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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-01-04 - Orange Coast PilottBoat , ··1 Buims • DtiDar Sinking ··-Go European Money Markets Orange Coast VOL. 11, NO. 4, • HCTIO.Ct, .. PAeH I ·! Heavy Rains Due Tonight Sunshine brleny brightened the Orange Coasl today, but it probably w~n 'l be seen again for a while, Na tional Weathe r Service forecasters say. Rain began falling hea<Vlly shortly before noon t-Oday and I weather !orecaslera called for a 90 percent chance or more of the 'sameonThursday. · "We 're in kind of a storm pat- ftern here and storms have the potential to keep coming in," I hid Don DePauw, weather 1ervice specialist. 1 He said toniaht's storm 11· I coming from west of San Fran- cisco and should brlnl moderate to heavy rain, taperlna off to 11howers Thursday. r • DePauw said the storms are 1 due to a low pressure system I over the West. 0 These storms are likely to come throu1h one I arter the other," he satd. 1 Hl1h1 Thursday should be near 80, wllh overnight lows ' around tlO, be said. ' The Orange County Harbc)r f Department today reported .42 lncbd ot rain for the past M I . hours, bringing the season total to 4.07 tncfiea compared to 3.9 inches wt year. The Moulton Nieuel Water Treatment Plant recorded .32 inches, for a seuon total of 5.65 comparod to about half that last , year. • BUI Shields or Laguna Beach Hardware tallied .41 inches of raln on his gauge durlnl( the past 24 hours in lhe Art Colony. The season total lo date is 4. 72 Inches, compared to 4.29 inches l3st year at this Ume. In Costa Mesa, Charles Lewis of Oranee Cout Colle1e'a (See RAIN, Page A!) Dollar Takes Further SUde In Europe . ex m e ~ase · SA Seeks 'Profits' OnFihns BJ GARY GRANVILLE oe•Dilllr,.......,.. A Superior Court Jury wa' told Tuesday that Santa Ana should be paid SCS>,500 by the porno movie mocull who profited from the abowtng in a local theater ot 11 sex films the same jury de· clded Jut month were obscene. Attorney James Clancy b11ed his call for almost half a mlllon dollara in punitive damages on the estimated box office income at the Mitchell brothers Sant.a • Ana theater during the 382 days the 11 ftlma were shown. In addition to punitive damaees..._ Clancy pleaded for the city to be awarded an un· 1peclfied amount in com· pensatory damages for the_ ~cor· ruptlon Of morals" causeo by the p~bllc showing of such X· rated movie epics as "Behind tbe Green Door" and "Sodolll. and Gomon-ab." _,,,.... ........ But defense attorney. Josepl\ Rhine acoffed at Clancy's plea for compensation to the city for damaces allecedJy caused by operation ol the X-raled movie palace in a shopping center across 17th Stceet from San1-Ana Colleee. THIS WAS ALL OF HIS IOAT THAT THOMAS WAKELY COULD SEI TODAY 25-foot CrulHr E•plc)(Ma and BurM Aft• Leaving Balboa llland Fuel Dock Four Leap to Safety in NB Four ~aasengera leaped for their Jives and swam uhore Tuesday when tbelr 25-foot cabin cruiser exploded and burned near mld·channeJ In Newport Harbor. Flre from the blasta reducec! the veiliil to a aeml·aubmerced hulk. Two Ol the rour people who were aboud the veaael were In· Jur.d JD tb6 expl<*ion and firt. HubOr PatrOlmea aatd the DU enchanted Pmr Arrested • In Nude Heiat Because no other CaUfomJa jury baa fotmd any ot 11 films to be ob1ceoe, there can be no maUclous intent attached to the Mitchell'• operation of the porno movie house, Rhine taid . He tnalated that a rum must be <See :X·MTED, P•I• AU Budil.y Saves Paratrooper · FAYE'ITEVJLLEt. N.C. (AP> -;r_}l Fort »raag paratr«rper. plummeting to earth when both bis parachutes failed to open, WU laved wherfbe fell Oll top of an opened parachutt and alid down the lines into another aoldJor•a anm • .. He hollered at me to tel o~ bot by tbe time l 1Ud Oil the top, holdln« 00• to hll llnel, t.. knew what •bad happened " recallfd Spec. 4 Jtn;r,Tindal. The otber trooper. Nelton Peter1 ot Bay. ~ .-bbed. Ttndal. and the two landed wety. Tlad1t ••caped wJ\b • •PrAIDid!ec mu.e!e. j . . . ..., .... ~ ......... TIUJCK POSHES UP WAVf. AS DRIVeR Nl!OO'nATQ FLOODED THOROUGHFARE Water, Water, Everywhere end More to Come, Sap the Weatherman Fro111Pa9eAI RAIN ••• division of physlcal sciences re- ported .72 inches of rain for a season total of 4.86, up from 3.76 last year. Orange County F'lood Control s upervising hydrographer John Gietzen said that, although rain· fall has been considerable, It's b een s low enough to soak in rather than cause erosion prob- lems. · GiettM1 said today's totaJ in Santa Ana was 61 inches for a season total of s 02. compared to 4.48 la.st season at this time. · The highest rainfall figure he had was for Santiago Peak, where .60 inches in the put 24 hours brou&hl the season total to 15.70, compared to 10.9 la3l )'ear. No serious da m age from Tuesday's ruin w&1 s r eported <.1long the Orange Coast. l~rom Page Al DOLLAR ••• ('cntral hanks in £urope also in· tervcnt'd on their markets to s tem the fall of the dollar. Europ<>an central banks don't w<.1n t their currencies lo rise too s harply against the dollar because thi5 makes exports to the lmport.ant American marltel mot• expenalvo and leu CQm-petlUve. The year-long 1977 decline of dollar has picked up momentum in the first trading days of 1978. In Frankfurt the dollar con- tinued Its downward spiral by plunging