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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-11-02 - Orange Coast Pilot~ i I I .. WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBE.R 2, 19)7 YOL-7t, NO.-. 4 S&CTIOMI, • ~AGH a ; Guard ,,,,...,.... A ITA BRYANT wmt HUSBAND 808 GREEN ' Flgh~ng Sieg• of Mlltant HomouxuilJa NEW YORK <AP> -Anita Bryant said today tbat piWtant homosexuals have praetlC&lly .gotten her blaetli.ltC Cft TV. forced ber to live unwguard aOd otherwlse disn&Dtecl ber life. "I'm not ilrald," she said in an interview with 'lbe Auoclat· ed Praa. ''So they kill me. So what?•• 5 Jailed Woman 'Told' to Torch Husband, LANSING, Mich. <AP> -An •• rsent voice" told Francine H~hea to slosh 1-.0 ne around the bod where her ex·tiu•band lept, then lenite the tuel and flff. James Hughei. died ii\ the Ire. ':.l'here was like an urgent voice whispering, 'do It, do It,· " abe said Tuesday ln the sixth day of her trial on flrst·deeree murder cbnrges. women. F~AJ DROWN •. ;;.. -i 'J!~tu~R.~. and I ran and .got: my boogie T/te Elenf,ii;,i board," David said. r The Cathohc school seventh grader s&d he pa<Jdles;l lOwJrd the rods and·' gi'abbed R..ev. - Colleran's arm. Uslng his free arm David paddled the three-root foam board towar4\h6re, pullln'1 the priest behifld blm .~ . , Meanwhile, David'• 10-year· old brother Patrick was helping Desmond Colleraq from the',; surfline. ~ Laguna Beach· lifeguard frlike Dwinell said r escuers ad- ministered first aid to Father · Colleran and a U.S. Marine helicopter was dispatched to transfer the priest to the hospital. Rev. Colleran, a native of Jreland, was the coordinator for the Catholic Church's Worldwide Marriage Encounter proerams, and was associated with St. An· • thony's Church in Loni Beacb. Church officials said more than 80,000 couples from Los Angeles and Orange County archdiocese participated in the t'ncounter programs in the past W\ cral years. Sister Florence, principal of St. Catherine-St. Nicholas School m South Laguna said David and f'ather Colleran had been close friends all of the boy's life. "He was sort of a father figure for David," Sister Florence said. "Ever since David's real father died several years ago " Father Col&eran's brother Desmond, who was not seriously hurt in the ocean mishap, ad· minis tered last rites of the church after the accident Action Sought Against Home SACRAMENTO <AP) -State health officials are aeekinf legal action to revoke tbe license of a Long BStach extended care hospital 1te:cused of health care violations '- The Department of 1-{ealth said Tuesday that besides action against the license, it wants the state attorney general to help suspend the Medi-Cal status oC Regency Associates Ltd. as a skilled nursing facility. Violations include failure to provide patients with enough care to prevent bedsores, failure to provide enough nurses, and failure to properly give medic• lion to 28 patients, the depart· mentsaid. Jane to Give Free Encore? HONG KONG <AP>-A dozen s&lect · Ja~an~se guests began savoring such delicaeia as elephant trun~. bear IM'W, sturgeon intestines~ deer tail to· day 'tas 'tlui1. mgan • two- da,y, $20,000 ,.,.enactment of an a.ncfen\. ·crun~e im- 'pertJlJ b~!t. MiUing !tom the ~enu are sucb ~ties Of the Ching i"nd Manchu dynasties ~s mOl)key's brain, go#lla Ups, camel )l-u m ps aJld pe acoc It tol\.lu~. . · ·The banquet is being eateo in a Hon<g.' Kooe lri.nalU'ant..wDUe the ToltyO. :.Broadcasttng System rnd\s it for. a ~v.laiol'l documM· tary.on CHinese cuisine to be:shown in Japan Nov. 13. Secret Nuke Teat ReDeoled MERCURY CAP > A nuclear test was conducted 1,300 feet below ground in a remote area of the Nevada Test Site, the Depart. m ent of Energy said. The device, code named Hybra Gold, was used to determine the effects or a nuclear bomb on U.S. mthtary hardware, the DOE said Tuesday. The test was not announced in advance. It was the ninth nuclear test at the site this year and ibe 48lst since testing_ be&&.rJ· · . .. F ..... PGffeAJ SCl#}JIT. , • took out a ftome improvement loan. "The improvements didn't come to as much as we expected so I took the extra money and bought a small sailboat. So what is wrong about that," Schmit said. He also pointed out that in his view much of what was con- tained in a nine-page written statement by Butterfield was already "well known, well dis· cussed and well rehashed." Most serious of Butterfield's charges was that Schmit on an amended disclosure statement filed in early 1976 improperly showed roughly $36,000 worth of loans for in kind services from Butterfield. That amended statement along with the amended document filed early t.bi.a year were the latest in a series of five amendments the county supervisor filed to cover his costly 197' campaign. According to authorities in Sacramento, the poliUcal reform act of 1974 was not f n force at the time of Scbmit's campaign and there would be a legal question .as to whether or not reporUng would fall under the provisions ot the reform· act. ...... P-.e Al . ) : ARRAIGN ••• Richard, all one time Laguna Beach residents, are stiU being sought for questioning by police. Meanwhile, affidavits on file in Orange County Superior Court indicate a variety of business records and narcotic$.. ~apbemalia.. ••• ~ tD Ui . tinda tsle hOme whtre Kulik 11at stayine at the time of his arrest. Included on the search warrant ~p~vit were lis1' or what ~!c~ I ~f& ~e-~ ra"'r~ records of alleged heroin sales. The affidavit also listed a bank slip in Kullk's name for a $355.000 deposit, to an unJpecifled bank. Also included on the court dotument o( Items seized in the search were a microfilmed busi- ness record, a nickel·plated re· volver and a list of. names, ad· dresses and telephone in1mbers or residents of several European countries. "' Police are Investigating the source ot cub used by Kulik and his partners ln tbelr investment firm, Prasadam Distributors Inc. Bovan worked for one of the firms in which Prasadam invest· ed. Police allece Bovan believect the partners in Prasadam had a store of a large amount of cash. They allege Kulik waa kid· napped in an at.tempt to aet al that maney, .,,...,~A.J JFK ••• , CHICAGO CAP> -The ·rain was cold anll tJie trartlc 11\lS«a· . ble, but 3,550 Cblca14ans braved both to see a photo and bear an old recording. Both were or the late Maria Callas, who made fer American opera debut. h re ex- . actly 23 years ago.. Another 2.000 opera lover' stood in the tobbies of the Civi~ • Opera House to watch a musical tribute to the late soprano on closed-circuit ttlevlllon. Of· ficials said it WU ttie Wge!t crowd in the history of the Lyric Opera of Chicago. The tribute featured other opera stars and spoken eulogies by some of Callas' colleagues, but its opening minutes were the most moving. Fireman Held .. On Ar~on Rap SYRACUSE, N.¥. <~P> -A . volunteer fartflChte w I charged Wilb arson after a fire at a Holiday Inn forced dozens ot motet guests to cltmb down bedsheets or jump from aecc>nd· story windows early today, authorities said. • Four people were hospitaUUtd, one in critical condition. Police said Raymend E. Hoffman, a 19·year-old volun· teer firefighter with the East Syracuse Flre Department, wa~ charged ;wtt.h kco•d-~e arson, first·degree assault and criminal mischief. i. • l. . ~ , . ' ~ ' .. ~ ' By KATHY CLANCY OfllleO•ltyf'lletMitff , Carol Bensol) was in her office at the Orange County Transportation Commfgsloit ear· ly today despite her firlnc as Its executive director Tuesday. When asked if 1>he was still on the job, Mrs. Benson replied, "I U.ink you can draw a conclusion by the fact lhat I am here to take this call." Commissioners -emerged from their second -rtosed-door session irl as many days Tuesday and voted unanimoll!;ly to dismiss the $30,000.a'l)'ear executive direc:· tor. They said they were dis· satisfied and had "lost con· fldence" in Mrs. Benson's performance. It was jll!;t JS weeks aco 1that Mrs. Benson prud her own mov· il)g expenses from Washington, D.C., to assume her post wJth the new transportation panel, bring. ing along her young bon. The former transportation con- sultant pressed the five com· missioners repeatedly Tuesday for a public hearing into the grounds for her di5missal. Mrs. Benson said she wanted her attorney present and an op· portunity to refute what she said were ~eged complaints about her. ~ "JC you refuse to grant a hear· in' to present alleged complaints so that I can respond, this ls a total failure of due pr~eu and I can discount an~ further orders or directions with regard to terminating my employment," .l'tfrs. Benson continued. · ··1 shnll remain on duty in my otfices discharging the functions and duties for which J was hirilil lQ June." she srud. ToOCDoeton o.11)' ,. ........... ,..... STfCKS TO HER DESK OCTO'S Carol Benton .. But Commission Chairman Al ffollinden told her, ''There doe!n 't seem to be any sympathy for yo~J)OSiUon aUhis tlm . "As flU' as lam concerned this does lerminate your per- formance as executive. iJirec•. tor. immediately and I request that you remove your stw.tf from the octic:e at; the ~t possU:Ue• time,•• he said. Neither Mrs. Benson or Hollinden would discuss s~ifics of Uie complaints. "' • Commissioners ordered that Mrs. Benson be given ,severance pay thrQ\ISh the d of ovember and be rc~id for any oLher. sums due her. • • ' TIME OUTS DEPT. -My mother doean't watch as much television football as she used to a few year& back. Unlversal greed has ruined the game for her Now m truth, mother never was o e or those real gridiron fanatics. She'd watch the televised games all right, and ad· mire \lie style and grace of a quarterback as he fadied back and flashed a pass downtield to a wide receiver who was doing his · ballet along the s1dehnes. She would, however, tend to groan and avert her eyes when the bhtz was on, and three 250- pound linemen would crash in, bury that i;ame quarterback in the turf and remind him that he was mortal. CLEARLY, MOTHER never cared much for the collision part of the game. What she waited ror was the halftime when the players exited to nurse bruises and the bands took to the field of play. Ah, the pageantry or marchlng units-color guards, the rorma· lions and music with balloons rls· mg in the air and rooting sections forming card stunts in the back· g""und. That was an for her Televiswn and the hard-sell have pretty well ruined that these days. Fewer and fewer ---rwttnITTTCTecfilits give you lhUNI of the halftime colur these days. When the game stops in the middle, you arc more lfkely to be t>ntertaincd on your home screen by some fast talker peddling un· derarm deodorant or super radial tir~. IF TUY DOS'T fill up the halftime with that, then it's Howard Cosell blathering on while you watch replays or what you just got through watching in the first half __... All lhts comes lo mind because mother would have loved to have been with me last night when I watched the halftime show over al Westmins ter High School s tadium. As a matter of f"cl, I arrived at halfllme. 1 know this because there was a colorful band on the held, playinl and marching with precision while coed squads whipped banners in unison and baton twirlers did their thing. THE STANDS HELD a capaci· ty crowd as I squeezed Into a seat. Then the second band came on with mw.ic and precision drill. You would think the halftime was about over. But no Here came a third band. and then a fourth and fifth. This was the longest halftime in the history of football To tell you the truth, there was no football game. It was all halftime for bends. This was a band night s ponsored by the Hun- tington Beach Union High School District with the Westminster High folks as hosts. l 'd guess about 15 high school bands and marching units s howed up to put on their halftime shows one right after the other. Visiting schools com- peted for huge trophies and Pacifica High won bolh for band and drtll team. THE DISTRICT'S h~t schools, Westminster, 8dlson. !\larina, Fountain Valley and HunUniton Beach, didn't compete acainst the visitors. They just dld their thing for fun and to entertain the capacity throng. I'll admit some coastal prejudice and &U&Jesl any one of the host schoots mtghl have won it had they been com· peting. They were great. It was one super halftime. Motlier would have loved It. -REPORTED A disappoint· ing im grain harvest ot lN million tons, 19 million tons below target and 29.8 million tons below last year's record crop. -Sharply criticized China but warned communism's roes Uult the Soviet-Chinese split may not be permanent. 4 Brezhnev said the Sovjet Union "ls effectively looking after its defense capability, but It~~ not Kidnapper•· Free Dutch Magnate AMSTERDAM, Netherlands <AP> -Dutch multimillionaire Maurits Caransa, freed un· harmed by kidnappers early to- daL,. said he ne_gptiated his own $1 16 million ransom. .,___,.""""'">== The 61-~·ear-old real' estate magnate told a news conference the four abductors who erabbed him last Friday were "out only for. money" and fii'st demanded 40 million guilders ($16.64 million> for his release. .. WE BARGAINED AND call)e to the s um of 10 million guilders," he said. He said he wrote his board of directors Sun· day afternoon and instructed them to get the money f\"om the banktend arrange "a drop in the slreel." Caransa, who controls hotels, real estate and other enter 11ses valued at more than $40 mlllion, was put out of c a i n downtown Amsterdam at 1:30 a.!J:l. local time after a 4S.:60 Roberto de la Madrid, fir~( U.S.-born governor o1 a Mex- ican :;tate, wps sworn into office Tuesi:fay. The head or Baja California Norte. he was born in Calexico, Callf. He said he will work to develop jobs for Mexican citiiens. • ;Mounties Charges Spark New Crisis minute ride ... mini-Watergate." A f r o m t h e CAR "' "dark den" where be said he was held rive days, handcuffed to a bed. The magnate told a passing woman who he was, and she put him in a taxi and sent it to pohce- headquart,ers. He was reunited there with his wife, daughter and several friends. Af\er he had a physical examinatiOfl, an am· bulance took him to hls home in Vinkeveen, south efThe Hague. Appearing dapper and relaxed, Caransa later told reporters at a yacht club there that the abduc-1 tors "were not poHUcal gangste,rs, just criminals" who said they belonged t.o the "bia· gest and best" extortion ring anywhere. He said they &Poke French and English. HE SAID TH£ kidnappers never threatened his life. Caransa was forced into the back seat of a car early last Fri· day as be left an Amsterdam club Cler playing bridge. Chief Inspector Gerard Toorenaar said Caransa reported he was kept ly- ing on a t>ed. fiandcuffed 'tD a heatin& pipe throuahout the n\e days, but he was not mistreated ~atened. Fltzsimr;nons ac:knowledted one contact by Kleindienst In ear· ly 1811 in which the form« at· torney ~al. now lo private law practice in Wasbip&ton. asked Ftwimmons tor his betp in the award process. OBITStfK TOLD police he wpa alone when he answered the ®Or of the suburban Studio City home Mon<Ny night expeclini a trick-or-treater. Instead, the cos- tumed man at the door burst in· aid~ and beat theloung man in the face, head an cheat wilh a club, said Nortli }follywood division police. The intruder then knocked the handicapped man O\tt of his whe.elchair and bound him. police said. "!WREN THE ELDER JtObitsek, a textlle lmporter- e)t'porter, returned home, the in· t~cfer bound and fagged him, then beat him, app rently seek The aUackel' fled ln the dead man's white 1971 Dodce van, ta.le· mg some jewelry and more than Sl,000 in cash, said police. THE DISABLED younger man was left to a~ggle for two how's before freeiilg himself and roll· ing his wheelchair next door where neighbors summoned police. Police said tbey found the de-4 man, bound and gagged oh his bed and the living room blood· spattered lmre Robltsek told reporters Tuesday that his grandfather.bad cared for him for t\fo years and was his last living relative. In Divoree Court ··Estranged Wi/e · Shoots Husbar:td •• VENTURA CAP> -A ~-year-old mao was hospitalized In $erious coodltlon after his estranged wife shot him in the cheat dur- ing a break in their divorce hearing, orticiJ]s reported. Georae Sabol of Cano1a Park and his wife, Martha, 37, or Slmi Valley began arguing Tuesday during a pause in the bearing at Supetior Court m this community northwest of Los Angeles, wit- nesses said. While the two were outside the courtroom, Mrs. Sabol shot her) ~usband once in the chest at close range with a small-caliber gun :ihe pulled from her purse, pol~e said. A bailiff knocked the gun out df her hand, police said lfariae Dies Pl•sht9 a .. Jcetkll CARL.5B~D CAP) -A young Marine is dead after collapsing on the basketball court at Carlsbad High School. A coroner's official identified the victim as Dietrich L McDaniel, 19, of Mobile, Ala. He was a private first class assigned lo Air Control Squadron 7 at ( J Camp Pendleton. McDaniel was practicing SJ' A.TE Monday wilh a unit basket· _ pll team when be dropped to ihfl c:ourt, officials said. He was pronounced deaa at Tri·City ospl.tal an... paramedics failed to revive him. . Sllotoe1 • D .. JNm Nertla St•te By The Also(la&ed Press A slonn dropped showers on the stati's northwest corner today but was expected to break apart before bringing rain to the rest of. California. I The National Weather Service said Crescent City felt 64 hun· ldredths of an inch of rain during the 24-hour period which ended at s ·a.m. today. Eureka was sptjnkled with .J.8 hundredths dunng the same stretch. Crup, clear weather \fll.9 forecast for the remainder or the ,Northern California region, with patches of fog and low clouds ex- 'Pected over the coast I Fttel OU Pipe Ll.e lhpt...,. WILMINGTON <AP> -~or, lhlltl 1$,oOO gallons of fuel oil that jSpilled into streets and storn\ drains when a pipeline' burst apparent- ~Y has been contained without flowing into .. nearby Los Anteles 1Harbor. After Tuesday's rupture, the Coast Guard dropped oil booms in- to the harbor in case the oil leaked into the sea. But by late tn the lday, none of the oil that bubbled through the asphalt and flooded rstorm drains had reached the harbor, officials said. 1 Firefighters contained the rtow, and oU salvu• crews Iv acuumed the gutters ":nd storm drains. i ~ ..,_..,ed Fr .. Kl'TI' I LOS ANGELES (AP> -The National Association of Broadcast Employees and Technicans ti., removed lts pickets from television Btation K'ITV followint an acreement by the station's manaiement to meet with unlon reprenntatlves. K'lTV General ~anaier Charles Yount refused to comment on what was discu!led in the meeting Tuesday at the Federal Media· tlon and Conciliation Service office, but said production at the ata· tion conUriued normally after the pickets were removed. ••All commitments have been honored and prodllctton has con· llnued Wli.nterrupted. ··Young said. HE SAID ONE or 1he com- muters who gave him tbe toll In pennies pro111ise<l to pay his toll that waydafly. "I told him 'You can do 1t every day, but you 're aonna wait here until I count 'em,• " As for the rnotorists who rushed off without paying the full fee, toll collector Bill Sutton, 47, said, ''I can't catch them. I'm not the bionic man." TRAf'flC WAS delayed about 15 minutes durtng the ruati hoW' because of the protests. Tolls were increased as well as fares on buses and ferryboats operated by the brli!Je di.st.riCt.:in hopes of generatine an addition· al $5 m illlon in annual revenues. Police Lat!k Suapeet in Girl'• ,Death • The ib ttlo over •1 Beach has been I I on toO hOl'iton. , Someresidenta clalmtbatth small private h1ieldhl the northern part of the city ~es a safety h zard llnd that pilots have buued homes, caus~ unneces3 y noise and distress. The airport owner nnd~Uots say ttiere la no basis for the comp iilntS and tbatttfey come from an embtionillTew.'""~-,~......:- Caught in the middJe pf all tb1s is the oity of Hunt· ington Beach which aays that its authority over airport operations has been pre-empted by &tate.and federal agen-; cies. · Last week, a possible solution to thls continuine .con-, troversy was suggested by members of the HOME Coun· cil, a coalition•of Huntington Beach homeowner assocJa. tions. . . . They propos"e that a general aviation airport for small planes be developed on vacant land at the Seal Beach Naval Weapons Station. They say that pilot!J would shift to the new airport, solving the probl~ms at Meadowlark which is nearly surrounded by building developments. An official at the Navy station said tbat the Navy is us. fog all its 5,000 acres. He also raised the possibility Uiat an afrport may not. be safe because weapc)ns are stored at the b~se. · Whether he is right or wrong, it would seem that final authority for the use of the federal land would come from Washington. · • The proposed airport may not be feasible. But thete are some good arguments that support the lacallon attd it should be given more than a cursory studY. Deal Se6ms Bloel.ed The Huntington Beach Vnion High School Dis· trict Bo¥'d J>f TrUslees is divJ~ed 3 to 2 over a con· troversial plan to sell one pj.ece of lamJ to buy property elsewhere. Trustees John Hundley ad Doris Allen oppose the sale • of some land ati.westminster Higti SCbool and use Of the funds from the deal to buy land near Huntington Beach High School. In order to sell the Westminster land, the board must vote 4 to 1 or unanimously on the deal as state law r~· quires. _ But t.rUstees Allen and Hundley say they will never vote m favor of the proposal because it is "robbing Peter to pay Paw:· ... In general, the plan to sell some property to buy much needed land in Huntington Beach is acceptabli. However, it is obvious that time is being wasted on the distncf s further attempts to go ahead with the transac· tion. There may be other steps the district can take in re- lieving the space problem at Huntington Belch High School. • The state law requiring the• to 1 vote on the land sale is meant to require the school djstrict 'ake a hard, careful • look at the situation. • That is exactly what the trustees should no do. ""' '• . . ._,. Unique ComDJonity;{ · - There undoubtedly is no other ~mmunity in Ora91e County quite like Sunset Beach, a 1,20().:resident coastline enclave that doesn't have door·t<>-door mail ~U\'ery, for example, because residents want it that way. . -., . · Residents also like their community's dt\'ersitf, which sometimes places boat repa4' shops or other busmesses next door to costly homes. County planners now are Involved ln a rezonlrit study aimed at improving Sunset Beach. · • They want· to reduc~ commercial zoning, keep most businesses clustered at major intersections and r~one some commercial parcels for homes because the 2,700· square-fOOt lots aie too small to accommodate businesses. In addition, they hope to change commercial zoning to residential on property where homes already have b~en built. . Some Sunset Beach residents fW they will be left w1th too little commercial property. while others f-avor county plans. · County planning commissioners now have recom- mended that zoning changes be addressed as part of the county ·s overall coastal program. • . -The county plan a f oi: SUnset Beacli sound like reason· able ideas. While planners go abOut trying to improve Sunset Beach, however, they ought not J\ISl apply standard planning theories to the point tl\at tney destroy the unique character that its residents now enjoy. 'ft. 6BGIA8 mindset ls found wltllin the Cartc!r admiplst.ra· Uoa•J nlltloaal secu1rlty bU ... aucnr~. tlie~by movin UlliJ'' debate oUt of Ute 1\terary salon. Suspicions 'h1tv• beeo riilsed about how the American auperpowel', deprived of the · right to mtervene, can confront. the Russian supereower un· shackled by self·lltnltations. :Among the s~ctoua is novelist Wattenberg, who in the real world is aiobilb:i.nl De ocraUQ • d~nt to Carter ~lcles. • In ••Against All Enemies,·• Ii beral Democratic President Carl Rattigan faces an invasion of democratic Bolivia by Com· munist Chile. Impeded by cama;. ; t palgn promises and bis own doubts, Rattigan nevertbeless · To the Editor; Three 1t'eekends ago, follo~J the misiuided advice of a friend, I attended a Saturday matinei8 at a Costa Mesa theater, where to quote their ads, ''The best pie. lures play... A triple bill was playing: ShQck Waves <PG), Champion of Death (R) -and. r .Meatcleaver Massacre CR>. • 8JIE COLLABORATED 1'ITB a perfectl.y un· ~rdtnary, eccentric actor-turned·mOdea.tumed· ,pumorJst.tumed writer named Chria Cli e., The re- ult is a breezy romp called "Life ls a BesiqUet." •'Ono thing 'Wanted 1>Ut Chft fel-... hence to do was add a paragraph at the belinnlni ayin1. 'Rosalind Russell couldn't hive written • is without me because she don't type good. .Signed, the collaborator,• "Mrs. Chase said durinJ • int.erview. "But she died and the boot became sadder. Somehow, the humor nffded for doing lltUe things like that just wasn't there anymore." Miss Russell died at age 63 last November after a torturotis batUe with ·arthritis and cancer. The book was one of her last ac· compllshments in a career studded with suc· cess. "Mine has been a lire with a lot ol luck in,. it,·• she writes at the end RUSSELL of the book. And then, as the last words in her life's story, ·!'I've had a good ride." i. Mn. Chase and Mi11 Russell worked together for aboUt a year. But during that thpe Mi$$ Russell ever let on that she was dying.· "SHE CAME EAST LAST Y!>All for the open· 1ing or her husband's play -'So Lone. 174th Street' -and went to Sloan-Kettering for chemotherapy.'' Mrs. ChUe said. "It was the first time l knew. S)>e was sick and tremendously brave." .Even in her book, Miss Russell dOes not dwell 001b'\Rlft"ofl'h~~1ft~1 ~i1~~~t.n-eYC!',·di1&filli&--+•_. ber arthritis at a greater length. "She sa1d one disease in a book 1s enough," Chris said. "Wo Is a Banquet" reads almost conversa· · onal1y. lt is complete with litUe Rosalind Russell ~sides and mannerisms. Sometimes a passage .. rambles but it returns aft~r pleasant diversions to ; ,the original point. "I WANTED TO KEEP HER voice as much as t 'J>OSSible," Mrs. Chase said. "Ghost-written books -are slick, but the fl avor of the person isn't in it. I i gave her some bride es and some poetry. Jn fact. her r-sis ter read the book and said somewhat bewildered, 'l didn't know Roz knew any poetry: .. Miss Russell always emphasized bard wotk 1r.aiod the jmportance ot aooct. close frleods ln her personal life. She stayed married to the same man, Frederick Brisson, a producer, for 35 years. l Many of the anecdotes are not titillating · l passages of a big film star, but rather tame by that world'.s standards. She talks about the mecbanics ol mlling a movie and tbe work in· volved in theater and musicals. When she dis· cusses the war years, abe inc1udes her husband's-role. "Her career was fortunate," said Chris Chase. ''She worked ter· ribly hard. There was a lot of talent and a lot of sweat." Now that the col· laboration is over and the book published, Mrs. Chase has but one regret -that she didn't know Rosalind Russell a litUe longer "Had she liveCl, it would have been a richer book.·· t Thief Gets P~on SAN DIEGO <AP> -Gold dealer Richard J. Horeb, blinded by what police uy was a self· infiicted bullet wound, has been sentenced to two to ;!.fl years in prison for 1nand theft. Superior Court Judge Earl J. Maas, who sen· tenced Horetz, said he would have considered pr°" bation instead of jail if the defendant offered to re. pay investors as promised. Horeti, 41, was found shot bi his car near Carlsbad on the day he promi.sed to tell a Judge that. · almost $500,000 would be teplld to investors. ... A girUriend, Janet Mills, 29, of &l Ca.ton, WU wounded. ' Or e County upel'VI ors ecre ot land la too m 1 cri I lt•na an v ritual of open sp ce heimHUI . • The board qnod unonim~ly Tueaday to oliate tbe pcmlbl trans! of u .s acre• to AnahehnJlills Inc. Coe uat as an avocado a rove. But when tbat acreement J1 returned to 1upervlsors for their approval, it must be accom· ponied by arran1emenl$ for the county to recelve 504 acres or open space aupervbors contend tilt d•· veloper owes the county. Supervisor Ralph Clark noted that when an a;r1cultural preserve covertn1 lhe Anaheim Hint area was cancelled ln 1974, the board requited tht devo&Qper lo d~ 100 acnli of C>Pfn apac-a year until 50-f'M:U~ h_ad been dedicated to the c;aunty. So far, h~ntlnued, no l•nd hllJ been dedicated because of d1sa·ereements between county and Anaheim Hills officials over &radine and construe· tion e asements as well a s what land \VU t.o be de dicated. Clark said he wanted to kee~ U\e Rd dedlc tion on the ··open burner" and negotiating both agreements at the same time sbauld ''coinpU1h that. Deaths Elsewhere aaNNllt ELllASETH E. 8El"NER, ~•«d •wev on Oc to0er SI, 1'11 •I aoe 92 Relt04nl of COli. Mew, C... for 1l y .. ,, :.urvl .. d bY .,._, son Horm•n Arbu<kle of c.i. Mew, c... fllftlr•I ,.,vicet "''" • ti.Id Tltl#'l&r Hov-emt>er l , 1911 •I 11'00 A.M. •t lt.. M~nl•ln VI.