeotiatjons belw~ Newport.Mesa School District emioiltrators and teachers ve ,r,p•ldn• «OOd pro1r•~ ... but a number Of "thorny 18$UCS" re· ln't() ~settled before a nnar . Utment ts reached, school sistee Marian Ber4eson said lo· peakin1 before a morning Una of tbe Cit~"ns Harbor ea Research Te•m <CHART> Cotta Me•a,. Mrs. Berieson ed blndln1 arbitration. class * * * rucial ssues Sttulied While school trustee Marian Bergeson discussed teacher con· tract negotiations with one dlizen group this morning, school board president Don Smallwood discussed the same issue with the Harbor Area .Board of Realtors And like Mrs. Bergeson. 1Sf\'\allwood said he believes the two crucial issues in the on.going negotiations with teachers in the Newport·Mcsa Unified School District are not salaries and w.orking cond1t1 ons, but the pro posed transf er pol icy for teachers and their insistence on the use of bmdini arbitration Salanes. Smallwood said. are a resolvable issue. "We've almost always reached agree· ment with our leachers on dollar amounts and J anticipate we will do so again," tht' Nt.>wport Beach attorney said in a brief 1nterv1ew after his speech But Smallwood sa id he Jeels the teacher proposal to base transfers strictly on seniority would be "chaotic m light of the (¥t that we are closing schools." · He said he agreed that seniori· ty should be a consideration an making transfers of teachers. "but it should not be the single factor In that dec1s1on." The use of binding arbitration. S°'allwood said , is goine to be crucial because he and he believes the balance of the school board agrees is adamantly op- posed to It and the California Teachers Association which is handling the negotiations for the Newport·Mesa Education As- sociation, the teachers' bargain- ing acent. is adamantly for 1t ''The CT A statewide regards binding arbitration as a maJor union goaJ," he said Smallwood said he 1s opposed to it because ··1t divests the pubhc of its nghtful place at the bargainingtable ·· He explained that theoretical IS , lhe public IS represented In bargMning by the elected school board members Members of the public act through the election process and if they're unhappy with the JOb done by their school board, they can elect new members "Once you remove that ul t1mate authority from the elected public offlcaal and give It to an arbitrator, you have denied the public ats role m the process." he said Narcos Raid . Cocaine Lab T HOL'SAND OAKS <APl Deput.Jes have raided an aUe1ed cocaine fa ctor') m a residence near where two Frencf\men were arrested for 1nvuli1aUon of possessinJ{ 37 ounces of the iJ. leeal drug vaJued at $170,000, in· vttsUgaton said Wednesday. Lt. Harvey Harrison said lab equipment and chemic ala used to make the drug were found inside tM house alont with a pound of hashish and about 100 pounds or hlehgrad• marijuaha, arown in Haw ad, called Kona Gold. OAAMQI~ ( DAILY PILOT ._,, .. _ .... _,_,,__ Jac~1t '-..... "'°'._, ..... °""'"-..... .,_,II_ ...... lblllf'1r•, • &.id the wue ol teacher salaries and the 1eo&lb Of teHber work-d ys sbouWDGt-bem'lJ«fAclOJ'I. Under a new collective bar1ainin1 law (SB 1&0). dl6trict teachers represented by the Newport-Mesa Educat.lon A•· soclatioo <NMEA) are seeking use of binding arbitration if con· tract necotiations stall. Mrs. Bergeson ctaim.s the use of an arbitrator. "an oulaider Carnival Ckaneellor A giant paper head of West German Chance llor Helmut Schmidt. built for Cologne's Lenten carnival parade Monday, sticks its tongue out at a workman daubing its nose. Political figures are popular subjects for parade floats during the carnival season m Germany. Mangers, Remington Account Settled? By GARV GRANVILLE OU!le O.Uy l'llet Sl•lf Fullerton attorney Michael Remington said today that he and Assemblyman Dennis Mangers <D·Huntington Beach) have settled their controversial accOWlt and Mangers no longer owes hJm SS.000. According to Rem.inaton, he early th.is week picked up a $S,OOO cashier's c heck drawn by Mangers al a savin1s and loan bank Thouah the money came from Irvine Co. IArector Questioned Mangers' campaign committee, Remington said there was nothing about the remittance to him that would tie it to a cam· paign loan rather than a personal loan. "l could live with that kind of payment. So. now the slate's wiped clean,'' Remington said. The SS,000 loan Remington made to Mangers last Oct. 22 became a controversy three weeks ago when the attorney said it was a personal loan and the newly elected assemblyman m· s1sted it was a loan to his cam· pal&n committee. Arter receiving the money, Mangers the same day reported 1t aa a campaign loan to the secretary of state. Later, the Democratic as- semblyman 1howed the loan on his campaiatn finance disclosure statement as bein& a loan made to hla campaign committee. 87TOM BAaLEY "I did everythln& openly and °'.,..,_,.,,........, the way it was to be done," Irvine belreas Joan Jrvlne Maneera said or his handling and Smith'• lawyer quealioned an reportlne or the loan. ll'Vlne Company director He alao •aid be checked with throu1hou.t the day Wedeltelday the state Fair PoliUcal Practices on the details oC a board meeting Commission to make certain be laat Feb. I in whJcb Mrs. Smith had Pros>erl.y reported the $5,000 was out\'oted S to 2 on a con· loan. troveralaJ mercer proposal. "They (the commilsionJ told Board member William melhadhandledtbelraoucUon Thornton White 111 lold attorney properly," Mangers said. H.o.w am-E.riedm&JLJ.ha.l lhe. But Remington dldn 't agree. ~~~r: m~r :~ lo~w:rr ~ .~: ~ for a delQ in board acUoa ap.-•howed a penonaJ note slaned by proving a takeover by the Mobil Man1en and a cancelled check OU Corporation. made :fnable to Mucers to pro- TeaUmony h\ tbe Oran1e ve hil t . Count1 Superior Court trial re· "That be put it into his campa· vealed thai Mra. Smlth wanted tea is his businesat ~ot mine," the delQ because abe had beet\ Rt1D1n1to1u cl. M d.m.d. be red « ~pcti»,bldde bicl Ide • loan lb I.be !rranaers Uiat the Mobil bid of mt.9 commtt.t.e. mUUon for tbe tmtire co1npan, ounce County Su.pen~ wou14.be-qped w•ttm1 ttrnim-htptr-f)tMrlcb, who hacj direct· twowetkl. ,,, ed Mangen 'to 'Remlnlton'a of. Tbe competin1 blddu wu flee Jut fall. alao •aJd 1l wu hla identlfted aa the Allen·Ta\lbman und•ntandln1 that tbt loal\ wa1 oombU.. a couortiun'l buded Ptnonal. by Wall Str"t flnancler Cbarl11 Allen ~ Detroit develo&>er Alrr.c. Taobb>att. --~ It wu t•ttned that the Allen· Taubman lnter .. i. ere pre· p.r·ed to otter •·• • •l\att for the tmne Coinp111y t\Oldlnp 1n • new au cub on ·the .MoW bhtwcnaouiattaa alh.ift. Mrs. ~reeson •190 aees pro- blems if tbe NMEA'• demand for a transfer policy baaed on seniority alone le 1ranted because It would create con· fusion fordJstrlct officials. WASJUNGTON (AP) -A pay rme'tor members of Congress, federal Judaes and high officials was assured t04ay when the House voted to adjourn for the weekend. Members who oppose the pay raise or the way it 1s being putlnto effect wan\ed to hold the House in session as long as possible and the House first moved to fight over the issue during the weekend but then reversed itself. Without a Hou se vote specifically on the pay raise, the increase goes into e ffect automatically at midn'ight Satur· day It will apply to senators, representatives. federal Judges and highofCiciaJs . Under the increase. salaries for members or Congress would be hiked from $44,600to$S7,SOO.· When the issue of ad1ouming for the weekend first came up, the House dereated it. 224 to 109. But after leaders reiterated that there could be no vote on the issue even if the House continued in session. another motion to ad1ourn untll 11 a.m . Monday earned without re· corded vote. Th!·~ slarttni and clolinc Umet orthea school ye • an wue Mrs Bergeson sald should •not be neeotiable. She lald district and teacher negottaton bave nacbed "a ten· talive -veement" on the lencth ofteacber worJt days. The NMEA 's original request, ·based strongly on the ouWne of the NMEA 's parent,bc>cl1. the Callfomia Teachers AuocJaUon, called for a fOUJ>·hour wotk day. AllhouJ{b the was not speclric, Mrs. Berj(eson fore8ees ''a pro- • . ~ . tae•• d•' ca\et' TONIGHT ORANGE COUNTY FAIR BOARD -Regular meetine, 88 Fair Drive, 8:30p.m. COSTA MESA COUNTY WATER DISfRICJ' -Regular meeting. 1971 Placentia Ave., 7 p.m. "DESIGN FOR LIVING" - OCC Drama Latt Theater. Feb. 17-19, 8 p.m. Free. "OLD TIMES" -South Coast Repertory Theater, through Sun· day. 8p.m. r OCC LE~TURE - " Phtlosoph}' atsd Wisdom of American Indian." Chier, Red Dawn lecturer. Fide Arts Bldg. 119, 7:30p.m. FRIDAY, FE •• 18 OCC PLANETAIUUM - "Birth and Deatl\ of the Sun," Feb. 18. 25. March 4. 11, 7:30 and 9p.m. OCC LECTURES -"Real E state for the Consumer," Science Le<:ture 11, 7:30 p.m. "Card.io Pulmonary Resuscita· llon," Feb. 18 and 25, Gym· nas1um, Handball Room 101, 6 pm. "Discovering America's British Heritag~. ··&cience Lee· ture I, 7:30 p.m. ••ttang Gliding." Science Hall. 7:30 p.m . "Power or Betng Alone." Fine Arts Bldg. 119, 7:30 p .~. QUALITY TELEVISION Output Of Gas Studied WASHJNGTON CAP) -lo· terlor Secretary Cecil Andrus said today inveaUaation Of four national au fields in the Gulf or Mexico fo~ reduced produc· taon, and Called for a sweeping study to see if he should order a speed up of gas productlof\. Andrus said the inveaUgaUon found that production has fallen sharply the past two years in three gasflelds which were studied and in these plus a fourth field production t.argeta had been lo~ered by the producers and even then were not being ~et .. A statement issued by Andrus s.aid there may be cood explana· hons for these evenla and be is riot tryina lo blame them ror the present enerey crisis. He said he would order an in· quiry lo ·'focus on the question or what the department can do to assure increased production in the future from the outer con· tinental shelf, rather than 'fixing blame' for the present energy crisis." Trans1t1ona1 slyled console. Casrers. Genuine Oak veneerg anct selecr narctwooa solids on. lop and ends Front ano oase ot March 1st is coming soon. and we need to reduce our inventory before floor-tax day. s1mu1a1ect Oak. The Kl"8IRLEY • H2310W 23// Table m~leaturing durable v1nyt·clall m~ecab1ne1 beauttlully finished In rtchly·graln Slfmllaled Wal11ul. 0•"0(>--4• EVO-Elecrroni V1cteo Guard Tuning System with convenient 0 ·Knob VHF and UHF' Channel Seti n. 13" and 17" dlago'nal PORTABLES 19"-23"-25" diagonal TABLE MODELS VERSATILE. COMPACT COLOR TV The MALIBU • H1310C Our most compact porlable with 100% Solld·State Chaula wllh Power Sentry, Srllllant 110• Chrom1color In-Line Picture Tube. Solld-St1t1 Tuning Sys- tem. Ebony color cabinet. 1- In: ~Ounty Gov. Umlmd G. Brown" Jr. was e.11;9eeted today to ahnou.nce the eppolntment of l1¥0 new ~ Oran1e County municipttl eourt jud1es Co nu alota ere a~ by ex. pa~loa of county courta. Brown's two nomineea are de- puty ~trict Attorney Frank QrJseno and trial commlsaiooer Phillip Petty. Briseno, 37, an lrvine r~ident is a 'eraduate of Cal State Long Beach and earned his Jaw degree at Loypla Onivusity law school in Loe Angeles. He has served on the pro- secutor's staff since 1969 anct bis current autgnm(lqt ia t.be pro- secuUop el murder cases. He wUJ serve on the municipal court bench in Santa Ana's Cen- tral Judicial DislrJcl Court. Petty, a resident of Newport Beacb, bas spent the past 14 months as a trial comm1ss1oner in the Harbor Judicial District Court. The 44 -year-old attorney formerly practiced cramioal law with the Santa Ana firm of PerkaJ, Petty and Barbaro. Frank Barbaro. Petty 's former Jaw partner, Iii the Qewly elected chairman ot the Democratic county C~ntral Committee. fetty was one of two attorneys wtio represented Newport Beach socialite Eloise Popeil in tbe 1974 murder for hire trial in which she and her boyfriend, Daniel Ayres, were convicted of hiring two men to kill her millionaire husband. Samuel The other defense attorne). Robert Green, bas since been 1 a1>pointed to the Superior Court bench. Petty is a graduate of the University of Illinois and he re- ceived his law degree from Western State University of Law in Anaheim. He will be assigned to the North Orange County Judicial Dis trict Court in Fullerton • HYM AP....,_ .. IE SINGER KISSES WIFE, RUTH, AFTER BUYING SS CATALINA FOR HER The Greet White Steerner, Whk:h Coat $1 Miiiion In 1924, Goea fore Paltry '70,000 Singer-ing Valentine' S.S. Catalina Saved From Scrappy Doom By MICHAEL PASKEVICH O! -D•llf Pii.1 Sl•fl Calling the purchase ··a late Valentine's Day gift for my wire." a Beverly Hills real estate developer offeted the highest bid for the S.S. Catalina steamship during a public auction Wednes- day at the Port of Los Angeles. Hymie Singer, 65, will buy the s o -cal l ed ''Great White Steamer" for $70,000. ·1 remember throwing up on 1t." a nearby man whispered After submitting has winning bid , the leis ure s uit-clad Smger strode onto the ship for the first time. accompanied °by a flock or newsman and photo-graphers. The pa.mt is peeling in many places and the blue. leather seats are covered with dust, but the S .S. Catalina still appears seaworthy, a possibility Singer did not rule out. Singer replied Jn the last few years f1nanc1al problems overcam e the Catalina, which was seized in 1975 by Long Beach off1c1afs try mg to collect about $50,000 an dock fees. The ship's history includes use as a troop carrier during World War II and tis a location for mov- ies. The most recent was "Farewell, My Lovely" with Robert Mitchum m 1975. ROCRl:STEft, N.Y. CAP> --A n\ln on ~al 1n the death d her •bodl con 1.sd ab• bad in· eatin.i palris ana toulcJ not te.ch achOOl lbe d~ J>abf boy was lotmd deW in her convent room, QOlher nu.n tettified here. Tho prosecution contends that Carol Mu.-pby. known as Slater Maureen, caused th• baby's deatA by stutring clothhie in his mouth to qulet biQ\.._Wh she beerd the apprqachiq footsteps of ariotbtt nun. The ae. ar-old R9mf.iP :.CaUJoHc nun ll Char&ed wtth ~-degree mansla~. One oltM first watoeatea W~­ AeS<laJ t 1be non-j~ trial. Sis- ter Kathleen Carrdl, te.Ufied •that she noticed Sister ., aureen gaining weight after Ctuistmas 1975. By mid-ApriJ, ••f Observed that she had gained weight around the waist," she added, but sta.rnever discussed that with Sister . Maureen. Sister kathleeo, the convent coordinator -a position she said is similar to that of mother supenot -said Sister Maureen calDe-co ller door in an orange bathrobe early the morning of AprU'27. "S!•ter Maureen said sM ba1i int~al pain$ and couldn't be in H~l that ntorning butrmieht be there later," the witness said. efore leaving for her own teatbhig position at Our La«b' of Lourdes School, Sister Kathleen returned to Sister Maureeo·~ room . ·'She had a towel in her hand and I thought she was getting slck." Sister Kathleen said. •·t asked her if she was all right and ibeaaid yes." • )righton Police Sgt. Stanley J Avery testified that be took blood samples from Sister Maureed's room and a nearby bathroom April27. A.Yilt.ant Molll'oe County Dis trict Attorney ~oseph Valent.Jpo told the court that Sister DAILX fttl.OT I l . .... ,..,,.. .. TRIED IN SLAYING Nun Carol Murphy Maureen gave buth taat same day in her room at Our Lady of Lourdes Convent in Brightort. a Rochester suburb, and suffocat- ed the child a few hours later. 11 The father has not been idMl- tified. '· Defense attorney Charfos Cnmi said in his opening re. marks that Sister Maureen was 111 at the time and should not t)e.. held accountable for the death. Crimi told the court that Uie state's case was based largelyl;n inference and cireumstantfal ~vidence. He said the defer'$e wall prove that Sisler Maureen suffered from an acute loss 'of blood and other physiological factors that t e mporarily depraved her of her mental faculties. About 40 spectators and re-porters were ID the courtroom when the traal began Teacher Union . ~ng Pleases Neither Party After depositing a 'down pay- ment ($7,0i)O), with US Marshals, Singer said he had no immediate plans for the 52-year old vessel that has ferried nearly 20 million persons t'o Avalon since 1924 . One newsman asked Singer about reports he planned to sail the Catalina to Puerto ValJarta. "I don't even know where it is;·· Howeve-. ~i<fhe had no m tention of s ing the S. s S . Catalina on a al voyage to the UperV180r8 scra1> ywd: • ~ Is too good for sdap." said ·nger, who later 'I" E · . ofu-~S·ule! SACRAMENTO I APl A state lleDit]ng 0U1cer ~ys the of ficl*ls· of T~stin Unilled School District should be barred from ln•rf.e.dD& fitrmataon or an enf1Jla)'.S'11nion But the California School Employes Association sa..ad We:d· nesday the rulmg didn •t go Car enough And the school distract •s ex· peeled to protest al went too far. uid a spokesman for the state EducatJOnal Employment Rela lions Board. U tbere b•cbl't been protests. ruling w btve (Qlle into ef· feet Feb. 2S. 8Ut llOW U¥\ board will review Ute case. thft ntst ot its kind under the year-old school employe collective bargaining law. Tht CSEA say& the board should order the CSEA certified as the distri~t bBTcaining agent JVithout an election. on gro\lnds that the district fostered a rival sroup The ruling would require the d1 st r1 <'t to break up an alternative t-mployes group. tall~ Reprei.enlatave Associa· Uon. and refraan from fostering •ny successor organization Jeff Paule. the hearing orficer, .sald the assoc1at1on was unlawful becau se the employer 0 participated ID sett1n1 1t up, .ivlng financial support aad dominatmg 1t, theretore in- tere!~nng with employe riilhta The CSEA says 1t began ertorts • year aeo to become the ex-~lualve asent of the eG0 QOn· Leach1nf employes of the dlstrycl. Tben District Supt. Elwin Clemmer Issued a bulletin saying if most employes rejec:ted \d\\on representation, they could devise their own representation. hinted a~ the jbiUty of tum ~ .1. 0 Stablish• . mg the a<ll ·f long into 'f, .: , -· ffoating .-estauraJY ~p'jnf' •, • • 1 ' racillty T ~k F ce'" Bidding on the ship was not a~ . spirited "s l"(lany would have Oranae Countf rvi liked, sinca-~e s "8aS beang. Jlue agrftd ontinue selecttnk auctioned t belp pay about architects and engineers 'for 5400,000 in C aims against the coanty ptOJeCts from a list (Jf s hip's owners, the Catalina thre•f1rms submitted by coun(t Tran5PO{Ut.ion Co. empjoyes. Bidding opened at $1,000 and Supervisors did agree thia the number ·or bidders UUnned week to channel all contracts from six to two at about the threueh the county General $25,000 mark. From Ulen on it Services Agency <GSA> and to was Singer versus Joe Goren. a establish a task forc e of representative of • shipping un· empk>yes t.o 1ltrot.iate terms and tan. atonltorc911f,fal!\a. Coren dlopped oat 11t tBS,000 But at the'e'ame tim~. they re. and Singer qow owns the ship jecled a recommendation sub· Creeandclearotaotclaim'S. milted by .Pepperdine College Singer latfr .s'ai~ he was pre· that a screening committee ~ pared to go u bi«b as $250,000 created to list top firms in orde~ for tbe-slUp. •bicb was built at a of preference. cost of S1 nilWte' in· 191!4 for the The GSA list will not be ranked Wrigley cbewine gum family and in terms of preference bad made 9)JOT trips from San Ron Bates, assistant. GSA Pedro to Catalina Island. dkector, said the Pepperdine Ray B\.IJ'1\ham , the Catalina's process would "slow the process chie( engineer since 1969, said cJown to a crawl at best." the low purchase price, "isn't Stapeniaots hired Pepperdine Just a steal. it's robbery... in 197• to make recommenda- "This baby is worth at least taons on the contract procedure half a .oilllion uld can 10 on for The Pepperdme study also re- another Uor20years ..... sheruns ,commended centralizing con- like a sewing macbioe," he tract administration and claimed. establishing one set policy for A smiling Sinaer, flanked by handlingcontracts. his wile, Rtftb, said the whole Bates told supervisors he was thtne started~ u a joke when wepartn1 a procedures manual, be asked bi. Wife if 1he would for contracts and was asked to like a bi•&er bolt for a Valen-brio& it back to the board for re-tlne~s Day gift. The couple view before It is Implemented. al reedy own a 32-foot craft. " Rµth was enchanted at ownine the vessel lbt had Tidd " to Catalina wtiet\ she Wll 14 years did. "l remember neektng on the CataUnA." the smUtd, Pilot Carrier Honored by Youth Group Nixon's· lloff a ~ Parole Probed . '· '4 D aAtelle Holt Purcell. dauehter of Laguna Beach police captain and Mrs. Nell Purcell. has been awarded a Certlficateof Merit for ne~a1 r can"fera f'Td the W"arem • •P*1*'~~.,.~~~Jll Now SpeCKilly J;'rlced Now •539 .'i Ft. Lo"e Srat "100 Le•• • Choice of 4 •t11Le• at ge•erous ••~Ing• and · flOU ~an choo•., a 7 It. or B It. 4f:e. • Oaoo•e tlae •tflle that I• l'l9lal tor your roo• • trorn a eef de •electlon of /abrlc• lit~ludl11g • t'C!lvet-, tape•t,.9 print• ~nd aeo.,en pattern•. " , \ .44 DAIL. Y '91LOT ON '1'llB SC)AD: lt 1ppean to- day that w.•re in for another study cl the eo-call.S tl'auporta.~ tlon ecnidor acrou the San Joa· quJn Hllll '"'111 tbe Harbor Area to the IOUS.bern <>ranee Coast. Thia ii wondetful. ' Flnt, I auppoae, we should )Nute over -bat tb1I tranaporta. Uon corrldor ii all about. Once upon a Ume, we built roacb between places. Al things 1ot updated, we even built aome auperhlJhwaya called freeways. To build a freeway, the state would eatabllah proposed routes. Tbeae would &et studied, debat· ed, cuated, tou1bt over and bubed around. Sometimes. one of thne routes would 1et adopted and aomeUmes a freeway would ac- tually 1et built. FREEWAYS FELL INTO dis· repute a few rear ago. You don't hear state offacials or many other people, for that matter, talking about building any new onea. · Thus, from the omen of the planners and shakers, the term ''Transportation Corridor .. seems to have crept into our language. Further thus, there has been . this specific transportation cor- ridor along the San Joaquin Hills proposed for some time now. This one ia a 13·mlle-lon1 swath of land which rambles from Bonita Canyon in the Harbor Area on down across the bills lo eventually connect with the San Diego Fr~ay (there's that old· fasbionel word again) near Avery Parkway in the Mission Viejo sector. When the transportation plan· ning people first started tallcing about this corridor, I puuled over the term. This is a long, thin strip of land. What were they go- ing to do with it? WO ULD WE BUN a stagecoach down the corridor? Maybe they would use the strip to put in a high.speed monorail commuter train system. You could think up all kinds of no- tions. Maybe 1t would be a sub· way in a tunnel. 13 miles long Alas, this lS the kind of Uung that can happen when you start talking about vague things like transportation corridors and let }our imagination run wild. When you get down into the fine print of the San Joaquin Hills Transportation Corridor, however, you find out what they're talkmg about is bulld.lng a high-speed thoroughfare. A big road, in other words. A supertughway. Susp1c1ous types might even go so far as to sugaeat it would be a freeway. But the county's master plan (loesn 't call it a freeway. It just $ays lt should be a roadway with (he same capacity as a si1-lane freeway. So you can call it whatever you .,ant. BUT DON'T FaET about it too flUCh yet. Only this week, the Qranee County Board or Supervisors agreed to hire a con- sultant to study the corridor and Uie six-lane thine that J.aa't a ~eeway. The study will cost an esUmal· ed $200,000 It ia further eatunat· ed that Uw! pondertnc wlll take twoyean. You won't be going for a drive on It very soon. ' • .. E~secretary ChiUged in Violation o/ Policy N YORK <AP)r-'l'M $1.U conUnent•l abelf. from L0111 bUUon u1e ol olf1bore oil drilllnl bland to Delaw..-e. rtCbll ln I.be AUantJc Ocean to a •'The pUU. are eQ.foln.cl from number of ~ajor oU companies nutb•.-Ol'OCMd1ul .ttb tM a· waa declartd null 8"<1 void tod~ erclse cl-any-poWeia reportedly by• federal Judie. er aated by•• tb• HI• of tbe U.S. Dlltrlct Court Jud.re Jack leaau, Wtlnateln 1ald. "The 8. Wetnatein, sitting in Brooklyn, leaaea an declared DUil and acted oo irounds that Thomas vold." Kleppe, former secretary ol the interior, had violated the Na-BE ADDED THAT his on:ler tional Environmental Polley Act wu "stayed pendin& the comple- in allowing the sale of the drilling tion of appeals, if any ... rights. Weinstein Hid there waa no In- THE RUUNG WAS revealed ln a 132·Pate decision that followed lencthY beartn11. The oil companies boulht the rights to drill for oil and natural gaa in the so-called Baltimore Canyon, whlch extends along tbe dication "of We1al act.a by the oil companies. Tbe fact that they muat 1uffer because of the aecre=r• <Kleppe> failures wu c dered by the court. The public's rtchta and equities are paramount and muat prevail." Weinstein noted that the oil Andn Plot Alleged eompantee that autcaal\ally bid tor tbe D leue tract.I ''bave befUD to lak• pH!lmiDary ~ requlred for tun txPloltatlan ol their leuebold.a." He ordered that they atop all actlvft)'. 8ALEOY'TBE lt&Ml lut year wu viewed aa a m~r victory for enero lnteresta, whlcb bad lon1 wabted access to the AUan· tlc ahelf'a oil and au reaervea. W e1nste1n ruled that there was "1ubstanUal evidence .. that Kleppe'a decision to allow 1ale of the leases ••was not baaed upon a &ood·falth conalderatlon ol rele- vant documents, but on decisions made privately and in adnnce of public hearln&•·" The suit apinst the sale of the Archbishop Killed CalBng Trfbe Column rising over legen· dary Superstition Mountain east of Phoenix recalls In- dian smoke signals of days gone by. The true message is that a jet passed over- head, leaving behind a white vaPor trail. KAMPALA. Uganda (AP) - The Anglican archbishop of Ufanda and two government mtnlsters accused with him of plotting against President Idi Amin were killed in a car crash after they apparently tried to overpower the driver, the Ugan- dan governmentsaJd today. It said black Archbishop Janani Luwum, Internal Affairs Minister Charles Obotb-Ofuplbe and Lt. Col. Orinayo Oryeman, the minister ofland and water re- sources, were being driven from the international conference center in Kampala to an officer's mess a few hundred yards away for questioning. THE THBEE HAD been ar- rested Wednesday after a ralJy in Kampala at which they were im- plicated by three men who con- fessed taking part in the alleged plot against Amin. Tax Rebates Tied To Income Levels? WASHINGTON CAP) Congressional tax writers are altering President Carter's proposed rebate plan to deny the S50 payments to families and individuals with incomes of more than $30,000 and to make sure some of the nation's poorest citl~ens get them. The House Ways and Means Committee voted Wednesday to scale A government spokesman said the Range-Rover in which the de· tainees were ridini collided with a car, overturned and skidded across the road. The three Keep Your Shin On MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP > -Despite the en· dorsement of tourism of- ficials -and a coun· cilman's contention that "God's masterpiece .. should be gi•en greater ex· posure -ba re-breasted bathing still ls against the law ln Miami Beach. The city council voted 6-1 Wednesday not to change a city ordinance against top· lessness on the beach .. Councilman Phil Sahl cast the lone vote in favor and said, "God's masterpiece is a well·built woman, and Mayor, you should look in· to it ... But Mayor Harold Rosen was unmoved. "If we had secluded beaches. like California or some or the islands, it would not bother me," he said. prisoners were killed instantly aftd the driver, identified only as Maj. Mosel, was critically in- jured, he said. Radio Uganda said a govern- ment investigation was planned. FBOll OUTSIDE Uganda came expressions of dismay. The archbiabop of Canterbury, Dr. Donald Coegan, said in London that be waa horrified by tbe death of Archbishop Luwum -a "dear friend"' -and did not believe the allegations th.at be was involved in a plot to overtbrow Amin. The deaths were called an "as- sassination" by the International Commission of Jurists in Geneva. ••The pretense tbat they were killed in a motor accident will de· ceive no one." the commission said. THE COMMISSION, made up of law teachers, judges and ~lawyers from the n on- Communist world, ;;aid the de- aths added urgency to appeals for a United Nat.ions investiga- tion into "a consistent pattern of gross violations (of human rights) in Uganda." leues was brouJht by the two countl• that comprise 'Lone laland -Naaaau aDa utJOlt - by several loWdl on LODI bland and by the Natural BMOW'CeS . DefenM Council, an umbtella «· 1anilation representlnl aevtraJ envlroomental lf'OUPI· There was no lmmedla~ com· ment from the oU companies. Cyril Hyman, the a11lstu& U.S. attorney wbo repreaented the -government in the cue, nld tbe- declalon was beJ.ni studied to de- term lne whether an a ppeal would be rued./ - Stands Alone Henry B. Gonzalez <D·Tex.) predicts the House commit· tee on assassinations, which h e chairs, might not achieve its mission to shed new light on slayings of • former President Kennedy an~ Martin Luther King Jr. after the committee voted 8-1 to adjourn Wednesday rather than vote on Gonzalez' demand for a showdown vote on his effort down the rebate for persons earn- ing between ~.000 and $30,000 and to eliminate it entirely for those with income above S30.000. The panel also dttided to ex- tend the rebates to the 11 miJhon persons who receive Aid to Families with Dependent Children. the cruer welfare pro· gram Many of these families earn too little to pay income tax and would mass out on rebates under the original plan if they did Archbishop Coggan, spiritual leader of the world Anglican communion, said ne na<l cabled the widow ci Archbishop Luwum assuring her .. of loving sym- pathy." He said he was sure the Ugandan church would stand firm "over what they believe to ( __ ,_N~S_H~O_R~T __ J ~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiib-eC_b_ru_tian-aniiiiiiiiiiiiidn~·gh-t._ .. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ to oust s taff director Richard A. Sprague. not file a tax return 15 Soldlet-• lrajur~d FT BRAGG, NC <APJ An Army officer remained an serious condition today with injunes suf- fered when a mortar round landed near a group of soldiers Secretary of State Cyrus R . Vance arnved m Cairo today. the second stop on his Middle East tour, and praised Egyptian President Anwar Sadat as a "man of vision, a statesman and a leader" He then exchanged views on the Middle East conflict with Foreign Minister Ismail Fahmy They refused to malce statements after their two-hour discussion, which was attended by theu· aides and exploded during a live am-ERA O~ca.ae• munition training exercise Fourteen other soldiers were in· ju red. The morning exercise was im· mediately suspended, along with a similar exercise that had been scheduled for the afternoon. a public affairs spokesman said. Military authorities Immediately aealed off the flrint ranae ror an invatiaaUoo, aapotesmanaald. l'a.ee JfeeC• Fala•W CAIRO, Egypt CAP) SALEM. Ore CAP > Women's organizataons led the charge Wednesday mght as a move to rescind Oregon·s en· dorsement of the federal Equal Ri1hts Amendment was turned into a reatrlrmaUon of Oregon's stand The iasue was settled alter 3'ri hours of testimony by about 50 wltneaaes before more than 500 per1on1 who attended a Je11l1l1Uve commlttff hearing. ·North Florida Freezes IEHINDTH• ICA•S I • Mild Tempeilzturea lnt!hing Eaatward Te ........... ...... .._Pre. ,. . ., 31 :u ,. "° 11 ., 5' «> ,. «> t• 10 ~· 21 • '' 10 M 1• • 2S tJ 2? ' " 4 • , JS .56 J1 JO " 20 s 20 " ,.. "' " . .. _ " Q .. u • • • 1' ... • • SO•M Each comes wl1h a beverage . And the entire meal costt Just ~Oc tach. And as a bonus. au Little Amigos get a free menu mask to wear. So next time you're out shopping, Of Jost loof<lng for a fun place to eat lunch or dinner wtth the kids, go to the partJctJ«lng Red Onton Meldcen Re91a1Kant In your neighborhood • Treat your Little AmlQOe to a 60o Speolal1 Yo1.1r klds'n love the food. You'll love the prtce. El Toro Huntlrullon Beac;h 23732 El Toro Road 16060 Lach BIVd. (San Dlt!190 Fwy·406-(Beach Blvd. at ,....~ El Toro Rd.~h) Sail Diego Fwy· 405) I ~ ' ·Plan Joined DA VIS CAP) -The Brown admlniatratlon ls joininc an e¥perlmenlal industrial site p1101ram that includes sbarlni property tues from new in du stry amone neighboring cities, Gov. E dmund BrowQ Jr. 's chief environmental 11d- viser says. Bill Press. director of the atate Office of P lan- ning and Research, sajd Wednesday that his of· flee bad agreed with the AssoclaUon of Bay Area Governments on the pllot proiram, to be set up in t he nJne San Francisco Bay area counties. EPA Otllrial1 President Carter has scµd he will nominate Douglas M. CosUe of Long Beach as administrator of lhe En- vironmental Protection Agency. Coslle is currently assistant director of the Congr essional Budget Of· Palmdale Area Bulge Seven Drops· Inches LOS ANGELES (AP) The perplexing Palmdale Bul&e ap- pears to have deflated like a ralling loaf or bread , and one or the sclenll.sta wbo discovered it says "it is really quite mystifyin1." A 1urvey almoat across the middle of the massive upswelllni or land stcetchln& north and east'Of Los Angeles showed a drop of seven inc bes -more than h alf its height -since 1973, county engineers re· ported Wednesday. But chances are "neither enhanced nor diminished" that a large earthquake will sooner or later rupture the land in the bulge area, said Dr. Robert Castle of the U.S. Geological Survey in Menlo Park. "IT IS a unique feature," he said.· 'It doesn't fit any model.·· He said that until further surveying is done it is impossible lo say whether the swelling has deflated uniformly. SALINAS CAP) - After the ehootinc of Mlcuel Jiminez, a wit- ness testified, the m an living wtt.h Ines Garcia auacested that aouieone hit her so ahe would look as ii she bad been raped or fighting. J u a n Carbajal said Wednesday he obliged and "slugged" Mrs. Garcia. More than a year ago Castle and other U S.G .S. scientists an CARBAJAL WAS one nounced the da!>covery, based on a review of old surveying records. of several prosecution that the land had nsen 10 to 12 inches smce 1960 over a large oval witnesses who told of shaped area of Southern California. The swelling ran parallel to the M rs Garc i a• s a p . famed San Andreas Fault and seemed to be centered at Palmdale. a pearance and demeanor desert town about 65 miles north or Los Angeles. after the March 1974 fatal J shootmg in Soledad. The A LARGE part of the uplift, said Castle, had occurred between prosecddon was expect- . 1968 and 1973 the latter being the date of the last survey prior to ed to resltts case today. Man Ch d the one just completed. fice. ( State Watson IH arge The ups and downs of the land are reported m relation to a Mrs.Garc1aclaimsshe LOS ANGELES CAP> benchmark at San Pedro hear the Los Angeles Harbor a mark shot Jiminez in self· -Assessor Philip E w· th T l that represents mean sea level for surveying purposes. defense after he held her Watson is expected lo be I ry 0 fir~l lunt that a sinking of land had occurred came last fall down while Louis C~llo convalescing six to eight when surveyors, recording the elevations of benchmarks from San raped her The proTecu- w eeks followin g his S ) D Pedro north through Los Angeles to Pasadena. noted that the t10n says there was no hospltalizatlon with ap-mugg e rug Pasadena mark had fallen about four inches since 1968 rape, thattheshoolinf(OC· •~w1 ... .,....1e ACQUITTAL 'SURE' Inez Gatcfa Confldont but Medrano refused so Carbaj.al's aunt, Ahcaa Alcaraz, urged ham to do the job "She turned• around and told me to hat her." Carbajal said. "I turned around and slugged her " He said they Own went to another house where Mrs. Garcia turned over a rifle to Soledad Pohce Chief Benjamin Jimenez. who testified later under cross-examination that he beheved Mrs Garcia s aid "she had s hot Mike." parent heart trouble, his cur red aft er a d rug · wife says. SAN DIEGO CAP > • Federal TIUS WINTER, the suney was continued along a winding palh related argument among HE ADDED, ·nothing officers are holding Fredenck through San Fernando, to Palmdale, where it joined another recent Jim mez, Castillo and was said about a rape.·· Gfrl Guilty Hector Echeverria, 34, of Azu::.a, survey that had been carried out 20 miles farther north over the Fred Medrano, the man No rape ohari::es were LOS ANGELES CAP) on bail of $1 million on chrges he top of the bulge. an effect. Completed in J an_uary, the survey found Mrs. Garcia was living ever I il e d a g a 1 n::. t -A 15-year-old Oakland tried to smuggle an estimated $15 that the bulge, too, had sunk. with Castillo. who served as a girl baa been convicted millioninheroininfromMexico lnfacl,the landlevelhadfallenasmuchasfourinches belowils key wit ness at Mr~ of robbing six banks· and U .S. Customs agents.-. the San elevation m 1968, a year Los Angeles County engineers use as a M ~~r::jnS:, s:~d heM s:; Garcia's first trial. Her a savings a nd loan as: Ysidro border crossing between starting point because a very careful survey was earned out that conviction in the first s ociation in th e Los San Diego and TiJuaoa said they year Garcia after the sh9oliog trial was overturned Angeles and San Fran-were alerted to possible con-The survey was a joint project of the California D1vis1on of and quoted Me<lrano as because or an error in the ciaco areas. traband in Echeverria 's car by Mmes and Geology and the Los Angeles County Engmeers office. Its saying "somebody would Judge ·5 instructions to an Immigration mspedor who resultswercscnttotheU S G.S .this week. havetotuther " thejury E"'"'-OK'd did not accept some of the "I hope that the pub\U: won'{decide that we can forget about the The wttness said Mrs Mrs. Garcia is free on LOS ANGELES (AP> answers the man gave to ques-bulge no"." said Castle, !>tressing the need to continue intense Gar c 1 a responded . ss.ooo bail hvang with her S AN FRANC ISOO CAP> -The state PUblc uuuuee CommilslOft h s asked four m ajf r Callfomla public utllity companies to develop p roposals for helpin g bo m eowotra In sulate cel1ln11 to conserve ener1y. The PUC order or Wod· nesday went to Pacific Gas & Electric, Southern Californ ia Edison , Southern California Gas. and San Diego Gas & Electric The utilities wer e asked to consider two methods of financing in- s u 1 a lion programs. Under one the com - panies would pay the en· tire cost and recoup by increasing rates. Under the other the companies would pay most of the cost a nd collect the balance as a service sur- charge to the customer. T he PUC specified that a n y rate changes necessary to cover im plementl ng the insula- tion programs be sub- mitted with the prq- posals. The Federal Energy Administration on Jan. 18 outlined for the PUC and t h e Caltfornia Energy Commission a comprehensive home ii)· sulation program with uti li ties doin g t he purcha!>mg and install~· -The City Council has llons as he tried Lo drive through s~ud) "Okay. Freddie. hit me... children m Berkeley approved an extra :=th=e=c=h=@=c::::kpo=in:=t.::::::=:::::::::--:==============---... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~­$SO,OOO to lure more tton LOVE Al FIRST SIGHT , tourists to Los Angeles On a 10·2 vole. the council tacked the extra funds onto the $170,000 budget of the Southern Califorrua V1s1tors Coun Cad Yide<>•iew JACK ANU EICSO'\ v•Ul •fW OfF(f.i')"A ·u REVEALS 1n lhe • p "' • '• • .. • <.. .. ,., " • t ..... ,. ' '.. ... .... DAILY PILOT 1" .. • 997-5400 'o' E. c~ ••• .. o,.~ cil. , When you consider our prints, our service and our prices, we're nearly picture perfect. Wed I ~now 1 1 0 "1 / 111 lilm de11e1oried ann oroccsst>O at •hr place th.it q1vl'<; you tl'lr> hl'St quality 8 '' w li• n you Q• : 1,1s• dependable ~"'v•ce an<l low p11ces. 100 th.11 .., really s m tl- thinq That s JC Penney Have your color film developed and printed by JCPenney. .. 12 exposures, reg .. 2.99 ........ Sale 2.27 20 exposure, reg , 4.49 ......... Sale 3.39 SpKlal pricea effective Thurad1y, Febr.uary 17, through Suttday/~tnuary 20. I Kodacolor C110 film, Kodacolor C1~0 film, 12 exposures 20 exposure~ Only 1.29 Only 1.69 Kodacolor 126 film, · 12 exposures Only 1.29 . . 26 film, s Only 1.69 ARCADlA..SANTA ANITA • CANOGA PARK CAAI ON I CUL~EA CITY 'FOX HILLS' DOWNfY ,ULLl:ATON ~NDALE 'OALlEAIA' · HUNTINOTON 81!ACtf t;AGUNA "ILLS LAKEW,OD MONTCLAIR ~'4WPORT l!ACH NOATHRIDO& ORANGE 'TH& CITV' PtJINT! HILLS RIVERSIDE SAN BERNAR~tNO VENTURA WE.ST COVINA WHITTWOOO { , • I Boucle knit sport shirts Reg. 20.00 13.90 Perfect spring sport shirt with uniq ue V-neck collar In open boucle knit polyester with handsome two-tone co Hrast trim. White. blue. yellow Choose rrom natural linen·looks qr <-. blue chamt1ray In polyester/cotton. Claaslc bell loop styling ,, Forward-looking fashion in four parts Four coordinated parts. Two ways to look The lhree piece vesled su t heads tor business or bistro with equa ease Switch 10 the coord1naled ct1eck slacks for casual occasions In naV'y or brov, n fresco weave of Dacron· polyester /wool. Febru.ary Fas~1on Value be 195 00 now 169.90 I ( .~ Last week's OlMl·maifi:o:mmittee.,....~~,,...._=~ed Corehipbuilding. more than tbe Air Force g on cooditions 't Oranae County Jiil will spend on planes and missiles. lg ht have bad 2'0me m~ .had It. not The dilf erence with military pensions, so ccatrived. of course. is that they can be drawn years • For one thing, a small band of jail before the usual civilian retirement age of criUcs were so entwined wtth Lm Angeles 65. Military ~nsions begin, on an average, Aasemblyman Richard Alatorre's staff that at age4.2. they acted as his ad'!ance men. Thus we find a career officer, retirlne As they went about their chOTes, the at 46, drawing retirement pay of $1,282 a critics invited the press to their fStaged month-for life. Or a sergeant, retirmg at event -the hearing -before they bothered 41, drawing $534 a month. And a Navy re- toinvitejailofficials. tiree drawing a pension of $100 a week at the Theo the jail critics led the dialogue of age of 37 is not an unusual example. the witnesses, but what they said wasn't The military retiree can easily draw in backed U{> with evidence. As a result, much pension payments from 132 to 144 percent of oftbetestimonylackedcredibility. all he earned during his 20 to 25 years of That is not to say there aren't problems service. Government civil servants can ex- at Orange County Jail or that improve-pect 49 percent. The private sector retiree is ments can't be made. And the Board of lucky to get 20 to 30 percent of his lifetime Supervisors has not addressed itself to the earnings. size of the problem. And, along with actual cash, the We accept the fact that there are pro-milU.ary retiree enjoys free medical and t>lems at any jail -if for no other reason den lal care, commissary shopping than the collective personality ot many of privileges and free travel when space is tJJe anti-social characters in them. But un-available. Plus (since the 1950s) Social fortunately, Alatorre's one-man show did Security benefits at age 62 or 65. little to dispute consistent findings by state Of course the lush pensions are a prin- and other inspectors that Orange County cipal fact.or in persuading enlistees to re- 3' a ii is, within reason, properly and mainintheservice. humanely operated. But even the Pentagon. while eager to The Pension Bill Private firms are required by law to fund their pension plans by putting in enough money every year to guarantee pay· ment of promised pensions as they-come due. This law does nol apply to the govern- ment. And this year the bill for military pensions, bloated by pay increases and cost of living adjustments. will be in the neighborhood of $8.4 billion. In 1964 it was $1.2 billion. step up enlistments and hang on to trained persoMel, recognizes the need for some re- form to bring tbe pensions closer to reality One Pentagon. proposal wouJd reduce payments for those with less than 30 years of service. Another would trim pensions by half the amount of any Social Security pay- ments received. Another would provide dif· ferent pension plans for combat and non· com bat service. Obviously there will be vigorous opposi- tion to any cuts. And obviously politicans can win brownie points by voting for in- creased pension benefits in the comfortable knowledge that the staggering bill will wait for the next generation of taxpayers. This is more than the Army pays all its ·persoMel, more than the Navy has budget- The question is, do we have the right to impose this burden upon our children? ~ UC Costs Us Too Much .... . : Taxpayers Shell Out More Than Harvard Fees • In making his first three ap-[ pointments to the regents of the University of California, Gov- •• ·emor Jerry Brown declared his _ EARL WATERS J selections were aimed at sending •• "a message to the uruversity"' of • ·~e need '"to keep a very light re· • • "'11'' on spending. • His appointees replace three Jll:illionaire regenl!i WluJe,... even •"' i"f.'ilb his own .