as low us 2.0470 West German marks in hectic trading hd ore r ecovering to 2.0625 marks by <'&1rly afternoon. ' At-the el~e of business Tues- day, the dollar was quoted at a historic low of 2.0768 marks. Today·~ late rate was likely to set another record. Dea~rs sald lhe West German central bank bought $52.4 million lo help prop Lhe dollar. In Zurich the dollar was aJso on the way to another record low. By early afternoon, the U.S. currency was quoted at 1.9160 Swiss francs. compared to the record-low 1.9370 Swiss francs set at the end or business Tues-day. In Paris the dollar was quoted at 4.6230 French Cranes 1n the af. ternoon a.a compared to 4.6425 francs late Tuesday. Panel CoJUJidered BALTIMORE (AP) -Presl· dent Carter will name a special commission early this year to look I~ the need for a separate Department of Education, the first 1tep in his drlve tor the Cabinet.level agency, accordint tb admlnistratlon sources quotecr today by the BalUmore Sun. O"ANOI COAIT • Survivors 1Jnkno"1D Clwpper Crashes-~ On Search Mission KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - A military helicopter carrying seven persons crashed today while searching the Great Smoky Mountains National Park for a small airplane which went down Tuesday night with five aboard, authorities said. There were unconfirmed re. ports that three persona aboard the helicopter were killed and another unconfirmed report from a park ranger that there was one survivor of the airplane crash. It was not immediately de· termined what caused either ac- cident. A spokesman for the1'ir Force at Illinois' Scott Air Force Base, which coordinated the helicopter search. sajd all those on the plane. a tWin-englne Cessna 421 charter flight bound from Fort Lauderdale, Fla., to Chicago, were killed. John Nance, chief night con- troller for the Federal Aviation Administration, said, "I un- derstand there were •even cm board the beliCIOpUr end that there were tht'ee fatalities, but Ski-masked Bandit Robs " FV Station A ski-masked bandit stalked into a Fountaip Valley service station Tuesday nlght1 bran· dished a pistol and took about $200 from a terrified attendant. "This is a robbery ... don't make it a homicide .•. " police quoted the grim masked man as saying. Investigators said he then or· dered the unidentified attendant at the Thrifty OU Company out- let at 17475 Brookhurst St., to stay inlide for a few minutes before calling police. The bandlt, described u about 2S years old, then fled from the corner station at Brookhurat Street and Slater A venur and disappeared into the rainy nlaht. Police, who said the holdup OC· curred shortly before 7:30 p.an., seatched the •urroundtn1 neighborhood tor the caucaafan suspect without success. GM Plant Down FREMONT (AP) -Auto as· sembly lines were shut down anCl 2,000 workers were Idled temporarily at the giant General Mot.ors assembly plant Tuesday after a three·alarm .flrf was · sparked in a spray paln unit, GM officials said. we haven't Conrll'med that yet." Nance said a fiJgbt plan WU flied for a trip from Fort Lauderdale Executive Airport to Macon, Ga. An FAA Flight Service supervisor iD Miami said the pilot was IJsted on the fliebt plan as Pred Philp, no age or address given. Tbe supervisor 19aid the pilot repomd there would be five persons aboard the plane. None of the names were listed on the plan. An employee at Sky-Tell Inc.-, a charter service at the Ft. Lauderdale airport, said the plane was owned by General Electric Credit CorP.. The passengers aboard the craft were Philp's parents, his brother and another woman, ac- cording to t.he Sky-Tell employee. The downed helicopter was one of f6o..r which had lifted off al dawn to search the rugged terrain (or the airplane, Capt. Frank. Thornburg of tbe Civil Air Patrol aafd. It ... llGt bftmed.l.Wy ....... wblcb cl the four crabed, bt4 Maraaret CblP'>berlain, deputy publlc tdformation oftlcer at Fort Campbell. J(y., said she belfeved it was one of twa sent Crom there. . FroatPageAI X-RATED ••• considered legal unUl a jury f)nda ll to be o~cene. Rhine aald Jn comparison to Clancy's plea for $480,500 In punitive damages ..that a $1 U· aeasment would fWflll lhe JUl')''s obli1ation to a1H11 punitive dama1es. Last month. lt .wu the city's special anU·pornocraphy at· tomey Clancy who won the day when tbe • jury IOClnd 11 of 17 tilm• lt reviewed to be obscene. Slmultan~ly, the Jury 1•ve a clean bW of health to lwo other movies and failed to reach a de- cision oo the remaining four. That oblcenity finding in the Fate ot ·the 11 films led to the second phase ot the two-month trial, tompe111aUon to the city !or various forms of damaces. It will be Jud&e Marvin Weeks who wlll ctoiermlne the amount. 