--mort•I P•rlt 1n Alle04n•. C.. h•rer•l servl( .. dore<I f!dl>y M•lll~r F•mHy Morl.,.ry ~rdtn (',rove, C.• CLEMENTI: ESTELL.A tll MENUZ, retldtflt et !>ant• "'"-· C.e • ~•Wei •"'•Y on OC· toMr JO, 1911 •t I~ -of 4 . Belowd toOllWr Of lrl'nll Clemente. R-y will be lltlO l _,-~ I, 1911 •I • lO P.M et ~"' 1 utnlll Lemb Se<lt• ANI CMpel, M4W flt Chrlll6-8111U.I wlll be h<Pld 'ii.~ NQvtmber l, tt77 el 10.JO A.M. et ()ur l.•y of G11eo.iupe CtthOll< Church, $h E'. c.n. lr•I, S.nl• .fine, C.. lftl«-... 11.,. ta&.llOADWAT MOtTUAIY 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 642·1»150 SMITH TUTHU. UMI COST A MISA CHAPIL '427 E. 1fth St. Costa Meta• 844M818 Santa Ana Chapel I 518N.8~ Santa Ana• ~~191 Jn Irvine, Uldonna Bomzfrr wiU host \he meet- ing Nov. 9at9:1Sa.rn . atberhome, Duchamp. In Lal\Ula Beacb1 the program wUl be present- ed on Nov. 10 aU;l5 J.rn. at the hOoieofSUSan Tep- per, 26 North Vista de Catalina, SOuth Laauna. . Two meetings will be held in the J'l(ewport·Meu area. ; I , l. Don't tak up the 11una hablt. bcfor ~ have h d a phYf!lcal checkup. E$poc.1ally so lr there has been f l\ist.Qry of heart attack or on· going treatment for h)'pertension. 'fhe heat ot lh ~auna (al least iro degrees> .r.ot only raises your tem· peratllre, but '° raisea the tilood pre11ure and puts an extra burden on th'-.h"rt. • ' rniiiifil 69 c rntiiITTl'l 499 ~ "·~ _ .MAJtEl COMBAT HEDSTIOM I'' ATV HEROES IN AalOll llDDtt CYCll ~·--.... ,...... .... . ...., , ... ~ .... , .. . .............................. .,. ..... _ ..... . ,_. ._,..,._ .-., fw ,_..., IMIM _., ""-... rWeaJ u1-0U1 1~! · •• · PLAYSKOOl ~ TAKE·APART Ml~I TOYS en.lift fl. ht H 1"· fwa ' ...... ~ .,.... & "' _ .,.,. 0.... l • •. .................. an..ie..,...ar1. POWERFUL ,,.. •·'· ... ., >.• .., ...... ~ ...... ·~ 1111. WIER ..., .. _ 11e .... lltt. li9~t••lf'" .... ClmTAU ~.wtms lllAIW&US, ruma. 81111.0llfGI, A10Ut10 nus llGULAtS'IYU,' •••• 2.36 COMfOIT TOP ••• 3. 56 If IOIGMT UI 4 SlftUtl PACIS • • ·Siamese twins Llsa and Ellnlllansen hav.e been transCerred to McKay-Dee liospital in O&den, Utah. ~ spokes.man said 1uraery to separate them, if "' It is performed, will not ( J be done unUl the infanis PEOPLE are 3 months to 6 months old. ' '--....:..-------Jo n Ke a la e y • Univ e rs.it y o t l1 ta h 'Medical Center spokes.marl, Jaid,j.he 2-wetk old twins -joined al the top of their heads -were re· moved from the Sl,000 per day care." · • While !Ulcbael H. Wabb was conCerring with Atty. Gen. Grttnn Bell m Washin.llton. D.C .• the p;o~~~io;;:.,::'l~-.... home of U1e •U.S. attornei· designate in Del Mar w s robbed. ~. W ulsh, 35, disclosed , that a truck pulled into his driveway · 1ast week ond the house was stripped or $4,000 to $5,000 worth of television sets, sil\'er and other Items. • Pretildent Carter nominated him Tuesday to become ct\fef w•u" p~osecutor of the Southern Dis· trict or California. * Symphony conductor Geor« Soltt, severely ip· jured in a Call, relinquished bis baton lo his female assistant and listened proudly as she directed the orchestra through one of Gustav Mahler's most dlf-f~ult compositiops to a standing ovation in Carnegie Hall. Solti, who suctered a spralned wri~ and strained back, neck and shoulder muscles in a fall m Chic~o. turned over hls Chicago 1S1mphony Orchestra and Mahler's Eighth Sfrnpbon,1 to 11 argaret«Wts. The symphony is 80 minutes Jong and is almost totally choral or vocal-ensemble music. Miss Hillis is director or the orchestra's ch<>rus and has often conducted the ..two ensembles m U\e (horat- orchestrnJ repertory. • NEW YO~K <AP> ~ The New ~ Timu aaid today lbat former Rep. Otto P.assman of Louisiana g t $190,000 froro.P.T~ Park, •l· leged · Kore~~ influence buyer. aad~..U.a\ on at least one occasion to Park'' Passman den ea t e re- port. The news£aper, In a story from 1!6ndon, cited close friends and 89· sociate! with knowle<tge of the alleged payoff as its source for saylna that Passman 1ot SlS0,000 directly from Park and another $40.~ in two en- velopes delivered to him by a Park underling, R1ll Jae Shin. .,,.._, .. ...,. Dtte WASIUNGTON <APt '"-The Senate and House Of Representatives P· ~eer head~d fo~ a showdown over funding of the• B.i bomber because of a Senate vote upholdirrg Pre,.tdent Carter's decision to cancel funds for Rroduc· tk>n of the controvor l l plane. he Senato un Q• imously approved an $8 billion omnibus ap· propriations bill Tues- day. It included 180 mUlion to keep alive th~ plutonium· breeding nuclear power plant at Clinch River, Tenn., money for accelerated development. of cruise missiles and $4.S bllllon to help states build sewage treatment plants -but no funding for tho B-1. ft1'eKllW • Marcie M. A.ibury bas been nained senior operations officer of the Irvlne office or CaUronala Canadian Bank. She bas been with Ctllfomta Cana· di an Bank for seven years. * 6 1 l ... SLIM-FAST NOTOC POWll DIET CONCORD ggc GRAPE JELLY 3.11. 1u LAUWe>Oo "JUllOR" DEEP FRYER Uses only 2* cups of oil! Teflon coatin&: cooti•Wkd•:: 15 87 . ~ LIQ~OR Specials CUTTY SARK AM DEWIE POCKO GlllT1I PROMAX COMPACT °"111 ' • ' i , ,. '1 f I j . · 1 .. t : I Only 1lmg tar · •. ··~· .. ~•·>..a·...:;·_-.-.. ~-· --::.1 .. t t I The. 32-year-0\d right-hander. who won 17 games for tt\e Yankees durlJ1g the'·re~trtlln season and two in th.e~World , leries. reportedly is ~eeking a Filled Gap ~ell · 'sThompiOD ~Budding _ Star By ROGER CARLSON ' Ol .. OellyNetS'8ff f'or a fellow considered too young and lD company too talent- ed lo really become a factor m Fountain Valley High's football success, quarterback Doug Thompson hasn't done too badly ~t himself, or the Barons. ;-''J'he 6-4, 180-pounder came up- • on the scene during the third non· le,.gue game of 1976 when as a is-year-old Junior. he toolt the .r.eins for fallen ttammale Gary (dSteman. t : Since then Thompson has com· pleted ovet:' 50 percent of his p~ses in the past 17 games, lead- lj\g the Barons to 15 victories, in· ~}\iding all seven this year as .F~ntain VaJley prepares for FJjday night's Sunset League de· 'cr(!er with Newport Harbor at Of 11nge Coast College. · In that span Thompson has completed 130 of 2SS passes for '21189 yards, but his worth goes 'd~eper than cold statistics. "We don't have to worry about running up tbe score anyfl'ore and we don't figure to play COi\· servaUve again as we dld a1aJnst Edison <Huntington Beach>." says Pickford. ''Our game with Edl!U>n com· pares on a coUeae acale with Ohio State and Mi~h!I~· They go conservative ~ keep away from mistakes." · • Pickford credits the aid of as· sislaat Dave Penhall !or much of Thompson's improvement. with his passing and hia audlbillzlne. "We wouldn't otdlnnUy audibilize with our quarterback," say& Pickford. •'but a sophisticated kid can do Jt effectively and Penhall does a pretty good job working with him." • The only detriment la that backup quarterback Compton, a certain starter in •nt, get.every little game experience. But Pickford explains: "Compton is an excellent quarterback, bat you can't have two quarterbacks. A good example is the Los Angeles Rams." "'Doug didn't figure to play at all for us," says Fountain Valley coach Bruce Pickford. "Coleman -w;is our starter in '76 and Doug te:tlly didn't figure in our plans.·· 'But Coleman w•s injured and 1\!ompson took up tb.,e slack . • +.ong range pl~h~d Gil Compton taking over this year ~fl.er Coleman's tour , but Titbmpson grabbed the ring in '76 ~ has not let go. ~ewport's Corum ·.·~·Doug understands and r~ognizes various defenses and .;ludibllzes when he sees: something be doesn't like," says; Eickford. "He has real)y 'blossomed mentally and Rhlslcally. . 'Our pass offense Is somewhat }jitricate and he understands our system. Thompson is a good l.>Q ... ·~is year the Barons have not ~Jle tp the alr as much as in the ~~t with Wlllie Gittens running W\Td (19 touchdowns>. but still 'J~mpson has competed 45 of 85 . ~f"' 819 yards and 7 touchdowns. And with tough Newport !lrbor and Westminster re- ining before the CIF playoffs, ' ~ktord says the Fountain Jley passing game fieures to l)e, emphasized more. F;V, Sailors Tied in Poll I Returns to Lineup JC Grid Poll ,..,, c.llfllt, ..... 1. Fu11en111 Ml 2. S.nleMGntU.,.) J. ~A Veltey i..tt •• Goklllll W..1 IS-2) s. Secllll.-0. ~II . .... , ..... ., 1. Etc.nilno ~a> L e....1tlltCll>V ~ DAI !.'f Pi LOT • : .................... w • ..,,, ••• ~ IKE CALVERT, Su aem te -Calvert, a deCensive back, Intercepted OM pass and helped break up several othen ln tM Tritona• 21·8 victory over University Hlgb <lrvine >. vtcroa RtJBALCA'BA, Mater Del CSata Aaa) -Outside ' linebacker R\lbalcabi had five unassisted tackles, most in crucial attuatlons, and pursued well. MIKE HOWARD, Marlu <Buatlacton Beach) -Howard had 10 unassisted tackles and six assists from his middle JJnebacter poaltJon. MIKI!: MOISO, Cosat Mesa -Molso did an excellent job or coverlnf split receiver Art Gourdine, limiting him to one recep. ti on. He also had some key tackles. JOltN SCHNl'l,'GER, Corona del Mar -A sophomore, · Schnitger had 14 unassisted tackles and lbree assiats against Mis· 1ion Viejo. CRAIG• WINNINGHOFF, Dana HUis -Playing at a linebacker position, Winninghoff had seven unassisted tackles and rour assists in leading the Dolphins on defense. JOHN llOGDAN, Edlsoa <Huntinau. Beacll> -Bo~ nine assists and four unassisted tackles. He caused one intercep- tion and was hitter of the week for two separate plays. JIM FREEMAN, Foanulll Valley -Did an outstandi!ll job at linebacker, shutting off the Edison nmnint game. He was a big factor in Fountain Vailey's narrow 6-3 victory. ROBERT BAKER and DEREK NESS, Huatlnaton Beach - Baker intercepted a pass as a defensive end and recovered a fum· ble. J'less was involved in 12 tackles from' hi& derensive tackle position. RON VAN PUEJlSEM, C1platnno Valley-Van Puersem recovered a fumble, intercepted a pass, ran a fake punl38 yard& in a key play and had a hand in 14 tackles. · RICHARD BROWN, El Toro -In one of his finest·efforts to date, Brown intercepted two passes, one for a touchdown, and also threw a TD pass from hls tailback position. DAVE LARIMER, Estancia <Costa Mesa> -Consistency was the aspect of Larimer's performance at defensive end that. w.qmw pleasing t:o coaches. He-bad five .unassiitecltadd•-· OCC •-•ers Sth Gauchos Place 4th lfost Saddleback Colle1e finished fourth in the Mission Conferen~e ftnals while Orange Coast College placed fifth In the South Coast eo;;rence finals in cross country m ts Tuesday. To no surprise... ossmont was the winner in the South Coast finals it hostecl, totaling 32 points lo nip F\allerton by three. It was the second straight South Coast title fQr the Grilrins, who have won eight various conference titles in the lut nine years. Jeff Day was the top runner for Orange Coast, placinc 11th in 20:44. Tne Pirates flnlshed with 112 points. Joe Ebtner of Mt. San Antonio Colleee <Walnut> was thewinnerm20.01. . In the Miatlon meet, Sad- dleback never lived up to Its bilJ. in& as • ~. ROrtng 90 points to f'snl.lll way behind the winner, SOUtbwestem. Irqperial's defense, which will almott certaiQly be Si Ying a Uttle extra to preserve its atrinc. or shutouts, is based O[l pursuit tltld aang ta~kling. "We don't key on the ball that much," Evangelist says. "Our secondary reacta very well and our linebackers make aboUt 75 percent of OW' tackles." MANHATTAN BEACH - University High (Irvine> didn't look lU(e the ClF's fourth rankea water polo team here Tuesday. The Trojans suffered their third Ion of .the season to No. 1 ranked Mira Ooat~ Kigb and for the secopd time it •as no contest, 14·7. -7-6, .. ,1 ...e1-ounn '"' IOlt .. e.1,.. Ro .. ~ cttf, C......,_ M ; llll•llllH 1 ...... (I' I tell J.4i. H; ...W.Uhll!IWI .. tFl Mt. IAllfl• Sol-M, Clef, °"'9f·T•'tl0r W; 1"98rlY·11.hUMI !I') -"'3. .. J; Lister.er-II IFI .,.,. H.11 .... PNCl'A811M. c.iM (12) ,., ., ,_ SI .... Glr1er Ca.I IOal lill "'*'lllr H, ,_ ,o Ford Jot, Ml'-.. 1; Sl#o tEI Iott 1+0.., WIT .. ; Oio.llle lal *l , .. , -~ .. 2.. DMles Prl~ IEI lad to ll#lftln.. Bet,_ , .. , lclll .. 11.l"WIM·l'Wt«f"ICI , ••• 1011 te O-bOdv·LMl.on i·•; Loftetl·Oldc Cl I ..,_I 21', a .. , -1'41 ernon • ....-. till !Oat a.., 2 ... won ..... . . ~.._....__..._ ...... .l l Air caJ.1fornla. Newpott Beac ... has co111pltted financm1 arrangement.s for aircraft and engines that increases the company's fleet by two Boeing 737s and aJJows the purchase of up to three 737s formerly being leased bJ the~irline. ( J~ Financing terms in- c 1 ude an option to purchase two spar~.-~-....~~~~­ engines under leas~ and lo extend the leases on two more 737s. The 737s to be added to the fleet were owned by Aloha~ Airlines and will be leased from GATX Aircraft <:orp. on 10-year terms. The lli'St was de- nvered last September and the second will ~de­ livered next March, brlnglni the total of73'1s in Air California's fleet to 10. The airline also operates three Lockheed Electra aircraft. Tbe agreement allo arran~ for the pQrcbast! or two and wi option to purchase a third ol the 737s that OATX has leased to Air Ctlifomia since 1988. One purchase wu completed Jast September. Purchase of lhe second will be effective in December. The aircraft ate beinc financed over to years by GLC Finance Corp. • Tl'le option to purchase a third "137 is effedlve until June~. 1978, and ls tn addition to 811 Qption to purchase two spare jet ~nJilles bet.nf leased ~orh GATX. These purchases would befmanced by GLC Finance Corp. on terms similar to thoee on•itcralt being purchased this year: Air California also r~ived c>ptlotia tc> ext~d the leases on two of lts other 737s tor up to three y~are past the present lease expiration date of 1980. and to purchase these aircraft atf air market value at theeidoftheextended terms. t: • ,, . ~~: ... Betall ~f!r Saler JtR ComputeT·Automati°".a,lrvine, paans to= retail sala of' "NakeOUI l" ~~1at w computer stores opei'lttid y T~ ~~;~ Ol't W ortb, Tx:, operators of the Radio Sliack chain. The two firms have an~ced an qreement whereby TMd1. wW ieU d>miiater AatomaUon'4 • 'ca ~ ~ ' • \ 'J: minicomputers through its ecenUy organlMd Tan· dy COIDPQlel'. 4h1afon. Th4: tliilt 'l'andy COmputtt state was scbedµled to~pen in Fort Worth. . Tandy expects this to be \be forerunner of a chain of separate storu it will build to sell ctata pro-cusing Producti. • The minicomrters will be sold over the counter in smal business-oriented sy.stems packaeed by Tandy or as ttand·alone units tbat pro- fessionals and hobbyists will iJ\corporate into their own systems. The products ~ will bO lilted 1n Tudy'a catalog for the mail-order trade. 6~1dftl ""' .... .,. · Goldeil West Airlines. Newport Beach, has an· nounced a 29.81 ~rcent crcn\'.th th.Ii year·to-date. compared with the aame period IUt year, m pusen:ten carried. The ali'llne hu carried 375,315 pusengen year· to·date wlth o record of 2,015 PNSeDlen carried QP Sept. 30, wn. which accounted for a 67.50 percent load factos:. . Golden West operates 168 dally 'fil1hts throughout Southern Calif ornta and pJa~ to expand the route structure to include service from Oranse County to San Die•o via Palomar /Carts bad and from San Dieao to Oxnard and Santa Barbara. ltVlldftlgtoB ... e.Fl._ Corporate headquarters for Griswold Controls, Inc., manufacturer• of sprinkler oantrols. valves end timers. is Wldet' construction by SaffeU 4t McAdam, Inc., at280S B~anca. Irvine. It will house manutacturlni, sbJpplng and <JI .. fice fdltles.,Tbe compeny now ls in San\a AnL · ~ ;lfUon of tbe buUdin1 ls exp~cted tn December. • P eee &eu c-iraec ' t l I ·- WILL ZENITH ADS TELL US about it.I Tal'Nmuise-1. auembled aeta? Wiil Zenith tell Ui that ill stereo aets are •• 1• belna boueht from Japanese compinles? Will Zenith ads, .c , boQt about the Mexican workmansblp ln tts TV reeel•en!. •. DOn 't bet on lt. · ,1; , • On tho other hand, Mlller Bre-.1ng, subsidiary of el1arette1., •,· m•ke~ Phlllp Mortis, ls revenlnl thJa traffic with a -: mUJttmttllon-doUar ad campatsn profttotln1 th« vh1uea C)f ~ • • Lowenbtau beer. Mlller has had tbt ri&bts to l~pott LOwen· •• trrau from Munich, Germany, since 1914. And If you are,... • familiar with Che TV commercials for Mtller's Ute Beer, •••. ypu blow how this compal\Y ean pour it on. · ·, But Juess what• Miller has n~red out a way to brew~. ,• · Lowenbrau here -and that·~ predaely what it's dollla now .• :. 8\ Its plants tn Mllwaukee, Fort Worth, Te1'., and Ann. • caur: So when you pJck up a ease of Lowenbrau today ...... you'rebuYfneaU.S.-madebrew. ,•: •• MILLER'S CAMPAIGN TllBllE ! "Tonlcht. let it be ; .. . Lowenbrau." Do the ads tell us t.bal Lowenbrau lJ •ow bem. .. . brewed In Amerlc!'a? Don't besWy. ThencbetdenVtdtrom, , b\lylng Lowenbrau Is that You·re aetUng a llM German ~r 6~. rev en if Ifs comine rro111 WIJconatn, Texas iM CaUtomla l . ~ ~ , : A alx·p_eck of the German-made l.owenbrau tell$ for 80 .;,~ centa more th•rt Budw•lser and other leadln• Amencu' , been. which Ii u.nderst.andable when JOU thlnk ~ tbe beet ,. • betnc packed In Mul)lch and then 1bippied across the Allan ... ·::· Uc Oceln to Arnertca. Now that LoWenbra" ii belr\I made.i. •t here. \\1U !ltlller reduce lhe price! Don't be 1ltly. Pbibp~ r~ Morris Deed& that money to mount lta blockbuster advertl.f.. •• ,, lnC drives ror Marlboro. 8enson & Uedaes. Parllameia~ «,.! Merit and Vlratnla Sllma cl1artUe1, aU of wbich •re made.-. lri lhe United States. o#, ~, ~· .... ( ., -.-" 9yfte IUHtlia.41 Preu .. . .\nelt.Mt drop in corree prices lut month offset Jneruaes I or other Items and helped cul overall 'CfOCttY bllll allJhut. an Alsoclated Press marketb1itket1urveyehoW1. T)aelatestdecreaseslefttheeostotapocmdOf~eaf -• fee lrl most ateu at tiJ.50 or I~ welt abov• the tf_lte at~· ,. r- at.art of tho year, but Sl aod more below the reeoi'd l..ela w --:: • lait1pring. ~ .. c CONSUMER • • THE tJNOFFlCIAL STANDINGS in the Cabo : San Lucas race: • : IOR Overall: 1. Sliver Fox 2. Merlin 3. Drifter :"'-. 4. High Roler 5. Blue Norther. : ... • Unofficial standings in the La Paz race: t IO R Overall: l. Merlin 2. Drifter 3. Silver Fox. 4. ~. High Roler 5. Equation. Class A: 1. Merlin 2. Driller 3. Silver Fox 4. High Roler 5. Equation. Class B: 1. Cottontail. skipper John Arens. :· BYC : 2. Sneaker. Don Wilson. LBYC; 3. Buena : Vida VI. Merrill Lowell, Coronado YC; 4. Concep· tion, Larry Bradley, California YC ; 5. Audacious. Mike Kennedy, Dana Point YC. PHRF Overall: 1. Cher-E-Dan. Bob Lane, .LBYC; 2 Drill Rig III, Gordon Hall. Ventura YC; 3. "·Karma, Carl Hanson, Silvergate YC; 4. Elusive, ·:·Harold Day, Bahia Corintblan YC; 5. Leprechaun, Whitney Collins, LBYC; 8. Wild WiOd, Bob Jiolm, : SFYC. i:Hijacking Danger ~= ~;Peril to Boaters, ·: . :-HiJacking and piracy may pose a danger to :. boaters in the Caribbean, Gulf or Mexico and re- !!! mote nrebs of \he westo.rn AllanUc an~ eas~rD • •. Paciflc,'lhe Const Guard "arns. Officials of the 11th Coast Guard District said : there were no recorded incident.a d hijacking or .. piracy in these waters in recent years/but admitted that the possibility exists. ~ Protection of vessels in remote areas is difficult • and often depends on the wariness of the operA.lOJ, • the Coast-Guard said, noting that the ~ajority of~- • Jackings involve people who come aboard with the ~ .. permission of the vessel's operator. SEVERAL MEASURES TO help prevent .. problems were s uggested by the Coast Guard. They include: Gel to know your crew and guests. well. Insist on positive identification . .... ; Before departing, deliver or mail the (omple~ ,.,. crew and passenger list to a friend -along with a ,,;,,:.. "float plan" and instructions to notify officialS' if 2". you CaJl to atrhe at your destination after a ~ reasonable time. Let everyone aboard know that you :&,. havedonethis. ~~ ' MAKE A THOROtlGH check lorstowaways. When assisting socueone in distress try to notify the Coast Guard by radio or what Is happening ahd ~be alert. · When lcavlne the country, advise the local customs agent, listing the crew and..a.11 valuables. This is not required of a pleasure c!'M\, but may save problems In forei&h ports and in cleJring customs on ~r return to the U .s. '·!'IAlt e:m•c ~e nt 1 111.745 495,658 ..() . . (). 557,638 260,811 2'3.500 •4 ( ( ( SCJlUllANN'S "OVERTURE, Scherzo and Finale" had Its moment.a of beauty and they were faithfully delivered ~or us by De W~art. But the 'Per.feet Person' Imperfect ByWILLlAMGLOVfia · vraani.:ation .Delp• Ffnd Parent•. NEW YORK (AP> - "An Almost Perfect Person" is a perfectly terrible play ~out politics and sex. DEAR PAT: Can you give me the phone n mber ot the organization that helps adopted sons locate their natural parents? My adopted parents are deceased, •md I have wanted to try to fand my natural parents', but couldn't recall the ii me of the group that helps people do this. P.W., Costa Mesa The Moptees' Liberty Movement <ALMA) can be coat1.cted by phoning 1213) 5'7·0147. Prft}fou Te11anu Bllfl O.oner DEAR PAT: The house we just bought had pre· lous tenants -silverfish! Can I get rid of them self, or must I hire a professional exterminator? G.K., Costa Mesa A prof'~lonal eictermlnator would be )'CU~t best btt for permanent control. If you prefer hotne treat· ment, reqU.est a copy of tbe Cooperative Ex· tfhslon'$ Pest Control Bulletin No. 7, by ~lilt 1tc.1oso. 'l1ds sllverfl5h control publleatlon l'ffom· menda speclftc lnsec4lcldes for 'urface spraylog ID· tO'. lddeo, dark areas ancf' baseboards. Try to dry o t any warm, damp areas in your home and avoid wtpretected storace of slarcbfll clothing and ac· c"maJated paper. Rarely, if ever, has either subject seeme<l so bOrin& as in the contrived claptrap that ventured inlo publt~ view at Broadway's Bel as.co ~==~======~~:;:;=;=;;=.~;=:~~ Theater. _ Most regrettably the fiasco invt>lves two or the stage's fi~t actresses -Colleen Dewhurst in the centi:aJ role, und Zoe CaJdwell, who rather negll,gently chose this script for her debut as a dir~ctor. MISS DEWHURST flexes aH her magnificent Amazonian techniques as a youngish widow- mother who loses a bid fol' election to Congress, then within a few hours beds bOth her campaign manager and ~he chairman of her finance · committee. Somehow, DEAR PAT: Help! Huge black crows are kill· she needed the one and mg the mocklftgblrds tbat ~to 1in• to u.a .U day theotherrieededher .. aod half the night. We actuallY saw these crows kill AboUt here the n1msy three mocldngbirds and the rest are starting to v story ~tracks totally in· · 'd 'd rth ., to b • m • h er· h l m avoJd our yard. How owe get n o e crows. banallti.et, interspersed R.C., Costa Mesa with asides about mass Jlm crew. blologlat wWa the state Fbll &ad media campaiening, Game Deriartment, 1ayJ yoa ltave a t°"1i. pr"lem feminism, .urban rebirth becapae crows are almott lmpoulble to scare. One and everyone's past eiception Is their extreme fear of owls. U yoa put marftalWaterloo. oat a few owl decoys, available frqm larie sportlni AT TBEFINISH£be is go0d1 storea or homemade facaloallea, crows w11l getting ready to run for stay away from your yard. Another su11estlon ls to mayorofNewYork.City. rig 1prinklen. Place the boees in lnff or areas Ben Edwarcfs d~lgned where the crows con1re1ate, tnd spray forcefully the setting, a West Side wbenevel' they arrive. In lime, they will avoid thb Manhattan apartment unwelcomed bath . and 10 elsewlaere. Ir these which h'aa' seen better methodsdoo' ww letAYSlmow. da:vs. · !%< J¥ • ::\} Ntwnt from hol- y, d&IOO'tWt that Emma .. ~MOUllCLU9 WArf TIU Y~ fATHER HOMe ·'BEllAMI! 8TMET YIU.A ALEQR2 • ;r<>t.f ANO ;J&ARY ~1a HODGEPdOO~"'~~=E,.,....LO~DGe-~ E "M9klt'Q Breed" l:OO CU NEWS eNEWS IMEftGENCV ONll A MPt1M birthday petty for Dixie turns Into a flaeoo when ahe breaks an 8nkle. D BASkETIIALL Loe ~ Laker• vs. New . Yortc~ • THI PARTRIDGE FAMILY Danny Par1ridge bec°'"8 • labor negotiator. • 1'HE AOOKIE.8 • A mwrtage. II atralned by Mike'• prolecitve tnte<est In the widow of a man Mike WM forced to klH In the line of duty. ZOOM fli) FOOO&FOR THE MODERN FAMILY .. Lamb And Porte" ABCNEW8 8:30 MOW: *** "On A C1eer Day You Can See Forever" (Part 2) • (1970) Barbra Strefaand, Yvee Montand. A young woman di .. covera ahe has ESP while trying to curb her chain emblclng. (1 hf.'.'SO (!11n.) a THE 000 COUPLE Feflx taJks Oscar Into beloo a 'big brother' to Mike, a young boy In reform achoot. • ASWESEEIT "Bigotry" (;hlcago atudents explore pt9judice in their lives; "Six Studenta From Memphis" Publlc schools and private 'acadeiniet' otter different llfe- atytiM to their students. ~ FAMILY PORTRAIT "Alternate Ufestylee" (Part 1) Cl) C88NEW8 0 MERV GFUfFIN 7:00 D NBC NEWS 8 UAR8CLU8 D ABCNEW.$ 0) I LOVE LUCY "Lucy Does The Tango" al ADAM-12 A girt leads the officers to a suspicious plane and jeep In the mountains. 9 MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT fD YOGA WITH MADELINE (I) TO TELL THE TRUTH 7:308 YOUNG PEOPLES SPEC1AL "Joshua's Confuak>n" A young Amith boy Is tom bet>Aleen the tradltlona of his hmlty and the g!!tter Of the modem worid. • NEWLYWED GAME ' e MATCH GAME P.M. • THE BRADY BUNCH When Jan recetve. a locket .. Madame the puppet, manipulated by Wayland Flowers, amuses Frank Sinatra on tonight's Laugh.Jn special at 9 o'clock on NBC, Channel 4. See review ~low. from an unknoWn ldmlrer, both Mike end C9rof ILlspect the othereentlt. LET'S MAKE A DEAL PLUTONIUM: B.EMENT • OFAISK . Reporter-producer Don ~ Uf'IC(MlrS MW lnfOnna· don on the rtlQlno c:ontroverty over plutonlum UM In thla doc- omentary narrated by Jack Lemmon. ID STARBOARD "Kenny Laur-.n" (I) $128,000 QUESTION 9 FAMILY FEUD llam Hold•n. Cepucfne. A Y'>IJ!"G girt 'begln9 t• beCome prlmlttve due to an ~ tittechment to her pet lion. (2 hrs.) • MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING "StlllUfe" l".30 9 (I) BU8TING LOOSE ~ enllate the lid of his~, .. Vinnlp, L..-and Woody Jn maJdrlg .n if'n.por1Mt romantlO dedelon. (P.rt 1 ¢ 2) G> CROSS-WrTS e 28TON10HT 1:00 8 Cl> GOOD TIMES A fotfow.up look et , ... poten· tJal benfth and rllKa of plutoni-um uae. • "Wheels" One car plua four QW1*S 411quala troubfe when J.J .'a "Awesome F~" become buatneaa partners. G GAIZZL Y ADAMS ~ ''The Orphans" Adams and Mad Jack must convlnoe two fleeing young Ol'pMna to mum to the safety Of the orphanage. e MOVIE ***'At "Any Wedneaday" (1H8) Jane Fonda. Juon Robarda. Ewry Wtldnesday a 'model' ~ vlalta his,,.. treu In her eulte. (2 hrs.) •«I EIGHT 18 ENOUGH ''The~ And The Bod'' Joan- nie wtna the lead In a modem Sbakeapearean production but doeen't want her tether to know Jlt>e must ptay a daring acene. > Jame1 Ray guest stars. • CAROL BURNETT AND FRIENDS m MOVIE *** "The UOn" (1982) Wll· Ratings Guide IMcwlff we ,., .. e««dlftt lo llo• offke ~ MoYlff l<W TV en ludOed 11¥ • C71tk. > * • * * -Excellent *** -VeryGood * * -Good ·~ -Fair * -Poor· G ABWESS!IT- ''Rumora" Aellit,_ of deeegre- gatton: "Black Hlttory" Should tt ti. given .,,..., empheels?; "Sex Ollcttmlnatlon" Utlno h'glll actloof ~ ... Old-wortd standards es opprealve. L"411> JOKER 8 WU;D t:OO 8 CBS MOV1e"' ~ * * * "Breakheart Pa••" (1978) Charleil BtOMQn, Ben Johnson. A ~ and hi. prl1oner, aboard a train, beoome caught up In myl_teri- oua deatha. ~ lttacka by lnd*'a and Une>c• p4alned ecddenta. D LAUOH~N . GU.eta: Frank Sina~ Ip WlllOn, Cindy WUif--. .._,. Gamer, RalPf\ Necter, Sen. Bar- ry_ Goldwater. • ltl CHARLIE'S ANGa.8 "Unidentified Flyfng Angets" Sebrina, ~. Kris and~ Infiltrate e phony UFO c:lub....,. pec:ted of doing eway with members after taking Uteir moMY· Ro.