~ote gained • J!_y being an , ~x·officio re '< eent. the gov ! , ... emor is a long ' way from : dominating -.;:J( h e 2 5 · ~<C:Oember ;Uij>oard which lrols UC. s sufficient strength to make d noises. Further, since U. :~overnor M ern·n Dymally. • peaker Leo McCarthy and f: perintendent of Public Inst.rue· on Wilson Riles also serve ex- cio as regents. the potential of atroog bloc to enforce curbs on ending would seem to be erstng. : 1ba1 it is lime for a tigbt·fi.sted cb to U C. management is led by its request to lbe ature for ov~ $700 million • ~next year's operaUoos. This akn the cost to the taspayers :teT student enroll~ exceed 11.000 per year. That i5 about ,000 more than annual luiUon Yale or Harvard, both among .. the highest in the nation Actual· ly. the total budget of UC., de· rived from the state appropna- tions, federal grants, endowment funds and Ce~ charged studenU., bnngs the ar\nuat &Pebdmg to a flgure which represents an average cost of over $18,000 per &tudent a year. Because the university ·has long operated in an aura or secrecy it is impossible to pin- point all of the areas of waste or excessive spending. Even Verne Orr, one of the new regents ap· pointed by Brown, had great dif· C1cuJty fathon:1ing the complex financing of U.C. while be served as state finance director under Governor Ronald Reagan. CERTAINLY there should be a review of the salaries p.-ld by u.c. It IS difficult to understand how a state inatitut.ion cau justify paying its presideqt, chanceUon. and scores of other employes salanes greater than that pe.id the governor of the state. Symptomatic of the open· handed treatment of U.C. funds by the r-e1ents •ho preside over a state operation, which is con- stantly pleading poverty and in· adequacy of money to teach tbe m.tarta. has not only been the hiCh salaries but tt\e ernnling of fringe living benefits for the pre· sident and each of the chan· cellors. Thls not only includes free re· sidences but all the costs that go with the homes, such as utilities. servants and entertainment funds. The homes can only be described as mansions for, JUdg· ing by thai ocC\lPied by President David Su011 and the chancellor at La Jollat each of the 10 pro· perties wou1d represent a value of S1 million or more. The an· cillary costs of maJntenance of the ten residences is at least $500,000 a year. UNTIL a couple of years ago the Legislature had been ap- propriating money for these liv· ing benefits but Assemblymen ~Willie Brown, then serving as chairman of Ways and Means, deleted the funds thereby si&nall- ing U.C. that the Legislature dis- approved or providing free homes for the U. C. top brass The regents promptly delved into en- dowment funds to continue the practice. That in itself evidences the need ror a legislative audJt of the regents' management of en· dowment runds as required by the constitution but never un· dertaken. It bas been estimated that by providing such fringe benefits the regents have converted the U.C. president's $60,000 salary to a total compensation or near $200,000. • New· View Pf Boycott .. · l . WASHINGTON -The first clue to President Carter's Middle East policy earned a surprisin& hint of flexibUity on U.S. moves against the Arab boycott of Israel, a welcome but belated concess100 to Mideast experts fearful that without political pro- gress this .rear, another war to free Israeli·held Arab territory is inevitable. Thal lint. unannounced clue was a delay arranged by Secretary of Stale Cyrus Vance in anti· boycott legislation planned for immediate consideration by both houses of t h' e n e w Congress. In telephone calls to House and Senate leaders, Vance pleaded for a delay in the start of hear· ings designed to produce a new anti·boycott law that would pre- dictably enrage Saudi Arabia at just the moment Vance was mak· ing his first diplomallc swing through the Middle East Almost as surprising as Vance·s plea for time (approved by the Oval Ofrice> was the prompt acquiescence or both Rep. Jonathan Bingham of New York. chairman of a House In- ternational Relations subcom mittee. and Sen. William Prox- Dear Gloomy Gu(; With one hand the Soviets offer u.s peace and friend- ship. while with the other hand behind their back they give violent weapons to those who only wish to make war and murder the innocent. How can we ever trust these people whose premise is to dominate us and destroy freedom in one stroke? J .C. G.....,, GIK cemmtnU ••• ....,.~.,,, r•-n •11d M llel ... u.urily "''-'lt!W voe"" ot Ille ,...,,.,.,. S.M ,_ pet PM••'-Gloomy Gu•. Dally ~lie! ( EV AN~NOV AK ) mire of Wiscorjsin, whose Senate Banking Committee controls the legislation in~ senate. Considering the sometimes shrill content of Mr. Carter's campaign rhe1oric against the Arabs' anli·lsrael boycott, some congressional experts were astonished that the delay -even if planned only for a few weeks - was granted. Ope answer may lie in hard, quiet background work on the torrid boycott issue by some of this Country's most in- fluential big b•sinessmen. They ate now striving to hnd a boycott formula with leaders of the American·Je~ish community that will not automatically hamstring U.S.peace efforts . THAT SEARCH 1s provi.ng to be difficult. but perhaps not im· possible. A ss*ciat legal panel secretly appoiitted by the Busi· ness Roundtatle. a blue-ribbon assembly of 17dmajor American corporations hepded by duPont's Irving S. Shapito, is now working with legal experts named by the Anli·Defamatioh League of B'nai B 'rith. the Jewish service or· ganization with he:wy political clout. The common •bjective: an an· ti-boycott legialative formula tbat will ne1thef wreck Vance·s Mideast diplom~cy nor so an· tagonize oil-rich i\rab stales that they wm transfer billions of dollars of their American busi· ness to Japan and Western Europe. JI that secrethe effort suc-c~ the drive rcr a tough new la~ might stall. It not. Jimmy Carter's political posture in the e~olioealized boycott struggle is re u~ed to this: delay Congress as Ong as possible in hopes that real progress toward a Middle Eait settlement will be made. In that case the new President could respectably argue that, impor· tant as 1be boycott tsaue is, peace in tbe MJddle East dwarfs It and that peace, meaning withdrawal of Israel from Arab territories, will end tbe bo)'CQtt. BtJT PROXMIRE, Bingham and other congressional leaders w~ say they are aenuinely out- raged by the _.econdar1 and terUary aspect. of the Arab boycott -boycQll provi•io04 not just again.st Israel but aaialnst U.S. companies which have in- dependent commercial relations with Israel -aren't goU., to sil still for Joog. Proxmire, for example, t.Qld us lbat under no circu.mstances would he delay antl-b9ycot~bear· ings beyond the l.aSt week in February, when Vance will be back from bis exploratory Mideast ttip. In the Hbuse com· mittee. the same timetable is be- ing worked oul: quick hearings designed to produce a hard·line anti-boycott bill similar to the blll passed by the House last fall <which died with lhe 94th Congress>. Tha~ forecasts a nasty rc;cep· lion for \he princes, presidents and other Arab heads or state when they visit WashingtoQ,. this spring to confer with Mr. Catter. Anti-boycott legislation may then be moving through Congress, with Arab radicals demanding revenge against the U.S. in the form of an Arab oil boycott-or, at the very least. those higher oil prices that Saudi Arabia has re· Jected. YET. Mr. Carter maybe boxed In for his first real Mideast lest. During the campaign, he saw the Arab boycott as '"not a. matter of diplomacy or trade (but) a mat- ter of morality." He called Jerry Ford's refuul to jump aboard the anti·boycott express last year "a disgrace" -cutting his own options now. Moreover. Secretary of Com- merce Juanita Kreps, questioned carefully by Sen. Daniel P. Moynihan of New York, a pro- Jsraeli leader, during her con- firmation bearing, testified that she fully agreed ' 'WiU.. Mr. Carter's campaign rhetoric. Any new law would be under her de- partment. Thus, facing Mtdeasl realities instead of U.S. vOters, Mr. CarteT has little maneuvei:-ability -no matter how much he wants to derail the anti· boycott express. Quotes "Don't think you can get the cities straightened out if you don't get the schools straiehtened out." -Washington, D.C .• School superintendent Vlltcent leed, at a meet(Qg of bli+Clty school system h,adliDOUcago. .. V Negkcted Key Facts of the MCCiirthy_ .E-l!a W ASlU~TON -The other .,.,.....,..t NBC decided to get a little oaey and mileage out ol history presenting a three-hour amatlzation of the llfe of natar Jaeepb R. McCartby. lo o..n •13 the NBC venlon of cca.rtby and Mccartbyism was twilled as lhe Sena\or bhnsel! ••• The NBC thesis is that cCarthy; a scalawag and oralist - . ( VON HOFFMAN ) paranola needed to end debates a•d doubts on the new forclin ~Icy and to create national un- itJ. liberals who think poliUct really is chll~'s •••Y and ••po. 11 c e w om a 11' ' ls v e rh t. militUdf! .. Under tht circurnstuct:s NBC should eet out of t.l)e h.l.noJY buslneu. and confine U..U to Wbat it does 10 well and dn unde~ .... ~verinf the snowstorm Buf· falo. OAllY PILOT ·- Water Wanted O<llty ,., ... St.it l'Mte This pigeon approaches a spigot on the San Clemente pier in its search for water on a hot day. However. the bird may have learned that water is becoming scarce as it drips slowly rather than flowing in a steady stream. FTC Delllalldi~ Credit Refunds • W.(\SillNGTON CAPJ The Federal Trade Commission has announced 1t obtained consent or· ders against Diners Club, Carte Blanche, the AUan- , tic Richfield Co., and two department store cbairls which b.ar the firms from unfairly retaining customer credit balances. Tbe agreements require the five firms to make refunds of balances exceeding Sl.00 carried within · the past three years. and to routinely disclose and return -surplus payments in the future. THE COMMISSION SAID WEDNESDAY that while it is impossible to determine an exact figure, tbe Initial round of refunds mandated by the patts likely will be tn the range or $3 5 m1l1Jon. There was no ind1cat1on how many indt\'tduals would receive refunds. The department store companies named in the orders are the City Stores Co of Nev. York City and Federated Department Stores or Cincinnati. Both have outlets under various other names across the nation. Federated outlets include Bullocks, Bloom- ingdate·s and l Magnm. THE AGKl!:EMENTS SEnLE complaints which chargeq that the firms retained on their ac· counts substantial dollar amounts or credit balance which belonged to customers, but which had not been claimed or offset by purchases. Credit balances usually occur through overpay- men\ or the return of merchandise on an account. . . . ·.· She aaJ:d she lbGugbt of buyani the picture back, but couldn't afloni to pay the $4,400 she got for pamtinc tt. Then lhe state official in charge of •nllquities ln Siena told the friars lhat both the pamting and the new wall erected for its display conflicted with the Renaissance style of the church Htt said something bad lo be done lo re1tore the crypt to its onginal cood1- tlon. NEWSPAPERS SAID 1t was strange that the state acted two years after the painting was unveiled, but the friars decided the simplest solu· Uon was to brick everything up . "It lS sad." &he said. "l still re- member lhe inauguration day and the rnars and auests smiting approv- ingly." MICHELANGELO'S LAST Judg- ment in the Vatkan's Sistine Chapel was painted wlth all figures in the nude. including that of Christ. Then the Vatican otdered a second-rate painter to cover lhe nudities, and the painter has been known since as "II Braghettone" (Big Underwear). . .. ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ........................................... ' ............................................. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . E11~ut1ve Olfic•s. 7812 Edinger Ave., \Huntington Beach, CA 92647 Southern Catlform.t Regional Of/ices: 4140 Long Beach BIVd .. Long Beach CA 90807 8955 Valley V1owS1.. Buena Park, CA 90620 20715 S Avalon Blvd , ~11on, CA 90746 1001 E. lmponal Hwy., La Habra. CA 90631 1095 Irvine Blvd .• T~stln, CA 92660 235 N. Citrus Ave .. West Covina. CA 91793 ,. f: 'illlili .. lllililillilillllll ...................... ~ ...... . . ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ·.·.· ..... . . . . ... ... . . . ... ... . . . . . . . .... . . . I ••• . . . .... . . . • • • • ... • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••• ••• • • • • • • • •••• • •• RCA 15" (diagonal) XL-100 COLOR SET "''10•"· th o~ I~ '329 fd 1 l"~oll ,. ono of 9 5 RC"' , t-1 buy.. IOO't ,ol1d ~10111, <'Jrtd Ac~uMcl< rv conOrol or col0t. ""' bn</l•nel\ COt'ltOll. CA 25" (diQnal) ColorTrak with REMOTE This is the one. Comes with ColorTrak Control Center. Channel number and time of day light up momen- t a r i I y on screen when color, tint or channel buttons are touched. · WE FEATURE: . GE, RCA, FRIGIDAIRE, .• lln»N, SONY, MAYTAG, SYLVANIA,· MGA, AND CALORIC . . . . . . RCA25-.. COLOR TV WITH BLACK GLMS .TOP A q1eot col"' console from RCA Hos beautiful Bloc~ Gloss Top 100~ \did stOle. Automatic fll'le tuninq. Super AccuColor Blad Motr1~ Pioure Tube. AccuMotic IV one ootton control of color. tint, bnqhtness and contrast A truly fone RCA Color TV from DAVIS-BROWN. RCA 25" (diagonal) . ColorTrak with Swivel Base Thi' ColorTrolc hos o swivel bose for easy viewing and all of the oth&' fine features that RO.'s ColorTroh offet. . . . ... " . . . . . . . . . . . ...... . . . . . . . . . ' •. •• ·~r. ·, ..... . . . . ' ..... . . . . ' ..... . . . . . • • • • .... ~ •• t . . . . . ..... ..... . . .. . . . . . . · ·' .. , ·.·.·J.'. . . . . . .·.·.·~·.· ·:·:-~:-: ..... . . . . . . . . . . ••• • .9'· •• . . . . . . . . . . .. '-.. . . . . . . . . . . . .... . . . . . . .... . . . . . . . . . . ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . a a a a I • • • • • ' ..... • •••• • •••• • • • • • f ••••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ...... ·>=--~~ . ,t~~~·~ ..... o~AJ-L;..;Y..;P..:,IL:;O:;_T~-----...!Th:.:.:.::,u~=~rr.:..· ~Feb~N~'!Y!L.1!.!7~, .!tm~. 1Many Share tin Profits ~ FrOm Coffee EdJUn-'1 Not•: Soaring coif•~ price•~ brotlght ~ profit to~ aZono tM chain from 1*Pt to brft>. Bid' the • wealth U vnevenl11 divtdN. Her~ i& a look oi who ba3 been lharmg in Uw ~« l'ph-al. By DAVID C. MARTIN and TEaav KlllKPATIUCK ' AMkl•IM r,..1Wl1!4ln If you 're wondering where the money you spend on corree is going, look first to the countries that grow it. Brazil. the world's largest producer, earned $2.3 billion from corree sales in 1976, about 2...., tJmes more than m 1975, although its exports rose less than seven percent COLOMBIA, THE SECOND LARGEST pro- ducer, boosted coffee revenue:. by lJbout a third to $917.7 million, despite a nearly 25 percent drop in exports. Since July 1975, wheo a frost hit Brazil, sudden- ly making future supply uncertain, the retail price of a pound of coffee has 1umped from an averaae $1 27 to over $3 in some places. Although 1t 's difficult to give an exact breakdown of the retail price, most of what you pay for coffee goes to the produ~ing countries. And in· dlcaUons are that no se1ment ol the American cof· fee Industry has reaped a romparable windfaU. : From farm to grocery shell, the sharing or the new coffee wealth looks like thls: ., . PRODUCERS Green coffee beans account for more than 00 • percent of the cost of producing a can of roasted cof. fee In Brazil, a 132·pound bag or green coffee sold last month for $240 That is about $1 .82 a pound. but 1t Lakes more than a pound of beans to make a pound of roasted coffee. OF THAT $240, ACCORDING to exporters and o(f 1ci als, the government takes $100 in export tax; local levies, commissions and fees account for $27 and the grower gets $110. He spends about 68 per- cent of his share for salaries and production costs. leaving him with a profit of about $35. In 1975, before prices started soaring, the 132· pound bag of coffee sold for $64. The government export lax was $21 and. according to one exporter. the proportJon or money the grower had to spend for local levies, labor. etc. was about the same as it ('()' \iif 'f '--'U Is now. That left the ' , , • 1' r.J n grower with a profit of about $1 l or $12. Prices for beans have Jlmost quadrupkd. profits for the grower have JUSt about tripled THE GROWING NATIONS NEED coffee re- -.enue to buy 011 and American tractors Earning as much as tht'Y can from coffee, industry observers say. Is no d1fferC'nt from what U.S. farmers do m times of shorta~C' "WhC'th~r it's right for a producing country to hold back on its coffee or not, 1t 's a free market mechanism," s;.11d a commodity analyst "The alternati\.C' 1s lo pa~:-. a law that you can t drink cof fee " " ROASTERS Then· an· more than 100 U.S coffee roasters. _ who tum green bealts into ground and instant cof fee. They sell to grocer) :o.tor~ from their inventory at a price based on the cost of replacing the gr~n beans. although the coffee actually gomg to the store was bought several months before WHEN PRICES RISE. THE coffee they have in warehouse 1s more valuable, a gain known as inven- tory profit Two '-'Ct>k'.'> after the Braullao frost, Maxwell House, the niJtlon·., largest roaster, raised wholesale pnces b> ~ ceols a pound Folger, the !'econd largest. cut temporary reductions it had been offering to grocerl'I General f'oocb. the parent company of Maxwell Mouse. said that m three months f'nded July 3, 1976, profits were 61 percent higher than in the same period a year ear her "I N \'ENTORY PROFITS FROM AN· TICIPATORY price increases on coffee account for a sizable portion or the recent earnings." the Argus Rttearch Corp said in an analysis of General Foods. The big roasters could have reaped even larger Inventory profits had they raised wholesale pric~s as much as green bean pnces were rismg, analysts say Maxwell House says its' proflt mareln actually ls lnwer than it was b~ore the frost In those days. It took 71 cent" worth of beans to make one pound of toffee sellln& at a wholesale price of $1.26. Today. it tak~ 92.69 worth of beans to make a ~nd of coffee sellina wholesale at $3.11. Maxwell ROuse says the markup dropped from 55 cents to 42 cents. IMPOR'tEICS _ Al~gh roasters bold about 80 percent or (the nations coffee stocks. inventory profits were also Important for the some 100 importers in the United States, who buy coffee in producing countries and •hip it to roasters. Any importer with a warehouse or coffee whtn the frost hit made a quick profit. "WE MADE SOME GOOD BUCKS nght after the frost." said one Importer, who didn't want to be um ed. M06t import firJns are privately owned and don't reveal profit fieures, but all airee that the post-froet boom pulled their businest out of the doldrums. · ''Thia WU a very, very depressed mdustry," one said. ''Only now ln the last six months bu the eol/ee importer been able to make a reasonable .1rofil." THE IMPOtTERS ARE REALIZING a cont.1· •ulng proftt on their inventories al.nee the coUH (Cemialled GDP*•• 8'~ I I I I I I I I I I .. I I I I I I I I l"flaSult SHE SWEPT 1'8EFIEW MANCHESTER, N.H. (AP) -CatheriDeScbel· ner, 16, of Derry, won D e b b e Reynolds has filed suit against the late Howard Hughes' Summa Corp., claiming the firm reneged on a contract for 11 weeks' work at three Las Vegas hotels. the American Lealon's ---....... ----~----------....------------oratorical contest 1n Dis- • trict 4. She wu the onJy contestant. City officials and con- test school promoters blamed each other for the lack~ entrants. Last year, there were two contestants NEWPORT G ALLERIES, LTD. 2542 W. Coast Hwy. Newport Beach. Callfomla 92883 (714) 6.4$-2200 Call 642-5678. Put a few word• to work fo ou. Cluna by L1moy~. Woogewo.x:l Hosenlha1 and others. hne Europe:ir. dr1d Amenc_,n cut crystal and drl gld.5.S, i;..orcelam hourmes, bronzes; line turruture, chdildE:hers and onP ~ .t tht: largest d1Splays ol lme 1ewelry m the "-ut.hkmd E.verythmg lrom 2U cor.it diamond solitaires to gold neck chains FREE ADMISSION TERMS: Bank.Amencard, Master Charge, Personal Ched:, Tenns. ADDm ONAL INSPECTION HOURS: Mon. Tues. & Fri. 10d m to 5 p .m .. Sat. 12 noon to 5 p.m., Sun 2 p.m to 5 p m AUCTIONEER: Ar• l.• \ & LIDO SHOPS 'oR~ELL ON CONSIGNMENT. 'l_ WE BUY FOR CASH . -~~~~~=~:~T-E:-~~~I~~~=~:E_r.:~_) This Saturday & Sunday Feb.19 -20 FOR EVERY SQUARE YARD OF CARPETING YOU BUY ••• WE WILL E' L YOU A SQ. YD. OF PADDING* FOR ONLY 1C NYLON TWllD lfl.t.O l"1! litd ........ c..,,.. ~· • .... ~ .... ~-,.. ·· s4• •• ...ct:.::"" ..... w •• sgn N'fLOHIMAO 11 ... "" ........ ,.... ...... ,.,.,..... s4es ............. , ....... .. "''Yllllflllf "''•~ .... ~'Ct ... "'1.,. f•"AOOMMSfMfN°sftit~~ 2t 11 SO. ....... 11331 ... h M•d. , .,...,.. .. ..,C...,...•S•p •• .._..C:..-•Md It a llW2f7. <Wt;llC'OA'l'I tut• IAT, "-" • • IUNOA•" '• ,_. f.t!i~~ HOW liiri:..•~----~.-.""'\0--..-....;..;----..,.;-.... ...-°"**-"' ~ .,.. CASYCIWOlf f MIS• 1'°40 to CM'f HO _..f'lM'tf loCOfl. • ._.liMClllC4flO • lillUft" Pl""'°« \ - G IEUY FOR SPRING CLEAM·UP! Empliasis Placed on Violen~e WHY· WAIT?' NEW YORK CAP) -There are mon tllan ~ ahopplo1 daya left unUI Chrtatmaa, but the 6atloo'a toymaken aren't wutlnM any Ume. They have alrHcly in· troduced the produl!ta they~ wJU capture mUllooa ol co sumer dollars in the 197'ThoticfiY woWd 8dd about -5 percent to t.M cost cl to)'I this year lliller reported on the state or the lndu.atry as tbousanda oC buyers wudered through aome 700 dfaplaya at the annultl toy (air to .elect Uema that wlll appear on re ta~ ~1r'---. b et \"es at "We left out everythina ris· que," said a spokesman, wbo added that the gamtt'ttould retail for $8. CALL OR€0 DISPOSAL. aeaaon. • BQyers can expect more elec· tronic toys and 1ames; a revival ofafwoldfavoHtea; tle-lnswttb televlalon, movies and sports flcur•: and a range of mock ClUzensBand radiOI. Someotthe more elaborate playthings will retall ln the area of $50. oartltam. TREJlE SEEMED TO be le$$ eanpbaaia on violent toys than in paat years. Toy guns occupied only one page of a 7S·page catalogue distributed by one company. Mattel Toys. the world's largest toymaker, offered a Line of "Shogun" warriors. complete with battle axes and rockets. Among the hlghligbts of the fair: -"Slime." A areenisb-yellow aubatance -9S percent water and s per~nl chemical com· pound -desiened to mae through your fineera. The manuC•ctw-es deacrlbe it aa · • ycuckey." Oneapo apoe ''yuckey." One spokesman sald it "feels like thick Jello -only heavier." -DOLLS THAT Df;VELOP a "tan" in one minute when placed in sunli1bt or close to an artlftcial light. The extra color lasts for an hour. 540-0813 For ~l•f r•nt•t of • kublc: yard• traah container for dla- poalng all that ugly extra tr a ah. CONTAINER.ON 6" CASTERS MAY BE MOVED ANYPIAa ON PREMISES TO LOAD. .. DAVID A. MILLER, chairman of the board of the Toy Manufac turera of America, Inc., sald 1976 aalea at the wholeaale level were s:u billioa. up 14 percent from 1175. He predJcted 1J77 sales would be 8'10 10 percent higher than Jut year's. Miller said he did not expect major price boosts. but added that "the usual creeping· inflation type of increases" -THE ''MARY HARTMAN, Mary Hartman" game produced by Reiss Games. Described as "Fun Cor All Ages." the board game features the less-spicy episodes ot Ure as portrayed m the syndicated television senes. -several offerings loosely tied to current events: "Lie, Cheat and Steal." described aa .. the game of political power; "Cban(eover." a board game de- signed to help the player adapt to the switch to the metric system; and a plasuc bank ln the shape or a peanut. complete with a big grin on the front. 2051 Placentia Ave., Costa Mesa WILL DELIVER IN CITIES OF NEWPORT, COSTA MESA ONLY : Young Witrh Lar~ Wendel, i.ln · 11 ·y<.•ar-old American, plays the role of a devil-inspired witch irt "Ring of Darkness," being filmed in Rome Miss Wendel makes her film debut in the terror mo .. ic \\ht ch s tars Anne Heywood, ln•ne Papas and John Philip Law Party Favors White 'Rights' A TLANf A <AP) J . 8 Stoner has been waging a battle against blacks and Jews all his life. Now, al 52, he i5 chairman or the N atlonaJ States Rights par- ty, .which he calls the world's greatest hope for white supremacy. . In an interview Wednesday, Stoner emphuiaed racism. and left no doubt that be and the States Rights party are for whites and whites alone. FREDERICK COWAN, 33·YE.ta OLD gun en- thusiut and Nim sympathiler wbo killed five persona -including three bluks and ooe East Indian and rum.self during a 10-hour siege m New Rochelle, NY .. on Monday, was Identified by a city ofr1cial a5 a member of the StatH Rights party. Am00& the racist Uteral&U'e police said they found in Cowan's 1"00m afterward was a boolrthey said he had inscnbed: .... . ~-~ .. ~ . . -... ' . ,., ~ "Nothing IS lower than blacks STONU and Jews, except tbe police who protect them." Stoner would not comment on Cowan's mem· bership in t'fie party, aavin1 it is the party's policy not to identify Its members. "They can ldentlry themselves tr they want to," he said. WHAT HAPPENED UP THERE ln New Rochelle is unfortunate," he aald. "We don't ad· vocate violence at all except in self-defense. We believe in aelf·preservatJon." He said the group is "very much alive. We're holding meelin4s everywhere, dist ri bu ling literature and picking up members.'· Speculation is that the organiaation hu about l.~ members, but Stoner declined comment. A JIAJOR 08GAN OF THE party ls its moatbJY tabloid -Thunderbolt -wblcb ts operated u a noaprdlt co_i;poration uodet Georita law. Cowan wu reportedly a t.mbel"of'lb\l:Dderbolt. la New York, tll• AntJ-DetJmati:ln League ol B'aa1 B'rith a.set tbe'publlutloo a paid sui.. 1cripbll'a of lS,000. S11arant11t1 Sati1laalion A• ro OflAUri 6 MIU! ••• Or .. rt/II ,.hJttd 'lfHH lftOMf tN Hr:,,.ftf19 YHr llte• wllltln 10 -.,. of p11rchaH. Jutl twtum 1our tltw• lor •11 111c,,.~ °' ,.hind. ( Llmlrtd WMr•nty J SUPER! • • • LOW LOW PRICES ON BELTED STEEL RADIALs Blackwalls 155/13 165/13 (S71/11) 2988 3288 175/13 3488 (C71/U) 185/14 3388 (171/14) 175/14 3388 (C71/14) 165/15 3488 (155/15) ·Whitewalls AR1a113 33aa (165/13) ER11114 33a8 ( 115/14) FR71/14 4088 (195/1A) GR10114 43aa (205/14) HR70/14 4688 (215/14) Whitewalls GR1011s 43aa (205/11) HR70/15 4688 (215/15) JR1a11s 4 78a (225/15) a..R1a115 4888 (~/15) 14-lo UO F9d. lllCIM Tu SUPER Wit' LOil. PRICES! INVENTORY CLEARANCE! -J?!!!!f~~.!.~w~! !7'~f.~:N & SPORT 1asm 41 ~d '\,,, 53" ... ,,. 6 J •• ""~::.~.. """"" .:'I'::" ... 175/13 4418 209/14 57" 215/15 64.. 5.50/12 5.50/14 6.45/14 115114 46.. 215114 &211 m115 6711 .=lli, ~::a, ::.r~ 185/14 50" 1•/15 61 U 230/15 77u SllOW' M TIDI ~It~::.~· SIOW a •Ul TIW :u t CH EL 1 ~ zx BLACK n· A •~• .. s a.--.--_:::.:.;,;.:~~;;;;.;~~:=~~-5-l-tt-----:'.D:--A-:T-:s"::"'.u"::"'.'\'=--=T~o::-::1--:0T:=-:A:-'.T=1=-=a:-:E:':'.s=-.-.-'1. 145110 27" 1ss11s 34• 1ss1f4 aau 1as114 ·•G.. · J 788 155112 3·118 165113 37u 1t5114 42 .. 1m1s 40" 5.80/15 5.80/13 IHili~UW.1"5/13 32•• mm 40" 171/14 45u 115111 44u (155/15) (155/13) !!i':1' .. 8 . F. GOODRICH TIA ll U."il:I> MlllTf: l.f .TTf:R TIRl:!'I 60 & 70 SERJES As Low As '3 7!!... a111m •&a• ..... ., .. VNIROYAL Alignnaent Wheel alignment for moat U.S. cers. No eiclra charge for Air-Con- ditioned or Torsion Bar Carel (Ex· cept for cu atom wheel•) ~,.....·9~.:~ YC ~ LIJ BE JOB! !'Ii." l,l 'Bf;. Qll, Cll·\\GE. -;:-ittnd OIL f'llJTER ,........,....,._ .......... . '"· :'L. .... "" ........... .. ..................... , .. . ~--:..:=~ ................. Uaa COST~MES~ , .......... . (Uflllrfll ...... ~ 1714) 517-1000 . GOODYEAR f'omp 6 Spore. c ... Tira Now 0n111 19m:J:,, .... ,.., .......... l1AELii CINTl!RATO 1988 387 RADIAL ~,:-e·TrPe 145112 155/14 -... ,. GISLA. VED~~~':;:,u Belted STEEL Radials 1ss11239aa •175/13 t4.. te5tt45 I u 1ss11339" 1ss1144818 1ss11s4S .. 115/1J'f ( H •17511449'-•116/11.'>08' .. cyl Piftt• & Vet• .... s24 88 .. cyl. htav ... v.w.. s29ss T9yet•, Opet 6 c,e. "'"' U '4ri. · · , LOK' LOW Pricf>~ •111.tc.BMM Tiit Grtot loo~ of Ptrl_, & Di•tO..CtiCNt! ll111ttd W•r•IJ RAISED WHITE LETTER TIRES ~ 70 SERIES 60 SERIES A70/13 "25BK A60/13 '288" A70/12 "2988 CI0/15 s2 9aa 070/14 s:Jolllt F60/14 s:J5811 E70/14 ":J3H G60/14 "38H F70/14 "331111 G60/15 "38111 G1'0/14 "':J;>IH l60/14 "39118 MAlllC C. IM.-COOWANY'o ••rtetttf fer Ut•u••r •H18' ~lt"'••P Jte11•"t•r To•• eftowft ...,_ _..... ,,_.H .... * 10,000 ,.,. .... et •••r •H.,.,, I :::;~. ·~.::~~~.:~:· .,:~:~'~ P•H•ft'f•' n~• M nou~ .. ten~oe tn th• U1Uted Sl•ltt, ~A'.'.:'c'.'k3~.·co:~~·:J ........ ,,,._ ........ °"' .,. •. , ... tl9ft .. "'"' ............ "'"' :::.n~~::::~· ::!~ ........ .,""' ~ .... ,.,..... .... ... -........................ ,,., ,,., et ,,,., ., ..... , ....... . WIUehewH Ct"'l•I tint. I•• ___ ..... _ ltuNrlMMoH llACH. . 11411 ........ ...... ....., C7141Ml-1445 . · 1714J.7.Sl·t•U. I ,. I don't like to complain, but my take-home pay is all ken before I get II there " Deaths Elsewhere ASHJNGTON CAP> lcba.rd C. Harkneu, whose career as a t and television re. er spanned four de· c•es and included cov· e ge of the New Deal in li1f 1~. died Wednes dJt in Naples, Fla. OS ANGELES <A P> ·-UFuneral Mass will be d id Friday for Fr ancis G el, a Los Angeles at t ey for more than 40 s. Gabel, 72, died or umoma Tuesdav rAClffC YllW MIMOl14L rAll Cemetery Mortuary Chapel 3500 Pacific V1Pw Onve Newport Caltlorn1a 644-2700 McCOIMICIC MOITUAlllS Laguna Beach 494-941 5 Laguna Hille;, 768·0933 ~ San Juan Capistrano 495-1776 u1..n.111•HOH FUMlttAL NOMI Qkona d•I Mar 6 73-9450 ta Mesa 646-2•:.>• IB.L. no•Dw •' MOITUAIY 110 Broadwa)I Costa Mesa 642-~150 .... , .... u ~ALllUMlliL NOMI 7801 Bolsa Ave W"tmlnster 893-3525 0 • CAP> -Dr. Louise Yim, 11, a legulator, educator and women's movement leader who was educat- ed in the United States and was the rll'St woman to serve in the South Korean cabinet. diecr Th1Jrsday. . DAKOTA CITY, Neb <AP>· -Currier J . Holman, 65, co-founder or I ow a Beef Processers Inc died Wednesday after an apparent heart attack at bis winter home in Boca Raton. Fla.. a company spokesman heresaJd ........ l'O\J..-i'AI"' \I.ALLEY COMMUNITY HOSPITAL .......... ,1.1'11 Mt •nd M r\ J Gu•d•lup• M•Q<l•I""" 2510 B....C:• L•nr No«o boy ......... ,.,,. 1'77 Mt •net Mr\ W1ll1•m 8o"'mdn 10717 La MarqUfi.A. '°""'•••n V•lte't' Doy _.,4,1971 Mr •l>CI Mr'-F'r-rl<IL C.r-.tn 9650 C•l•nOul• -.1mln$IH.glrl Mr •nd Mr\ A•ch.aird Orr 1~0t Jae It \On SC Wf'1tmtft\ter 91r1 ... llnlffY J, 1977 Mr •..0 Mn Wllllem Chburn Jr ?Ol •tno ~I N~w"°" llHCll 9lrl "-°'"""''· 1'71 4 Mr dnd Mn. James Ev•n'> 1HO Acldm' A~ 1(.20-4 C.O.t•Mesa,91r1 Mr Jl"l(t Mn Robert Wal-.er 1417'1 HOQvftr ~l' :rttS, Wfitmlnstef o•rl l'•IM"1J.11ry 7. 1977 Mr "''~Mn Lclur~n<.1 Ht:>rnm1nQ •ff..41 H ,.1 1 A,1iN• U ._.uotmqtnn Rr-111 h l>Oy F•brliWryl, 1'77 M r dlld Mr' WA"/nf' (hf'Of'Hq, r 81"1 ronnrr Or .-.unt1nq1°" ~ac_h q1rt Mr Mld ""'' Rot>rrl Eq.in 1/b1 <-1.Jr Or HunllnQton Bt-·it( h bO'f Mt ''"' Mr\ M.-JttVPI Mor• nu 11 t41 Cjt()n,.r q;'' ~o.un•dm V-'IJ•·J' ho-. ,._ ... ,, .. 1'77 ~r ~Mr\ Alcherd HOll•l'V>'' 't.1\1 Mt Nimbi~ FOIA'WotnV~t . .-y Qlri -......,11 lt70 "' •nd Mt"\ lllt .. tl Mol 'tA I~ C <tll,. Circle Fourit"'"V•ll•v DO• .. __., u. "" Mr •nci.Mr\ Albt\0Sa1a~"' •..t&1 L.t E\t,ett•AY!' F~~nVJtllpy bOw PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS 9USINESS NAME ST ATEMl!NT '"f" follow•no ~,WW\ '' Oo•twa bus1 ... ,. VIL LACE TV 19046 8rooknur". Mun11nq1on ~ ... -CA., ... L.•\I•• W•Yntt How~ro S0410 M~ll>rook """""'m CA ~ '"'''bu\•¥\'\,.., conOuc•.-d by .,, 1n d l..,ICIU•f L,..._IPy W How" rd Th!\ stdf~t W4l\ f1ft'C) w 1t't ·~ Cou"tV C'"l•rk ot Or•nctt" County on F•l>rU<try I 1~17 '71$40 Publ•"'9<1 OJ•nOt'" Lo~t\t 0•1ty Pilot '•O 10 17 14 --rcl\J, "n •1• 17 PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS eUStN•U .. AMa STATEMENT T'"'-tOftOWt""O Q+f"'WW' f'\ doinq tu,1\1 ,.~ .. LA MANCHA AP .. RTMENTS 171 \coll Pl..C:• Co\I• ,,,.., •. CA 't')U> lv<"·ll• ( P•~"'at 11'G1 Hen'~'' CtrrllO\,CA '070• ,,..., bu\f~\ ., <Oftdu<t.-d '»• ,,_ •I'\ d•'ltdue1 1.UC•lleC p,_,,. .. fh1\ \\.atflfftll'f\t -·~ ,,,...., •iff'I ,,,... Ctiv'ttv Ct•f'tt. of Or•~ Countv on ........ ryl "" 1'71414 Pultf"l..o C>llflqlr eo.t\I O••ly Piie! ..... ''· 17 )4 ...., Miltcll l .. ,, PVBUCNOTICE '9CTITIOUI •usuuru IUMeSTAT•Ml!NT T"" IOl-"9 ""''°" I\ CIO•llQ OUSI· MUM , IC Na ~UC. MACMllOHG, ltS1 Dari' SI., Coli.Me", CA "627 IC.,! H. arv11. u1 Dwrlll St • CMte ...... CAm21 flll• llusl,,.u ts concl\lcted by •n ;,, "1Ytdu411 k.,IM BrU'\I Tiii\ >l.,emenl """ 1111'<1 wolll '"" C.ounty Clerk ot O"""Ot-' Cou,.,ty o,, F•brU<try 1 1•11 1"11MS Pubh-0r~"9'1 Co.tll D.i1v Pll04, t<tll 10 11 14 •ftd ""'rel!] ,.,, HE SAID llE hopes there are enough people interested to form a task force for the study But he said. "It's an awful lot or work that someone must. do.'' Initially, SACC asked that the study be done through the Local Ag~ocy Formation Cornmiss1on and paid for from the county general fund. 8.ut Supervisor Thomas Riley said the only county funds which could be used would have to be from the service areas S E PaESEN.TUIV ES OF. Laite Forest. El Toro and Laguna Niguel said they would not want to raise taxes or lose proJects currently ui their service area bud&et.s to fund the study Alao. embers ol the Mission Viejo Municipal Advisory Coun- cil have h\dicaled they are not ln· terealed in working with SACC on the project. The MAC this week decided to conduct a special study session Tuesday at 7;30 p.m to discuss what kind of approac~ will take to the cilyhood issue Representatives of Laguna Hills and Aegean Hills said they are willing to supp0rt the study. Leisure World residents re ported}y are stiU studying the proposal. B UT ft~B B TELLM AN, representative or the Laguna Niguel Homeowners Association which has already done its own incorporation study. urged SACC to 1 t Witters ta do l nud)' ftlr ~....._...-r+~ all of t.he unincorporated south Oran1tCounty He said an m1l1al study ot tbe po111billtles of incorpontlon could be done inexpensively by volunteers. He said this study would tnd.le-a the costs involYeel aa well as tax revenue wblcb could be ex-perteCS. LATl:R, WHEN c1tybood ta be- in1 seriously considered, he said, a professional stµdy would bave to be done. He said this would probably cost from $50,000 to $100,000. Another director said that may not be needed for another five years Re~~•fl Te acher s Agre e RJVERSIDE CAP) Tentative agreement has bet!n reached to end a three month dispute between teacher~ and the R 1 verside L "n1fil~d ScbOOI Distnct. SINGLE-LENS REFLEX CAMERA King Khaled, 63, of Saudi Arabia, has undergone $Uccessfu1 surgery In London. An a.ifing hip b ad .!!:~~~~~~~ caused him pain and cuTtailed h is walking. can Na-1111. Put a t•• word• t•work for ou . -t Spot meterin (lO%•~w1tll VALUE ... FEATURES .•. ·1 ~ PERFORMANCEI a~tn~ideopen> * 1/109Q seqlhd ah utter speed ~ ASAs:i-ds25to3200 __. * Easy multi slot film loading . ..,-Self-timer Hot flash shoe WES TEN'S SPECIAL PRICE s159~5 BES WITH F/ 1.8 PHOTO -· BUYS :--------.---IN TOWN -, mam1ya msx GAF ST 202 POPULAR-PRICED MOVIE CAMERA S79'L~ .. '104 .. ST/202 ,\ ... i,. J •dfllltt.. 1t1 .\ Jt'I \\'ort11nt1 .l :· a (Jr. vH [)J~tt!IV ·"' tCI • .I • I Ill 7 IAll\ .. cm I• , ,, • • 11 ;ltllo:'l'mm ti;l1>1.11 't U t-•ln1 movl"mP1~ 1n'1lf ilia• • I: ' • 1 •t int i.11 .. 1 •Elf><. "oc; mot cl I •u-lhf'l· er.S V•l!'Wlnll COS•h<lllc.••vl!l'l~ll" l••l hl'Y , "rtr10!]ll IQ,1<11• o ASANUMA ALUMINUM CASE I.: ~·" ~~ {~ .: .. _.~.. ' '•' $3897 Llgntv.910l'll, l'le:ivy-duly afur1"n irr\ • Rl'.l 11lprced edgl!" eiitrj f ?!"l'erS . l ongue 111 Q'OOllfo Clo trP. hOIO'.'> $Oal o ut '1l1Sl anO mo• rura • Te•turt',J t rw.n ( r1Jven1~ scrakh inq • Polvlonm b·,ink Iha! r..11n bt> c11.l· >'T1 cut • HeaV)I duty l!tvQCI na·.o tyoo loci<'>,,, .um 101,1 .;lo •OO • Atta~h"" ~hoo Ider <;lr.10 r n 1 • Att.1one type• Ac.CA'~""~ 1nc1uow.1 ad1u~11n1e~11l!lftr 'llrap wllh Qui()\ ff'll1611~ \,lop~ ·IJI" •Ill 10.1111 ' 111111111 ••1•1» .inn IN() k~lt ( Just Arrl11ei Sl;G~:·LENS REFLEX CAMERA 500 ~ t-10% spot metering * Full-aperture readings . -* ASA range 25·3200 :'. M1croprism focusing l 1I500 second shutter WES TEN'S SPECIAL s1299s SOUTH COAST PLAZA 3333 SOUTH BRISTOL• COSTA MESA PHONE: 979.3373 " HOUIS: MOHDAY .... DAY tO.t SA TUID.A Y t M SUMO.AT 12·1 I \ Delicious Toi:f Slrfoln Steak prepared to your taste, two fresh eggs, hash brown potatoes, toast, jelly and butter. Served from 11 p.m. to 11 a.m. daily. %111. Jfa11tlfurjet"" €:/:fries ' $J..59 A half pound of fresh ground beef (pre-cooked welght) on grilled sourdough bread with hot trench fries. l~ttuce. and tomato slices. We call It the San Franciscan. Serve~ 24 hours a day. No traditional Frencb waiter wears a muatache. That facial adornment 11 for tbe chef. You'd have to ~ 108 years old to have been born before the first tennis shoes came out. On Jan. 15, 1977, a Mr. Flood and a Mias Blizard, both of Turlock, Calli., took out a marriage license. It bu been proven re- peatedly that loneliness can cause an isolated doe to become hysterically timid. Experts at the Smithsonian Instltulion think they 're able to figure out which museum pieces are of the most interest to the public by counting the fineerprlnta on the display cases. Historical suretcal lnstrumenta rated exceedingly lo}". for Instance. No prints. But the glassed-lo shelves ol old gum ranked high. Smudges were everywhere. COPFU, TEA OR MILK! Q. ·'Can you make tea In those newfangled automatic drip coffee makers? .. A, CertaiDlY can. Excellent tea. I had no intent.ton of joining a coffee boycott ~·1hen we first made tea in that brewing machine. But the tea tasted so good that the oolfee canister hasr.·~ been opened pince Odd tbina. A man can drink coffee folf 35 years only fo realize eventuatly that the reason e third of it slways gets cold In the bottom of the cup is that he re- ally doesn't like the taste of it all tbat much. Combined weight of the insects is three times greater than the weight of all the other animals put together Takes a sloth two weeks to digest what it eats l·R·S SAL E Inventory Reduction Bel• All 1 Gal. : All 6 Gal. nursery stock : nursery stock t4l11iiiilll : @iiliiilii Also look for special Midi& Sales Sale ends Mon. fo'eb . 28 Florist Special SCHEFFLER A -! 6',.Pot Thru Feb. 22. WHISKEY BARREL PLANTER Sturdy oak, steel banded, 25" diameter, 17" deep. Reg.15.9o sAL~ ·u·m~a .. Thru Feb. 22. -'rJ,,v ~~ ~w,· \rk ~~~1 cv.v;( eJev~~ :3ocx:,b a,11), <. ;~ / / 1 ~ l·) •• o u., J. Y\ \:.~~ T~L£nAt -tciUciA Sl(IL. 318" Vwiable Speed DRILL 1777 • FAMOUS MAICRS 1ovs• JEAN JACKETS VALUES U,TOSI 2.00 Shet4-7 .•. $3.00 Sllftlof4 •.• S4.00 WHfLI ntlY LAST ' You can meet the occasion with confidence in formal attire from our outstanding Hlection. dar~ell~ D.Gidl'1 Ta Shop of Santa AH. htc. Westclff Plaza 64MH I S...• A.-.21 .... S.--1474l41 .. .. SCOPE MOllfhw .. ......... Sl 3! .. r ' BEEF STICK . SALE CANDY ..,, ......... ,..u SALE Getz. .. Fl& (lf~f•t 1111111 ff idc~ry ,.,. OF ONIO i&- WESTCLIFF PLAZA I 7fti I llYIM~ HACH PHOMI '42 .. '12 ~on • .frl. 'Tit t S.t. ·rn e Sun. 'Tit 5 DON 'T THROW AWAY YOUR COMFORTABLE OLD TENNIS SHOES WE. RE'f'AIA ANO A!SOt..! .AOIOA&-fRET~Nl-l • ·A~ P.THER MAJOR BR~OS ·, 'I . '\ : . . I OF.SPITE THE J'EDEIL\L GOVEaNMENT'S constant vt&U, vlalton to the desert wbo find the rock writinp continue to d•tro)' the remnants of that ancient Indian civilization about which 10 UtUe ii known. ''The petroglyph panels frequently tell a ftoty. something like biero1lyphics," said Johnson. "The '-SO PICKING UP ONE OF THE pet.ro&lyphs and movmi it just a few feet away could de&troy the inte&rit.)' of the oriatnal tompositioo." Johnson said tlie rock writing bas some value to collectors and museum1. ''There is a good black market for things of that sort, even among museums, but the law says no petro&lypbs can be t~en oft federal land, ao most ot the Cbea you see ln museums were obtained u. legaJly," beaald. "Aft~r the San Dlegulto culture let\, there ap- pears to be a cultural hiatus, or gap, where there seems to be an abandonment of the southeastern de- sert on a major scale." , older ones were probably the work of people wbo lived in the desert about 10,000 years B.C. Scientists still do not agree on what they should be called, so informally they are called the Sao Dieguito culture." THEN A LATER TRIBE, which nourished in The vandals occasionally try to take the the 14th and 15th centuries, amved. It was called petrog)ypbs with them, to sell. the Yu man Indians. M1T111Sa c AU VE&Y nw covvnmentot. ficers patrollln1 lbe desert, especially tbe back oountry where few roads exist. "Unfortunately, 1D01t ueu are aee ... ible these ~. lf not by four.wheel vehicles tho by the blkers. We've posted 111115 advlsil\B people of tbe value ol the petrotlypba, but they even at.al lh• si1111 -anythln1 for a toUvenlr." Johnson 1ara. Now the 1overnmeot la Jooldng into a method of affixl.ni the slgn1 to the rocks permanently, so they can't be removed. "There's a lot to be learned from the petroglyphs," said San Diego archeolo1ist Bill Eckhardt. "No one bu ~ able to cope and.aur- vlve in the desert as well u tM lndlans, ancl the petroglyphs were wntln~s to lm~art information." Moosemen, Spare CALO Rice In some cases. the vandalism has destroyed The 'Ftrnes "WITII SOME PEOPLE, IT'S Just a flat dis· more than balfthe petroglypbs. ,it c;. regard for resources aa they are," be said. "It's like finding a rare, one-edition book with· TAX REDUCTION . People have used the drawings as target prac· some of the pages torn out," he said. SAN DIEQO (AP> - lice for firearms; used dyruunjte lo break up the The eovemment has worked with researchers The M006e Lodge says 1t larger pieces to cart away segments for sale; -they're called "cryptanalysts" -especially at a can cut down two tr~ carvedinitialsonthefaceoflhedrawlngs; painted number of Western and Rocky Mountain. onlts laodi!itwanltto. over them; simply taken sticks and broken them; universities,todec1pherlbestrangemark111gs. . The trees are Torrey moved the pieces to different locations. pines, so rare that they ---=--...!-:..:..:._....::..~-;__;__~-----------------------erow only in limited numbers in San Diego and Oft'Santa Rosa Island off Santa Barbara. A temporary restrain- ing order to prevent the lodge from chopping down the trees was is-s~by Superior Court J e Jack R. Levitt. • ,. • Pepl1ile ' E: Howard Hunt Jr .• still In jail for the Watergate bu r&larly, bas paid h1a $1().000 fine and should be paroled Feb. 25. ' An the local coastal com mission plans to de- cide whether the trees are protected by law. NEW CALORIC SELF-CLEANING MICROWAVE/GAS TOTAL COOKING CENTER A group of Ocean Beach residents sur- rounded the trees the other day, climbing the trunks and out onto limbs, ln an effort td st-0p the cutting. They told Levitt that the Moose Lodge mem- bers were angry about 1l but quieted down only when police arnved. SAVE UP TO $250 DELUXE AM MOBlll MODEL-185 • • j{ll ,.,, ; s19900 THE SHICK . MIKES CB AFFORDIBLEI R..id10 ,')h .. ,..k huuflht the remaining inventory ol Regt•ncy CR· 18~ mobile 23 channel CB rad1~ IJ gP: you into C1'1ten Band at an amazingly low co!>:' 01 1•' ·uni RF Q,11n automa11c noise limiter. rr k• <fJ1n 1 • 1,111•; '>Jtnt as a bu11t-m power mike ,in<IS RF.,.., 't•' A~,.,for::.'1 ·4 185 R·•oul,11 h• g• n : F,1c1orv L1mt11 d Warranty. SAVE62% . Reg. 79.95 ANOTHER BIG CB BARGAIN! 29~.~ SECURITY ON THE ROAD! The Realistic~ TRC-11 is a miniature 6 channel mobile• radio al a give-away price! Switchable ANL. lighted channel 1nd1cator. automatic gain control Ready to use on Ch. 9. add crystals for ANY of five more channels! . . TWO SALE-PRICED ARCHIR ~ Cl ANTINllAll r I SAVE 54°0 "SHORTY .. ROOF MOUNT Reo.16.95 12!! • E••v SnaP-ltt ~tl.ttfl • Ad1u1t•ble Top Wlt(pf SAVE 52°0 GUTTER CLAMP MOUNT Aeg.17.85 15!!. NEW/ REALISTIC~ CH MOBILE CB RADIO TRC-452 puts you in touch wfth 40 139• channels of action! Power and features . baeked by R. S. 