'if any, of OOler damages the cU,v will be awarded as a result bf, the X-rated movie display between September or. 1975 and April or 1977. For h\s /•rt, Clancy said judee •n Jut}' would be justJfled to aateu m1lllon1 of dollars in damaaes if, tor no other reason, than to serve as a deterrent to the 1howlna of 1uch filma lo other communities. P11DksPen~ Peevilh Pi.roil. P"kieid •• I:. FA l\IS (AP) -Pre•ldent Carter described American,.. Carter launched a three-day vis-latlons with Frace as ••apecJal lt to France today with an im-and r.ue_ •• Jar1eb' an alUance promptu ltroU down lbe Champs ol lcleals" iD a brief urlval ad· · SlrHn, drawlna ahouta of cb'ea1. Jledeclaied: •'JIMMf • ! • nmmy" ftom de· '10ut' NJl)l"O~beit to lvecUJC lilbted .,,.unden cl'Owdtn1 th~ quqUona may JaOt ahrays-be the Part• boulnard for a 1Umps4S of sarue, b\¢ OQ1' deep respect for tit• Aalel1cu pratdent. the lndepeodeaee and Jead.erlblp Carter, bare-beaded and coat· of France and our afl.,Uoll for Jeu dasP't. the winter ehlll, 1et your ~ have.NmaJMcl as oU uoder sny aides down the 1tron1 tor JOO )'e~" wide boulHarcl wltb French Carter aakl he woill4 4lleuss President Valery Gtscard d'Es· international ecopomic at.ability, CARTER MEETS Wl1M IADAT--M disarmament, enerfy, Middle East pqee, relations with the Sovlet thdGrl ad lb alltw, and human ri.1bts ln talks with taliir alter placing a wreath at Giscard d'Eltain£ ~ted to the Arc de Ttiompbe, tbe tomb . total tbur bourL · ol France'• unknovni soldier. Clscarct"d'Dtatnr. ID~a bttet Cheers and a,pffause en:ipted ...Welcome at Ody's v.JP lauQce. from •l*taton at the-wreath· also cited the Ion( history ot layln1 ceremony . when Carter Franco'American frlendsb,p. 1auntered several hundred· But h9 underlined French tn· yards down the main lifeline or sistence 011 lndepen~~nt fo.reian Paris. The crowd surged toward the president and white-gloved police were hard preaaed to bold them back. Carter stDp-1 several times to shake bands, and both presl· dents waved and saluted tho crowd. They then cUmbed ioto a limousi.oe bound for the ElYtM Palace to begin ~ ftrat round of talks. The French presldent greeted Carter at Orly Airport today when the American ardved from Aswam, Egypt, where be met for an hour wit.b President AD.war Sadat.. Argentinans Die in Duel . SAN CARLOS DE • BARILOCRE, Argentina (AP> -Two !arm workers stabbed each other to death i11 a duel over a woman in this mountain town 1,100 miles southwest of Buenos Aires. Police said Julio Fuentes, 38, and Ambrosio Elcbeverry, 40, quarreled over Fuentes ' romance with Etcheverry's sis- ter and agreed to meet with knives alongside a highway near town. Duellq wu a tradition·~ 1aucbo bonemen ot tbe 18th and -19th centuries and stUJ is OC· caslonally used for setU1ng dis· J>Utes in rural areas. Fre1Wh Prepare Carter Fete VERSAILLES, France (AP) -Tbe aple&dor that Louis · ·XJV, tbe Sun KinJ, and Nfpoleoo created at Venallles will Uve again for President and Mrs.. Cart.er in a elltte~ ata~ ban.· quet and reception at. the ireat palace 12 miles southwest of Fam and tta aatelijte. tbe Grand Trlaon.. l>residelit Valery Giscard d'Est.ains ha tnvlted some 4,000 guests to the reception Thursday ni1ht after he and Carter visit the beaches ill Normandy where A.Wed !orcea IA•llded Oft D- Daft. • .JUIM e, ~.I& WW ta. held ba u1au ot • bup main lnUla.m• r.-ect~ IJ7111'alriam ~-. IACJMlnc the Bockdeller W1:i111. • ' TBE JlECEPl'ION 1Vll£ IOU.OW • state banquet (or ·~ 200 guata ln tbe P'-abd &old Galleey oC tile Grand Trianon, tbe smaller palace LoiQla XlV ltUilt nearby to 1et away from the n,Ora ~ pOWet wtth Jail mlltraa Madame c1e Moa.· teapa.Q, olnc~::i~~1~Fl'~:r. °':r'ex~~ alwa11.'' • Vl81TING llMD8 011' STA'l'B hne been entertained at. Veraa1lles ever since Louis XIV ordered France'• greatest architects -Le Vau, Mansart, Le Bl'Un and Le Notre -to transform his father's hunting lod1e and grounds into an elaborate regal playground. He moved into the palace in 1682, making Versailles the c~pital of France. The Grand Trianon, an Lshaped, slncte-lltory bulldlDt wu built in just six months In 1687. President Charles de Gaulle spent an estimated $10 mUUoo to re.to,.. it to what Jt had been Jn the Napoleonic era eo tbat !t could be UUd &o.•JUerta.ia•,.._ ftl. ltora. • o. GflaD.e ca" a lOAcheon for President N'lftlt tlilere ln 1969. Other gueats of honor have included the Shah ot Iran. Kina Hassatt rr or Moroceo, and Britain's Duke of Edinburgh and Prime Minister Harold Wilson. -Winter Furniture sae Com~ \1 e 1111"'9t the world ol dlttlnetlft tiome h furnl.tltng' I) oll obout ••• Now al s.1vinqs from I 0 to 50~ •• Toke od\lantl)QI} or Un• bcflevabfc ld\lfnga Of\ current end dlacontlnuod hn..:-s throughout our eotlre store ••• In oll depa11rn~'"· You'll ~ toom titer room of dbllnctlve homf' furnlUll"fl• all completely ikcot~ed. ell ~rfzl'<f. Y11,, a 11lsl1 10 our t torc con~ ll'lo 6l1tl'f of• ll>t!Qle MW hfr si~lc for ~u. •tf1'..nft"••11o•,,,,..Mt1Mr"""i.11~ itn .. ~,.·--· "11fcssk>o1l lntcrt« Ocllg11 without ObffgalJon Comlortal>~ Partclna · Coovtn~ Anandn9 i . .. By GARY GRANVILLJ: Of._ Deify"'*' SIM( ProsecuUon of Oran.ae County supervlson Ralph Dledrlcb lnd Philip J.nthony a.a well as their two cOdeCend.an1s in a poUUcal campai&n conspiracy case was put off Tueaday b)' the California Supreme Court. The court ordered a halt Ln the prosecution unW It decides 1f Dialrlct AttOrney Cecil Hicks should prosecute the alleged criminal conspirators. More correctly the c0urt said the prosecution should be baited unUl It decides ii it will review the challen1e by Hlckt' office. So far, Orange County Superior Court Judge Philip Schwab bas ruled that Hlcu and his staff should not act u J>!OI· eculors or the two county 111\)erviaon and their codefen· danbs. ., Judge Schwab's rullng was up.. held ~ast month by an appellate court. Those decisions came alter the defendants said the DA should be removed from the case becauae of alleged bias and preJudlc. against