-MStfn, Dennie Cole~star. MERV QAtf'ffN GREAT PERFORMANCES "Madame Buttetfly" Puccini'• claaic tragedy of a geisha and her hopeleaa kMt for an Amert-. can NllV)' lleuteMnt. ' 8 AUSTIN COY UMrTS "Doug Sahm" Psychedello eountry kicker Bahm end mem- ABC Stfil·'IOps. New Slwws Struggle in Ratings NEW YORK (AP) - Television's new series con- tinued to struggle for prime time viewers as the current season mpved through its eighth week, A.C. Nielsen figures show. ABC's "Soap" finished the week ending Oct. 30 as the highest rated of the new pro- grams, 18th. CBS' "Betty White Show" was No. 29. And four of the five lowest-• rated shows for the week were new ones. C8S' .. Mitchell," was No. 65. ABC's "San Pedro Beach Bums." No. 66, NBc·s .. Mulligan's Stew,•• No. 68. and CBS' "Tbe Fltz;pati cks." No. 69. ABC, MEANWHILE, con· tinued te dominate the other networks in the ratings race1_ as it 'hu done~ week this fali; But bla audiences for a couple or car- toon specials helped CBS nudge NBC out of second place for the firat time this se8$00. For the Week endin' Oct. 30. ABC bad a ralfug Of 19.9, CBS' 18.5andNBC18. ''It's Your: F1tst Kiss._ Charlie Brown, .. a h8lf ·bour s~lal on CBS MondaY evening, was the third most·watched sbOw. and the "Fat Albert Halloween Show," aited right afler "Charlie Browtt," was No. 7 . • .... NEW YORK 0 <AP) .l. 'the WC' · ns range up to '"' feet tall, cothy ls ;!( and black, and Oz ii ated 1n such places at tbe atate ilion of Ute 1'164 New York rld'• Fair. . ~~oh lnU!llleence may ~ome as a vere blow to purist& who regard the MGM movie vers.1on of "The Izard of Oz" as something close to AP'WI,.,.., .. rtpture. They will be quick to point out that Ol'Othy, as portrayed by Judy arland, waa 16 years old, the dnchldns ecarcely came up to your eeoap, end Oz was a purley fantastic •H created on the MGM sound SCARECROW AND DOROTHY IN UPOATEf) 'WIZARD OF oz· M1chaet Jack•on, Diana Rot• Star In Movie 'Ttle Wtz' a1es. I FUaTREa, DOROTHY and her tmpanlons hailed from all-WASP ans as • . Not so ln "The Wiz," the movie tacle now bemg filmed here by versal and Motown. The dif· nee could be seen .by a CaJiCorma tor who attended an openmg se- ce one blustery night at the New T ark State Pavilion. 1 The huge circular arena, which re- Qlbled a bull ring with a mass of aoeers Instead of toreros, was ahve The price tag for such a work? Cohen estimated the final tab at $14 million. The producer has an answer for traditionalists who complain about the 32-year old Diana Ross as Dorothy· * th bri.ihUy costumed performers rlthing 1n rhythm, rhildren playing 'Slides and jungle gym!i, gymnasts P.eslorming flips. The walls of the ihNilion were decorated with · "IN THE L. FRANK Baum book, iCb~tucl graffiti of d'_ su~aj'. D..orothy as described only as a •youna ~rtninal. ~ ' girl.' Becausa of the 1'.1ens1ow draw-! A BEWILDERED Diana Ross, car· ings that illustrated the book, people ylng her miniature Schnauzer, Toto, conceived of her as a teenager. We're ad just landed .ln. the 'maJic lanct. phlyins her .. a Jehool c~acher tn r ·&nderlng how ~he got tbere rrom mid·lw¢Ades •l¥> l~ves in Ji iem. arlem. Her guide was a ~wit~h •• T.hal, ~:~tliink . ._.ill add a ne liss Ohe, looking cc,,AOllsly like a ..U dfrnei'wiiocUind llf6to the stor)' upJbeft seller and played by the • e"t er an fa z.t s i n g e r The 1 m a f,arpenter. WhUe the 200 dancers, recruited r0m the schools and dance com- • .,~s of Manhattan, did their thmg, Mlss Carpenter instructed DOrot.hy on how to fl.nd "The Wii." ' '1You've got to sing, Thelma," in· tructed director Sidney Lui;net over Jhe bullhorn. "You can'tjust mouth to re playback." THE MAN DOROTHY was seeking • played by Richard Pryor; his pre- f cessor in the 1939 version: Frank organ. Her three companions down e yellow brick road, yellow vinyl orth $237,000, acc()f'ding to publicity ~: Michael Jackson of the J acks<>n 5 s Scarecrow <Ray Bolger>, come· ~Ian Ni~ey Russell as the Tlnman · Jack Haley>. and Ted Ross of the roadway "Wiz" as The Lion !Bert ''lncomparabl~dcap ahr>. and finnlY rooted ill human e~rience." ---------.... ·-John Simon; ,, .. New Y ort Mapzine ' i I• •' ' t I "'t W \ \ t •, • ~ .. "QAMNATION AL'9.EY" "3 DAYS OF THE CONDOR" (R) "LOOKING FOR MR. GOODBAR" (R) :'SMOKEY AN[) THE BANDIT" "THE STING" (PG) "BOBBY DEERFIELD" (PG) . "YOU LIGHT UP MY LIFE" "FUNNY LADY" (PG) "THE, SPY WHO LOVED ME" "THE DEEP" (PG) l t t "A house of STRAW? Sounds like a real I firetrap!" ( ·, 1--~- t i j 1 > f J i ~ ' -.. ' ... 'Coward~ Murderer Sentenced CHICAGO (AP> A man convicted of murdering a couple along a lonely stretch of interstate highway, after orderinf tbem to kiss one last tbne, has been sentenced to serve from 1,000 t.o 3,000 years in prison. "You are an evil coward. You are the lowest," said Clrcu.it Court Judge James M. Bailey, as he passed sentence Tuesday on Henry Brisbon, 21. BRISBON, OF CHICAGO, was convicted of killing Dorothy Therese Cerny and her fiance, James Schmidt, both 25, along In- terstate 57 in southern Cook County on June a. 1973. He and three youths were accused of ter- rorizing the couple by bumping their car from the rear. forcing them to pull over and robbing them, proseeuton said. ,, ONE 011IER MAN JS on trial for the murders and the other companions testified aeainst Brisbon, accused of being ~ trig· ' germ an. The prosecution sald Brisbon ordered the couple to kiss one last time before he shot them as they lay alongside the highway. Dent Wms Frisbee Finals Smashing a pumpkin was the object of the Laguna Niguel Frisbee finals, but wlth a high wind, a good dcQt was enough to make Je(f Cadieux, 17, grand prize winner. Ruonerup was Walter aeesoo, 10, a Crown Valley Elementary School student. About 300 people at- tended the Frisbee championships at Crown Valley Elementary School, said Karen H«:_n• drlx of Thornton Realty. event sponsors. Players competed in aee categories from 3 to adult, she said, with 18 winners in all. , Cadieux, o( 25192 Nueva Vista Dr., is stu- dent body president at Dana Hills High School. Thief to Pay SAN DIEGO (AP) -A Navy Trainlne Center recruit has been grant- ed three years' probation and ordered to make restitution to a Phoenix bank he admitted ro}). blng last year. A U.S. magistrate ordered 21· year-old Wayne A1len Edwards of Phoenix to pay $2,483 -or half the loot in the April 1976 rob- bery -to the First Na- tional Bank of Arl.z.ona. _, . . ( SAN FliMCiscO <APJ -trnleu n'Jmber of factU"I, lncludinl tbe Jaet Mother served lots of laJnb, chances of qualltled sheephefd~. incrusiQ are 1ou ~ven't•blld much contact predator populations, compeUUpn with the m~t ttiat &obert Blackford from synthetic fiben and the &brink· calls 1beerdel1911Mothe tastebu&. lng amount ol public land ••&Uablo What dcles Blackford know about it? for grazing. ·Well. Uil"•year·old rancher bas been About 8) percent of the lndUStrf't raillnf tatUe and ~eep on bis Yuba profit com.es from the 1ale ol wnm County·apread near Wheatland since for meat. The rest ls from the sh..,. , 1940. And be does it.so well that be has ing of sheep for their wool, a~ beet> nam~ Llvestockman of the lo Blackford. J earforum. Although lamb makes up a · "Lamb is a meat which has tradl· minuscule share Ot the meat mark Uonally been Introduced through the Blackford and bis fellow w~ family," says Blackford. "If your aren't overly concerned about boolt'"~ mot.ber serv6:1 lt lo you, you probably , ln& demand. .J atlll ~tlt . · •tAatuany. out S1Jpply <loesn't meclt 4'Jt'• bard to mlroduce lamb to peo-the deawxtao lt'WoUidn'tdo •• lotal pie wbo"ve neYer eaten it before,~ 1ood t~promote lamb eating,•• we've eonverted quite a few &>eo1>le Bt'eltforu 1.Sd.; ··w~·re still Vying to beCaoae it h~.~a &OQd flavor, lt'a lncreuej>roductlon.' . - P Jal.able, nev~ l4Ugh and e&S)' to some areu Of the~~ dlgeat." · more lamb than otben, be said, 'While the·.nation has been gulping primarilytheNOl'theaSta'nd\lieWeSC n 130 pOunds of beef per capita, In New Yock, for ,example, certaia 1 b consumption is hovering around et!lnic 11'9UP6 -Jews and MOilema ' two l*Dl.s per person and shows no a.retwo-eataJotOIJamb. • algn1oliDcreaslng, Blackford1a1ct Dmti IS 1eneraJl7 more expensiYe" Tbe nation'• sheep and lamb than beet and the West's blgber population peaked at about 50 mlllloo average iDc<ime makes lamb more al· ln'lMZ and bas been steadily declininf fordable, Blackford siid. The w since. '1'lere currently are 11bo\lt 13 western cllmate ls conducJV'e to out- milllon, primarilr in the West. be dQOr tooJdnC and lamb barbecaes aald. The decrease has been caused by a <SeelAMB;P11ea> . II na~ ganisation to double th thto111b i~f.OY~ ~other c~, 1d • .. You ~an io lnlQ y a end p~ mote lamb and lnuca c sum~on • by about 50 pert t." ti i ld. "Wb t wtt have to do b •etl mb wJthJn reach et people. We want to av lt being ~onsidered a gourmet food! ··~~~~~.,..~~:;:::.::¥~ Lamb Steaka/CUrry-Appl&auce ls mildly seasoned and it not t,yplc Indian.Curry. So it doesn't mally ne.d cbutney, coconut, peanuts rid typical. curry accompanim nt but they do add an exotic touch to a menu. COld cider, apple juice or beer make •P· proprlate beverages for such a meal. LAMB STEAKS /CURR.Y·· APPLESAUCE 3 tablespoons butter or tnargarlne :::,.. . 6 liunb steaks, cut ¥.a tO ~ inch thick · 2 medium onions, chopped •? 1112 tablespoons curry powder ... 1 . .If.I teaspoon ground gin&er .. :~ 3 tert apples, peeled and chopped " 1 ~cups chicken broth ;~. 2 tablespoons tomato paste ~ 'h cup heavy cream . i~ lf.l teaspoon salt •... ell butter or margarine in large • ·net. Saute lamb c;t~aks unµl they llre brown on both sides Remove the p'8tter. Add chopped onions to skillet aad cook until transparent Add curry ,Owder and ginger, stirring well. Add apples, broth and tomato paste and bring to boil. Return lamb steaks and cover with sauce. Cover pan and sim· mer 25 minutes. Uncover pan for S minutes and reduce sauce slighUy. Add cream and season With sait. Serve with rice, peanuts, l'A.isms and coconut Serves 6. LAMB AND R ICE-SALAD 3 cups cold cooked rice 2 cups cubed cooked lamb l mechum tomato, diced gravy . 1,. cup water 1 table!tpoon tomato ~te 2 to 3 teaspoons curry l)c>Wder Dash salt and pepper Cooked rice Chutney ud chopped peanut.a In large skillet or lreavy saucepan, brown lamb and cook onion, celeey, and garlic in }>uUer" Stir jn envy, water, tomato paate, curry powder, salt and pepper. (;over; cook over low beat about. 1 hour or until meat is tender; stir now and then. Serve over rice with chutney and peanp~ Makes· 4 servings. ' • • Brown Bag Pie , { <From Page Cl) 2 teaspoons cornstarch 14 cup cold water Pare, core. and slice apples and pears. Combine sugar and water m medium saucepan. bring to botling. Add lemon · slices, cloves, orange rind and cinnamon. Add apple and pear t;lices. Simmer, uncovered, over moderate heal until apples are tender, but still firm, about 15 minutes. Turn the fruit onoe during cooking. Remove apple and ~ar sUees to serving dish. Garnlah watb , lemon slices. Bring syrup to a rolling boil and cook unUl a thin • syrup forms, about S minutes. Meanwhile, dissolve cornstarch in cold waler. Add to sugar syrup. Cook 2 minutes until sliehUy thickened. Cool; pour over fruit slic~~ldakes:6serviogs. f· •• Gadgets ,· ________________________________ ._ ____________ , f ~ \ <From Page Cl) "not a i?adget person," the Orange County director ttnd home advisor for Cooperat1 ve Extension for the University of Cahfornia! likes rubber .spatulas and her can opener. {; Paula Schoepe, owner of Paula's cstaurant an Newport Reach, bas a • apanese tool that she uses forsllcinti • cucumbers. Peggy Cotton, restaurant. columnist for the Newporter News, finds her blender most useful. Lois Shelly, a visitor from Houston, thought about it for a minute and said, .. My favorite kitchen gadget.? Wett, I'm not a good cook, so I guess my favorite is my husband, since he doos- most of the cooking.·· ·cheese Tempter A simple cheese board is a good place to show off some interesting, special cheeses. Here we've included pro- volone -the sharp smoky flavored Italian cheese -for slicing. Jn contrast, the other two STUFFED FOLDOVER powdered ginger crisp. Remove bacon one side in fat in sklllet . STEAKS 4 large cube steaks from skillet and draio Remove from pan and l cup canned pitted (61hx5 inches, 6 ounces well. To fat remainitlg m place a portion of the ripe olives each l skillet, add celery and rice mixture .on \In· 3 strips bacon &,A, cup liq'1.id from onto and coot until cooked side of each 1.4 cup chopped ohves • tttlder. Rernove 1 steak~ Fold over to celer~. ~cup water vegetables .nth lotted enclose filling. Fasten 2\tablespeons· .2 teaspoons ~i>rn-spoon and mix wtth with wooden picks. choppe4lonion starch . chopped olives, rice. 1 cu)>cookedrlce Chop ~ cup ohves, cheese linger and Return steaks to skillet ~ c~ at~·ched-keeping remaln~er bacon. ' and add remelmns dar chees whole. Cut bacon into • " whoJe onves, olive liquid .:. ~~ asp o on small pieces and cook Brown cube stew AA and water. CovertlehUy, ' simmer 1 to 1~ rs, until meat is er. Place steaks on se inf Platter, remove pie • Blend cornstarch wit 2 teasPOODS water. Ad to 1 cup liquid re. maihing in pan. Bring to boilfog and cook until tbictened. Pour over stea~s. Makes ... a~rv­ ines • .,,..._.,_. .... ....... ==·-..... .. .. ..... -.mn-.. mn.1 ,_-.,..,.1,am. Hot Pot Is Easy for Tired Cooks to Make An Old Engh sh I lot Pot IS a one-dish meal or casserole, tht! standby of busy housewives. It's a dish th'at has so many advan· tag es it can be prepared in ad·· vance, put straight into the oven from the refrigerator, doesn't spoil if it is kept wjiling, requires little or no attention once 1t is in the oven,.and leaves you with on- ly one dish to clean In fact, for this tcind or cooking. it 1s really the oven which docs all the work once the ingrt'<lients are prepared. Casseroles usually use a Jong slow method of cook ing which wi1l render the cheaper cuts of meal more tender. A great addition to casseroles -once you have tried it, you·n Stew For Two use It every time -is beer as the liquid base. Beer helps to ten den ze the meat and blend the various ingredients together Your casserole will come out with a more robust and hearty· flavor wh~ tieerJs included. The tilellS'h are famed for cooking with beer and ale and for their casserole dishes -this English Hot Pol. ls exceptionally good. OLD ENGUSH HOT POT: 2 cups beer or ale, l cup beef stock, 1 2 lb. onions (t>eeJed and sliced), 2 pounds beef <chuck or similar cut), 2 mcdium-siud carroti (peeled and chopped), 2 ounces mushrooms (sliced), 1 stick celery (chopped), salt and pepper to taste, pinch · nutmec, l strip lemon peel, 1 bay Jell!. 1 tables· poon chopped parsley. Boil ale or beer unW reduced by half, add stock and boil a further 5 min. Put a layer of onions In a larae cAAei:~~en fill about ~ full with 11lYelS ol meat, cul jnto bitt-alied pieces and vegetables. Sprinkle each layer with a liWe salt aad ~ per. Add nutmeg, lemon peel and bay leaf. Add bot reduced liqUid. Cover UghUy wtlh loll and then put lid on Cook in a slow oven (350 degrees> for 4 to 4\-'l hours. • Befo11e serving time. sprinkle " with parsley and remove bay leaf nnd lemon peel Yield: 4 serv- ings ) yTOMHOGE •~wntw Amerlcan u apple s a time-honored pll se. but 1t would ap· pl ~ore aptly to the er rry, that brilliant re wt Introduced to the 1lgrtms by friendly In ns back ln 1620. anksgiving would -eeem complete in m \ homes without the tra 1tional turkey ac co panied by a sauce or Jell of cranberries. But ho Jll&nY of us realize th this versatile fruit is a luable addition to countless dishes from cof~e cake to chicken salH? ~anberry juice is use~ to soften liverwurst inlo->.a pate. Cranberries are ften added as a fill- for .coffee rings. erry cookies are a f<i v ite for kids after ~cil. Cranberry sauce un rown sugar make a gla for baked ham, and 1 · m· told that cranberry bol)tcht is becoming ~ilm st as popular as the ori al Russian version or t s hearty soup. T e American Indians (•al the fruit Jb1mi or ··b er berry." They the cranberry to pemmican. mix· ing the berries with drie.d vemson and fat. Conyuning much nutri- m ei}t and little bulk, J.l'rQmican was ideal for 1 .1libns while on the trail. W seems that an im- a g~nal1ve Pilgrim l1k$ed the pink cran· berry, blossoms to the he~d s or cranes and ~alf!d them craneber· tte~ "h1ch later became tontractro to the pres· tnttame Yob Id cranberries re- tna~ed popular as the Pilt:rim settlements grew. Each fall entire fam\11es would gather to pie~ enough berries to pre!erve for the long winter Ctanberries were prob- ba!Jl..y the first native A m,trican fruit to be eat¥i in Europe, because th(\}' kept so well. Pac'led in water. they were shipped by the ton to the Old World Sailors ate em on long voyages tot lo prevent scurvy. ~ anberry products are available the year rou~. But they arc most po~ u l a r d u r i n g Th nksgiving and Chr tmas. Here's a rec· 1pe or cranberry chif- fon arts that should go nic~ during one or the hol· ays. • envelo~es un- flavored gelatin 'i cup water •A cups fresh cran· ber les Jul 'cup water cup~1ar .'!! teaspoon salt , cup fresh oranae te~apoons gra\ect ora ge rind '~ . iaeuwhite$ Is baked 3·1nc'h tart she This week, . ... i~'s quite a buy as well. Our dictionary speaks. ;-;:;:;,--• -~~1:> • ."."~ "To aress " L.~~=~our Funk&1 _ · Wagnall's tells us, can mean "to prepare for use or sale0 • It can , also mean "to. prepare for cooking". When we talk about fresh dressed -=::-::;....;t::;:::;§'ii# pork, both of the above would be our choice of meaning ... just as fresh pork is our choice of a dish this week. Being fresh dressed also means this pork wasn't frozen for transportation t market, but instead was brought in live to be prepared days fresher than it might otherwise be. And we think that makes a flavor' difference worth thinRing about. Choose your pick. We have a selection ... up to 14 different cuts of fresh pork that you might find in our meat case this week ... all are real values, and rea savings. Pork sirloin roast Pork shoulder picnic Pork leg center slice Regular spareribs Country·style spareribs Leg-butt portion Leg-shank half Fresh Pork Loin chops Loin rib chops Sirloin chops Loin blade chops Sliced quarter loins Pig's feet Neck bones ~ ~~fOIN 118 SlllLOIH OJT .. .. • .. • . • • lD Fi'ESH SPAAEPJOS A 14 Sf.MU. SIZl5 . • • .. .. .. • ... LO-: I .. Leg (bone in) Whole Half •Potatoes with tomatoes and cheese. IDAHO POTATO T0¥,A.TO BAKE '2 tablespoons olive oil 1 cup chopped onion 1.4 cup chopped 1reen pepper v, CUP cbQpped celery 2 tablespoons chopped parsley 1 clove garlic, minced 1-:? leaspoon dried In.( basil 1 bay leaf, crumbled 1 teas~salt 1 can Cl pound) tomatoes 4 Idaho potatoes, unpared and sliced 1.4·inch thick IA cup grated Parmesan cheese In large skillet heat oil. Add onion, sreen pepper, celery. parsley, garlic, basil and bay leaf; cook over medium heat un- til onion is tender Add salt and tomatoes; heat. Layer half the potatoes in a buttered 10x6xl~· inch casserole; pour half the sauce over potatoes. Layer re· mainioe potatoes and sauce. Sprinkle top with Parmesan cheese. Cover with ~011. Bake in 400 degree oven, l hour and 15 minutes. Uncover; bake ts minutes longer. YIELD: 4 serv- ings. POTATOES HENRY WITH HERB DRESSING 4 Idaho potatoes 1 2 cup butter or margarine I tablespoon lemon juice t tablespoon chopped chives 1 :! teaspoon each dried leaf chervil, tarragon and dill weed ~ teaspoon hot pepper ~auce Scrub potatoes well. Place in large saucepan and add l·uu::h cold water. Bring to boiling, cov- er, reduce beat and silftmer 35 to 45 minutes, until potatoes are tender. While potatoes are cook- ing melt butter ln small saucepan. Stir in remaining in- gredients. Place cooked potatoes on serving platter. CUt each potato fa 14-inch slices withou~ cutting all the way throu~h; fan out each potato slightly. Serve with herb butter, YIELD! 4 set\'· iOiS. Zesty mushroom dried beef chowder. , Mushroom Meal Few't.hing1 in life are quite as satisfying as soup, whatever form it takes -bisque, "marmite," chowder, burgoo, hol pot, you name it. Each one of these is a winner: Mushroom Rarebit, sparked with sharp Cheddar, beer and Tabasco vepper sauce; Mushroom Dried Beef Chowder, mighty solid eating and rich with pea soup and sliced carrots; Mushroom Corned Beef Stew, fla\'orful with herbs, tomatoes and little whole onions. Served w!Vt chunks or peasant bread, whio could ask for more? At home or away, canned mushrooms make it a cinch to dress up a wide variety Of dishes -even on the spur of the mo- ment. If you keep the pantry shelf or knapsack or galley stocked with a few cans of mushrooms in different sizes and packs; chopped, sliced or whole, you can transform a plain Jane standby -even a stralgbt·from· the can soup -into a special dish that will have you happy c'bming back for seconds and thirds. How do can sizes compare with the weight of fresh mushrooms? Canned mushrooms, like home· cooked fresh mushrooms, shrink when cooked and are about 60 percent of the raw product. You would need about a pound of • fresh to equal what you get in an 8·ounce can of processed mcshrooms; and about a half· pqund of the fresh to equal the coo tents of a 4-ounce can. MUSHROOM RAREBIT 1 cup beer 1 teaspoon instant minced onion 't• teaspoon dry mustard 1 pound sharp cheddar cheese, shredded or cut in small pieces (4 cups) 2 eggs 1 teaspoon worcestershire sauce, optional • 1-a teaspoon Tabasco pepper sauce, optional 2 cans (6 or 8 ounces each> whole mushrooms, drained Use double broiler, or lm· provise one by placing saucepan m skillet about half filled with simmering water. Heat beer with onion and dry mustard. Add cheese, a liWe at a time, and stir until melted. Remove from heat. Beat eggs in a small bowl until well mixed; stir in a small amount of hot cheese mixture and then stir warmed eag1 Into the rest of the cheese mixture. Return to 'heat and cook over simmering water, stirring con· stantly, wiW mixture ls sligttUy thickened. Stir ln Worcestershire and Tabasco; add mushrooms and heat through. Serve on toast. 4 servings. MUSHROOM DRIED BEEF CHOWDER 2 tablespoons butter, m.ar~arineor salad oil 2 teaspoons instant mlnc«l onion 2 jars Wh ounces each) dried beef 2 cans ooin ounces each> condensed pea soup lcupmilk 1 can •1 pound> sliced car· rots,d~ 2 cans (6 or 8 ounces each> sliced mushrooms, drained l,'4 teaspoon dried leaf thyme Melt butter in large pot; add onion and beef and brown beef slightly. Add undiluted soup and milk and stir untll well blended. Add carrots, mushrooms and thyme and simmer 10 minutes. 6 servings. MUSHROOM CORNED BEEF STEW 2 tablespoons flour 2 cans (6 or 8 ounces each> sliced mushrooms 2 cans <1 pound each> tomatoes 1 beef bouillon cube 1 can Cl pound> whole onions, drained 2 cans (12 ounces each> corned beef, cubed 1 bay leaf 1,a teaspoon dried leaf mar· joram Blend flour with a small amount of the mushroom Hquid in a large pot. Stir In rest or mushroom liquid and liquid from tomatoes. Add bouillon cube; cook, stirring cons tan Uy, untll mixture thickens and comes lo a boil. Add drained mushrooms, tomatoes, onions, corned beef, bay leaf and marjoram. Simmer, covered, for 1S minutes. Serve with large chunks of French bread. 6 to 8 servings. FllSH S&:ICED USDA Choice Beef Loin Boneless. . COLOR ZENITH Tll WINN.RBI ,. . · Lucerne onne m .•• The rench bras na • '1ood M 11 th wa" .. ,ood t 11 eOoka it. We'JI be ore Uborated and ,. 'analate lt to mean the way a "aood cook .. cooka IL And our delinitton of a 111ood cook'' <or "Cood t!ife,'' .. ,~ husband" or ''lood friend", ta one r. who ls considerate of ealorlea-and cholest~rol. Moat recipes for lhla dish involve loll of added fat ... and a 1inkCul of dlr· ty dishes. Our one·pan ~technique ia ao mueb simpler: ' SKJLLETSOLE •A BONNE FEMME' CFloando may be nMtttated) 1 2 teaspoons butler or :-margarine i one-haJr cup dry i sherry or other while . wme ~ 4 ounces sliced ;nushrooms, fresh or ~anned f 3 tablespoons minced onion (or 1 \ablespoon dried) 1 pound fillet or sole ~r flounder, fresh or pefrosted · salt <or butter- lflavored salt> and pep. er dried tarragon optional: oue·half easpoonMSG _ 1 cup skim mlllc 2 tablespoons flour paprika 2 tables1>,~~'-'i inced frest} ~if~:~~l i)1 a n~c?k. s ...... """'• fry pal\. '\• mushrooms .Cdr.Sl1'lmlJ.i.Jr.tl canned·). t6o'k ili4\ over hJg1t •hea llquid .eva~ e ~ushr~s begin lo brown in remaining rat ~ teaspoons is all you eed). Remove ushroo'!.:.t and set aside Put onions and re- maining wine in skillet. Add the fish fillets in ~ ~ingle layer Sprlnkl lightly with salt, pepper a pinch of tarragon an .MSG . Sim mer, un .. ~covered, over low h about I to 8 minutes, de· pending on thickness of fillets, until fish is opaque and most of the wine has evaporated 'add a little more wine r water if it threatens to vapor ate completely. l poon wine over fish oc· asionally while at sim· ers Stir milk and flour gether, then stir into e simmcrine skillet, ntil It simmers and '.h i c k en s . Sp r in k I e rowned mushrooms on p of fillets, top with aprlka and parsley. eat through. Serve rom the skillet. Makes our servings, about 160 alories ejtch. J FW\JNDER " ! T£TRAZZIN1 CHerc·s a decalorized .seafood version or a temous turkey dish, with flounder M sole. the preparation technique is 11lmilar to the first re· 'cipe. > '1 • ·--fllUHto•OI IU ....-aacrton rAn 1G•OUllDallF me DOW Utdr eommuniti . many fOC"eian 1 taJU t.hat can (OOd food must aened quickly. I II loved around the world lor ltl peat abil ty to blmd with many dirt in(l'edl ts, ~--·~b::.:: Uon roller Cowicll r UI. Md~ c t1 ao modest, it malt ea a sreat mat value all; , J • H~ve you ever eaten· that tin• Hungarian --wpcclalty1 Chicken Paprika? lta 1ubtle season-' ; in11 of b1ushinc paprika and •atin·amooth aour cream blend beautllully with chicken to make a la f ydlsb. Beatot 1.n-:~qulleeu)';tt> pr,paN. 4 "MOUer-lryer, cut In seMn1 pl.ces, la aplin'1ed with seasoninaa and btOwaed on both aides a skillet. Then comes anion wblcb is lig'bUy eooketl with the chicken. liquid addeet, and th chicken cookedtlor a balthou.r. coYerid. Th c i.I then removed to keep warm. and paprlk and smooth aour cream added to the • skillet. The sauce is spooned over the chicken which is served traditionally over wide noodles ... a noble dish quick enough to suit today's "right now" style of living. Chicken has important convenience and high nutrition to add to a busy household's cooking. You can buy chicken in the form you prefer for the dish you are making -whole, quartered, or In parts. An interestin& chicken part is the drumstick. Drumsticks can be purchased separately, are easy to cook and provide a fun way to give chUdren the complete protein they need. Try !)(>. Split Pell. No matter how you cook it, simmered in tbe time·honored Dutch oven or slow·cooked for hours in a low-heat electric cook· pot, this unusual, economical, whole-meal soup made with split peas adds a bonus of good eating to the week's meal plans. Delicious, nutritious, this no· soak, quick-cook legume adapts easily to the no.fuss, no·watch methods of both. MEAL-IN·A·BOWL SPUTPEASOUP 1 pound washed green split peas 6 cups cold water or stock 2 cups canned tomatoes . C16-ouncecan> 1 12·ounce package frozen chopped spinach <l and 1'2 cups cooked or canned> 1 and •,,, or 2 cups sliced raw carrots · a• cup chopped onion <l medium 3-ounce) 1 fat clove garlic, thin·sliced l teaspoon salt 1 meaty ham bone To cook: put all in 312 lo4 quart Dutch oven or heavy saucepot. The spinach need not be thawed. Slowly bring to bolling point in uncovered kettle. Wben boiling, reduce heat to simmer. Cover and let cook 4 hours preferably, stirring occasionally: May be cooked in a slow (300 degrees> oven. lf one of the new low-heat, slow·cook 3 and ~.quart electnc cook·potS ls used, place an in the pot, cover and cook ~n "low .. for 12 to 1$ hours, following miinlifjctiu-er'1 lnstrucUon. No- watcb, no-stir, no-bother! • V tables: skinned fresh tom 1«>es may be used. Or canned spinach, Carrots look nice sliced on the bias. 2. 'nlat "meaty ham bone"' Best Of all meat~avors, Tue meat from bdn just belore 11crv- inai . Cube ilnd Q>nnkle on top of soue ln tu.reen. A moked am hot.~ or wo m y eel but. they re not a Ood b\ly, prke and w tc·Wlse. :A half.pound piece Of tor . a meat th• famll>: will CKEN PAP&IKA 1 broiler.fryer-chicken, cut in serving .DO·EASY DRUMS'l'ICD 12 broiler-fryer drumsticks Salt and paprika • '.<. cup butter or margaril\e, ruelted 2 tablespoons.lemon Julee "1 teaspoon dried leaf t•rr~,.., Sprinkle drumsticks withs t and-paprika. Line shallow baking pan with foll. ,Combine m•lt· ed butter, lemon juice and t1tteaon. Place-1. drumsticks on foil·llned beJdng "1• brUah with herb mixture. Bake in 37S:detree oven 30 minutes. Turn, brwsh with herb liaure and bake 15 minutes longer. 6aervtqs. Left, whole-meal split pfitJ soup cooks all day. ': ..... r 1>o you Ji to ? OV W 'YO ked t s queahon of au· n , aJm t all the hqmemakers answer "yea." But there are always • few-ten per· cent or less-who an.swer -"'•no.'