's 16 years of CB 'le~rshipl tt-15~1 [!ii I' ----... ~ "='~iii ""' ·-r • II . .. .. .. , ......... "' I C•ll 6 42-5678. Put • lew words to work lor ou. ; ,.~· flOHTWMlll CMAllltUt MIAVl Dun M ·X WHEELS 10s•uo.a DOIJl~ISTHL AltAYA.IM 105 GAUGE Sl'Ot<U Mk,o••u• (ht'n lhn .. ~.,, "1 lo \ " ... ,., ..... ,, 'lhl~. Ill Oflf' f~fl~ 04.•lttUI Oliu• 90DAY Charge Ott Appro•ed Credit 6 11 II I ' Au,om.titK Pilotlfl.• l~nil1ot\ tt•h• w."'. ""''''·' l 1v1k ~• ••·'"'· "'" HI lf"n ••"· o-dut n m••• ,hw1ko111 1vh I"' 1n4' M> : 1111n1lf'• b'""''"• c.-.. n b•a•~r 8] )ru< PHol•h• ,,.fl (It""'"( 0H!l ~ ......... ..-1111'" •••• ,, -.. C..t•l'I """'"'•h4•·•· .~ ... ,., ............ , .... applia101s SALES & SERVICE 888 GLENNEYRE ST. LAGUNA BEACH • 494-0582 AMERICAN MADE 'BICYCLE TUBE WITH ANY TIRE PURCHASE TUBE VALUE 12.50 •4so RfG,'Ut .,295 . ,. KHJee:oo-.. Wild ift ttie~ ... The kids take over the country in th!l 19e8 movle with Chrlltopber Jones, Shelley Winters and Diane Varsi. KCET .@ 9: 00 -"The Froaen World." The start or a 13·part series on the great ideas and events of Western music, sculpture and architecture. KTI'V CD 12 · oo -"All the Kines Men." Oscars went to this 1949 movie and its stars, Broderick Crawford and Mercedes Mccambridge. r ~. TV DAILY LOG . -THUR--S-D-~-~-1 ., .. I _ ... 11..ijv..1111 .... iJiG ..... _ ... e:oo D fJ JJ flt ( tL 3 ) his u o CI> ltBJ rt > m ""' G Qt) Sbr Tift ({) CilDmer Pyle O""'-U Gll'artridp family G> Acllm·IZ m Electric c.n"'"' ~·I Mite o.ctas m little bsals -6:30- D Din1h! Gijests 1nclud~ V3f'"' Harper. Mary Tyler Moore. Odv1d Groh. Juhe ~et. 1e1AHyGriff'ltll 00 Men Criff1n Show mF•tPt Alfw ( 1 r ) lilnlslnal1 mz- < tt J ) Bnltcaed 7:00 6 DINAH VISITS RHODA • M. Tyler Moort/Hlrper DO.uh! D II ~~i e m ID News O Lian Clll~ e llty ThrH Sons 't To Ttl the Trutll O Conunt11hon m I I.rte lJlcJ m 111e Fii lat! MdJ Gnff~ m llbchl/Ltlwer lteport ( jf) <t J The hrtridte F 1111i~ l)•l Alntriu: Tiit T111111 Elperiel!Ce m Mdlale's ..,., -7:30- 6 DINAH! VISITS RHODA * M. Tyler Moore/H1rper D DiMh! U An4ly Leslie AM Warren puests ' D lowlina tor Oolllrs c el Ttte o.. c.u~ 11 Tiit r..1 Show (i) CIMid C-u O Tiit Jetcr's W'ild 110 l» (J) ... '-' m c l8J ct.> ltldy llllldl ( 1 r CJ') Tiit WilMnl ••rs fD Tldlfs C.W.t 26 _,.., ltefltS m Cllt11lltl 21 Ttnichl m~nu h lt1111t >t Lian Cli* C!)"f" ,,.., 8:00 ~ 6 FAMILY SCMOAL • 1£W. THE WALTOllS ' D (rjz; G ) '1 flit •httoH lason ful4s .. llSIC and loY! bolh 1n lht a"" pl. b<A his rela1ton~h1• 1111th tllt upuonc s1111er •ho llu fU'll walked out on lltr h~nd. ~h~ them lht ctnltr ol town 1Q$$1f D 211 t JOI m h.rluh< l4t11r11y 8t1ond lhr lh1111t&1ft • Jonathan W~IOW•Y <Roddy MtD<l••tl 1n hlS tltlllll U I rtp~r 1n lht senes). an Am111u1 sc11nhsl rt1ecttd by hit Pttn. IMIPfWllS wh1lt on 1 lltaM OVff lllt Set ol bpan lfld 11 ia<awrtd 1n • flmt sphere 11111.11!1ttd "" mtnp. llttn • be1n15 ind tlte1r 1ndrt>id \Jaw\ e ......_, UClA 1! °''&on SI • (Jtl (IJ) • WtlctM ltc* ._.. Boom eoo .. ·, ~ 11 • p11I tome d•K·1odty 11ou1u 1raf(lvsy lm<Mll lltt S.uthof1 D MIN: CJ Qllr) ....... • !tit Slrlltl" ( *11 '6S-S"""1 Wini en . ~H -,. 1)1,rit Ytn1 '81Un£MDMW * lll([T DISASTU QD SUCCESS AS nm CIOSS AUSTIALIA! CD ..I T111 Wiii o.M &r~, ~nd Willl In lll60 1n lrlSlt snldotr lurntd pol1cfm&n 1nd 1 yoona E ngh\11 • Sllrttrc>f wtre the fltll wlhlt men lo tross A1nlr1h1 o'erland ho111 ~tlbournt to the Cull of Caf!l'nla11a Gl USC ""'"'" lro1ans n °'''°" Outb. \WI .... : a:> (DJ) "lttlNCll ... rt.Mt tf h •• (ad~) '70 J1mes frtncrscu1, Cllarlloll Heston e M I ... 11ltltl'I .,........, ... -.. .......... ~""'"" ., ....a:30- • (121 Cll) QI! WWI ~ ;Jiic Mama (lf;e1ops a crush on htr t1 lltlsband wbtn she allows him to "'°"' 111 u a boardtf, but O.nleht llld 111t boys dilaMr ti.'a not ttlli9 lltf 1M wllole lnith l > ....,..: ~ (!tlr) '"'MN A hlll ltDrsa" (dr1) 64-GretorY Peck e ( 2:t I > 1U lmey lllllltr Wlllle H1111s struulu lo Miid down• StCOnd fOb. his COllUCJtS cope 111lh a m1n1stt1 who slocb hrs lhnft sllop with stolen toods 11\d a boot.maker who uses 1 retarded boy as a numbers runnei CD Men Gnff• s-. .hidoSu .... fl:) CMlmbon ~Tiie fr0ttn World" Lord Krnntth Clark hosts this ! J. wt st11H-1 tour lhrou2n the grnl 1dus and eents ol W41$\ern archilec.-• lure, scutplllfe UICI music. CfJ!lerun~ -9:30- D ('11.l (I') ID To11y Randall S1-lud2e f 1 ank1n s son comes to h1. !ilhtr s courtroom lo set his idol. tht touehest hockey player in the ltdaue ttst1ly, and learns a ltsson .. hen h, 111u to emulale his hero's hockey shit 10:00 0 ( {?) 1;) e Bu111by Jones NCI Ion& alter an untt.pf)lly rumed mll\ adm1IS IQ trOup llltt'JIY !Mt fie hlS hltbortd UIOllpts ol \1lh11C his "1lt the .oman ~ IGund dud under my~lrnou· en umstdncrs 0 (')News 0 (at • lt Struts of Slll Franmco Ha" Jo1;rh A loug~ up ~n the b•ink nt rrtuement brcome• lh• IM£tl ~I ll M'ke Stoor) 1nv,st11ation •hen rt appears a narcol1t informant may havt been stl up 1n a muoder Ci) lilt s-1 ~Tony and lKI m A Miid at E.alort ri.c:. ~hu Withs. sculleiy maid for 1 wealthy l~moly at (dlOn Place 1n London. lal~s w11h hnsl 8111 Varney and com parrs her hmf al £~Ion Place with lhe Upsl111s. Oown~taus househoh1 -10:30-m mm""" m Jeanne Woll Wtth ... 11:00 oo eu11e.s u 23 • tQ m """ O ( .29 a ) lAlft Anltnan Style • S..tiH lhtdl u, 0 MIHO(k _ y HutlllH ( 11 l ) Tiit bAclt Show 26 kit .. Wtuttto m kl 'tn9K1m .. th• """ _.11:30- 111 < 1r n J cas i.. •• on • 111mw.,c.. ' Tiit l'Tl a.. • ( 2tl Lt ) tlfl lllllnUy Mi&kt s,.c.11 Cl) Tiie "8Mp!llOOl!tl1 ,. Tllt 7GO Cid 12:00 Dhstof~ D ~ ... •C "Wlllt1 llents 111 *"-'" Jun St~r1 m ...... : .... tllt IU!lc's Men" (dfl) '50-8roder1Ck Cr1wford Q) ....... "The Tllfftwlltll lltttr" (mys) '51 Chilies Boyer -12:30- • All llllilt ~ ..... firp," "T.,,.r R1t1n1," u$1114ew of ,_ .. 1:00 .. .u> (t l u. ,_,.,, 2:00 ...... ~"c.Mt o-4" "Tiit , ... Sfe"""'" m Aii.ie111t1 SN•· "lll1ae o •• [11utie1tr," "'-tt1"1 '-rtiu ~r" -l:OS-a .... it: I C'I .. TN ltll&tst Hvtl4r14 Miltt'' (dr1) 67-0oua M<Clurt. ~ilhf11~ Ross flatlMT 11 .... !or.--··· ....... da(s-tn. 9:JO g "lh•l ... AH." (dr>) '62-0an& Andrews. El11n01 P11~er 10:00 ff ~ "I'd Clillll Illa ~ Ill~" (dr1) ~l-Slm11 ~prard, Roly Calhoun. Wlil11m llltld111n U.1111. "A 11i111t tt a-Mr" (lllyS) '42-lorttU You111. 811~11 Ahtlrll Hll e -UO. .. ttalM" (dra) '58-MIU f.oftllOIS, Jolln Aslllty D CC> "Fntty Ftct" <mn) 'S1-Fred AstU.e. Audrey Htpllum, ~ Thtilipson .(1:1.,...._ •A hr\ StMt"' ('11) 72-Jamts Obon. • tl~lia111 ~In•. R1chJrd cm;~ ... ,. • CC) '1'llln " .. AT' (•ts) '~Jeff Ch1ndler. 0orotlly MalOl!t, W.,.. 8oAf. CC> ~A I.Mfr W1y i. Die" (cir•) '38-ltir\. o..oa. ~· KaiciM adO e CC) "Tiit 111 MMUI" ('°"') '61-Jeny lewis, Klfold J. Slone. Sllsln Bay, 81ddy lester. KOCE Televl8ion (SO) Dana Paint aUOriley St.ililiy Welaabu.rg wbcted th• appetites ot Dana Hills Hllh Sc:boo1 atu· de.at.a for law careers t.bia week bY describing some of bis own eases One cue lnvolves a man who hired Weissburg to fight child support payments, which the State ol K.anau c1atmed be owed till former Wiie. The wife bu moved to Kansas with lbe child and wu livtn& on weltue. .. THE PROBLEM IS, I don't think I'm lbe papa," has client told Weissburg. California law says any child born to a married couple is legal- ly the husband'• child. unless the Stopgap Park Steps Okayed by County Miffed that a complete revision of Orange County's regional park master plan would take a year or more to complete, county supervisors have ordered interim measures. While approving plans thl.s week to hlre a conaulunl to do a $200,000 park study, lbe board also uked county staff members to quickly update an existing park master plan as a stopgap guideline. And super.vlSOrs ordered coun- ty officials to come up w1lh a Ust of information the consultant could provide them within six months, before has over-all study is completed, ''WE HA VE HAD so many ques- tions in recent weeks where the lack of a master plan has m· terfered with the .board's de· cisions," Supervisor Phil An· thony obffrved. And Supervisor Ralph Diedrich said there probably would be more such decisions within the next year Anthony also questioned the need foe hiring a consultant for the study rather than use eounty staff members, although county officials said they lacked both the time and expertise lo conduct such a study. • · Wilb all of the parks we have in tbe county we ought to have someone on the staff wbo would be one of the top experu in the world In this area," Anthony said. "but apparently we do not have that person." The consultant is to conduct surveys of county residen~ about parks, study park t.-ends ·and <'ompare wbat exist. wlt,b wtiat may be needed through 1995, ac· c ording to a report to supervisors. The study also' is to ouWne park sites and sources of funding. .. THAT'S 'SEXIST, I argued. The judge bought it." W eissburg said that if the mother refuses to cooperate with the testini. bis client is orr the hook. If tests show his client t.o be tbe child's father, be will have t.o pay child aupport. Tbe ~Y la one of 81 ex. perts who serve l\S an adjunct faculty al Dana Bllls. They lec- ture and ans•et questions ln their areas of expertise. Additional Information on Dana Hills' adjunct faculty is available from Ptjra. Redfield at the high school, 496.8668. Shed your storage problems Why clutter up the garage with things ltke lawn mowers. bikes and tools? Put 'em 1n a quality built shed. We have a full selection in a wide range of styles to complement your home. They're weather-proof, galvanized steel with easy assembly instructions. Talk 1t over wtth our storage specialists All exterior dimensions are approximate. 10'x10' GREENBRIAR STORAGE SHED Gable root, Colonial olive with cl!ss1c white molding design on forest green doors Exlerior dimensions· 1191h"W x 116"D x 73Y2"H Model #GR1010 Reg. 139.99 118.88 I ~ .. Judge Sued Retired Orange Coun- ty Superior Court Judge Robert L. Corfman, of Newport Beach. has been sued for damages by a motorist who holds him responsible for a col- lialon between their two cars laatJunel2. Christine Moselet. Irvine. claims in hfr Superior Court laws1· that she suffered serio Injuries when Jud Corfman's auto slru her car. ' ' J 10'x10' CAMBRIDGE STORAGE SHED Gambrel style roof. Sun gold walls. white tnm Colonial style doors Extra-tall walk-rn height doors. Exterior drmensrons. 119Ya "W x 10'x10'WEATHERED BARN STORAGE SHED High front gable roof. Simulated weathered grey \ f16"0 x 84 Y2 ~H Model #CAM 1010 Reg.'1 79.99 149.88 Oatden Grove Fullerton ;707 Oardeo Grove BIVd. 301 So. State COfle09 531~es11or803-6623 870·0050 Open Mon. lhru Ftl. 9 to t Open Mon. thru Fri. e to 9 t. &i Sun. 0 to fS • Sat. • Sun. 9 to e • .. Co.ta Meea 1275 Brlltot &ee-1500 wood grain design. White doors. black barn door trim. Extra-tall walk-In height doors. Exterior dimensions: 120'W x 11 t"D x 92Y2"H. Model #W81010. Reg. 2, 9.9Q 179.88 . O~ Mon. 11\nJ Fri. 9 to~ Sit. I& &uft. 9 to • Ii I . ~ \ I I t l I - :I'·'· . ' ... 'i "• •11.u f fl'} ·} ... , , 'JI • • I nr ,, ,, .. . b• ,., ,, . ' "' . h·· ' ll" I• • 111 . rl •'> n .,· I ,•. :•n, , ., .. . . f I • . I Yoo T may still enroll in Coastline Community College's ·co1Rs·rs FOR CR II through Friday, March 18th. 18COIRSE ( ro111 which to choose (No parking probletns. You aHend claises In front of your own TY) . Coastline Com•unity College lnfor•ation: 963-0824 "-IV COURSES: 1 . HUMANITIES 132 -3 UNITS "Ouak: TheatN-th• Humanltl" In Orem•.;, A •tudy of 13 of the greatest pteye of the 19th century. Begin• Thur9d•y, FebnN!ry 17, Channel 50. --2. HUMANITIES 119 • 3 UNITS "ffom Chant to Chance," a cou,., coyertng th• music ol our Weetem cuttu,., Begin• Mondey, Febnlery 7, KOCE·TV (50), KTTV·TV (11), KCET·TV (21). 3. HUMANITIES 110 - 3 UNITS "~ '°' Personal Me•ntng," •n lntrodudlon to tb• era. painting, literature, muek:, •n::hltec:ture •nd d•nce." ..._,. Fffnl•ry 7, KOCE·TV (50), KABC-lV (7). KCET·lV (21). 4. ART 119 - 2 UNITS "~ SbtcNng Techn1quee;• for •nrott• mterffted In IMm6ng to dnnr or honing ulstlng MIMI•. Sequ .. to "Ftwhend Sbtot\lng." 8egt"9 Foebntery 7, KOCE·lV (ISO). 5. ANTHROPOLOGY 100 • 3 UNITS Study fnc:fn•tlng culture• of the world. Begin• Febfu•ry I, KOCE·lV (IO), KNXT (2), KCET·TV (21). 6. BUSINESS INFORMATION SYSTEMS 100 -3 UNITS "Making It Count," •n underat•ndlng of th• worklnp of the computer In tod•y'a bualnHa world. Begins Monday, Febnulry 7, KOCE·TV (ISO), 7. BUSINESS 101 - 2 UNITS "rt'• Ev..-ybody'a Bu11n...," a 30-t>art expl•n•Uon of how tflla country'• buetneH enterprtH ey.tem provld9• good• and HfVlce• legaffy •nd ethlc•llY In the Amerlcen economy. Begin• FebN•ry 8, KABC·TV (7). 8. BUSINESS 106 - 3 UNITS "law tor th• 70'1," • couree elucldetlng baalc understendlng of the l•w •tfectlng buelneu end cttlzena' righta. Begin• Februery 7, KNXT (2). 9. AGRICULTURE 118 • .2 UNITS ''The Home G•rdener," one of the moat popul•r lV coureeaot efl time; 30 lea10n1 on how to create end m•lnteln garden•, v.getllble plot•. Indoor pl•nta, •nd much more. Begin• Februery 8, KOCE·TV (50). 10. SPECIAL EDUCATION 821 -2 UNITS: "New Direction• In Co'"m&MltJ c.,.. .. la designed to aulet etate oommuntty cere f•clnUt• .ctmlnlatr•tOf'• •nd atatf AND p•r•ne. woridng with lndlvlduela h•vlng mentel •ndlW developmentlll clNblllU•• (mttt• only AA rtqUl,.mente) . ,, .. \ , bu· -------------------------------------------------------------~ CLIP AND MAIL \ .. ·~ '· ;.1 ..... • .. ;t, • OR BRING IN TODAY! Last REGISTRATION FORM First COASTLINE COMMUNITY COLLEGE TELIVl810N COURSE REGllTRATION FORM Middle Initial 2. Birthdate -------------------------------- 3. Birthplace ~----------------------------------------------------~ 4. High School Last Attended ________________________________________________________ ~ Name City 5. Resident addrna white attending Coaatllne Communl1y College Zip Number and Street Phone • Apt. No. State City SEND TO: DNn of Admllllona a Records Coaatllne Communltr College 10231 Slew Ave. Foun .. ln Valley, Callf. t270I Enroll Me In: 0 Applied Sketching Techniques Art 119 D From Chant to Chance Humanities 122 D Classic Theatre • The Humanities Jn Orama and Classic Theatre Preview Humanities 132 O Dlmenlfons In Culture Anthropology 100 O It's EV4trybody's Buslneas Business 101 D Uw for the 70'1 Business 106 0 Making It Count BIS 100 0 Search: the Quest for Per'°nel Meaning Humanftlea 110 0 The Home Gardener Agriculture 118 0 Nftt DlrectlOnl lft Com"""'1ty OU'8 $pedalEducadone21 • .. . . I I ' 7he transition called death is a shedding of. the RhYsical boay -similar to a butterfly shedding Its cocoon.' -Dr. Elisabeth Kubler-Ross Death : ·Is End • 1ng Another ·B.eginning? By BEA ANDERSON OflMO.lly~lleUleff When Dr. Elisabeth Kubler- Ross conducts a seminar on Death and Dying, the approach i51 humanistic ; the experience positive. The petite Swiss ·born psychiatrist advocates such things as: -Learning the symbolic language or the terminal patient. -Providing screaming rooms in b~itall for survivors and staffing with volunteers who have had a similar experience. -Taking the terminally ill home to die. -Hoepital chaplams and oUler professionals who counsel the dy ing to work at night "that's when the patient needs you '' Dr. Kubler-Ross is renowned for her researchtni and counsel- ing the dying. She has wntten several books on the subJect. She conducted an all-dav seminar at Cal Slate Long Beach. Her audience or about 700 was comprised mainly of pro ' fessionals. MINISTERING to the needs of ' the dying and loved ones is not morbid or depressing, the speaker said. It is sad, she admitted, and claimed, "Jt also is beautiful " An advocate of "death with dignity," Dr. Kubler.Ross said, "this doesn't necessarily mean transition Crom shock and denial to peace and acceptance '' . However, she assured, this often happens. "To die with dignity,'' she said, ··meanstodie in character." If a person is a fighter. that's the character he will feel com • fortable with when he dies. she said. If a patient 1s comfortable with the stage of dental, that·~ where he s hould stay She reminded her audience that "awareness is heightened m terminal pa,lients They become super hyperperceptive They know where they arP anct exactl} wherP Y<>'I are If yo~ fee• hke running away. they know at · TO BE EFFECTIVE m helping the terminally tll . the psychiatrist saad. "You must get to know yourself to be dread BEA ANDERSON, Editor Thursday February 17 19n 81 fully, painfully honest with yourself ''Know your gut·reaction and have an understanding or why you feel this way. It's the only way you can change. "IC you feel hopeless, helpless, sca red. frustrated, embar- rassed. or lost around terminal patients, it means you are afraid to die. ··Whal are tou personally a!raidof?" The audience offered such in- formation as: Guilt. Final judgment. ··why not start living today so you won't have to worry about it?" The unknown "The unk.flown" You get mar- ried don't you? ''What's the big hang-up"'. Dr Kubler-Ross said what the audience expressed were thoughts-up in the head like the exposed part of the iceberg. ·'It 1s in the repressed, un- r on H 1 ous area that people believe death happens to ever- yone else. We can't conceive of ourselves aging and dying of natural causes. "So the big hang up is the fear or a catastrophic force hitting you and you can do nothing about It. "FEAR OF DEATH 1s the fear of our potential destructiveness. too. .. In each or us, there 1s a Hitler and a Mother Theresa. You only will overcome the fear when you overcome the destructiveness," Dr. Kubler-Ross asserted. ·When you understand the . fear. you can understand the lan&uage of the Lerminally 111. "They know they are going to die, when they will die, when they need help and from whom . ·'The ones \VhO can lalk about it, don't need you. They're the ones who end up helping abd teaching ypu." Dr. Kubler-Ross said those who are dying and close sur- vivors talk in a symbolic la_nguage -either verbal or non- verbal. AN EXAMPLE of non-verbal, she said, is having children draw whatever they are reeling. They will draw their concept or death, either their own or a loved one <whoever Is terminal). Th' psychiatrist stressed that to communicate you should use the other person's languaee - ~ith this example, draw a pic- ture of your concept or death. She recommended talking about the subject only when the patient brings at up. ''Be tuned in and really listen to what he has to ·say. "I strongly believe the less you know about a human being the more you listen. ·'The more you know about that human. the more precon· ceived ideas you have." WIDLE WORKING with the terminally ill. Dr. Kubler-Rosa cautioned. "Never bring up the subject of dying. never push and don't proJect your needs on the patient.'' Sh~ advisOd those who would feel "at a lots in ~communicating wi\h the terminal patient to use the "universal languaee" -a hug, bold bands, kiss and/or cry Tears. she said, are like medica- tion wh.en given in correct doaagee. She believes chaplains and coun&elors should work night shifts. "I can assure you, you will achieve more in 10 minutes at 3 a.m. than to hours any other Ume. "It is in the middle of the night, when a patient awakens that he feels the quiet, darkness and aloneness. All his defenses are down. Thia is when he needs a minister." The psychiatrist said children die easier than adults because "their life is less complicated and they have less unfinished bu&iness. ·· IT IS THE PARENTS who need help in dealing with rage and anger, she said. "Screaming rooms should be available to them . It should be staffed by volunteers who have lost a child." Dr. Kubler-Ross said that sud- den deaths are much harder for survivors to <Seal with. "So often Uiey are sedated and sent home Sedation only postpones grief " Father-so n Effo rt } .,, _, .. ••• ' ~ .. • • The psychiatrist also sales i-t- search has shown a comm•· .. nominator in survivors w~ stiy in partial denial: "They hate not seen tbecorpse." t She believes special counjelli)a be given to survivors of thoie killed in war,• especially thoie where the body has not l>een sent home. -""· Dr. Kubler-Ross said the4dja lot of truth in the adage, "bl-.a with a malignancy." They ave time to prepare, she expl · For the terminal patien Kubler-Ross advocates th allowed to die at ho e familiar surroundings with loved ones nearby. 1 IF PHYSICIANS and idstttu- ti on s are averse, she ;aid, children should be allowed t>vis· it in the hospital. "The b~t disgrace in this country is al- lowing children under to visit." , Or. Kubler·Ross des~ many of her cases where p · did go home to die. Althou O'lld, each instance had love, w lb, dignity. ~ She was asked, "Whal ha~ if the physician and/or i._\\tu· tion is not cooperative?" Dr. Kubler-Ross said sh~ thousands or such cases, t "I don 't believe in spre lDi negativism. You can't be (See DEA TR, Page BZ>J ' .. f c Adventures .Booked By DENNIS Mc:LELLAN Ol IM O•llY Piiot Stall Jack CoufCer. a Corona del Mar -ba sed cinemato- gr apher·dire~tor-writer, years ' ago converted his garage into an office where he set up hls desk and darkroom. When his son Mike was 4 he was given a case of drawers to house the bugs and insects he loved to collect The case was put an the office- garaie When Mike was 7 a table was added to display more offils butterflies and other critters. By the time the boy was 14 Courrer raced the inevitable: A slen had appeared outside bis of· fice reading "Corona del Mar Museum of Natural History- Mike Couffer, director." "He just said forget it and moved out.'~...aays .Mike with a . laugh. "I had taken over the whole place." That he had. Large floor cases house his collection of rare shells from the Galapagos Islands and other foreign lands. COUGAR AND WOLF skins carpet the noor and there are dis- plays of ancient shark teeth dug up in Bakersfield and Arizona bats that had been caught with a butterfly net Most of has collecllons are made up of souvenirs gathered during trips Mike has made with his globe-trotting photographer Cather. • The 15-year-old Corona del Mar High School sophomore twice has collaborated wllh bis ~ather in wrltini books about ~!.elr adventures. .. The two slim volumes, aimed for a youna teenage audience, are ttUed "Galapagos summer: True .Adventures in Amazing Pacific Islanda" and "Afttcan Summer." (G.P. Putnam's Som). Spending vacations in such far· off places has become something of a summertime ritual for the Couffers ever since Mike was 3, and he went with his father on location in Canada. Mike since has spent vacaUons in Scotland, England Arizona and Carmel, where Couffer served as director or photo- graphy on the movie. "Jonathan Livingston Seagull." BUT IT IS the trips to Africa and the_Galapagos Islands that are the most-fascinating. Mike often gets requests to talk and show slides of the excurs'lons, the most recent being for the Friends of the Newport Beach Public Library. Mlk.,'s portion of the books evolved from the journals be keeps. Both father and son do the photography. Returninc home, they spend two or three rnontha putting lt all together. Thurlday. February 17. 1977 "' .s . DEAll~N 1:4.Np& : at ii wront wtth rbao who hita. kicu, or pWla bi.I wlf 't laa.lr in s sleep? Four t1mes in the put th"":,montbl, ve been aVlakened by a flit ta ~ fact and a lc:k in the back. Once he tried to choke mt. wt ' ht he was pulllni Ol)' balr, aboutln1. 1•wey did dothat7'' ... 1 When t qu Uon him lh~tollowln1 monilil1 ·seems reuntlul, as it l bavo no rfght to aay [31Qythmg seelo1 as how he does all tJWs In his ep. This rnorninf, after receivlna a nocturnal iCk eye, I decided to ask YOU about IL. • We have two ernpty bedrooms now that our [ ~bildren are aone. Should I aleep alone for m1 own satetr? Mr husband is strona as an ox and ' From 81 • ~ t • • • Death f • -i'ith them anymore than you can with a six-month : dnfant whobasn'tlearned towalk. ltjuslisn'ttheir : : time. .yet." :---The psycluatrisl said that dunna these years • of research, the tact that patients died with a i:\J>:ttceful smile has always piqued her curiosity. "AT THE MOMENT of death, there 1s something super marvelous that happens." Her analogy 1s "like a butterny shedding its cocoon." After several years of researching people : who have been brought back to life after being • 1 pronounced medically dead, Dr. Kubler-Ross : . said she knows death is merely the shedding of i1' the physical body and going to a higher state • . • Common denominators or patients at the ', momentofdeathinclude: · -Experience floating out of the body. -Aware of everything that is happening. • ,... F-0r instance, at an accident scene the person has : been able to describe in detail everything, in· ing license plate numbers, who were there soon. -Become a totally detached observer. -sense of peace Absence of fear, pain. ~'.p·anic. : -Feeling of physical wholeness. A loved one waitjng • Afterward, reluctant to talk about it. It is t. almost a sacred experience and they don't want. t t1> be laughed al J -Not afraid to die. ·'The most movmg thing to me is knowing that no one in the lime or trans1t1on, called death, will be alone." she said {Ann Landers Q"J ther•'• no time for exceaa ba11a1e like grandparents We are the lc.t aenerauon ,,_ strangers to our children and atranae.ra to THEIR children I have searched my soul for answen and can rind none I am available and eacer to see my family and they know it. But my phone doesn't ring. Sad, isn't it? -LONESOME DEAB LON£80ME: Yes. It la, ud I have no magic sollltloa. If you Uve la Ule same city, perba1>9 yoa dlald lDvU.e lbe &randchlldren to your place and teacb them to knit or crochet or bake cookies. Buy colorlnl books and palnta and crayons. lo other words. DO aomethlnt toaetber. Sometimes the mou•talo bu to 10 &o Mohammed. Charity . At Stake Opening rugbt at Los Alamitos Race Track will prove a winning event for the Lawyers Wives of Orange County. High stakes will be their philanthropies - scholarships for law students, Court Tours and a Juvenile Education Program. "Serving" an invita- tion of Judge William Murray is Mrs. Joyce Linch. who explains that Orange County judges will be honored. Tickets for no-host cocktails, dinner and evening of harness racing are $25 per couple or $15 per person. The ev.ent will be Satur- day , Feb. 26 . Reservations may be made by calling Mrs. David Freeman, 552-7170. RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY w...v.w .. ...... ltll HwlNr ••c&. C_, • .....__141..0JH LOY( Al flRSI SICHI cal~• v1ot0\lll.,.. Of'l'IS ...c>fll. • ,..,, ..... ,_... • $11""0 • v.-....- s.11 ''°". ,,... -~ ·~ 4C .... , .... 9f7-S400 '°6 I. c.....-A•• .. Or9p W ALLPAP_ER SALE UPTCJ"T/3 OFF VAN lUITT, BARONE, satEMAQffR THIBAtlf, WARNER, UOYD, BERGER AND MAHY OMRS 1HRU FEB. 28 LnoMn & Wo•• Woock. to 40% off ufft!l !ltilig~ MeMV-*C...... Hsbor&A.._ (Behind Ice~ Moll.tlrwW.IM 54 ... 3034 Pia .. Ouht•d"'9 SclYiags on fllfire l ?scorpio: Emotions Overrule Logic NIWSPRIMG FASHIONS MOW ARRIVIMG M F 0 =r:.~J:t~ • • • ~ewport, Inc. . fRIDAY, FEBRUARY May 20J · New Moon h1gblights desire, fulfill · ment. settling of dif- ferences, friendship, creative urge I.ha\ finds outlet ' 18 l 8ySYDNEYOMARR : ARIES <March 21 · ~pril 19) · Strive to get tyle, pohci~ across o lime for Laking back 6eat. Imprint beliefs mamlam faith in your f>wn ability v1 '\JOO f'inish project TAl'RUS •April 20 From 81 (It.MINI <May 21-June 20>: New Moon spotlights the way you relate to superiors, your ambi- tions. standing an com· munity Promotion due as you handle added --. - ... Adventure uanas He has merely to call them and they come running The Couffers' African book is about their summer trip made in ms.. They lived wilh friends on an Island 1ame preHI'vein Kenya. THE P\JRPOSE of the trip WU ao Couffer could ftlm \he TV series ••Born Free." But it was another chance for )(Jke, and friend Cbarlea Callahan, to explore tba animlla ~ COUD· tryaide. They even discovered U. fouill.led bones ot an 1,000-year..td natl-tt. Mike ts not certain about his ~ for the future. But he's thlnltlDI abom ~aphy and admits he'd like to be a writer Of course he's already got a bead start. A thtrd book called "Canyon Summer .. will be out next year ll's about their summer ta Aihona. e're hiding! If you can .find us we'd like to show ou somettiing really ecial -a lavish six· h Syngonlum in its · n wicker basket (youri -·-~··oice, light or dark) at 99. ~ ~you really love plants e think you'll be glad •rmiuU found us! responsibility. better relationship with one who shares your in- terests effortsandmoreforyour PISCES <Feb. 19- money. Refuse to be March 20» Lunar cycle bogged down with losing high -Judgment. intui- 1804 NEWPORT BLVD., COST A MESA (Correr of Harbor) CANCER 1June 21 - July 22 ): New Moon aspects highlight journeys, special readJng material. spiritual m sight.a. You shake ore lethargy you get pro- verbial second chance Social contacts increase SCORPIO <Oct. 23 Nov . 21 ) · Emotional proposition. lion are on target. 641! 1804 -.ft!•• ..... ,.. ~· iiJI• SAT t•M41JM ~ ......_ '""" ,... LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 You get involved . Nothing is halfway Superficial relal1onsh1p falls by wayside Mean ingCul association "heats up "Money, tax matters, cooperative financial ef- forts command attention. VIRGO <Aug 23-Sept 22 > Accent ability lb sway public opinion. Be analytical, especially in connection with lell?al matters. Do plenty of listening, observing. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): You locale missing, pbject, improve surroutf. Clings, eel major point across -and you develop responses could outweigh ---- I 011 ca I reactions . ,_,,,_....,. Member of opposite sex 1s very much in picture Key 1s to see clearly. to be romantic without bemg foolJsh. to be creative. open-minded without be· 1ng gullible. SAGITI'ARll'S <No' 22-Dec 21 I Practical is- sues dominate, including property improvement, laxes, ability to suc- cessfully close business transaction. Older in- dividual is willing to lend benefitof experience. CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 19): You can be . rid of burden. A relative • will aid in putting together puzz}e pieces. AQUA.RIUS <Jan. 20- Feb. 18): Accent on new ways of promoting as- sets, or getting mostfrom IS SWIMWEAR 1'77 E. Stewart. Cole, Hi-Tide. Daffy, Gatal1na IALIOAISLAMD 675-0770 Starts Friday Morning Feb 18th SUPER BARGAINS WOMEN'S AND ME~S SPORTSWEAR. ;j andUNGERIE REDUCED Jo~r SA.YE s~s $ NOW FAMOUS BRAND WALLPAPER SALE NOW THRU FEB. 27TH! SAVE 25°/o ON FABRIC-BACKED VINYL WALLCOVERINGS FROM WALL-TEX, BIRGE, VICOA, UNITED DESOTO AND OTHER FAMOUS MANUFACTURERS. HUNDREDS OF PATTERNS ON SALE! Here's the kind of savings you can really appreciate! Save 25% off our already low supermarket prices on hundreds • of exciting patterns. Fabric-back~ vinyl wallcoverin~s are easy to install, easy to malntalh and easy to remove. · They're scru~bable, strippable and child proof. Ideal for covering defective. wans. And best of ,111. they're on sale now at 25% off our regular low pricesfShop earty for beat seledlont MONE't .. CK' QUARAN'l&: Buy wit) confidence. Except for aaJ• ttems. all w~ IOld.by w~ &o go .... ret~ fol: ~ or complete refund. , . !100MER ~ Wa. F. Brown and Mtl Cassoa f0C ,~~ 8ell~V~ IN ~NCU..iATION? INSIDE .WOODY ALI.EH ~E EX.-MR6. AU.Ef.J USED"tt>iELL ME I WAS IMMAlURE At.JO AC~O L11<£ACMll..P. FUNKY WINKERIEAN mL1 r 8€1.1£-Ji:. 1N / E'AC>-i LIF~ Wf. COMe 6ACK A? A 8t11tfZ PE~ #.l>'IU'0"'/11 UNTIL Wf . ACHl~v'~ ~SZFU1loN \.......:~~~ F-OR ONE ell/TIRE DAI.{ I ~ICED WHAT 'I WOULD 5AVTO HER .,. by'°"' latlulc HOW TOWIN AT BASKETBALL c:.o.J CAN OFTE>-l TELL IF C.,IOU'vE GOT A 6CClO BASKET- BAl..L ~R BC.,> LOOKING HIM IN ~E E4~ . IF ~CAN LOOK MIM IN THE E<.>E ..• cur Him ! _JO CJ : " TAMI McNAMARA by Jeff Miller & Ill Hinds I ctN'T CARf tFrr IS GOINO 1b MAKE MY CARfGR, I CAN7 GO IN THERE!! TODAY'S CBDSSWDRD PUZZLE UNITED Feature Syndicate Wrd~oa... ~P.,111~ 5o•••·O ACROSS I Se••u•e~ 6CP11elOur h 10110 ..... , lOrtow" 1 fvrrr,. I 4 Plar,. )I I (Ion• f 1' Brol \h 01 g1a" 47Tocfol 1 r•n 44 ~1•4/ ~h 1 •. "11"U)t.n 1.' Whrm~•t' t• ly • • C• lo•IU commun1lf 411Al~O1>.rK\wn .n whf'f'I p.1r1 ~q N~ul•cal 1 6 R .,., 01 i;,fl, Hunv••v •.o Hr)ld llY 1'" 'IP°'''••• l•tle,,,,.n, ('tl'C tr0<)1 ~ 4 Pr.i y HIP 18 Co•p VII' '"'"' "'"~' ?O Prov11M • 1 We1t (,,., ~Y lem man,,.,., tlO'l•My ~8 To Pp1 41 l Ur IP.Clly Ouroc~r 59 H"' ra1tPd 412 8111\sh lirl' ( a1n pl&Cf' 1!0 • flu 23 Con1ro.,.1s11I 6 t Subtractu-.g sl.tge otay 6 ;i r "'5l•vr 25 Bus•nr~s 6J Commonot.tc" syndic.alts 21 Togs OOWN '°'one 2 .. Olds I l • IOt Ade no l J Ctlllitnges 19 Pa1en1S 71Golt111ua 30 Do a larmtng IOb ''°" 1 Grandoarentat 24 l•~e JI Moteun '"'°'able 37 AtQuitet 33Mltlea dec!llO,, 36 Holland product Jr Mlldoath 38Gr1f15 39Soan sh lord 40Chan.t~ 41 Gem made 2 Ptu10$00htr ;>')tu Vegn D•~•·te~ 1Soon 4 Reh91on 5 Survav 6 Absolull' 1 Novice 8 Soooer Ill.in 9 Be1ulorl I 0 lsprUSI'~ dt,QU51 1 I Percheron Culfency 76 'Judtlh cOmoofff 11 OV91come bV 111n 28 8uatte ,9 DtMlloOS JO Mette ronen '.11 Cornc>t11nt lnlOfmal J4 Mans "'ckn1mr 35 Nuiner1u1 sulfn 31 In slyle 38 Most distant 40 ·-cross 4 1 Buddy 43 W1d1n9 bo<da 44 Jalopy <15 Ptot con soncy 46 Winged '7 GrHk lelltr <&9Coll•o• •••m 51 Great l1nd !NIH 52 Men1.111 .. , 53Seabrrd 55 0.S'9fllll0n 58 H11em IOOrll 5 7 Ea11ted PEANUTS JUDGE PARKER SAM. TIUf, IS CARL4 DANE. MY HEW ~TARY' StlE.'S TAKJNG MARGARET'S Pl.ACE! TUMBLEWEEDS ' k'tll ~ S'ehoo I Klari'o., ~ E'Ot1bl\IA C. Ofr1c.fS~ • • CANT tit; 7EE. ?!? IT LOOKS AS 1UOUGl1 A T?ACCOON CLIMB~!? ON MYUFAPANP "1ErJ ! ) GORDO MOON MULLINS WHEICE ..:4 VI ..-.tKC VO(I..:>() WE ~-A .. L MJT eE. w~r.:- .----:® kA'fo, PL~.A5E c,AT You~ i:SCAR~ors so we CAN <5ET ON wm~iHE NEXT cou~s~ ·· J.W~f<Y! HeLA .. O ~ FUNNY FARM~ ~HAVE! A PICKUP FOR YOU .' by Gus Arriola by Ferd and Tom JohlttOn by Charles M. Schub THE GIRLS ~l.\AAT 11.145 'THE Al.ITHM'S PURPOSC IN WRITING •• 11115 STOil.ii ?" by Harold Le Doux by T °"' I. Ryan VOO'U.. FINC1 MY MfiH( WARS OF ACCLJMUl.Ail!V' ~IENCE ANV WISP0\1 ~FY ME 10 fl(f:WMMeNPA· ru:L.IAILE SHRINK! l·ll~,,.1... ... "The trouble with tweed~ i' you'rt alway\ the fir\t one picked to head another club fund·rii~ina drive bccau\c you look as 1C you'd bc good II ll •· DENNIS THE MENACE It PVJIUC NOTICE Farrah: Wily the FDM? ftls in UoUfltoOOd, l1w GardMr'f cut Uwir ocon ~of ctNbrUWa ondold /rWnda. rana lhweeU·Majon, the Sb-Million Doi.lat llan'a la\'Ori~ Anpl, Lt thrilled about ber face and flaure belo1 embla•oned on some three million p~n~ poaten. Sbe'a also Datt about betnf compared with earlier pinups Marilyn Monroe and 8.u, Gr1ble and dubbed "the face ot tbo "IOB." But it bua't wooe to Mr •tnd·awept head. "Yah, lt'a neat," abe con· cede• •• ,.. r don't'" myself as an1ooe tptelal . . . I don't real- ly UDderst.od all tbe1UH I'' ~oe BOB DOPE, lo talkina with us, reflected on Gerald Ford'a loai.ni the election. Naturally b&'s disappointed thet hlS friend wu not elected. He thouaht be did a aood job as President. As vaudeville eollllea used to say: "I wouJdn 't live that 1pot to a leopard." "I blew, liked and respected 'Glad You Asked That' tbttr decllcaUoa. their likes and dLIU , H · ~be thand wltb Truman. £babo1"f, obmoo. Kennedy ed t.bo others. Cootrary to popwar ~. If~ lnailtl LBJ bad a helluva sreat-.e~humor. ' eom.cuan 0.. Adami has an obnrvaUon. "You tnOw." he 1111. "It'• really 1tran.1• bow OW' 1rut D10t c~ comedlans (Uh B r Rackett eeky Greene, Al ad DOD RJcklea) Ila· ve made ll in a TV aertet. And l@lt areat TV com· lea "lll:Y haven't made '' ln Dlabt c.tut.. A llOtable exception la Mtltoa Berle, wbo topl b1mself to whatever medium be worb. I bo" IUctle1," Ad.ams adda. •'ftmlly blta wttb bll ia..- AD,Wa TV cbaract«. 'Sbarke7 .' ti.'1 lite Alan K.lng. Between tbem they've made more pilots than a couple of atewardelles. I a.llo look up· on Dean llll'tiD u one of our funniest l'll)'a. WbJ Mart.in? Because. In bil TV routs, Dean caaslatent- ly comes up wtth the moet unexpected, unusual and fUDDlest ad-libs." <Footnote: Aclama is 1oint In. for dlversJlicatioll ln bis career. He's peanlq a book~ 40 tender. philosophical poems set to mualc an titled ''Tunnels ... And wrttiq a screen.play wbleb he'll produce and direct.) Visit to a sick friend: Mupe Duul4t·Uid her husband would love to have us come over to tMlr house. "FOi' 10 mint.Itel a Clay." abeaald softly, 'itbe sig'hl ol an old friend cheers h1m up ... We found the Schncn in the family room racln1 the pool. He wu stttin1 in u eu1 cbair bis bead oo a pUlow sent to him by a fan. It wu oeedlepointed wttb "Stop the Music." and the tiUea of shows he'd starred in, Ute "Jumbo." Jimmy looked pale and wan after bis repeated strokes. Margie, speaking for both of them, told us all about their teenage adopted daughter. Cece, who's won many trophies for her horsemanship. We then oueANTa went through the famous man's aeemtn.e11 endless collection of awards -fiWn1 every surface but the cellings of their Beverly ll1l1s botlM. Badces. cups, photos, congressional Kudos and familiar props from bis act. All these -and more -may ooe day fill a permanent muieum honoring ooe of the show world's m06t beloved and uniquely talented nice people. We gave our old friend ao aff~ooate em brae. -then Margie led us to the door. "I'm sure," ab• whispered, ''tbal Jimmy tnew you we.re here-and will probably mention it a~ be reata a while and f= .. ~ lit.re nouriahment. Rest always revina 8nd J.lOUf' qunfloM to Hfl Gatdnl:r, "Glad You A_, '11Jat ." oare of tMa ~.P.O. 80% 1560, Coda llna na4. Marilfln ond Hu Ganbwr tDiU annoer. ae mar..,. t*>u. a1 tlwfl~ in thdr col1m1n, but tta. oolamw ol moil ,,.,._pmoaal r~atmpollibl.f. $100 a Ticket For Sinatra Gig AMSTERDAM, The Netherlanda (AP> - Ticket.a will cost between S40 and $160 for a Frank Sinatra concert at Amaterdam's Concertgebouw on Marcb7. Sinatra, 61, last sang in Amsterdam in June 1975 when be received enthusiastic reviews tn the Dutch press and a at.anding ovation from the public. He will be accompanied by bis own 50-man or- chestra. 1'be concert is expected to be a selJoul. as was tbecoeln 1975. PVBUC NO'ftCE PVBUCN011CE f'tc:nnous au11111ns llAMI STATaMllllT T ... followlr19 ---dOllll Ml· llHt•t: ESSEX SHOP OF WIUTMINSTElt, u• Wfftfftlf\Ster Mell.~.C.llfomle"'8> · M--. ""·· • C.ll!omle c:or-.. lion. 1101 Wetl<l"t Or .. SUit• in, Newport 8Mdl. CA."* Tiiis llUllntn 11 condlKted bot • cor· PIN'•tlOfl. MoMlllnc:. Oewklwer..._ VIOi ""9slc1Mt TMt tUl-f •• fll«t wftll .. c-tv '*' ot Or•• °"""" 900 , .... ,.,a. 1911, ..,_ Pvbll .... 0r-. ee..t °""' ~tot. ...... ,.,,,,,.. ... ~~tm • ~Pro Theaters. M Shows New Honor or Records ' AP Newsfeat1lJ'et During 1976, the Recording ln· duttry Association of America, wbtch cert1fles gold recordings ed so~ething new -th~ eerUflcation of platinum records. to become platinum, a record baa to be issued after Jan. l , 1976. A slnsle bas to have sold two mllJlon copies, an LP one million (op~s. To berorn' gold, a single re· eora bas to sell one mlllion cqples. LPJ issued berore Jan t, S81~ become eold by hawng sold $1 snllllon wholesale and LPs i•· llfed after that date are certifted g_Gld for the sale of S00,000 copies. '~ales of equivalent pre· r.ecorded tapes are added to LP lllft~· in the counting. Jo some hoes, re~ords are certified gold, later certified platinum; jn other cases, they go platinum im- medl,atelr. Puring 1976, the RIAA certified four platinum s ingles, 37 platinum LPs, 5.5 gold singles and 149 41old LPs. This compares with 191$, when 48 gold srngles and 125 told LPs were announced. . ) offlclall,y oo Mattb 12. However, to accammQdate an expected de- mand for tickets by student.a and. DOO•IUtJleribens, tbe Coeta Mesa tbeater t. addinl two addltiobal week• ol performance. betin· 11ing next Friday. Dan Sullivan, wb() •taeed "A Midsummer Night's Dream" at SCR last season and ''The Tam· inl ol the Shrew" ln 1974, is directing "Two Gentlemen" with Ronald Bouasom and Richard Doyle playing the title roles. OTHEa CAST members in· elude Anni Lopg, Elizabeth O'Toole, Martha McFarland. Morgan Mackay, John Elllnatoo. Don Tucbe, Jobn·David Keller and Art Koustik. Michael Devine is designing the set while Charles Tomlinsoa is the costumer. "Two GenUemen of Verona" will be staeed nightly except Monday at the Third Step Theater, 1827 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. Reservations are beine taken at 646-1363. Meanwhile, at Sebastian's West Dinner Playhouse, the feel· ing Is that "nothing succeeds like success." Last year ltfe San Clemente dinner theater brought "Fiddler on the Roof" back for another well·received staging, and now another reprise is in the works -"Norman, Is That You?" SEBASTIAN'S WESI' staged "Norman" two yean ago, and alnce thea the comedy baa cr"Opped up on the 1ta1es of Irvine, San Clemente, Laiuna Beacb ad other theater groups. ll '• allo tbe projected leadoff pt:Muctloo for tile Hunt1qtoa Btacb PlaybouM 1n lta new din· ner theater formal DQt summer. Three cast members fl'OJD the county premiere at Sebutian's -John Moran, Joe Fletcher and Blanche Jllicteboa -will be back ln the new pl"Oductlon. The other two roles have yet to be cast. "Norman" will open March 8 at the dinner playhouse. HO Avenida Pico, San Clemente, followlna tbe repeatedly ex- tended musical "The Sound of Music," which will wlnd up Marcb 8. Reaervatiom are being taken at.m.9850. * CAUJIOUD -Golden West Colleee la lookille for youngsters in tbe 7 to 12 aee bracket to play MunchJd.ns in the college's up- coming production of "Oz," a mini-musical adaptation of "The Wizard ol Oz" ..... auditions for children will be Saturday at 10: 30 a .m . in the Patio Theater, while college students and community performers may try out for ma- jor roles tonight at 7 o'cl~ in the Actors Playbox .... the show opens April 4 .... Readings for the popular old comedy "Arsenic and Old Lace" will be held Sunday and Monday at 1 p.m . by the San Clemente Community Theater. 202 Avenida Cabrillo .... director Peggy O'Hara Gibble will be seeking 11 men and three women for the show, which opens May 5 ... EW" BALBOA CINEMA 709 E 8A LBOA Bl VO ALBOA PENNINSUL '""' li715 36'IO -Alf .. ~-., .. __ , T0PH4T .....,.._ ~--.~ .... .. .. -nll•-_,,.,_ !Bil,18 An= • .....,..._. ............................. ....................... . ThYr..:iay, February 17, 1977 DAILY PILOT .. -Piaf Play P.EJoluia ,..__..~ .. MY5TBllS FllOM HYOHD unw IGI '1.06AH"S RUM"' ll"Gl A '"nVEHCMOllTHf V CHllil LIAOU.S" Ill "SI.UC -,AltTY '57" THE CITY SHOPPING CENTRE ORANGE •532 '721 ~ CITY CfMTH CINEMAS $A FAWY IMANCHUTUI E)( L l'l.O FRWY IC1TY 0111 fi><.I A •c•ssAMou V C•OSSIHG" !Ill "FA.llWEU. MY LOY.IL Y" '"YOYAGI Of nu DAMMED" "GI "SHAGGY D.A." "IN SEARCH OF NOAH'S ARK" (0) J4IOl1tilll SI ~'1111 1111 '-naouMD FOR GLORY11CPG -""'_ .. ,. ,,.,,~---..~1-Jt SO. COAST PLAZA l41lli•\lol SI ~'1111 ltll "t''"' "ROCKY" 7:JO A 9:45 SAT /SUH/~I :.JD-J:40 5:45-1:00-10: I I CINE MALAND 1m 5t • .,.., ....... u~"°' "" "'""' ''TltE SEYEM.PEl-tOO SOLUTION" fKl 1 ... UT/-,, __ l,_l'llt "'MA•ATHOH MAN" Ml SAT/MN/-..lb•~f:4t I II ......... ,._,_ 6.JSI I °KIMG KONG .. -""" (PG} IAT~--IL-4-~- '"LJ~AllDu .. 0 UT/Mlt'1--l:l .. 7'.Jt 11THE LAST TYCOON" IPGJ 11NICKELODEON11 IPGJ "NETWORK" IRJ "SHAMPOO .. CRJ "BOUND FOR GLORY" IPGJ ''LEMNY" IRJ 0 SIL VER STREJJ(" IPGI I CAT" IXI .,.. UYH Of AJn Tffl CAT"' IXI '141AYY nAMC .. m "THI .. FOltCB" 11) "RHlll AMD THI llAM"" "SlHMIB PAlrf' llJ '"SIX MACHIMF' "llVIMGI OF THI CHEULEADRS" II) En•lewood, N. J ., II o came t.O th1s eountry frOm &Ad IO years qo. DetermlnaUOn to contmue an early eareet u a atage and screen &'Ctreu waa Interrupted for matrimony and motherhood. n.ccnt· ly abt tried h r lmltatlons 1D a aul>- urban ~&ht club. A half Clozen act.on parUcU>ate with her. under Lee Racbman'a directtp1. aa various Piaf male famWan. NGIDe' wltl probably look back oo th,ls in·· terhade u hil fineat theeplc hour. ••• , M•al lt OICM ._..,.... ~,=.. Ml"'91 M&'f. °'99 1taae• c311153~1 ... ··m wr,Jlrirn 11111 Jf Ill -I " DAILYPILOT Tt\Uf'ldar. '!bn!!ry 11. 11n Many Share In Profits <C..1 ne1Hrom Pace .U) U\is7 buy oveneq LI worth more by the Umo they sell lt to tho router. "Our firm's position wu to buy more coHee ~n we needed," another Import exeeutlve said. 