lbem. Jn the Initial ruling Judie Schwab said be failed to find any evidence of true bias and preJ· udlce. But, the Judfe continued, the appearance o bias and pref· udice might tend to undermine the credibility of court proceed· ings. The, case beean last July 1 when the county a.rand jury ln· ·DoUar Struggles Back . / After.Initial Plullllllet • . OMtyPl ... IWf~ THIS WAS ALL OF HIS BOAT THAT THOMAS WAKELY COULD SEE TODAY 25-foot Crulaer Explode• •nd BtJrna After Leaving B•lbo• lalend Fuel Dock . ' 'Da1nn Glitd:', 4 Saved 'Hedg~' Of Gold Goes Up LONDON CAP) -The dollar made a modest recovery on Europe's money markets this af. ternoon arter a sharp plunge tn morning trading. But the U.S. currency still finished the day lower on most markets. The price of gold, a traditional hedge in Urpes of monetary un· certainty, rose $U5 in Zurich to close at $172.125 an ounce and $1.62 in London to Cinish at $171.125. For the first time ln nearly two years, American tourists in London had IO pay more than $2 for a Brit.lab pound at. currency enttantt1. American Express, for eutn• pie, wu exchanaln& pounds,tn mldattemooo at $2.02. Thia ta\ei the tompaQ1 · 1ald, inC:lud• a commilelon eb•r11 that~­It slightly higher than lhe "market rate, .. at which ban.ks buy and sell laree sums ol money on the forel1n exchange markets. The POUDd nudged the S2 mark on the London foreign excbanieJ today. One dealer said It got a high as $1.9960 at one stage, but eased back late in the day· to $1.9590. ·25-footCniuerExplods1 This was still a half a cent higher than Tuesday's late rate or $1 .9540. The last Ume the pound was at. $2 was March 5, ;R 1'.Tewpo-* IJ ,,...,;.1.. _r 1976, ·and then 'sterling was on a ., 1 ~I • ,, ll U4J (}(I dOWnWard Spiral that bottomed _ out at $Ui690 on Oct. 28, 1976. By JOANNE REYNOLDS OI Ult o.llJ .-!let JIM! A Newport Beach commodity broker said today he is "just damn glad to be alive" after his 2S·foot cabin cruiser exploded during a cruise In Newport Harbor Tuesday evening. The cause of that explosion which spread.flames across the deck of the Miss Beth is under investigation today. Boat owner Thomas Wakely, 49, of 235 Promontory Point Drive West, and three compa· nlona -i.ncludin~ one non· ~mwl Will Hold Off Oii SCMal ElosUres swimmer -were on board the The United States activated a vessel when the explosion took stabilization fund and set in place at abouts p.m. motioD.a,..~ap arrangement with Wakely said be bad just filled West. Gennany in an effort to his 110.gallon fuel tank at the bait the fall ottbe dollar abl'Nd. Union Oil gas dock on Balboa The Treasury and tbe Federal Jftllnd, prior to the explosion. Reaerve Board said in a joint . An exploding ball of flames . announcement in Washington caught Wakely's brother, John, tbat the Exchange StablllzaUon 56, a physician from Pittsburgh. Fund "will bencelortb be ut.llbed Pa., igniting his pants. John's actively tokether '1iitb the $20 wife, Olivia, 44, also was burned billion swap network operated by when she tried to help her tbeFederalReserveS1stem:• husband, Wakely said. It said tM agreemeDt with the At that point, with the boat UO DeuttclM Bund"bank, the West yards off shore, Wakely said be German central bank"' already ls threw his 1iater·ln·law into the In force. 61-degree water and jumped European olflciall, concerned overboard with bis brother and over the sharp fall Jn tht value the fourth person, Paula Pichon, of the dollar which maltea ~ 32, of 343 Baywood, Newport e:tporta more costly tn the u.lt.. Beach. ed States, ~av~ been ur•lng Wakely said the four people at American officl.all to lnterv~e first tried to hold onto one of the in the ~urrcmcx markets by 1N1· <See CRUISER, Pa1e A2l lng dollars tb halt the drop: dieted Diedrich and Anthony on multiple ·charges related to al· le1ed violatlon.s of state political campaicn regulations. , Indicted aloog with the two county supervisors were Anabdm Councilman William Kott, Fullerton attorney Michael R•mington and one time political ft.D.Utier Gene Contlld. " .su_bsequently. Remlac\on Buddy Saves Paratrooper FAYE"ITEvlLLE, N.C. (AP) -A Fort Bragg paratrooper, plummetine to earth when both his parachutes failed to open. was sav~ when be fell on top or an opened parachute and elld down the lines into another aoldiel''s arms. "He boU~red at mt to get off, but by the time l allcf off the top, holding on- to bis lines-, be knew what had happened," r~called Spec. 4 Jerry Tindal. The other trooper. Nelson Peters of Fay· etteville, grabbed Tindal and the two landed safely. Tindal escaped with a. sprained leg.muscle. Bystanders In France • Hail Carter pleaded tullty to a sin1le con .. apiracy cbar1e and the r-emain- ln1 charces again.st him were dlsmilffd. However, none of the other de-· fendants have yet entered • plea to the char1es brought a1a.inst them by the rrand jury. Delore the Supreme Court edict Tuelday, the defendants <See DBLAY, Page A!