• e,v,..,..u14111 rea Hewde ul A. ou will save calories and fat by uslnt avocado lo place of but· ter. A tableapoon of pureed evocado conlalna about i~ arams of fat. and 15 calories while a tablespoon of butter (or marear1ne > has 11.5 grams of fat and 100 surface or f b ilfood is washed off, tho fiih will keep longer al o. ll)y keeping enotlgh ice on top of the fish so that the meltmg ice contlnl.l&lly washes it, you can pr~ long the storage life. Storing the fish tlead down in a verttcal posi- tion in ice makes the washiri& more efficient. • • Q. el t y~ar old Tbe reasons for these differences of opinion are interesting. Homemakers who like t.o ~eot conalder·it mpre r---~~----:-~~~~~~~~~~~;..w.;.....,. ...... ;.....;:.~.....,.~~~~~~:.-::-.-....;+:.~~ ............. ~...;......,;...,;;.;;._,;~...!.:.!..-_:_.....:...:.!..:.:.:...:;:::..;.:.~..;;.;.,.;;.£~..;:;_,.:~:.:;!;;;;~~~~~~~ calories. ••n I.Imply reraae• to creative t.ban other homomakinc tasks such as cleanl.q. They feel they are producing pro- ducts to which they can I add their own Ingenuity. , and they can see taneible results. . Another factor that adds to their en1oyment. is appreciation of the re- rsults by family mem- bers. ··u you clean the oven, no one notices," ex· plains one homemaker. .. But if you bake cookies, everyone tells you how good they arc and they might even say thank you.'' A thlrd factor is the 1 cook's own enjoyment of her product. "I like to cook because l hke to eat," JS something we hear often from homemakcr:s. The reasons why homemakers do not en- joy cooking often relate to time: "Cooking takes too much time. There arc too many other thrngs I'd rather be doing." 1 ·' l could enjoy cook~ jf I had-titne, Butt.} always Jtave to eet the food Of\ the table in a rush after 1 get hot\).e from worWoe:, ~~ V•O • -to-worl.1.t.tlae .. ~in,..,,. All thit ~lUng ~ears medo..rn.• Time schedules of family members also cause cooking problems for homemakers: "Everyone in our family is on a different , schedule, so I end up be- 1 ing a short orcler cook. I seem to be cooking all the time." •• Studies of homemak~ time use show that too« I activities do take u1 ii big block of time-tw<Yte three hours a day on the ~ average tt you include I planning, shopping, and cleanup. But this time cost can be cut, if homemakers really make an effort. Pl3'llling is the most im- portant key to saving time. By planning meals in advance and making a shopping list, you can ensure getting all the foods needed for the week in just one trip to the store. With planning you can also put foods in· to the form they will be used before you store them, thereby saving preparation time later. <For example, salad veg'etables can be washed and stored ready for instant use.) Wilh planning, you can cook extra quantities of some foods to serve later as planned leftovers, and you can dovetail jobs by cooking several make· ahead foods simaltJlneously using some of the same utensib and ingredients. I . Planning can also help solve the problem of :Staggered eatina times. A posted menu plan can s upply directions for latecomers so they can assemble their own meals from foods on hand that you have pre- pared earlier. Menu plans can also provide for the involve· ment ol family members in meal preparation tasks. Cblldren, for ex- am pi e, can be made respGnsible !or prepar• Sng eertaln foods (Jucli as salads) dUrln vedc, or entire m the1 are capable, thereb1 save the cOdk 90motime. BMf lledeCut Clu:k Rollt s: I luSOAt Beef,._,...,._. Clll ~Rib Eye Steak- D "...,_~ Ctu:k Patties ,_ lb. Pantry Fillers lilillllilll•ll.llllllf.11 .................. . UM'llOML I ISconl aAIP•AIDI I 'It • •Ya&m I MtolALOf : .. illiliillilil ............................ . Manufacturer'• cents-off coupons from newapa rs and magazines are Hl<e coupons and a half at R lphs thia week when you buy ttie Item. One coupon ~r item and one item per coupon uni specified otherwise. Not fo 1nclulfe ~etaile~ or "free" cou~ .. or exceec:t the value of the item. ~ ,. ~ 111· 1~.79 . .;:: .49 ~ 3" Health & Beauty ..... 79 all. I 1111. 99 .... Super Balcery Super Floral I I "Whose lawn did you unrake this time?" . . ' .. ,, . FU.NKY WINKERBEAN ~ RERJRnNG FOR A 0&.19JTIOtJ ~ Ult() 6EITT CXX,) ~ 1 DID l I WAS JN ™E toJOR SlUCX) HAll AND I CALJG+rr ~ WHl&PERIN& f WAIT'Ll I mJ.. 1MEM A800T 1HI& AT "TME NEXT PRIOOPAL'6 MEEnNGf by Ferd and Tom Johnson 1'1c1'1C-~! WfAA AH'Tf/.ff. No, 1'M Nor ~1Nc4 ® 10 SToP INiHE MIDt>LE ___ .,...AWkf I CtV\LLE~E yoo To ,A t>U~L., )00 OHMY • LrmEE>RS- II ~ 9f' >iJ ERROL FL »JN ", MOVI~ TO SEE" A STUPIP DoCUMENTARY. THe~CHl~N we1'e~ FOR 'TH& WE:SK~N~u• . ~OYAl.ISTVJ\Rl.ET fl .. .. -. -~.:a_.:~~~-~<-~~ ~ ~ ~o - ---~ --• • ---- NATIONAL COlJNCIL OF J£Wl&B WOMEN; A mini convenUon will bt ~d from 9:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 3. int.ht Los Coyotes Country Club Jq Buena Park. Information is •vallab1'1 b talllbt 819-5388 or ~·'701-• ..._.,~_.......,, __ ~-.-~--::-T-- N EWPOlt'I' 'BEACH £BELL CLlJJt: The troop will bold tta 1eneral meet.int at 11:30 a.m. Thursday, Nov. 3. Collectibles and antiques will be the subject ol the afternoon proeram. ' . • .\LPllA CHI OMEGA: Alumnae in the Orange County coastal rqion wlll hold an annual oounque and silent auction at 7:30 p.m. Thurs· day. Nov. 3, ln the Newport Beach home of Mrs. Nelson Pfister. LIDO ISLE WOMAN'S CLUB: Sarah Purcell or the A.M. Los Angeles show will be.the euest speaker at the rneetin1 Tuesday. Nov. 8. She will discuss Achievinc One's Goal. Reservations should be made before Friday. Nov. 4. SADDLEBACK COMMUNITIES CHRISTIAN WOMEN'S CLUB: Author Ken Poure will be th• special guest speaker at the guest mght dinner-banquet at 7 p.m. Friday, Nov.4, in the Holiday Inn, Mission Viejo. AMt:RICAN LEGION AUXILIARY: The Newport Harbor Unit 291 will hold a holiday bazaar Nov. 4, 5 and 6 at it& Bayside clubhouse, 21515th St., NewPort Beach. Hours are Friday. 5 to 9 p m ; Saturday. 10 a.m. to 5 p .m.: and Sunday, 12 noon to 7 p.m. Profits go to the Auxiliary Rehabilitation Fund ~rnd general aid lo veterans. KAPPA DELTA: An art exhibit and auction will be held by the NewPorl Harbor Alumnae As- ..... ociation at 7 p.m. Friday, Nov. 4, in the Harbor \'icw Homes Phase l· Clubhouse in Newport Beach. Reservations can be made with :Mrs. .John W. Kruse of Newport Beach. 644-1409. INTERNATIONAL TOASTMISTRESS CLUBS: The Newport Harbor group will hold its Founders Month dinner-meeting at 8 p m. Fri- day, Nov -1, m the Revere House, 1st andTusti~ Santa Ana Reservations may be made by call- ing .Jean Wheeler, 646-3255 . PARENTS WITHOUT PARTNERS: Orange . Coust Chapter 26 invites all single parents to its ffrst 1''nday Dance at 9 p.m. Nov. 4, in the Costa .:\tesa Country Cluh Information on the group is available b> calling 546-5788. LAGUNA BEACH WOMEN'S CLUB: His· tonan Giles Brown will speak on Global Trends in the '70s at thl' meeting Friday. Nov 4, m the clubhouse. Lunch will be served at 12:30 p.m. Those interested in the club. which is not limited to Laguna Bea(·h rcs1<lcnts, may call Betty West wood, 499·2f.39. THI-; CHRl~TMAS COMPANY: Ceil Ainsworth, noted New York designer of children's clothing, will present her collection or hohdav and cruisewcar to The Christmas Com- pany ior a luncheon showing Friday. Nov. 4, in the Newportel' Inn. Proceeds will go to the Com- munity Trust Fund of the Junior League or Newport Harbor and .Junior League projects. In- formation is available b> calling the Junior J,.cague, 640-1450. MYASTllF.NIA GRAVIS J<'OUNDATION: Tl'f£> Orange County Auxiliary will holds its 9th annual luncheon and fashion show Saturday. Nov. 5. in the Grand Hotel. Cocktail hour starts atlla.m. AAUW: James E. O 'Connor will speak on Waler: the Dream and the Accomplishment at the Lacuna .Beach branch meeting at 9:30 a .m. Saturday. Nov. s. in tb.e Los Alisoa Intermediate Schoolin Mission Viejo. THE VILLA~ Orange CounLy Women's Alcoholic Rehabilitation Center wilt hold a 1'hanksgiving Fe&tival dinner-dance and $hO!'ti.Salul"d.ay • .Nov. 5, in t~ Grand Hotel, t.eeos CU.IALICRA flT• eHOa aTOft•a autumn shoe sale OUN11NGTON BEACH GAaDEN CLUB: A mem bip luncheon will be h ld at noon Satur- day. ~ov. 5, in the Huntln&ton Viewpoint Clubbouso. Reservations may bo made by call ina 846-G90t ot 846-5918. ORANGE COUNTY POLKA CLUB: An an· nJversaryda.nce wUl be h'tld at 8:30 p.m. Satur· do.y. Nov.S, ln Plumbers H41~ saoi. Anr. NEWPORT BARBOa BUSINESS ANb PROPQSIONAC WOMEN'S CLUB: The seventh annual Fun and Fancy Baaaar will be held at the Downtown Cemmun.ity Center <formerly.the B<»"s Club> from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday, Nov.5and from 10 a.m, to 5 p.m . Sun- day,Nov.6 . JOB'S DAUGlft'ERS: Th~ Mothers· Club of Job's Daughters, Masonic Temple 157, will bold its MCOIMl annual Santa's Shopping Bag, a Christmas boutiquo, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 5. in the Masonic Temple, 1401 I.5th St... Newport Beach. • GOLDEN WEST COLLEGE .PATRONS' CIRCLE: A swap meet w1U be hdd in the park- ine lot, Goldenwest and Edinger, between 9 a.m. and 2 p.m. Saturday. Nov 5. CRAFT MARKETPLACE: Southern California amateur and professional craftsmen wilt sell their wares at Bazaar '77, a project of the Junior Ebell Club of Fullerton. Saturday and Sunday Nov. 5 and 6 Those interested 1n parhc1pating in the event, lo be held at the Community and Recrea- tion Center at 8150 Knott Ave. in Buena Park, may call 99&-2763. IRVINE JUNIOR EBELlS: An Art in the Park festival will be sponsored by the club and the Ranch Homeowners from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m Sunday. Nov. 6, in the Ranch Park, Fountain and Roya le, Irvine. Exhibitors may make last·. minute reservations by calling Kay DeVita, 551·9747, or DoMa Brownell, 551-4305. s ALPHA xt DELTA; The.J()range County alumnae group will meet at 7~ p.m. Monday. Nov. 7, ln the Orange home of Mrs. Jerry Money. A representative from Ameriean Airlines will speak on How to Pack. Further information is available from Mrs. Mone)', 639-5474. SANTA ANA COLLEGE: Women's Week. complete wifb 1emi11ars, ranel discussions, lec-tures~ work!lhops, wil be held Nov. 7-10 on campus beginning each day at 9:15 a.m .. in the faculty study. The firstsessJon concerns jobs and careers. HOAG HOSPITAL AUXILIARY: The Hunter Chapter will hold a holiday boutique and tea at 11 a.m. Monday Nov 7, at 433 M St , Balboa. INV~'TMENT SEMINAR: Economics ()f lnveslmenl Banking 1s the title of ·a public seminar lo be held in the Catlina Room of Park Newport Apartments, Newport Beach. at 8 p.m. Monday. Nov. 7. The free meetings are held every Mooday. SENIOR CITIZEN SEMINA&: A four-day i;eminar dealing with the concerns of senior citizens "111 be hosted by lhe Lllespring Founda· tion begl.nnilli Tueaday. Nov. a. in i1s Ora.nee headquarters. Tlie seminar, Sixty Plus, is designed to help senior t'itliens make the mo.st or their later years. Reservations can be made by calling Ltfespring Foundation. 973-1011. KAPPA ALPHA THET.A: The Junior Alum· ni Oranae Coa.~t group will hold • social hour following a lecture on auto repair tnd-maln· tenance at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Noy,8, Further in· formation is available from s.ndt Zo<>lt, 6-&6--3756 or 675-8000. AMERICAN PARALEGAL ASSOCJA'l'ION: Katherine S. Fr ash et. newJy.appolnted dli'ector of the Los Angeles Trial Lawyers Association.· will speajc at the meeUnc at 6:30 p,in. Tuesday, Nov. 8. in the Colony Kitchen. Costa Mesa. Further information js available from Ann McCluskey, 151-8844. . ''Fdod For Thought· BOok F.are;• the annual fWld·raiser of the Oranee scholarship fund enabling an Orange County• Chapter. Scripps Colleae County «irl to atteAd Scripps. Last Alumnae Association, will be held· year two such s_qholnrsbips were from 6 to Q p.m. Wednesday. Nov. 9, at awarded. to deserytng &tudents. For B. Dalt-on Bookseller. 15 Fashion further inl~rmation, contact. Mrs. Island. Ronald Perkins. CATllOUC SERVICES AtJXIUARY: A tea and holiday boutique wUl be held from 1to4 p.m. Wednesday. Nov. 9, In the De Anza Bayside Villaa:e. South Clubhouse, Newport Beach. SUCCESS SEMINAR: Motivation Seminar founder Kathy Alls, will present a program for achieving success at 8 p.m. Wednesday. Nov. 9. in Ute Spa, Park Newport Apartments, Newport Beach. The meet.Ing is free and open to the public. · OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH NURSES: Eye Injuries and New Ophthalmological Surgical Procedures will be the topic for Thomas W. An- dersons, MD. at the.dinner meeting at 7 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 9, in Mr. like·~ House o PrtmeRib,santaAna . Reservatlons may be made by c:allinf (213) 583-4W Betty Shepber, 882·4410. AAVW: An Evening of Bio-f4}edback will be presented by lhe Huntington Be.acb branch tl 7 p .m. Wednesday Nov. 9, in the Tiburon Clubhouse. Further information is available by calling Mary Schulti, 9!>3·904.5. PEN WOMEN: The Fountain Valley and Orange County branches will hold their annual tea from 2 to 4 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 5, in the Fountain Valley Civic Center. Artists of Tomor- row is the theme and youngsters and their work will be featured • THE NINETY-NINES: The Orange County Group of women pilots will meet al 7 p.m. Wed- nesday, Nov. 9 at the Harbor Racquet Club. Costa Mesa. Mike Wandrikck will ·speak. The ~roup also will have a fl.y-in5iLalte Havasu City on Sunday, Nov.13, .nd ,»oon aL the Pub Restaurant on LOndon B ~- HUN'11NGTON BEACH WO tLtJB: Poel Bruce Sievercs will aive a presentation at noon Tuesday, Nov. 8, at the club hoUse. Call Mrs. Elmer Addison, 536-7118. for reservations. Brass Flower v ... $19.95 Designers and Decoratol'S Welcome - Oispfay Showroom -1-48 E. Ga!1)' Ave., S&nta AfQ Olf s. Main S(. bet~ AkOn~nd Dyer 546-6fiOO Open 10-4 ~ydwu~ November 3 thru 8 Birthday cookies and coffee will be serv0d tn all the Lanz stores on Saturday, November 5th. Robes , Mrs. Bob Yam8fujl, left tfl'ld Mts. Roy Tanikawa, prepattJ Mi "S~P.his ban. Another Je:i-k DEAR ANN ~ANDERS: My wafe and r decided that maybe you can help us. I am writing because she bas been crying and her eyes are too swollen to see. ·Last year our beautiful, intelligent daughter married a jerk. She had so many great guys running after her we can't figure out why she picked this loser. But that's over and done Ann La~den with. Now the current having to defend him problem: Her younger against herparenu. sister has · be com e Look hard and try to romantically involved find somethbig about the with the 1d1ot 's brother. young maa t.o admire. He may be an even big-Then -4,well on H. ger jerk. At least the You'll be amazed at the other one had four years change in her altitude of college. This clown when you change yours. tiuit after one year and 1s D E A R A N N still frying to ''find LANDERS: There was a himself." big discussion at our One character out of house last night about that family is enough. drunken behavior -also Whal can we do to dis· a lot of divided opinion. courage our second Will you please check daughl'er from making with the authorities and this awful mistake? -give me the straight PITTSBURGH dope? ' DEAR Pins: If you When people have had 'Want to make sure both too much to drank do l dau1bten have the same their true feelings come in·laws. just coatfnoe to out? Or. do they say and )mock tbe kJcL Nothing , do things that are un- \ 1 :makes a fellow qu.lte so characteristic of the real a Ura dive to a girl as person? My uncle, for example, . ii a rather reserved man ·who usually keeps lo himself. When he has had one too many <like a third martini > he becomes very talkat1 ve and even affectionate. (Actually, he is much more likable when he's loaded.> My aunt, on the other band, h a love ly, Pleasant, r efined lady when she's sober, but when she drinks !he becomes belligerent . nasty and downright mean. What is the story on such behavior, Ann? LIKE TO KNOW DEAR LIKE: Alcohol breaks down the inhlbi· tlon5. When the booze goes to work the ••censoring agent" takes a vacation. Inebriated people say what is truly OD their minds. Burled resent· ment1 aorface. The langa~ Is unguarded. The behavior you see Is the real penon. t Doro.scope: J THURSDAY, NOV. I By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES <March 21-April 19); Be !lexiblt, willing to laugh at self. . TAURUS (Apr1l 20-May 20}: Look ahead - turn _aroWld, if necessary, to correct safety hazard. GEMINI (May 21-Jufle 20>: Your ldeH work. Views a.re vindicated. CANCER (June 21 . .July 22): Accent on work. money, purchases, budget.. collection of needed data. LEO <July 23-Aug. 22>: Spollieht on publici· ty. beliefs, convictions, relationship that is in· volved. ·VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Mystery, in· tngue, getting down to business despite distrac- tions. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 32)_: Emphasis on friends who argue. • .... SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21>: Get to heart of matters. Be specific. · 1 SAGl1TARIUS (Nov. 22·Dec. 21): Be aware of distance, perception, meanings, long·range tf· recta. -. • CAPBICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19>: You mi1ht be deliberat~ly flirting with danger. AQUARIUS <Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Refuse to be manipulated. Some relatives seem to feel you should be maneuvered. PISCES <Feb. 19-March 20>: Added' com· pensation for employment, task, assignment. . . . !Reasons Not t~· Pass a Camper Everyone has fears. , Fears of heights, fear of death, fear of falling, fear of flying (not to be confused with air travel). I haven't told anyone about this, but my greatest fear is passing a camper oo the highway. The family doesn't even suspect this. Oh, they 80t a little SUS• picious when I followed a n A 1 r s t r e a m. E,...a B091tieek caravan all the way to going uphill is 35 mph? Tamea once without And 65 mph in a passing passing (we were headed zone going downhill? at scenic views? Never get gas? And have bionic kidneys? l almost passed a camper once. I bad been readina the back of their car for several miles and knew them pretty well. Their names were Karl and Rita from Iowa, and they had been to the follf western l)rovlnoe& of Canada, the Grand Can- yon, Williamsburg, Crater Lake and Knott's Berry Farm. They were anti aun control, wanted us to keep the Panarqa Canal, bonk if we loved Jesus, and had voted down the school levy. I bad followed them so Jong, at one point, I thought I saw Smokey the Bear's lips move. • ''Why don't you trY passing tbem?0 suggest· ed my hush~ eentl¥. "Are you saying I've been going too slow?" "With luck, we'll make to Ft. Lauderdale at the . Dld you know that time), but no one said many campers have. anything. .bumper stickers proudly 'll"'"l'!'l'!'~~~'i":!"ll~"""!'!:!'!'!!!!'.17"~~'"!""'~~~ Because I have spent proclaiming, "Campers most of my time lookina Are the Most Honest up the exhaust of camp-People in the World" and ~l'.1. I have become have their gas tank CBJ>! quite an authority on chained to the rir? And them. To begin with, did a dog inside with eight· you know that the inch teeth? aYeraee speed of a Did you know that c· mper on a Yf!llow llae cpm'pert never pull over ten mUes today.•• My bands gripped the wheel as 1 eased out to pass their camper which was attached to a trailer carryloe two motor bikes .•. which was at- tached to a small car be- ing towed. • . whic;h was attached to a boat which was belnt pwled by their stat.loo waion. What tbe hee~. What was m~ hllJ'l'1? We were ol\ly a few days from our destination. HAM ~GOOd ••• ltWll . ..._...YCMtMlt1.._• SPECIAL DISCOUNT WITH THIS AD ~DIES~ CLOTHING DESIGNERS SAMPt;ES • '6· 16 P ICED BELOW WHOLESALE MON.~1: I 0·5 • SAT. I 0-3 CACTUS CO. QH,E DAY ONLY! D~~EIER RING THURSDAY,NOV.3 ~ 10 A.M. to·s P.M. ~ f?USt9m ord~r ~ <91 . gemstone ring caravan! Cutlom order coltedlon ~ d11pl1y 1t Ot• foftowlngabn: Let our loglst asalat you fn ordering a hlgt-iuaUty stone .tt 1'41< gold ~ned and flt Just tot you. The Mleotle>f' of. ·•199 lnclucl• many delfOn« jrgtilature ptecee. Each ~m has been carefully choeen for quality 8fld .~color. Gemetonea lnclUded are tourmaline. aq11eJN1rlne. topu. ' hi~ &f'd morel Ulde9' ..n•i-.tromcJaJntr• fJ ngs •e lque lnch.ldlng l'f9W mbllYe look.a. DtllgM range front hdttl~l to oontemporary. The perfect gift tor now or the hotidtl18o Don't ml• m• chance to HY9 • big 20% on 04ll regular atoc Of diamonds. You'll find •tYln tout ev..-y late Ind pric.s to tit~ budget. All of the fin• qalality ~·w come to expect from .a.n~ Op"n daily 9 to 9 Sunday JU to 7 o 1;alei to deole lack .,.in! ... EJ ...... Sale! Stell .. lobster ••• to tellpt tbe wt tsaimtie-satisfy tbe .m pricU1 .W, • 11at e ..._...., n.r _., spKt1C1111r ..-daJ • . nentf Fi let Mignon ... the epitome ot dining delight! Tenderloin of U.S.D.A. Choice bee!, naturally aged, carefully trimmed! An epic:arean feast to be remt·rnb~rcd! Doubly so when it's served in tandem with magnificently meaty Cteah Pacific Loti.ter ••• flavor and tendem• that'a IO rt!wnrcling. Treat. yourself -and Uiom -to a gourmet feast this weekl ~"I •.• l .. l~ k) Beef Roast:•. s1'! ~ Honeless round cut U.S.D.A. Choice CHUCK STEAK 69! Center cut U.S.D.A. Choice beef ttf L~~~~s ~!~.!. -~~9i mo Bone Roast . . 99~ • ::huck cut l I S D A. Choice beef Bratwursta...s s1 3! Ground Beef •.. ~12! . - Ground aeeurn: s1°! Lean -does n<>t exceed 22~; fat Beef Roast :S s1 s! 1 Chuck rut i;houlder clod -Choice! . Garden Crahl ••• all en.en· •• , eo tasty, tram tender at.alb to dellcate florets CHICKEN 49( LIVERS • From fine fryers! (5 • ht& ••• US) Shopper Stoppers eri Tow els ....... : .... 4·9c ~ey're tough • they're atrong • and abeorbent! Colors or UIOrted printa! (SC lff) ~.._.· I J • 39c ~ 1 oma o · u1ce ....... . ~ Del.Monte .•• for the fttsh-fro~-the-vine flavor that'a ao ~t 32 oz Preserves STRAWBERRY ~ •• :.79~ Smucker's ••• each 18 ounce jar generoualy filled with berries anCI gOodnellt . . iloodles o.cma.1 • • • 49c Noodles ........ 2oc Fine, Medium, Wide or Dutch• 12 oz. ~en Pride -cbOlce ()( navon ·3 oz ·y.!~._ ,~ .. -::J~c ~~~J'!'_·a !!: ·Romaine ··25c Lethice .. G~ u.h..Wp, large bunch SlOUffER'S9ac LASAGNE Maio couree plMIUl8 101.\ oz pkg com ............ ggc Frobi Green GW:it'a fteldlt pq d 4 · Vegetables••• 59c Birdee)'•'• taaty c:ou.binatioaa! 10 OI Lemon Juice ••• 49c Minute Mitd -pure Juice -1" °' P.ERSIMMONS 39! THEY'RE ALL HERE AT OUR REGULAR EXAMPLE: ~ .. MEW '77 FORD MAVERICK 4 DOOi SIDAM- FACTORY AIR COHDITIOHIMG C8rpeting, lockable glove box, bright wheelhp moldings. 302 CID V-8 engine, vinyl seat trim. eeled-ah1ft curlse-o-metic, wsw radial tires, POwer steering, pcwer front disc brakes. front and rear bUmper Quards. AM radio. tinted glass-complete. du.ill •Port mirrors Ser. 1167216 Stk. #1301 ,~i ''i f.cfOIY ,'A.tac~ . Selectshlft 1cr~ae-o-'mat1c, POwer front dlep bra.I<-., power steering, front 9umper g11arqs, 1 blrght rocker P11nel moldings, ~ deluxe steering wheel. POwer ventilation avst.em.· .-oo CID V-8 engine, wiN'"ratllaJ "tlr ... rear bumper g\,lluda. 4ual rear seat speakers. AM radiO. tint9d glass-co~lete. wheel covers. Ser. #181349 Stk. #1098 106.9" Wheel6ase. power f(oOt dl'sc btakes, bright front bull'll8r. 4 speed tran~m13Sion. 1400 POJJnd capacity, wsw tires. Ser fTR32~ Stlc #T1681 '72 FORD PIMTO 2 Dll S9UIRE WAGON . Gas Savef. Lie. 945EGB Stk. t188A S47.15 a V-8, auto. trans , factory air cond1tlonen month for 30 months Cash pnoe 1ncluchng tax POW&r ateenng, PoW•r brakes. l'lld10. heat• & hctnse S1328. Deferred pnoe S1614.50tintedglass.Li~l'481FYWPt3t19C' J lnct. tax. lie. and all carrying ctwoes, on $ '' · approved credit. Annual percentege rate 15 18.33% 5200 .DOW•· $47.15 ,_ ..... PUBUC NOTICE • 1 • PUBUC NOTICB ..... -..._ ________ _ • "'" "CTITIOUS•uso••ll • •a•o ICAMllSTATaMaNT 1 1,,. fotlowlng person Is dll-e llllnl· k''~'-' • U 'IEMl..I.. AUTO OIETAll .. IHG, PlJBUC NotJCE PVBUC NOTICE ,.c:TITIOUIBUIOtatl PtAMa ITAHMaHT PUBUC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUI 8\llllCHS NAMllSTATIEMaHT TM fouewl"I perM>ft Is Clolno ......_ . ., VHIVEASAL. OAAPl:RV, V l 7 S . ..as-n Croddy W.,., Uftll •D, s.nte A.rt•, CA _..;._ _______ -f t21IM PUBLIC NOTICE Nnlor Dllllel Prt«o, JOS7 L.Dre<1 Lii., C.C. #Mse; CA ni,a ---,tcT-1-TtOUS--au_Sl_N_E_IS __ -t ..:,.~-• I> ~eel WY •n ...... o.,.,,... Tllls ...,,..,.. "'" "*' '#ltll 1111 COllll tY Oer1t et Or eflfl Coone, on CK1o«1er 1, ttn. • iru. PlllllllMd 0r.,.. Goist Delly Puoe 0ct.12. 1',».t.ov.?, "" ~n P.UBUCNOTICE This newspapel' wlll not knowingly accept any adverti&ln& for real est.ate which ls in vl~a· U.onofthe law. Housetfof>Sale ••••••••••••••••••••••• Gitaerd 1002 ....................... FANTASnc c;:J Walker & lee Real Estate rJn :'{IG(l. fi.l\IL[Y f. i\~~U(IAlt:S CAMI<> SHOl!S ~ Walker & Lee · RealEState - TH£ REAL _!S!AT~~ 18015 MclgRola St. FowltaUt v.., f63·Hl I TERMS: . m deposit on day of sale, balance upon delivery of deed and marketable t1Ue. Buyer will be required to attll\le Cblanclni• prtor'to jhe sale, Sales are 1ub,lect &o ooafirma- tlon ol .se!Jer. B .E. taxes estimated • M* per un1t. M~OltT CREST Lowest pri«d 3 bedrm, dining Tm, in~ ba Coni1o. Coor9inated carpets. drupes & wallpapers. Fireplace. Tiny ocdn view! Like new, $119,500. I PETE BARRETT -Rfil:.TY- tHI llTTER UFI ,..... can be re~ched when you find this <beam house in Newport Beach's fin~t neighborhood. Imagine seeing Catalina from your liv· ing room, bedroom, kitchen artd being awakened in the morning by the sound of the breakers. $385,000. c• 640-6161 EXTRA GUEST aOOM -A "plus" with detached double gar~e ana separate guest room. Lovely ,3 bedrm home shows "I Care" thruout. Young couple moving and must sell. ~ust $67,500. Calljoday and see at S4M141 Serving Costa M\?sa·lrvinc Huntington Beach-Newport Beach Golfers Dream Mes.a Verde'.$ most SPECTACULAR home. S BR, 4 ba, FR. DR, t;R, ml,650. Great C~lly home. 4 Bedrms. 2 baths, con· verted' iarage. larie yard. Go VA, Conven- tional or 107o down. .. ~ _.. ,,• . . ... ~alh1lutr!( • W/lelc,H IH Al H TAtl l \ -. WOODBRtDGE CROsmNG The VU1a1e of Wood· bridce. 2 • 3 bedrooms. N """-.. 2 B 2''-Ba ---------1 From $96,990 to S12S,9IO. ew ~08• r, ... · $7 500 DOW... Enter the Village on 2 frplc's, ceramic tale • n kitchens & bath. Pool & No credit needed, owner Warner Ave, tum rt•ht ------1 A beautiful ,Deerfield By Ow ..... ER Park home 1eaturlf\I 3 "' Bedrooms, family room, Charming, qwet 2Br, 1¥l dining room, and blghly ba home wifrplc, patio, upgraded lhrou&boul. g1ar. pool & trees. Ha m p r o f e s s i o n a J l Y to beach. $58,000. Open 1 d d A k houst> 12 5, Sat1Sun. an scape · 5 ing 2605·A Del Way or cal $1l7•990• 898 2470 for appl __ _, ____ .. ,_,!110 Unbelievable luy D.a ~ofnt 1026 Grab this one quick! ••••••i•••••••••••••••• Newly listed 3 bedrm, CoUMTRY STYLE formal dining, huge home 1Vilh whitewater family room, delux view Spacious2Br.Besl bu11t-ins, near all ~treet in Dana Pl. Pool & schools, shops, freeways. Jaruzzi. Sl35.000. Open RV_& boat parking, ever- hou.se Sunday at 3·1022 ything, call loday, BKR, Chula. Vi.ate. '493-9577 &12 8llSll ~~.!~! ... !~.~~ TARIB1 TlburoK. Rare Malibu. 2 "#I In Callfornla" br. fotmal dining, fam Yo~ rm. patio. Xlnt loc ·~ .. ~..,.on LARGEST HOME In Deerfield. Thls home features 2600 sq. n. of llv- 1 n g area with ' bedrooms, formal dlnlni room and Is Ideally locat· ed just 3 doors from the community pool and greenbelt. Priced under m11rket at $128,500. 7BEDROOMS 41ATHS Fabulous one of a kind Columbia Plan ln the College Park area. Ideal 5.56·6791 ncwbcMr ••••••••••••••••••••••• for the professional i--------.. person with large family. 1042 Home h as been ~on hach I 04 *JUST LISTED customized to Include ••••••f••••••••••••••• Immaculate 4 Bdrm, 2'h over 30 additional up- ba home. Large yard, grades. Call tor addl· full xlnt location just steps to Uonal information. Ask· Ocean Breeze ~t.~~ club & marina. mg $153.soo. Keep ~ool thruout the PURCELL REALTY summer. 1.4 Mile to the Sunset Beach 846-2848 beach. Ceramic tile in~~~~~~~~~ kiteben and bath, big 3 Don't give up the ship! bedrm nooc plan. Huge "List" it in classified. famlly room, formal din· Ship to shore results! mg. RV parklnc. $95,500, 642-5678. BKR, 842·2.Sal -------- hWlc:Motlc:e Take advantage of the new l(JfA gov't insured loan prop-am wltb loans UP to $60,000. 8~% Int. & LOWtR down pay- ment$. (Only $1950. down s . ~ RANCH REAL TY 551-ZOOO WOODllUDGE Creekside Willows, 4 bdrms .• 3 baths, cul de1 _____ ..;.;_ __ -i sac street. Air-cond. SlOS,000. Owner I Agent 833-1768 . By OWNER l mmac Univ Prk Twnbouse. 