'You always aain a lot more ln an up market ~cause your Inventory appreciates in value. But JfOQ 1et killed when &.be market 1oa down.'' SPECULATORS Alt.hough not a dlrect part of the now ot most. coffee, the U.S. and London commodities markets became a source ot protlt for speculators attracted by the price advance. A futures contract u an aareement t.o buy or sell a certain amount of coffee at a fixed price at a l,\(er date. l! you buy coffee now and the price goes up. you make money. If it eoea down, you lose. AN EXAMPLE: A S2ECVIATOR agrees now t.o have 100 bags of corfee delivered in three months tpr '60 a bag. If the price were to rise to $80, bis pro- fit would be $20, less bis broker's fee. He could take delivery of the actual coffee, or just sell his contract back in the futures market before the delivery date, realiWlg the profit either w y. Speculators can also profit when prices go down. if they sell before the drop. ln this case, a speculator agreeing to deliver 100 bags of coffee at $60 a bag in three months would be able to buy the coffee he needs to make delivery for less than be will receive for it. HOW ACTIVE SPECUIATORS WERE in the CfOUee price advance, and what their profits were, aren't known. One analyst estimated that speculators not in the coffeel>usiness account for 25 percent of active futures contracts. Most rutures trading, however, is done by cof· fee merchants. They can protect Otemselves by buying futures equal to their planned purchases of attual coffee or by sefllng futures equal to their in· ventories. For example, if prices plunge, their inventory will decline in value. But if they sold rutures, they would realize a profit on the contract that would balance the loss on the actual coffee. Coffee comparues can also tqade speculatively, buying or selling more than needed to protect inven· tori es. RETAILERS Al first glance, many stores appear to be losing Q>.ooey as coffee pnces rise Before the July 1975, frost, they sold roas ted coffee at an average of six cents above the wholesale price. By December 1976, the retail price was 25 cents less than the wholesale price. BUT GROCERY STORE PRICES Jag several months behind wholesale prices. ln all but three months since the frost, the government's average of retail coffee prices has been higher than the w~olesale price of two months earlier. There are signs. however, that grocers -who often sell coffee at or below cost to attract customers into the store may be feeling the profit pinch. They were the first segment of the trade to urge customers to quit buying coffee. "TIIE MONEY YOU AND I ARE being asked to pay for cocree is outrageous," said Mart in 8osengarten, president of lhe Daitch Shopwell chain in an advertismg campaign. "My sincere re- commendahon to you is that you limit drinking cof- fee and find a substitute." Nert The pro8J)ects. State's Building Pace Rises Slowly Southern Cahfornia's homebuilding pace is ex· peeled to nse moderately m 1977, according to Security Paclfic Bank. climbing to some 130,000 new units for the year and marking a projected fl percent gain over 1976's healthy pace. Seeurity Pacific Bank's regional Southland hou~ing forecast indicated a 5 percent annual decrease in single-ramily housing construction. At the same Ume, the bank's projeetioo shows that mt>lliple dwelling units -duplexe3, triplexes and apartments are expected lo rise by 23 percent oYer 19'11's level Shirley A. Stephenson of the bal\k's research department says Southern Canfornla's aingle- f amlly housing should ·number approximately 70,000 new units in 1917, compared with 1976's 73,900 new units. In terms of multiple dwellings. her fort'cast projects 60,000 new units this year, up from 1978's 48,800 wiils The foreca!rt includes Oranae. Imperial, Inyo, Los Anaeles. Rlnral~. San Bernardino, San Diego, San 1.WJ Ob~po. Santa Barbara and Veo· tura counties. YOU di TAK ... AH.HOMUH•t • Your feel cnrry you ab-Out ~.000 miles In \he •v•ra1e nretime. That'!! lot of ... for i'IU('h l i'lmtlll part of your body. Tit protect your feet do no\ o•eTlook in rech on p.roducln1 bnd"les, cuts aDd cracks. Oil Leues Approved Ox~o International, Newport Beach oil com- pany. bas ~ awarded two offshore eo11cesaiona totaling approximately 15 million acres in the Canning and Bonaparte basins on the northwest shelf of Australia. The joint venture partners are Mid- Amertcan OU Company, Peyto Oils Lt4 .• Voyager Petroleums Ltd ., Australian OU " Gas Corp., Bridie Oil Ltd., Endeavour OU Com- ~any, N.L.. A.A.R. Ltd. and OffsboreOUN.L. .... ~. 'KILLER WATT' BULB CONVERTS LAMPS Alan Fried Ctalma It Cute Electricity UH In Half 'Killer Watt' ; Can Slay Bills LOS ANGELES CAP> The wmner in Johnson Industries' "name the bulb" contest was "Killer Watt". The rive-year-old lamp manufacturing com· pany has begun marketing lhe lighting fixture, which it claims can save money and energy by al- lowing consumers to convert their lamps from in· candescent bulbs t.o fluorescent lighting. "KIUER WATT," which looks something like a glowing doughnut, screws into a standard light socket. Johnson Industries President Alan Fried says fluorescent lighting uses only half the electricity or an equivalent amount of incandescent lighting. Utility company ollicials agree with the claim and a spokesman for Pacific Gas & Electric said lbe utility will probably Include the "Killer Watt" i~ a special catalogue of energy-saving devices dis· tributed to customers. In addition to using less etectncity, fluorescent bulbs last 10,000 to 12,000 hours, compared with the 750 t.o 1,000-hour hfe s pan of the incandescent bulbs, according to General Electnc regional engineer Paul Schmidt. THE ONLY PROBLEM WITH ''Killer Watt" is cost. The adapter and bulb retail for $14.99, com- pared with the usual SS-cent cost of most incandes· cent bulbs. A spokesman for Southern California Edison estimated that lighting accounts for about 10 per- cent or the average home utihty bill, meaning customers would save about S percent on their bills if incandescent lighting were to cut their light costs in hall. Despite the adva ntages of nuorescent lighting, few homes have it because it heretofore has re- quired special fixtures that would necessitate costly rewiring of a home, says Schmidt. "KILLER WATT" IS ESSENTIALLY "a way you can retrofit to gel nuorescents into existing 11om es." Schmidt said Fried"s company began national distribution of the "Killer Wall" last week He said he originally had expected SI million in sales this year but he has now r aised his prediction to $2 million. The devu:e has already won praise from energy officials. "GlVen my JOb, I feel I would be remiss if I didn't use at least some of these in my home, .. said Dane Hooper, coordinator of the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power's Energy Conservation Center To"7n Pays Every Adnlt dn Aide From AP Dispatches Every adult tn the northeastern low a farm community of Donnan is on the town payroll. But then DoMan, Iowa's smallest incorporated town, bas just 13 residents "We 're just the same as other people -but there are less of us," said Mayor Matt Porter, 60, who rarms 17Sacres "We're down to seven adults." Porter s aid. Five other adults are members of the Town CounciJ and the seventh, Ruth Holmes. is the $24-a· year town clerk • Walter CronJdte has signed a new contract with CBS to continue as anchorman or its nightly n~twork news program untU he retlrf's. the network said. Cronkite is 60 and normal retirement age at CBS is 65. Cronkite &aid the contract provides the aame schedule as bis previous one, glvtnf him 10 weeks off a year. Salary was not disclosed. .. CltONl(tT• Te.nnll atar Artllur Attbe will bobble to tbe altar Sunday with J•aa.u Marte Maa&oauamy, a free. lance photoarapher whom he met less than a year aso. Performine the wedding wll l be A•drew Youa1, a Conereeatiooalist mlnlst~r bet- ter known aa the U.S . am- bassador t.o the United Nations. Yount ta a rriend of the bride and sroom-to-be. Corns and celloui'les (O{m if the skin on your · feet la dry. Appty an anttsepOc loot balm at nltbt. Dry your fH\ careru111. e1peelally betwea tM toe. to avol.d a~t.·s feet. Have any• root troubles qulcltlJ taken care of. We carcy Jmbl)' Pt'QdUC"ta that a~ btlpruJ to foot care. Albe. 33, wbo bad surgery la.."t ~ for bunitJs ln hl.s left heel, ..ut move down the aisle lo .,____ ..... Ope f!llOU10UISAMY a cut. .. .ave-cuaa D • . M4atoaaam1 • II the 2$.yur.old dauehtU' Local biih 9Cbool and coll 1• ltodt!!I• aN be-ma leleded to compete for ~000 in atatewtde c h pri.z.et to be Jh'ell b)' Bank of America tb1s yetr ln lta aaaual achleMmtnt awarda and community coUege awards procrams. Ag~mrea ' ol Qi.leqo attbi.ted JohJ> Mout.ousaamy. .. ~State Rep. T ... .._.,...of Junction ctty cot an unusual autographed plcture from a consUMcm -Saaquatch, the lqendary ,.Bl(foot ... of the Pedllo Northwest. · "To Ted,'' tho in·----------. scnpUoo nact. '°Tb~!'u( PEOPLE J fore~. Love, Saa. 11ae photo camo with ..._ __ ....._ __ Sasquatch memorabUla from .. the men aod women OI North Am~can Wildlife n.euch." nlo O'OUP LI a deirin•bC>Ua• In "lb aateh foc-the world'• a.tlntlU~ Jll1$tm'J !' ICW6n )d ol1 red a reiolUUon lat .._ _, mah tt uDJa*M hi «>re1on to "1'.lr'aa, an.no, ar t'4 tlrnld '' ~ CalComp Vows Appea1 Dumissal of Suit Against IBM Cal.led 'Error: By Ule AaaotJa&ed Prea Call!omla Computer J>roducts Inc plans to appeal dismlnal o( ill S300 mlllloa federal a.ot.ltrust ault at1ai.mt IBM. Los Ancelet U.S. Dlltrict Court Judie Ray McNlcbola ruled Feb. 11 that Anabelm·beadquartered Calcomp had jailed to present 1ufficlent evidence for the case to so to tbe jury after a three· month trial. The judge said Calcomp showed IBM bad a monopoly share of tbe general-purpose computer market but failed to prove the power was unlawfully exercised. Calcomp manufactures com· puter equipment that can be used with IBM computers. The suit al- 1 e g e d that IBM oUered customers pricmg and service contract advantages which dis· criminated against Calcomp pro- ducts. Lester L . Kilpatrick, chairman of Calcomp, said Wednesday the firm 's board of directors and at- torneys "feel the judge was clearly in error • . _ After three months of trial we were stunned and shocked at the judee's dis· missal of the suit.'' IBM, meanwhile, has filed three counterclaims against Calcomp but McNlchols delayed hearing those cases until the main antitrust case and appeal have been decided. Gcu Rates Probed SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -An investigation into procedures needed to make more accurate rate adjustments to meet uncer- tainties in gas supply estimates ha1 been ordered by the state Public Utilities Commission (PUC>. Traditional rate makmg ap- proaches are difficult to apply under the existing gas supply situation and periodic adjust- ments might be needed indepen· dent ol general rate cases, the PUC said. "!EW YORI<: IAPI Con P~o )I' 1 J11 , l<l'>OU UI ~""~,~~~'i.!1,•I Crew Co I~ .. ,,. ' JtmWPt " Cr'CU\ Co n 11'-· J•m1bv 1onc1• So-tut Ille\ Cullr F, d 1 '<t '' • Jiffy "'" Ott1lrr\ A\Vl o~r D•nly M 10 t ,,. "' JO\IYn M ·~ c.ountf' 8.tn• .. , .... 1<:11v Sii ( TAKING J _ STOCK _ Named aa parties to the In· veat.l11tion were Pacific Ga.s & Electric, Southern Callforni~ Gas, San Dieso Gu and Electnc. Southwest Gas Corp. und .Callfomia-Paclfic Utilities. Se.l•ar Schedtded A two-part &eminar and in- dividual cooaulting workshop co sponsored by the S e lf- employment Advisory Fou.nda- Uon and the U.S. Small Business Administration will be conducted Saturday and March 19 at Orange Coast College, Costa Mesa. The program will be repeated at OCC May 4 and June 11 and a similar program on franchise ex pansion will be held there Apnl 30. Further information is availa ble from the foundation, in Sherman Oaks, (213 ) 981-0258. C'oal E.q»eri•ent EyN SACRAMENTO <AP) -The chaimran of the state Energy Commission says California 11hould test coal gaslfication in a pilot plant. Richard Maullin told the Senate Committee on Public Utillties, Transit and Energy that he proposes a joint rederal- state effort t.o get a combined cy cle plant operating. The project would be similar to the $100-mlllion solar power plant funded mos tly by the federal government that has been approved near Barstow. C'lufJ to Meet The Economic Club will meet at 4 p.m . Friday in the c\mmum- ty room of Laguna Federal Sav- Ov••r l'hf" Count4~r MASO LiStiltCJS in11 and Loan, Lall\IU ~,t' The protram wlll f~ P1r11l NaUonal City Bank ot ew York's monthly report, e "Sound ol the Economy... • Meeting cost ls $1.50 Reser.vi· lions aro rttquested and m17. be made by phontns 633.o'ft:i. • . ' C'onferencn C•lled SACRAMENTO <AP) -~by. Gen. Evelle Youncer says be Will conduct rour conferences.:_.. month aimed at ldentlfYln& lqal o bs tacl es to busineu tn California Younger. who plans lo seCk.tbe Republican nomination for~ ernor in 1.978, said that ii be laws that inhibit bushless growth, he will propose c«rec- tive leg1Slation by mid·Apr\4· OPEC' Et1n Nftl' Prke KUWAIT <AP) -A ~om­ prom1se 011 price formula WW be recommended shortly by Ute economic commission ol the Organization of Petroleum Ex- porting Countries <OPEC). 1P heal a nft among the 13 meqs~ of the cartel. according t.o· the newspaper As-Seyasseh. The commission, meelJ.n& in Vienna, wants to reduce th~ oU price spread by raising the 5 por• cent increases announced· by Saudi Arabia and the tJOittld Arab Emirates to 7 percent and lowering the two-stage lS percent boost agreed to by the 11 other members of OPEC lo 8 percent, !he newspaper said. C'oncordf! Rule StalU& W ASlllNGTON <AP) -Preei- dcnt Carter has told the lea4trs or France and Britain that tte:~D not overturn a Ford adm1nifl.t•· lion decision to allow superaoaic Concorde jets to land at 'New York's Kennedy aiport for. a 16-month trial period. , 1\ 1)' 1 Par•\ H l•'e I' t.;t"nctvn 1)\. 11.t'• ... .... P•ut .. y p ' , ... ~~" ll~'li~ I~ ·~'· l 'p• ond Doacn• 1&•' '7'. P~.-1 Mt u•. u•, 1f I 1'6 ' ,., P• Enltr a>~:~:.: ~l,.rlq 4;tr ,, ' A• 1\' • It. Pnr•OG 51ra,.b Cl 16 1 ,. N~ W VQHtt IAPI T .... IOll-1"9 I()( 33', 3'', g::: ?~" Pfl't"'' ew 1A•, w· r Su~• El l \'• \f\Qw \ thl'· O•ow,. I~ Count., ln\Uftt"tl' A. lnii:lu\t ''• 1 • M:•l•Sll 111 , .. ·~ .. PPtr\n H 14' .. ·~ TIM( DC \ ' 0 \IOC.. ttnd w•r'rdl"h th81 l\aWf" QOnf" ltO fhtl \CO<lil\ 0•1'1 fr\( ,. )()•, l<:•l••r I I I • Pf'-1rolll .. J' ...... 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Ott ,, com1 Sii • n '"'""' G 11~ ~ P•cGa R Ho"-,,.,, fOUI W1~ •••••• .,., ••••••••• 14ll.600 ,. P•ull"f P 1 -., 011 ••• comw ~• ,,.,, :m , tnllll W\11 4 4't l'~o ""' J MUTUAL FUNDS NYSE CO~QSI'l'E 1JRANSACTIONS I - 1/N DAllYPllOT By MILTON MOSKOWITZ The oat.ion·~ rive laraest brewers tiabtcned their lriP~ the beer market In 1918, accounlln& for 88 percent or~'"I lhipaieota They did so .:v~n thouah I.he Lnduatry's No 1 prod~j Anbeuser-Buscb of St. Louu. was bit early in the year.,,~, ~-day strike of Teamsters Th11t atrik\l reduced Anheulet· Busch's output by 17 percent. lf not for that, the mai'IM sb&re of the top live brewers wouJd probably have exceeCliCI 70 percent. and tbere'11 little question that, barring a similar mishap. they will reach that level o! concentraUon In im. FOa THE INEXORABLE TREND THAT HAS moving lo the beer industry for many years now -the~~ get blgger, the small disappear continues unabated. Anheuser-Busch, the brewer of Budweiser, Mlcbelob and Bu.sch Bavarian, shipped 29 mllbon barrels last yetr. Despite the drop from 35 million barrlH In 1975, that ..tu still good enough for nrst place as Milwaukee's Sch!ft.S Brewing managed only a 4 percent Increase to 24.1 million barrels. The industry's standout performer was once acam· Miller Brewing, Milwaukee subsidiary of cigarette·mlJt~J" Philip Monis (Marlboro. Benson & Hedges. Parliament. Merit>. In 1975, on the wings of a 42 percent sales increase;. Miller bumped Colorado's Adolph Coors from fourth place Last year tacking on a 43 percent increase lo the 42 percent of the pre vious year, Miller knocked Milwaukee's Pabst Brewing out of third place Money Tree •' THE f1NAL STANDINGS FOR THE YEAR show~ Miller with shipments or 18.4 million barrels. Pabst came In at 17 million barrels. a 9 percent gain over Its 1975 shiP., men ts but not enough to hold off surging Mill er A major factor m the Miller advance was the success of' its low-calorie beer, Lite, which had the benefit or some very good television commercials, starting burly athletes'.; Miller Lite. JUSt by itself. may have accounted for as mueft as 5.5 million barrels. which is more beer than Miller Brew'~ ing sold under all labels in 1972 So successful has Lite been that it's now attracting com- petition. Schlitz is in there with its Light brand Anheuser· Busch is brewing one called Natural Light COORS, WHOSE BEER STRIKES MANY people as ai hght brew. racked up a 14 percent sales gam last year to re·-. ach 13.6 bmillion barrels. It's the only one of the top rive brewers with a strictly regional distnbulion (mosUy lo the Westl. The ranks of the s mall independetrt brewers continue too thin. It seems that ir you can't bt'ew at least 6 ml.lb on barrels a year. you can't compete any more in Otis business. The Olympia brewery. In Washington state, has become' the oat.ton's sixth largest by acquinng Hamm's of Mm.1 nesota in 1975 and Lone Star Brewing of Texas ln 1976. And moving up right behind Olympia Is the La Crosse; Wis.- based G Hel1eman brewery. which this week '<l'as• scheduled to buy Washington's RaLnier brewery for' tr- m 1llion in cash. .- The destruction of the small locally owned brewery in America 1s mirrored in the Heileman brand lineup, which now includes Special Export, Old Style. Blatz, Mickey'~ Malt Liquor. Schmidt. Sterling, Drewry's. Kingbury, Pfe1f- fer. Wiedemann, Grain Belt and Raimer : Farm Aid Extended SACRAMENTO CAP) -Federal drought disaster relier has been expanded for ranchers m 37 California counties who need greener pas tu res . Officials said the ranchers m counties previously declared eligible for feed subsidies may now apply for up to $24 a head for round tnps to greener pastures. Gordon Larkin of the state Office of Emergenet Ser vices said the program was approved by the if.s, Department of Agriculture and the Agriculture Stabilizi· hon and Conservation Service Dow Surrenders Gains From Week NEW YORK (AP> -The stock market pulled back to- day, giving up some of the ground it gained in the first half of the week. The Dow Jones average or JO indu8trial stocks lost 4,57, Points to943.73. Losers outnumbered gainers by a 2-1 margm am~ New York Stock Exchan~e·Ustcd issues. Trading was quiet. WJaat Stork• Did NEW YORI( I.AP! tfr# YDltK (AP). s.tn, 4 p.m Ill'•~ ltllll lltt <"-ol ... tlfl -I «II,. .,,_,KM !lcu Ell<"-• ,,_, t.acll'!ritloMllY ., ,,_. ~ ,1 Mlt• 1.,.. , • IJI; 10 ,. . • Cllftlll A ••• ,. , • '7 1tll\ + • 't v.n.1'""' . • • ' • 71. 1T\-lo\ '"" ..__....... . . ...ooo • .,. Celllpec c:....... . 16.909 t\'lo+ ,,. ~11"1\ ••• " JO,~ SI t " SNMOI A • .,. • U,• 'S'l--"• r.11~~ <:.ortt • , .. JUot lj5-tz .-, Oii.. . • . • . Jl""' , • .. 111 P••· ••• '"' ~ 1111 &VA:\ ANftNOVA~ COV ~A POLITICS '"'""' DAILY PILOT was just testin' to see if the jello is done enough to eot." Got a problem? Then write to Pat Dunn. Pat will CUl red tape. getting the answers and action you need to solve inequities in government and busi- ness. Mail your questwns to Pat Dunn At Your Service. Orange Coast Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 9di26. I nclude your telephone number . T he column appears 1daily except Saturdays. iBeodadla Eoq to l..,..dl• DEAR PAT: Please help me get in touch with Che Migraine Anonymous group. I'm having in- 4:reasing trouble. J.S., Costa Mesa There t. no MlgralDe Anoaymou 1roap. as far .1'• AYS and tbe National Migraine Foaadatlon ;tnow1. Carl R. Marcbeae, praldeat of tbe Soutbero allfornla Chapter of NaUoaal Mlp~ine Fouada- 1ton, bas beea contacted regarding your problem. '8be will communicate with yoa and provide .c:ouseUng or medkal refe~ &o pbyalciau ac· Uve ill mlgralneileadacbe treat.meat. Otber readers may coatact llra. Marchese by ~cmlllg <n4) m.ms, or by wrttln1 to her at 557 s. ?lJriibtwood St .• Orange, CA ma. Tills group bas a •JDedlelllly·bued blformatloa servke for tbe ml· fTalne beadaclle patient and it will provide leC)timate contacts ror treatment. Mrs. Marchese .. Id A YS tbat sbe bas received more tban Z,500 coa· tacts tor help In the three years she has been af- fl1Jated wttb NMF In Orange County. AU inquiries have bef!ll auwered, and that's some record. Non-deHvft9in No Pk-lei~ DEAR PAT: I ordered a $19.50 picnic basket for my son in New York City last May from Vermont Casual House. He's never received the basket. My check was cashed and my Jetter of inquiry bas not been answered. A. W .• Huntington Beach Dick WalU, o,,ner of Vermont Cuaal House, knew immediately aboat Ulla problem, even before A VS bad a clauce to teU blm your· soa'a address. Tile pk:aic buket, attonli.Dg to WaiU, was returned moatlls ago because of "lasa.fficlent addreas." He waa&ed to coatact yoa, but did not ban a record of yoar add:resa, nor Jaad Ile received YOGI' letter. A YS gan blm your addrela. and be wUJ be iD toucb with you. A straage quirk to this problem Is that yOG sald your' Mil bad aenr received a presmt aent to him by allGUaer party at lite same addresa yoo provided. A YS n.ggests tbat yoa aak bim to give Ills area post office a eaU and btqlllre aboat these two correcUy addreaed IMlt lllldellvere4 pa.reeb. Betlree Seeldllg /ff ere frat• DEAR PAT· I would like to join the Amen can A.socaation of Retired Persons, but 1 feel uncertam about whether or not aome of the benefits I've heard about actually ex~t. Can you provide me with som e auth~tic facts about tbls group" M.H , Costa Mesa The fada yoa retuffted are In Ute mall to you. You aJIO may be l•terated la atteDdla& the Newpon lleacll cbp&er A.A&P •eeti.81. It t. lteld at lt009 • Ute foa~ n.r9Clay el eaell ••UI at Veter&1111 •emertal Hall, 515 W. lltlt St., Costa •esa. U ,_ ,mer &o ltawe penoaal comae& by flilloae wit.It u AA&P a ember, a pbcllle aumber llu beell prevlded .. yw. Pretzel Eaters Warned by FDA 'WASHINGTON (AP) -The Food and Drug Ad· wiuistra.Uon warns that ae.-eral variet.les ol pretzels 0\\ the market corrtalo lye cryatals which, if eaten, <!ould a.eriouaty bum the mouth and throat. Tbe wamin1 applies to 5',000 cues of pretzels inade by Pepperid1e ~arm Inc., and madtet- ed under six brapd ,amea. Though 37,000 ~asea are under the manufacturer's control. Jl>oUl 19,000 cases re· 11\ain ill commercial d~ t.ributlon channels, th• F.DA said Wednesday. 1 • .PEPPDIDGE Farm tecalled the products fter two person. in D e troit recei ved chemical burns lo their mouths and tongues this month, the FDA said. Neitber person wa s holpitall&ed and both re· covered fully. The pretzels were made at Pepperidfe Farm's New Holland, Pa., plant, which bu at.nee suspended produc- tion. They were market· ed natioowide under the Peppe.'idae Farm brand and that of Billy'• Ptettell. IN ADDITION, the pretaela are marketed rerionaUy under the Snyder•• of Hanover Guest brand lo Pen· nsytvania; c.tns'• brand ln Ohio atMI Kh!hJau: Croutbamel'a Prlse in Jhrylaria, hlristOn, D.C .. Pennaylvanla, D lawaii, New Jersey, New Yon. Coonedieul ml4 M cbUHUa. aDCl tbe DUtCh Valley brarid tn PeboaJl'#anta aod -~ . ... . -.. good old growtll pow• Vigcxo All PUll)Ole Fertltlz« la th• an•"' for ltetttr ~~1...n.. ..... . •• ~11$ ""' ~. 20 lb. bllg. ~. 4.11 2·~ . long lallng enecav .... Glldd•11 Spred Latex Enamel 11 ld .. I lot ar ... ttlat get hard wear. New lmprOYed formula for .uy ap- p&etlon. Reg. ~.98 911 , ... 4.., eat "-'· ....... 1.11 good 111111 bf .... pound Smooth box. finishing, galVanlzed box Of common nalla. Slz• .c. e. a. 100 and 18. Get plenty IO you'll tle'+'9 them when you went them. Reg. 19• 19•, ..... tamed for tM lllril 111111 11111111 t , t} it's creamy consistency ~ makes painting a breeze. Glldden Spred Sa1ln Latex Wall Paint Is such an old smoothy that It practlcally goes on by Itself. ft dries In about a half an hour and leaves a tough and washable finish. Clean up hands and tools with soap and water. Reg. 9.99 -88 their role 11 to paint things better 9 Inch roller cover1 lore use with Juat about any kind or paint. Get 1he ona )'Ou nMd 11ow at our apecfal price. 79~ch bolls the llgbt to flood Ille ana A cut metal, pr•wlred outdoor fix· ture to hold llghts for MQ.lrtty or ac-e.nu, Socicet IWIWll Where you want the light. 311 I battMy WIJ to llah ll'llh gal. gloss It over for something pretty Glidden Spred Glo .. All Purpose Enamel dries to -. brllllant hard t1nl1h. Sate 10 use because It's lead tree. Reg. 14.59 10~'- 1 good combination for nuts and bolls Oxwall hu put It •II together In an 11 pc. open end/box wrench H t f rac- tion or metric 1lzn; with carrying pouch. Reg. 12.99 711 PLASTIC BAG hold• truh bag and haull n 1w1r Hold• truh beg open Ilk• • "•-" oen. When lt'I tut~ tie It uc: and It'• eulty h•uled ever Y04I w1nt It. Reg, 15.96. Reg. 111 911 ., i ' . ·. DangerouS Bil) LOS ANGELES <AP) - Vet.a' Pan mD. an alwQS du•enu ~r. eould. be more ~eroua than uaiial tn the Loe Anleles Open lolf tourna-ment. _ .. I'm lettina clOle," Hid Hlll. a eoatro• ... lal, out.poken mu who bu woo 13 titles, more than $1 millloo and thousand• of ftieDda and fam in bis 18 yean ol tour activity. ··u I can Juat 1et my swing b~ek lo tbe riaht plane, I'll be okay. And I'm •etUna close. U I can just work a couple of little th p oat in the awiq, and keep Gil tuttl.nC like I've been putttna the la.st couple ot weea, I abould hue It. Usually, the puttinc. is my trouble, but I've been putting better than I bne in yean, .. , feel lite I'm 1ettin1 cloee to setttni it ill tosether, .. tbe de- dicated perf ectlooiat aald before •tartiJlS out today tn the fint round ol the chase for a SC0,000 first priae. lie paused and 1mllecl. "U I aet lt, fine. There's only one tblng for sure. If YoU 1et it. it.'1 goiogto ao away. You ~annot keep it. 1\19 ~ *1 lt tw1cO Ill tbe lut30 an. 'tMIOyeus I've been playfn} eolf. Oac as fot ab montm, once•• lor ~t montha. '°Tbefl IOmet!ilnC happens. 11 can be Just th1a .1nucb.'' be aatd. boldlng ~thumb and forel.incer ab eidllb Of an mcb apart. ·'The averqe fan can't see it. Even aprO can'toeit. It doesn't even show on film. But you're juat that llt&le bU olf. bitttua it juat that lltde blt different. And lt'aaone. • ''So then you atart working SailOrS Gain Playoffs . . By Silencing Viking1s ByGLENN WHITE Of .. o.lly f'li.t Sl .. I Newport Harbor High's from raga-to-riches basketball team exploited scoring and rebounding balance to gun down 1976 Sunset League champion Marina of Huntington Beach, 67·56, 'Wed· nesday night before 744 fans in the winner's gym. Thus first-year coach Jerry DeBusk accomplis hes a miracle· like turnaround. His Sailors were suffering through a 4·7 record at the season's outse\. But they've since gotten it together, winning six of their last seven basketball encounters and have clinched no worse than a tie for second place in the loop. That assures them of a berth in the upcoming CIF playoffs -on· ly the second time a Newport five has made the playoffs in the last eight years. One game remains on the regular season menu, a date at Huntington Beach High Friday night. Newport Harbor was in com· mand from the game's outset Wednesday, using a steady 50 percent fielct goal shooting touch to go with strong board play. The Sailors zipped to a 6-1 lead and wereabletoholdthated&eun· til the decisive third quarter when Marina ran into one of its patented lapses. Marina had gone 5:11 at one stretch in the second quarter without picking up a field goal. But free throws kept the Vikes close. However, they bit another dry spell to start the last half, miss- ing their first 10 shots and going 5: 01 with only one point produced in their behalf during that span. Meanwhile, Newport was hit· ting eight of its first 10 shots of LA Net Tourney Evert Shatters Foe; Casals ToPs Abstin LOS ANGELES CAP) -Chris Evert, with onJy a few lapses when her opponent zinged some ace serves in toward the end of the match, breezed to a 6-2, 6·3 wln over Julie Anthony in the Shot at :01 Knocks Off Marquette MILWAUKEE -Dennis Boyd threw in a 20-foot jump shot with one second left Wednesday night l<l..Cive 15th-ranked Detroit a 64·63 college basketball upset victory over ninth-ranked Mar- quette. Boyd, who finished with 14 pointa, had scored with two minutes remalnmg to pull tbe Titans. 22·1, within 63·62. Mar· quette then went into a delay pat· tern. But Boyd stole the ball from the Warrion' Bo Ellis with 36 secoods left to aet up the winning •hot. ' Dettt Atll'all<-~• SAN JOSE, Catir. -Phil Dent and Steve Docherty led the WQ into tbe quarter-final round ol the $50,000 Grand Pnx tennis tournament Wednesday with aecond round victones. Dent. No. 3 s eed and a member of the New York Sets in World Team Tennis beat Geoff Masters 7·5. 4·6, 6·3. Docherty outlas ted Tom Gorman 3-6, M , 6-2. Second·seeded Roecoe Tanner beal Jim Delaney 7-5, 4-6, 6-4 in a MOODd round match. second round of a pro women's t e nnis tourney We dnesday night. Eve rt, No. 1 seed in the $100,000 women's professional tennis tournament at the Los Angeles Sports Arena and No. 1 in the world, dispatched her second straight victim m JUSt over one hour. In one o f the fea ture d matches of the evening, 14·year· old Tracy Austin of Rolling Hills battled gamely but lost a 6-4, 6-4 match to Rosie Casals E vert looked a lmost non- chalant as she ran the doctoral candidate from Santa Monica all over the court. In the seventh game of the second set, with Evert leading, 4·2, Anthony came to life. She aced Evert twice and then. making fun of her suc· cess, wound up like Casey at the Bat before delivering another first serve. This one was alao out of Evert's reach, but it mwed the sideline by less than an inclf. Still inspired by her momen· tum, Anthooy salted the game away with a sizzling halfcourt volley to Evert's backhand. It was the last ~ame she was to win in the matc4- Earlier in the day 'terry Holladay', who had to play her way into the tournament by winning a preliminary match, ups et eighth s e eded Betty Stove. 4·6. 6-4, 6-4. . * * * 11ew1a di,,,. 1..0t Angttet ~·· P1'11 '9Ml1 1ovrne.-WedrlellMiy •I Ille l.M AllQllet Sllortt ........ , SKCWtek-t tnolff -Jo""4 ~. llNt Keltly Har1ff, 1-S. ... ,. T•"'V HollMay llNI .. ,,., the third quarter as Lyn Geronim.i, Steve Timmons, Rolfe Schwalbe and Ron Craia shared tbe Offense in that outbQl'kt. It was that kind of balutced at· tack that kept Newport on top as five Sailors wound up scoring in double figures, including reserve Mark Bradbume, who was in- spirational ln his role. Rebounding chores were also well divided among the winners as Timmons hauled down 14, Schwalbe bad eight, Galey seven and Geronimi six. In all, Newport outboarded Marina, 41·29. Dave Gibbs paced the Vikings with 11 rebounds while Tony Warren was Marina's lone of- fensive spark, collecting a game high 24 points. Newport was guilty of only 11 turnovers while Marina had 13. And Newport hit 50 percent from the field while Marina suf- fered through a 36 percent ac- curacy performance. M¥1M U41 •• It ... Ill 8ru<t l I I 1 1<0.1i.r 0 1 2 I loHn o J l J W•rrtn 10 • 3 1• H•IOl!n,..lcll 1 0 S • LeOI• 0 1 0 l Wolle 1 O 1 • Clbl>l l J I 1 1'1 l N..,..ortl4¥- Bro•n Cr119 Scll•alDe Geronlml caiev Tlmtnon\ Braot>urM .. II pf tp I 0 0 2 l 1 I 5 s 0 J 10 • 3 • 11 & 1 , 13 l 10 2 lb s 0 2 10 Croo~ l O O • To111s 21 u 16 54 Total• :!6 1S 14 67 S<•••vOU.r1tn MlrlM NtWPO!'I HerllOf' 11 ts ' ,._ 16 17 u ~I 0 And ~ dOn't bo'llt wben lt'I ~·to to. or Ult•• ever c:oln.I to come badr. But 1 reel Ute rm 1etttns clcee ••• H• re11t11ot lt alJ together lQ 1969. Hill woo tbHe tou.mamenb tllat year, WU second OD the moaey.wtnnln.I list and woo tbe covetecl VatdQD Trophy for tbe lowest atroke .average oo the tour. But it's been a aomttlm• tbbla aince then. Bruins Battle Oi-e.gon State OD~Tonight UCLA coach Gene Bartow is confident bis Bruins are going to be ready for upcoming games a1ainat Oregon and Oreeon State, but he says be wishes tbe contests ~ being played in Los Angeles. .. I think we're going to play twq very good basketball 1amea,", said Bartow, whose team faces Oregon State in Corvallis tonigb t . •'But sometimes you can play y0ur best on the road and it still isn't good enough." The game will be televised on Channel 5 at 8. Bartow hopes the Bruins can escape from the Northwest -~ they play Oregon Saturday in Eugene -with their Pacific-8 lead intact. The third-ranked Bruins have a 7-2 Pac-8 record after being Up· set 78-73 by Washington in Seattle last Saturday. That mark giv~ UCLA a one.game edge on Oregon State, Oregon'a nd Washinif.on. Tonight's only other Pac-8 game finds Southern California at Oregon. Friday night, Washington is at Cal and Washington State is at Stanford. In the Pacific Coast Athletic Association tonight, Fresno Slate is at Fullerton, Long Beach State is at San Diego State and San Jose Stale is at UC Santa Barbara. BRAD COOPER OF E~ ~NCIA (34)) REB~UNOS. ·Gauchos ·WID; OCC Oobbered . ..... lelAnes Slova, ......... I>·•· Vlrol"ll WIHM ll9et Kal!t ut~m. w ...... Chrl1 Ewr1 be1t Juli. AllttlOnt ... 2 .... 1. Ao.laC..flbHI Tr.CYAUllln,~ ... 4. o.tty ..._ .......... OM Dr .. ESTANCIA'S RAY ORGILL ON THE WAY FOR A BASKET. JIM PRICE (26) WATCHES. TORONTO -Roes Case con-quered a long-standing jinx WedneldaJ night when be beat Cliff Drysdale, S-3, 6·7, 7-6, in a 2~·bour flrat round singles match at a $100,000 World Championship Tennis tourna· menL Case, 25, bad not beaten Drysdale in five previous matches, including last week in the WCI' tournament in Mexico a~. ta otber ftnt round matebes, top 111 lled Jinim1 Coonol'I d• f..t.ed Onny Panm. f.1, W and fOllrtb·seeded Tony Rocbe doWned Jobo Alexander. s.e. 'I M. • • Edison· Scuttl"8 OileF:S I • • . ·' 1l i1 ) ' . - DeMaggio Quits · At San ~lenlent6 8' a Dally PllcK WrKer Su Clemente Wgb'a Stan DeMauto hu re- sl1ned his position as buketball coach eUec- live at the end of thla eeuoa. DeMaggio, 42, is in bis fourth year at the belan of the Tritons. Left on the regular season fare Is Friday night's col- lis lon wlth visiting Corona del Mar the South Coast League championship decider. Playoffs competition continues for the Tri tons. their fourth straight en- trY in the eliminations o.nder DeMagg:io. "My decision waa made prior to the start of t this year," says DeMag-~~~~;j~~~tc!;;lJ;,1~~ fio. "The reasons are °"'"' l'ltol ""'"" w lM h"'• that I'd like to pursue other areu in education, to spend more time with the family and because of the trend towards the emphasis o n girls athletics. ST AN OeMAGGIO Outta at SC too/' says DeMa1gio. "The lut part of our season. with the girls beginning, it's hke a z.oo in the gym. There's a place for girls athletics. but what is happening is reverse discrimination." DtMaiaio'e four.year •tint at Saa Clemente eaw a reversal iD form for the Trit.ona. Hi.I four-year record eoinl ipto Friday's championship tilt iA 68 wln1, 11 &olaea. Prior to bls duty, San Clemente's nine-year h latory ln- cl uded 88 wins, 128 · losses, includin& seven losine sea.sons. Prlor to San Clemente, DeMaaJio coached for five years at Lawndale High School, two years as Downey High 's varsi- ty coach where he com- piled a 25-25 record, then five years as an auistant at San Clemente before a year at Dana Hills High • as athletic director. · No replacement bas been selected . Dunhmn, Hettinga Pace SC, 63-55 By ROGER CARLSON a. h Delly l'llet St•ll LAGUNA'S TERRY HAUGWT (11 ) DRIBBLES BETWEEN STEVE DeCASAS (LEFT) AND MIKE BRAWLEY. "Everyone here at San Clemente has been cooperative, it's just that there ls such a problem with the use of the gym." The Tritons, in their drive toward the South Coast League crown, • have had to practice at Saddleback College three times this season. Tim Dunham and Ted Hettinga ignited San Clemente High'& Tritons in a seven-minute span beginning mid way through the third period W ednesay nigbt as SC rolled to a 63-55 South Coast League basketball triumph at El Toro. dtd his thing. The 6-6 ace scor ed. from six feet, Dunham connected on a free throw, then Het- tinga picked up a clutch rebound (one of 15 for the evening), completed a three-point play with a 10-footer and free throw, then got the next re- bound. rirates, Rustlers .. rnmnph Golden West and Orange Coast colleges, two of the better junior ~liege baseball teams in the state, rolled to vic- tortes Wednesday. GWC's Rus tlers, behind home runs by Ken Munger and Mike Selwood, toppled visiting Santa Ana. 4-1. while OCC 's Pirates, behind Daryl Sconiers' six rbi, belted invading El Camino, 22·4. Sconiers blistered a bases-loaded triple in the sevenµt inning and hit a '450-foot three-bagger to s traight-away center with two Pirates on base in the eighth OCC scored eight times in the seventh and six times in the eighth in running its record to 4· l. Ten walks aided the Pirates' cause G leM Robertson drove in four runs for the Bucs with two smgles and a triple and Bobby Smith had three rbi with a double and a single. At Golden West, the Rustlers' Munger hit a two-run homer to Jen In the second inning and ~lwood blasted a shot over the 380-foot marker in the surth. · Both area JCs re- ceived good pitching. P'reshman Ron Cooper went I.he dmance In to.s- ing a four·hitter for OCC while Peter White scat- tered seven bits 1n p1tclung eight and one- th1rd frames for Golden West ll-1 > s.-taA,.. Ill N•\t.._1i ff l'"'""'' lh t4vftt dh \fl(ii.ft'f ,, A•m,, .. , < c .. 1'110 lb k•u11, rt 8•rrlftot.,.., ID B•<llm..,,OI> 6u•-•. pf\ M<C•l1hy • Wulff ph·U Pifer. p AH\.p Total\ •• ' • I • 0 0 0 ' 0 0 • 0 l 0 I 0 0 0 ' 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 l/ I ~-..110 MoM\ <I ~IWOOd,lll H-11 C O.v011..-.., Mtmflll pr ICW.Ollb .... ._,,, M""~' '' Bfuntaua. rf VetOMl""l, 2't Wllil•. p Co\ltll ... p Tot•I\ •• • 1 0 I • I • 0 0 0 ' ' ) 0 1 ' ) 0 t 0 0 0 0 • ,. . St-." '"""" .. ,.. 0 II l 0 0 0 • 0 ' 0 f I) I I I ' 0 0 D " • 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 I ... 0 ' 0 0 0 I 0 , 0 0 0 0 r II • S.nl•A... OilO OGll 001-1 1 J ...... -· .,, 011 00.-4 • • " or.p Cant (lfl ... . . ... $fflllft.rf • J 1 J GI R•rtlGll.M J 4 ) • kpl\1-lb ~ J J • Wool•rd. rl ' I I 1 flPMUillo, Jb I 0 0 "rt<ich, Clll I 2 1 I JIJldl."' I I t t /i,Affff'O,c. : ; : • ' ~::~. ) t I : w;;t._,,., ' 0 0 • -'•·" 0 • 0 • '-"'·. 0 0 0 • '°''" • 22 w 1• k_...,..,... r II • 10I ODO 000-4 4 I Lag11na Stops ·MV, For the 25th time in 25 games, 6-6 Ben Bacon scored in double figures Wednesday night, pro- pelling t.be Laguna Beach Higb Artists to a 73-59 South Coast Sea Kings Roll, 7 3-56; Black Hurt By HOWARD L. HANDY Ol UW Dally l'llot S\.tfl Corona del Mar High's Sea Kin gs breezed to a 73-56 victory over Dana Hill& Wednesday night in South Coast League basketball action but the win could prove costly for the Sea Kings. Alex Biack, the husky center for CdM. went higb for a rebound with 1:49 to play in the fourth quarier and came down over the top or a smaller player. He landed on his back and right wrist with a loud thud. Black's wrist was twisted in the fall but no swelling was ap- parent immediately following the game. ,.- Such an injury '<:ould hamper CdM's chances in Friday night's showdown battle for the league championship at San Clemente. The Sea Klngs and Tritons are both 12-1 in league play and Friday's finale will detertnine the champion. Aaainst the Dolphins Wednes- day night, CdM hlt its first five shots from the floor and never looked back. The Sea Kings led at halftime by 14 and maintained a bll advantage throughout the 1econd half. The game was played in semi- darkness, especially at one end of the court where eight light banks were out. The tempo of the Dana Hills game wu alowed when guard and captain Steve Crapo found himself in early foul trouble, plclrtnc up three personals in the first three minutes ot play. Dana Brown bad a hot shooting third quarter for .J.lte Dolphins, canning f-of-7 attempts from die noor. He cloaed wtth 18 polnta, high for the Dolphins. Black was high for the same with 20 while guard Paul Aldn bad18andJackTu:&17. ' Corona del Mar hit 54.8 = from the 0001' while the Do canned 41.1 ~cenL DaM Hlllf !161 <nlc:.tlioll H•I" 11-9,,,..n C•41110 Slv1tln Ck>ll .. Alldrews .. ... . ) ) 2 ' 4 0 I I I 1 I IA 1 2 > • 4 0 ' • I 1 0 3 I 2 2 4 T.u (5001111> 81a<~ A•tn """' ltllllan ~·r Hll<llcO(ll -°'°'*' F•I< Tttals D IO It M Tttlls fill ..... t ' • 11 1 ' 1 1 IO II I 10 • 0 • " • o a o, , , , ' t 0 I ,. \ 1 0 J • 0 , 0 e t I 0 i:-\ 0 0 1 as14n :t. ·ac...-. ..... 0Mt Mins IO 10 '1 I~ ~••Mtr " tt')2 n-n Tonight on~ ~ . a p.ra. (!$> -coa.a,sos 8ABKETBA£L -tJCLA•a Bru:b).I takt on Orecoo $at. at OOnalU.. OS> -COU.EGS &UJ[&TJW.I,-USC'a ~am tateoo Oritloifat Eu,eoe. League basketball win over the visiting Mission Viejo Djablos. Bacon scored 19 points and tallied eight in the second period as Laguna Beach upped a 20·8 ad- vantage after one quarter to a 36·22 halftime lead. Phil McManus and Randy Smith added 14 poi.nts apiece for Laguna's cause. And the Artists took advantaee at the rree throw line, hitting on 21of 33 in comparison to Mission Viejo's llo(l8. 73.59 Mite Boster and Roger Huff· man scored 13 points apiece and Pete DeCasas tallied 12 for the Diablos . Mh1i<lft Vi.Jo Utl IJJ} ........ itff(lt """'ti» ~ l • 19 8051..- Hllftman P Ot>C.W< H•w•lftS 9, •• ,,., Ev~•IM>n ~-rts S 0.C•ut Ale••nder Toi .. • ft It Pl tp • I ] I) 81(00\ • S 4 ll HaUQht 6 0 • 11 Gr•enougli 0 I 0 I A"CltfWft 0 0 l 0 M<MMIU9 l 1 t • 8>01~ 0 o 3 o Brvant s 0 S 10 Smllll 1 1 1 4 O.watd 14 It 74 S• T Olalf S<Ort bV CN.lrtt" 7 I I ) 7 I 4 ~ 4 0 I • ~ 4 , ' 0 t ' 7 I 1 I I 4 u I I I ) ,. " " 13 Mission Vl~lo L•91Jn•8Hcll 8 1' II 10-S' 10 1~ 17 ~ ·ll "It's just a matter of too many people needing the gym. With only one gym you can't run a suc- cessful program. And the fact that the boys· basketball season has been cut enters into 1t, SoCalNine Trips 49ers LONG BEACH-Mike Scheetz tripled home a pair of runs and the Southern California College Vanguards of Costa Mesa toppled host The victory sets up Friday night's shootout for the circuit crown at San Clemente against Corona del Mar with each team boasting a !2-1 league record. San Clemente coach Stan DeMaggio got his 69th victory in 100 games as the Tritons mentor. but it didn'l come as easy as the score would indicate, at least not with 3:58 spent in the third quarter.~ The hargers of El Toro coa h Wendell Witt were sitting on a 35-32 • Cal State (Long Beach) Wednesday afternoon. 4-1. in non league baseball acllon. lead after Mark Hill and n rbi Bob Charles accounted CNolo:•u\lo:•\ II -·°" MIU\ftln> 11 p.,.,, u TllOmo 11> S<l'lttll < Grttr. cl S••llon <!Ii Albin Ot Wll\Off lb • c; Acwm'I, .lb LVll<ll O W11td p Tou1i 0 I 1 0 II J] I) (1 I a o o for a 10-point spurt to ' give the h06ts the lead. ~ But then Dunham went I , ft IJ 0 o to work with two baskets and the balanced Tntons got buckets from Glen Frank, Mark gherry, John MacDonald and Hettinga. ' u 0 I ti 0 0 () 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 8 • . " . SoC•I Coll-'"' Xll oor • " • c~ Lono Bu<h ooo coo 010-1 • 7 El Toro crept to within 44-41 with 5: 35 left in the game, but then HettlJ\ga Temlls Results un91MKll cc 11) 111 5.tddfe!Nclr Oou&lft s;,,.1tt A~c•"'9"•·~11•v 1~1 ""' ~<••·••" Albllrl (SI def Whlln~v :Ht .... 6 •. 810• &·l &·1, ""' Nlfl\"'1 CovM\ 6 I Pel.,\ (LJ d~I Flnlty 6·4. 1 S, 6 l. Loc~tralf W•ntef\ 1~1 won 6 • Wt\IPll•I !LI def Fulltr 6·3. 6-• •• I; lo\i.-6.:H> Brow11 IS) dl'I. N•rxier 6·7 • .S-7, •·' V•n LIM ILi O.f. LuJano 6·4. •.• JUNIOllVAllSITV Jollnton (LJ""f Po\16·1.6-4 EIT°"' 011 (Ols.t11tl190 °"""" Slfltlft Whttn•v·P•l•r> (LI d•f Alb@rl· Brown !El °"' MtC:,.1100.-. 6·0 Flntev 6-4. 16 W.,l~l·N&PO<tf ILi °"' Mllll!<'M) <!ti Mtl~"l¥1m••6·0 0.1 Fu11..,. B•-'I .... 16, Van LI•.,· def. CorlMlr 6-0. F<>•bo tE I..,.,,, 6? JC>l>")Oll II.I del Lu).1110-L•l'ldl9 6 >. 6-1. 6.Q 6-4. Jarrttl IE I won & 0, ~ O • • 6, 6-0. l(11jq11t fl!) -60 6.0 • 0 0 .... ftW4'\I Ill t•l f'ullt~on 6-0 si..... Oovbl .. S..n<llel IF I""' ICUV1M't •• , , 6-) 1 6 0 8rlen·Mt1\-IE I d•f .,,,.,,~ ... And'"°" 11'1 Off C.llne 6 1 •·• Plait Pttt•\Oll 6-4. 6-0 l'Olll•mm.., 01no •Flclel8•e<!1S.3~ IS l(ll•nlFI IElwonlt-0•• oe! M .. _ .. ,_ •·1. IJ111 .. IGI clof Kttf~ ~°' Cf-1111 IOI eorw Ora- 6-3. •·>: "-!GI CHI J•Dlons•i 6 4, Si"91ft .. , C••l\on l!oJ Clef S<oll 7 s ~.ur IS> ~.. defKo1·S ICuyoer 8 ro !GI d~I Kol~~r - S.n<llal 1-6 4 •. 6-4 """"''~w,.Pl•tl !Fl def C..11,,...MHll 16. 16 Kf"'t~ J•b4onSll (Fl UOI .. All.,, J.6. •·• 1 6 \IAllSITY II T-(2tl (01 SIMia .. ,~ .. T,.lo ( l!l Otf Ce!>•lroro 6· I del Ou••tt 6-0; def Aqu"r~ 6-0 O.f Smith M ; S. ~llQhts !El won 6 1 6.0 •·•. 6 t; Whltaktr !El won .. ,.6 1 6·1 1·•1 BIOOd(llwon .. 7 H.6·1,6·3 '*"'" 0 Hll(llln lllck .. (I!) dfl Vall~ Ou•rlt .-0. 6 I; def. Oulfy.JohMon .-a .• O; Owrd1wtlHlta .. .c1o:er IE I WOI\ 6-0."°;WllllM.6·1. .. ...,.,. (ll),., , ...... Molllt• "~ Oracle (H) "*1 Solomen .. ,, d~f EllQllfhW, to.110 Mos5 , .•• ct.11!1-lnt 6·•1 O.MOll IN! • .,., 3 •·won 6-7, lost >•.won .. 