> Storm Rtiging In North By TM Anoclated Presa HeayY rains driven by aale- for1:e winds slanted down on Northern Callfomla today as a ma.Hive Pac!fic storm front. galloped over tbe reg.ion. Coastal showers fell from San Francisco to the Callfo.rni.a·- Ore1on bonier and the National Weather Service said the downpour should grow stronger tbroug.bout the day. •'The storm is still ap· proachlng but it's rea1ly starting to rain pretty bard here already, .. said Phil Swain of the weather service's San Francisco International Airport office. Swain said 46 mpb winds were reported at mid-morning at. Shelter Cove. Winds are considered to ex· ceed gale caliber when they sur~ pass 39 mph. Winds of u,p to 45 mph were forecast for the San Francisco Bay region too. The blow was expected to build later this afternoon and then diminish toni9bt, Swain PARIS (AP) -President ~he Coast Guard posted gale Carter launched a thr~e·day vis· waminp from Monterey north. it ~ F~~ ~atb 1'11 tm~ Bui ·AQ Wind·r'1ated sea acci· • ~-JMI aa the Cllinlps dent.a ..... repcrted !lY••es, tlrawla1 .~houta of Swaln said ralnf~ from the llmmy • • • linun>' b'om de-faat·mcwinl front would ~·cer­Ughted bystanders crowding the tainly l>e snon than we've bad in Paris boulevard for a glimpse of the ~ ..&. ,All w 've been the Ametlean ~dent. gettlB• ll mm ·· Caner, ~belM!ed an~ coat· J Ht aald anaw . shower• bad less despite the w~ter chUJ, set begun to bit the north Sierra and oU UJ\der gray skies down the heavter snows would fall later wide boulevard with French today when the storm reaches Pre1ident Valery Giscard d'Es· the eastern sector of California. CARTER MEETS * * * WITH SAoAT-A4 · Say GOQ.._dbye laing after placing a wreath at the Arc de Triomphe, the tomb ,..., S hin of France's unknown soldier. .I. 0 008 e Cheers and applause erupted from spectators at the wrutb· AJ C laying ceremony . when Carter Ong 0881 sauntered several hundred yards down the main lifeline ot Paris. The crowd surged toward the president and white-gloved police were bard pressed to hold them back. Carter stopped several Umes to shake bands, and both pres\· dents waved and saluted the crowd. They then climbed into a limousine bound for the Elysee <SeeTRIP, Pace AZ> 4 Huntington Teen8Named . In Assaults Sunshine briefly brishtened the Orange Cout today, but it probably won't be seen a1ain for a while, National Weather .Service forecasters say. Rain began falling heavily shortly before noon today and weather forecasters.called for a 90 percent chance of more of the same on Thursday. "We're in kind of a storm pat- tern here and storms have the potential to keep coming in," said Don DePauw, weather service specialist. He said tonight's storm is coming from west of San Fran· (See RAIN, Page A.%) Coast Weather Chance or measurable rain increaaJoi to 70 per· cent tonight a.net to 90 per- cent Thursday. South to southeast winds lS to 30 mph at times throueh Thursday. Lowa tonitbt 47 to 52. Hlahl Thuraday 57 to a. IN8DE TOD£ Y Ewr .,.,.,.,,.,. tf u.ot can of gr•n bcanl ti dill f100d? The A1IOCfaUd Preu ~ com· p4Ud ttw ~ of Ammccm canur• and poc~• to UU vou how to drtmnine •'*elf Ult of IJ"O"rlc•. Sn Food, Pogtt Cl. CRUISER .•• boat··--...... r,ttbcn cannot twtm and tbey dJdJt't want to tr')' (Of' shore ln their heavy winter clotblq. "But wtlb a run load of fuel on board, 1 wu afraid 1he'd blow again aod there'd be 1aa all over tbe water,·• Wakely satd. So be swam tor the island shoreline, dracgtn1 Mise Plchon while hJs brother and •later-lo· law aided•cb *er. He said tbertt>ete not far {ram 1hore when two young men came into the water to help the two women. "If 1L hadn't been for thoee two youn1 men, we mlJbt not have been able to make it," be said. Tbe four wete ta.ken to Roal Memorial Holpital wbere Johll waa treat'd for burna, a puncture wound to bla right lee and a hairline Jaw fracture. Hia wile waa treated for mor.e severe buru on her band.I and legs and Wakely and Miu Pichon were treated for scrapes and bruises. All were released. Meanwhile, Oranee County JI.arbor Patrolmen arrived to ex· tlnguish the blazing vessel, but a secondary explosion shook lhe boat moments later, apparenUy splitting the hull. Harbor Patrolmen and Wake· ly were at a loss lo explain the explosion. AMERICAN FLAG RAJSEO AT OMAHA BEACH..._. President Carter to VJ.it D-Da~ Shrtne Glory Revived French Prepare Carter F ete VERSAILLES, France (APl The splendor that Louis XIV, the Sun l(jng, and Napoleon created at Versailles wUl live again for President and Mrs. Carter in a glitterini state ban- quet and receptjpn at the great palace 12 miles southwest Qf Pari5 and" satellite, the Grand Trianon "I took the standard precau· lion of running my bilge blowers after gasslne up," Wakely said "In fact, lf anything, I was more~ cautious than usual." Pres1de~alery Giscard d'Estaing has invited some 4 ooo guests to the reception Thursday night alter he and Carter ~isit the beaches in Normandy where Allied forces Jn.,aded on D- Day, June 6, 1944. It will be held in salons of the hu1e main building restored largely by gifts from Americana, inchadint the Rock~leller family. Both Wakely and the patrolmen said they are pu:nled that the iniUal explosion did not occur until several mlnutea after the vessel pulled away from the dock. The boat was towed to a Harbor Patrol mooring off Carnation Cove where it will be kept pending completion of the investigation. Settlement Reached by Wallaces MONTGOMERY, Ala <APJ - l\ Ci r cuit Court official an- nounced today that a settlement has been reached in the divorce case involving Gov. and Mrs. George C. Wallace. About seven minutes prior to ~e scheduled start of the trial in tne divorce proceedings, Circuit Court Administrator Frank Gre1ory told reporters the prop- er papen would be filed later in the day. The agreement rrrtedly in· vol~~d. ~ .fl$.900 !