48r, 2~ ba, 2 frplc, cntrl A/C. Lo assoc dues. 2 fam ft adult pools w/jac. Tennill crll, LARGE 4 bdrm., family parks, close to schls & home. El :Toro, close to stores. Immed occup. schools le abopping. Priced to sell fast at $82,000. Ph&;n-0139 Also 2br den 6: 2ba townho°'e with TOP vtew. New offering - , --~---HERITAGE • . RLALTOR~ i; f lf:tf: <; • E rJLSON red hill ~ . 55:-·7500 r ••••••••••••••••••••••• ON WATER CHARMING 2 Story, 4 Bdrm home on Rest • Bay{ront location. Yrly le<e.e. $1400/mo. SALISBURY REALTY Calli~~ COf'OftCI dtl Mor 3 I 22 ·················••>••• BEST CHINA COVE LOCATION. Jo·abuloub JASMINE CREEK ChaMer View and beach 2 Br, den, 2 Ba, dll( out front. Decorator's 2 cpts;drps. Bltns Incl story, 4 Bdrm home. micr? wave. Pvt, view $850/mo winter lease. I~ ~ blk fr POOL ~ Waterfront Homes. T~NNIS CRTS. $875. 631-1400 'SSS-~39 , _ __,...__~~~~~---1 do, new 3 Br 2~ii Ba, ~'!"'II ; I l HACH RENTALS WltlTEB. Oc••ntrohl Lwcory 3 Br: 2 ba hie $1400 Spad<>Us Bayview lBr, 2ba, 1lpe 4 $450 West Newport Comfort 28r, 1 ba S3SO/mo FROM$265 UP .. 2511 W. s.flow1r a Br 2 Ba, S32S mo. New decor, no pets. 2 kich OK. ion Valenct.. ~85 7 days, 10 lo S 2 Br apt & 3 br coltafe, _.# __ SorTY_...._. ao--"pe_ta_ . ...___, pool. Jacu~zt. 3 BR, nu pnt, cpts, dn-645·2498 $300. 771Sbalimar _. 642·5208 or 646·3442 2L f J~ • :nve ::.;D-Gf ~'~ ~ . ·-~ ... There's $1mlllion In recreation : Tennis, ~wh1'rninc. bilhar~ 2 health clubs, free Sonf2•y brunch, part1e1; and l\1UCH MORE! , Plus beautiful slntle5, 1&2 bedrooms furnished or unfurnished. Sott~. adults only, no pets. '"1i! 1. • , finest in country club hv· 1• J ing at a price you can af· : "1' ford. Roommate i;ervice In •I available. ~ • Oakwood "'"" f J • • Garden Apartments .~•t· tiin•: Me..,..tlMcW~ J bn 880Jrv1ne(atl7thl i;,,hi OOOMO .1:1 .... Oh'> r· Ne..,... IMcJVs..tfli 1700 16th St <Dover at l§th). 642 8170 lootf· ~T.~~~~~~~~~ <1t:.fr Rooms 4000 .,.,,,,, .-·t··\ ". otii•ub '"''', "'11 •.1111: ""'.#1111 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WESTCLIFF SLOG. llEWPUHl ~(,,CH ' U' ''' • 1#,1, I II, •••• •""' ··~ ... Call Mr.How trd 645· 6101 scRAM-1.ETS ANSWIRS · a.tify ..Jfwiae I:"" Phune -Cl"ayon - • l..IC'D ~M.ETOLOGlS ·-''• . ... ... lor appt. 960-4135 • Ctirpewt11 •••••••••••••••••••••• C..,..Senke ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jfor expert carpet ln- atallaUon at low cost.s. Free Est.s. CaU9'75·2875 General OHice SECRETARY Interesting poi. in credit dept. Reefs typlnc ss+ wpm. Sh helpful or die taphone. r:umber 3p· tltude Is a must. .\bihty to work on your own. New oHices in Costa Mesa Apply, Nation al Systems Corp, '4361 Birch St. N .a. <Ne ar OC Airport> E.O.E. General office Lite typ. ing " bookkpg. Call 67S·l636for lntervlew. SHOP FOR YOU? LOVE TO CALL 5'2-2426 , ' 1---------1·..,----------· ················•····· Mlt.Ct41H1ST MAINTENANCE TOP PAY THE CITY Of Growini Costa Mesa mfc co. is lookina for a skilled HUNTINflJQN B£ACH all-around maChinlst.1------1 a Must have rnlnlmum s '•or-• & T~ At I Jw.tf• yrs exper. on setup & Announces Openh1111For Tt;e Poai\Jona ot: !ihort run punch press, G«OU.-S 01f8 ~MEI chucker, mill, lathe. SS• Pfll' W-.. Company paid benefits &. h0Uday1. E.O.E. Call MAIMQHAMCI SDVICIS TUI.a &tUOeO. SllO P• .._. ·--.J-M~A=-J-D-_E_x_pe_r_on_ly-. -:-R-ef-'s CUSTOOIAL SHVICIS TIAIHll req'd. P/T. Xlnt salary. SSIO , .. .._-. ~ply to ad 1f959, Daily These are CETA funded J>01titl0Qa & require Pilot P.O. Box 1560, Huntington Bead) residency & 15 we41ks pnor Ca.ta Mesa, Ca. 112628. uoemoloyment. A•pltcaUooa period closet Nov· ember 71..b, im. Certilacahon (I( ell1ibUlty must •MAIDS• be completed at the State of Caldorn1a Emptoy. The Inn at Laauna ment l>evelopment Department, 9738 Garden 211 N. Cst Hwy. Laguna Grove Blvd, Garden Grove, Calif. MA I I) s W A NT E D Sl.00 PH HOUR or more paid for many jobs uiuna..Buc.b...(Wl QC'. oi Ume.'494·~ Quick PayRalffs Advancement PotenUat Variety cl Activities Company BeneOls PART TIME EVENINGS ***** lfflllW.S.1 HEWtY LICENSED . .. , ~ • ~ I A.anolmc a.ICTllCIAM-Clr4 sao11 r .. .._. a..Meir.711 MAIMTIMAMCI su"°n sa,, .. .._.. a... ......... 1lll!l>t-ure CETA funded poljtiOI'\$ & reqw,. Huntir11ton BC'ach residency & 30 dl>15 prior Un· employment. Apphcalloos will be accepted at the i:mplO)'Cllenl ~ Trlllning Caller. l.18 Alain St, HUllUl\llon Beach. Apply daily before JPM. UlMALA YAN Kl'tTENS S~CRETARY START MOW TRAVEL AGIHT BritLMySpal\lel HERCULON ••• Sofa & MtYe .... • IOTH PllCIS S l tt. I PC P&.A Y PIN S7H.ltt-$1 ISO l U•lng ltm Tbl1 $99. Cwtft Furniture 18iSHarbor Blvd C.M. 645·&1Sl LUGGAGE TAGS from your business card Send one card tor eac lag plus one 11pare. W '\e"Wfl Ctr investment Local business mun of Salespeople, no exp PoodleMlx /Lrm <Jood gen ofe buck-fers opportunity for good needed Jr qual'd. we wlll Yellow Labradors --------• relurn permanenll ~rouf1111. Call Eileen, earruni:s. You pick the i.r.in for perm. pos. Call YorkshireTerricrs tH~l23. hours. For a ppt. call ror Interview. 7ll·M4l Pit Bull Terriers .t92·52!l6btwn 12 2PM. • PARICB'SPm Secretary for Design & TYPIST part·time 10 to 3 NEWPORT BEACH Super remo4ellna Sale t Frig, stove, wshr/dryr, sofas, tbJs._,chrs & ac- cess. 675-:WlZ an 5PM Graphlci co. Must have STENOGRAPHER dally. Call 645-6300 a9'1 64~0090 ~uperior sec. :.kills & Jlea\'y d1ctaphone cxper forGmn)' 8' Red Spani:.h Couch. ~ub:.taDtial exp. 10 prof. {;ood bpelling & punctua. Red vclvel headboard & onviN>ftment. Jrv. area t1on . Mrs. Baker. UPHOLSl!RiR Gd lov'g htn for blk M bpread, dbl~ .. r: Dix 111 556-3937 8339550 Exper'd for furniture Cocker Span pup 1l mo wheelchair. 774·4141 dyi;, -------i manuC. 1 Yr min cxper. A1'C. shot.:;. JlOOioCr 868·921!eviwknds .SE:CRETARY Full or 'TUOENT !or lite main Pay bas ed on exper !»2-4570. 752-1055 Pi tlme \fust be able to tcnam·c & cll'an up. 20 to 754-0461. -----1Uving Room Set, Custom tril\cl. Call 3.12 9977 an llrs p1wk. 'rice's Ren----SCOTI'TERRIERS Gold sect'l sofa. table~ IPM ult ror Mike. tals, 193() Newport Blvd, Welder Fabricator. G?Od AKC. shots, 6·12·3'706 or lamps & much more. ------C \l position for exp'd rob i>46-Ut00 $UOO.Call636·12.at. SECRETdAR; ~fc. recpt. . . l-hop foreman. Mu!it ENGLISH BULLDOG WHITE Bdrm: set, like wante . I /lime: Gd Swf-$hlft Supv. know heliarc & uA- phone personality & Growl~gCosta Mesa Co derstand stainless & puppies·AKC·RE:G . & new, block & chrome ;,omc dcncal exp. nee. , lhl 1 b 11 b . ·• aluminum Knowledge of BrilUih Imported trirrt. Chrome " glass Plscall aft tiPM 4!19-4621 '° 11 t!t c 8 usmesi. b l. h I r 1 XI 1·737-8239 cocktail tbl, cstm made. ---------• needs dependable person oa ing e P u · nl Must no. Leroy Nelman SECRETARY to .supervise light mfg ~4° ~5~J~ g c 0 n d · Nd to find good hme. for painting, collectors item. P •lime, exper'd Typing, :.h1rt from 4P M lal _ our lovable fom, 2 yr old AP.546·94" anytime phones, hte bkkpng. Nice l2.JOAM, Mech & supv YARD MAN rent a I Bas!lcl. Ml 5, 612·6-155 c T <''<per needed. Starts l h · · . r 2 --r-Must sa~ce 8 mos old o cs near airport o S500 $4 .oo hr' ca I I Mr ~o er '!51 opehnma:.. or I Male & female Malamute ~ntemporary sectional mo. l714 > ~9·929-1 m e n " e c a n 1 c a $7 · Wachtel,6425254 knowl~ae helpful Neat puppies Sea. Beautiful. Off white---------• witch board Opr. Start h 11 n d writ an & · n e c 497·3272 hounds toolh clrs. Cost SECRETARY DocumenlJlion. Newport Ctr 1m eslmt•nl firm. Xlnt skdls req'd. p1 timt> Will train Wkdays off. Will train PUPPIES . :l~, ::11 for S250~1Al:o superi~r Ansv.enn~ 19:.lNewportBlvd,Co~la AKCGoldenRelrie\ers fe ';._ ortifru1gsbed • e • " M • 979 1710 o r. u.:au u room • Ca II 640-0123 ~rv1re. 250 E. 17th St. ~ csa. · set: dresser, men's bi· Ste l. C.M. (Up$lairsl Black Lab Puppies, s wks. boy &. matchin1 Alt.e ---- S!CRETARY General s upervision from National Sales Mgr • .,.ust ha\e xlnt typ. ing, ~horlhand ab1hhes. ltt.ler composing & .:ood phone persona lily. .\pply HOBIE CAT Corp. 2026 McGaw, lrv1ne SECURITY OFFICERS f\IU, Part· Time Prefer over age 50. Re.:.ponslbllc. dependa- hle people only need a p- JJly. .TAILOR $30. s t ands. M a k e of r . Mff'chancllse Call sis.4914 642--0953 wknds, 546·5243 ~hare expenses, keep ••••••••••••••••••••••• wkdy:; ttulonng prof1ta. NG tn· Afttlquts 80q5 Yorkshire Terner Pups ------. ---- H-slment. Robert's Tux ••••••••••••• •••••••••• Chornplon blood lines Sofa & occ.as1onal chr.Lrg Shop. Corona del Mar frame mirror. misc. See 6-IO-tl22an12 noon. MUSIC IOXES 530 564_9 ______ , _________ , TEACHER/ Assistant Ca,OC«S Jrvine. 18 yrs or over. CallSS2·7"194 EACHER·Pre-Schooh ~rt. Greirper. lpm·5pm ~.60 hr. 640 8820. Tef~Safes Want to make money? 1---------i-'---------1 Can you bell on the Free puppy, ·s mos old. phone? Tep Sin our busi-We sell !or JOU on consign-Springer Spaniel. Hospitals, Plants. nay. Home OWMn .Assoc:., i--~~------- Antiq"81, Collec· 6_~ Gate Control No weapons r~q'd. Observe & report only. Strictly business tPlease No "Play Cop" people apply) Palrol positionifopen also. lNTERNATlONAL CITY SECURITY 103-17 LOS ALAMITOS BLVD l.OS Al..AMITOS IN THE BUSlN~PARK ((){fices al th<' flagpole) ('114) 8Zi ,')2() (213) 430-7548 •SKy I AcMdn AHt San Pedro $19,200 Per Year Employen Pay All Fees Liz Reinders Agency 4020 Birch St., Ste 104 Newport Beach 833-tUIO Call for Appt/F.Atab •ss TELEPHONE SALES 10-4 ON THAT SALES JOB GOOD BUDDY! t•.--------1Redwood Burl table ESTATE SALE NOY 3""4°$. SANTAANA 1018 W. lat.h Sl S.A Betw•eu 1~!wntr ttl01Vel' Moving Sate· chairs '3 a: up. Wood " metal desk, drafting tattle &c •rm. stora&e cabinets, pana bins, sci.Iba tann, 10lt1---------1 I_ \ l .t---....,,. ............ __. __ , 'la ,.,...,U .... Q . ~\014\l•O .., Blaupunlct 8 track ster w /4 apkrs, Jensen 1'rlexels. Mich tires 100+. whJs. Silver. lo mi. Xlnt OOl¥f, Mf·7n7 Auto Center .. We youruaedcarl • JOE MACPHERSON CHEVROl,U 21 Auto Center Drive IRVINE . 768-7222 BARWICI< DATSUN ""·•II I I 1.111 ( ',q1,,t I ..... f 831·1375 4'/J.)375 ~hporled '73 ~"10Z Xlnt cond . • !-•••••••••••••••••••••• Am1Fm, a ar, mai:s. lto o\udl • 9707 spd Jf. ••• •••• •• •• •• • • • • • • • • • • s.aooo S48 0291 ,. ~NAl!Mll•tt i-1 Audi lOOLS, sunroof. m, 280Z ~tags, radiak. » steno. all'LXIM-<:ondi· AMO'M , 10.000 ma.* taon. $2&'JO flS-~71 SuPfr Clean! ~o 2360 dy. • 75 FOX 2 dr, auto, G4CHOS9e\' : A~!/FM, A/C, Lo ma., '71 2·IOZ Air, 1\ \l.f'~l it- mtntcond. '4000. 549-SO:ll sten"<>, radaab, nu eng. * lMW 9712 $3400. ·193 1213 -*--- COMEIN&SEE THEALL NEW 6lOCSI NOW!!! COMPUTE IOOTSHOP MOWOPEH SAODLEIACIC VALLEY IMPORTS ll 1·20~ 495-4949 Tit. '78s Are Here All models & colors. lmm.dlote O.elvery Today! "emah\iftg 19 77 Han Got To Go! COSTA MESA DATSUN ... .. .. .. ... ... ... ... 2MS HARBOR BLVD ,.. 540.6410 540-0% I l ·------~~__.;:::;= CREVIER 1976 Datsun 280Z·Air -===,,,-,=====-1 cond., wire wheels, & I ST It .. OAOWAV SANTA AMA 838'3171 Tlflf W.ATt OllMNO llACIOHl •USEDIMW's• '71530l 4apd ~EU '71320laS/R l17RSK '762ilOiupdS/R 401POP '76 3.0s14 sp Si lt 572PQ M '74 Bavari• auto 780M VG CtoMd 0. Suftday1 f<>RAMGE COUNTY'S OLDEST !ltereo tape plus extras! I.Jke new! Pr1. ply. Best • Offer Mu~t Sell! Call ·1{ 759·0944 days; 830 4911 ~mng,, & '>H'ckrnds. '76 280Z, 4 spd w/mag whls. A C, ,\:\li f'M, lo mi. S649S, moving . 64.S-SU4 . NEWPORT DATSUN '77 Clearance $50 Ov« Invoice on remaining B210s, FlOs & {10s in stock! 888 ®VE STREET (Near MacArthur And Jamboree> ... -------1 : 1iiiii • .it .it .. • .. • 1962 220S E b coupe, new It tlU!i~llll: eng, trans. clulcb & * · paint. S7SOO. AND 66-= www ' 2SOSE sedan, sunroof, IEFOllEYOU new paint, Full pwr. SELL YOUR ::;::n :v!:i~5k2n~s d ys • .,_ T9Y9TA,d, 11 .,_ us .or a top o ar 9742 estimate! MAltqUIS TOY OT A MISSION VIEJO AUTO CENTER 1425 131-2810495-IZIO • '72Toyota Corona II ark II 1915 DATSUN Station Wagon. 9.ooo 1·210 miles on rebuilt engine. .c speed transmission, air Best offer. 8'48-9498 aft. condlt1on1nc, AM/FM _7_P_M'"",_M_o_n-_Fri_. ____ 1 stereo with tape, low milet. (619NIK>. $2799 • T........ 9767 •........••. , .....•.••• ·1974 DATSUN '74 Spillil'e, $2700. Call ~vo after 6pm, 962-5865. WOCJ" 9770 ....................... '70 Csd CdV, A·l cond. 1 Ownrcar. Nu tires: brks, alr ahocks, ball joints. '2:500. 548--00-10 l AIJ remaining •77 Plymouths must go! Brand New •77 Furies, Volare 2 doors and 4 doo.rs, wagons, Voyagers, every one rolling out now at only ' OYER FACTORY INVOICE MO GUISS WOIK, AU. INVOICES ARE OH THE WINDOWS! DON'T MISS THIS GRAND SALES EVENT! • . CHECK OUT THESE FINE USED CAR 8UY.S, ALONG WITH M~MY, M~NY MORE ......... . 171 CHEVY MONTE CAJU.O V-8, automatic. illr conditioning, pOWer &leering, power brakes, radio, heater. whitewall trres. vinyl roof, tilt Wheel. (045FZM) MW:der Probea Search ¥ields Drug-tied Records ·~- ByJOANNEREYNOLDS °' 111e o.i1y l'IMCluH Newport Beach police found narcotics paraphernalia andlista qf names lhey allege are buyers and sellers of narcotics at the home used by murder conspiracy S\llll>ect Alexander Kulik, court records indicate today. Tbe aearch warrant affidavit j was fiJed by investigators at Qrange County· Superior Court after they searched the home where Kulik was staying on Lin· da Isle. Without Racing In the affidavit. omcers allege they found : -R.ecordt of alle•ed heroin said in addition to lists of what police assert are names of narcotics bu)'ers snd sellers. -A bank ..Up tn Kulik 's name for a $355,000 deposit to an un- spec ICied bank. -A mlcrolUmed business rec· ord. -A list of names, addre:sses and telephone numbers of resl· dents ot several European COW\· tries. -A lllekel·plated revolver. Kulik la lhe fifth penon. ac- cused ot murder conspiracy in the shooting death of Sttl>ben John Bovan of Fowftain Valle)'. He was arrat1ned on tbose c barges today in munklpal cOUrt. municipal court. Kulik, who bas t>een In custocb' since Oct. 22, was orl1lnally jailed on suspicion of possession or Marly puTe hero\n valued at more than $1 million. He was ar- rested on a Mission Viejo parking ~l. . He was to have been freed from Orange County Jall Monday after posting a $500,000 bond. Jtowever. Newpc>rt Beach de· tectives who haTe been in- vestieaUng the OCt. 2! murder ol Bovan had Kulik re-arrested on the mW"der con.splr•CY charges. Abo held in the case are Debra Ann Addison, 24, of 19822 !rookhurat St., Buntin1ton 8eacb; JerQ n Fi ,-l. Of . t y . et· '.'S""l:'M&~a.·..,..~ unUnitoa ·:.iu1W11~.&1~~ as. Ute CA mu.tder Innocent ro Mrii-der Rap "" ANITA BRYANT WITH HUSBAND 800GREl!N Fighting Siege of Mllftant HomoHxqaf• .Anita, ASsailed 'So Tiwy Kill Me,, s0 :~?.' . . ,,. . NEW YORK (AP) __: Attlta Bryant said ~ay that militant homosexuala have practically eotten ber b .. ekllated on TV, forced her to live under ruard end otherwise d!i~tect.bedlfe. -. "I'm not afraid," she said in an interviewWtlh"Tti• Atioeiai· ed Press. •'So they kill me. So what?" . .. ... . WHEN SHE WAS 1'.0LO THAT hOmose~u\l demonatratora were headin~ for NBC, where ish.e \,!ped twe~lntervlewa, her husband.declared as they hUrried!Y dwrted fortb• aQrport: "Why don't they kUJ J.!S,and getitoverwith?'' r ... "· , She said In the interview that *' was Jltd titat a~ c,m. paigned in Florida against a"Dade~y-ordtnanc at~\c_i have permitl~ known homosetuats to teacb in ~ ~a pr iv ate schodls. • · . · ,. ' .. 1 "If I had to do it all over again, 1·would, .. Ml.Ss Bryant said, adding that she would continue her fight against homosexuals. ALTHOUGH SHE DECUN~D TO discuss security precau- tions in detail, Miss Byrant, who w.1., travetine with a Heurity guard, said her family doesn't dare open its mall few Cear or bombs. _ . . .., • "There's practically a state or sie,ie in thb lntildinl he"' to- day,·' Bob Green, her husband, remarked of the NBC buHdlnt. Besides threats, other consequences of her opposition lo homosexuals wer~ a pie thrown in her face in Des Moines a few .· weeks ago and the possibility of the Florida Citrus Commission's dropping her from its advertising campaign. "It looks like it's coming that way," she said, noting that a dec1s1on was due on her conlinu1ng in the more than $100,000-a- yea r Job on Nov 17 Priest Dies Despit~ Teen's Reseue By Sl'EVE MITCHELL Oftlle Oltily 1'1IOI J~H The ef~ o'tflJ.lr~MfJrl' ·"°Y who ,,Mled M4l~ n'I\ lie boar<1 r~gf111u1'f ~o l' • •n mJure priest t.lt\t> "'•' a.Vm div-ing proved to be in vain TWlilday afternoon at Thtee Arch Bay in South Laguna. The Rev. Patrick' Colleran, 43, of Long.Beach, who was skin div- ing of(s.hore, wait pronounced dead on arrival at Mission Com- munit..Y Hospital following the dramatic rescue efforts of young David ~vlin, of 23 La Senda Place, 'l'hree Arcn tiay, ~uth Laguna. Laguna Beach Jlfeguards credited the four-foot, lO·inch boy with bringing the un- conscious diver to the beach where guards and county paramechcs administered first aid. Young David said he had gone Thief Gets Car's Lighu Somebody punched out real estate salesman Guye Delorens Wagner's headli&hts in Fountain Valley Tuesday night. The Costa Mesa man's car was parked at the .Fountain Bowl, . WASIDNGTON JAP> -A gc>v· ernment clerk, accused or em· bezzllng more than $850,000 hu pleaded guilty to two counts of fraud and claimed be couldn't have committed the crime if hlS superior had been alert. William C. Sibert told U.S. Dis· trict Court Judee Howard Corcoran on Tuesday that he em- bezzled the money over a three· month per~od. He claimed he got away with the scheme because his superior did not· rud vouchers subm\tted for his signature. • A Trensportation Department spokesman said Sib•rt 's superior. uwUI M. Keeton. haa ~eD ttanslettied to other <luUn ln the office, Wt tut Mother ac- tion ia expected: The apoiffman s11. d the ttansf er was prompted bf the Sibert case. · • · $ibert· was arrested last Au1ust aher f!uthortUes received a tip tbat despite the 30-year-old clerk's $10,000 annual inc:ome he bragged about baying luxury cars, A baute wlth a swhamtns pool and a »foot houseboat. He also ha4 invited co-workers to lunch ~uenUy . ' F,....Page.41 •· SCHMIT ••• ·· Butterfield. That amended statement aloog with the aDMDded documentfllid early th1a year were the latest in a series ol five amendments the county supemsor filed to cov• his cosUy 1974 campaign.• • Accordin1 to authorities 4n Sacramento, the political reform act of 1974 was not In force at tbe time Qf Schmit's campaign •o4 then~ would be a legal quesUot\ as to Whether or not repoi'tin& would fall under the provtsionsor the reform act. • ' • The bnUle o r eadowlark ~ bl Hwitmgi~_­ ch bas been aoing OSl too loq WUb. no_'i>!'ff'"!,~\1.1~ rizon. . Some reiiaeota cliUm that the am a1rtl d in the northern part of the city poses a 1alety h&lard arid tb t pilots have buaed homes, c ming wm noi6e an<t distress. The airport owner apd pllots say there a no b for e complAi,nts and that they come from n mOtlo f. w, • Caught irt the mi1lille cf ill tliiS 'JS the-Cl~ Of H~o~ ington Beach which says that Jts authority over airpOrt operations has ~pre-empted by st.ate.and federal agen. cies . · Last week, a possible solution to this continuing con· troversy was suggested bY members of the HOME Coun .. ell, a coalition of Huntington Beach homeowner assocla· tioos. . . . They propo6e that a general aviation airport for small planes be developed on vacant Jand at the seat Beach Naval Weapons Station. They say that pilots wOU.ld Shift to the new airport, solving the problems at Meadowlark wbic his neaPly surrounded by building developments. An official at the Navy station said that the Navy is us- ing all its 5,000 acres. · ,, He also raised the possibility tllat an aii-port may not. be safe because weapons are s$ored at the base. · Whether he is right or wrong, it would seem that final authority f oc the use of the federal land would come from Washington. · , The proPosed airport may not be f easibl~ But t}\ are some good arguments th.at support l~ation 'l!ldit s hould be given more thao. a q(lrsoty stu~y. t. ~ r ·~ Deal Seems Bloeked • The Huntington B~ Union High School Db· trict Board of Trustees is divjded 3 to 2 over a con· troversial plan to sell one pi~e of land to buy property elsewhere. "' Trustees John Hundley and Doris Allen oppose the-sale of some land at Westminster Hig.b Schoo} and use of the funds. ~"""Ill the deal to buy land near Huntington Beach High School. In order to sell the Westminster land, the board must vote 4 to 1 or unanimously on the deal as state law. re- quires. , But trustees Allen and Hundley say they will nevet vote in favor of the proposal because it is "robbing Peter to. pay Paul.·· In general, the plan to sell some property to buy much needed land in Huntington Beach is acce~table. ... However .it is obvious that time is ·tiieing wasted on the .. district's further attempts to go ahead with the transac· tion. There may be other steps the district can take in re- lieving the space problem at Huntington Beach High School The state law requiring the 4 to 1 vote orh»le land sale is m eant to require the school district taie abaid, careful look at the situation. ·- That is ex.a<!Uy l\'hat the U)t81'eJ sh uld MW ,. Unique C ~~ ..... ~~;,J There undoubtedly ~ other community in Orange County quite like Sunset Beach, a 1~·resident_coastline enclave that doesn "t have door-to-door mail e~, (Or example, because residents want it that way. .. Residents also like their community's dive~1ty. which: · sometimes places boat"l"ePatr shops or other businesses next door to costl~OS... County planners n6w at~ involved ma reznning study aimed at im}trotif\(Sunset ijeach. They want ~o reduce ct>mmercial zoning. keep most businesses clusfered at.. major intersections and reione some comD)erdal patcels for homes because the 2,700. "6quare-fooUots#,t'e tQo small to accommodate businesses. In a • on..:ith~Y:.hope to change commerclal zoning to residen · on -pfu{>a'ty where homes already have been built. Some Sunset Beacb residents fear they will be left with too little commercial p'roperty, while others favor county plans. . County planning commissioners now have recom• mended that zoning changes be addressed as part or the county".soverall coastalprogram.. .:. · The county plaus for Sunset Beacli sound lik~ reason· able ideas. While iNanners go aboat trying to improve Sunset Beach, howei'er, Utey ought not Just apply stan<tard planning theori-.:.te ~e point that they destroy the unique character that its residents now enjoy. Tothe~tor; Three weekends ego, following the miA«Uided advice Of a friend. I ,ttended a Saturday matinee at• Costa Mesa theater, whereto quote their ads, "The best plc· tures p~." A triple bill was playina: Sh<>ck Waves (PG>, Champion of Death <R> and. .M.eatcleaver Massacre (R). I was surprised to 1ee several cblldren in the audience, includ- ing a pre-schooler being b~ld on the lap of a girl not much 1>lder. I walked out to the Uc It et counter and asked the woman in the booth wily children were b&- itlg solct ticltetS for rioknt R-rated rums. She wasn't sure. WantlnJ a direct answer, l aaked to speak With Uie manager. Up-· fwtunately, the m.ua,g'r was on •lunch 1:ftak. I decided to wait. I wellt back blto the theater and sat throa&h two of the .fibnl· ••Meatcleaver Massacre/' J>ebli evetytbhlg the tiUe indicates, 1tarted. More childreti entered. apouoredHa~&uselnSan· ta Ana. The March ot J>lmea 41Phick for years has tried to tie aDc1 •Jm- bolbe itself aa close to the American flag. apple pl_~ Ud motherhood, belplna the han- dicapped wtth a teary-eyed cbDd, put on a show to beat all. I'm aure the orgaD!Un and tbe spo~ started with lood intent.km, 1Nt for. the many un.smpectlni and uninformed ~ta with smau cblldr«J it waa a Na1 nlgbtnllnl. . LOS ANGELES (AP> -Police ire seekin& •Hall°"'"" nt1ht rob- bor who dresi;ed in a akeletoo costume, bouo~ and dubbed a certbfal palsy vi~Um, then beat th•man·~..,.andfaUaef tOdeatti. Imre Allen Robitaek, 33, who lived with hts grandlatber, Zoltan Robltsek, said Tuesday he watcbed helplessly trom hb wbeetcMlr as the jntruder bound and 1aued the 69-)'ear.oJO man, then beat him to death. 1ng money ef\d valuablef, poU sold ~. --u-~ii.-,;.w.i.~~~~, llOBITSEK TOLD police he was alone when he answered the door ot the suburban Studio Cily home Monday night expecting a trick-or-treater. Instead, the cos· lu1Ded man at the door bunt in· side and beat the young man in the face, head and chest with a club, said North Hollywood division police. Tho intruder t}\en knocked the handicapped Jl\An out of his wheel~hair and b_ound him, police said. WHEN THE ELDER Robltsek, a textile importer. exporter, returned home, the in· trvder bound and gagged him, then beat him, apparently seek- The attacker fled 1n the dead man's white 1971 Dodge yan, tak- Jnl? some jewelry and more than $1,000incuh,saldpolice. • THE DISABLED younger man was left tostrucile for two hoW'I before freeing himself and roll· ing his wheelchair next door where neighbors summoned police Police said tney found the dead man, bound and gaaged on his bed and the living room blood· spattered. Im re Robitsek told reporters Tuesday that rus grandfather bad cared for him for two years and was his last living relative. In Divoree Court Estranged Wife Shoots Husband VENTURA <AP> -A 55-year-old man was hosp1tahzed In serious condition after his estranged wife shot him in the chest dur- ing a break in their divorce hearing, officials reported. Motorists iateOver i7oll Hike · SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Motorists crossing the Golden Gate Bridge did their best to drive toU takers oearly over the edge, ToJJ1 went from 15 cents to $1 Tuesday and the Uhifonned toll colledors were the target. Of pro-hurt her ki\ee, wet her panta felt "awful" testjrom 8J\IP"1 oommut.en. • I ~y •tomacb felt lite l WU •onna throw up, ... •au>GE 0 CIALS 1aid. at· she said. · • leaat a dozer\ driven quickly .JODI l\ND · ANOTBEa kldnJp victim .Mike hand~d over 75 cents and ~~and Marshan, 15 rememl>Ued the children crytDg and off without paying the additional • prayinf u they lay in pitch darkness in a burled quo~e~ cut a dollar bill Into -moving vao. George Sabol or Canoga Park and his wife, Martha, 37, of Simi Valley began arguing Tuesday during a pause in the hearine at Superior Court in this community north~st of Los ·Angeles, wit. nesses said. three pieces befol"e handing the ----------------------..,...------------,-----ton over. While the two were outside the courtroom, Mrs. Sabol shot her husband once in the chest at close range with. a small·caliber l\ln ~he pulled from her purse, police said. A bailiff knocked the gun out of her hand, police said Marlae IHes Plalff•• a .. lcetlHdl CARLSBAD (AP> -A young Marine is dead after collapsing on Lhe basketball coun at Carlsbad High School. A coroner's official identified the victim as Dietrich L. McDaniel, 19, of Mobile, Ala. He was a private first class assigned to Air Control Squadron 7 at ( J Camp Pendleton. McDaniel was practicing SIA.TE " Monday-with a unit basket-_ _ \lall team when be dropped to the court. officials said. He was pronounced dead at Tri-City Rospital after paramedics failed to revive him. ~ SltotDer• Da•~ Nert• State • 1 , , , By The Associated Press A storm dropped showers on the state's northwest corner today but was expected to break apart before bringing rain to the rest or California. The Nalional Weather Service said Crescent City felt .64 hun- dredths of an inch of rain during the 24-hour period which ended at.S a.m. today. Eureka was sprinkled with .18 ~undredths durine the same stretch. · Crisp, clear weather was fprecast (or the remainder or the Northern California region. with patcbes of fog and low clouds ex-pected over the coast. f'ttel"'111 rtpe Lf1te R•t•..- WILMINGTON (AP> -More than 18,00Q gallons of fuel oil that spilled into streets and storm drains wheo a ~peline. burst apparent- ly has been contained without flowing int6 nearby Los Angeles Harbor. After Tuesday's rupture, the Coast Guard dropped oil booms ln· to the harbor in case the oil leaked into the sea. But by late in ttte day, none of the oil that bubbled through the asphalt. and flooded storm drains had reached tbe harbor, officials said. Firefighters contained the flow, and oil salvage crews vacuumed the gutters and storm drams Plelcee• ae..eed p,.... KTT¥ .tos ANGELES <AP> -The National Association of Broadcast Employees and Technicans has removed its pickets from television station K'M'V followine an agreement by the station's management to meet with union representatives. K1TV General Manager Charles Young refused to comment on what was discussed in the meeting Tuesday at the Federal Media· tion and Conciliation Service office, but said production at the sta· Uon continued normaJJy after the pickets were removed. ''All commitments have been honored and prOdu~tion has con· tinued uninterrupted,·· Young said ,. . S'EVERAL commuters paid their tolls Wil!l'100 pennies. "It's a miserable job out ·there,'• said veteran ton collector Ricbard ff~. 