1. tltl~tr 11-11 won •·4, 6 1 IHI ... , ..... "4; v. Plroumlan (M) WOfl61.io.t .. 7 ..... -.. 3 .,..,.., .. Swt'dllllld•l>owty (M) dtl Allee• l'ortunal .. ,, 6'1: dti 51...-..or•r 6-0. 1 S. $ml~ (NI WOii M , M ; .. , .... S.00 C""-"e (241 C41 .. , .. OraMt ~ ,....,_ 131 d9f DleMU"O ._,, ~ ICt ... •1 Ufle 6-0, e.f TomllMan J t C•l11 ISi WOii 6 1, .. I ICKI by Of. 1-..11, won 6 I. J Mollory !Sl -6-0. ~.M, O.vu 151•..o. J.l.M. Doubl .. o·a ...... 0m111.-s1 ,,.,, ' •ndt>.,o Cav&ll..-0 .. 3. 6 1 M_,loo W~Ot !SI ,,., J~· Slr•wud' 1 ' I fltwl*1 121 ttl 5.tllta Mo•,.<• ""'' .. F """ (H, clft Thema1 .. , BuHtrlUI\ IN I del WllllA! 1·S O•"a Hill• f1''>1 (OI LO• Amltot SllltlM Ov.I( IOI dfll Ftnlon 4 I Ar>lln t DI won 6· I. S.rtQer r 01 0-f NO.I• l o.utllet Paul·McCabt IOI d•I Ona vosnlmura 6·3. Jtnl<lll\·To\dal (01 won 6-2; def T•tlMF•Noet ._O CllMtlW!l (4\11111\ancla """" Ron (Cl clef l!l<tU• ~.dot Niclloh &-0, d~f 0 Vll9' •-«1. dtf F Vtl•• 6 f) C .. t !CJ wen l-3. 6·1 6.0.' I Mu .. I rc1 I ~d l>-4. "'°" 'f\, IC>\I l •• , h Grum ICJ won 7-S, dllaullf'd, dtftull e<t."laull .. .,..,.," Allaborfl·AY•n tCI d!'I ~l•Y'lllllCI"• 0.Flor. M , .. 11 °"' ZalMr\~V H1•11 .. l, •-01 Y-.Patrl\~ IC .. on • I. •-4 • ..o .... l'ltCMH·~l'H 11 T-(It) !ti M"11• .. ..... , .. Allf>tltl IEJ .,., C..rl•n • I fff HOOCI 6-1. A"'rinq fEI "'"" •O ... 01Yld (£) •I Frt4'Wlld '0 ~f Y-lmMo .. 1. s-nion •~ 1 -M .. 1. IOI Olt .. lt-41 '4 )•;=::::i:tf;fS;fj5;;::=:4iliiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~--ii;~iiliiiiiiiiiii•iimiiiii;iiiiiiiiiiiii~~~--iiiiii~i!;~~-i ;]>rep SocCer That made It 50-41 with 4: 28 left and El Toro was not to cut the gap to less than six points. San Clemente strug- gled at times during the first haJf as El Toro's smaller Chargers managed to keep the Tritons away from the inside. But wtth Hettinga as- serting himself on the boards in the second half and finishing with 16 points: Dunham clicking on offense and with key steals, John Carson ad· ding 13 points, there was too much firepower for El Toro lo handle. '.l.MCl.....metUI '' II Dunh~m M 1V-OOnAld C•r\on NH'Y H•t11119• Fr•"" s •• .,,,.,,, ~.,,., TO!•I• M•rff H t M 1li.l'H1ll B~1>c,,.,1~ ~"" c '''"'" S1mp'1m • 0 n \ 0 • • , ' (I 0 I 3 ,. 1S EITerotn1 ,, tt ~ 0 ' ' ~ 8 ' 0 Holm,.\ o ' p .. ,,.... ' 0 k•lly T 1 ToWtt\ 10 IS S<ort lty OU1 r1en ~~-(l~""'"lt 14 14 IS fl roro 13 10 ,. ... Ip , 1l \ e ' IJ ' 0 , ,. 1 • ' 0 • \ •• •1 pf tp s ·~ • ' 2 20 2 1 ~ ' ' ' • ,. S\ 20-4-1 18-H FVTops Foe, 69-56 Fountain Valley High 's Barons, the No. l prep basketball team in Orange County and third in CIF 4·A circles, rolled to their 23rd victory in 24 starts Wednesday night. stopping host W estmlhSter, 69-56 . The Barons did it without the ser vices of ace guard George Bar- rios. who was kept out of action with a charley horse. He'll be ready for Friday's game with rival Edison says FV C01\Ch Dave Brown . Roger Holmes picked up most of the slack with a 23·potnt effort, bolstered by the 12-point scoring of Scott Ford and 1 o points from Bret Wilkinson. ........ l411V1ll..,(HI hr .. ts.l!y f'ord Wlli<IMOll Holme• Sv•'""" •• It .. ,, l l 1 • " 0 , 11 ' 0 .. J 10 10 3 3 2J I l 4 ) Htldo> I 0 0 Carroll I l 1 80(0fd 0 I I I Aof•t I 1 1 Ttt•h '9 IJ II •• k-lty Qu•r1tn ft-lalnV•ll.., U I• 1' JG-4• WH(1111Mter ti I U 14'-i6 . \. ·Bahashoff JC Foes ' Collide Kelly Shine 1n Surf Arch-rlvala Orange CMne11itt1 cv11 tut. Coast and ~o West "°" 1 i ..,._ 101 colleses • two of the best NNIOtt VAUI TY C:..~,.... 091 Ull ~tl' Oe ... I 1'1 ,, t'1 O.ev!t 9'iCM-(4) " Cll ~ Fountain Valley Bl1b'1 Blll Babubolf and Mike Kelly eacb scored double vlctoriH -. the B&IUlS trounced hoet Muina (ffuntlqton Beach), 120YJ-37~. In Sunset Leasuo awlm· tn.ins acUoo Wednesday afternoon. Babuboff won the 200 free ln 1:48. T and the 100 butterfly in • 57 .... Kelly captured the 100 bacbtrote in 57.4 and the so free ln 22.0. And ln the South Coast Leacue, Corona del Mar's Eric Kredel, Alan Launer and Steve Wright each srored doubles as CdM ripped visitin& EJ Toro, 116-46. YA•SITV ••V...., 11~1 IS7hl ,,..rlu 100 -'•Y rel•Y-1. F-1•11\ Velley1·4U; 3001,_1 llMa\N>ff IF I 1. .. 1 1 ~l(f)J~(MI. JtO h•d. mM -1 Aldtl. (F) t It 1; 1 lolOfl'1tlf• Cfl 1 lO 4; ) T•ICMll IFU·n t. 50 ··-1 Kelly CF> 71 O; t. !.tone fMl;l.~IFI Olv1"9-I Lw<lwnco tMI; l oavli tFI; l A-.ol fMI 100 fly-I. ~·-IFI S1 4; 1 Te\Clell (fl I OU, J Sl51141f (Fl 1:04.S. 100 tree-1. P\>11 IF I SI •; 1 Veno tMI n .J; > fllel &ow.• IMI •nd loltKOI\ (Fl SS l 500 fr .. -1. ""'-' IF) S•)O 7; t HM~1 CFH ll 1; l Hl<-1 IFH H.t. 100 be<k-1. Ktlly IFI S1 4, l Aldrld9f (Fl I OU; J SchMIOtr !Ml 1 01.7. 100 bA•"-1 Sl\11 .. IFI ,.,. 1 5inc:ltlr IF) I I? t, l ""°9"U•-IMI 1 ll s 400 fr" rtley I F°""ltll\ V•llo l,,. Mia'-Viele tf11 1741 c.t~ Mn• 100 -.... rtt..,-1 MIUIOf\ Viejo 1 .. 0 lOO lrtt-1 Dot.,. !Cl I SS I, 1 Htll IMl l Ml,l P<1U1'°"1Cl20I• lOO IM 1 a.ml<MI IMI 2 1• 0 J. LH IMU lO 1, l F~\ 1Cl1 lot l SO tree-1 --e CCI U S. Wr19hl tCl17J,1 At,...d ICl3' • Dlvint I -IMI llJ:IO 1 N · 1.,. ICI tl.00. l ~ ICI ti lO 100 fly-I .• .., !Ml St 4 1 krt>or (Ml I Ol I, l W.1tM CCI I I• t lOO Ir• -I J veu4111o IMI so o: J Konln~ (Ml SI o. l Arnold tel SS I * 1-I Dottft CCI 4 St t, 1 lleiltll (Ml S 14 l . l Htll (Ml S JI 1 100 ... cll-I V V•u.i1o IMI S4 t. 1 wrtltm°"' CCI ' en s. l P<1Ul10n IC) I 07 I . 1110...-1 I a..rt.r (Ml 1·11• 1 8'1ml(.Oft (M)l IJ~J Ye...-CCI I.,, 0. -free r~l•Y-1 Ml>\oort Vl•jo l .U.2. 0.M Cl Ml 1 .. 11! I T9,. JOO -0¥ rel•y-1 CorON dtl ,,,.,I ... 0 100 tr'w -1 l(r.O.I (C) I SJ 4 1 Wolwn IEI I s-4 •. J Choc!IW""""" (El I SI 3 ?00 IM I Se-~" CCI ?·OO a. 1 TulU• IEI 1 11 S J Wolktr ICI 1 13 t SO lrH I WroQM CCI 11 • 2 Sllvo IC> 14 I J eo.t.r !Cl 14 4 01Y11'19 ·I Well\ ICI no 1KOftd or lltord 100 lly I l•un•• ICl SI t , 7 Jel'llUn\ CCI \l.l J ""'"-' El I 00 0 100 htt I Of>o'"'"' IC> S> 0, 1 t>odrr ICI S.) 6 J !oitvd ICI SJ t SCIO ftft I l(,_I ICI S 03 0 1 WllWI I[ I S 0. I, l Cl\OQ\IHtuM•U IElSOU 100 1»<•-1 ..,,..,.. 1c1 sr s. 1 Sml!lt IE) I Ol l, J I t4 ) J Hetr.,. ICI' 04. 100 _, I U.-r <Cl I 01 S 1 Turne IE)'°'' ) p,.,.., !Cl' Ot. OOf frW ,.,_., I "°'"""' Ott MV J ... --t'l.Sl , ... ,, ... ,.....,., ... 100 .....,..,, rtlty I Hunh"91 ... Bff<"' .. ) 1tO trw-1 A-lft IHI I~· 1 MM* CWI J ;OO t l. -.Cll .. y IHI 2·0!) 4. HO IM 1 tC~ (Ml 1 .. ' 2 !Mmf.tld (Wl ?-01 0 J. N Wttt-11 IHI 1 14' '° 1....-1 11"1 8 T.eylOt IHI -E9'1-(Wl 14•1 Ciel W•I* IHI -M<S!Wow CWl 24 ' Olv1"4 I "'Cft IHI ISS t _, CWI UI 1 J. tlell !Wl ltO l 100 tly-I ll1el F•tt-IHI end l'llkl..,._ (WI I ti.I J CrHtef <WI 1 '41 *NCll ... "*' (0) ,.,. ... .,....._. ~ IVllO?~ t ~ (011.&2 l. w.-(0) , ..... .,,..,...., 1.1Mlwr"1yS1SU , a.• Cl-4• UMJ IOI "49-~ M "*"W r-n-1, 511\ Ci.n-te t!Sl.4. TOO lr"-1 ICthtl ISi l:U.•. ?. GNM (SI MU; J. O.lo IS) 1:01.0. 1111 If~. l'Mdlev t WerMr ISi t ·IS.t ; 1. _.,,,,._ ISi J;JI.,, l. Hill ISlt tt.S. se ''--'· O'Gorm ... tSI 14.S; 1. l.l111t1 .. t• Il l t.U. 3. l(l(llJl119l ISi 24 I. Otv1119-I. 0-ISi 3'.tS, 2. P...,1 ISi • tS; J ~lps tSI JU. 100 fly-! f>e•IOM IS) n t ; J. llruMwld< Ill I 02 4, l. OMIO ISi I 03 •· 1001,...-1 K..,., ISi S4 • 2 Werner (SI S4 S. l l-lell .. (LI S4 • soo rr-t _.,,.,., IS> no 11me J L11,.i..ck tSl3 HICiuM ISi. 100 bAO I Murplty CSJ I 04 •· l H••-IM ISi l ~t. l. t..toenn•n Ill I Ot •• 100 b._.,t -1 Mel-Ill I 0. 1. 1 Bert ISll II.I l L-ISll ll 1 400 I,_ ,.....,,_, lA9 ..... llH<h ) S4 1. Cl Fll9"1-\ Ell..., Vraceourl'I. n. 2 Mary V11M•h, 14, l M V Ar qulll•.1S C Fll<Jl'll-1 ICay Salo. M. l . Conn•• 0ul'l14• ..... l Dee Hot"' II • Ila• l"9twlll ... 1l Ace o!""' ._,, IO C.O"''•• Oun•ao wllll • 1S'" a ptt'f<lll, JUNIOft VA,_StTY o .... 1111 .. 1•1 rn1 u<>1~11, 200 I r-I Wol•• 101 2 l• I 100 IM I H""tl't IOI l 00 I, SO trot I ~,,...I (01 t6 t, 100 fly I Ahern 101 1 u.•, 100 t••-t w 11es 10) 1 o• s• 100 lw<k -1 4hern IOI 1.21 t 100 t>reot-t si-1101 t 11.' N--1 041 l11l ldl1.,. 100 medlt'I' nley-1 Newoo•I 2.01.l. JOOlrtt I C:.rl-INI l 09.1 100 IM I Woocltl'I IE) 11•1. SO 1-.e I Kl'""\ tNI 1S 4, SO tlv-t Warfel IEI I OS 1. 100 lre•-1 1C1m" CH I S6 3; SOI) trM-1 C:.rliOtl IN I S ••I, IOObe0-1 c;o.tn l[I 1 1• • 100 br .. \1-1. WMi.I tE I I II I. 400 fr•~ rel•• -t EO•San • , .. ._ ,,.,, ... 11o .... 1.-i-•• """11"91 ... l't11. v .. 1., IMtl 1111 Matio 200 mt"CMty ,..l•v-Fount••n VaHry I SI 3 JOOlrtt-S..ltrs"" IF) l 11 0 :01~: ~""-;,;" ~ 'io:i ~~ ~· Howtlth tFI I Ol • 100 free -1 ""11111 tF) SS l S00 lrtt-1'1><""'" IFI S ll l IOO bitfk-1 Um~"°"' 11'1 I OtJ >00 br .. Sl-•9ura IF) t ll t GI ''" relay-I Founttll'I Valley• JI I l'llOSt4-SO PM '1L Vt!.., ('9\'t) (1""91 Marlfta lOOmedl-Vrwl•Y -1 Mer11'1•1 ._. 1 100 lt'tt-t Wtouenberqor CM) I 5' t 1 SO..r9 IMI) M<Glynl'I tMI 100 ll'ld med -1 Wutlrey IM) 1•02 t ; 1 Y .. tMI 3 Mof-to IMI M~Ml~i'n.:C:.."'::'i' IMI 161 l SO fly-I JKlef IM) 29 8 2 8ow•ns IFl l 8raretFI 100 fr•-WoiS..,_llt'nJOr CM I S4 3 7 Shfor9 tMI l 8•'1>oo IF I SO tMI0 -1 Wo.,.rty (Ml 7'10 l Ille) Menq IMI .ond Ttylor <Fl J Clrat• IFI r SO b<U'\I I Mor•l>lto IMI ll S l Y~ IMI S Torncha-IF 200 Ir .. rtt••-1 ~fll'la ··•6 J N--1 IMI (,.I Edh "" 100 mtd,., rt lay -I N•wport SJ 1 1001rH' I M<Cri>""Y IEI 1 H11-tt IElJ Poll .... •n!INI Ti.,... I H' 100 IM I U'f'l'h• ... CEl7 W111o...,, INI l Slwelct\ tf l T•m• I nos SO frft 1 K•nwor-Jhy 1 P.~ l 1 G<ltm.,. IHI l S.-""°'" •!I Ttmt ,., SO II• I 9'·t~ IEI J l(rn....,.l"v INll 11~9""ilt1EI ''"" l• 0 Ito lttt t McCr•ne1 IEI l \h911••• IE! ) H.,_1 El l1m• Sl> ,., ba<'-' c.or-•NI l M .. v•n tl>l Str-<Hl Tl-11• ,., b<ta\1 I AIU'°" IN lJ Cr ... NI lE..,.,•'ElTI_n, 100••"' .. ..,_, E.,.win I Jtl. C .. lt -1111 IM) llo\IH .... Vi. .. 100 ~ ... ,, •• ., t CO\t.4 """'. IHI , lOO ,,..,._, P«utt CCI. 2. Eby lllolil, l. f-\llC.l Tt-1 SIS 200 llloli 1 C'-"" tCl. t. N......i,,., 111o111; 1 T.-., <Cl TI.,.. 1. 1• •· SOlr ... -1 WN1-. ICl.1 8'10C>IU Kl.) O.r CM). Tl"'9; l 44 100 fty-1 E..., IMI. 1 Brown <Ml. ) 11••-ICI TI,... I 00 t 100 frM-1 Whllmort ICI. 2 lloli(Qo...,.q, (Mt, 3 Earnest ICI T•..,. S41 100 &et-l Pie ketl IC I, l 11 .. 1,_fMl.1 "onwhntCI Tom• ' 02. surth>& teams io the state, clash Friday mornin& at Hunttoaton Beach Stnet, soulb of the pier in Hunttnitoo. Junior varsity aclion beains at 6: 30 wilb lbe varsity event starting at 8:10. Oraoge Coast eotera lbe meet wtth a 1-0·l re- cord, defeating USC and tying UC Irvine. OCC's Pirates. under coach Laird Hayes. are m their first season or surfing competJlton. Top members of the OCC squad include Cart Heyer, Martial Crum and Billy Foyt1ch of Hawaii , Kerry Carpenter and David Lawson of Newport Beach, Rick Fugnelti of Huntmgton Bea<:h and Brian McConnaughey of Westminster Golden West, under coach Raul Duarte, is s parked by freshmen Chris Woods, Pat McGin· nis, Keith Johnson and Chris Arroyo along with sophomores St eve Weaver , Brad Baylis, Kevin Gephart and John and Joe Wallace. The meet 1s Golden West's opener. 90-58Win For Mesa Steve Parrino had another high-sconng out- put Wednesday night, leading the Costa Mesa High Mustangs to a 90-58 rout over the University High Trojans of lrvme in South Coast League basketball action at Costa Mesa For tile 13th time this year. Parrino scored more than 20 polntl> in a game. hitting for 28, in eluding 16 of 17 from the Cree throw line. And 1t was at the free throw line where the Mus tangs did most of their damage Taking advantage of 30 Uni Couts and four technicals, the Mustangs sank 36 chari· ty tossei. And four Mesans scored in double figures, with Stan Miller getting 16, Gary Wills 14 and Doug Dysart 12. Mark Eykholt led Una with 17 points ~It) C Ill TO• M111er ca.1 G m~11 $WY'1< .. 141 G Ill .. ...,...., CM _,,.. , ... , &••., I. Wlll- 1.......,. '· O'Neel i.. y .. ,. l. ""'· ..-...1.-tOll ...... t. Htt"'-CM.•1t. ON 1•11•0 0-"II" A,,..,. (211 f" 1101 Ohon l•e<-tne11 IHI " m ~;i ""'*" ,,,, c (1$) ""9<rllo" Pk-ett 11•1 G ltl ~·-Scerntt m o 1t1 Collll'I\ CdM "K0tl"9 \lllls· ~"lllMll t. Vtf~ 1. Ot4 WIMll\OhOtf, Claur .. ){ .. ,... ... Hal"'-' OdM. ~TT l._C>U IS.SIM .... IMctl Kl,,."'at'll (IS) F Ill Slel-llS Gu1to IOI F (111 1'~111 Tun.,. lnl C Ill Wool., ftlid91'1borO l'l G ltl C.M ,.,.., 1.i G Ill Tholn- Edl•on Korl"9 WI>\ P'Oloile-10, H•rUr •. c;.r-~er •. Z•m,,...,,,..... 3. l'•IU l ,__, HI M•tkll'I ?, MootTIO.,..t.1t1'119111J,Grn•. H•lflinW Edi_,.,. .. 1..t-101 IUIM'-'lellY .. je Rl<IWr<lwir> lll>l F tl)l C..,,..Ml"O l'tllfWI" 1.i F 111 z..,,,,, Hl<hOIS Ill C t•I Fl'(ftn Wotrel 10> G "' SoH• LI_., ttl G ,Ill Froot La UOtl"9 sUO C.1...-...od. lf,V. Katt•-• H•lfl..,. MV, ? .. tl S.• 0-C .. l IJtl 11~ Pftt t Ill F (41 Tnlor W-"" F lllll.at Gtonow Ill C ltOI W&IUt Mulll9•n 111 G 1101 Wlh"" Mulu-111 G IOI G•llC• SC worlnowl>'i llakt< •. M~.,, 1, H•"'"'""" 1 0vn ...... l H•lll1""' SC 11-11 """'""• l•H I .. ) N--1 801\m C!Ol ~ 10 P•oll•" 01\0n !101 ~ 1111 Mar•vocf' f•ttll 16) C 1141 'iWff' H•llOl'l 1701 G (1)1 Fre<1mal'I ~p1v .. !\I G !41 l'\rtnom MArlN "'0"1no \U~ Cooonien tt M1ttllLt' • NH 8•11~, 1 Hittt1r?W M.lrll"td 2<&-1'f , .... , ..... 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Compton 7', L8 Wll'°" '1 H.,.y ISO!• U Lii "°'"IO,_.,.,,,. V•11lllft0-I Clan 1-1. Nowtlo Mllllk.,, 10 u-tO tlA I 1 SS 1 W.V9'11\dt ISOI I A; J. (~&Ilk ~I Cev1111nc11rt tSOI S ~s. Cteu 1-1. Alhambt• "·Arced!• JI Ll,..,MY tlOI 7 65; ' Seto .. , COCCI ~" C.-•1 '4, 11 •entho S\ 1.JS; l • ..,,,,.. ILAI 6 ts Nlulr 14, "~" Al I re1Md--CIH\ l-C.ve11lndl11 CS .. O*te1 V~ti.y Le-I fSOI ?S~· 1. Wllllem1 1&01 J.U•; J. L.,n.ood .. , C..rrllOUI Novello 11.!'I 14.IS. Cl-1-51ftllll w~ ... Olnllnflltc,. IOCC> • H. 2 Stoller (~) UJS, a. D-Y M. Gtllr.. llndM'I' (SOI D.tS. SPOT·BILT BASEBALL SHOE s149s _ • 0•14"11 WHI 111.tS, at C."'"'9 tit >S, s... ~"'"' tfl .... Vwltl"9 ICI~\ 1)-1 ~-,·~ tGI 1 7\, 1 WOll,....dftl'I ISDMI 8 1. l S•uol•Y I ECI I ts ICltH ,, ' Gr0 -10 IGI I OS 1 Ot9'fl 1$Dlooll 1.0. J Well CSOMlt •S ll•l~e bf-10-ti--I W4'11«t IECI I IS, 1 M411Nny IGI 1 10 l ~--ISDMI t SS ICC~• 21-1 Vi_ .... IECI 1 0, 1 011rHell IGl • •s. 3 All.., ceca u Floor ... re••• CCI U\ 11 -1 W•llace tECI t 11 1 New•omt ISOMI eU1, l Will•em\ IECI I l ICla'S 21-1 Mc0att1ol t~OMI It; Z VIQnHu IECVI 11, S. l..aK,,_c.11 IECI I. 8tr\ 10"5 11-1 l'Nll .. s IC.I 1.7, 2. Ntwsome ISOMI 1 H ; l Or•QllflkU tGI •.IS. tCl•K JI -I l'etin IECI SIS. 1. Aoln CECI' J. 3 S<htKh tEC:l 4 U, A• .. aro.tfld CCleH 11-1. W•lla<t <EC) lO 40; 7 PIM>tiot COi 1' .O, J Oraoue\llu fGI tt.OJ. tC1"9 fl-I Alley llCI M • .O; 2. ~ l$0Ml 10.00. Wt\1,,1'1 6 1 ltO Trov s I Ill ...... "". l JI) , .. .,,.,..,,.. 2 1' ns W ...... Y"'lkw., IN<11t'" 5' Anthtlm SJ Low.ii ... 8~ P•"' u S..My Hiii\ 11 Ma91'1Gl•t b4 Troy 11 s...--. 61 Pro Scores .... NY Knl(ks 113.~<.etJO ttl PMl_l,,,,1• ll1,8uffalo1U W••n•nQlon 111, Bost.,,., O.lrolt m ~ 111 '"d•.,.• 111, ,.,_..,, '3 Hail\~ 1'4, St•tlle•\ Otll..., 11•, NY Net\ 101 lllATIOffALMOCICliYLIAOUE llu"•lel, O-lc;..-0 TorontoS Cle .. l.-.c!J MOlllP'ffl '· PtttMM1r9ll •. lie loet6"1 • ..--rt PUBUC NOTICE ""CTITIOUS aUtlNUS NI.Ml! STATl!MINT T"" fotl0wl<19 Pt,._., art clolnQ l>llM ftit-H,.~; OAOH A081NSOH COMPANY, 3'3 S.n Ml9uel Orlrt. Suitt E. Htwoot1 8e•<"· CatllOtl'I•• 92 .. 0. o .... oe ... ,_.., Corporallon • Clrlto\n CotUMt>lt CNC14' <orooratlon. uoo O\ltll Slrwl. Suite ?1' Hewporl 8U<h.C:.111..,...la91MO AoboMOll oe ... 1-nt ComlMlrtY. l'llt1t Pu01.--()r_.. Cot\! O•llY PllOI, F tb II 74 al'ICI AMr< fl l. tO, 1971 PVBUC NOTICE »J Stft M~I Ori .... Suitt E. Ntwpo1t 8Hch, C..lltorn1•'2!>Ml STATl!MINTOl'Wl"fHO•AWAL Th .. l>u\IM\~ 11 conducltd by • "'"°""' ,. ... TNU,$Nl~Ol'l!llAYllllO 99ner•l"rtMnhlp UNOI• f'tCTITIOUS aUSINliS$ R081NSON OEVELOPMENT NAMt! COMPANY Th• lot-1"9 --llA\ wlt .. dr-11 E<ttrfarct&.Aob'n\On •\ • Q•n•l'•I pi1rtner from tr't OAON DEVELOPMENT "'llWt\hop OOt•A1"'9 \lncMt lhr lie COAPOAATION t1t1ous ""''" .. ' n•m~ or C.tneral J...,,... O Stout Properton .ot 101 C.01111'1\ Aw • 8••~ \lt<e PrttodMI l•l•l'ICI C.1192 .. 1 C:.lltorl>l•Ol>tt•tlon lht loClthOU\ """""~ "'""' \t•I•· ThlS •1411 ..... nl WM ,, .. d W•lh , ... m.-.t '"' the """"'"hip .... '""° .. Count• ci.n. of Ortnge CO...nly 01'1 OK 11 1'141"1 ... CountyolOrWtQe • Fe1>n1ary•, "" Full,,.,..., •l'ICI -·\\ OI Ille~·~ "" ... wl1Mr•wo"9 Pvbll\llecl Or-Coe•I Oally Piiot. !llw<yl 8<.-r Fet> 10 11.14-MarCltl. t•11 10.' 1COlll ... Atlf' ~11 11 11.t•llo• l\l-CA ., .. 1 --------------~ !>htryl 9,.,..., PVBUC NOTICE l'ICTITtOUS BUSINEU NAME STATl!Ml!NT The to11ow1P19 _...,,, ••e OO•nt 1>11>1· iwn•s H J I( ASSOCIATES tit Sonor• Aoec!,CO\tllMtw,CAm:Ho A09tr A Holl. 1000 l(or.,et Or . Co<•• M•~ c"'m:i. Ht•••nd Cl JO<dell Ill SOllOr• Awo. Co•I• ......... CA m1• H Wiiii..., l(lr--~ So ()( (ldenl•I Lo•"'nooln.CA'OCISI Thi• 1>11••...u '' <-ucttd tw '" "" 1ncor90" 1tect •uoc:t•Uon other th•n • p,1rtnf'n.hlp H. 8. JorCl4'n Thi\ \IAWmtfll ... , '''" wllh "'e County Clerk o! Ortft9* C.1>11~1y on Jtnu•ry 7, 1'17 l'ltUt Publosll•d Or•~ C041•1 D••I• P11ot. J•n 71, F•b l, 10. 11, 1'1/ PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS IUMNIU .. AMIE UATIMINT "1 ht f0How1no c:aienotu. •r• ao1no bv\• por•llot" ICtNGSALAAMWSTEMS. INC 8V O.v•d LOdQt. t,...,~, Th•• •t•t.,_..t was filed .. 0111 Int County Cit"' ol Ort"9t1 Counly Ol'I Jal'lu•rr s. 1'17. ... ..,. Pubh1"9d ():.,.91 Col\t Otlly Pilot, Ftb 11, 1•. -M•• 3. 10. tt/1 .,. 11 PUBUCNOTICE PUBUC NOTICE l'ICTIT10U1 BUSINESS N4MIE UATIMENT ,..!~, 10110 .. 11-0 ~non I• IO!n9 _..~, CllAIG M!INH411l0f/Hf19 8ULB~AVEA )l~A J.,.mlne. Cortn1 0.1 M•• CA • 91•1'. PO Clo•'· Tuslln, CA '7680 J•mt\ C'A'CJ Mflllnhard; lU1'l Joml,,.. CoronA<IOIM4•.Cll 9U2S 1 lhl\ t>ll\OMh '' cOl\ducted t>v •n"tft. d l•ldu•I • J~~\ Cra10 MelntuirO , This >l•.,-l'lt w•\ 111ea wltt\ ~ C.ounlv Cltrk ol Oran9• Co•mty 'I(> J•nu•ry l•. 1'11 , Flb£i P\lllh\f,.d 0rt"9" Co.t\t 0<11ly Pf~; Jtl'I 21, Ftt> 3. 10, 11 1911 PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE • ... • I --· -- POllUCNOl'ICS •n~. • 111(11~ -.. oll<lel Ot I•~· 149c· lo<•I n 11111..-. '1<11..s. -CW'•to ... 4lt f10t' .. e Otltn. A E OUOH "'91stT .... VOIMliK ~" J l'Mllllol, Dlpvt-Pv&ll-Ol'Mtt C::O.ll 0.llY Pllol. FM>r ... rv 11,14. 1w1 4'4·11 PUBLIC NOTICE PVBUCNOTICE MOnC. INVITl ... •tOS Hollce ls..,...,.,el-IMI -~d of Ed\Kat-of ,,. ,,..,.,. UftiftM ~11001 OIS1rlel of Or ..... Gevf'lty, CAll~w411 ........ _..., ........ 1 ooo.m.al .. >rdclrfollMr<h, t•n.- Wl\kll ·-Yid ~ wtll be pwtllklY --eftd t'Hd tor Alllle41C Ecwlf>--t. llld condltl-end ln,lf\ICllorll end llldlclrl'M nwvbe_l,..M "'90t- llc• ot &ullnen ~· Service., 2'41 Afloft A-. lrvtne, C.lllOflll• TIM Olltrict ..-l'1t f!PI to '9j11Ct - or ell bldlcit towelw.,,., ltretUIMltlff or lnlOnl*itlet ln.,vlliclaOf' ln Ille~ OlllQ, ,,..,.,,.u11Wltd$CMo!OltlrlU OeMHertll,. AllthorlrtdA~I .. vllllll*I Or-'°"' o.llY PllOI. FM».11,14,ltn PUBUC NOTICE STATOA&NTOl'WITIIO••AL. l'ltOMf'A•THlllSHlf' ~•ATINOUMOlll l'ICTITIOUI •IKIM.U Mo1"1ill Tiie IOllOWlllQ --!Mt••--., • 1•ner•t part11er tro"' Ill• penMn.hlo ••atlno unclff 11w 11e tl1Jou1 llUSINU IWllN Oii 9"0AOMO• PllOf'ERTIES at 10 .. 0 Wlhlllre 8oultv..-d, Suite 1210, L-" Af199IM. C•lllor11la *24. (l'ot1nertyl 4040 l!M<Ar111vr 81.cl., Suite no, H-oort 8M<h, CA. '1MO. The tlcttuous '""'neu "•m• stM....-tcw lllt oett.,..\l\tp wu lllecS Oii FeboiMty l, 1'7' In Ille '°""'Y of Ot•-· l'ull Hemetf\d 11.ddrenol IM ,..non WI~ ERHESTC WIL~.Jll JftOWHterly Piece Hf'wport 8Hdl, C.llfOf'nte t:aMO /SI EdW•rcS c !!.Ills ,.tl71 Publl-Or-Co.tit Oello( Pllol. February s. 10. 11. 24, 1•11 o 1 II l'ICTITIOUS IUSIHl!.H NAMliTATU.-IHT The to11owinv l»'IOfl• ••• 001no 1>1n1 ~•n· WlllGHT 8ROS MOTOll CARS lllW 1711\E_.,Co\leMHet1U7 ,,_ .... s fOtrP•I... I09t Meple Aw ·-P-. C..111 "-" L Belt.,, 1n1 Verde Aw • 1-------------A"911elm,c.tll Tiu s """"'" '' conouc led l>Y • ge ... , •• pe,,....$1110 -------------1 R-IL..8.-.. Man S Forr~ler Tiii\ Slt!f!mi!flt WH llled Wit~ ti. Countv Cler-ot OranQtt Cou111v OA Feorverv 11, 1'n. 1'11117 Pubti'llWll Orartqll C.O.sl OeHv PllOl, Feoruarv11.2,.-Merc11J, I0, 1'11 SH 11 PVBUC N<n'ICE 1'1CTI TIOUS •USINIH NAMESTATE..-INT The ro1iow1no oenon " Oo•no IM.tll MUH• TULCO EQUIPMENT t6tl l'ot1 Ct.,.,. Of .. HUnll"910118etKll, CA~ MICllM! R Tully .. n Port CIVO. ~ .. "UllllllQ!on 8eec11. CA., .... Tiiis _.,,." Is condlicted by .,. 111 <llVldll•I " Ml<ti.1 R. Tulley TllfS stat-I w•• 11141<1 with tl\e Countv Clm ol Ore110t Cou11tv on Fe-rv11,1m 1'111" "'11>11"'8d Ol'olll>QIP O>iltt Dally Piiot, Fe-rv.11.24-M•rchJ.10. tt11 ~71 PUBUCNOTICE r: PAMTAS11C Vt1W NOMI loeated ln DOVER SHORES. Thia outstanding 4 bdnn. + olfice home ls Just gorgeous. u is the sweeping. unobstructed view L&rp pool, separate Jacunt. BBQ. fire rina. outdoor he~rs. $2S8,000 ls v•ry reasonable. Calf far a private ahowtng, while lt lasts . ------------- --------11114 ~-~!4!'!~---d~~~ ...... . IDOIS: AclYttllltn ••Mrwl 100'1 ~Hill IOOZ ....... ~ ....... -............................................. . .., ... ,.,..... ~ ,.. .... 61hfr. n. DAI. Y rn.OT n1•t11 ...., ....... fin ... ceiawct••"'--'Y· ,... ....... Hoffee: \\' I·.~ I. I< '1 '.\ TAYLOR CO. H l<A l .1'UHS •, l l 11 I . I! 1 · l I i 61J..4400 ....... 1002 ....... 1002 ....................... ••••.....•............. 411DROOMS .,, { • • I .... IXICUTIYI HOMI POI LEASI "' In exclusive SborecllffS! Spacious 3 ... bedrms.. each wt th it's own bath & • atrium view. Tbls home bas blgh beamed cellinp, skyllghts, wall& of .... glau, a wet bar, a beautiful 36' pool.- w-bathbause, & a very private en· vlronmeot. You should see it, you'll ·:. love it! $1200 a month including . gardener, electricity & pool service . All rul estate advertised ba tb1a newspaper i. sub- J'9d to the Federal Fair Hou1ln1 Act of 1968 which makes It Ulegal lo advertise "any pre· rereoce, li mttalloo. or dJacrimlnation baaed on raee, color, reUa.lon, sex, .. CANYON TO'MllOt• Brand new ! County Club atmosphere. Private garden court.yd entry. pools, tennis & golf c~e view. sunken LR. wet bar, security. Choose from 2 & 3 bdrm home. For lease from $79S. Sale from $136,500. 2111 S.Jnt I ....... HIWPOU CIMTB. M.A. ~t I 0 or oaUoca1 oridn, or an !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ intention to make any ALL HARIOllYIEW ~ CALL NOW 752-7315 UflllliltJUI: tf()Ml:S IdeallyH~~ted for .. DONALD M. BIRD REALTORS.r; 675-6000 children across from Associates, Reolton 2443 E.n Coast Highway, Corona del Mar such prererence. IJmil•· ft al 1002 BRIGHT Greenbell Greal ramtly also 1n Mesa Vercie. al 546 5990 homeoocomerlot.Only ------------.-, tJon ordiscrimmation." Gt•ral 1002 •••r . . ............................................ . 1bia newspaper wtll not UHIQUEFIHD SPAHISHVIUA knowingly accept any Huge custom family SSS.250-IEACH And cheery colors! Fun family room and rive bedrooms! Only $72,500. 2t..IJ years old. Pnce 1s 1 1 , . $132.000. Call now ror ap· Gew• 1002 G11t1r.. IOOZ •••tll IOOZ eeMttll 1002 po1ntment to inspect! ••••••••••••••• .. •••••• ••••••••••••••-••••••• •••••••• .. ••• .......... ••••••••••••••••••• .. •• Call 673-8550 • adverllalng for real room. unusual pool and Winding walkway estate wlUcb is In viola Jacu:ui make this home th ro u g b Castilla n RED CARPET ()PIN Uf O• JI'\ ,UN fOP:I ,.._"°, • t , 1911tdll ~!~~·!.i~~~!°i ~'!!'~ booofthelaw. one of a kind. Oversize courtyard leads t o REALTOR 7S4-1~ Homes for Sale cul-de-sac lot still leaves secluded entry abeltered ·-·················· •• room ror the kids to play. by red tile rooC. Fiesta Ga•ral I 002 If you lilte open beamed dining plus canlioa bar ASSUMAU LOAH $51,900 -.z::::m•-•:11:111'!!~· across street from bayfront water; BAYFRONT, pier & float. lots $1.M,000 •·. to $295,000, to build your own custom.. · home. Several areas to choose from. • each unit has 3 bdrms.. 2 baths & ••••••••••••••••••••••• ceilings, custom drapes C!Dd gourmet kitchen! and room lo spread out Soaring staircase to you must see Uus home. Master bdrm plus child's Call collect (714) 842-2535 retreat. Pool plus tennis. No qualifying and no loan fees on lhls 3 bed room beauty . Fireplace, upgraded carpets. ~nd drapes make this one worth s~· ing in a burry! Call t-'01· lect (714) 842·2S3S BLUFFS CONDO f~c. plus enclosed garage. Available for $172,000 on tax deterred exchange. ATl'RACTIVE Linda Isle S BR. 4Y.a ' ba., fam. rm. & formal dining; lg~. ' tile patio & waterfront deck. $295,000 IYOWHER LAKE FOREST II REDUCED! Lakefront + doclt, 4Br, 3Ba, air, ~-8US. Open Weekends °""' 11111 • '' s IUN ro m "'"'' Make this Twnhrn living I ~· , I at its finest. Try SS.600 ~~.1t~ft1Hj\ ~ ~:.~; f.~~ ~~~~~ EX~~E l•b11n1 TRI-ft.EX + POOL Lag•ta RmcMtte ()PfN 1119• '' ~ IUN IOllf M ~ 1•11111 Charming 3 bedroom home located directly across street rrom Newport Beach Tennis Club. DellghUul patio faces onto spacious greenbelt. Formal din· ing, 2'A baths, upgraded carpels aod drapes. $110,000. 640-6161 ~ + IASIEM&fT executive double door entry to step-up U v. rm Formal step-down King --------•I Louis dining room! Mesa Verde Epicurean kitchen! Sep. WITHYIEW RE Nearly 2 acres oesUed among giaol oaks only 2~ miles to the surf wllb a remarkable custom COATS .~ WALLACE REAL ESTATE . INC. 2srORY195,950 ram. rm.! Subterranean Lwtunous 4 bedroom on passage way to RARE, qwet cul-de.sac with RARE basement·game formal dining room, room + r1replace! Soar- large family room, lng stairway to sweeping kitchen eating area. master br. retreat with Park-like oversized yard vaulted cel~ng.s ! Wet bar with flowers. fruit trees. + gaa BBQ sand m~re In basketball \".I :o rt auto lhla two sty . 4 br. Call bl.alt 3 bdrm+ den + DONE ram1ly rm home de CAU:USFOR signed to mruumize the T L /Ca d 1 panoramic, hilly W ftR D ranchland view. Also 5 New Carpets and laT•tflt&l"M car covered parking + Drapes! s Bedrooms and FromSJ9,000to$69,000 room for cam~. boats, a large family room ! EXCELLENT TERMS C U ' quick I 847-6()}0 sp~i n k lers. covered OFfN ,,, 11.,, \ '""' ,0 ,., IV"'' paUos, and yard IJghUng I! etc. 1be corral can ac· $72,500. THI HOMESELLERS ~om mod ate as many RED CARPET '-Ph: 872-5353 ~Ef.~~·~~.~ [ 91 l!Vali11 hones as you could ever REALTOR 754-120:.: -------- ft'!\111 with room to spare. --------~------­OFF ER l NG PRICE --------1 Maal1C)OM°*9 1220.000. HEW USTIMG H.-Y•w Homn Cal 644-7211 4 Bdrms .• 2 baths, frplc .. M l c too -~.e• HERITAGE . • REALTORS FIXERw-PIR trt.,.. ... OK Nickerson fans. Pnced al S80.000. and S9S,OOO. here's your choice to bwld up equity fa.st. WESTCUFF Heated Pool /Jn ~IG[l Gf\IU. '{ & l\SSUClf\T ES $98,000. MAGHIFICIHT Prestigious Westcliff VllWEASTILUFF arM. o< Newport .Beach. Spectacularly located Warm walnut paneled overlooking the rnoun· lt•aag room overlooks talna, upfler bay and den. Furnished. Plus any ex ra eatures bachelor unit over .2 car numerous to mention 10 aarage. Xlnt rent.al pro-this highly upgraded " be h home. Custom wall cov· perty, close lo ac · erings. wiodow and ~~· 642·22S3 Eves carpela. 4 Bedrms. spacious fam nn, formal dining rm, rplc. On a beautlrully landscaped corner lot. $136,000. 644-7270 associated fll>·:,. FPS IHAL TO llS • • ~. liau1b,. I .. I ' ie.o I «o•ered patio and aigbt lights. three H ape.rkbag healed pool. specious bedrooms and ~"4(.Ui S. · Jua 10 ~down. CAU diatioctive Family -W-Aca--OU-S_RAM __ C_H_1 . ~ 11~.Ql'~il 112-TTll !::.;1.!:i~g:asn~ $53,000 IEALJOIS liil "'--• K€Y fend at Sl58,000. Shown Secluded entry to large ~-~~~~~-~~ Pl op!!_~• ( n.eAl,.~~-. by appointment. Call Family sized Living = ·~· ........ "'"' .•~-~toview. Room with mass ive MOO~Sl UACM -~------O't .. IM9•rl PVfOI08' .. <I· atooe nreplace. Country HUUY!I lstl'mOfhtad Larae 4 bednn family home close to Mes a Verde Counlry Club Grand piano sized bvang room, lar1e aeparale family room compl~te with wet bar, big bedrooms and heavy shake roor. Covered patio and beautiful grounds 1urround An· tbony rree-form pool. Call 54&-SIO ror full de· talla. .. :.s-HERITAGE . • REALTO RS TUDOa style Kllcben conve· POOL· IEACH nlenUJ senes Formal VIEW $62.950 Dini.Ilg Room. Huge 25• Family Rec. Room and Circular drive lo -========-i Den. Lus h terrace. secluded entry. Huge Dnll£ _.. IDfTAL Separate wing ro1' Living Room wllb llUlft .. elefant Master Sutte & crackling s tone Charming 2 bedroom Chldren'a quarters. ra.replace. Pub gourmet Easllide Costa Mesa Hurry!Call963-'1881 Kit.chen. Dille. Dramatic home oo a deep lot with a Of'f'" '" '1•" ~ •Lllf 10 81 M<I' view or covered pavilJon 2 bedroom rental unit, and aparttllng healed & ON THE BLUFF Huntilgtan ree1111int filtered freeform pool. clroM to shopping. Priced HlJleaway Master & ~~t $86$0. CALL Guests~tes.AssumeVA -=-~-~---~• ioan. Hurry I Call tm-•1 •SE• ECT Ol'fN •• o. 11 \ 'Ullf ion ""', • PROPERTIES (8111 r-:r~~·: WAl&ROMT PB/fl.OAT CJolc. corner • rare • 4 bdrm.. I bath home, 2 frplcs .. lge. covere<I pe&io. New float! $179,500 .... lay,,.. lledtan •675-7060 * OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 12·5 11506 V AU.ART A Beauti!lll 2 bedroom. 2 balb. CUstom carpeting ai wallpaJ>8!'. Fireplace, ~~~~~~~~I large entry ball with -------1 wood pegged floors, 2 HIW OM MARKET patios. double aarage llAUTIFULHOM! with electric opener. 1Mra511GtOUS Pool. tennla cowta. Just 9 moot.bs new. HIWPOITllACH $77,900 LOCATION Locat.ed off E!lls $195-000 between Buch Blvd. & Tb t u l l I m a t e I n New1IDd In HunUqtoo eoordlut.ed decoraU01 Beach. ~ lute aboundl CoatliDe Really ~~~t= ~ ~ POOi a feoeed5_l_N_EED--=--.. -~-lde-Dlial-rard. rou mull He lot or W aile. So. W.1tnuranfiod. . ~area-Cub buyer. F. tu..,,,, 759-0811 C.U "'"'°' OUR BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR Glut Wutiu 'BUg. 3.;1 f'n r •d· Or .v·· t-J tt ,,;•, olol .........•........•.... ······················-Ge•r.. IOOZIG••r• 1001 4W NEWPOAT CE lllTE R OR IVE 759-0811 ,~ ~ DUPLIX • ~ 6BEDROOM.6BATH -o;n\ ~ almost 6,000 sq ft stud10- GeMral I 002 GeMral I 002 ~-& style w m· tu·vltd cell· ••• •••• •• ••. •-•••••••• •••••••••••• ••••••• •••• angs. Ea unit like a 2 ab PICTURESQUE J Bedroom. 2 bath . Debgbllul living room with used bnck Cireplace PRIVATE PARTY LEMON HEICiHTS home w /den & forml din G 0 0 D F 0 R rm, 2 decks, rrptc, wet ENTERTAIN ING-S bar, bttns1nc compactor. Bedroom each w1t h etc Sep lndry rms. 2 ots· pri vste out11de door. rd dbl gar's, .all ntcely Wanta duplex or triplex family room wltb wt!t Ids cpd w /spnnklers & and opea beam celling. Recreation room approx eve. ~.N:0rrtz~~4~7~;2 bar. bulltln buUet. handsome slumpstoac Beautiful landscaping. wa lls Nr. :.hop·g. ouldoor ligbtin& and $240,000. 23x2.1. ~~~~~~~~ COSTA MESA DRUM •&HGYOUR PAIMT•USH We start YoU with an all IAYCREST POOL HOME Spact0us, btll. newly de· oorated home in select area. Move-in coadlUon. Priced right for immed. sale. 646-7711 ~ Walkr.r 1; ltrn Rt!al (state pool, all on trees 718 JACOIS RIALTY : U1'e. 675-6670 640.9900 \ \ 1.1.E' 1~1.\1 "1' l\ffl 1,1tt,lJ(H• (•I• 1 '4••#11(1!!1! lh• 11..h . PARADISE Own your own land (n Valencia. 628 acres of 1111· ly terrain. up Towsl~y Canyon, L.A. County. Only S200 per acre, wiJI consider trade 646-3928.eve:673-4577 new sink, garbage di3· --------posal and water heater. All you need to do la paint the outside/inside in lh1s lovely Colle1e Park home. Bright and warm exposure or the sun ftUs tbe living are a 3 bedrooms and a family room is yours but move f~ ! Call S46-2313 H!WPOtrr HACH LUXURY $135.000 Lachenmyer oPfH 111 0 •II\ 'VN •Ollf N"'f' 1ai1m1 Are You a Vet? Yao need no money down to bey I Many to choose from. Call for further lnfoa·~-~sr.-.-.,,. DESIGHIO FOR COMIOITAILE UVIHGIH M!SADB.MAlt ARE YOU A Closet Top locat&on. Cu1tom btalt home. Ideal for en· Realtor tertainjag. Muslve ... -------• E111erf~7 rooms all open onto 1---------- NEED MORE ROOM? beautUul pool area. HEWPORTCREST Off an enclosed private lbnua room perfect for ONLY SIZ,000 courtyard, thru a double teenagen or •D·laws. Two story Newport door entry. past a Plenty o< room f<W boet Beach luxury. Formal spacious foyer. unfolda a or.trailer ~tog. Doa't dimng. 3 king size colossal livtng room with mtSS UU. ooe. 646-7171 bedrooms with massil; ~~:~ .:~r:~~in: r ~~~I oPrH r111>1;1S1~~l'O;letl\~'1' ~:!~fn;.w~a~e:~t fireplace-perfect for ~ . ' \ popular condo plan. Call company. A famllY room . • !._,, i.oday! 646-7171 with separate bath could OH-1111o•,,\1urv ro 81 "'"" • • be 4th. bedroom o~ You don't need a gun l•ill~~·1i·~1 l'llOlbtt·lh·law quarters "draw fasl" when you · " A ' ~o~~T~~rki\i~i~ p1_ace an ad In ,the Dal.ly ~ ;• j Wlth Island, make this a Pilot Want ~ds . Call now - perfect family /enter· -642-5678. Want Ad Help? 642·5678 t.ainment home in pre· - stigious WESTCLIFF SffK & FfNft SMITHS · area. $130,000. ,, Wow! Loads or charm in tl.WPORT HBGHT.S this decorated home. 4 M I A F S T H A T E R T C I S 0 T I H S S R I E A H T I M S R E V L I S H T R A B G U N S H 1 T H R U V C H E T 1 E W H I N H M T M F 0 0 T 0 T V I H H S T M k M W A B 1 S Y K I L l L M S T M I S H I C L R L V R I H C H I S k 1 I M A T T L S A 0 E H E S I S S R C HTSRIHOMSCRTRLYKIEA S H S B M S C t I k T I N S I C T P l E L S H S T k H H T I M S L 0 0 T P B G B A C K M S I G U N S H I T L B 0 I D I R H T I H S E F l N K H E A V C " E 0 B T S G I 0 ~ H T J M S D L 0 G S H 8 C l 0 C T D S M I T 0 0 l S M I T 8 l A 0 K S H T l M S N 0 R I K N S I bedrooms and ram1ly Ooe-<>f·a·kind 3 bedroom room wltb versaWlty for home located on a quiet the creaUve homeowner tree-lined street. Two Your CamUy will live 10 huge rustic wooden sun· warmth and prl vacy decks and pool·sized with separate master yard with E ·Z boat or bedroom. Clote to all lra.J1er access, make thiH your needs. Call now, the an active ramUy's dream price is righl! S46 231.3 home. Priced right at Ol'fN '" 9• ,, HVN 10/'I ~ .. 1• S97,.500. CALL 7S1·3191 [eJll!fl •~•ES A'ITEN'nON ~RS/USERS New 8500 sq.fl. o(e bldl IMITUCtlonl: Hidden wordl ti.low IPPelf fOIWllf'd, IJK«. w•d, up, dcl'MI Oii dlagonlfly. Find NCl't Ind box It In. :: Blacks111th Goldsm1th Saws~1th ~ Bo11tf'lll1th 5unsm1th st1v,rsm1th - Brass-S.1th Kn1fesM1th T1nsm1th ~ Clocksll1th Loeksm1th Toolsm1th TC110rrow: Austr1an Htstory .. 1:sa.n.1u eac.e aoc1 .at 2beclroom uniu. Excellent Costa lrJ• area, seo.ooo. In Santa An.a, priced '° ---------------sell.C.U PETE BARRETT -REALTY- . Corpofalelecilty l7t4JHl-1701 8e•rtll I OOJG11t1ral I 002 .............................................. Don't give up tbt ahlp! WATERFRONT Rita 11)"9u, Rltr, HOMES ~Ol'l80-1T01 REAL E'STATE 831-1400 "Llal" lt ln cluailled. '"'!!!!~~~~~!!!!!~'f. Sblp to •bor• neulta ! Ft.nd wbat you want ln"' 642·5678. .Delly PilotClaulflech. ------,,--- CIE 110111 ILlllS CD •CAMYOM-llAUl'IM. Tasteful decor la aol& colon, gardens lush, wltb auto. sPHnklera · " printe pattoa cul-4lwac location are Just a few 'Ci the eye stoppen la WI 4 bedroom, dinln& room. f amlly room home. A show stopping price· '229,500. A C0LDWaL ..._CO. 644-1766 ••••al 1002 c ... ,.. 1002 1002 e_,_. 1002 ................................... -.... . .............................................. .......... °" •AUD Da. Beautltul re.J4ence w /spectacular Yiew I Lg. SUD·fllled IOOllll - 5QUtmet kltche11Q..: brtflt. area -2 places -marvel.om home for eaace In livmg • entel'taining. 48Ra, formal dlnlng + family roorn. $329-500. Barbara Aune ~.(1)82) • llCMa MIW USTl•I • SPY•LASS -Fab•loaa Portl1Douth model cm COl"Df* ~ $235.000. • CAJ •O SMC'i& -I 8doam famllJ rm. formal dine, ~-.. try. =.$198,9&0. • H~ YllW t&U -beaum.t I bedrm ciatate, fam rJD-1-pool, jab·~== $111J,:1UU. • c s -4 bedrm, ser dJ.niDI, apeetacular ocean Yiew, al 011 an excellent bomealte. $189,900. OVER 60 YEARS OF SERVICE •ACIOUS , .. Pl.AM ......... LoYely E Plan End Unit With Terrific View Of The. Upper Bay & Ecological Area. 3 Bedrooma, 2\41 Baths, Family Room, Larae PaUo. For Ias. $750 Month MSTOfla ... amlMAI. aUffS t• PLAN HlahlY.w~ 2-atory Townhouse cm -wsae greenbelt near pool. Finest appointments thruout. 4-bedrooms, s~ibath Spanlab plaster int«lor, open beam celllnga, ltalia:o tile en- trf, tl~ ltitcben with built.Im, refrl1erator, wa1ber /dryer ln· ' cluded. $129.500. By appobttmmt. ~ ~ COATS&WALLACE REAL ESTATE. INC. MESA VERDE. lmmac. 4 ---------· br. 2 ba, ram rm in xlnl neighborhood. Del Piso lc6oa Pftlinsula I 007 ••••••••••••••••••••••• hie entry. Cust. shut· tered & draped, Or. to ce1ra. Used bnck frplc .. ---------1 2 cov 'd ~patios . With 41R.-21ATHS Plus office. pnme loca- llon. Ll:.t.cd at $158,500. JEFF BRIERY REALTOR 675 9111 C'opistrano S.ach I 0 11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MUCH, MUCll more. U mui.t see' $71,900. Ownr, Agt. 546 1081 •38drmUome •Zoned R2 •Harbor Hlgh School •364 La Perle Pl ·~.900 *DUPLEX* Olive W1ggenhom 675·6160 673-4447 PRIDE OF MARVELOUS INCOME .,.Quail ~ Iii IPlac• Prap..-ti•• 7S2•19l0 1400 QU.Ul61. Nfw.ollt l lACM Valentine's LIDO REALTY :~:l77 \ ia l.i.111. '\. B. * 673-7300 * NEWPORT HGHTS Hll 833-9781 Hesfet'-Brown · ltl•HIOR$-- COSTA MESA OWNERSHIP OPPORTUNITY Two 2 bedroom units on· In fast growing Eastside ly 4 years new. On bluff area Two separate wtlh partial ocean view houses on a lol. Sep from second ~Lory PLUS yar<i'l. gar's, both 2 Br 1 large fenced back yard Ba. bltns. lndscpd, etc Walk to shopping' Tn Nr by i;hopping & tram .. dupl1cat1n~ thi'> foi lly o ... nl.'r $79,500 OefiPt!! Super, affordable pool home. Large, airy ' bedroom, ideal for enter lairung. Gas BBQ. Loads of declung. All tor only S'i2.500. SEA HAVEN 3 Bedroom + laree 18x26 family nn .. a super ar~a ror family riusmit. On today's market ttus as a ternflc buy' RAHCHRULTY 551-2000 ILUERIVER! A superb 3 bedroom PRlVATE DRIVE PARK HOME with Ocean new. pnvacy & separate dintng room pot~nt1al 2 BR ,+den. Ha::. been complete!) up large fireplace. deck:.. 2 gradl'd and professional l"ar garage $12!1,500· NEW 4 Br, 2'hba. den, SHORECLIFFS 3 Bdrm. 2 hv.rm, din.rm. wet bar, Ba home. along fairway frpk. + many xtras. Redecorated throughout Some ocean/Catalina Vacant. Ready lo move views By builder. trades in. $115,000. <.-onsidered. $139.950. 22S '77 Skyhne 12x56, new Coach. Adult park. walk to supermarket. (7968K) American Mbl Hms. 557-9390 Custom made 2br, lba. bltns, reflg. washer, dryer. walk to bch, shop:-. & market l'\'t. Ply. $20.000. 673-2976 S65.000. $96,000 ii-I -19-1 20til Mother -in~aw' s ~2ifl ly landscaped. Vl9'y con ~ 'en1ent to POOLS, ~--=g..--- LaJolla Dr. Open Daily 1111 du::.k. 646-7085 or 646-7968 'tale b.) O\,\nr Jbr Condo. 1-'rl'nch (}uartcr~. Open da1I~ 10 5 pm 3183 ('ollt ~l' .\ \l' 556·8671 Pi 111 onl) PARKS. SP,\ and you --_;.;:..;'\.~/ HARBOR VIEW Monte«JO-ly Owner VIEW-Mountains dur-m.: the da}". sparkling L t\ light:. at night from th1!> beautifully decotat· cd home. 4 Br. 2ba. fam rm, prof lndscpd, lge cvrd patio w/gas BBQ. 3 l.'-"Quail ~ liliilPlac• Dream -ANYTIME h a ' c C A B L 1-; T \' ......__,,,. RE,\LLY GREAT AT 939Glenneyre494-8519 Pra lll'ti•• 2 Master ::.u1tes. 20GO :-.Q .fl include:-. 4 --------- ~.OOOCallto~ec l)lJPLEX TO fol:\ t;P P,n-1920 ' 1'00 OUAllST MIW~lU HACH bedroom::.. large S d separate family room & UITOUll lots of storage. Pool and YourseH in Luxury RV access on beautiful 1022 CoronG del Mar ••••••••••••••••••••••• Tastefully decorated in cul-de-sac, for only BRAND MEW rich tones. Newly paint-$78.500. 4 BR + DEM ed. richly paneled family II room, 3 bedroom suites. 2 Roberts Ute ideal com"-'at1on ol baths. 2 fireplaces, cov· a hew h ome 1n an 11 e11tabltshed neigh cred patio, ~6•900 Ca Realty !).W 17':!0 borhood, featuring all ic4i luch ll•d the latest kitchen ap TARBELL KIMlllllf'•• Bta£h Pointments, overs1ze~I ---------1 garage, larJIC room~. . ---- hath::., ~ll'P do.,. n "-•'l "#I In California" BY OWNER bar.mm1 oct-an\.ll'W \II _ __ 2Br. 1•2Ba. 'orklo.,.n \\alk1ng cJ1:.t.int1· 11 BY OWNER Valla Conuo. S5ti,900. private bt•.i c h llnh 963-3957. Open llou:.t $165,000. rce ()~n ho~c 19. 20 2bt Sal Sun 1·5 Call644.721 I ~GrantAH• 01 I Br. 2ba, dm rm. frplc. office Lge coH d pJt10 '68.500 Ph ~0841 ---VIEW POOIA Home 3 br. den ~ ba w.sunl..l'll ba!hluh frpl. lg lot on cul de-!.ar By owner SllJ,500 963·5804 ------- SUPER NICE! RA~CH REALTY 2 Bedroom condo for only ,,,. 55 t-2000 S-l2.000 Sw1mm1n~ & ------- recreat 1on n earby. Wootlhr1dge l'la ec llurrywhale1tlai.t!'I ··Gn•l•nlJ11Jr· ~ HH. pnm· uni.\ EH·'· <:JO:Jl -lih IJK.4 or <.ll~I 1 Hti ~Ill.'> WESTSIDE REAL TY INC 848-2323 L.A,"lOMARK 5 Hr 3 U.1. l''am Hm w fpl1 . n1 tx-ach. ~t·hoob &.. :.hop Pini? I )r old ~l.!JOO Call aft ti. or \\ k nd' Open tor an:-.pcl'l 1on 962·2104 WoodbndJ(e Pl.ll'l' Hi -.1·ay :'ltnd€'1 tl>r. lorm.il f.im rm. 3ba. 2 frptc ... J l·a r ~ar Premium lot on park t:pgrades 1nl'l'g .'\C Sl23 000 8J3 0507 aft Spm OCEA:>. VIEW !:-'ROM L!PPEH UNIT. S LAGUNA JAYW. YEATS. RHffors 499·2237 -----1 houses to pool, jacuzzi HEW LISTINGS and tennis court. Ma:ny • Deluxe Condo. Ocean ameruties. $145.000. Opn next door Pool and house Sun 11·5 at 2324 \'1ew .. ~.500 Port Durncss Place. • Updated home plui. 644·6826 Cottage on 1i acre. --------- $82.500 "Z" Rl::ALTOR 494-8611 EMERALD BAY LOTS Laq:c & .Le\ r l with µl.1n!'I topo. '011 lc:.ls :iitll.500 DOLPHIN R.E. /Jn NIGEL Dl\ILEY Ea. 1\SSUCll\TES Best Buy m Mesa Verde. Call 494-8~~5~8~1~~~~!!!!!!!. By O...ner 3Brl12 Ba con ---------1---------do. Best area. clo:.c tq TOE TOASTERS _be_a_ch_963_94_24 ____ 1 2 Frplcs .• one LO the II\' CAU US mg rm for formal toe . for all tile latest mulli· l ________ _ DUPUX 3 Br. $71.500 S . 3 bd & r ~06J0aft4Pl'tt paCIOWI rm ~ ---------ON THE BLUFF baths, e.ach unit. ~If \1esa Verde 4Br. Tropical mstr. bdrm., bea'l'led carden Open every day. cei I.. x I nl re n la. s ! By owner. 556-1530 1139.500 Huntington Viewpoint ,,.... 1044 • •••••••••••••••••••••• loasting & one irt the den pie hstml:l> avail.able JO CALIF RANCH for informal tot' toa~t the Laguna Beach area! HARBOR VIEW HOME. mg; come get this 2 !or Also" c have prestigious area. Enter Starte Homel 31 bdrm . 2 bath A large ot•canfronl through open beam. PAUL MARTIN REAL ESTATE i;.w.7~ IY IUILDER CUSTOM tnptex under construction 3 br. 2 ba. 2 story owner's unit +z . 2 story 2 br. l '': ba unlta. Tame to coose color!I. Xlnt E s\de loc $185.000 673-1658eve11. f • charmer. while il's hot' home. down low n Vaulted entry way, large Cute 2 bedrm with $79.500 Laguna. Commercial entertaining liv l'oom. COUNTRY COTTAGE 2 BR. 2 ba. S. of llwy 198.000. Paul Mart an Real F.atate 64-1·73113 cuiitom rt replace & "'"---~ Jl06S1b1hlies. $350,000 Huge family rm, dining tastefully enclosed front ' rm & 4 big bedrooms. patio . Yard Is a 552·7000 m~fics~ Move up to a beautiful OPEN HOUSE !n:st~rp~eie:cN!a~ c~md THl ... · .':. · · ~ ........ 8Il001l~ ~~tter hurry, call munHy park and pool VI LLACE. · .. · ... .. and tennis court! Sound _...;.... __ _ HY OWNER SUNDAY 12·5 nice! Call Red Carpet REALTORS ~ a BR. pool side Condo DR. PR. J8CU711, tenn15 cta.67~ EASTSIOEC.~. Realtors,833-3380. ---------3 Br, 1 ba, srr & laundry Bv Owner Turtlerock rm. 2 car 1ar. lrg lot 11506 VALLARTA .a Br. S109.000. J"ee Tcn- w cslm pa tao & bltn COLONY rus & pool fac1I. Prine on- OCUN ¥SEW BBQ Move 10 rond .. va· Beautiful 2 bedroom. 2 Beautifully upgraded 4 ly 644-4157 3 Br. den. din rm & <am can l 3 o 9 E 1 9 t b bath. Custom carpeting bedroom family home _;;.... _______ _ t'ID. $30.000 uperaded an Sl968-7444. & wallpaper. Fireplace. with separate family WOODIRIDGE put year. All ne" &Toro 1032 taree entry ball with room and dmin& room WOHDBl lntchen, <'pts. "allpaper ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• wood peg&ed floors. 2 Convenient lo lighted A better than new Broad- • lile Hug• lot. Un Open House By Ownr. 4br. patios, double garaee TENNIS courts. POOL moor Laurelwood Plan behnoable reduction to (am rm. J:\6 ba, 23S7J with electric opener. and PARK. Call to see at E 4 Br. Jba. frml din rm. Sl49,000 Duryea off Rocklield Pool. tennis couru. Just only S89,950 ram rm. 3 car gar. Open Nick Vracan Agent l l-6 Sun $72.500. 9 monlhs new. Sat Sun from 10 AM to 4 ~-M21 5.51·2784 $77, 900 I PM. Your best buy al --r-t•Y~ 1034 Localed oft Ellis ~ Sl2S.OOO DUPLEX ••••••••••••••••••••••• B d , RIGHT ltEALTY 2BR +den, 1•,BA . between~ach Iv .& 79 S 3 w/1ara1e apt.·lBR. lBA Le0M /Optloft Newland in HWlltngton Call t -8 3 Beam celhnes, frplc. 4 Bedrm. 2 t>atb ranch Beach. uulVERSITY P"RK llurry. pn ced to sell. style homt in immac. Coaalilne Realty " "' AGT.,Carey.675-5327 condillon. Freshly paint-~ Uti4CHllALTY Terrace Cam bridge _.i __ ._ ed. New cpt.s. All bltns. HI 2000 Twnhse 3Br, 2ba, frplc. ~MIM t024 Sparll1tn1 20X40 PoOl. • sep din rm, wet bar, up· _.•,11••.·.·.··.·.·.··.·.·.··.·.·.·.••.•.•.•1 Vacant, lmmed . pio.u. The fastest draw ln the Woodbridge Place, grd'd, cpt'g. drps, coun· • P l ,150. Call 545·8424, West ••. a Dally Piiot Orttnbriar Plan. 4 Br, try kitchen, rnc'd patio. MIS.A YHDI BKR. ClassinedAd. -5678. ra m rm, 2 ba. Call S76.500Ph 644·7475 FORESTE OLSON '""' h• Ao ~CJ.U~ 3 br Costa Mesa area. (rom $$4,000. Multiple. Olde World John Vanian Company 548-8614 Charmer wtl.h big vu nr --------- V1ctona Bch, with a de lllAMD HEW tached studio. 