\Cl ~eot w1lb a d1v1s1on of Jiro~rt . Attorne)'s for Cornella Wallace earlier in the day aban· doned plans to confer with a judge prior to the scheduled !>la rt or the trial. Last Sept. 6, the raven-haired first lady moved out of the mansion, saying she could no longer .tolerate her husband's 'vulgarity, threats and abuse." Wallace nt.ed for divorce six <lays later, citing as grounds "incompatibility" and an "Ir· retrievable breakdown" in the marriage. Mrs. Wallace. in a c·ountersuit, accused the partial- 1 y paralyzed governor ot "crueJ. ty a nd actual violence" aeainst her and sought "liberal" alimony. The trial was threatened with postponement because Mrs. Wallace recently had health problems. Mrs, Wallace was hospitalized from Dec. 22 until Friday for • "mental and physical exhaus- tion," according to one of her lawyers. Before the settlement wu an· nounced, John P. Kohn, one of her attorneys. quoted Mrs. Wallace'• physician as saying the first lady "Is not capable of bein.i there" if the trial were to begin on time. In addition to giving Mrs. Wallace tlme to recuperate, Kohn said a postponement would give attorneys tor both sides more opportunltles to seek an out-of ·court setUement. ORANGI COAST c DAILY PILOT THE RECEPJ'ION WILL FOLLOW a state banquet for about 200 guests in the plnk and gold Gallery of the Grqd Trianon, the smaller palace Louls XIV built nearby to •.i aw~ from the rigors of power with his mistress Madame de Mon-tespan. The menu bas not been announced, but Glscard d'Eatain1'1 office said It would be "French, complete and exceJlent. as always." VISITING HEADS OF STATE have been entertained at Vers~illes ever since Louis X[V ordered France's createat architects -Le Vau, Mansart. Le Brun and Le Notre -to transform his father's hunting lodge and grounds into an elaborate regal playground. lie moved into the palace In 1682 making Versailles the capital of France. ' The Grand Trianon, an L-shaped, single-story building was built in Just six months in 1687. President Charles de Gaulle spent an estimated $10 million to restore it to what it had been in the Napoleonic era so that it could be used to entertain state vis-itors · De Gaulle gave a luncheon for President Nixon there in 1969 Other guests of honor have included the Shah or Iran, KJng Hassan II of Morocco, and Britain's Duke of Edinburgh and Prime Minister Harold Wilson. • . • FroraPa~AJ TRIP CHEERED •.• Palace to begin their Orst round or talks. The F1ench president greeted Carter at Orly Airport today when the American arrived from Aswam, Egypt, where he met for an hour with President Anwar Sadat. Carter described Am erican re- lations Wllh France as "special t.1nd rare ... largely an alliance of ideals" in a brief arrival ad- dress. He declared. Fro"' Page A I RAIN .•• cisco and should bring moderate to heavy rain, tapering off to s howers Thursday. DePauw said the storms are due to a low pressure system over the West. "These storms are likely to come through one after the other," he said. Higba Thursday should be near 80, with overnight lows around 50, he said. The Orange Count~ Harbor Department today reported .42 inches of rain for the past 24 hours. bringing the season t.otaI to 4.07 inches compared t.o 3.9 inches last year. The Moulton Niguel Water Treatment Plant recorded .32 inches, for a season total of 5.65 compared lo about half that last year. Bill ShJelds of La1una Beach Hardware talUed .41 jnch~ of rain on h.la gaute durina the past 24 hours In the Art Colony. The s euoll total to date la 4.72 inches, compared to 4.29 Inches f3st year at this Lime. In Costa Mesa, Charlet LeWla or Orange Coast Co1Jete'1 division of f.hyslcal 1clenoea re- ported . 72 ochea of rain for a sea•on total of 4.86, up from 3. 76 Jut year. "Our approaches to apeclflc questions may not always be the same, but our dee51 reapec:t for the independence and leadership q.f France and our affection for your people have remained as strong for 200 years." Carter said he would dlscuss international economic st.i>Wty, disarmament, enerey, Middle East peace, relations with the Soviet Union and ita alllea, and human rl1hts In talks with Glscard d'Estaing, e>epected to total four hours. Glscard d'E.st.aint. in a brie( welcome at Orly's VIP lounge, also cited the lone history of Franco'American friendship. But he underlined French in· sistence on independent forelp policy and defense abUlty, which has been the basis of Irritation in Lhe past between Washington and Par~. • Carter was visltln1 a country that wu the United States' first ally, he aald, and which has· become "a modern, active coun- try. which la muter of Its own destiny and defense and wants to work with you to find the best solution to the problems of the modem world. "If Is true that we tn~ have difrere1>t vtew1 on the paths to follow," said the tall, slim French leader. "But I am 4!00· · vinced that we will derive from our discussions useful elements to Ugbt up the road leading to a more fra~rnaJ, more united and more secure world." From Paris, the U.S. leader moves on Friday to Brussels. headquarters of the North AUan-tic Treaty Organization. Mesa Sc~ool Custodian Bites Slated -oranre COUnty Plood Control superviaing bydrotf Apber John Giet&en 1afd tbat. althou1h rain- tall bu been considerable, tt'a be~ alow eoouah to aoat in , rattier than cause •roslon prob-Jems. GranaJde tervfce1 will be held Tburldq fo'° WUUim John Abbott Sr .