40. "~here's no morale \Qd8$." - HE SAID ONt o't the com- muters wbo gave him the toll in pennies promised to pay bis toll that way dally. "I told him 'You can do it every day, but you ·re gonna wait here untill count 'em,· " As for the motorists who rushed off Without payJng the full fee, toU.colJ~t.or Bill Su\t.on, 47, said, "l can't catch them. I'm not the bionic man.·· TRAFFIC WAS delayed abollt 15 mlnutes durlitc the rush hour because of the protests. Tolls Wet'e increased as well~ fares on buses and ferryboats operated by the bridge district.In hopes or generating an addltion- a I~ million in &Mu al revenues. Police Lack -Sus~tin Girl'• Death SAN DIEGO <AP> -Police said tboy were without a suspect in the bludgeoning aeath of Belin- da Anne Robinson, a cheerleader and a "very popular tirl" at Lin· coln High $clM>Ol. The body of the 11.year-old glrJ, hit on the head with a rock,· wu found behind her parents' apartment house Tuesday. Police said sbe wu attacked while walking home across a va· cant fteld after work at. a chicken taat-r~store. Tests were under way to de- termine if the partly clad girl was raped. McVeatlc LoJce TohOe b o veor 'round playground like none • o1tl4K In 1t'8 'lt'Oftd, f1efe you corf ski ~hollenglng •lopes. step Into nights filled With gllt· t.rlng entertainment ••. or ~ bteathe th• mouitoln air and wotch the seasons crtonge. tt'1 all wtthfn eosv reach when you toke off tor Tahoe on AJt Collfomla. , I • '"1, • to 1;;,;~~toft!LD police he w; II~ he &l\IWered the door of the •u~rt>an Studio City home Monday rugflt expecting a trick·or-tre~er. Instead, the cos tumed man at the door bunt in· side and beat the youne man m· the face, head and chest wtth a club, said North Hollywood division police. Tb• intruder then knocked the handicapped ~an out. of his wbeel~bair ana b,ound him. police said. WHEN TffE ELDER Robitsek, a lextile importer· exporte'l", returned home, the in· truder bound and gagged him, then beat him, apparently seek· THE DISABLED youneer man was Jett to 1tru11i. for two hours before Crfflng himselt"and roll· ing his wheelchair next door where neighbors summoned police. • Police said they f<>Wld Ute dead man, bound and gaeged on his bed and the living room blood· spattered. lmre .Robitsek told reporters Tuesday that his grandfather had cared for him for two years and was his laat living relaUve. ID Dlvoree Court Estranged Wife Slwots Husband VENTURA CAP) -A SS-year-old man was hospitalized in sertoWK condition after hls estranged wife shot him in the chest dur· inf a break in their divorce hearing, officials reported. • George Sabol of Canoga Park~~ wife, Martha, 37, or Simi Valley began arguing Tuesday du a>•\l!e ftt the heanog at Superior Court in this community northwest of Los ·Anaeles, wit. nesses said. While the two were outside the courtroom, Mn. Sabol shot her husband once in the chest at close range with a smaU·c.Uber gun !\he pulled from her purse, police said. A bailiff knocked the gwi out of her han4. pollce said. Jfarl11e Din Plalfl119 a .. lcetlHlll CARLSBAD (AP> -A young Marine is dead after collapsing on the basketball coun at Carlsbad High School. A coroner's official identified the victim as Dietrich L. }14cDaniel, ~.of Mobile, Ala. He was a private first class assigned to Air Control Squadron 7 at ( j Camp Pendleton. McDaniel was practlcing STA.TE • Monday with a unit basket· _ _ ~all team wben he dropped to tile court, o(Clcials said. He was pronounced dead at Tri-City Hospital after paramedics failed to revive bim. Sltotc1n-• Da•pns Nert• Seac~ .1 By 'l'be .\ssoclated Press A storm dropped showers on the state's northwest comer today but was expected to break apart before bringing rain to the rest or California. The National Weather Service said Crescent City felt .64 hun- dredths of an inch or rain during the 24-hour period which ended at. s a.m. today. Eureka was sprinkled with .18 "undredths d1Uin1 the same stretch. ' Crisp, clear weather was forec-.st for the remainder of the Northern California region, with patcbes of fog and low clouds ex· peeled over the coast. f'ttd OH Pipe Lfae R11pt•l'a WILMINGTON (AP) -More than 18,00Q gallons of tuel oil that spilled into streets and storm dtains wheo a pipeline burst apparent· ly has been contained without flowing into nearby Los Angeles Harbor. Arter Tuesday's rupture, the Coast Guard dropped oil booms ln· to the harbor in case the oil leaked into the sea. But by late ln the day, none of the oil that bubbled through the asphalt and flooded storm drains had reached the harbor, officials said. Firefighters contained the flow. and Oil salvage crews vacuumed the gutters and storm drams Pleltet• ~eel p,.... Kr1'J' LOS ANGELES <AP) -The.National Association of Broadcast Employees and Technicans has removed its pickets from television station K1TV following an agreement by the station's management to meet with union representatives. KTrV General Manager Charles Young refused to comment on wbat was discussed in the meeting Tuesday at the Federal Media· lion and Conciliation Service office, but said production at the sla· lion continued normaJly alter the pickets were removed "All commitntenta have been honored and production has con-tinued uninterrupled, '·Young said J Motorists . ~ate Over· Toll Hike · SAN FRANCISCO CAP> Motorists crossing the Golden Gate Bridge did their best to drive toU takers nearly over the edae. ~ ToJJs went from ceo to $1 Tueaday and the formed toll coDectQrs were the target ot ~ro­ test Crom angry commuters. aJUDGE OPftCIALS said at· Jeast a dozen driven quiCkly handed over 75 cents and roared off without payi.ng the additional quarter. One man cut a dollar bill into three pieces before .handing the loll over. SF;VERAL commuters paid thelr tolls ~U.100 pennies. "It's a mlaerable job out there," said veteran toll coUeQt.or Richard H~, 40.• '"l'btre·s no morale toda)I." . . .. .. HE SAID -ONE o? the com- muters who cave him tbe toll in pennies proa:nised to pay his toll that waydaily. "I told him 'You can do it every day, but You 're 1onna wait here until! count 'em,' " As tor the motorists who rushedotfwithout paring ~be full fee, lollieollector Bil Sutton. 47, said, "I can't catch them. I'm not the bionic man." TltAFFIC WAS delayed about 15 minutes during the rusti hour bee a use of the protests. Tolls were increased as well as fares c>n buses and ferryboats operated by the bridge district In hopes of generatlni an add!tion· al $S miUion in 81\l\Ual revenues. Police Lack Sua~tin Girl's Death SAN DIEGO CAP> -Pollce satd tbo)' were without a suspect in the bludgeoning death of Belin· da Anne Robinson, a cheerleader and a "very popular girl" at Lin· coin High School. The body or the 17-yeBN>ld sirl, hit on the head with • rock, w u found behind her parent$' apartment Prouse Tuesday. Poli<:e said she was attacked while walking home across a va· cant field after work at a chicken tast·fooc:htore. Tests were under way to termine if the partly cla was raped IODI AND ANOTHER tlwp Victim, Mike Marshan. ~t remembered the chlldren cryinJ" and praying aa tneY lay in pitcb darkness in a buried movlntc van. MQJeltfC Lake Tohbe is a veer 'round ~n:>und like none otNtr In ff)e WOfkl. >iere you can •kl chollenglng llopea, step Into Nghtl fllled with gilt· terlng entertainment ••. or sl~ breathe the mouitoln olr ond wotch the season• change. tt'1 on within eotv reach ~ you take Off to< Tahoe on AlrColltccnla, ·~ • I . .... LAID ACROSS the back fender well etid the kids piled up against me -on my arms aild l•p, .. Ray said, "I got cramps ln my lep and tried to move. but, I coul<ln 't.. becaus• tbe lllUe kids just a tarted coing ·more ... the. poor lltUe kids dldn~ w nt to move,·· he said. "So 11et ~em h1_y on rne." • . , ail'J)Olt owner apd ~ y 1 no basts for the complafuts ahd that they com from ttn emOtlonal few. Caught in tbi nilddl Of UUa ls the dty Of H'JJ}t• ~Dgton Beach w)licti SaYJ that 1ta authority over airpOrt opera~ lias ~ pre-emplect byi4at8,and fecte.ral agen- cies. Last week, a possible solution to this continuing con· troversy was suggested by members of the HOME Coun- cil, a coalition of Huntinaton Beach homeowner associa· tions. . • They propose that a general aviation airport for small planes be developed on vacant land at the Seal Beach Naval Weapons Station. They say that pilots would shift to the new airport, Solving the problems at Meadowlark which is neuly surrounded by building developments. An official at the Navy .station said that the Navy is us- ing all its 5,000 acres. · , He also raised the pos.sibWty tfiat an airport may not.. be safe because weapons areslored at the base. · Whether he is right or wrong, it would seem that final authority for the use of the lederal land would come from Washington. · The proposed airport may not .be f easibley "But tfi~ are some good arguments that support th Iodation and'it should be given more than a c(irsory stu_dy .. The Huntington Be1te.tt 'Union High School Dis- trict Board of TrUstees iS divjded 3 to 2 over a con- troversial plan 'to' sell one piece 'of land to buy property elsewhere. Trustees John Hundley and Doris Allen oppose the~ale of some land at Westminster Higl\ SchOf>} and. use of the funds from the deal to buy laz\d near Hlintington Beach High School. In order to sell the Westminster land, the board must vote 4 to l or unanimously on the deal as state law re- quires. But trustees Allen and Hundley say they wlll never vote in favor of the proposal because it is ''robbing Peter to pay Paw.·· In general, the plan to sell some property to buy much needed land m Huntington Beach is acceptable. . • However. it is obvious that time \s"~ing wasted on the :. district's further attempts to go ahead with the transac· ti on. There may be other steps the di~trict can take in _re- lieving the space problem at Huntington Beach High School. The state law requir\ng the 4 to 1 vote on the land sale is meant to require the school district teke a bard, careful look at the situation. . That is ~Uy wpat the trpst,et sh,uld J¥?!f ~·' There undoubtedly lSnO other community in Orange County quite like Sunset Beach, a l~·res~dent.coastline enclave that doesn't have door-~oor maildehverj, for example, because residen~ want it th~t ~a)'.. ... . Residents also like their community s dwel't1ty1 which sometimes places boat-repair shops or other businesses next door to costl~es. County planners ndw at:e involved in a .rezdning study aimed atit®rofiagSunset Qeach. They want W...reduce c.Dmmercial zoning. keep most businesses clus~red at Ulajor intersections and reione some commercial patcels for homes because the 2,700. <tiquare-fooUots •l'e tQo small to accommodate businesses. In a~ .. th~h9pe to change commercial zoning to resideo l on property where homes already have been built. ' Some Sunset Beacb 'fesidents fear they will be left with too liUle commercial p\-operty, while <>tbet's favol".county plans. . • County planning commissioners now have recom• mended that zoning cha_nges be addressed as part of the county:Soverall coastalprog:ram. , The county ~ for ~et Beacli sound Ilk~ reason· able ideas. While annen go about trying to improve Sunset Beach, ho er, tbey ought not JUSt apply standard planning theoriee:t. the point that they destroy the unique character that itS re$idents now enjoy. A SIMILj\Jl mindset }s found within the Carter 1 admloiatra· ttou 'a l\,Jtlonal s4tc\trlty bur~aucracy, thereby movm, this debate out. e( the literary ~alon. SU$plcions have ~een railed aboUt bow the American superpower, deprived of the right to intervene, can confront. the Russian auperpo•er un- shackled by self-linUtations. , Amontthe ausplolaus is novelist Wattenberg. wbo in the real world is rnoblllzi.9g Democra~c d(rsent to carter i>Qfieiea. In "~ainst All Enemies:~ liberal Democratic President Carl Rattigan facee an invasion of democratic Bolivia by Com· munist Chile. Impeded l>y cam- paign promises and his own doabt.s, Ratttsannevertheless in· 17 By TOM BARLEY °'-~"'"'"'" Oranee County Superior Court Judge Robert P. Kneeltnd ruled today that campus killer Edward Charles Allaway was insane when be shot nine people ln and around the Cal State Fullerton library on July 12, 1976. Jud«e Kneeland ruled after hearin1, ar~ment.a from lawyers lllgh ... £0f'e Su• Beth Grtet, 22, certalD- 1 y we• aurprlaed •• ahe afpped • glaH of red win. •t tt1• Beach Houae In Laguna Beech Tueactay af • ternoon and glenced up to aee Jerry Owen•' confeaelon of tove In the aky. owena, 35, a former nfghtcfub operator, aald he met the Corona del Mar butl· neaawoman In a Laguna Market three month• ~­ "Ood, h•'• alway• dolnt aome"""° '*' ,_,._ .. tM ....,. ba"aued ollfect Of ht• af. fectlon Aki. ••Last t111Mt ti. dellvet'9d 42 ftatOra of Ice cr••m to my~." By GARY GRANVILLE OIUleoeily ...... .._ I Orange County Supervisor Laurence Schmit turned tbe other cheek Tuesday and responded to a verbal assault on him by a formeT political crony with a hastily written brief memo. memo. Schmit said Woodrow Bul· terfleld's public lambast.i~ ol bJm was loaded with "innuendo, for both slaet that Allaway, 38 was "coi:,tletely p ychotlc'' wben be a tifle to the rn- pus and shot nine l*JJ>le, &even ol wbom~. Judge Kneeland wu torced to call a halt to-further court acUoa Immediately after his rullna when an attractive blond• woman ran screaming from the courtroom. , l Ex-spy 1 NEW YORK <Al» -Convu:t.ed Water1ate butcJar Frank Stu,..;.. ha• been jailed on char1es "be (breatened ex-spy Marlta Lorenz. After Sturgis' arrat, Miss Lorenz alleaedJy told tn· veat)sators that Stur1i1 1hot at• Prealdent Kenn9dy tn Dallu. tht Daily Newt reported today. The News s11ld sources re- vealed that Mass Lorenz broke down Tuesday under questioning by RobertJBI k{e, the I al counael to the Houae As&uaina· tion Commlttee1 aod maintained that 1b• h.-d "oooumentaey and pbotogtaphic" evidence to prove that Slur~ fired at Keruaedy from tbe grassy knoll near the Texas School Book Depository. Kulik Pleads Innocent to Murder Rap . Alexander Kulik, 28, pleaded not &\Ully today to charges of conspiracy to commit murder during ar- raignment before Judge Selim Franklin in the Harbor Judicial District Court. Bail for KuJlk on the con- sp1racv charRe was set at $500.000. He has been in custody on a narcotics charge which also carries SS00,000 bail making the total bail $1 million. Deputy District Attorney Dave Carter told Judge t'rankhn that arrests of four more people in con- nection with the murder Oct 22 of Stephen John Bovan of Fountain Valley are expected. Sources indicate war· rants were l$$ued today for Kuhk'1> wife, and his busi- nebs partners, Joseph Shelton Davis, Joseph l''edorowski and Roy Christopher Richard, all one lime La.cuna Beach rebidents. Saddleback College trustees hired a construction manaaer to auide the development of their new northern campus Tuesd'-Y· Fr.., Pflfle.1\J , Normally, trustees would hire • • • • general c:on\rador ..-0. I~ cffte fee coverine the tot.al cost of c<in- atrucUon, would be resP.Qnsible -KULIK IN C.OURT. • • bis attorney, PJ\illp DtMHaa, arguet """' c•ll\l!r: a~rlWhe m unic~ ~dg~ ~v.r 1et\ltu1 of bail. The argument concluded when Judge Franklin declared, "ll is my feeling' "On all the people in- ''olved in this case that none of them wQuld be around if they had a chance to leave.J assume Mr. Kulik to be in the same positi<>n." Kulik Is one of five people cur· rently in custody in connection with the shooting death of Bovan. The other alleged conspirators are all scheduled to return to Judge Franklln's courtroortt Thursday afternoon for their ar- raignment and hearing on bail setting. Those four who were arrested last week by Newport Beach AP Clarifies Names of Two I . The Assoclated Press today clarified the identities of two Beverly Hills attorneys sus- pended by the California Supreme Court from the pracUce of Jaw for one year becauae of misconduct. The two are Ronald L. Goldman, as, whOae off~qe ls loca.ted at 8383 WUablre Blvd. SuJ~ 552, and Samuet P. Dulai. 35, otthe'lame addresi, SUlteMa, T~e susl'ended Goldman 11 not the ,aame u .._ttorney Ronald L.M. Goldmati. who praotl a Jaw 1.in Now,p.ort. Beadl nd Marnia de1 Rey and·i.a~h at Pepperdlne Unlvenley. · police have he wlth~t bail. " At the conclusion of the ar- raignment, DeMassa told Judae Franklin that his client had botn ill since being Jailed on Oct, ~ and asked that kulik be confined to the Jail ward of the UC Irvine Medical Center'. Judge Franklin instead said he would order physician• to ex· amine Kulik at the Oranee Coun· ty Jail and then make recom. mendations to the court on further treatment fCYr the Jailed s\llipect. Fr .. PogeAJ . SCHMI'F ••• for hlrint subContractors, obtain· if, needed equipment and s'teit'i thil the f~il,t)'. !f built.. . ·• flowever. uhder the con$truc- tion manacerrtent proeram, the colle1e actually becomes the general contractor, explained Dr. Edward Hart, aHISttU\t dlh· trict superintendent. Trustees, with the advice of their construc- tion mana1er, wm ~responsible for piedni thf) project toaetber. • F....,PGfleAJ DROWN ••• Surfer Doug Fox, 25, Huntington Beach, eyes latest batch of old tires to wash ashore near Huntlh&top Pier. They were on the beach this morntng. Ufeg~ds say they are ftom the state Department of dominat~ horse racinf," 1ald Fulk, who took over the Costa Mesa·bued fairsrounda early thJs year. "It just not very fair to Ute peo- ple of Oran1e County," said Fulk, referring to the Monday de· cision by Los Anseles Superior Court Judge David E11rleson. The rwlni supported ar1u· ments by lawyen for Santa Anita and Hollywood Park raceways, Althoueh tl'U$tees will get "all thtse bits and pieces•• to approve on the project, be said, the pro- gram offer1 'realer flexibility and a better ct)ance of complet· int the campl.d l>y Auiuat when it ls scheduled to open to •tu· dents. •• Dist.net offlclclf broke •around for the $1.8S tlllon campus Tr.tesday. The 1radlnf. pre~-· lion or pad•. for the bulldJngs, som~ paving and off.site develop- ment of utilities is expected to be completed in 60 to 90 days. Tbe build.in&-"shtU1" are tx· peeled to be completed In arch, when work on the lntet1ors 11 scheduled to befjn. Dr. Hart said tho colte1e will be seeking proposals from con· struction firms interested in serving .a the constructton manager., , 1 ln a related action, trustees unanimO\lllY agreed to tTan•fer ~.ooo from oontin1ency, funds to pay for some ol the work on the northern campus. Tru1tees tranaCerre~ 1tnother Sl9(>10QO from continaency fundS (or re· modeJin1 work beuia done om lhe present campus. College offlolala said botb amouDts were previously bud1et· ed for thecopstructiOn work. wbo eontend•d that the Callfomla Hotae RaclnJ 1So'"1 did not hav• lho power.10 allocate raclft• dates,,. tbe falr. Deputy AUC>rn•Y. Geo1raJ Marilyn M~er. represen~ the state raclng bOard and theJocal rairMound5, -bai been directed to flle ian appeaJ h:i an ,tfort to re· verse thtdec1'lon. Fiir olfic:lall 1till plan to atace the small o!f·fe~ Jalr, et .tor. Nov. 1-11, In the parldq.: tOt t 7 By Sl'EVE lllTC ELL Of .... Oelf't Pl ... IUft effON of I lS·year-old boy Jao padcfl~. t'\it. on a ]l®gte tiQird m rough au:rt to rescue an lljured priest who wu altln div· I pt'OVeCl to be ln vain Tuesday afternoon at Three Arch Bay in south Laguna. !J'he Rev. Patrick Colleran, 43, • G( Lon~ Beach. who was skin div· ing offshore, was pronounced QJ9'I ... Le1'e Sara Beth Orfer, 22, certain- ly w a• aurprlaed • • •h• alpped a glau of red wine at th• Beach Hou•• In Laguna 8eac-Tu .. day ef • ternoon and glenced up to see Jerry Owen•' CO .... •albn af love In the •k)'. owena, 35, • former nightclub operator, •aid h• met the Corona del Mar butl· neaawoman In a Laguna Market. thr4'9 cnomha ...,. ·~oct, fl••• ••••,• dol"9 aomethlno Uke thfa/' ~ em- barraued object of hla af· fectlon •llkL "Uttt tltae deUY-.CS 42. tliYOr• cteam to my hOcilM."'' • By GARY GRANVILLE OftlMo.lly ........... mi$atat.ements and halMniths." 1 Orange County Supetvlsor Laurence Scbmft turned the other cheek Tuesday and responded to a verbal 4Ssault on him by a former political crony with a hastily written brief memo~ memo. Scbmlt said Woodrow But· ter!ield'$ pubUc lambasting or blm was loaded with "innuendo, Moreover, the Gaiden ·Grove supervaor added, Butterfield's attack was nothing more tban a vendetta deSttned as • repjiial fot' SCMii~st~ lh 19'15 to hire him as an~ecotlv~tlde. "WoOd.v bas a Character f\aw. He tried to destroy or' own everything about hlin, •• Schmit said. . · Sehmit included the charge tbat 81 JOANNE attNOLDS' Of .. CMlitf ......... Newport Beach police foUnd narcotics paraphernalla and 11.st.s of.names they alleee are buyers and sellers ol narcOtica at the home Used b7 murdet conspiracy suapeot Ala111der Kulik. court ttCoi'ds lndkate today. The search w~ant affidavit was filed by tnve1t111ton at Orange County Su&Mlrlor Court after they searched the home where Kullk was staying on Un· da Isle. In ~ atftdavit, officers allege they f O\lJld: -Rec:ordl l)f allecC'd heroin sales In aadltlon to lis of what police assert are names of narcotics buyers and ieltera. -A ballk tllp ln Kulik'• n&P,le for a ,OQO "1~1t 1 to n ~ cu· a'JlX. · / VIRGINIA BEACH. Ya. (AP> ._ Wbll a woman driver was be. lh beaten in a par1dn1 tot-by a man whoM car had hita hen, authorities HY one wltnt11 locked bier shOP dpor, eeveQJ passersby refused to atop and about 20 onlookers watched passively before she sot help. The 'fietim, Carol Hold n, 2'1. clerk pushed thr<>Uib ot onlookers and It: sailant away. Authorities later arrested two men, including the driver of a car that allegedly clipped the fende.t ofMrs.Holden'sc~. ,.,, F,....PageAl KULIK .. ; napped Kulik and eld him for $100,000 ransom wb h wu paid by Kuu~·a thrQ bu•foeu· partnen. Those three business partners, Joseph Shelton Davis, Joseph Fedorowski and Roy Christopher Richard, a11 one time Laguna Beach residents, are still being soucht for questioning by pc>llce. P6lice are stUl lnvestigaUng the source of cash used by Kulik and his partners 1n their invest- ment firm, Prasadam Dis· tributors Inc Shooting victim Bovan worked for one of the firms ln ~hich Praaaaam lnveated. Police al· Iege Bovan believed the partnen in Prasadam had a store of a large amount of cash. They allege Kulik was kid· napped in an attempt to get at that money. Robot Rapped Mom Sues Over Baby'• Fear PfllLADELPHIA <AP> -A Catonsville, Md., woman claims a five-foot department store robot named KLATU frightened her baby so m""lt she ought to~ awarded $100,000 in damaces. KLATU, a sUver-sulted, fiberitass robot given to outbursts such as "Hello, how are you?" was scurry. ing arO\llld the mall Nov. 10, 1976, when it encountered lO·month-oldSbaun P•trick Del Guidice. sui;~::iun~:.~~rcl!~~l:~ !~e·~!m~~-~t j>;J1't : which her son was "accosted, touched, assaulted ahd • ... terrorized.·· That'S' not the way Bamberger·s Department Store sees it. "The robot started talking to him and I guess the kid got scared and started crying, .. said Homer Beat, loss-prevention manager for Bamberger's store in the Springfield Mall shopping center. "It's just a normal robot,·· Best said. Moral Reward That Plua $5{) May Get Bike SCHMIT ... view much ot what was con· tained in a nine·pa~e written statement by Butterfield was already "well known, well dis· ~u,&ed and well rebashecl.:' Mftt serl()\15 of Butterfl ·, cha~ea wits that Schmit on · .an amended dlaclocsure 1tatemw filed ln early 1976 improperly ho edi!rwchl)'. s.16.ooo w -of for In ki u:r:v • t rn .. · ; ~ ~ at atatftnent. l.Rma wl h the amended document filed early this rear were the latest in a series o five amendments the county supervl&Or ffied to co\+er his costly 1974 camp•lan. Accordmg to authorltl~ In Sacramento, the political reform act of 1974 was not ln force at the time of Schmlt'a campaign and there would be a Jeeti qutttion aa to whether or not reportlnJ would fall llllder the provisions of the reform act. SJC Council ... ..,LOS ANGEL~ (AP> -Police are H_tldn& a Halloween nl1llt rob· ber who dressed in a skeletm coetume, boUJHl and el'1bbed. a cerebi'a.I palsyvlc:UIQ, then beat tho man'a(randlathertode.lh lmre Allen Robttaek, 38, who lived with bis grandfather, ZOltan Robltsekt said Tue.day he watched helplessly from hie wheelchair as the Intruder bound and l•lled the 69-)'~!lf.old man, then beat Jum todeath. BOBITSEK TOLD pohce he was alone when he answered the door of the suburban Studio City home Monday night expecting a trick.or-treater. Instead, the cos- tumed man at the door burst in· side and beat the young man in the face, bead and chest with a club, said North Hollywood division police. The intruder then knocked the handicapped man out or his wheelchair and bound him, police said. · WHEN THE ELDER Robitselt, a textile importer· exporter, returned home, the in· truder bound and gaggesf him, then beat him, apparently seek· inf mone31 and valuablu. police l>&ld. . Tne attacker fled in the dead man's white 1971 Dodte van, talc· ing some jewelry and more than Sl,OOOincash, said police. THE DISABLED younger man was left to struggle for two hours before fr~ himaelf and roll· ing his wheelchair next door where neighbors summoned police Police said they foun~ the cJead man, boUDd and gacged on his bed and the living room blood· spattered. lmre Robitsek: told reporters Tuesday that his grandfather had cared for him for two years and was his last living relative. In Divoree £oart Estranged Wife Shoots Husband VENTURA <AP> -A SS-year-Old man was hospitalized in serious condition alter his estranged wife shot him in the chest dur- ing a bre-.k ln their divorce hearing, officials reported. George Sabol of Canoga Park and his wife, Martha, 37, of Simi Valley began arguine Tuesday durtng a pause in the bearing at Superior Court Jn this community northwest of Los ·Angela, wit· nesscs said While the two were outside the courtroom, Mrs. Sabol shot her husband once m the chest at close range with a small-caliber gun she pulled from her purse, police said. A bailiff knocked the gun out of her hand, police said /tl•ritae Din Pl•lli•fl • ...,_,IHIU CARLSBAD (AP) A young Marine is dead after collapsing on the basketball court at Carlsbad High School. A coroner's official identified the victim as Dietrich L. McDaniel, 19, of Mobile, Ala. He was a private first class assigned to Air Control Squadron 7 at ( ' J Camp Pendleton. McDaniel was practiclng SI'A.TE Monday with a unit basket-_ ball team when he dropped to __ _......._ ...... , ---:---- the court, officials said. He was pronounced dead at Tri-City ffospital after paramedics failed to ~vive him. . . Sltoeoen o .. pe11 Nerd• St•Ce By Tiie Aaociated Press A storm dropped showers on the state's northwest corner today but was expected lo break apart before bringing rain to the rest of California The National Weather Serv1ce said Crescent City felt .64 hun· dredths of an inch of rain during the 24-hour period which ended at S a.m. today. Eureka was sprinkled with .18 hundredths durinc the same stretch. Crisp, clear weather was forec•st for the ~mainder or the Northern California region, with pat~hes of fog and low clouds ex· pected over the coast. f'etel Oil Pipe Ll11e R11pt•rn WILMINGTON CAP) -More th8l' 18,000 gallons bf fuel oll that spilled into streets and storm drains w_flen a )>ipeUne burst apparet\t· ly has been contained without flowing into nearby Los An1eles Harbor. Arter Tuesday's rupture, the Coast Guard dropped oil booms in· to the harbor in case the oil leaked into the•sea. But by late in the day, none of the oil that bubbled through the asphalt and flooded storm drams had reached the harbor, officials said. · · Firefighters contained the flow, and otl selvage crews vacuumed the gutters and storm drains, Plefcet• lle9aoeed Fr .. KTTV t.OS ANGELES <AP> -The National Association of Broadcast Employees and Technicans has removed its pickets from televislon station KTl'V followin1 an agreement by the station's management to meet with union representaUves. KTTV General Manager Charles Young refused to comment on what was discussed in the meeting Tuesday at the Federal Media· tion and Conciliation Service office. but said production at the sta- tion continued normally after the pickets were removed. "All commitments have been honored and production has con· tinued uninterrupted, .. Young said. Motorists I ' f Irate Over Toll Hike SAN FRANCISCO (AP> Motoristi; crossing the Golden Gate Bridge did their best to drive toll takers nearly over the edge. I Tolls went from 75 eents to $1 Tue:iday and the Unlf ormed toll collectors were the target of pro- test from angry commuters. · BRIDGE OFl'l~LS ~aid at least a dozen drivers quickly handed over 75 cents and roared orr without paylne the additional quarter. • One man cut a dollar bill into three pieces before banding the toll over. SEVERAL commuters paid their tolls with 100 pennies. "It's a miserable job out there." said veteran toll collector Richard Hoey, 40. "Th~re·s no morale today.