3 bdrm~. OCEANFRONT duplex den. all on double lot 00 Balboa Perun. 3 br. 2 $1S4,500 ba, owner's uml w /bay Jacunl Spa view & 2 s undecks + 2 br With a be11utlful p0ol 1n a rental uruts, 4 car park· secluded yd. This 3 Ing. Only $285,000. Call bdrm. home haa a fa mil)' 642·3850· rm. (pie & areat local1on. PROPERTY HOUSE Sl~.500 Baycrest 3 br, 2 ba. ram.rm , din.rm . $150,000. 642-7889 or 646-3448 ~.~~':'·d::~!~ ~':b Codtl.MeM 1024 ColtaM..e 1024 84().252&. BY OWNER: Hi&hly up. "' lnt, t.io lai d. ................ ••••••• ••'"•"•••• .... ••••••••• RANCHO SAN JOAQUIN graded Cardiff mdl tn ~....... I OS pa pa , arae yar Ont 2 Br +den on aoU Terrace. 2 Br , 2. ba. •••••••••••••••• .. •••• Ft'uit trees! $73,000. COUJ'94!/lake. 83J.3&L3 lof\/Ubra~, end utnt. 2 • s E A T E RR A CE ! RoyMcC_.. G d 0 • Brick patios w /arbors. Garden home. 3BR ....... lllOM......,,. ran pen1ng TURTLEROCK OLEN, Premium lol.8Mosnew. entry kitch. ultunate l ~W...541-1'129 M1t'4 Br2Ba.FamRm $79,900. Open house Sat fam liv'i· Pool, tennaa Owner. Sl36,000. Prine. 1-4. U Jordan East. beach! M.500. FIXER UPPER )N 90.0IO. NBRHOOD. Sdlcr wiWna to do *PIW'O•· $3,000. wortb Of df•it-. Aakina $57 ,000 •GENT, 13'll01 left MIS.AYllDI ~Ct. SBR, 2ba ~·brim• nbrf)ood o.r io1f ~urn and parlt. r.tsohrra.cbt..t.ma " brid. Acem 1'13-7G)l CJllb'.944-5621. By appl.. 552-1901, 833-6332. •NORnNl&WI Custo TERESITA VILl.U TAR GAZER'~~ i:~:ly~;,,~s~~~~ COltDOMINIUMS ~ !:'..';,~ ~ BONt>l~:ttTY Te ~ ~toOe t0< Ftldoy, ~}19'1F-z:.::=: IONftlben 4 AHCHOUGE fHYESTMIEHTS 1714t 496-771 ' ~====----' 2 Br. l Ba. Mobile Homt'. San Juan Capidrano I 078 ••••••••••••••••••••••• BY OWNR-UNO EH MKT Sharp 3 br. l 'h ba condo wwc $49.750. 493 6590 Bayside Village . Nc~port Beach. P't beach. 2 pooli.. 2 jaCUUI'>. boat docking faCJl1t1c !> avail to tenant. $23,500 RoyalReoffan 645-0882 BY OWNER. Nicest 3 Br. 20' Mobile hm. Good cond. 2 Ba home In trad, Palms Park. 140 beautifully lndscpd, Cabrillo.Sp25,CM.lblk $60,500. 493-5506 off 17th/Nwpt ----- Anytime Casual Snuggled & Cozy! ... ~ WaUmr r; lee lh:al l:.itate Lowe It and theft A RECREATION MRADISE. Twv t\:'nnls courtl. Swimming pool plus unlqw voll~ll pool. J4Cuui Sand votk>lµll court. Mountain lodge clubhou:w with fireplace. conversation pit. blfllerds. gym. S.tuna . I I Huny to the good life •" 1d 1h1.>n rel.ix FROM $26.5 TO $355 'I Including Heat 011v Redinorn. Orw &rh Twu Botdruon>. Two Bath ,,ll~IP 13(X) Ad<11ms Aw., in Costa Mesa. c)('TOSS from Orange Cortst Col~ l:wtween Hortior and Falrvie.v . 'Very large 2Br. 2ba w/stove & refng. New painl, pvt balcony. lsl, last. & dep. (98.(1~ Sunny, sparkling clean 2 BR, bllfta, carport, ocean view, no kida/pets. $250. 493-7231 rcwt•Valey 3134 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •OUVIPAU• Al'fHOMIS Nu 2 fr 3 Bdrm., blt·in&, cpt.s, drps, encl. aar .. all nu. (714) 84'7·'75&e, lOam· ~.7dys. associated &l!Ol<fl!S llEl\l •OPS l ~ l '1 \A Bot <.lQ•l h ' 1 t t t. t 4400 ..... W-"d 4600 FOUND: S-6 mo Female cat, wht w/blk tail. vie Hell & Goldenwesl. SJJ.2218. You doa 't need a IUD lo "draw fast" when )'Ou place an ad In the Dally PUct Wanl Ads! Call now -~. f HAPPY llRTHDAY TO u. u. P'rod u.u. JJapr'J Ul.ntw ~ ~ ... OUI' lltlr'J lt16f :l,.u,,.J. Jun-, Jr. & 2W A.UEMBLEIS PRECISION Only quallfled personnel need appl~. Good manual dexterity . Microscope exper. Orow w /small co. in Mission Viejo area. Call Carol. 581·3830betwu l ·Spm. Assl1tant Optometric. Must type, mature, sales oriented. will train. SC8-23SO or sal·U218 ... . ~!!.?!'!'!'-.. !! ... ~?~-y.?!~ ~!~-?!!! ~!~-... ?!!«? ~?~ ..... ?!!~ ~!~--.?!!! ..... ~ ..... ?!!C! ~~¥.!~~.~ ..... ?!!C! ~!=!~ ..... ?!~~ IOOKKEEPEtt F /C COOK GIMllW. OFFICI HCYl'liiL . M&nutadurtq ........ a 1Kt4w .. DATA ENTRY Through general ledger a.ERICAL Exper. ~pply. The Secretari l·Gal Frid NIGUT AUDITOR 1BfflCIAN Dept. ~reliable man & fmancial statements. *'l'I £DUONE Quaner • 2530 w ....... XlD: oa•1 Looldnl ror penoqble. 3 y . XlD tor t1ebttn1 Hs.ture Al¥Y'U1NflNG l"'l ICDIW exper required. Salary ti.UR CoutHwy,N.B.5e-117'7 i:i.,..g .dlven~· 6 :: ~atare. relia,le In· ~ ~~ bi1 wa:ttbouae. A.pplyJOSlS M\AAIU u.i;nn. open based on skill & cOMnauy dividual w/poUtiYe a&. • -r-• ... E. Mala si. fnlne. Fall time position open as a vi(leo abltt ty. N.B. Area l"M * c~~·&5r;:pime~~f: ~~=~10~,:,:S" ~%0: Ut\Jde Is ablllly to,.. =:'11~ co.::: uou from o .c display terminal operator for a 873-727? for appt, ask for abop exp. Bela. pleue. •l&en'I olc exl*'. Thia mtmber c"'tomers bf 1ro~. Ml11lon Viejo _Airport. ~l. Basic/Four mint-computer. Some Betty "Aftftr11--1 awue·a Chill Ofc. (no posit.Ion offers a Sood S:.r:hr~~=b!:; area. catl Carol. 181·1810 a.ts WIO aperience is desirable, but will train nn..,. Ail ~1 ~ salary, + 00:· qualillcati®a. ~· betwnl-$pal. m. WellG. roomed indiYidual with demonstrated typing BOOKS Needed Cook Trainee" Busboy Accurare = =:n: !'>I employee prO(lt abar· Mm4lllf ._..... Ptus.b Fash 111 klc. accuracy and speed. Work in pleasant St.:deNb Cleancut. career minded tlal .. No ah req'd. Xlat mi plan. U In~·~ Raptdb irowtoi co. bu Em'1~~~ _:~~ environment with good company Homewiws& Immediately enersetic 548·M beDef1ta inclUde major gt.~p~· oa-Fn need ror marine In· .a20BircbSt,Ste10t benefits including 2 weeks vacation .. ..._...,. Counter or Yard person med&profitaharing. ltvHoetMotorHotel atal,ter. Boatbi~xper. NewportBeach ~lllO after one year, -company paid group =o~e:!oi1:,,:eo;~f EXPERJEHCED part Ume. 20bn wk, U· A~~m~n ln7 E. Dyer Rd. Irv mo~ ~!r~e ('f/r:j Call for Appt/Estab 65 insurance,creditunion,etc.Applyat any age who enjoy ONLY =:e:~:li-~t•r. CIMCO E.O.E. M/F 980-3"1. ' ' PIXAMwtt'.StrY. OIAMCll COAST DAILY PILOT speaking w /others & who I r v In e I n du s l r i a I HOUSE.KEEPER • ·Mature person to work JJO w .., St eo.ta Mesa ~bored w /the averaie •Customer Rep Delivery · Part·Ume. s to Complex LAGUNA BEACH MmW Tedmldm IJ'•veyard relier. Im meet ._..._tweenthehours~fS·OOAM-5·00PM nmolt.bemilljobs. 9PM, or wee kends. ~BnpsAve,C.M. We are toolrin1 ro~ a CIM~ 1haic.vereqe~pe. r.;._2m1dar openina. Apply in u.. · · •Ope-t..-~7196or495-0081 Call544H480 respo111ible, auraatve. -:of" d. ..... person, 155 Rochester c.•..,1L t 11111...... No actual selling an ••wt~ EqualOppEmpttrm/f reliable lady who la not =::iaent desirable. Ave,C.M. • '42-4321.nt116. =~e~~ow~.:,::c •Cle.a... ~~·~,:s~;i~in~~0~~r~ satisfied with their pre· com.:n:=,~!~'i. nx $trY F.qualOpportunityEmployer of the most popular & I~ cert req'd. Salary open, Gell1M*1•11•c• ~aal.:,?~~t Dyna. lb,iae, t714l Operat!:'::"ed ~ & successful producta on ~or67s-340S Min. Lquna Hills area. ml.Ill be tborouA No -.aMI. wknda. Paid trainina the market today. An lo· _ """.._._.._ Retired servicemen pre· children. no pe1s, no •~ET"''"°• Apply ln c.non. ns expensive product whose .,.._,.,AJ.,--f'd. Also, Janitorial .....,.,_tt M t ha .....,." o-i.--.-c Ill ""'W..e.d 7100 ~W.ted 710 name 1s a household Aaa,latant. AUractlve, Supervisor, eves S.lam ... ..._..,. us ve ca(. ALE • ..,..._, · · ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• word thruout the world. zmature woman for full 830-3321. Call (7l4l 870-8802 C2l3I 55~ Oomm-Ouar mln. NX OPERATOR --.... -----•IBAR GIRL, attractive. Work In a youthful, ;1148C--Dri•• time in «hical 1eneral e9l-50JJ. ~U lit P.T. •ork. Mbr No e.xper. neceaa.. Call Aaloclate Rep Part time. Salary plus. friendly atmosphere I& S4M741 pradlce: Erpertence not Girl betwa 19-23 for blklnl Housekeeper, refined ~~A or 2 yrs exp. *1'ter l0:30AM, Maureen llOIOYIR 846-55'4 have funwhileyoueam tActwaFrom nec.Callbtwnt&lOAM. & aport.awearr:n't•I. lady for cpl. Nice ~ES"• u"'"""' Wllaoo,8'4-1700 . ... 0 EJCPRa ... IU"" •••u••D W--"-... top pay. You receive a ~Airport) Monthru Fri. 9G-:Ml2 Modelln1 & ll nl(. Newport 8ch home Pvt -..a& 1rn ....,....u ... " -. "....,. __. _._ eed ntn-• :.254115. Rap Uolfmlted. S l I . I PEOPLE.PERSON gwu-ant s ...... ,, +ex· Eq ~ployer ELECT R 0 LUX ~eves. rm/ba. ma sa · MATtrRE WOMAN u . to Oran KNOTTY KEG t=e ely liberal com-6*8119. 1 Newport Exec needi. you re new 1e 2125Harbor81,CM Ion & bonuses. Con· Authorized sales Ir p)Ume to we come part Ume associate In CO., temporarily diacon· Cal1646-9910 tes &otherlncentives. aervice. M/F. Fall· GIRL FRIDA~. part ousekeeper, En1llsh newco~rs & contact wholesale aupptv . tinuing your education, 1---------1 X l 1'1 d p /time S.U-41.U Urne, phones, fihna. typ-speak'g. 5 days, 9-S. $500 met"cbanD. 1-'l~ible bra. ..,.,... " recently discharged Beauticians wanted. possi\,ul'ue:~o~~:i~ Cl£RIS ~ .. !,!!t·/3A2•~-tae.vHe8s . mo. Quiclr advancement Need car. Ute ~~l-1-v_, ... 2223 __ . ____ _ from tbe service or for Great opportunity for l&women. Energeticpeopleper90n oTIJUUJ...... uau for riibt penon. Reply 1547-31115. any reeaon aeeldng tem-hairdressers w /Newport ALE Cl.ERIS c~~t.:~ ~ .... lnJi.!r GIRL RIDA Y Ad Ha. Daily Pilot. ro ...,.,-.-ture--..a-m-eQ_w ... a-n-ted-:; ~t=P~: !:c!:d11~::~= No exper nee. You re· SR.TYPISTS ,.. ,.....,._,, Secy/Bkkfr. Good Boxl.580.Coat.aMesaCa. ror houaecleaaing PHONESAL£S queoppor.Youcaneatn the finest salon tbal ceivefullpaywbilebelng ENGINEER p e rsonalty . Non 921626 tet'Vk:e,P/r.Top$S,car Phone Sales people . · Newport Beach baa to of. trained. You can work REPRO TYPISTS smoker. Needed lmmed. Insurance ntcl4&-S1a male or female, 16 to 65 Slf6PBWEBC fer.640-6003 =•bc;-~e/~~~fi w-fadaleg Hardware Supply. Ex· O..YowOwll Med Aist._ Fr (jf yearaotage.Guaranteed surrounding com . STAT TYPISTS 3 Yrs min. fam4llarily J:.'°8" r= Call Mel 11 •~•A11•cy BUUq no~Ob. b~ w.aes or commiaaions Bued on your produc-~~C:.~.~~llbor munit.ies. You owe it \0 w/high reliability small ppt . Noexprecfd.earowhlle compenaallon opn . 2SO Eaat 11th Street. t 1 vi t y . Co m m + WIUIU\a ,...._ .. .._ .... or components. Degree not team. k 10W' -.suN Soite o. Coet.m lf•11. mcentivea fl extra profit P/llme.88T-M14 =te\Ot~ 1:J:i S£CR£TAllES nee. Salary com · GIRLS & GUYS )'Otl • eep pre-betweea5:0C>fl8:»p.m abarin1bonas.Ont.MJobe.aui1 operator. Hair c R meneurato w/back· aent~wbiletralning. MENforLA'nmeshoma 646-4223. trainio1. Ttemendoua drwer •lfollowtng for oppor. ontact eoee Long&Short 1round. Call Carol. Neat,alert,overl7.Need f9Wt'-t W deliv.,inN.8.SZTl-'350 Equal<>Pt>ortwUb potential to reach uciUng new NpQcb Roai,833-8098. TermAlaipments 581-3830betwnl·5pm. a job'! Uke to travel en· .._ pet:IDClllth.~·1'140. Emj>loyer a\C)ervisory & manage-.,_,_ ·--,.. Ure U.S.'! Tranaporta· Edi.ml 1' "112-1147 .._..,,,._ ~ SIN£EI tlon furnlabed. Dal17 M;mt Tme, .,.... Kara mmt positions. llust be ------"" IOYSAMDGllLS EN . cub adva.nc:e. For ·ri ·-·---Sl75·-00 •Ir. r11ller•--------~ble Is ambitious. rw.w.,...-:..wv-...,__.._ •n-t... _""'Toro ua'"'""""' .., •-t t J nw.-/CoQstruc $800+ -"~~ a:.a c~u-..5 pointmeot, ca I Peraonal llnea Sec'· BrulbSalea.~·'nm. P/tSaJea,~S70wkup ppo ... men on Y ......... area Earn )'OUr own ~• n4/642·3030, Es.t. 4, 11 ty/Underwrlter for . Men, ladles. atudents call LoanProc/Comm1 SL2K money selling subscrtp· 31.a•c z Dr Decree not nee. 4 Yra 3 du Muaieallnltrwneat E •/S t 554 78Sl 53, I Ill D......-~.t ,_ -~ min. ex ....... •~ hi .. t. re-a.m. \0 p.m. a y. ~gage bankin&.ftrm. · ve" • · · · . • ._.....r••.Tr-tloDlaftencbooL Forw· l4M741 ..-u• ... S,J.. Exper.,a muat. Xlnt Mfg Deec1a t.ralneea for 839-7896. 9:30AM-ZPll =-~= ~c.118»0UJ <AcrouFrom , !!:.~t~~O::~fu~~: GRIMOIRON Job ono~ w/aro•'• woe>d shop a fUU.ldDc'---.... --...._----•&1~0aa&a 11 .. -a..1c11m mafAlltala, r«ail Orange Co. Airport) alon Viejo area. Xlnt <CENTERLESSl qeney. Salary open. For oper.Cal15'5-'IJIS. MST MANAGER. ht 8111teZM •1410 ..-IDdtfldualcapable Equal()pporEmpk>yer bene. Salary com· beYt~o~!0co~p".P;~9 ~ call Claire Lutea. NURSE APPttAl9L Couatry Club. llust be a ol MSWDlna reapomlbli·e~~~~~~~~I meo1urate w /back-n-'-er ~· C.M. SU-0403 83Ml5lll\ ....... Imperial S • .U.'a, ~ penoD -·~ill ty. Heavy llA'I req'd. r~ .... -" 1round. Call Carol, Oil& ~ "• E. 0 . E. llJF. Quallfka iood ~ .... lllnlmwn ltart'I wage ~BeA_,snl 8l-3830bdwn1·5pm. aam.nnoon. JANITOR. P'/Ume, fPVel. 173 n..t n-.... e Co ac tiooa; 2 yra tun time •P-•--'"---" IJE UllE '" Cl\ b.r Pb -~ ., ..-""' Locail. Jl1oor exp. Lead~ ......-..,. _ ' . .....-•-·• -p. -c:lau 2 de· --~o;au..._I..., --· : ''"""+<>at CocJctaJJw-"~-.r-.--sHOP b~11 1 ~ ece. ~ loe nr ,... ..... u .... ..,. 8 30-5 J0541-10i.1Z ..... .,... EXEC. SECRITAIY -ma o c ••• • l • •. '..-. .. ""'---~ "'·-I • ed. si8Jialion. 413.n30 ext AUl'O MF.CllANlC. 5 : : •SH.GO• · Superint'endenls ofc. Muat be 21• p/~e poa. 979-allZt p;w:-_. mm 40, (9-3) es.p. Bef1. l1000 mo. OPEIATOI care lltitro. Lido Village Exdtiq l&.Pn:llltable AJao, acts as rl"ttllftfindl = ~v~8!: K*ln,. 11an.auraetive '~a~ Real __ f.B_ta_te ____ _ = ODauD. llUlt haft receDt uper. Shop's Cntr now accept-Glamouroul Prdeaion aec:y. lo the board of -.-heh ay Nil!w facWty '' • Qill 1\9e Lcln&lsSbort los applications for •'Lelm lo 40 bra from educatlon. a.q·, sb 120, 530. Goochtaftr_-: . 3-lllsM' MIWPOIT lllc.at-llllbetwaW. Twm,1tefp....,,t O>ckbll ~ Bar ten-prolanl'1 the fine art of \n>ina 65. Must have 2 GUAIDSWA.MJID ly ad IG7~=~ MIID!SURGICU/ECU llACH A .... ,.... din, Bus •Sandwich wailrasatftbniques. yrs college lrainin° or ..... h • POBo• • ...... Cu -..oil"" rmlra' 6 alntMaace. •FreeJobPlcmo&Assllt ._ "'"ll·Ume. Ana elm x-• . .,..-COntactNun.ln.a : Opp.forRBsaleaperaon N9w ~.~ m.-i •D .. vore-nln1--.... --~uiv. in ofc m&m~·b• '5 lrvtne. Ale 21 fl ov~r. Landsca ... Foreman " (114)~ itl t.op NB &oc. Kona Kai _,r--... ... _,,..,... yrs reaJlofta, de Mature men pref d . wonen..-COQCl'eLI! man (213)598-J.111lext203 Rlty. Div. of Pacific: Top ..... P9ld. CM WASH HaP f'ci~714> 7~9fu9' =rafr~~;:· ~~:~ Uniform.a furn. No ca ~ • • LOS ALAMITOS lnvalmt. ProperUea. 9 I ...... _, ••=Dr l'/U.me.Onirl&. o1U:mm\~prd= around ~ Luuna outlaJ.Car&pboaeoec GEND.ALHOSPITAL ~«568374 wr ... ~ ..... c..w• So.eaunfattresa,lnc. Beach ~lfied $cllool AllPb' Univerul Protec LET llE INTRODUCE Jm~AYe!l!le laohtel'J'. allampooen MM ~ 2150H.arborBl,C.ll. 1._..SlryPa.r .. Bl,"'•-c ni.-o-'ct p---~• Of tkln Service, 122111 W. You to the world ot Ldl~a~it.c».907J0 Reeeptloni.tfl'yplat dl9dl =•Is (AaamJl'tom ·-• a..-.-au• • og..._.._ c. St .. Santa Ane. tn Beeline Fublona. Eiu"h f'4ualQppOrtl:mployer Part time, fQr1mallMf1. hwy. a OnnceOo.~rt> CAIWASN..., IMne,C&llf.,92114 ~-tenlewt M·F 1o:aoam. $»S40 per eve. No, ln.-Plant. Exp. ln1enera1of· am BtCll Equal()ppor&mployer F/tlme.JUcOYer QlmpaniOtl·Cook deslred noon&1:3CM:IOpm. •esUDent, tar" pbon' lice procedure•. Xlnt ~ Ml-llm 11.VOC&rWub by male Senlor CWten, FACfO.Y •• t neceu. call Kn. Cloer condlUona. CORTEC ·-n-.-a.m He I' •-1 -" for -rsonal lnC.rvw. INC.· Costa Mt a a · AYll ---~~~--·i-~-~~~~~~·~· ~·~ .ve-au, .. u1 oeau..aa· .urrnrn NOW•. r'* '43-1171 ble, ref'a. IH-5177, n1.1fU1U • '30-:im•S48-1488. 1------- Calbier,,....._W ·~ .. tares. •M90<714> , TEMPOHAS UC~ST Apply, M7 . ~ t. --------1 OPENJNGSP'OR: foe' 3 man "*91atrtc Of _ec.ta __ .,_.._ _____ ... CONTRACTOR Al ct •11r1 Dee. lllalJon VieJ01 Ph Cl• OPPORTUNITY ,_..,,,. "111~. lllP NEEDED ~z>:rt-w!. ... SbllU Dlt •~....,...App-raau ~ 1tnmeatete1y 1 r , Beef ma at a r llUlft • NEVER A RE ~ aoio IWbor UP.TO ~~··· BYd,C.IL Sl.OOTOSIJ..00 =Help CHE1' ~ mo. kitcbeo PaMOUI l'IWl klnlDe Helper a.so br. Sid'• Ml.0.PmMI 4M411 Bh•9"t.f'l5.3333. •lltlat•apce to. Ntedl F.qual llllioJft' Odld---Clre--t:l-JIO-per--bt-.-lD*"' ::!:, To Service Ac.· --------... our bome. S Cblldre" •l'a.mll7 llen ID Need Of ~~~.!:!!~~~~I U.t, aft. ltbool ls all day AddJUonal WeelllJ In· ID IWIUDW. ~ d.rlv· come l.q. CllU "99. Sll-G582 •Not Afraid Ot Manual a.EANJNO Qltet elderly Wort ep&e 4-ire pn1 clua· •lluat Hue Truck, Illa woawa 2 morniop W1'060rAULo I*' trk. OWD b'aftlp •Ne> EQWtence Or 8ale9 Nrs.1'11-m>. • • RETAIL .AUISTAllJ MIJIAIER Or 11•1\••er Trainee OllelWul ln aeveral loca· t 1 o u -w I n• t' I Jr. 5portawear cbaln store. RM.ail aper. pref'd. Ad· va n cemeol OP · porLuoHlea. Xlnt beoellta. Salary com meoeunte w Jexper. ~ ply In peraoo: PETRJ.E'S 147 Weetmin1ter Mall Wettmmt.er RETAIL CLERKS UTOTIM C.u11l11ceMarlteh Pol1Uooa open 2nd & 3rd abltla In San Clemente " Laguna Beach. Other areas have opeoln11 also. No exper. req'd. Apply at any of our stor.. 2588 Newport Blvd. c:o.ta Mesa ~-77 SUPERIOR FIREftL'ACE COMPANY ADM11ooOf MOBEXC()RP. .m AttMla Ave Ful.Lerton. Calif. 921633 An F.qual ()pport~y Employer M /F SHlqMETAL MICHAHIC ..._.,. Y CHAIGE Min. s yrs exper. operat· Apply tn person, Paril Ing shear brake & strip· Superior Conv. Hosp., pit req'd. Salary com- 14.S Superior Ave, N.B. mensurate with educa- M2·3'10. t.lpn & exper. Xlnt health -------~ & educaUonal )>eoefits. RMS.penisor Fuian Corp., 1006 W. 11-7. full or p/time. Mesa Hoover Ave, Orange. Verde C-Oav. Hoe;p, &el _639-_11193 __ . _____ , Cetur St, c. M 548·551S. ROBBIE'S RAG n' MOP Mature women needed for housecleaning service. S48-0757 SR. TYPISTS NEEDED IM MED. ·voLT '•11\\Uf.IAlft •J U•ll t "• I nzo '"' ....................... 'T3 &lout. XJnt cood Lou ot mu, S.cnllee s:nM . Phm-59Z5 tl60 7JOahla,..., 4 aJ)ffd wltb radlo & m•8•· (7U70U) Reduced k> eel.I •l OMLYSZltl 7t ca.-., 1>'4 , _ Plcllif lbutre style orian. w / Automa tic with pwr. rhythm, chl!JlC!S, sureo, ateenna. alr eond. & Le.she speakers. s>rael 1 ____ _..;;. ____ 1 custom cab. <7052!5M ). chords $850. 968-7331. Red~tofflbt Blond Wurlltser s pinet OML Y $2495 76 o.tt. rklmp 4 speed ln abarp condi· ~· (18140081. Reduced ---------• tolell at ------Otil.Y S3195 COLORTV•s 76Toyot.Pkbp Aute>maUc with ra~ & low miles. In euellent condition ! (1865894 1 • Reduced to sell at OMLYS379S Beautiful set& $99/up! Factory recoodationed, guaranteed Portables. '72 Hooda 2SO XL. 14.000 Consoles -RCA. Zenith, mi. Very clean. $650 "T1 El Camino. Auto, PS, etc Wnght TV 646-1786 w trlr 497-1077 radio. 6 cy1. 3300 m1 Mint I $4700 Call 768-3674 Tape recorder. AC /DC '74 2SOcc Honda Elsmore w1cue, also 1as toa. $35 Nickle plated frame. did 1955 Ford Panel. new each. Nlghts551-3194 nms. lotsofextras. Must everything. S2000 sell. $400. 960-51~ al\ 968-C*l af\6·:.>. 8p.m. --"'---------87 Cheyy '1'I Too pk up. new sooo. 'SI V AMAHA 250 Enduro eng, ~. 648-8432 dys. St. legal. new parts 673-4M3evs. 9040 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Xlnt. $290. 837-1013 -----------------Focd PU '68. Shell, looks. '14 Honda XL12S. Gd cond nms aood. Many xtras. Must sell this wknd. $300 S17SO/bst. 642·635 l or Ph 646-3006 546-3989 •. ",\'y'•'TI\ Ciil!iOUi<' BILL MAXEY TOYOTA I 8881 l •och Bl••I '-ivnt1nqton lfl'a("J.i eH.esss - 'ii Ford ''l ton. P1S, P 'B. A1C. AtT. xlnl cond. S!lOO 675-4689 '50 Chevy PU. Xlnl run·g cond. $900 bst offer 642 9378 i6 Chevy LUV. Wrangler s hell. boot. 4 spd. AM/FM caaett.e stereo .. nurron. lo males. xlnt cond. 545-0263 TOP DOLLAa PAIP P'ORQ.EAN 9570 C\_~ r ~"'l ~--· t1111 t It',·, It 1\1 .I H •.J11• •. " •, !U' 11 ·~ • • • : •t I , l 1 , ~ .' dare ext 38, S"·4194 '98 vw Ghia. Traneu k . IMPOIT CARS eve.. seata. fmt brake drums ALL MODB.S W/DeW brak• 6 beckJ.na•--------- WI MBD CllAM USIDCAlS MOW CREVIER 'fB Blue Corona 4-dr 4· spd, iood Ure. a. brakes, new battery. ~arb. It valve job. Wall maln- talned car . .-zs. 893-64GO atl1p.c6. iO Toyata Qnna, 4 dr, alt. reblt lr&DI, uk1Jll sa:ro 49'3-2813 71 MK ll Wqon; 4 Spd, he rack, map, low ml. Call 540-4439. Mi\RQUIS " MOTORS - .... ' .. ;, I ti I ,.~ ,·, ' • I• .. '• ··' j I '11q, I'-'·. 'J'tJ 642-5678 DAILY PILOT 1976ALFETTA 36 mo. open end ie.e: cap cost S6300: reeldual 13213; lit s 131 a month. license 6 '- eecur1ty deposit. On •o. apdroved credit ~:)-BUY OR BEACH IMPORTS 141 DOVI Sll8T 75'> ftftftll '4iW'OST llACH 'l.-V7VU """" .... ~.J-1 -• Complet" S.W:. FoQlll,., • Fextqfy Tioned Mechcnct ........... ftOOMlol.Mew tl00 .... tf9't .. 9100Alllot.M•w tlOOAlltos.M•w taoo ............................... , ............................................................ ······················· Phil LOng ha~ eome .. to your re8elle ~ .... _ ... Wherever you Uve Jn Or•.nge County, ~ • U.ect Car In Coate Mes• from Johnaon a -Son 0 Juat M•k•• Sensef .. • 76 ...CUIY MOM4tCH Near New 21,000 miles 4 Dr. Sedan. V8, auto. trans .• p. steering, heater, wsw tires, wheel covers, silver w/maroon interior. '4895 76 F01D MAMAl»A 9"IA Cll. Less 'naan 9,000 miles Auto. trans ., factory air conditioning, power steering, power brakes, radio, heater, whitewall tires, vinyl roof, tinted glass, wheel covers, door locks. (193MYZ>. s5395 '11 LICOf.M COUPE 'vs. automatic, factory air conditioning, whitewall tires, full p6wer, heater, stereo radio, vinyl roor. tinted glass & wheel covers. (252CCY). • s2495 '1l OU»S CUTUSS 2 Dr. Coupe. VS, automatic, factory rur conditioning. pwr. steering, pwr. brakes, stereo radio, heater, tinted glass. vinyl roor. whitewall tires & wheel covers. (S37HTY). s3195 '7J CADl&LAC CP. DIYIW Automatic, factory air cond.; full power. stereo radio, vinyl roof, tinted glass. meidum blue, less than 44,000 miles. (758GJS). 54495 '7S UNCOOi MAii IY V-8. automatic. factory air, Power steering & power brakes, Power windows, power door locks. 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AM-FM stereo. digital dock. ultra plush intertor and much. much morel COME IM AND SEE DATSUNSNEW ' LUXURY CAR ---•·--- THE NEW 200SX This new trx>rtY modet Is what YolJ have bMl'I asking for and Datson has It. 5 aoeed « artOrnltlQ. AM-FM ..,_, end *" ••et that mekee KlnQ Tut ...... ~ Great Selection BUY ·FROM llCE '70PICKUP Te>yota #183S91 Shell· .. Speed s1stt '76CHINOOK a.sis Mo\lnt Catrc>er # f IOPCY $6599 I 'Lives By GUY GllANVILLE Ot•o.11, ........... Fullerton attorney Michael Remington saJd today that he and Asaemblyman Dennis Mangen (0..Huntington Beach) have settled their controversial •ccount and Mangers no lonaer owes him $5,000. According to Remington, be early this week picked up a $5,000 c;as hier's check drawn by ldangers at a savings and loan bank. 'He Shot Me' Tbouch the D)OOey came from Mancera' campaign committee, Remington said there was nothinC about the remittance to him that would tie it to a cam- paign loan rather than a penonal loan. ··1 could live with that kind of payment. So. now the slate's wiped clean," Remington said. · The $5,00C) loan Remineton made to Mangers lut Oct. 22 became a controversy three weeks ago when the attomeY_ s~d It wu a penooal loan and the newly eleCted assemblyman in· slated lt wu a loan to hia cam- palp ecxnmittee. After receivl.n1 the money, Manien the same day reported it u a campaign loan to the secretary ol state. Later, the Democratic as.- semblyman showed the loan on his campaip rmance disclosure statement u beinC a loan made to bls campalen committee. "I did everything openly and Victim. Testifies In Death Hea~g - By ARTHUR R. VINSEL CM._ o.llY f'llet R.-H One of three men cut down by rifle fl.re outside a New Year's ;>arty in Huntington Beach :estified Wednesday he was >lasted after screaming a lysterical insult at the fleeing <iller of his friend. Br1dley J . Gillespie, 21, took the stand in the preliminary hearing of Thomas J . Stack, 20, to describe what he saw and re· members oftbe tragic Jan. lcon· frontatioo. Stack's defense attorney, Pete Norton of Newport Beach, also made it evident he ls building an t Front the Claa•p Children at Holy An'gels Catbol~ Church in Chicago were thrilled Wednesday as World Heavyweight Boxing Champion Muhammad Ali visited the South Side. Ali was pTesented a copy of the Koran, Islamic holy book, by the c ongregation of the largest black Catholic school in the nation. orth Must Show ~Need for Water Aid I • FRESNO (AP) -State Water tfoject contr1cton· have been 6old they ··must show need and ' e" for 300,000 acre-feet bein& e~ by Metropolitan Water Jstrict for drou1ht·parched r ortbem Cellfornia. District officials, meeUn1 re Wednesday to learn details Pl state project. cutbacks. were orted to apply by early next weu IGr a share of the Southern California diatrict's al- location. Metropolitan bas indicated it wW live up part of lts ltate project supply thls year and In· stead use more Colorado River water. "You. must .show your need and use." cautioned, Robln Reynolds, deputy director d ttiil state Department of Water RetOUtta. ''1'17 your level best i4 a mlrrat!ve sense to dc>cu· mnt YOU!' need for this water.•• arg ument of s elf-defense, because a smaJl automatic pistol was found at the scene. Brian L. Schneider, 20, of~ Seine Drive, either owned such a weapon cap1ble of being hidden in the palm of the hand, or had re- cently ~poken of plans to obtain one, at"cordine to testimony. Schneider was struck square in the chest by a .22 caliber rifle slug and died moments later in the driveway at 20651 Goshawk Lane. A third vic tim bes ides Gillespie, John A. "Junior" Hunter Jr., 22, was also shot in the chest and only barely sur- vived, la&inl bis spleen and a portion~ bia liver. Gillespie testified he was hit in the abdomen Just altove bi.a navel by the gunman who killed Schnelder and w~Wespte m what was the ~·aay d Stack.'• prelimln~n· hurille. ff• w11 ~&Sid t>ef\Sive as he identified an -.Yt4enee photo- 1 r apb of Sc~eider·s cowboy boot-clad corpae spfawled in the Goshawk Lane drive'We.y that morntnc. Wednesday's session included testimony by Huntington Beach Police Detective Dick Nolen that both tlunter and Gillespie posltiv\ly Identified a file m~ shot of Stack when questioned in their hospital beds. Judge Robert A. Knox con- <See llEAJUNG, Pa'e AZ) Skateboards "' Noisy Being Made, Too So you think skateboarders make a lot of racket pursuing their sport? Well. one north Huntlllcton Beach ,,.,.naa complalned to police WedJiuday that tbey ou1ht to . co·me· out ta.._b.ff Graham Street home abOlli 1 a.m. and llJtenfor awblle. All that buUinl and whining ancf POUDd1nl emanates from a skat-eboard f acto.ry where employ• set up quite a ratket at nlabt makln1 skateboards with which akat.eboarders make racket by day, palice said. Offtcer1 contacted tbe ln· duatrlal firm on Commerce . Lane aDd nmincled thutl,ft ma• Jor nolff.:produclna bUlineues must p,Ntfy mucfl thUt down · between JO p.m. ancl 1 a.m. UD· der dt:J Clidin1ntt. showed a personal note alped by Mang~ and a cancelled cbeek mad• a>a,yable to Mancers topro. ve bis point. ''TtialM put it into his campa- t1n ls bis businesa, not mine," R4;dl~ said as be denied he lJ'd made a toan to the Manters committee. Orange County SupervisOT Balpb Diedrich, wbo had direct· ·eci Mangen to Remington's of. flee last fall, also 5;1lid it was his Steeeping llp the Slosh Workmen labored at mopup operations and 21st Street, flooding a . three-by-five Wednesday in Huntinaton Beach when a block area. Small patches of oil smeared salt water pipeline used in oilfield opera-roads. Pipeline was scheduled to be back tkms ruptured at Pacific Coast ffi&hway in operation today~ ,, ~~~~--~..,...-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-- Trustee Hopefuls .. Address Parents By aAYMOND ESTRADA JR. CM .. O.tty f'llet St.ttt All six Huntington Beach City <elementary) School District trustee candidates for three open seats in the March 8 election said Wednesday night they seek to lm· prove board sommunicatlon with the public. The candJdatee spoke to 45 parents at a public forum at Eader School. Candidate Lee Trubovltz, a long·Ume League of Women Voters educational committee volunteer, said much more or the school board's buslness should be done in public view. KIDS GEi' LOOK AT B.4.NK HEIST VIENNA <AP> -About 80 Viennese third graders went to a bank here to le•m about ••Vlnp, but 1ot an unexpected lesson ln bank robbery inlte1d. "Have they stolen our money now?" ieacbei's . said the children asked Wednesday after watchinl two masted bandJta with submachine IUlll make off wlt.b $28,000. Mrs. Trubovitz pointed to the board's apparent violation of a public meeting law in screening applicants for a di~trict advisory committee lut year. Kathy Bush, wife of outgoing Trustee Dale Bush; agreed a communication problem exists in the district. Although Mrs. Bush would nQt place blame for the communica- tion problem, she intimated the district administrative start "take the responsibility" for in- forming trustees better on mat- ters before the board. "We must improve the lack of respect between the administra- tion, teachers, parents and board,"said Mrs. Bush. Her husband chose not to seek reelection after serving five years on the board of trustees. Roy How, a Huntington Beach city purchasing agent, said, ''The btaest pToblem in the diB· trtct ls ineffective leadership. We have no clear, dynamic leaders on the board." How added, "There are vast area• of no policy In our dmtrlot. I can't stand au.,, mes." Paula lfuJsc, • leader In the Gt•l•r SchoOl Parent-Teachers Association, said the board must try to eommltnlcate more efffle- tlvely with district parent.a. Leland Hendrie,. a local tn- <8ee TaU8TEE, Paae ,U) Mesa Man Shot, Cops Puzzled By STEVE MITCHELL CM tlll Dllltf ~llet stiff A Costa Mesa man was shot several times in the back late Tuesday night as he returned to his apartment from his car. Victim Ronald Edwin Melx· sell, 38, of 550 Paularino Ave .. Park Mesa ViUits. was reporte4 in critical condition at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital today arier undergoin1 surgery for a spinal injury caqsed by bullets from a Jar1e caliber automatim pistol. 1 , Costa Mesa inveaU1ators wJ:if responded to the 10:30 p.rn. abootlng said witne11es aave several descriptions of the eun~ man. Police put out a bulletin to other a1encles asklnl them to be, on the lookout for a male Latin suspect. Th, cunmar\ ts deacrtbed as standing nve feet nine inches tall, wtth a alim build, shaab balr worn In a~. ud wearinl-:._ brown or whli. levi jacket. ~ut CostA )fesa potice Lt. Georae Lorton aaJd today ~· lives have received confiicW\I report.I ttom witnesses CODCel'J;. lnl the identity of the a unman. - / AZ DAILY PILOT •H/F H u n t1n1t on B each Ctty ele m entar y) School District uateea allocated about M1000 hla week to hlre 32 1utittltute ead\ert at Peirry and Burke cbqol1 our the next Ovt onthl. The 1ubsUtutea will replace eachen durin1 seven hair-day arly C'1Udhood Education ECE> pro1r•D\ plannini eulons, accordln1 to Jim .. aeon, di1trlct curriculum rector. On Feb. 1 trustees threw out a .,prope>aed plan to allow 1tudenta to Jo home 30 to 45 minutes early ~acb Thursday tor lhe teacher plannin1 perioda. Trustees aaid they did not want to take s tudents Crom the clauroom and ordered Macon and bis staff to come up with a new plan. The teachers ·s contract, signed lest December, says, ''Teachers involved in ECE 1ball be provided one-half day per month for plannln1." Trustee Norm a Vander Molon said the staff's oriainal plan was not what lhe contract called for. Macon called the ECE contract clause "ambiguous." Superintendent Al Moffett sald the planrun1 days have yet to be scheduled, "but they will be or. different days at each school. "Students will not go home early as a result of ECE planning seaaions," he added. To romply with the contrad, Moffett said, the district wlll in· elude pJannin1 period fo!' December and January during the next five months Macon sald the money f<Y. hlr· ina substitutes will come from the district's contingency funds and not the normal substitute ac· count. Fromrag~AJ .HEARING. linued the hearing until next Tuesday, when a coroner's depu- ty will appear in West Orange County Judicial District Court lo testify in the case. · Prosecuting Deputy District Attorney Michial Nunn said to· day he expects Judge Knox lo rule then on whether to bind Stack over to Superior Court for a formal tnal, unless the defense calls more witnesses Gillespie's testimony centered on events surrounding the fatal shooting episode, which left Stack charged with one count of murder: two counts of assault with intent to commit murder and one of fmng at an occupied dwelling A second defendant. Richard L. Bradley, 21. of Stanton, faces a separate trial on charges of being an accessory. He WH allegedly present and both remained at large until surrendering five ~ays later through lawyer Norton. T he defense attorney had Gillespie reconstruct what hMp- pened as the baby.faced youth sporting flowing, wavy blond bair -toot lhe stand. "What did you do",·· he aaked of the seconds lmmedlately before Gillespie be1an movin1 away after an uruiuccesstuJ at· tempt to dusarm the returned rifleman who wu thrown out of the party earlier "I ~ my beer down and broke lt." the witness said. He testified it was seconds later two shots ran1 out ''Boom, Boom" in rapid sue ceulon and he saw Hunter start to apln around and collapse, while Schnelder was apparenUy already down and dyma. "What did you say!" Norton ~keel in crou-examlnallon. ·•1 yelled al him : 'You spnotabltch ... you're 1onna die'!" Gillespie said after a mo-rnent'spause. DAILY PILOT Carni1'al Chancellor A giant paper head or West Germal" Chanceltor Helmut Schmidt •. built for Cologne's Lenten carnival parade Monday, sticks its tongue out at a workman daubing its nose. Political figures are popular subjects for parade floats during the carnival season in Germany. Hearing Resumes In BB Slaying Testimony was scheduled to resume today in preliminary hearing for a defendant accused of murdering his molher·m-law in Huntington Beach. Daniel Buyher. 23, of 5441 Hen· dricksen Drive, is accused of the Dec. 7 gunshot killing of Mrs. Muriel Norton, 50. who hved nearby in the same tract. at 15161 Davis Lane. The unemployed laborer who was separated from his w1fe then allegedly fled on foot to his parents' home and gulped beer wh1 k packing his bags. They were sitting on his bedroom noor when a police SWAT team and detect1vei. ar· rived shortly afterwards Buyher's prthmlnary heating was abruptly delayed Wednes· day afternoon when a prosecu· lion witness. Terry Savold, of Huntington Harbour, failed loap· pear a.c, S<:heduled. Judge Phil Petty issued a ~ beoch warrant for Savold's ar· 1 est and he was taken into custody w'ednt:sday night lilnd lodged an city Jail to assure his appearance in West Orange County Judicial District Court to- day Investigators assert Buyber. a bar hopper who reportedly drift· ed around the area just ahead of police for a week before surren· derlng, killed Mrs. Norton at the height of a quarrel. He bad reportedly gone to her home demandina to know the whereabouts of his estran&ed wife when neighbors heard a shouting match start. From Pflfl~ AJ TRUSTEE. • • • Police h ad alreudy been 9otifled of a growing family dis· turbance and possibly a woman being beaten. A shot rang out. the door slammed violently, and the nei1hbors found the dying woman. Runaway Girl Gets Counseling A IO.year-old Huntington Beach girl whose disappearance set .orr an eight-hour inte nsive pohce search Wednes~y. is back with her r amily today. The child will be referred through Juvenile court guidance programs a nd less-formal methods or dealing With pre· ssures at home which caused her to runaway Tuesday. lnvestlaators searched a large area of north Huntington Beach with police he lic6pter sur- veillance and even conducted a door·lo-door hunt seeking in- fo rm at1on on her possible whereabouts. She wu finally round about 3 a.m ., nearly 10 hours after she was reported missing. unhappy but Rafe and warm at Fountain ValleyCommunlly Hospital. Police said she at first coMed anyone there who asked about her prHence by saying her mother was having a baby and she was at the hospital In the company of her Cather. • Suspicious personnel finally called police and they established she waa the runaway they had been hunting. "I peas alter dark when il cot damp and cold she figured it would be a warm place lo stay," says Detective Sit. Lula 0ch9a, of the police juvenile bureau. Car Hunted ID Probe of HBBorgiary W ASfUNGTON (AP) -The House refused today to approve a weekend adJournment, thus 1trenttbenint the hand or mem· ber1 teyinc lo force a recorded vote on a pay ralle. U nleas the House votes specifically on the pay raise. the increase will go into effect automatically at midnJght Salur· day. It will apply to senators. representatives, federal judges and high officials. By blocking adjournment, op· ponents of the raise kept alive a chance of voting on it and putting each. member on record either m favor or against the increase Under lhe increase, salanes for members of Congress would b4" hiked from $44,600to $57,:500. The vote against ad1ournment was 224 to 109. Members objecting lo the pay raise or to the method or putt.mg 1t into effect argued that the ad JOurnment vote was m effect a vote on the mam issue But Speaker Thomas P. "Tip" O 'Neill told reporter !>. ''If anybody thinks the folks ~t home wil I interpret a vote on adJourn· ment as a vote on the pay raise, he's 1ust whistling Dixie." An attempt to force a recorded vote in the House railed Wednes· day. Members who obJect to the raise then focused their efforts on O'Neill. They insisted O 'Neill has enough clout with the Rulei< Com m1tlee to push through a special procedure allowing n vote on re solutions to k1ll the r aise Meeting Tonight A Marina High School Com- munity Council meeting will be held tonight at 1· 15 pm. an the campus faculty dining room Proposed mathematics and physical education graduation rettuirements will be discussed. All Marina High School stu· dents' parents arc invited to at- tend. W HINGTON CAP} -Sen. WllUarn xmire CD· Wis.) is giving hia February "golden neece or the month'1 award to the Law Enforcement Asmtance Administration for spending nearly $a'T.OOO "lo de· termUle why inma~ want toe cape from prison. '1 ··This study is a crime.'' Proxmire said. char1mg waste of tax dollars when "it should be obvious to one and all why someone in Jail wants to get out." . An LEAA spokesman said the stud.Y. w,)tlle paid tor from federal funds, was commissioned by the state of NOrth Carolina to gain information on how to classify offenders to reduce the number of escapes, particularly from minimum securicy prisons. Proxmire said results or the study are suspect because the findings rely heavily on responses of in· mates to a questionnaire. • "l can't for the life of me imagine why prisoners anywhere would want to help their captors keep them in captivity," he said . • Day Care Center Backers Organize Supporters or a proposed day care center in an economically deprived area of Huntington Beach are spurring efforts to win approval for the project. A group of eight members is forming a non-profit corporation to administer the center in an at tempt to ailay city fears that 1t may be left holding the bas In financing the project in future years An allo<'al1on request of $165.000 for the day care center has been supported by a citizens advisory committee and the planning commission. The city council will make a final decision March 14 on fund· ing requests of projects throueh the Housing and Community Development program. Ocean View School Superlnten· dent Dale Coogan said tbe area for the proposed site at Oak View School in central Huntington Beach has an unusually high un· employment rate and Is made up or a large number 'Jf single· parent families. 8 QUALITY TELEVISION "Our surveys show that 46 per· cent of the families whose children attend our schQOls are earning S7 ,000 or less annually." he sald. He repc>rted that 80 percent of the single-parent families are un· employed and presumably on welfare. Coo1an aa1d he thinks that if a day care center is built. it would allow many of the parents lo seek employment. A 3.000-square foot facility is proposed and would accom· mod ate 85 chddren. Youngsters from six months to 14 yean would be cared for from 6 a .m . to6p.m . by aataffofsuc. Coogan said there are no guarantees for future financing but that school officials have been assured that once a building 1s up, a proeram rates high priority for state and county fu nding. "Thia ls a serious community problem and we shouldn't be afraid to take the first step," he aaid. March 1st is coming soon. and we need to reduce our inventory before f loor·tax day. 13'' and 17" diagonal PORTABLES 19"·23"·25" dlagon•I TABLE MODELS VERSATILE, COMPACT COLOR TV The MALllU • H11100 Our moat compu:t portable with 100'1. Solld-State Cha11J1 with Power Sentry. Brilliant 110• Ch110maco1or ltt•Llne Picture Tube. Solld.State Tuning Sya· tem. Ebony color cabinet. TIM KIMHALIV • Hl310W 23/f Tablt modtl ltalurtng durable v1nyl·clad metal c.abtnet beaulllully flnllhed In 1lohly-gratned 11mulattd Walnut ~ !VQ-!ltctronic Vtd•O Guard Tunll'lg Syateni with convtn,t nl One•l<nob VHF and UHF Channtl Se11c11on . ... _.. .. ~ __....~ ... ! ~--· I - By 1111..ABY KA YE Of .. o.lly l"lllC lt.tff Irvine school boa.td candldates came out swln1fn1 at. W.ed- nesday's forum, blasllnf' -ever· ything from the district s opea enrollment policy to the number of Irvine schools being built. · Nine d the 10 school board can- did ates attended the forum sponsored by El Camino Real School PTA. Candidate Euaene Slmma did not appear. "Open enrollment la a total failure 1n our district," ebarpd Louis Zejda. • aaleaman runnlq !or OGe cl t1Je two open aeats oo the school~ 1n the lbrch 8 election.. Once an elemenlary scbool child progesses to a middle or hilh scbool, he's apt to loH coo- tlnuity in bis educatioc, Ztjda maintained. Uiwla' provta of the dia· trlct'• open enrollment policy, parents may cbodse which school thelr child attenda. Various educational alternatives are d- fered at tbe different schools, but some al them ae not carried out at the middle and high school levels. , Zejda in.slated that a child who attends me type of elementary school, such u the year-round Gas Production , . Collision Narrowly Averted A county fire engine with no • brakes and a passenger train ~ traveling 80 miles per hour I came within seconds of crashinc at an Irvine railroad crossing Wednesday afternoon. Fireman Ray Johnso• said he . discovered his engine had lost its brakes wherr he tried to stop at the railroad cross~ on Jel- E Road wben the warning ts started fluhinl and bells anrtnliog. Jobrison, who wu travelia, so\rtbboUDd on 'Jeffrey RoM at l s: 10 p.m., •aid lt4e •CIH would 1\ot stOp so be sped tbrOuih the cl'ossing, breaking off about sh feet of the slowly-lowering L l crossing arm An Amtrak pusencer train f travehng eastbound towards Sen Diego rumbled through the crossing area just four seconds after the hre engme had croaed to tbeot.her side. .. The cuys were a little nervous,0 admitted Fire Capt. Bruee Tui'beYille. The ettline w not damaltd in the lncidflftt but ll is in .~ .. shop today having its brake •1stem repaired, Turbevllle laid. Polict Sgt. Robert Kredel saJd there bas been one fatal acci· 4eot at the J~rey crossmg in tile put five years. Charles •::~~e;as~c~9!:~::U~ b7 a train in December of tm. Eredel said. KIDS GET LOOK A.T B.4NK HE/SI' VIENNA (AP> -About 60 Viennese third graders went to a bank here to learn about savings, but got an tµtexpected lesson in banlt robbery lmtead. "Have they stolen our money now?" teachers said the children asked W edoesday after wat~hing two masked bandits "\vith submachine guns make off with $26,000. Mesa Man ·· Shbt, Cops Buzz led By STEVE Mn'CHELL Offt90.lly"9l ..... A Costa Mesa man was shot several times in the back late Tuesday night as be. returned to bis apartment from his car. Victim Ronald Edwin Meix· sell, 38, al 550 Paularino Ave., Part Mesa Villas. WU reported in critical conditlon at Costa Mesa llemorial Hospital today after UOderaoina surgery for • spinal iQiury cauaed ~.1. buP,ets from ... a 'fargi cafiber-aUtomaiic pi3tol. · Costa Mesa investigators who respondtd to th-e 10:30 p.m. sbootin& said witnesses save seven! 4escriptloDS of ti. 1un· man. Police put out a bulletin to other .. encles asking them to be on the lookout for a male Latin suspect_ WASHINGTON (AP) -In· terior Secretary Cecil Andrus said today investigation of four national gas fields in the Gulf of . Mexico found reduced prod.