• a ~~ bead cutto- dlan at Whittler ScbOQI in Costa Meaa. Reeiaurant Meet Mr. Abbott cited S~ay ...... 71 . Sttvlcea will be lttld at Kln1•~ Dlrtrtct Cem•t~ in Kins1bur1 CaUf. Mr. A6b0tl worked tor the N ewport;Mesa Unltled School Dittlict u a C\lltodlan from U8S ~ JWJ~ He had previoual1 been eut~ut ma11a1er at a naiaurml fn o.ta ..... Sur•l•ort include hla Wlf e, ~flvla~oleo.tilhia: son ~ilUamA..at&1r.of CGlta.._.;. 1l1ten ClauclttM N7 .. a ol .IUopbui&. ·s:•1-'ot.NeW •eatec>;liiUy . ot~ ud Henrietta Jad.r' of Wfa~on•tn. an4 two ,raDdchJJesr.L . . . • By GUY GRANVILLE Oftll90MI' '-1\.Mt A. Superior Court jury was told Tuesday that Santa Ana should be paid ~.soo by the porno movie moguls who profited fJ'Om the sbo~r In a local theater of 11 sex fllms the same jury de- --. . -.. cldcd last month were obsc..,._ Att~mey .rame.s Claftcy bued his call for ..im~t halt million dollars tn puntUve dam11es on tho est.l,matecl bol( oalc• tncome at th~. lllJtchet( brotherJ Santa Ana t.balet 4ultn1 the II; days the 1l ttlms wer•"thown. " . , .. North Costa Mesa Rezone Op~ile'iiµ To Meet TluiniJ,O,y . . Beca ... no otMr CaDJanb• jury bas found any of 11 fUmt to be obscene, there c•n ~ no mallcloua intent attach~ to .the MltcheU'a operation of tht1*'DQ movie hcN.se. JW.o.e aald.. The first meeUng of 'the year between north Oosta Mesa homeowners and three de- velopers they are trylna lo stop via a rezone elect.ion initiative will be held Thursday nlght. The public meeting will begin al 7 p.m. at the Chamber of Commerce building,~ Harbor Boulevard, Costa Mesa. The developers are expected to outllne development co~ prom Isa in an at~mpt to bait op. ·poeiUon to thelr planned proj- ects on 68.3 acres near Bear Sbreet and the Corona del Mar Freeway. The homeowners have already qualified an iniUative that wW be up tor a city vote on March 1. Approval of the iniUative would prevent the three developer. from building anything but slngle-famUy homes on the three parcela. Tbe largest parcel, and the center of the dispute and numerous lawsuits CnoW' dropped), Is to be developed by the Arnet Company of Santa Ana. The two other parcels would be developed by Henry Segerstrom and Henry Roberts. After the city councH ap- proved Amel's plans to build 536 apartmeats and 127 homes on its 46 acre parcel the North Costa Mesa Homeowners Association began a petition drive to halt lbe project. Arnet sued the homeowners, L and later the city council, ft>f' placine the qualltied initiativ• on the ballot. T¥ city council opposes the initiative and ls expected to complete an oppoattlon argu. ment to be placed on the-)(arch 1 sample ballot. This arl\():n~t w~uld be placed next to the homeownera written plea to ap- ~rove the inillaUve. The city council Ubeduled a special meetin1 thia afternoon to finalh:e its written argument' that, had to b6 submitted to the city clerk by 5 p.rn: · The homeowners· ar11umesu us favor ot tbe ln1U_iative was sub· m1tted Tuesday by homeowners President John Paradis. Con· tents ol both areuments, which will include a map lo bt. placed on the QmQle ballot, •ill be avaU•bleTbursdly. Pendleton Shots Kill 2; 5 Wounded CAMP PENDLETON <AP> - A M artne shot two people to death and wounded five more in an unexplained shooUnt spree shorttY before noon today. a baae spokesmansald. The victims were identified only as h0ncomm111,roned of- ficers. The nrat was killed by a llurry ot shots in tbe audio·vlsual center of Camp Pendleton. and the aecood clled later in lbe Naval llegtonal Medical Center, satd bue spokesman Lt. Cbarles Owen. He Se.id the Marine opened fa.re inside the •udio-viaual center. bJttlo' th,-ee of the non· com IJ)iasioned 9Jticer• before runaln1 tQ Ute °"1'by baae photo lab wwe th~ ot.Mn were wounded. The ~ ·~~ p>en were In emeraency ,.,OFJll at the hospital. ~ conditi()n wu Jtot. im~¢iately knoWJ\. Winter Furniture s lie lnatated lbat a rum must .,. coettldered l•J•l until a Jury ffnds It to be ~sceno. Rhine 'aid in comparison to Clancy's plea for $480,SOO in punitive damages that a $1 as· sessment would fuUm lbe JtU')''11 oblieatlon to aaseu pwUUve damaie:s. Last moot.b. It waa the etty•1 special &l\tl·po.rnocn.plly at· torney Clancy who won the day when the jury found 11 of 17 fUma tt reviewed to be obaeene. Slmultaneou.sly, the jury 1ave a clean bW ol bealtb to two otber' movlt1 and failed to reedt a-. clalon qp tbe rem.mlD1 foar. That obeeen•i JlDdiu 1n the c.,e of the 1i ma !eCJ to tbi NCODd phase f/I tbe two-l:QOlltb trial, aom~tJon to Ute cltJ for vartous forma ol damact1 •. !t wtU be Juctp Marvin W~ who will detennll)e tbe amount., ll any, ol other d,ma1es the dt.y will be awatded u • reauJt ot • the X·rated movie dlaplay between September of lt'1S and April ol 19TT. For his part, Clancy aaJd 1 judge and Jury would be juatirted to assess miWom ot dollars in damages if, for no other rea100, than to aerve u a deterrent to the abowin1 of lucb rums in ether commuoiUea. DELAY ••• were acheduled to appear in • Judie Schwab's courtroom Mon· day to enter pleas and to belin what is expected to be a Ion&,. series of pretrial moUom. Come i.rc what the wor1d of d1\t1nclivr home rumlsf\lnqs ·~ 11ll 11bou1 ••• Now at ~11vinAS From 10 to ~·.Take 1dv1nt&Q!t of un· hf-llevablt> ~•>Vlngs on current and dl~llnued lines throuqhout oor entire ltofe ••• In 111 dl'pllrtmt'tllt. You II .,~ room orttr rootn of dlstln(11ve homf' Futnl•ll1ng~ .ill completely decofll(td. 1111 ~SJOrlted Yes, a v1"t 10 our $10ff• c.in be th~ stftrt of a wJ\olt nc-w ltrr \lyle for you. •r ........... ,,.,. • ..,,...._,.,.,.. ... "'rL ...... ~ ..... ,..,,..