~· HE SAID ONE of th~ com· muters who gave him the toll in pennies promised to pay his toll that way daily. "l t.Qld hjm 'You can do it every day, but you're eonna wait here until I count ·em,' " Ae for the motorists wllo rusheCi off without paying the lull fee, toll collector Bill Sutton, 47, said, "I can't catch them. I 'm not the bionic man.·· TRAFFIC WAS delayed about 15 minutes during t'he rush hour bee a use of the protests. Tolls were increased as well as rares on buses and ferryboats operated by the bridge district in hopes of generatJn1 an addition· al $5 million in annual revenues. ·Police Lack Suapttt in Girl'• Death SAN DIEGO <AP> -Police said tbef were without a .suspect in the b1udgeonin1 death of Belin- da Anae Robinson, a cheerleader and a "very popular girl" at Un· coin High School. The body ot the717-year-old girl, hit on the bead with a rock, was found behind her parents' apartment house Tuesday. Police 'Uld sbe was attacked while walklng home across a va- cant field after work at a chlcten fast-toochtore. ' Tests were under way to de- termine if the partly clad girl was raped. N :TLY CLAD tn blue aUlU, James SCltoen· feld, 26, ~llard SChoenfe1d. 23~·"'~ Fred Woods. 26, allemat.ely teated throu1h ~pen and glanceCi impWlveb' at the youn~ witness. • ',Tbey to.li:I 111 not to do annbln1 bad or: wrong or we were li®na set bun," JOdl said when she re- sumed ~e wit.a utand. \ THE l)~~ANT' are c:baratd with "kid- napplpg wiUi bQdily harm," a more serious offense than simple ltldri pplDg to which they have pleaded guilty. • If C<1Dvicted of the bodily h'arm count, the three would be condemned to life imprisonment without possibWlf of parole. THEY HA V.E CHOSEN • trial by Judge tat.her than jury. fearinc jurors would be swayed by sym- pathy for lite children. · Jodi teattf ied that ahe suffered repeated nosebleeds Alurint th• 27·hour abduction and -also hurt her knee, weUier pants add lilt "awful." "My stomach felt Uke I was IOlUl& throw up,·· sbesaid. Mojelttc Lake Tahoe Ito y.ar 'round ~iounc:t llke none o1her In the ~. Her9 ~ can ski chollenolno llopee, step Into nights tln.d With gt~ tertno entertotnmont ••• or ~ bfeothe the ~toln· air ond watch the 180ION change. 1r1 all within eosv l90Ch When you tolt• df tot Tahoe on Air Col1[9a)IO.~' THE :J'BEN·AG a. who helped Ray die an escape route. aaJd the ordeal c:auatcl hlm to haJluclDat.e. . .. , seen SQme trees and a little stream runrung along.'' Marshall recalled. ''. •• They 'Hren't for real1 bQtlaawthem." : Of hla feelings in the undereround priaon. • Marshalhald, "I tbouthtl wu 1otna to die." ' EAJU.a:a. a.A \t took the witness at.and and re. lat.eel bis memoriea of the niibtmare day when he tried to comfort the kidnapped children by holdina them clQ&e. · .. There was a lot of crylJia," Said the $6-year- old bus driver. "The klda -they tboucht' they wouldn't see their mommies and thelr daddies ao more. I thou&)lt we waa all aonna die rt1bt there,•· MY l.IATER was balled ts a hero when he and the children dug their way out of the van whlcb was buried In a gravel ciuarry. Hls bodily inJwies, he. said. were two badly cutfln1efS. • . W~at he remembered most cl~arly was the ttaum• tothechlldren. "It was real crowded."' he •Ile\ of conditions in the ltid.Dappera' panel truck which took them to the quarry. . "I LAID ACROSS the back fender well the kids piled up asainat me -en m7 arm. ud Jecs;•· Ray said. 0 1 eot cramps iil JDY l•O ina tried to move. but ·y couldn •t 'because the liWe kids Just started crylng • more .•. the poor little kids atilft't want to move." he said. •'So I let them lay on me ... Anniversary Boost Selling bus tickets for. a . Feb. 26 tour or the Nixon estate was a clever way to get out·Of ·t°"n folks to pay for .San Clemente·s 50th armiversarJ festivities! but th~ to~r shouldn l oveishadow other jlSpec\s of thecelebration. Richard Nixon and his f~miJ.y Jt.JLe · lived in San Clemente less than 10 o(Jhe City'$ 50 years and have hardly participated in the lif G Of ltnl community. People front N.side San Clemente might think of the city primarily as Richard Nixon ·s residence. but the an· niversary isn't for them --ifs forthecity·s residents We'd like to see a celebration of founder Ole Hanson and others. who made San Clemente a city with a 50·year legacy worth celebrating. But the $20,000 expected to be raised by the Nixon home visits will certainly take a dent out of the cost of the celebration. Don't Act in Haste I. San Juan Capistrano councilmen will consider tonight a request by Sun Ranch and Meisner tract residents that two streets through their area be permanently closed. off by cul-de-sacs so the roads cannot be used as access to the Bear Brand Ranch adjacent development. The residents .argue that the two streets --Calle Aspero and Calle Ricardo --cannot bear the traffic that would be generated by the new development, which is located on county land. Relldent.s also are CQRaerned~o the safety of their children wtlo use the streets. While such concerq ~understandable, we don't believe the cul·dEtslt<."9 are the answer to the :p~btems The residents altaady have"'eiled aMdents and ~ing· · cars on the streets as a problem. Perhaps openiill\\lP the dead -end streets would help alleviate some of thriraffic. San Juan councilmen might also keep in mind the months they spent grappling with an annexation develop· ment policy ordinance to woo county projects into city an· • nexalion. · ., The net effect of approval of the cul-de-sacs could easi· ly alienate the Bear Brand Ranch developers, a g~oup the city had in mind when passing the annexation ordinance. And if Bear Brartd becomes reticent to annex to San Juan, the city loses any chance of having a plannlrig im· pact on the aevelopment -an impact that could preserve the beautiful western ridgelines to the benefit of all city residents. The council should keep an open mind during tonight's · meeting on the issue. Hasty decisions off er short-range benefit for a v0¢al minority, but sometimes at the ex- penseof fonger range benefits to the majority. • Oplnlons expre5sed In the space above are those of the Dally PUot. Other views expressed on this page are tha. of their authors and artists. Reader comment ii Invited. Address The Dally Piiot. P.O. Box 1560, Costa Meaa4 9A 92626. Phone(714)642-4321. • · • around tbe --;· the 11'•· jority ef a TV lludience responded ucolla.r," whereas ~ a gen~ation ago U would havebeeh "ro1y.")• . ' A SIMILAll mindset is round witbln lhe Carter edminlstra· tioa's nattlonal security · bureaucracy. UierebY moytna -this debate oat of the literary. salon. Suspicions have tieen raised about how the American s uperpower. deprived of the right to intervene, can confront the Russian superpower un· shatkled by self-limitations. Amon& the 1uapidous is noveliit Wattenber&. who in the real world is mobilizing Democratic dltsaebt to ~~~r ~lid~. In "Agalt\st ~U Enemies,·• liberal Democratic President Carl Rattigan laces an invasion of democratic Bolivia by Com- ... munist Chile. Impeded by cam· palgn promises and his own doubts, Rattigan nevertheless ~- To the F.ditor; Three weekends ago, following the mls«uided advice of a friend. I attended a Saturday matinee at a Coste Mesa theater, where to quote their ads, "The best pie· tu res play." A triple bill was playing; Shock Waves <PG), Champion of Death (R) and MeatcleaverMwacr4! (R). I was surprised to see several chlldren ln the audience, lnclud· lni a pre-schooler being held on lbe lap of a girlJ10tJllucb older. I walked out to •the tick.et counter and asked the woman in 'the booth wby children were be- ing sold tickeu for violent R· rated f&lms. She wasn't sure. WanUng a dfred answer, I asked to speak with the manager. Un· fortunately, the manager was on a lunch bieak. t decided to wait. I went back into the the~r and sat thMUgb two of the films. "Meatcleaver !lasaacr~:· Ddiig everylblng the Utle lndtcates, etarted; ore~tiilareri entered. BrTO• B.U.LEY ... ..., ........ Oranse ~tr Sopertor COart Jud•e Robert P. Kneeland ruled toiay that eampua killer Edward Charles Allaway was insane Wilen be sbot nine ~ple in and around·the Cal state Fullerton Uts'rary on July tz.1916. Judlfe Knedand ruled after hea.rlll« ar~ta from la~en Blgla .. L..,e Sara Beth Grl4'r, 22, certain- ly was surprised aa ahe afpp•d a glau· of Nd wine at4 th•· Beach House In Laguna Be.ch Tuesday a~ ternoon and glanced up to' see Jerry OW.n•' confeaslon of love In th• sky. O'ffena, 35, a former nightclub operator, ••Id he met tt1• Corona del Mar bual· n•••woman In • ~aguna Market thrff month• ago. "God, h•'• ••war• doJng ao1M~lll .. ttilJ;., N .,. UU • ...,,J~Qbfeet Of Mt ef· fectlOn Aid. ~at time "' delivered 42 tee cream to my , By STEVE IDTCBELL .. Ot•Oeltr ........ The effarta of a 13-year-old boy who paddled out oo • bOos!e board in rough surf to rescu. u injured priest wbo was Uhl diY. I ine provect to be in valn ~ afternoon at Tbfee Arch Bay lh south~ The R8v. Patrick Colleran, 43. 9! Lon~ Bacti. who was akin dlv-hn1 offshore. was pronOQnCed <fead on arrl.al al lliUloo Com· plUDity HoaPlt&l foUoWint the• dr•matic ntscue effol'ts of YOWll David. Devlin, of a JLa Senda • 17 Kl)UK ••• Court. 'the bandcuf(ed and dis-~ beveled Kulik sat in sil9'lce Wblle hta atiorney. Philip Dellblat argued with Carter and tbe municipal judge over aettJng ol ball. The argument concluded when Judce Franltlin declared ... it is .my feeling on all the peopJ& in· ·volved In this case that none of them would be around if they had a chance to leave. I assume Mr. KuJtlt to be in the aam.e position." Kulik is one of nve people cur· rently In cuatody tn connection with thelhootin&deathof Bovan. The other alle«ed oonspl1ators -are all scheduled to return to Judge Franklin's courtroom Thursday alternoon for their ar- raignment and bearing on bail setting. Those four who were arrested last week by Newport Beach police have been held without bail. I At the concluaion:Ji the ar- raignment. DeMada tel Judge Franklin that bis ell bad been ill since being Jailed oe Oct. 22 and asked that Kulit be coaflned ·to the jalJ ward Of \he UC Irvine Medical Center. Judie Franklin instead said be· would order physicians to ex- amine Kulik at the Ot:ance Coun- ty Jail and then make reco.m· mendatlons to the court on further treatment for the jailed suspect. . Bank Manager Mrs. O'Leary Services Held Funeral services were held this afternoon for Norma E. O'X..ary, manaaer or the Seeuii- ty Pacific National Bank rbraoch in Coronadel Mar.; '' 1 " Mrs. O'Leary dJed Oct. 2t at· Ho~g Memorial H01pltal. She was4S. She was a director of the Corona del Mar Chamber of Commerce and programs chairman for the chamber. Mrs. O'Leary is survived by her husband, Frank; ions IUck Of Fullerton and Jamie ot Van· couver, Wash.; her father, Mat- thew Hakala of a; a brother, Richard ala of Villa Park; and two lindso!ls. Witness Says Tale's a Lie OXNARD (AP> -Oxnard police re)>Ort that a 1S·Y9BN>ld who previously claimed to be an eyewitness to the munl~r-rape attack Of a.pair of Oxnard biib school sweet.hearts bu chqed his story aDd aaya be Ued. Paul Yenney Jr •• 17', wu fa~ ly beaten in the Oct. 14 attack ud his girl friend, Llnda Fiene, 18, raped and beaten as they wilked home from a school event at Channel Island Hlgb School. Police sald Tueada)' the juvenile was re-lntervlewed and adrnitt.edbe hadlled. to police. .. t Costa Meaa's Baroid Cox . Rites Slated . . A memorial ...-vJce will be held Thursday in Irvine for Harold M. ~. a Costa Mesa real estate aeent who died Mon· day at theaaeof 53. Mr. Q>x. a veteran of World Warn. Korea and Vietnam, re- tired. from Uae Alt Force in 191'0 as a Lieutenant Colon~1 Since then be worltea as a Teat estate aaeot tor the Real Estateta firni lD Co.ta Keaa. • He ls sui'vived by h1S parents. Mr. alld Mn. Robert B. Cox ot Milwaukie. Ore., and three ions; Robert~ ol San Dleao, Gordon Cox ot San Fra,ncbc:o and Steve Cox, who is attendlne Harvard University. Memorial service will beein at 2:30 j>.m. Tbuts4ay at University Metbodiat Church in Irvine. Private interment will follow. The family has suegeated dooaClons be made to tbt California Institute tor Cancer Research. Wltneues Hid hp calmly awaited impact wltb the five-ear train. Amtrak'i Loll AD~~=·to-San Dteao nm. He was 1n· stant.ly. Bit body wu omteid250 feet down.1!lf ~ at;~Qnd Canyon Avenue ~inf~, aear theSantaAna Freeway. ~ Police llid a note wu fCMDICl lD • AJ•Ands'•~ ear. asklijlae~~~wtf6. and tdlbef ·~took for a oOte tn mJ blttoQ ~.la t.beden. •• ----~ --- 80BITS£K TOLD police he •W•• JIJU.U~.Wlltl.U ;,;, •uJll .. •• .._; ~·­door of the suburban Studio City home Monday night expectina J trick-or-treat.er. Instead, lbe cos· tumed man at the door burst in· side and beat the/OWtl man in the face, head an chest with a club, said North Hollywood division police. The intruder tben .knocked the handicapped man out of his wheelchair and bound him, police said. · WHEN THE ELDER Robitsek, a textlle importer· exporter, returned home, the in· truder bound and gagged him, then beat him, apparenUy seek· Th~ attarur fled ln the dead man.-s wblte-Im vouce van, t~ tnK some jewell"Y, and more than $1,000 in cash, a aid police. THE DISABLED younger man was left to stru11le for two hours before freeing blmselt and roll· ing bis wheelchair next doot where neighbors summoned police. Police said they round the dead man, bound and gagged on ftls bed and the living J'OOD'l bloOd· spattered. Im re . Robltsek ·told reporters Tuesday that his grandfather had cared Cor him tor two rears and was his last living relative. In Divoree Court Estranged Wife Shoots Husband . . VENTU~~ <AP> . A SS-year-old man was hosp1taJtzed in serious cond1hon alter bis estranged wife shot him in the chest dur· rng a bteak fn their divorce hearing, oCficials reported. George Sabol of Canoga Park and bts wife, Martha, 37, of $1mt yaue>'. began arguln.a Tuesday during a pause ln the hearing at Superior Court fn this community northwest or Los Angeles wit· nesses said. · ' While the ~wo were outside the courtroom, Mrs. Sabol shot her hus.band once in the chest at cl0&e range with a small·callber gun she pµlled from her purse, police said. A bailiff knocked the gun out of her hand, police said Mariae Dia Plaflf•9 a .. 1ceilH11i . CARLSBAD (AP> A young Marine is dead after collapsing on the basketball court at J:arlsbad High School. A coroner's official identified the victim as Dietrich L McDaniel, 19, oC MobiJe, Ala. He was a private first class assigned to Air Control Squadron 7 at ( Camp Pendleton. J McDaniel was practicing SJ'A.TE Monday with a unit basket· ball team when he dropped to -- the court, officials said. He was pronounced dead at Tri·Clty llospi~ afte.t paramedics failed to revive him. SIMMoen D .. peta Nertla St.ie By Tbe Aaaoelated Press A storm dropped showers on the state's northwest comer today but was .expected to break apart. before bringing rain to the rest or Cahforma. The National Weather Service said Crescent City felt .64 hun- dredths or an inch of rain durine the 24·hour period which ended at s a .m. today. Eureka was sprinkled with .18 hundredths dUri.na the same stretch. Crisp, clear weather was forecast for the remainder of the Northern Califonua region, with patches of fog and low clouds ex- pected over the coast. fi'ttd OH Pipe Lf1te Rt1pt11ra WILMINGTON <AP> -More than tt;.ooo gallons of fuel oil that spilled into streets and storm drains when a pipelltte bufst appareht· ly has been contained without flowing into neal'by Los Angflles Harbor. After Tuesday's rupture, the Coast Guard dropped oil booms in· to the harbor in case the oll leaked into the sea. But by late in the day. none of the oil that bubbled through the asphalt and flooded storm drains had reached the harbor. officials said. Firefighters contained the flow. and oU salvage crews vacuumed the gutters and storm drams. Pklcet• ~eel Er .. KTT\' l'..OS ANGELES CAP> -The National Association of Broadcast Employees and Tecbnlcan& hu removed its pickets from television station KTTV Collowin& an agreement by the station's management to meet with union representatives. KTIV General Manaeer Charles Young refused to comment on ~hat was discussed in the m~tlng Tuesday at the Federal Media· l!on and .ConQiMation Service omce, but said production at the sta· tton continued normally after the pickets were removed. "All commitments have been honored and production has con· tinued uninterrupted.·· Young said. Motorists Ir.ate Over Toll Hike SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -· .Motorists crossing the Golden Gate Bridge did their best to drive toll takers nearly over the edge Tolls went from 75 cents to $1 Tueaday and the willormed toll collectors were the target.of pro- test from angry commuters. · BRIDGE 011"1CIALS said at least a dozen drivers qulclcly handed over 76 cents and roared oCC without paylne the additional quarter. . One man eut a dollar bill into three pieces before handJna the toll over. SEVERAL commuters paid their tolls with 100 pennies. "It's a mlaerable job out there," said veteran toll collector Richard Hoey, 40. "There's no morale today." HE SAID ONE of the com· muters who gave him the toll in pennies promised to pay his toll that way daily. "I told him 'You can do 1t every day, but you're 1onna wajt here untU I count 'em,' ·· As for the motorists who rushed ore without paymg the full fee, toll collector Bill Sutton, 47. said, "1 can't catch them. I'm not. the bionic man " tRA.FFIC WAS delayed about 15 minutes during the r1.1sh hour bee a use of the protests. Tolls were increased as well as C"es on buses and ferryboats operated by the bridge district ln hopes or generating an addition· al $Sm iUion in annual revenues. Police Lack Srapect in Girl'• Death SAN DlEGO CAP) r-Police said they were without a suspect in the bludgeoning death of Belin- da Anne Robinson, a cheerleader and a "very popular girl" at Lin· coin High School. The body of the • 17-year-old girl, hit on the head with a rock, waa fOWld behind her parents' apartment house Tuesday. Police said she was attacked while walking home across a va· cant fieldder work at a chicken fast.food-store. Tests were under way to de- termine if the partly clad girl was raped. THE DAJlK.HAJaBD ,.,. broke down H •h• bee an to describe lbe bua hlJ ktn1ofJuly15, 1$76. "A man cot out with a fUA, .. Joell began, then . burst into t.eara. NEATLY CLAD ln bl..e suits, James Schoen· Celd. 26, Richard Schoenfeld, 23, •and Fred Woods, 26, alternately leafed tbi'oUi,h PIP.8H and Slanced impassively at the youn1 witness. .. They told us not to do anWilnc bad or wrong or we wens .ionn• 1et bun," JOdl taid when ahe re- sumed the wlt.ncu stand. THE DEFENDANTS are charaed with "kid· napping wlth b()d1ly bann.'' a more serious off'1lae than simple kldnapping to which they have pleaded guilty. If ~victed of the bodily harm count, the three- would be coadomned to lite impriaonment without posaiblllty of parole. . T..U BAVJ; CllOSEN a trial by Judge rather than juryt.f~artn1.Juron would be swayed by sym. pathy tor UM cJUldren. • • Jodi teatlfled \bat abe t\lffered repeated noseble.da duriU ~-hour abduction and also hurt her knee, wetherpantamdfelt "awful." • "My stOmach felt like I was gonna throw up.-· sheaaid. • JODI A.ND ANOTHER kidnap victim. Mike ?tfarsball, 15, remembe~ the cbildrea cryinc and praying as they lay in pitch darkness in a buried movlnl( van. \ .. MoJetttc Lake Tahoe ts o veor 'round ~ Uke none other In the world. Here you eon &kl chollenglng ~·· step Into nlgt\fl ftlled with gift· terlno entertainment ••• or 9'rnpfy breathe the mooototn cir ond watch the seasons change. Wt all within easy reoch ~ Yo\J toke otf 1or Tahoe on AJt Collfomlo. AllSRALL-; THE OLDEST of th• cbilctr.o. ~· membered bull drlver Ed Ray JeadiJ.tl the kids in sbo\,lt!I toward th\t roor of th bUried van, hopln& the kldnappera would liear . ' 1Ed started yelllne up, 'PJeue let us out. l?',rst· ty pleaao'," Ma.rshallaald. '" ... Sowut.ned all&•Y· ini that toHther for abo t l!S minute~.··, TR. TEEN·AGl':B, who helped ftaY di& an escape route, sald the ordeal oused him to hallucinate. "I seen some trees and a little stream ru.nnla1 alon1," Manhall recalled. " ... TMy weren't. lot real, butlaawthem ... · Of his feelinas fn the uncSerrro\lnd prtson. •Marsblllsald. "I thoutbtl wu1olnatodle.'' EARUER, RAY took the Witness stand and~· lated bis memories of the nightmare day when he tried to comfort the kidnapped chUd.ren by holdlnJ them cloee. "There was a lot of crying," said the 56-year· old bu~ driver. "Tho kids -they thou1bt tber wol,lldn1t see their mommies and their daddies no more. I tbouabt we wu all 1onna die riaht there." RlY LATER flao hailed u a hero when be and the cbU~ du& their way out of the van which was buried in a aravel quarry. Hia bodilY injuries. he said, were two badly ~ut lineen. I What he remembered most cleuly was the trauma totbe children. ' "It was real crowded," he uld of condillou tn the kidnappers' panel truck which took them to the quarry. "I LAID ACROSS the bact fender well and the kids piled up against me -on my arms and lep ... Ray said. • 'l got cramps ln my le15 and tried to move. but I couldn't bec:auae the little kids just started crying ·more ... the poor little klda didn't want to move." be said. ''So ltet them lay on me." .. '• , I \ ' Like Newport ach City Cotlnc 1m n Don Mcinnis. we ould haYe to arreeth1it the stgn ordinance !acing im· minentJ>assage ls a pretty100done. .. It lackS the major fiaws of th prev us eftofts to • ulate signs in the city -etcorta that pro<luced no r~gol • tions, bl\t plenty of controversy. There have been no cries from the community tor im· position ot stricter controls on signs. In fact, lack of community involvement is what's been wrong wltb all the previous efforts. Prinr -.m111e~ions for changes in the sign ordinance were ma• w1tnout consumng w. uu:.m~wt:u wuv •. wzn:.u backed into a corner. put up a stiff fight against any changes.. .. This time businessmen, represented by the Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce, ilave been in on the changes from the beginning, helping t• draw up the new ordinance. That kind of cooperation shows in a law satisfactory t& most and, more significantly. one which can get the sup· port it need!:i for passage by the city council. McNally Fills Need . Trustees in the Newport-Mesa School District are fac· ing their toughest decision of the school year. Last week, trustees received without comment two recommendations from a distrlct-apP<>int.ed citizens ad·:, vbory committee. J ~ • The primary recommend,.-tion wotdd clo~ Monte Vista Elementary SchQOl on C«sta l\lesa. eastSidet..'!!~h ·~ the vacant campus bet!omin. the new h<>cne of Mcr<aUY continuation school. The McNally site. 19th Street and'Nt'NJ>Qrt Boulevard, iii slated to give way l$ eosta 1"esa 's Downtown Redevelopment by 191tJ The committef? ·at!'o called for a study into whether .McNally really needs to function as a separ~te.facility in light of alternative education programs existing at the d1strict·s four regular high schools.. ' That option, and the time and money.itwou!~ tak.etqre· :->carch it thoroughly, can only work agamst the ideas upon which Mc Nally was founded nine years ago. :\Jany McNally students attend their small school because they don't function well in the sea of students and programs at large high schools. To return them to these in· stitutions could cancel many of McNally's success stories. Trustees should tackle the difficult problem of where McNally should be relocated instead of whether it should continue to exist. Plans Too Ambitious ·Two long-delayed public works projects in Newport Beach are facing even longer delays after last week's city council meeting, The projects, the bicycle bridge which will parallel the Arches bridge carrying Newport Boulev~rd traffic over the Newport Island Channel, and the Newport Center branch of the Ii brary were to have been ready for CQnstruc• tion and councilnfen were to have awarded the two con· tracts for the projects at ~i{;ruesday meeting. But councilmen deci~Jt\t tO act when they found out the lowest bid on the libraf'Yw&s 40 perttnt higher than the estimate and the low bid on the bridge was 60 percent higher than the estimate. Now plans have to be revised In an attempt1o attract lower bids. It ls both unfortunate and unnecessary that these projects have been delayed by unrealistic estimates. Granted, part of the problem lies in the construction business itself wbich is enjoying a boom, making com· pctitive bids harq to come by. However, part of the blam~ rests in the design .. therefore with city officials charged with approving the pl•ns · The average citizen knows that things like the red brick work and wooden platlking in the bicycle bridge de· sign, and custom masonry in the library, cost a lot of money. WlO' couldn't city staff ~d the architects ha ye come to th~same conclusion? \ • Opinions expressed in the apat:e above are those of the Oaflf Pilot. Other views SJCpressed on this page are those of their authora and J artists. Reader comment Is Invited. Addrna ~Daily Piiot., P.O. Box 1560, CQSta M~ CA 92626. Phone (714) 64~-4321, · Harris /·Thoughts By SYDNEY J. IL\lllUB around the-,•• the ma· .jority or-a ~V audfence 'responded ''coUar, .. whereas a &entW'aUon ago tt would ha\te bed\ ~"rosy.'') For eve:y one ~on who treats his own clrcte ol family • and friends with CODSidll'8• tion and strangers witb 1Ddlf· ference. there is another one who is more con.ce~tcl wlth making a goecUmp~ OD strangers than on meellna h1s more int.linateobllptlou, M~ tell llee. when they do, to ••l~e. •• ad"faata1•~ women, wbeit tbe1 do, to , avotd a difficulty • .. ReallsUc art.. fs eon.: tradlc:Um tn tennl, for all art is aa abltfacttOQ ~ .,.. ty, tbe only dlf1~• bfmf the degree Of abltra~oe. Ad•ertlstng tlogans have become the f.olklore ot modernity. with all the spfr tual tmpoverlahaient that mplies. <Asked ~ pletc the pbra1 , .. ln• What tb9 eourts eall "•anl· ty" is a letal Jen14 a medical ~: doctors can no more defb1e ••sanity" than lawyers can define •'Justice." "' WASHINGTON -A ficUonJl President's dispatch of troops to . halt lmqinary Commurust ~ .. 1re.ulcm in tho 1980s has 1eneral· ed eaoqb Juror here to un· der1co this baun'Ung· question: Cao a post·Vletnam u;s. govern-. mmt ever aga1n poise ~ eredlble threat 10 intervene mUltarUy anywhere in the worJat That very question ls the ldeoloatcal underpinning or "As•inst AU •"•mi'"''' <DOubfeday-), • Waahlqtoo novel by ex-LBJ speech· writers Ervin s,. Duaean and Ben J. Wattenberg. T)letr story has "an American President, some 15 ~ara after Lyndon Johnson, lntuvenlng in the right war at the right Ume in tbe right. way (with limited forces). Yet he provokes audl opposition that. be is nearly driven frorn office . Seldom bas there been so vivid a ca~• of life imitating art. Reviewers of the book for the most influelf\lal newspapers, ln· eluding a former campaign speechwriter for .1lmnty Carter, took precisely the same stand as the Uctio.oa.I Pfe&ident's enebtlesr W'll11e _.rally prais· lng the novel, tbeae• crfttcs re-> coUed at the notioft o! U.S. troops lntervenin1 anywhere under any conditloos. A SIMILAR mindset is found within the ~arter administra· tioa 's nati<>nal security bureaucrac:!'y, thereby moving this debate• out of the literary salon. Suspicions tiave been raised about bow the American superpower, deprived of the right to intervene, can confront the Russian superpower un· shackled by self·limitations. Among tbe auspicious is novelist Wattenberg, who Jn th~ real world is mobilizing Democratic dissent to Carter polki~. In "Against All ~emies, •• liberal Democratic l>resident Carl Rattigan faces an invasion of democratic Bolivia by Com· . munist Chile. Impeded by cam- paign promises and his own doubts, Rattigan nevertheless in- Mailbox To the F.dlt.or; Three weekends ago, follotrine the misnided advice of a friend. I attended a Saturday matblee at a Qosta Mesa theater, whez:eto quote their ads, "The best pie· ttires play.'' A triple .bill was playing: Sh<>Ck Waves (PG>. Champion of Death (R) and Meatcleaver Massacre <R). I was surprised to see several children in the audience, includ· ing a pre-schooler being held on the lapot a lirl not much older. I walked out to the ticket counter and asked the woman in the booth why ctulclren were be- ing told tickets for violent ~ rated films. Sb9 wasn't 9\ll"e. Wanting a direet answer. I Qted to speak with the·manaeer. Un-· fortunately. the mana1er was on a lunch break. I decided to wait. I went back into the theate aqd aat through two of the fllms. "Meat.cleaver Massacre,•• ~ everything, the Utle indicates, etarted. MOt$cblldreq entered. I .. would be an appropriate time for prominent; concerned Democrats, local officials and the media to ask the governor when he will okay the fl'eeWay's completion. If he duck~ the issue •. or responds negatively, then be should be told clearly Of our needs ~ of the political im· plic~ttOn.s in No~ember, 1978. Even though the governor is · "perceived'' as a fiscal co'n· servaUve, .