~c· lion, and called for a sweeping . studyto ~ if he $hould order 1 sp9edupof gas ~roducUon. , Andn.11 said the investigation foqnd thfi production bu Calle. sharply the past two years ln three 1asnelda whtcb were atudted and in these plus a f ou.nh ftel·prod~ctlOD Md be411a lowered l\y the pioduc~. llD.d et en tbeD: were not IMinc met:; A Ntement ~ b1 Aildrias &aid theie qiaJ be tOOcJ npla.na· lions for tt.es.e nenta and be ls not tryiftg to blame them foe t.M present enftl>' ens ls. .. He said·be would order an in· qulry t<> ''locus on the question ot wbat the ~ent can do to a.uure Increased production in the f\lture from the outer con- tinental shelf, rather than--'fixinc blame' for the present enersy crisis." As .Andrus prepared to explain tbe report to a o"a conrerence, l.oulslana GQ'f. Edwin ~dwards .told...nrpatten. J.n .Batoo • Rouge that ~ understood the report ac- tusea 10 major oil companies ln Louisiana "of hoarding gas while those hypocrites know that· Alaska and the North Atlantic sea co produce h\l&e quantities of natural .Sta which they have been unwilllnl to .aet together to (See GAS, Pa1e AJ) lrmlUr Co. Trial <.S-~> plan. ha.is ~ble a= inc to a re&ular calendar school. Robert Gray, a b\laines1 ex· ecutive, artued ttiat the district is buildinJ too many schools. He said tbedistrlct la using an W:or- rect auumptJon tbat dlatrict enrollment 11 •Wl escalatin1 at a fut pace. Gra,y ~ted out that by June, there will be abo\&t S,()00 empty Inside Post Street i\u.A' 8\&U'S LAWI\'" ._... •lllllf> \.'Wt...., .ft.,__. ............ ,,o. .• ......,.,....... .. ,,t ...... ..,......c--. ........... -....... ~--· ....... ,,.... ......... ...... ·~airat.c ....... wnr•,....,, Nation . \ 11ecessJa"Y to mate cttUln all tM new 1tudei'ltl have 1choola and doUblt! amiOlll' are not needed. "We tlav• i. look to Woiod· brldg and Northwood.·~ Gabm said. v. Arid W:umbent Fr'1\k Hurd said a.e whes the district would have tlttldy built more schools, because he thinks there would be a\ saytnp siJlce buildlnl costs are lSee f'OBUM. Pase .U) 1 • • ,_._ ......... Al>ltml\I. ftlT DUftOY'10--.-'*" tuirn ...,...... t.t\ ..,,_, ,.,.... fl" ..-tt. ..... , .... lMI~ ... ~ ~--...... 1111~1••f -··-~•-.\Mf ......... , •lfffll A'"'"' , ·~W ,..,.\.,. .,_. • .ae ,. • ..,..,,.. r.1 "'' '" ,.,, .. "' .......... L..O•--...... Ot .... c..tJ.•_...,,,.,,,__e! .. IWlf--c:.t••-... C..--t ""' • .\ .. tu 'I'\, .. el tM 1 'h• ,..., I 1 ' t. ,..,.. .......... "' .. '"""' ......... 1 ........... ,lllt•• --•""4"''"'' ......... t ' • "''"~")' 01-''• Jt r\ • i.t ..,. J" •• ~.,.. ...... ,,~I·,~ '• II\ =:-~::.:: ... ...;::· ... = "'-"'~'"' ,.., .. .. ~ -__ ,,.-~ ' "' : . PICTURE IN SAN FRANC1SCO EXAMINER WAS INCOARECTl. Y CALLED LAKE MISSION VIEJO - RIU'l9 of Lake Hae Become Controverelal In Water-ahy Northern Caltfomla Lake Continues to Fill Mission Viejo Company Turm to River Water . By WIU.IAM SCHREIBER Of h 0.11, P'llel SI.ti ~issioo Viejo Company Presi· dent Philip J. Reilly said today his firm will continue filling its l.2·billlon gallon manmade lllke despite political pressure from drought-stricken Northern California. But Reilly told newsmen at the Casta del Sol recreation cent.er that. as or today, all the water flowing into the basin Is from the Colorado River aquaduct.. "We believe thi~ is an accepta· ble altematJve," .aemy siici, not· ing that it will be possible to cut off all Northern California water reeding the lake without affe(t· ing supplies to the surrounding community. ''While it will cause a delay in the filling of the lake, we belie"e it will be tolerated by those in the cooununity and those who have conlrJ)cted to buy homes under consttuctioq," be said. A spokesman for the Santa Margarita Water District. which serves Mission Viejo and its im- mediate surroundings, said facilities are available to supply more plentiful ·colorado River water directly to the lake project without affecting delivery of the _}\i_gJler .. qualt~y m!xture ~f Northern and Southern California water received by re- sidential and other consumers. During bis 15-minute prepared statement, company President Rellly said that he was breaking a long-standin1 policy of the cor- poration by commenting on an is- sue that ls pending a bearing before a 1ovemmental body. One other fatal accident oc- fllt'red there prior to tbe Ume lrvine police patrolJed the city, Jt.redeJ Sllld. t Crackdown Set WASHINGTON (AP) ll•ricutture Secretary Bob Bergland said 'lbunday be will 'the emunan ls described as standiQe five feet nine inches tall, with a alim build, abauy balr worn in a bun, and wearing a brown or white levi jacket. But Costa Mesa police Lt. Georce Lorton said toda1 detec· Uvea have received contllcting .reports from witnesses concern- inl the ldeotlty ol the sunman. · Board Action Qtiizzed The lake filling project will· come before \he 11tate Water Resourcea Control Board in Sacramento Wednesday, to de- termine if the water usage is wutetul or ncmutilitarian. Reilly «mt.ended that the Jake has become the focal point of ~ aeeklnc to "simplify a complex ieaue-to search for some .-tence or two that would state the problem in hopes that a quicktolution would emerge." crack down on food atamp cheaters who do not deServe emereency free aid. At the nme time, he promised quick deli~ of stamps to those who hanJ1uf- f tred because of the aevere weather. . Coas& Weatlaer ComlderabJe fOI and lcnir cloudiness tomaht, eJ_,. inl d\ll'iq mld-morni~ and ~1 Im Frid~ afterDOGA. LOW'temabt • to 55. W8hs Friday Jn 10s. • • ··we•re cotnc out to refn- terview tbo wttoe11ea and. hopefully, come up wltb a better descripcton," be1aid. VJctim MemeU told ,rttcen be did not lcnoW who &IM asNllat wu. nordld he bow wfl1 ~ woald**Min- BYTOJll BARLEY 'bf-.. o.lly l"IMt ltllff Mrs. Smith owns a 22.4 per.. cent stake tn the Irvine \Com· pany . White , wbo1e erandmother was the second wife of foundation creator James lrvtne, ls a member of a family frOUptbatowns nineper- (8eeHJ:lllE88, Page A2) "Unfortunately, the facts sur• roundlne Lake Mleaion Viejo and how it fits into an overall re- aourcee conservation pro(ram <S., LAKE, P11e A!) *' * * ' -. . WASHINGTON CAP) A PQ lse for member• or ~ f er al JudJes and hleh. ';OffiCii.la ,.., asaured ~•Y whe' the lll>u• VOled to adjourn for the •ekend. ~embers who oppo1e the pay lliaeortbewayltiJbeln1putinto ~eel wanted to hold the House in safop aa lon1 as poulble and the use first move4' tO fiaht over e laaue dwioe the weekend bU1 en reversed It.sell. Without a House vot• clfically on the pay raise, t.¥ crease 1oes Into ef(ect omatically at mldnl1ht SatU>- Y. It wU1 apply to senaJ.ors, reaentativu, federal jud1es a hi&hofficials. Under the lncreue, salaries Cor members or Coneress would be hiked from $44.600to$57,SOO When the issue of adjourning for the weekend first came up, l~ House defeated 1l, 224 lq 109. But ~ft er leaders reiterated lhat there could be no vole on the issue even if \-Oe House continued in session, another mot.Jon to adjourn until 11 a.m. Monday carried without re- corded vote. Me mbers opposing the pay raise or the method or instituting it contended that the original ad- journment vole was in effect a vote on the main issue. Fr°"' Pagf! Al HEIRESS .•• ~htolthe company stock. Mrs. Smith ar11ues tb•t it Is unfair to compel minority s'harebolders to disJ>OSe of their ~fodc •ta price that she beUev.es can be Improved given more fune to seek bids and more com· pl!tition for Mc>bil. While testified Wednesday that MobU orticials have re- eeatedly made it clear over the y'ears lhat they are only In· terested in laking over the com- plete Irvine Company and not just the foundation's 54.S per· cent controlling interest. Friedman argued W e:dnesday that it would have been more ethical and businesslike for Mobil to seek control of the Irvine Company •step at a time rather than apply what he described as a "corporate freezeoul" on Mrs Smith. "It 1s clearly illegal to take over the minority shareholders stock 10 this fashion," he told Judge J udf.(e. White testified that Mrs Smith and Watson tangled dur- &ng the Feb. 8 meeting on the 1s sue of what she believed were the company preSJdent 's con nection with Mobil and an offer !ihe believed was made lo him by the 011 company White said Watson told the heiress that he had no such con- nection wtlh Mobil and that he simply wanted the best deal that could be obtained for the Irvine Company And the witness quoted Mrs. Sm 1th as telling the board. ''wen. thu looks hke a pretty good deaJ for the (Irvine Com· pany > mana1ement " White testified that tf\e Irvine Company was havin1 problems in retaining top management and personnel as a result of the unrest created by the trial and several takeover bids. And he indicated that Mobtl was a clear favorite amon«i management who belteve that their positions and future wW be more secure under a Mobil Irvine administration. Earlltr trial testimony In· clicated that the Allen-Taubman loteretta, lf successful in the tllke over bid, intend to· 'clean lhedead wood·· in the Irvine Company, Mrs. Smith has repeatedly, claimed that the company ls top heavy ln man.,emenl and that nt lll'IY of its senior personnel are featherbedded and overpaid. -- .... ,., ...... , .... ""'- SEEKS DEMOTION Prtndpal Sherreltt Uni High Principal To Resign V~tor Sherreitt, erinclpal at University High School in Irvine, asked Wednesday to be re· assigned to a counseling position due to "personal reasons." District Supt. Stanley Corey said today 'e will accept Sher- (,ei tt 's request abd will Im· mediately begin to search ror a replacement. Sherreitt has been the University High School principal since Unt. He said he hopes lo be reassigned to a counseling posi- tion al Uni Higb, but it is not clear yet on which campus be will be when school ·reopens in September. The principal said he •lilted to change jClbs for several reasons. the first being that the job re- quires too much time. Sberrelit said he regularly spends 10 to 12 hours at school each day, including between three and five nights per week at- ' tendin~school functions . He said his decision was partly prompted by the fact that his wife, Bea, recently underwent major surgery. her second such operation within the last four months. Prior to coming ~University High, Sherreitt wa5'mployed in the Pomona Unified School Dis trict as a principal, counselor and teacher. City vs. County • e ..... m Missing BJ IOANNI'! at:YNOLDS ~ Ol ft9 0Allf ""'M.tf Sara Bartholomae, widow '4 oil rnUllonaire Wtllla111 Bartholomae ot Newport 8eacb, Wal reported miasln1 today dn· der what family members described as s uspicious circu!9stances. Mn. Bartbolomae, 81, was re- ported mlaslnt by her sister Imelda, a Santa Ana resident who told police she believes foul play ts involved~ lniUal police reports did not specify wbal the circumstances involvin1 foul play might be. although the police report noted Mrs. BartboJomae was wearing a Sl0,000 diamond ring at th~ time of her disappearance. Mrs . Barlholomae, a millionaire since the death of her husband. has lived in a Santa Ana manaion since 1964. She divorced her yachtsman husband m 1963. That divorce was not final, however, when Bartholomae was stabbed to death in his bayfront Balboa manalon in January 1964. He was stabbed by lhe half. sister of his brother's wife who, was acquitted of manslaughter in an Orange County Superior Court trial that year. The Bartholomae family has had a history of bad fortune since the oilman's death. Mrs Bartholomae's second marriage in 1966 to Montebello manufacturer Ernest Launder lasted 57 days before he filed for divorce and she filed for aMul· ment. l'he family's 95-fool sailing yacht Sea Diamond as well as the bayfront mansion were both sold. The mansion was sold. de· molbhed and the land subdivided after the death of William's brother Charles a few months after his sister-in law's trial. Dallf~ltlll,..... MISSING IN SANT A ANA S.ra BarthoM>m•• &mbSlayer 'f he dectslon on whether or not lo fuQd the Von Karman Overp .. proJtct w u poat.poned uatn Wednelday in Sacramento d°'ptto tupport given by Ir~ine businessmen. Irvine Mayor David Sllls and Sen. Dennis Carpenter (R·Newport Beach). The Irvine cootinaent tried to convince the Calllornia Hi1bway Commillion that the Sl. 7 mUllon Von Kannan project. over Ure San Diego Freeway, should io out to bid immediately. The overpass would provtde "They might have held lt up again lo give the new com· mission-. a chJnce to att.1d..Y Ule project,·• Nicholson 1ue•1ed. In addiUon to a presentaUon by GllL's Strader, Mayor Sills. Senator Carpenter and Brent Muchow~ the city's public works director, all spoke. FroaPGfl#I AJ '"FORUM ••• another north-south route esca1aun1sorapldly. throu1h the Irvine Industrial Several candidates also ex- Complex, easing traffic conies· plored how to improve com· lion there. m unications in the district. But CaJTrans Director Adriana Ron Lunceford, a psychologist G1anturco once again argued and sociologist, noted that people Cl.teS Second against the project. insisting that who try to make comments at the more local money be used to fund school board meetings are made the road improvement. to feel "inadequate.'' Todd Nicholson, executive To solve thal problem. Lun· /Jt)frihi.n.a-, Plan director or the Greater Jrvine In-ceford said he would Uke to hold .,.-e dustrial League <GIIL>. said the reg u I a r sessions with PHOENIX. Ariz. (AP l -state "has no obligation" to pay homeowners usociations and Confessed slayer John Harvey for•lhe overpass as part of the PTA groups so they wouldn't Adamson bas testified be dis-freeway agreement made In have to feel intimidated al school c~sed plantint a bomb in the of-1964. board meetings. rice of Navajo Tribal Chairman ''When the state asked the Hurd, the incumbent, said he Peter McDonald with Phoenix al· county to put the San Diego wpuld like to create an om- torney Neal Roberts while a Freeway through hete, they said budsman position. so residents former aide to former Rep. Sam they'd pay for the overpass. It can have someone else bring Steiger <R-Ariz. >.listened. was just a matter of waiting until their concerns to the attention of · Adamson is the admtlted bomb they got money•" said Nicholson. the school board. slayer of Arizona Republic re-who attended the Sacramento "I realize lhere's not always a porter Don Bolles last June Two session along with GIIL col· warm reception to those who others have also been charged ln leaeueTim Strader. s peak at the board meetings. the slaying. "Now that they have money, Sometimes it's just a cold stare," Adamson made the testimony Mrs. Gianturco won't let it go out Hurd admit.led. Wednesday dunng a preliminary to bid," Nicholson continued. Gray suggested that parents hearing for Roberts and Nicholson said Irvine busi· use the already set·up "school Chandler plumber Jimmy nessmenhavedonetheirpartby adv1soryforum"systemtobring Robison, who are charged with using staggered work bour»i car their concerns to the attention or violating federal explosive. and pooling and assisting the city of the pnncipal, who would in turn conspiracy laws m an unsuc· Irvine with its bike trails pro-tell administrators and board cessful attempt to blow up a US gram. members. Public Health Service building m Nicholson said the project will Among the other comments Phoenix last year. return on the March 16 agenda or made by candidates. were: Adamson said in the ume dis· the Highway Commission and Gray criticized that while cussion Roberts ldentirled Joe that CalTrans staff members student enrollment increased on- M rs Hartholomae, who in-Patrick. former aide to Steiger, have been asked to gather more ly 9 percent last year, the budget herited SlO million from her as serving as a spy on the Navajo background information for the went up JO percent. He charged estranged husband's estate, was Reservation (or Sen. Barry two new commissioners just ap-that the money isn't eoing to hospitalized for a week in 1966 ~-o_!....,d,...w_a,t:....e_r_t_·R_·_A_r_la_._> __ _._ ___ P_0_in_t_ed_W_ed_n_e_s_d_a_y_. -.-------c_h_il_d_re_n_'s_ed_uc_a_l_io_n_. ___ _ after she was attacked by two gunmen in her Santa An~ hnmP and robbed of a $3,000 diamond ring. She has remained active in busines~. watching over her fortune, which she said she was amassing to pass on to her two children. William and Sarajane Potties At Wedge I Bring Feud to Head A two-year.old battle between the city or Newport Beach and the Orange County Health Department over the number of beach rest room s appears headed for a final showdown over installation of toilets at Balboa's Wedae. City councilmen were told that their position and the county's will be resolved by construction of four proposed rest rooms and the Installation of two portable toileti at the Wedge. Councilmen agreed to the con· struction projects -three are planned for parks near the ocean beaches -but they balked at put· ting anything in al the Peninsula- end beach. Backed by a group of Wedee· area residents. Councilman Don Mcinnis suggested that the city would fight rather than put any kind of public facility in at the Wedge. •"We have always had a deep concern with that beach." he satd ol the hazard.owl 1urfln1 spot. "We don't want to en- coura1e people to go thwe." Councilman Trudi Rogers, who represents the Penlneula, sug. gested that the city consider ln· stallin1 a rest room al the public bay beach at N Street. City and county repreMn- tatlves have been squabblinf over public rest rooms at Newport's ocean beaches for lbe F,...PqeAJ -- past two years. County officials contend there aren't enough or them and under a orov1sion or the state Ad· mlnistrative Code, Health Department representatives claim they have the legal power to force the city to install the necessary facilities. Councilmen and city staff members, on the other hand, reel the city has sufficient facilities and dispute the county's authori· ty to force any changes. The main area of dispute is the city's long stretch or ocean beach rrom the Santa Ana River to the Newport Harbor entrance. At present. there are public facilities only at the two piers at the bay beach al 15'.h Street. GAS ••• ----~ .......... VQUALITY T~LEVISIOM • March 1st is coming soon. and we need to reduce our inventory before floor-tax day. 13" and 17" diagonal PORTABLES 19"-23"-25" diagonal TABLE MODELS VERSATILE. COMPACT COLOR TV The MALIBU • H1310C Our moat compact portable with 100% Solld·State Chassis with Power Sentry. Brllllant 110• Chromacolor In-Line Picture Tube. Solid-State Tuning Sya- tem. Ebony color cabinet. 17 •1wnl.IAM SCBam• .... Cllll&lf ........... MWloo Viejo Colnpany ~ dent Pbllip J. Reilly saJd today· hie firm wilt continue tilling Ua l.2·blllloo aanoo manmade Jake .despite politteal presa~ from , drou1ht·atricken No1'thern CaJltornta. But ReiUY told newsmen at tbe Casta del Sol reereation center that, as of tocl~. all the water ' ~ontrecttd to bQj bOmes under conatruettco. ••be said • A apokeamaa for the Santa Maraanta Water District, wbich serves Miss.Ion Viejo and its Im· mediate 1urroundin11. said facilltit!S are available to supply more plentiful Colorado River water <tittetly to the lake pl'Oject without affecting delivery of the bigber quality mixture of Northern and Southern Cali!omia water received by re. .. -,.. Election Seen? San Juan Council Petitioned By ANNE COOPER Of ... o.ilf l'Met St.ttt A petition bearing 1,327 signatures, presented Wednes- day to San Juan Capistrano City Council, may result in a citywide election on San Juan's con· troversial agriculture preserva- tion f6el. Al Arps told the councilmen be was prompted to circulate the petition when Councilman Ken- neth Friess assured him Jan. 26 be would withdraw his support or aericulture preservation fees if Friess could be shown that 10 to 15 percent of San Juan voters OP· pose the fees. Arps said he began circulating his petition Jan. 27. The 1,327 signatures he and ·other peti- tioners collected represent better than 16 percent of the city elec-torate, he said. Friess said that ii aienatu.res Oh the petition are established to be at least 10 percent or ~city's · -Poaable Toilets Rejected B1 PIUUP aOSM,\lllN OIU. o.ify .... llMt • Tbe Laguna Beach C.'ty Coun- • ell re}ected an Orange County 1 Health Departm t request Wed· I neaday tbat portable tolltts be in· stalled tbls summer at Sbaw•a Cove, Agate t and Aa.lta street beaches. Mayor Phyllis Sweeney direct· ed the staff to write a letter "apolOl1zinl'' foe what ahe said It. the tnablUt,y 'of the city lecally to put up tbe toilets. She said tbe areas, all at lbe Oda of pubUc streets. bave never .,.en declar9d public beacbea anti belont to homeowners. l City Atty. Georae Logan re- f-oorted lbe city 11 1till under a .. lcourt onter obtained by Anit.a ., • · rfft homeowners oot to build •J)ermanent toilet fa.WUes. He was unsure wb tber compliance lth the county's request would violate the order. Tbe i11ue has been con- ti'ovenlal in the past and was equally so Wednesday. Residents have resisted any projects that mi1bt brine more tourists onto thtir beaches, re- 11rdln1 the seasonal population jDflux aa a nutsuce. Councilman Jon Brand protest- .ed, "So the county's tellln1 us. not only do •e have to let the peo. 11>le use our beaches, but we have to 1et rtd of, not OQly tbeir peper ba11. but their other dropplnp as well." •·our beac.ba are ao abused," h fumed. ''They're rtppina ol1 oor starfish. Now they want us to 8l•e them toilets." ·<SeeTOILETS., Pa1e ~) registered voters, he will con- sider a request to put farm pre- servation fees to a vote of the people. He emphasized that only signatures of registered voters will be considered. Arps, who is retired from a 38-yea.r career as teacher and coach wilb the Los Angeles city schools, told councilmen he in· tended to stay at the microphone Wednesday night until council "lctlon was taken on his petition. Mayor Douglas Nash assured Arps that councilmen would con· sider the lmpact of what Nash tailed Arps' "very significant" petition. When Arps requested more ex- plicit action than council con· sideration, Nash ruled him out of order ani,d threatened to· call the sheriff to have Arps ejected from the room. Saying Arps had offended the d~_orum of the meet.inf. Nash VIENNA <AP> -About 60 Viennese Ulird craders went to a .,_nt bere to leam aoo.A aarin1s. but got an unexpected lesson in bank robbery instead. "Have they stolen our money now?" teachers ••id the children asked Wednesday after watchlnc two masked bandits with submachine guns make off wltb $26.000. Brakes Fail; Truck, Train Nearly Smash A county flre eneine with no brakes and a passenaer train traveling 80 miles per hour came within seconds of crashing at an Irvine railroad crossing Wednesday afternoon. Fireman Ray Johnson said be discovered bis enrine bad lost its brakes when be tried to atop at the railroad crossing on Jef· frey Road when the wamine li1hts at.art.ed flasbine and bells beaan rifteing. Joh.uoo, who was traveline southbound on Jeffr•Y ijoad at S:IOtt.m ., said the .,m•wouJd not stop 10 he spe(I throuaJt the .~. int off •bout •ix feet .of,~ 1lowt1·lowerln1 ef'Ola.iDC aim. An Amtrak p~er tram travelta1 eaatbOund towards San Diego nambled throU1b the crOISiq area just four leccndi afte~ the fire eqine bad croued totbe~ta ~ni IU)'• were a little ner:riUI," lldm!Ued Fire Capt. Bruce Turbeville. called for a recess. When the meeting was called back to or- der. Arps stood again at the microphone. James Okazaki, city attorney, told Arps he was speaking out of order a.n<I could be fmed up to $100. Arps retired from tbe microphone when Nash directed that consequences or his petition would be considered at the March 16 council meeting. Arps said today that bis telephone rang Wednesday well past midnight. "Many people are hurt and up- set t .. at three members of City Council refuse t-0 listen to the voice of the people," he said. "I did not mean to cause an uproar (at the council meeting). I feel I let down more than 11000 people who were counting on me to get a job done. "We may have lost the battle, but thewarwill goon.'' Agree01ent ArdUOUJ O)onths of salary negoUatlons with San Clemente City employes ended Wednesday with city council ratification of agreements for au but three of the city's 175-peraon work force. The employ~. most of whom wrlt receive pay increases avera&ing 14 percent spread over two years. wJll get nearly eight months retroactive pay by the end of this month. . The agr~emeats were ap. proved by a three-member city council. Mayor B. Patrick Lane and Councilman Thomas O'Keefe were absent. The council hailed the aeree- m enta which members 11oted contained some ra~her in-novative upects includmg incen- tive procrams for the emplo~. The two-1ear length of the con- tracts are an innovative stet» for the city and will give a meuure of stability to its labor relations, all aireed. . The employea' pay ii retroac· live to July 1 when neeoliations formally ~ed. The employes agreed then to delay actual bargaining untll a private con;;ul·· tant could perform a job clastUicatlon and salary survey. The study waa completed in November and neaqtlatlons pJcked up. lnitJallY, employes were antered by what they saw aa a breach of the city neaotlator•a promise 1to resolve pay m.atters in •time for Christmas. ·.Man's Hotne Olltf ...... tlllff,... OH, YOU KIDS.-Wbere else but Laguna Beach would a winter f estlval be celebrated in roarinr 20s bathing suits and Clapper skirts? Dance team that includes old- f ashioned bathing beauties Judy Plath and Michelle Bowlin, and flappers Leslie Conner. Suzanne Ramos and Lisa Kyne performs March 5 and 6 at Festival of Arts greens. r LB Patriots' Parade To Celebrate Flag Laguna Beach's 11th ' aMual Patriots' Day Parade will step off at 11 a.m. Saturday with more than· 100 bands, drill and equestrian units as the Winter Festival enters Its 17·day nm in the Art Colony. The tbeme or the parade is •'The Stars and Stripes," celebrating the 200th birthday of the American FJag. The parade will becin at Laguna Beach High School, march down Park Avenue, turn right on Glenneyre Street and right again on Forest A venue, pass the reviewing stand al city hall and disband. Awards will be made atl:30 p.m. atlrvine Bowl. Actress Kay Leni, who ap- pears in the televiah>n program "Rich Man, Poor Man," ls the parade grand marshal. • The opening day or the Winter Festival is Friday as the "Fabulous 5-0 Faire" com- memorating Laguna Beach's ~h anniversary gets under way at the Festival of Arts grounds. Running from 10 a.m. to dusk, the Faire will feature the wares of more than 150 artists and craftsmen. Food and entertainment of the Faire will be in the spirit or lbe 1920s when the city was in· corporaled. Other events incude: -The Chamber of Commerce Pancake Breakfast from 7:30 a.m . to 10:30 a .m. Saturday at the library parking lot, 357 Glen· neyreSt. <See f>ARADE, Page AZ> LB Council ---~·-~- .. - •• W ASlilNGTON (AP) -A ply rabe for members of Con,rei>s, federal Judees and high .officials was assured today when tbe House voted to adjourn for ~ weekend. Members who oppose the J*Y ralae«the weyitis beina putineo effect wanted to ho!d the House ht session u long as possible and the House flrst moved to fight over the issue durine the weekend but then r~ed itself. Without a House vote specifically ()n the pay raise, tbe increase goes into effebt automatically at mldnigttt Satur-day. It wtll apply to senatois, repreaen\atives, federal judges and high officials. Under the increase, salaries for members of Congress would & hlkedfrom$44,600to$S7,500. ' • When the iss.µe of adjO\l?lling for the weekend first came up, the House defeated it, 224 to 109. But after leaden reiterated that tbefO could bt no vote on the issue even . if the House continued in sessWo:'.:: anotber motion to adjourn until U-: a.m. Moaday c~ wi.tbout re-corded vote. Members oppo ng the pay raise or the meth f instituting it contended that the original ad· journment vote was in effect a vote on the main Issue. But Speaker Thomas P ... Tip'• O 'Neill told reporters, "It anybody th.Inks the folks at home. will interptet a vote on adjourn" ment as a vote on the pay raise; he's just whistling Dixie." An attempt to force a recorded vote in the House failed Wednes~ day. Members who object to t.be raise then focused their efforts on O'Neill. They insisted O'Neill has enough clout with the Rules Com- mittee to puah through a apechil procedure allowing a vote on re- solutions to kill the raise. CoJWicts Send WundryOut SAN QUENTIN (AP) -San Quentin Prison, home for 2.aaf lntnates, is short of water like UM t of Marin County. So lb.e, son is sendine ita laundry $0 m es to the Ca,Uf omia Medical Facility in Va~avllJe. The move,, disclosed Wednes-. day, it deaigned to aavo th' prison 50,000 eallona of watAsr a week. A 1poke1man said the OPIJ'I· lion wUl go on for about thrte months while new water 1'leU~. are drilled ai the pr:laon. ~ - IMILY PU.OT .....,.,_..,....~--.... ...,.., .,,... .... , ... ....., ,..... .... ...-.... .., ..... ""'-......... ....., .... -......... 0 ......... _.,,.,.. .... . ...... .......... .. ....... ,_ ....... .... .................. Tift M\Ufle tl\\M .. ""'" tf ,,., t ... two-,...,.....,.._.. .. ,.,. .. ._.,...._ ........... , .... . -·u.1 .. ,..,...., "-1 I\ • Uia•"CtTO' '-&A.'e i• r\ ,._, .,.. ._.~, ~ .......... _... ................. , .. , ......................................... ........ ,,, "'.....,.... • o .......... ..........,.,............ ,....," TMr \W' "-P~flW'tV IM ~,,.,,. ._.,..,_..~..,..r .,....,_._ I~ ~-. • ---: .--_.:..:. , PICTURE IN SAN FRANCISCO EXAMINER WAS INCOAAECTL Y CALLED LAKE MISSION .VIEJO " ' FllNng of L•ke H•e Become Controvenlal In Water·ehy Northem C.tffomta . .. Fro..PageAJ LAKE .•• the Jake that was pictured as • !;ake MJasloo Viejo. According to an Examiner re- porter covering the story, the photo actually depicted lbe small late at Woodbridge ln Irvine, ~bout 14 miles from Lake Mls- ,slon Viejo. The reporter said the error was corrected ln later edi· tlons. According to RellJy, the shortage of rainfall in Northern California is "a factor over which no one has any control. It is a fact that the seriousness ol U,e situation ls a compelling re- ason to take mitigating action." But Reilly said an analysis of the problem indicated that the company could face substantial legal liability if it completely halted filling of the lake because of commitments made to buyers of more than 2,800 homes which have bet!n sold sin~ the lake pro- ject began. "Is it reasonable to ask a private company lo face possible breach of contract actiQns without offering a 1pecific course ~ action to mltieate that com- pany's liab11.ity?" Reilly asked. "We do not beUeve that it 1s and we don't believe il is re- a1onable for others to demand that a state aeency do so especially under these c:ircurnstances involved here." Reilly went on to explain the proJect 's timetable and purposes, noting that one ol the chief secondary uses of the recreational lake 1s as an emergency water supply that could serve llS,000 people for 60 days in the event.or disastq. • Trash Fees In Southeast County Rise Trash coUMUon fees In por- tions of Southeut Oran11e Coun- ty 'A'lll go up 50 cenu. a month, S\aperviaon rule4 Wedo.ta)'. The board approved a rate in· crease from 12.50 to S3 mooUlJy for Solag Dlspoul Company, wbich servt• South L11una, La1una Nl1uel, Dana Point and Capistrano Buch It. report by County AudJtor- ControOer Vic Heim showed lt now costs the firm 12.98 to col-l~ refuse ln those areas. and ttN Increase to S3 monthly for re;ldential pldup1 will allow th, firm a three percent profit. ta for commercial pickups o wen lncreased Wednesday o tlve lb• company a 15 ptr· c~t profit. DAILY PILOT Educator Manahan Cites Common Sense (Editor' a Not• -ThUt article ia OM of. a M'Ws profilbw the HWR can- didate• -.ldng lhT« open Hata Oil the CopUtrono Ura/Md School DP- trld board of trudea. Tfw IOiurwr in fOCh of the three. area. will be the carididate polling Uw moat vote• dia· trict-~ m tM Marcia I el.mion.J ---By ANNE COOPER °'Ult o.lty ...... StMf William Manahan, who came wltbin three votes of winning the Nov. 2 trustee election, says dis- trict voters will elect him March 8 because he has educational common sense. Manahan, 3S, teaches first grade in the neighboring Sad· dleback Valley Unified School District He says hi.a day-to-day involvement with school children and their parents would bring a valuable perspective lo school board deliberations. Moat peopl~ elected to boards of education are not educators and don't know what questions to ask. said Manahan. who will represent trustee area 4 <Dana Point and coastal Laguna Niguel) if elected. "They have to rely on distnct administrators for their informa- tion," he said_ "They lose their objectivity." A perfect example of confused priorities is the Capistrano d1s- trict 's Leaming Experience Ap- pr aisal Program (Project LEAP>.~ahan said. "LEA as written by two ad- m in lstr rs.·· he said. ''The con- cept is good, but it has senous Claws. No teacher input was 1ou1Jht when the program was developed. In fact, the reading resource teacher waan 't hired until after the proeram was adopted." Manahan, wbo has two children tn district schools, said some ol the pitfalls of LEAP could have been avoided If there were more public input In public education. "The Early Childhood Educa- tion <ECE> profram has been a success largely becauae teachen> and pa.rents have been Involved from tbe earliest plann1n1 sta1es." be said. Manahan sajd district tax- payen stand to benefit more from his election than he d~. because of the educallonal ex- ~rtise be would brine to Ute o.lly ~llot S~ff "'-to EDUCATOR IN RACE C•ndldate Man•h•n post. "There are no educators on the present board," he said, "and yet thla board just voted an 8.4 per- cent teacher salary raise -the largest in the county. Among people I've talked to. they seem to favor an educator on the board about ei1ht to one.'' Manahan has been involved in education for many years; in fact, his own college education took 11 years of night school courses to earn him a bachelor's deiree ln polltical science from Long Beach State. Manahan was in the U.S. Nayy at the time, instructing radio operators. He went on to earn a matter's desree ln readine. also from Lone Beach State, and ra,p a reacUna lab for two years. He tau1bt alxth erllde in the Saddlebaclt school district for two years before taking a fint crade class for the current school ydr M anaban sald the best lhing about teachine Is that he looks forward to colng to school every day. . "Tbe admlnlsttation Is the only level where chance can lake place, though," he said. ''That's why l'm running for the board." Schwartze Retires, • Cites 'Swi88 Watch' Phillip Schwartae, who moved to San Juan Caplatruo In 1970 to take a job u city planner, has announced bit resltoaUOn from the dty'1 plannin1 tom· mla1joo.; effective March 1. Sthwaltle, 33, bu served on lbe commlplon for about four years and hu been chairman fot two 1ean. Now Ullatant dlrec· tor ol {1;!annln1 for lb• City ot Anabe m, Schwartze Hld b feels free to leave the cQm• mil Ion because saD Juan la run· ntna "Uke a Swls1 watch." SC:bwart&e Hid wht.ri b ar- rtv~ In Sail Juan seven yeara aio be found a very dilorcantud dty 1tatf. the city code wq a Joke, b aaid, and the •eneril planwuwone. , "I Ht pretty smooth saJUna ahead for san JUan u lone u we ar•n 't o•errun by ·our nel&bPOra," . be said. "The city h•• all th• tools -• IOUDd 1eneraJ iplan, land uae man.,. rneot cotte and ~ manac• ll'ttm 1yftan. , 'fWe aUll have• before us a 1>hU01opblc•J declalon on •.rtc.uttunJ pruft'Y•tlon,'' b• aald. ''But tbat."1 r.ill1 tclt\1 on the cake.'' . P'Rl.SNO (AP) -State Water Project contraetots llave been told they "must. abow need and use" fOf 300,000 •cre·feet belnt fre*4 by Metropolitan W•ter Dt,trlct for drou1ht·parcled Northern Calllornla. District officials, meetlnc here Wedilelday to leam details of state project cutbacks, were ur1ed to apply by early next week for a abare of the Sout.bern C.ntomia district's al-location. Metropolitan bu indica&ed it will &ive up part of its at.le project supply W. year and in- stead use more Colorado Rlwr water. .. You must show your need and u se," cautioned Robin Reynolds, deputy director of the state Department of Water Resources. "Try your level best in a narrative sense to docu- ment your Jleed for this water." Earlier In a day-long meet- ing, contractors and the state had hoped to make their re- quests orally then, but Reynolds said after consulttn1 wlth Waler Re'$ources Director Ron Robie by telephone that written re- quests showing justification would be required. ''This is too big a thine not to have in writing," Reynolds ex-plained. Officials from various dis- tricts indicated at the meeting that they want as much water as possible in the wake of Tuesday's state announcement of a 60 percent cutba~k to agriculture and 10 percent for domestic and industrial use. Several officials said they ex· peel pre1sure from the Legislature and possibly feder81 water officials in determining who gets how much or the Metropolitan water supply. By TOM BASLEY o. ..... ty._...... ' Ii lr~e bei~1 Joan ItYtne· Smltb~ lawytr quesUon an lrvloe Company dlr-eetor "'°oucbout the day Wedeneeday on tile details of a board llleeting last Feb. 8 in whlcb Mn. ~th was out\IOted 5 to 2 Oil a can- trovental merier propoaaJ.: · Board member WtlU•m Tborntob White lll told at.tonieY Howard Friedman tbat tbe divided board refused to~ on Mrs. Smit.h's resolution calliJtg for a delay in board action ~ proving a takeover by tbe Mebil Oll~ation. ,,. Teaumony in the Or.anee \.Oounty Superior Court trial re- vealed that Mrs. Smit.b wanted the delay because she had been assured by a competing bidder that the Mobil bid of $281.9 million for the entire compan)' would be topped within the next two weeks. \ The competing bidder waa identified as the Allen-Taubman combine, a consortium headed by Wall Street financier Charles Allen and Detroit developer Alfred Taubman. It was testified that the Allen- Taubman interests were pre· pared to offer $.U.80 a share for the Irvine Compaoy holdings in f'roaaPag~AJ TOILETS ••• Former Mayor Glenn Vedder, whose home is on Shaw's Cove, rose to say, "We are already saturated with people." He want- ed no restrooms--that mieht at- tract more people. Vedder said more people would bring "more pollution caused by the does that roam freely before dawn to after darl(, and only con- cern by the property owners keeps the area clear of animal feces.'' WQUALITY TELEVISION Pre-Taxr:JIJ. · trll ~ a new all cub offer. The Mobil bld worb out at $.'D.50 a than. Wblte teaUtl,ed t.tiat Irvine ComJIU)' ...-de t BaylDCDI Watacn Pd other maaa•emut personnel stated at tile board meeUna that Mobll could do mucb mort for tbe Irvine Com- pany tban the company could ever hope to achieve Wl1b Its limited ca}>ltal. Watscm wu quoted u t the meet1n1 that Mobil's ternetional ~ and ess .acumen would ~P the Irvine ' Company to look fUrt.ber afield and "not put all its ens ln the Orange County basket!' · At issue in the lawsuit being tried before Judee James F . Judge is Mrs. Smith's claim that the sale of the Jam es Irvine Foundation's controlJlng in- terest ln the Irvine Company is unfair to minority shareholders. Fro.PageAJ r- PARADE ••• .:_The Hollywood Red Hots Dixieland Band performing from 1to4 p.m. Saturday on t.be green at the Festival of Arts grounds. -Folk Dancers Festival will be held at 2:30 p.m. Saturday also on the green at the Festival of Arts grounds. -The Laguna Beach Girls Club wU1 hold an auctiop ol anti- ques, art objects, sports and celebrity memorabilia at 6 p.m. at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse. -Sw>day, the Dlxieland band will perform aeain from 1 to 4 p.m. on t.be greei,; the Laguna Hills Kool Kats Kitchen Band will perform at3 and 4 p.m. in the Forum Theater on the Festival of Arts grounds; and throughout the day, nostalgic films will be shown at the Forum Theater. ~i$.~~~~~~~~~mn Th• WHITBY H2522E Translttonal styled console. March 1st is coming soon. and we need to reduce our inventory before floor-tax day. Casters Genuine Oak veneers and select hardwood .. olrds on top and ends Front and base or simulated Oall The l<IMBE Rl!Y • H2310W 23// TJble model featuring durable vinyl-clad met1I cabin el beaulllulfy llnlshed In 11chly-gra1ned simulated Walnut. °'"""°'4 EVG -Elactron1c Vtdao Guard Tuning Syttem w11h conven1en1 One-ICnob VHF and Ut1F Channel Selection 13" and 17" dfagonal PORTABLES 19"-23"-25" diagonal TABLE MODELS VERSATILE. COMPACT COLOR TV The MALIBU • H1S10C Our moat com peel portable wilt) 100% Solld·State Chassis with Power Sentry. Brllllant 110• Chromacolor In-Lina Plctute Tube. Solld-Slate Tuning Sys- tem. Ebony color cabinet. l I I ! \ 17 W ASIUNGTON (AP) -In- terior Secretary Cecil Andnul said today investication of four national gaa fields jn tbe Gulf of Mexico found reduced produc· lion, and called for a sweeping study to see if be should order a speedup of gas production. Andrus said the investigation found tbal production bas fallen sharply the put two years in three gasfields which were Mangers AccoWit 'Settled' By GARY GRANVILLE OflM Dally l'flt«Sl.tft Fullerton attorney Michael Remington said today that he and Assembly man Dennis Mangers CD-Huntington Beach> have settled their controversial account and Mangers no longer owes him $5,000. According to Remington, he early this week picked up a $5,000 cashier's check drawn by Mangers at a savings and loan bank. Carnival Chancellor Af'WI ......... ) Though the money came from Mangers' campaign committee, Remington said there was nothing about the remittance to him that would tie it to a cam- paign loan rather than a personal loan. A giant paper head of West German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt, built for Colbgne's Lenten carnival parade Monday, slicks its tongue out at a workman ·ctaubibg its nose. Political figures are popular subjects fdr parade floats during the carnival season in Germany. "I could live with that kind of payment. So.· now the slate•s By MICHAEL PASKEVICB Ofl:N Diiiy Pl ... 51llff Contract negotiations between Newport-Mesa School District •administrators and teachers are i ••makinc good progress." but a r number "' "lboroy issues" re· ioai.o to be settled belons a fmai " settlement is reacbed, school ~ ::.lee Marian ~~~~n _sai_d ~ Speaking before a morning meetin& of the Cituens ff.arbor Area Research Team (CH.ART) in Costa Mesa, Mrs. Bergesen bated bindini arbitration, class sire,· the school calendar and transftt pol~y as tbe potutiai stumblin1 blocks to an accord. However. Mrs. Bergeson said the issue o( teacher salaries and • tbe length of lHcher work-days should not be major factors. I Under a new collective baraainine law <SB teo>, dlstrlct teachers repreaeatff by the Newport-Mesa ~caUon A,s. sociabon (NMEA> are seeldne use of binding arbitration if con- tract negotiations stall. Mrs. Bergeson claims the use of an arbitrator, "an out.sider who doesn't have children or pay taxu in the district," could block out comm\mity input. .. "I feel .-ery stnm11y aaainst it." she said. ''(Binding arbitra· tion > is considered a coup. and for the NMEA it would be a real , plum," waaid. She believes bindina arbitra· Uon could evtntually cl1stort the acope ol nec~tions, allowing teachers lo necoUate curriculum which is currently dictated by cliltrict officials. .• The NMEA bas requested a celling on class siie, but Mrs. 8ereeson feels mandated clus aiie is in opposltioal to the di9'! trict's policy of decentrallUtion. Citing dec.l.lnl.l1i dlatliet ~ :-me.nt, Mn. BeraesOA claims . .. --~------~-----------.. wiJ*lclean," Jl aid. The '5,000 lo•~••• made to Malke~ l~A·Oct. 22 became a cont.10•,ray th.tee week.a~ when t.He attorney said it was a personal 1oan llDd the newly elected uaemblyman in· sisted It waa a loan to hil cam- paign commtttee. Afler receiving the money, class siz.e limits would force Maneers tbe same day reported more district input Ccentraliza-it as a campaign loan to the tion> to shuffle students to meet secretaryofstate. requirements. Later. tbe Democratic as· Mrs. Bergeson also sees pro-semblyman showed the loan on blems if the NMEA 's demand for his campaign finance disclosure a transfer policy based on statement as beinC a loan made seniority alone is granted to his campaign committee .• because it would create con-.. I did everythlns ol)enly and fuaionfcrdistrictottlclals. · the way Jl, was to be done," · -TM-NMEA is seektng·tnpot·m · -Man,ePS-aaid Mhls handling a.pd starting and closing times for the reporting of the loan. school year, an issue Mn. He· also said he checked with Ber1esol\ said should not be the state Fair Political Practices negotiable, Cornmlssion to make certain he Sbe said district and teacher bad properly reported the $5,000 <See PllOGR~. Page A?) loan. * * * "They (~e commission) told me I had handled the transaction C.