-"nice ~y" end u bavlna an at~tive (to aome> llfeatyle. let QI not be ' mesmerlied by ttiese upectl'; nor satfstied witJi any raUonale whlcb would continue the freeway'• Ital.US quo of lnactlon ud ofbeial benlenJyneatectecs. Put-it to the governor -dlieCt· ly1 openb'.'andprompUy. CHJ\lSTOPHft M. STEELE I•~ or V.S.'t • 17 ~-·•to. · · The eight-minute egg was sunny side up in more ways than one Tuesday when students at Valencia Elementary School in Lajuna HiUs used a solar cooking unit they built in two weeks to cook an egg. Jnstruotor1.Lyn JFK Sbttt J Taken by Sturgis? ... ·11tl11'1.0hl'J BylOANNE.BEl'NOLDS a.-... .......... NewPort Bea~b pottce found narcotic. para)>tiemalla and lists of names they allege ue buyers and· aellers ot riai'eOtlcs at the , home used ~Y murder conspiracy suspect Alexander Kulik, court recordJ lndic:ate tod~. The search warrant &ffidavit was filed by lnve.stlaaton at Oranie County Superior Court alter they searched the home here Kulik was staying on Lin- da Jsle. In the affidavit, oUicers allege they found; -Reootds of alleSH heroin sales tn addition to lists of"'What police assert are names of nareollcs buyen and ~eUen. -A bUtk Up in KulllCa pame for a $35$,000 deposit to an UR· -~iliod bank. -A atkrotllme4 t>\iSiness rec· Ord. ' ~il.la~--~11Jlt',tif'~9dd $1 MILLION BAIL -Alex- ander Kulik as he appeared in court· today, drawn by Daily Pilot staff artist Jerry Hertenstein KULIK •.. and has partners in their invest- ment firm, Prasadam 1>is- tributors Inc Shooting victim Bovan worked for one of the tlrms in which Prasadam invested. Police al·, lege Bovan believed the partners in frasadam had a store of a large amouni or cash. They allege K1,1Uk was kid· napped in an attempt to get at that money. tfctionJ Agoinilt SACft.UtENTO .<AP.h -:r.a~ health officials are fiee'king legal action to revoke th~ licemie of a Long Be'ach extended oare hospital ac9U~ed of bealUl care violations. , The Depiu;tment of Health said ruesday that besides action against °'e license, it wants th6 state attar~Y gener._1 tQ help suspend the Medi.Cal status or Regency Associates Ltd. as a skUled nursing facility. . YioleUons include failure to provide patients with enough care to prevent bedsores, failure to provide enQU&h nurses, and failure lo properly give medica· tion to 28 patients, the depart· mentsaid. Shooting Death De'Clared Suicide Tb& shooting death of a 25· year-old Laguna Niguel man has been ruled a suicide, Orange County COroner's officials Said Tuesday. Mark Edward Hauge of 23781 Mariner Dtive dleij euly Mon· day ln a lonel}' Mission Vlejo hardware store parkin.J lot: ue· was shot throuth the head wlth a .22-callber rifle. Coroner's of. flclall .-td ho feft no explanatiOw of bid aetfon. • Van den.J>i..oort, concerned that the .. sloppiheas ·' of. young medical eenter doctors could en· tbJ)f.el' tit# ~t--• ..... auv..•·· ~1u~ ooay proirarn, ···.cuesaay canceled the trt.n$f er of bodies from the UCI tampua to the medical center. A bout 1,500 Orange County residents have willed their bodies to the unJversity for re- seach upon their death. F ..... Page.41 JFK •.. sassination but that it d.id fit in with con1plracy theories that bold more than one ~li'on fired at Kennedy es be rode \broup Dallus in a motorcade. The News qtf9led Sturgis' de· f enae attorney, Henry Rothblatt, as HYinl that Miss Lorenz story wa" "utter no.,,ense" and that sM "$et up·· sturgi' by sendina hirtJ tltolley le) tty to New York from Miami to meet with her. Ht!> was arrested shortly after Mis& •Lorenz' l"~·yeat·ohl daoshter, Monica Mercedes Perez Jiminez, was taken into custody for possession of a pistol. Police said the girJ told them sbe got Ute gll!'I to protect her mother • from StUfeis, B:r MICRAEt. PASKBVJCR Of die.,.,,,"""' ..... The Orange County Fair· grounds could ION •~t $118.000 'on it& "Fall Fair .. next w~lt' at said'J'Uada~. ''Tbe reat tsaue here ls whether rich tracks can continue to S~urg1$ aerved a federfl prison term as one of tile five met\ caught ill the Democratic:· Na· tiortal Committee headquarters m the Watergate in 1972 -the in· ciden~ that started the downfall LOs Alamitos it • r.ol Anc~" • c&urt order prohlbltine thoroughbred r11cing ls not re· versed, fair Director Ken FUik . domihat• horse racin1. •• said Fulk. who took over the Costa Mesa-based fatr1rounds early thlsye_ar. "It jast not very fair to the pea. of then-President Nixon. Sturgis claims that after he bro~e with Castro because of the Cuban leader's turn to com- munism, he recruited and trained Miss Loreni for the CIA in an abortive attempt to kill Castro. Miss Lorenz claims to have been sexually involved with Castro at one point. TOJt ix ~· "l. Saddleback BU ~ 'I .. Askine for more' Information on the dmrict's ~ancial -status, Saddleback Colll!Ce trustees re· jected a budget calendar pro- posed by their 'administrators Tuesday. Administrators will begin working on their budgets for the 1978-79 school year thJa month. According to )he 1>lan, trustees would have'f'eceived their first budget report in April. But Larry Taylot-, board preal· dent, objected thtt this may be too late to avoid a last minute push to make decisions on the spending plan. Although he didn 'l fault the timing, Trustee Robert Price asked for more Information ... It always struck me that you were reluctant to tell us t.oo much un· less we asked questions," he complained. The trustees agreed to refer the calendar back to their staff who will resubmit a revised schedule later. Witness Says Tale's a Lie · Robot Rapped 'I' . Mom Sue• Over Baby'• Fear. · • SCHMIT RERLIES. He also pointed out that in hia view much of what wu con- tained in a nine-pare written statement by Butterfield was already "well ltnoWn, wen di.S· cussed and well rehashed." ~ Most serious of Butterfield's charges was that Schmit on an amended disclosure statement filed in early 1976 imptopefu showed roughly $36,000 worth ot loans for In kind services from Butterfield. Thal amended statement along with the amended docunienUiled early this year we.re tb~ ),ateet in a series ~ live amendtnent. the county supervtsot meet to CO'ier , his costly 1.974 campat1n. According to'IL~tboritles 1h SacramentO. the JIU'tiUcal r~ act of 1974 was not In.force at the time of SchDilt's li8D di! there WoUld be a &OBITSEK TOLD police be waa atone when ht answered the door of the suburban Shadlo City home Monday nl&ht expecUn& a trlck·or.treater. In.stead, the cos- tumed man at the door bunt in· aide and beat the younr man in the face, head and ch .. t with a club, said North Holly'Nood division police. • in1 money •nd valuablet. potlce sald. The attacker fled ll\ \be dead man'a wlilte Wll Dode• van, tl,k· ang some JeweltY and h\ore than Sl, 000 ln cash, saf d pollce. THE DISABLED younger man · was left to stru11le for two hours before tretlng · hi~lf and roU- i ng his wbeelc'bair next door where neighbors summoned The intruder then knocked the handlcapped 112an out of his wheelchair and l)ound him, _police. police said. ' WHEN THE ELDEll Robitsek, a textile Importer- exporter, returned home, the in- truder bound and gagged him. then beat hLrn, apparenUy seek· Police said they found the dead man, bound and gasged on bJs bed and the lWing room blood· spattered. Im re Robitsek told reportera Tuesday that his grandtather had· t:ared for hlm for two years and was his last living relalive. In Divoree Coart Estranged Wi/e Slwots Husband . VENTURA (AP> -A SS-year-old man was hospitalized In ~enous con~lUon alter has estranged wife shot him in the chest dur. ing a break m their divorce hearing, officials reported. George Sabol of Canoaa Park and bis wlfe, Martha 37 of Simi Valle~ began a~guini Tuesday during a pause in the' hftrtng at Superior _Court m this community northwest of Los ·Angeles, wit- nesses srutl While the two were outside the courtroom, Mrs. Sabol shot her husband once in the chest at close range with a small·caliber gun she pulled from her purse. police said. A bailiff knocked the gun out or her hand, police said Marl•e Din ....... a .. 1eetMU CARLSBAD CAP> -A young Marine is dead after collapsing on the basketball court at Carlsbad High School. A coroner's official identified the victim as Dietrich L McDaniel, 1~. of Mobile, Ala. He was a private first class assigned to Air Control Squadron 7 at ( Camp Pendleton. J McDaniel was practicing SI' ATE Monday with a unit basket· ball team when he dropped to the ~ourt, officials said. He was prol}ounced dead at Tri·City Hospital alter paramedics failed to revive him Shoecen De191pe11 Nercla State By Tbe A.uoclated Prul A storm dropped showers on the state's northwest corner today but was expected to break apart before bringing rain to the rest of California The National Weather Service said Crescent City felt .64 hun- dredths of an inch of rain during the 24-hour period which ended at s a.m. today. Eureka was sprinkled wfb .18 hundredths durtnr the same stretch. Crisp, clear weather was forecast for the remainder of the Northern California reaion. with patches of fog and low clouds ex- pected over the coast. f'ttd OU Pipe Ll..e R11pt•~ WILMINGTON (AP) -More than 16,000 galr0'1S of fuel oil that spilled into streets and storm clrains when a pipeline burst apparf:nt- ly has been contained without flowing into nearby Los Angeles Harbor. After Tuesday's rupture, the Cout Guard dropped oil booms in- to the harbor tn case the otl leaked intctthe sea. But by late in the day, none of the oil that bl.lbbled throuab the asphalt and fiooded storm drains had reached the harbor, offi~lals said. Firefighters contained the now, and OU salvaae crews vacuumed the gutters and storm drains. Pidiet• ..,_..,eel Fr .. KTTl' l'..OS ANGELES CAP> -The N atlonal Association of Broadcast Employees.and Technlcans has removed Its pickets Crom television station KTl'V following an aireement by tht atation's manaaetnent to meet with union representatives. KTTV General Manager Charles Young refused to comment on what was discussed In the meeting Tuesday at the Federal Media· tion and Conciliation Service office, but said producUon at the ala· t ion continued normally after the picket! were removed. "All commitments have been honored and production has con- tinued uninterrupted ... Young said San Diego Condemn& KKK Act Motorists Irate Over . Toll Hike · SAN FRANCISCO <AP>, - MQtor1sts crossing the Golden Gate 'Bridge did their ~t to drive toll takers nearly over the edge. Tolls went from 76 cents to $1 Tuesday and the w::itlortned toll collectors were tho target of pro- test from anCl)'. commuters. . BRIDGE oPnaALS sald ei least a dozen drlveri quickly handed over '5 cents and roared off without paying the add.W.onal quarter. .. One man cut a ctollar blU jnto three pieces before bandi.nt the toll over. SEVERAL commuters paid their tolls with 100 pennies. "It 'i; a miserable job out there," said veteran toll collector Richard Hoey, 40. !'There's no morale today." HE SAID ONE of the com· muters who gave him the toll in pennies promised to pay bis toll that way daily. "I told him 'You can do it every day, but you're gonna wait here until I count 'em,· " As for the motorists wlto rui:;hed off without paying the full rec, Loll collector Bill Sutton, 47. s aid, "I can't catch them I'm not the bionic man ... TRAfFIC WAS delayed a~ 15 minutes during the rush hour bee a use of the protests. Tolls were increased as well as fares on buses and ferryboats operated by the bridge district in hopes of generating an addition- al SS million in annual revenues. Police Lack Suapect in Girl'• Death SAN DIEGO <AP> -Police said they were without a suspect in the bludgeoning death of Belin· da Anne Robinson, a cheerleader and a "very popular girl" at Lin· coin High School. The body of the 17·year·old &irl, bit on the head with a roct, was found behind her l>arents' apartment house Tuesday. Police said she was attacked while walking home acroes a va- cant field after work at a cblCJten r ast-foodstore. Tests were under way to de- ternaine lt the partly clad girl was raped. TUB DEF ND ANTS are charged with ·'kid· na,.PP.lnl wlth~y harm," a more ''-riQUS offense than simPtt lddnapOJDt to which tbey,have pleaded guilty. . It ~onvlcttd of the bodlly .hann count, the three would be conelemned to life lmpriaonment wlttiou.t posstbUityot<parote. . ' TOY HAVE CHOSEN ~ tnal by judae rather than JQ,I')'. fearlui Jurors woUld be swayed by sym- pathy for the children. 1 Jodi testified tbat ab• suffered repeated nosebleeds duririi ~ b-hoar abductlon and also hurt her knee, wet her pant. luid ftlt 0 awtul. •• "My stomach felt like I wu roua throw up,•• sbeaaid. JODI AND ANOTllE& kidnap victim, Mike Marsh&ll, 15, remembered tlie children crylnc and prayln,-as they lay t.n'pltcli dariliess in a burled movln1t,van. · Mo,leltk: Lake Tc:h>e II o y&OI 'rOund ~ Ilk• none other In the WOfkt. Here you con skf chatlenQlnQ llope1, step Into ntghtl ftlted "11h gllf... tetlng entertofnment ••• or aJrr4>ly tnotM the ~n olr ond wotch the MQJOnl chonge. 1r1 oil within eoay reach wh9rl ycu take Off tor rM<>e on NI COlltomlo. THE TEEN·AGBR. who helped Ray dli aa escape route, said the ordeal caused. hlrn ~ hallucinate. '1 seen some trees ll)d a little stream runnJn1 alonr." Marshall recalled. •· ... The1 weren't for real, butlsawthem ... . or hl8 feellnp in the undercround prison, •Maraballaaid. "lthou1ht1wu1oln&tod.11.•· EAIUER. llA Y took Ula wilQesf stand ud ..._ lated hjj memories ot the nightmare day "When he tried to comfort the kidnapped children by bold~ them close. " ''There was a lot of crylnl." said the 56-year old bU$ driver. "The kids -they thought the,y WO\lkll\'t their mommies and their d ddies DO mord'. I tliOUibt we wu all &oMadie rilbt there.•· RAY LATER was bailed u a hero when he and the children dui their Way out of Ule van which was buried in a aravel quarry. His bodUy injuries, .be said, were two badly cut finaers • Wbat be relJ)em~red most clearly: was the ttuQla to the ch1ldren. "It was real crowded,•• he sald of coriditlona in the kidn&lppe~· panel truck which toot them to the quarry. . ••1 LAID ACROSS the back fender •ell end tbo kids piled up a&ainst me -on my arms and lep. •• Ray said. "I aot cramps in my leas and tried to move. but I couldn't because the litUe kids Ju.st started crying 'more ... the poor little kid.a didn't 'N&nt to move;· he said. "So I let them lay on me." traveling ond more time enjoying the spectac- ular r~t\on and cat- uol lifestyle that's 10 rruch 0 part c1 this toenlc inlafld sea In the Slenas.: M~ng dl$Counti ovoUoble for groups ot fet'\ « l'l'QB, kl1'llUel ond mllltory personnel. Sun- jet Tcxn. too. Don't ycu want to go? tr'.a eo»f ••• on >Jr Collfomlo. Some keptics aaid it couldn't be d~ne. Bi:ack in December~ .11f15. the staff and parent l E peranza School for the trainable ment lly retarded vo wed they would r•tse the money nee<led to bu\ld a wim· m 1 pool for their students. "'--·- Saddleback Valley Unified School District trustetl! had agreed to build an addition l9 Ulct Mil~ Viejo school. But they approved construction o{ the ~l only on condi· tion the $36,000 bill be paid by the community. State school building funds couldn't be used for the pool and it just seemed too mucb to take from the general fund . Rather than complain, Esperanza School supporters --including num·erous individuals and community OJ'· ganizations -launched a fund·raising drive. Earlier this year, distnct trustees agreed to match funds for the pool project, making the goal easier to reach. Recently, representatives from Esperanza presented trustees with a check representing half of the tab. It was more than many people thought they could raise. All who participated deserve congratulations. They have provided something that will benefit tiwse han· dicapped youngsters and the entire community in a way that hasn't pained the district taxpayers. Ho01e Front Reform The Irv me City Council;~ in the early thrashing stages of a home brewed version of campaign r~r~aimed at upcoming March elections. \ ' In coming weeks tbe CQuncil is'expected th consider whether campaign contrtbutions oqgtlt to be limited, 3*well as the mot·c important question Df when they 6hout<l'be t reported. • .. Mayor Bill Vardoulis is Qn th&\"iglit track when he sug• gests that candidate expenditure and contribution reports should be filed'•just'before election day, rather than two weeks before, as current rules allow. ·He correctly points out that you can spend a lot of hid· den money in two weeks, which then isn't reported until after the election, too late to be very infdrmaliv~ for voters. The council ought to consider cutting off contributions to an election campaign at a reasonable time well in ad· vance of election day, so voters can examine who's back· ing whom and why. Spending >vould J>e allowed to go on as long as a can· d1date chooses or his money holds, but contributions would have to be committed --and recorded -well before the election That kind of rule favors more open elections: Tests Need Balance J Bcforl' .June. 1978, Irvine school trustees, like their courterparts m districts throuJhout California, must de- sign tests to measure the mirumum knowledge students , must possess to earn high ~chool diplomas. · The rcspomibihty: to devin examinations that decide whether a child will be given a document that may !ffect a whole lifetime of earning ability and feelings of personal - worth is an onerous one. \ J ·~ ~ More burdcnsome~liid more lmpor\ent -i~ the responsibility to provide a curriculum plan arUJ teachmg excellence that will, if not guarantee that every student will gain the learning skills he needs, give him the best possible chance That does not mean setting minimum standards so low • that no one can possiblyJfajl Nor should they be so high that parents need feet ;lngty and confused because their chUdren are requffed master concepts, as they were with th~ New Math, H1at parents don't understand and so cannot be supporiive. It may mean a' ne.w st~ndard of teacher accountabili· ty, a measure (>f hdw well the profession is preearing children to unction in society. Teachers too need protec· ti on aga~ sta~atds too high, or ridiculously low. And.ltrla li~. means giving teaching titne that isn't chewed ue> by non-essential student or teacher activities. • Opinions expressed rn the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views expressed on thrs page are thoM of their authors and artists. Reader commtint is invited. Address The Daily Piiot, P.O Box 1560, .Costa Mesa, CA 92626, Phone (714) 64,2-4321. Harris I tTlwughts around the --, " the ma· jority ot a · TV audience responded .. collar," whereas a generation ago it would have been .. rosy."> Men tell lies, when they do, to ebe ~n advantage: women, when they do, to avoid a difficulty. What the courts call •1aan1. ty" is a legal term, ot a mediCal one: doCton c n no m~e d~e .. sanity•· than lawyers.can define "Justice." WASHINGTON -A fktional ~ sldcnt'a dispatch of troops to halt Im ginary CommUftisl a1· 1retsion in the 1980s has 1enerac; eel enou1b furor bore to un· Id this baunUn1 questlon: Can a post·Vletn m ms~ govern· ment ever •Jain pos a. credlblo thMat to Intervene 19illtftril.y anywllere u'I UM wonr. ..That: very guest.ion ls the tdeofogtcal underpinning of "A•alnst AU Enemies" <Doubleday>. a W ashlngton novel by ex· LBJ .speech· writers Ervin ~ S. Duggan and Ben J . Wattenberg. 'l'belr story has an American President, some 15 years after Lyndon Johnson, intervening In the right war at the right Ume in the right way <with limited forces>. Yet be provokes such oppc:1Sition that he is nearly driver) from office. Seldom has there been so vivid a ease or lire imitating art. RevJewers of the ~k for the most influential newspapers, in· cl ud Ing a • former ·ea19paign speechwraterr r°" Jimmy .Carter, took ptecis.iy th• same sta.rul as the (ictional President's edQOtles. ~ ion~r-117 prai&- ing the novel, Utese etitics r~ coiled at the not ton of U.S. troops intervenin& anywhere under any · condilions. A SIMILAR mindset is found within the Carter administra· ti on 's national ~eourily bureaucracy, thereby moviRg this debate out of the literary salon. Suspicions have been raised about how the American superpower, deprived or the right to intervene, can confront the Russian superpower un· shackled by self·limitations. Among the suswcjous is novelist Wattenberg, who in the real world is mobilizing Democratic dissent to Carter policies. In "Against All Enemies," liberal Democratic Presideqt Carl Rattigan faces an invasion of democratic Bolivia by Com· munist Chile. Impeded by cam- paign promises and his own doubts, Rattigan nevertheless in· Mailbox To the Editor: Three ,,.,eekends ago, following thi! misJ(Ulded advice of a friend, I attended a Saturday matinee at a Costa Mesa theater, where lo quote their ads, "The best pie· tures play " A triple bill was playing: Shc;>ck Waves <PG), Champion of Death <R) and Mealcleaver Massacre <R>. I was surprised lo see seventl children m the audience, includ- ing a pre·schooler being held on the lap of a girl nol much older. I walked out to the ticket counter and asked the woman in the booth why children were be- ing sold tickets tot vlolent R- . rated Cilms. She wasn't sure. Wanting a direct answer, I asked to speak with the manager. Un· fortunately, the manager was on a lunch break. I decided to wait. I went back into the theater and sat through two oftttre films. "Meatcleaver Massacre," being everyt.tilil1 the Utle indicates, surted.,More children entered. sponsored Haunted House in San· ta Ana. • The March of Dimes which for years has tried to tie and •)'m· bolize itself as close to the American Oag, apple pie and motherhood, helping the han· dicapped With a teary.eyed child, put on a show to t>eat all. I'm sure the organizera and the sponsors started with good intentiOns: but for the many unsuspecting and uninformed parents with sm'-11 children it was a real nightmare. ' j , MoneY. Tree WILL ZENITH ADS TELL US about its Taiwanese· a$sembled set.•f! Will Zenith tell us that tts stereo sots areu: ;: belnJ bought from Japanese companies., Will Zenith ad5' ·.,: boast about the Mexican workmanship in its TV receivers! \1:} Don't bet on It. .., .. 1 On the other hand, Miller Brewine,Jubsldiary of cigarette i.'"J ma~r Philip Morris, ~ reversin this traffic with a mulUmitllon·dollar ad campaign promoting lhe virtues of " Lowenbrau beer. Miller has had the ri8hts to import Lowen-' ' brau from Munich, Germany, since 1974. And JC you are t1&miUar with lhe TV commercials for Miller's Llto Beer. l'OU kfiow how thls company can pour it on. _ But guess what? Miller has figured out a way to brew .,•" Lowenbra~ here -and lhat'1> precisely what it's doing now· • •t al U.s plants in Milwaukee, Fort Worth, Tex., and ANSa, · ., Callr. So when you pick up 8 case of LowenbrllU tOday, '', you're buying a U.S.·made brew. .:·: • l>llLLER'S CAMPAJGN THEME IS: "Tonight. let it be Lowenbruu ... Do the ads tell us that Lowenbrau la •ow'bein1•: ,. brt'wed In America? Don't be silly. The cachet derived from .... • ' buying Lowenbrau i!S that yo~·re gettiltg a fine German tJeer_,,\~ feven if it's coming from Wisconsin, -r.xas and Calitornla>.. '"•'1:\ A six-pack or the German·made Lowenbrau sells for 80 · ·• .. cents more than Budweiser and other leading American·. ~ers, which b understandable when you think of the beer being packed in Munich and then shipped acf()Ss lhe-AUan-".v. Uc Oce&l 1o America. Now that U>wenbrau ls being made • hel'e, will Miller reduce the price? .D,on't be snty. Philip • Morris needs that money to mount its bloc~buster advertis-.. tnl drives' roe Marlboro, B~on & Hedges. Parli raent. \; 3 Merit and Virginia Slims cigarettes, all or which are made t in the United States ''• MarketbaskeJ ( CONSUMER THE TWO RACES IN one COJ?lprising the Sea of ;c Cortez series is a new wrinkle in Mexico races and 1 may lead lo still anolher race in the series two • years from now, according to officials or the ll'_sponsoring Long Beach Yacht Club. 2" Another innovation was the admittance of a Performance Handicap Racing Fleet dl'rision, wor by Cher·E·Dan, a 35-foot sloop skippered by Bot ~ Lane, LBYC. \;. Sasquatch, the last or the 2S·boat starting neef ;..•struggled across the La Paz finish line Tuesday. f • Three yachts withdrew from the race, making a total of 22 finishers. Green Hungarian, a CF two ton· ner·skippered by Kris KrJstort, was out or the race ~ early with steering problems and never made it ,,,, past Dana Point. ~~ KNOCKED OUT WITH MINOR damage in the ~ storm that hit the neet in the latter stages or the 1 race were Shearwater, a Morgan one ton skippered ~ by W. G. Andrews or San Francisco and Tasmin ~ Sea, a New Zealand 37 skippered by Cap West and ~ .Mike Beaupre from the California Yacht Club. Both ~ yachts abandoned the race at Cabo San Lucas. • Reports that Tasmln Sea had lost the top third of her mast were erroneous. The yacht suffered •· other damage in the storm which resulted in the :. loss of all her fresh water, according to crewmen . . . THE UNOFFICIAL STANDINGS in the Cabo . San Lucas race: IOR Overall: 1 Silver Fox 2. Merlin 3. Drifter :.-. 4. High Roler s. Blue Norther. fficial standings in the La Pat race: 10 Overall: 1 Merlin 2. Drifter3. Silver Fox4. ligh Ro r 5. Equation. Cl : 1 Merlin 2. Drifter 3. Silver Fox 4. •• 5. Equation. Class B: 1. Cottontail, skipper John Arens, BYC: 2. Sneaker, Don Wilson, LBYC; 3. Buena Vida VI, Merrill Lowell, Coronado YC; 4. Concep· lion, Larry Bradley, California YC; 5. Audacious, Mike Kennedy, Dana Point Ye. PHRF Overall: 1. Cher·E·Dan. Bob Lane, LBYC; 2. Drill Rig JU, Gordon Hall, Ventura YC; 3. Karma, Carl Hanson, Silvereate YC; 4. Elusive, ·Harold Day, Bahia Corinthian YC; S. Leprechaun, Whitney Collins, LBYC; 6. Wild Wind, Bob Holm, SFYC. Hijacki~ Danger L Peril totBoaters · Hijacking and piracy may pose a danger to ~" boaters in the Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico and re-. mote areas ot-the western Atlantic and ea.st.em Pacific, the Coast Guard warns. Officials of the 11th Coast Guard District said there were no recorded incidents of hijacking or ~ piracy in these waters in recent years. but admitted i that the possibility exists. Protection of vessels in remote areas is difficult and often depends on the wariness ol the operator, the Coast Guard said, noting that the majority of hi· jackings involve people who come aboard with the perm lssion or the vessel's operator. -· · SEVERAL MEASURES TO help prevent ~ problems were suggested by the Coast Guard. They ,<# include: " Get to know your crew and guests well. Insist on positive identification. Before departing. deliver or mail the complete crew and passenger list to a friend -along with a .. Ooat. plan" and instructions to notify officials it I you fail to arrjve at your destination af\er a reasonable time. Let everyone aboard know that you have done this. MAKE A THOROUGH check for stowaways. When assisting someone in distress try to notify the Coast Guard by radio of what ls happening and be alert. · When leaving the country, advise the local customs agent, listing the crew and,.a,11 valuables. This is not required of a pleasure craft, but may save problems in foreign ports and in clearin1 -customs on Y,OUr return to the U.S. I