-L--l J••ues properly, .. Maneers said. .::::lf::IKl(I oa But Remington didn't a1ree. Tbe burl1 aUorney aald lbe ~ -£1 • d loan wu a personal loan and ~ '111.e showed a personal note siioed by Manrers and a cancelled check For Real,ton ~-:.: :fu~le to Manaers to pro- ''Tbat he put It into his campa- ign ii his business, not mlne:• Remtnctoo said a$ be denied be had made a loan to the Mangen committee. Oranae County Supervisor Ralph Diedrich, who bad direct· ed. •aucen to Remlntton's of. fiee lut fall, allO 8',}d ~ WU JWs undentancHna that tbo loan ~a penonaL • That stance b1 Diedrich touched dt an unret0lved ex· chan1• of "liar" epttbeti betwem blm ancl Mngen. · Two weeks •10, Remlngton taUfled before~ count1 Grand Jury Lil Sta probe lbto campaiCn prae~ hi Orall&e COwrty. ID bis teathnOQY. the attorqey reportedly lDslated that; u fJr as be ls eodeenecl, tho Mangers loen wu peno11al aot polltiCal. ' , studied and In these plus a fOili'th field production tar1eta flad beeD lowered by the producers and even tbert were not beinC met. A statement issued by Andrus said there mQ be eood explana· tions for these events and be is not tryinc Lo blame lhem for lbe prHent'eiiern criJl.s. He said be would order an in· quiry to "focU$ on the question of what the department can 4o to assure tneriased ptocluctloo ln the futore from the "OQttr COD· tinental abelf, rather than 'flxing blame' for the. preaent enerty criliS." .~ AndruS prej).Ved to explain ttie report to a newa confel'fllce, Louisiana Gov. Edwin Edwards told repoctent tn BatOft Rouie that he undersfood lbe ~port ac· cuses 10 m~r oil companies in Lou.is1ana •'of hoardlnc 1as while " . •• thoM hypocrites know that Alaska and the North AUantlo sea eu produce bu~ quanUUea of natural eas which they haYe been unwilU.ni to get togetbe.rlo produce." Edwards said he was eoing lo try to cut production of oil and natural gu in Louisiana. CiUrtg the report and a fede()i court ruling In New York todly · <See G.U. Pase A?> Foul Play? -Mesan Shot Newport f!:eiresS.._{~:_ Repeatedly Rep~rted Missi,.gg In Attack By JOANNE REYNOLDS °' Tiie o.lly ...... 51tff Sara Bartholomae, widow of oil millionaire William Barlholomae of Newport Beach, was reported missing today un· der what family members described as suspicious circumstances. Mrs. Bartbolomae, 61, was re- ported missing by her aisler Imelda, a Santa ~a resident who told police abe believes foul play is Involved. Initial police reports did not specify what the circumstances involvine !out play might be, although the police report noted Mrs. Bartholomae was wearing a $10,000 diamond rtng at the time of her disappearance. Mrs . Battholomae, a millionaire since the dealt) of her bu$b~ b Jive<\ in a Senta An• ah5fon since 1964. She 4iwwoed her yachuman ha band lnl983. That divorce was not final. however, when Bartbolom&e wa.s stabbed lo death In his bayfront Balboa mansion In January 1964. ~ ~ ", . Jje was .stabbed ~Y the half·--.. she has remained active ip sister of .his brother s wtre w~o business, watching over her was acqwtted of manslaughter in fortune which she said she was an Orange County Superior Court amass~g to pass on to her two trial that year. children, William and Sarajane. The Bartbolomae family has had a hi.story of bad fortune since the oilman '1 death. Mrs. Bartholomae's second marriage in 1966 to Montebello manufacturer Ernest Launder lasted 57 days before he filed for divorce and she filed for annul· ment. The family 's 95-foot sailing yacht Sea Diamond as well as the bayfront mansion were both sold. The mansion was sold, de· molished and the land subdivided after the death of William's brother Charles a few months after his sister-in Jaw's trial. Mrs. Uartholomae, who in· berited $10 mllUon from her estranJed husband's estate, was hospitalized for a week in 1966 after she was attacked by two 1unmen in ber Santa An• hn~~ and robbed of a $.1,000 diamuou :ring. As recently as 1975 her children unsuccessfully initiated legal action to force her to tJand over control of tbe fortune to them. Police indicated they wO\l)d be interviewing family members in investigating Mrs. Bartbolom· ae's disappearance. A police spokesman Mid she was lastseenTueAday by.b~sis· tel', Imelda. who told officers she failed to show up for two appotn~ ments since then. Police said a search of her ho,ine and nelgbborbood bad proved negative. Mrs. Barth-0le>mae was described as standin1 four feet, 11 inches tall -and weighing 160 pounds. She bu brQwn hair and eyes and was driYinf a beige Chevrolet station wagon. D~tePru .. re Viejo· Lake Foill • 'Will ~ontinue' By BrBVE MITCHELL Ot• 0.lly ~-Stafl A Costa Mesa man was shot. several times in the back lat'e Tu~sday night as he return~ to Ills apartment from his car. Victim Ronald Edwin Melx,. sell, 38, of 550 Paularino Ave,, Park Mesa Villas. was repoJUd in critical condition at Cost,J Mesa Memorial Hospital toda.y •. after undergoing surgery for 11 ~ioal injury caused by bull$ ; from a larje caliber automatia ~ pis\91. · ~ Costa Mesa investigators who •. resppnded lo the 10:30 p.m. shooting said witnesses gave several descriptions of the JUD- man. Police put out a bulletin to p(her agencies ask:lne ihem to be on tbe lookout for a male Latin suspect. The pnman ls described· as · standing five feet nine in~~­ tall. wUh a slim build, sba,gr.: bair worp in a bun, and weart.ni a 1 brown Of' •ldte levi Jacket. But COsla Mesa police Lt. Geot•e Lorton said today detec·. tivea Ji.ave received conflicting reports from witnesses concern· in& lbe identitr of the gunman. ••We're going out to rein· tervt,w tbose -witnesses and. hopefUlly, come up with a better description," be said. Victim Meixsell told officers be did POt know who the assailant. was, nor did be know why anyone would shoot bim. . "He told us the last thing he re- membered W8$ bein& shot in the llack. faUJn& down, and beiq -Slro\'IOIDemore;·~ Lortolrs-aid: · Police saict Jdeiuell was re- turning to his hol'Qe from his· automobile In a well-lit carport al tbe apartment complex. · Meixaell. who is separat.d from bis wife, moved to Costa ¥~• from Dana Point. .several months ago, police said. · He worked for the Becht~ Power Corporation as a crane operator at the San Onoft~ Nuclear Plant until last Se'O:- tem ber, according to Edison Company oftlclals. Crackdown Set ,. ~WASHINGTON <AP) - A1rloulture Secretary Bob Bergland laid today he will cr•ck dO.Wn on food 1tafllp cheaters who do not deserve emergency Cree aid. At the same um,. he proml,aed quick dellv~ of 1tamps to those who bave s • f ered bcoauae of the ••ve e weal.bet. • • .. I Certain WASHINGTON <AP) -~91.Y iae, tor membera QI Conareu, eral judges and biCb officiala 1 a11ured today wbtn the u .. voted, to adJ m for the and. Members who oppoto t ~ lie or the way it ll bel~ put.into feet want.eel to hold the House ln salon as long as Polllbl• and the ouse fint moved to nebt over e issue durine the weekend bul en revenecl itself. Without a House vote clfically on the pay raise.~ crease eoes Into effect matlcally al midnlebt Satur- . It will apply t.o senat.ors, upresent.aUves, federal jqes dbithoCficials. _ Underthelncrease, salaries for members or Congress would be hikedfrobl$4C,600to$S7,500. When the issue of adjourning for tbe weekend first came up, lhe House defeated It, 224 t.o 109. But after leaders reiterated that there could be no vote on the Issue even if the House continued in session, another motion to adjourn until 11 a.m. Monday carried without re· oordedvote. Members opposing the pay raise or the method or instituting il contended that the oriiinal ad· journment vote was in effect a vote on the main issue. But Speaker Thomas P. "Tip" O'Neill told reporters. "H a nybody thinks the folks al home will interpret a vote on adjourn· ment as a vote on the pay raise, he's j ust whistling Dixie." , An attempt lo force a recorded A'Ote in the House failed Wednes· day. Members who object lo the raise then focused their efforts on O'Neill. They insisted O'Neill has enough clout with the Rules Com· mittee to push through a special procedure allowing a vote on re· solutions to kill the raise. Under regular House rules. there could be no vote before the deadline. The Post Office and Civil Service Committee has not voted out any of the resolutions and a subcom· mittee recommended against them Wednesday. O'Neill. who favors lhe raise 11nd has said he would vole for il on the record. insisted the speaker has no power to lake the r esolutions out of com mil tee jurisdiction and send them to the floor. Newport Bay Tour Slated On Saturday Members of the Friends or Newport Bay will be conducting another o( their series or tours or the Upper Bay Saturday from 9 am. lo 10:30a.m . The tours are given free or charge and interested people on· ly have to show up at the starting point at the intersection or Eastblulf and Back Bay drives. Toun1 will depart as sroups of 25 to 30 are formed. No special clolhm& as needed ~cause the tours follow Back Bay Onve whale guides point out the plants, animals and other features that make up the slate preserve Groups such as Boy Scout.a and Olrl ScouL'I are welcome as well' as and1v1duals and fam1bes Re-election Sought • NEW'DELHI. India (AP> Prime rtflnt.ter lndlra Gandhi h(unched her campaign for re· efectlon to her own parllarpen· U.ry seat today. nyln1 t.o her home district to flle her nomina· lcm papers. Her opponent ls Raj araln, the 60·year·old Soclallst s 'e defeated in the 1971 election. DAILY PILOT ... s..~J.:::.... ...... t.... VK•"'t-lt ... Clot-al~ o.11,NtClutl ..... ,y!'OMBARLEY 111 .. .-IY ........ Irvine bel~aa Joan Irvine Smith's l&w)'er queatloned an lrvlna Compauy, director thro\l&hOUt the day Wedenesday on tht detalla ol a f)oard meetin1 last Feb. 8 ln whlcb Mn. Smith .,,., outvottid s to 2 on a con- trovert.la! meraer prope>aal. ·Board member Wllllam. trled be(ora Juda• James F. J1.1d1e ll Mn. Smith'• clalm that the tale of tht James ltvme Fou .. datlon '1 controtlinll in- terest in the Irvine Company Ja unfair to mlnortty 1harebolders. MISSION VIEJO COMltANY WILL CONTINUE TO ALL CONTROVERSIAL LAKE The 1.2-BUHon Gallon Fadllty Hae Become focua of Cfttlctam In Northern Callfomla Thomtoo Whtte Ill told attor ... y Howard Friedman tbal the divided board refused t.o •~t on Mn. Smith's resolution callin1 for a delay in board acUon a~ provtna a takeover by the Mobil Oil Corporation. Mn . Smith owna a 12.4 per· cent atue 1n th• lrvtne Com· pany. White. wboae grandmother waa the secood wife of foundation creator James Irvine, ls a member of a family IJ'OUP thatowna nlot per- cent ol the company stock. Mrs. Smith ar,ues that ll is unfair to compel minority shareholders t.o dispose ol their stock at a price that s he believes can be improved iiven more time t.o seek bids and more com· petiUoofor Mobil. Toilet Tiff Beach Rest Rooms Studied A two-year·old battle between the city oC Newport Beach and the Orange County Health Department over the number or b each rest rooms appears headed for a final showdown over installation of toilets at Balboa's Wedge. City councilmen were told that their position and the county's will be resolved by construction or four proposed rest rooms and the installation or two portable toilets at the Wedge. Councilmen agreed to the con- struction projects -three are planned for parks near the ocean beaches-but they balked at put· ting anything in at the Peninsula· end beach. Backed by a group or Wedge· area residents. Councilman Don 1'klnnia-suggested that the city would' fight rather than put any kind of public facility in at the Wedge. E'r09t Page AJ PROGRESS negotiators have reached "a ten· tative agreement" on the length of teacher work days. 1 The NMEA 's original request, based strongly on the outline of the NMEA's parent.body, the California Teachers Association. called for a four·hour work day. Although she was not specific, Mrs. Bergeson foresees "a pro· fessional work day with realistic hours." The issue of &alaries doesn't appear to be a problem. even though the NMEA 's ongmaJ re· quest of an 18 percent pay hike shows a great discrepancy from the district's counter-offer of a 7.8 percent raise "We have been making good progress with little adversity," she s8.1d, adding the d1stnct set aside $806,000 <marking about a five percent increase> last spnng to prepare for salary negotia· lions. * * * E'r09t Page Al SALARIES. • • Ing asent, IS adamantly for it ·'The CT A statewide regards binding arbitration as a major union goal." he said. Smallwood said he is opposed to it because .. it divests the public of its rightful place at the ba rgainlng table.·· He explained that theoretical· ly. the public is represented in bargaining by the elected school board members ~tembers or the public act through the election process and if they're unhappy with the JOb done by their school board. they can elect new members "Once yo~ remove that ul · ti male authority rrom the elected public official and 1lve It to an arbitrator, you have denied the public its role in the process," he said. A Gnulging Admis1ion "We have always bad a deep concern with that beach," he said of the hazardous surfing spot. "We don't want lo en· coura1e people to go there." Councilman Trudi Rogers, who represents the Penmsula. sug- gested that the city consider in· stalling a rest room at the public bay beac;,h at N Street. City a nd county represen· tatives have been squabbling over public rest rooms at Newport's ocean beaches for the past two years. County officials contend there aren't enoueh of them and und.er a orov1s1on of the state Ad· ministrative Code, Health Department representatives claim they have the legal power to force the city to install the necessary facilities. Councilmen a nd city staff members. on the other hand. feel the city has sufficient facilities and dispute the county's autbori· ty to force any changes. The main area or dispute is the city's long stretch of ocean beach from the Santa Ana River to .lhe Newport Harbor entrance. At present, there are public facilities only at the two piers at the bay beach al 15th Street. When the city finis hes con· structaon of Wt>st Newport Park the first of two phases is cur· rently under construction and completion of the entire part is s lated by 1978 -there will be public rest roomi. within a block or the beach throughout the park on Seashore Drive from Sum m1t Street to S5th Stret>l. In the central Newport area. between the Balboa Pier and 15th Street. city officials are planning to buald a restroom on a former gas station lot near the mtersec· lion of Island Avenue and Balboa Boulevard 'that. say city offlcials. along \\1th the additional restroom to go Into Marinapark al 18th Street. should take care or the problem. fi'rona Page A I GAS ... cancehng offshore oil 1eases an the Atlanllc. Edwards told An· drus in a telegram: "We are running out of gas and have run out of patience and therefore will take whatever step legally and englneerinilY possi· ble lo produce a slow down o< ratet. oC recovery until the long· standing mequ1taes . . have been removed. We regret being forced into this position bul Lou1s1ana's 1mmed1ate interests and the nation's long.run in· t.erests not only justify but com· pet this achon. •· In New York. Texaco said It "is doln1 everything possible to mulmize its natural gas produc· Uon, With retard specific~y to the Lighthouse Point and Tiger Shoals fields, Texaco Is produc· Ing at mutntum capability from existing wells," The Andru11 team studied the Tiger Shoals field . The inveatifatlon tor Andrus also covered gas reserves in five fields alr~ldy oomrnJtted to in· terstate plpellM companie9 bUt not yet in produ~Uon. The fields had been lovestigat· ed earlier by the Federal Power Commiaalon, whose ataft report- ed In December that llOIJ\e ol the resuvea can be pro(tuctd sooner than olanned . FraatPageAJ LAKE •.• ~ay lead to dangerously mis· caJcalated results." Reilly may have been refer· ring to such incidents as the ap· pearance or a lO·inch wide photo· graph In last Sunday's Sun Francisco Examiner's preview edition. which bore the headline atop the photo "Where Our Water Is ... " The photo identified the lake that was pictured as Lake Mission Viejo. Accoi:dlng to an Examiner re· porter covering the story. the photo actually depicted the small lake at Woodbndge in Irvine, about 14 miles from Lake Mis· sion Viejo. The reporter said the error was corrected in later edi· Lions. According to Reilly, the shortage or rainfall In Northern California Is "a factor over which no one has any control It is a fact that the seriousness of the situation is a compelling re· ason to take "1itigalmg action." But Reilly said an analysis of the problem indicated that. the company could face substantial legal liability if it completely halted filling or the lake because or commitments made to buyers of more than 2,800 homes. Testimony in the Orange County Superior Court trial re- veaJed th.at Mrs. Smith wanted the delay because she bad been assured by a ~mpetine bidder that the Mobil bid of $281.9 million for the entire company would be t.opped wllhin the next two weeks. The competing bidder was identlfled as the Allen· Taubman combine, a consortium headed by Wall Street financier Charles Allen and Detroit developer Alfred Taubman. It was testified that the Allen· Taubman interests were pre· pared to offer $33.60 a share for the Irvine Company holdings ln a new all c'aah offer. The Mobil bid works out at $33.50 a share. White testified that Irvine Company President Raymond Watson and other manaeement personnel stated at the board meeting that Mobil could do much more for the Irvine Com· pany than the company could ever hope to achieve with 1ls limited capital. Watson was quoted as telling the meetin1 that Mobil's in· ternational assets and business acumen would help the Irvine Company to look further afield and "not put all its eggs in the Orange County basket." At issue in the lawsuit beini White testified Wednesday that Mobil officials have re- peatedly made it clear over the years that they are only in- terested hi taklnl over t he com· plete Irvine Company and not just the foundation's 54.S per· cent controlline interest. Friedman argued Wednesday that it would have been more ethical and businesslike for Mobil to seek control of the Irvine Company a step al a tim~ rather than apply what he described as a "corporate freeze out" on Mrs. Smith. "It is clearly illegal to take over the minority shareholders stock in this fashlon," be told Judge Judl{e. White testified that Mrs. Smith and Walson tangled dur· ing the Feb. 8 meeting on the is· sue of what she believed were the company president's COD· nectlon with Mobil and an offer she believed was made to him by the oil company. White said Walson told the heiress that he had no 1uch con- nection with Mobil and that he s imply wanted the best deal that could be obtained for the Irvine Company. "QUALITY .TELEVISION Pre-TaxB 1rH ~~~~~~~~i~~IT The WHITBY H2522E T1ans11tona1 styled console Cas1e1s Genuine Oak veneers and select tiardwooct solids 'on top and ends. Front 1nd base ol simulated Oak March 1st is coming soon. and we need to reduce our inventory before floor-tax day. 13" and 17" diagonal PORTABLES 19"-23"-25" diagonal TABLE MODELS VERSATILE, COMPACT COLOR TV . Tt\e MALllU • H1JtOC Our mo1t compact portable with 100•,. Solld·Statt Ch1Hl1 with Power Sentry. Brllllant 110• Chromacolor In-Line Picture Tube. Solld·8t1te Tuning Sy•· tem. Ebony color oeblnet. Call for Clearance Pr.l"es l . .. .. • J • . • • WASHINGTON (AP) -In- terior Secretary CeeU Andrua said ~ invatlaatioo ·of four national gas !Leldl iD tbe Gulf of Mexico found reduced produc- tion, and called for a sweepine study to see ii he &hould order a speedup of p.s pf'011uction. Andrus said tbe investigation found that production bu fallen sharply ~ past two years in three gastielda wblcb were studied and icl ~plus a fourth field lll'Oducticlll tarceta bad been loweied: by the proclucers and even u.i were not being met. A ~ment i.uued by Andrus said there ma,y be gC)Od explana- tions for these eventa and be is not try\ng to blame theQl for the present energy crisis . He said be would order an in- quiry to "focus on the questioo of what tbe department can do to uaure ~~ produtUOB .in the . future from tbe outer C04- tlnesstal shelf, rather than ·~ blame• for the present energy crlais.'' Aa Andr\18 prepared to explain the report ·to a news conference, LoulsiaN Gov. Edw Edwards told reporters in Baton Rouge that be understood the report ac- cuses 10 major oil companies in Louisiana "of boardlnc aa.s while the Atlantic, F.dward.s told Ail· clrua In a tet•ant: · "W• are ruo.alac out Of pa and have nm <Kil OI patience and therefore will take whatever s ep legally and eniineeringly possi· bl-, to produce a t low d9~ of rates of recoftry until the long- standing inequities . . . have been removed. We re1ret being forced into this posltlon but Louislan 'a immediate ln~ &nd the'naUon'a lonc·nm ~-. teruta Dot OQJy juatif7 .~11t com· pel thb aet10n:• Jn New York, Texaco aid It ''Is dolnc everythi~ po11lble \o maximize its natural au produc- tion. Wlth reeard apeclfically to the IJ&htbouSe Point and nser Shoals fields. Texaco ¥ produc· inc at maximum capability from existlng wells.•• 'lbe Andnls (SeeGAS, Pace AZ) '· ... Viejo ·won't SLut: _Qff Lake W~te~ -·' ' l l SaddlelJack Board 'Freeze' R11Jing .Appeal Nixed By LAURIE KASPER Ofllle o.i1, l'lletSlaff Saddleback Valley Unified School District trustees will not l. appeal a state bearing officer's decision that they committed an unfair labor practice when they froze teachers' salaries last sum· mer. Loa Young, president of the Board of Education. said the de- cision was made during a closed executive session of trustees Wednesday evening. Mrs. Young said she was I~ satisfied with the state officer's Count S l •t decision against trustees and felt .. y • n w lt was "fair and just and right ... 'Z:' ., Trustees had said that teachers bad to agree to delay a contract ()/ )" 7alley until July, 1971 or accept a salary y ~ freeze. Wben Ule eachers said they wouldia't ~~ the a,.-ee- mmt. trqstees i'ef\aled to give . LJ LL-•.? tbe• tbtir al Mary •in-U W,Uf, O...-es !Or 1e of ex-~nce and lldditiou educ• ' • Tile man headllif a 1peeiat L committee 1tudyln1 Orange t Cowsty ~al ~c~ int aald Monday none of the L ~ans currently under considera- tion would divide the Saddlebact '\ all~. 1 nnis Horn, aide to Supe visor Thomas Riley. told ' .members of the Saddleback Area CoofdinaUag Coc.uicil <SACC> that his boss would op- P9S• such a plan if it WU pro- ~ .. A yaJJey aplit bas DOt beeD. Mentlfled • an opUOa; auaat· ed as an option or coasidered .., • possibl.IU;y, wbicb abows bow much aease sucb a proposal bas. .. Jbn aald. Coocena over a divtsfon of the 1outb county by two •upervhorial dlatrtcu arose aeveral monlhs aro when a plad prepared by political ldn•makers Willlam Butcher and Arnold Forde aurfaced iD Santa Ana and ... publicised by tbe newspapers. That plan acllle.ed the re- qui red county pop•latlon balance by spllU1ng the v&Uey JateraUJ atoo• San Dieco Freeway, pladn1 tbe eastern h alt in Supervisor Ralph Diedrlcll'• third district and the rest in Riley's. Rom told SACC members that tbe Butcher· Forde plan bu been burled by bad publicity. But the supervisor's iide did M:1 that redlstrictinc Will have 11na•oidable effeeta oa aboat 13.ooo people cun'eDut Uvtaa in (SeeVALLEY,P AZ> By doing this, according to a bearing officer with. the state's Educational Employment Rela- tions Boa.rd {EER8), trustees were not bat'ainlili in th~ Cood faith wbicll is required under tbe state's new collective bargatning law. Mrs. Young said she and other trustees were "uncomfortable .. with their decision to freeze salaries. "I really felt bad about it. I did not like what we did," she said. ..But it was what we thoq1't 'ft'bad tQ do .•• '.?.he. boar.4 ~Hici4Mlt.. said trustees were advised that they bad to start all over a1ain on all -salary issues under the state's new collective bargaining law wblchbecameeflective Julyl. Sbe said trustees qUfltioned the salary freeze but were as- sured that it wu what had to be done. Sbe said problem• wltb the law wlll be clarifted bf the EERB and state leflalatora. Mn. Youn& also aald trustees did not expect the salary frene to last u tooc u it dJd. "We're all of the opinion that it had gone on too lone and we made a dlia- take," she said. She said it was beclluae of these feelinp tbat trustees 1raoted a unilateral pay raise and unfroze the·~ acbedule in January. (See atJLINGP Pace AZ) o.11, ~ si.ff ....... MISSION VIEJO COMPANY WILL CONTINUE TO FILL CONTROVERSIAL LAKE ·nte 1 .2-Blllon Gallon f ecllty Haa Become Focua of Crtticlam In Northern C•IHomla Con~'Pay­ Raise Okayed; House lights started nashing and bells began rillging. Jo~n. wllo was traveling soutbboUnd on JefJrey Road at 5: 10 p.m .. said the engine would not stop so be sped through the crossing, breaking off about six feet of the slowly-lowering crossing arm. An Amtrak passenger train traveling eastbound towards San l>i~p ru,mbled through the er~ are~ just. four seconds after the fire engine had crossed to the other side. ''The guys were a little nervous," admitted Fire Capt. Brue~ Turltetille. • The engine wd not datnued ln the Incident-bUt it ia in 'the shop today • haviAI its brake system repaired. Turbeville said. Polices,t. RobertKredelaaid there has beea one fatal acci- dent at tho Jeffrey crossing in the put fiv• yeart. 'SIJi!w N~~ For Water,' North Told FRE.$NO (AP> -State Water Project contractors have been told they "must show need and use" for 300.000 acre·feel being freed by Metropolitan Water District for drought-parched Northern California. District officials. meeting here Wednesday to learn details of state project cutbacks. were urged to apply by early next week for a share of the Southern California district's al- location. ' Metropolitan bas indicated it will give up part of its state project supply this year and in- stead use more Colorado River water. "You must show your need and ose," cautioned Robin Reynolds, deputy director of the state De_partment of Water· Resources. "Try your level best in a narrative sense,to-aocu. ment_your need for this water." (See WATER, Page AZ) Northern Pressure· . "' Rejected' By WILUAll SCHaEJBER • OI .. oeAV "'lM Sc.ff · Mission Viejo Company Pr'Ml- dent Philip J. Reilly said toct-r bis finn will continue filling its 1.2-biWon gallon manmlft lake despite political pressure from drou1ht-stricken Northern California. But· Reilly told newsmen at the Casta del Sol recreation center that. a.a of today, all tbe water flowlna Into the basin la from tile Colorado River aquaduct. "We believe this is an accepta. ble alternative,'' Reilly sald,oot- ing that it will be possible to cut ofl all Northem California water Ceediae the lake Tiitbout aff~ int •uppli• to the surrounding community. .. While it will cause a delay in the filllnl of the lake, we IMllieve • lt \vill be tolC'l'ated by those in the commUllity and utose who have contracttd to buy homes under comtructioo, •• be said. A spokesman for the Santa Margarita Water Dlatrlct, which serves Mission Viejo and ita Im· mediate surroundin11, said facilities are availabl~ to supply more· plentiful Colorado River ' water directly to the lake project without affeetlng delivery ot ttle hicher quality mixture of Northern and Southern California water received by re- sidential and other consumers . ~ bia 15-minute prepared statement. e0mpany Preal<tedt Reilly said that he was brealdbf a lon£.istlndinl policy of the cor-pora by comment1n1 on an fs.. sue that Is pendJ.nl a bearing before a goverpmental body. The lake filling project will come befqre the state Water Resour~ea Control Board in, s1acrameoto Wednesday, to de- termine lf the w4ter usaae is waatetul«~ utllltarlan. Reilly coatdded that the lale baa become the focal ~lat of ~pt• seeking to "slmpllfY a compier; lsaue -to search for (See LAKE ••• ,.AZ) Midland's reveoge ' ' At School A CJftdldate for the S.ddlebatk alley Unified SChoOI Dlltrict ard ~ EducaUon 1 Id W ednes- • ay that aomeone may be ''leak· I" di4trlct information po ltu· ntt which should~ p~ der fdr'al FamllY IUlbta and rivacy Act. Wltuam Kelly, wbo 1ald be wu epkin& u a ''concerned parent d as a parent very upset a~t number of ac,Uont." said li- ar-old students a\ Nuslon Vte-H1'h School have been called d encouraged to resister and te in lbe school board election. ti the 1tudent's birthdate ls own to the caller, he said, tben tbil may indicate a violation of 1be Cederal law which says Rhools cannot disclose lnlonna- tion concerning a stud!nt to the public. Kelly said the calls were made in behalf of Trustee Dennis Smith, who ts seekloe re- election, but be admitted he has no proof that anyone has violated the law. Smith said he doesn't know if he or his campaign workers ~lied the students Kelly was re· ,f erring to. He said about 5,000 calls have been made for his .;11m paign. Arter the meeting, Smith said ttiat he has obtained no list from the district. He said he has students work· ing on tus campaign and they are getting other students' names from the school yearbook. He said telephone numbers can be obtained from telephone direc tories and that his workers are ~sking studenu i(lbey are 18. But Kelly said today thal onl:v studenu who just turned 18 are being called. He said about 80 ~rcent of the students are 17 so this wouJd make It seem that so- meone has their birlhdates. "I don't bke getting up there and makinf( statements hke \bat." Kelly said. But Kelly said it upset him. He said that 1f in· formation has been obtained from the school then the person should be reprimanded. Even If Information hasn't been obtained from the schools, he said , the board's policy gov- erning studenu · records and stu· dents' righu s hould be rewritten. He said the Department of Health. Education and Welfare sent out regulations on the law m June. 1976 But the board policy, he said, is dated Feb. 1974 In addition to seeing the pohcy updated. he said, he would like to have all district employes In· formed that student 1nformallon Is not to be given to anyone. Fr .. rag~AI VALLEY ••• llJley's huge r1nhihslrict That figure 1s the number of people in the fifth district beyond the "population equity point'" or about 345.000 per supervisor. Horn said the one-man, one vote requirem e nt of the CalHornia Constitution man- dates redaslricllnc ever)' 10 years <by 1981 l or in the event severe imbalances occur throuch lopsided population growth. which Is happenine in south county area!> He notl'd that several areas ~1thm Ril~'s district are active candidates for movement Into a ntighbonng district Those in· elude portions of HunUnglon Buch, Fountain \'alley. Tustin and Santa Ano with roughly 60.000 people Horn dented that redlstrictmg Is being done in 41dvance of the 1981 deadline for '"POliUcal r• asons" and f(errymanderina That possibility was raised In questions asked by attorney Michael Clancey of El Toro, a SACC executive board member. · The supervlsOT'a aid• said be has heard or no such purely political molivl's since he haa been workinl on redi1trlcling. DAILY PILOT o.11,~••._.. JOINS SCHOOL BQARD lbldenl Mark How.U I Teen Takes 'Position' On.Board Mark Howell, a junior at Mis- s ion Viejo High School. was sworn in and seated as the new student member of the Sad- dleback Valley Unified School District Board of Education Wed· nesday. Howell, who was his school 's representative to the board, will sit with the board and be able to discuss all issues before il as a representative Of all district SlU· dents. He will not be allowed to vote on the issues and will not receive confidential personnel rePorts or sit in on trustees' closed ex· ecutive sessions. After administering the oath of office to Howell, Loa Youns. pre- sident of the board, said she believes Howell is the first stu- dent lo be seated on any school board bl the state since a state law allowing student mem· bersbip went into effect ln January. Howell is the son of Rev. Preston Howell, a former San Joaquin District school board member. Mrs. Young said it is ap· propriate that the young m\ln be seated on the board. "l re- member Mark when he was 10 years old sitting al board meet· ings watching his father on the board," !he said. And she predicted that the stu dent wiJI one day enter politics. f'r .. rae~AJ RULING .•• Then, she swd. was the first op- porturuty given trustees under the law. Trustee William Kohler, however, said he wanted to ap- peal the EERB hearing officer's decision because of the legal ramifications it will have on other districts. "We"re letting it sit as a prece- dent for every other district, .. he explained. He s&1d the laws are set up to allow an appeal and he llrlievea the district should follow l!fough on It Smee no appeal will be made, the hearine officer's recom- mended decision wiU be finalized by the EERB. Since the salary freeze has already been lift.ed, trustees will only be required to post a copy of t.he decision at all schools. Also, Bill Mecham. president o r the Saddleback Valley Educators Association, bas aald that be wUl a.sk that the district pay Interest on the money withheld for four months. • t.I IAto an onr re-aourca conservation proiram do not p•rmlt too much almpllflc&tlan, ·~ Reilly ea.Id. ''To tlmplUy the fact• in thi1 case may lead to aanierously mis· calculated rei.Wta." ftellly may ha~ been fdv-nn1 lo auch incidents 18 the •P-. peaJ'llDCe ol a 10.incb wide pbotb- erapb in laat Sunday's San Francllco Examiner's preview .tLUon, which bore the headline atop the fhoto "Where ~our Water [I .. ,' The photo identifted the lake that wa1 pictured as Lake 111.iulon Viejo. . Accordin& to an Examiner re- porter eovertnc the story, the photo actually depkted the small lake at Woodbridee in Irvine, about 14 miles from Lake Mis- 1lon Viejo. 'lb. reporter said the error wu eorrected in later edi· lions. Accordine to Reilly, the shortace of rainfall in Northern !:aUfornia la "a factor over which no one bu any control. It " a fact that the seriousness of the s1tuaUon is a compelling re- ason lo take miti1ating action.·' But Reilly said an analysis of the problem indicated lbat the comrany could face substantial lega Uabllity if it completely halted Oiling or the lake because or commitments made to buyers or more than 2,800 homes which have been sold since the lake pro- ject began. "h it reasonable to ask a. private company to face possible breach of contrac\ attions without offering a specific course of action to mitigate lbat com-p~ 1• liability?" Reilly asked. ''We do not believe that it is and we don't believe lt is re- asonable for others to demand that a state aeency do so especially under these circumatances involved here.•• Reilly went on to explain the project'• timet.able and purposes, notinc that one of the chief secondary uses of the recreational lake is as an emergency water supply that could serve 115,000 people for 60 days ln the event of disaster. * . * * f'r .. PageAJ r WATER ••• Earlier in a day-long meet· ing, contractors and the state had hoped t.b make their r~­ quests orally then. but Reynolds said after consulting with Water Resources Director Ron Robie by telephone that written re· quests showing justification would be required ··Thia is too big a thing not to have in writing." Reynolds ex- plained. Officials from various dis· tricts indicated at the meeting that they want as much water as possible in the wake or Tuesday's state announcement or a 60 percent cutback to agriculture and 10 ~ercent for domestic and industrial use. Several officials said they ex- pect pressurts from the Legislature and possibly federal water officials in determining who gets how much of the Metropolitan water supply. f'ro.. P09e A J RAISES ••• a.m. Monday carried without re- corded vote. Members opposing the pay raise or the method •f instituting lt contended that the or11inal ad- journment vote was 1n errect a vole on the main laaue. But Speaker Thomas P . ''Tip" O'Neill told reporters, "If anybody think• the folk• at hoJD.e wlll interpret a vote on adjourn· ment as a vole on the pay ralie, he's just whistling Dixie." Women's Lib Ranks Add Young Recruits o.11., ...... , .. " ...... EDUCATOR IN RACE Candidate Manahan f',.._PageAJ GAS ••• team studied the Tieer Shoals field. The investigation for Andrus also covered cas reserves in five fields already committed to lll· terstate pipeline companies but not yet in production. The fields had been invest1gat· ed earlier by the Federal Power Com mission, whose .:staff report· ed in December lbat some or the reserves can be produced sooner than planned. The Andrus team said th.ere were 225 gas reservoirs with re· serves totaling 981.S billion cubic feet which were not in produc tion, in thOse five fields al the end oflast year. If those reserves were pro· duced rapidly over a six-year period, for example. their gas now could provide the nation's demands for about 21, days dur- ing a normal winter, a substan- tial contribution but not a l:om· plete aolulion to recent eas shortaaes. The report said that in 1974 the Federal Power Commission foudd 188 reservoirs with 757.3 blllion cubic feet in these five fields and only 19 or those re· serviors have since been brought into production. (Editor'• Nott-Thi.a artk&. ii orw o/ o UTif• pro/Ufog tM uwn con· didat•• an#l:lng lhttt opm ~ on the c~ Um/Wd ScMot ~ tnct board of lnmtt11 Tiu willMr in each of ~ thrtt.ar(O.' will be 1111 candidate pol.ling Uw most vote• di.a· trict-~ in thl March I elect ton.) By ANNE.COOPER Olt•o.t!Yl'li.tM .. Wllllam MaAaban, who came within three votes ol wlnnln& tbe Nov. 2 trustee election, seys'ilis- trict voters will elect him Mar~h I because be bas educational common sense. · M anaban, 35, teaches first grade in the neighboring sad· dlebaclt Valley Unified Sebool District. He says his day-to-day involvement with school children and their parenu would bring a valuable-perspective to echool bond deliberations. Most people elected to boards or education are not educators and don't know what questions to ask. said Manahan. who will represent trustee area 4 <Dana Point and coastal Laguna Niguel> if elected. ·'They have lo rely on diatrlct' administrators for their infonna- llon," he said. "They los~ their objectivity." A perfect example of confused priorities is the Capistrano dis· trict's Leaming Experience Ap· praisal Program <Project LEAP>. Manahan said. "'LEAP was written by two ad- ministrators," he said ... The con- cept is good, but it bas serious flaws. No teacher input was sought when the program was d~veloped. lo fact, the reading resource teacher wasn't htred until after the program was adopted." Manahan . who has tw o children in district schools, said some of the pitfalls of LEAP could have been avoided if there were more public input in public education. "The Early Childhood Educa- ®QUALITY TELEVISION tlon (ECE> proaram h11 been a auccess lar1eb' because teathers and parents have been invOl't'ed from the earliest planning ataaes," hdald. Manahan said dlstrlct tax- payers stand to benefil more from his election lban be does, because ot the educatlonal ex- pertile he would bring to the post. "There are no educators on the present board," he said, "ahd yet this board just voted an 8.4 per- cent teacher salary ralse -lbe lareest in the county. Among people I've talked to, they seem to favor an educator on the board about eight to one." Manahan has been involved in education for many years: in fact, his own college education took 11 years of night school courses to earn him a bachelor's degree in political science from Loni Beach State. Manahart was In the U.S. Navy at the time, instructing radio operators. He went on to earn a master's degree in reading, also from Long Beach State, and ran a reading lab for two years. He tau1ht sixth grade in tJtie Saddleback school district for two years before takin1 a first grade class for the current school year. Man ah an said the best thing about teaching is that he looks forward to going lo school every day ''The administration is the only level where chan1e can take place, thou&h." he said. "That's why I'm runrung for the board " 2 Found Slain SAN JOSE <A P) The deaths or a man and his wife in their trailer home near here was a murder-1uic1de, police said to- day. The bodies of Jerome Hlln- nicott, 42, and his wife, Beverly. 43, were found after their son said he heurd an argument. ~~~~~~~~iii1T Tl'te WHITBY H2522E T1ans11ional styled console. March 1st is coming s001land we need to reduce our inventory be[ore floor-tax day. CastetS. Genuine Oak veneers and select ha1dw00d solids on top and ends Front and base of simulated Oak. 13" and 17" diagonal PORTABLES 1911-23"·25" diagonal TABLE MODELS 13':1AOOHAl VERSATILE, COMPACT COLOR TV The MALl•U • H1310C Our moet comp1c:t port1bl• with 100% Solld·St1te Cha11l1 with Power Sentry. Brllllant 110• Chrom1co1or ln·Lfoe Plctuft Tube. Solld·St1te Tuning •v•· ltm. Ebony color cabinet. l ,,.. . , .. '• 1) •)t. .... " ,_. ., ' , ,, t' n •' • .. ) •• ,. ,. .. _ .. .... ,.,, 1-. ,. ,_ ~ .. ' ,. ... " ,. > ~ ,, 'l ... • , u-. . " ., 'Cl J1 "' ., 11"-., 117 n-.. '• ,, '· • ,."' ... 1•'' t, ,..... ... n • ';I ,,, ... , •• ,,... ... "'' . ,~ '• 1t • "l' .. '\ ''"'~ .. ....-.. ' ?•'\• ~ l' ..... ~ ~;t."."' ' • u '• ,. '• ,. .. ,, ... I I •\ .. .. _.,.,;,.z. Xerea I ,.11 1)1 lClraCt ... I 11 v .. n IO :D hleCAl1'9A 6 21 1 .. .,,. .... 1 eH » 4 n • .,, ' u 9tllw 111 UJ lltfllNI 4' • H l:Jile Wouell MillerSh;:apens lta Edg:e • • 1!t 87111LTONK OWITZ I :)'! natlOO•a flve larpat bnwera tl•ht.n.od th-1r (rip aa the beer market 1h 19'76, accountin.a for 68 percent ot all •hijjm1nta. •• Ttl•y did so even tbou&h the tndu.stry'• No. l ptOd • Anheuser-Busch of St. Louil, w l\it earl) ln the year• es.ctay strike ot Teamsters. That 1trike reduced Anbftser-B oh'• output by 17 percent. II aot lor that. the market ihare ol. the top five brewen ~probably bav• U<*Mled 'JO ~rcent. aad there'• little question that, barrlna a •lmller mt•laap. Ul•Y will reacb that I.Ve! at concentraUon ln tm. fl td VO& 111£ INEXORABLE TBEND THAT RAS been movinf in the beer industry for many years now -tho biC 1et bteeer. the small disappear -continues unabeted. • 'Anheunr-Busch, tbe brewer ot Budwelsera Mkbelnb and Busch Bavarian. shipped 29 million barrels last year. Despite the drop rtom 35 million harries 1n 1975, tbat wu still eood enough for flrst place u Milwaukff's Sch!Ws Brewinc maa-.ed only a ' percent increaso to 2•.l mllliala barrels. I' The industry's standout performer was once agaJn Miller Brewing, Milwaukee subsidiary ol ci1arette-mabr Pbiljp MOl'N (Marlboro, Benson & Hed1es, Parliame... Merit>. In 1975, on the wlnp ol a 42 percent sales incre--. Miiler bumped Colorado's Adolph Coon from fourth place. Last year, tacking on a 43 per~t Increase to the 42 perftnt of the pre- vious year, Miller knocked Milwaukee's Money Tree . ... i1t l· . 1•• Pa bat Brewing out of third place. Jt.1 • • 4j THE FINAL STANDINGS FOR THE YEAR showed Mlller with il\ipments of 18.4 million barrels. Pabst cam.a. at 17 mi1Uon barrels. a 9 percent gain over its 1975 ship· melits but, not enough to bold off sur1ing Miller. ·• r • A m-.Jor factor in the Miller advance was the succesf!Of its low-calorie beer. Lite, which had the benefit or some very good television com~rcials. starring burly athleta.. Miller Lite, just by it.self. may ha~ accounted ford much as 5.5 million barrel.a, whlcb is more bffr than Miller B~ ing sold under all labels in 1972. •c•; So successful bas Lite been that it's now attracting cli.llf• petition. Schlitz is in there with its Light brand. Anheuser• Busch is brewing one called Natural Light. '"~' ,,, COORS, WHOSE BEER STB.IKES MANY people as a light brew, rac~ed up a 1' percffll sales gain la.st year to re• acb 13.S bmillion barrels. It's the only one or the t.op1five brewers wi~ a stricUy reeional distribution <mostly in the West). ~ • The r:anks of the small independent brewers contin~to thin. It seems that if you can't brew at least 6million barHl.tl a year, you can't compete any more in lhi5 business. The Olympia brewery, in W aahingt.on state, bas become the nation's sixth lareesl by acqw.rtni Hamm'• of fltioo. nesota in 1975 and Lone St&r Brewin& qf Texas in 1976. ltm moving up rig~t behind Olympia is the La Cr085e, W!tf ... based G. Heileman breweey, which this week· ..,.. scheduled to buy Washln1ton's Rainier brewery for S7 million 1n cash. 1 H The destruction or the small locally owned brewerr.ill· America is mirrored in the Heileman brand lineup, wbtdll now includes Special Export, Old Style, CJatz. Micker .. Malt Liquor, Schmidt, Sterling, Drewry's. Kingbury. Pre\f. fer, Wiedemann, Grain Belt and Rainier. .. Severe Winter ' ~. Cuts Home Star~ [ ____ Ho_us_1_Nc_J