~ 1514 NORTH MAIN SANTA ANA• 541-4391 Tues. \\Ai!d.. Thura. eftd Sat: 9'.30 to ~.30 Mon.: 12 to 9 • Ptf.: 9:30 to !MlO °"''" "'91 SUH ,.,.._ NOW SHe'LL CONCENTRATE ON HER SPOON CO,LLECTION Retired Marine Helen Hannah Enda 35 Yeari' Setitlce Career Ended FV Woman Leaves'\-.Mari:ne Base By RAYMOND F.STRADA JR. Ol I .. 0.-lly 1>11et Si.II Arter 35 ) ear:. or l'ombined military and c1v1h:m service to the Marine Corps, Fountain Valley re:.1dcnl llelc•n llanoah. 62. hai. end~ hl'r career ut her first duly !>lation. El Toro Marine Corps f\lr Station Miss Hannah. who retired ai. a master gunnl'r) sergeant an 1975, enlisted an the then M aranc Corps Womt·n·s Hcst•rvc 1n (k- tober 1M3. Prison Limo Plan Tied to Evel Knievel LOS ANGELES <A P > . An ••anonymous donor' rented a fleet of 20 limousm<-s to take Eve! Knievel's ft•llow work· furlough pr1sont'rs lo and from their jobs for thl' nt·\t few days, a spokt•i.man ~r tht' motorcycle stuntman Sa)-;. The spoke:.man, press a~cnt Stan Rosenfield. dl~ch ned to s pecify Knu.•-.el as the dnonor. But he noted. "l Utlnk il's prelly ob\'ious who al is "What he's done 1s hare about 20 limousines for today. Thurs- day, Friday and Snlurday," said Rosenfield. The cars. which rent for about $17 a n hour . wall transport prisoners on work furlough pro- grams from th(' llall or Justice to their ;obs Knie\ el 1s !-tervang 11 '>IX month Jail term after pleadtng guilt) to hittinJt a telt'visrnn t'xecutive with a baseball but ht·cause he was upset about a hook lht• ex ecull\'e had writll'n While the rest or the prasonen; are riding about town ~n limousine luxury, what will Knievel be driv~n to work in! Rosenfield answered : ••Probably his '71 Stutz Black Hawk eomert.ibte. That's what be drives in every day." But her career really didn't end until last Saturday when she stepped down rrom her civilian post as special services ad- ministrative assistant at the El Toro base. She had held that job ror the past two years Miss Hannah now plans to de vote most of her time traveling a nd building up her souvenir spoon collection The opportunity to truvel was one of the reasons Miss Hannuh decided to be one of the first 23,000 women to enlist in the Marine program during World War JI . .. C worked in a defense plant that made parts for liberty ships in 1943," she said. .. I bad been promoted as high as I could go but that dldn 't stop me from enlisting." Miss Hannah '&Ort of acted as a .. boot camp mot.her" durl.ng her basic training at Camp Lejeune. N.C. "Many of the other women in boot camp were younger so we mothered them through ... she reminisced. From North Carolina. Mass Hannah was assigned to El Toro MCAS. Over the past three decades. Miss Hanna h's travels have taken h~r to Virginia, Chicago. Camp Pendleton and L os Angeles. Born in Salt Lake City and raised in Whittier, Miss Han- n ah 's love for travel was s purred on by summer trips with her father and mother "Truck" Hannah. now 89 . Miss Hannah's father. was a baseball player and coach in the old Pacific Coast League He once played for the New York Yankees and the Detroit Tigers Miss Hannah ·s parents h ve next door lo her in Fountain Valley at 104 Pigeon Lane. She is a 10.year resident of the city As a former National Women Marines Association president. Miss Hannah says retirement won't cut her off entirely from her military friends. She plans to stay in touch wilb many oJ the Marines who became her friends during her M y4!ars with lbe corps. •• . ~ Janual) 4, 1t1'1 OAIC.V PILOT Fiairview Acts Upheld ;1 Director Reacts to FBI Probe of Rights . ' By lACKlE HYMAN Of tlle °'41f ...... ...,. Dr. Frank Crinella, executive. director or Fairview State Hotpital In Costa M"a. said to- day he does not believe an FBI 'Disciple' In Pageant Silccumbs CUJton Warner, who portrayed one of Christ's disciples for a dozen years 10 the Laguna Beach Pageant of the Masters' .. Last Supper'' tableau. is dead at the age of 91. Warner was a 46-year resident of Laguna Beach, coming to the a.rt colony from Wisconsin. He learned the art of wood- carving from local carver Peter Paul Ott. a skill whidt later earned ham nationwide honors. lie won a fi rst place award ln lhe 13th annual Inte rnational Madonna Show and picked up a blue ribbon al the Laguna Beach Art Museum an 1943. Mr. Warner was ulso com- rn1ss 1on~ to do a cual of arms · for the !lowland Museum in Ply mouth, Ma!>!>. a nd had a woodcarving exhibit at the Rowers Museum in Santa Ana. Festival of Arts officials said the artist had an exhibition on the festival grounds for several year s, and participated in a dozen Pageant of the Masters seasons in lhe 1950s and~960s. Services were held tor Mr. Warner at Pacific View Mortuary in Newport Beach Tuesday. His widow, Fern Gary Warner, suggested contributions be directed to the Festival of Arts and the Pageant of the Mas ters. Repulsive Act, Odor Urged To Stop Rape LOS ANGELES (AP 1 -In c·ase .of an attack. some rape ex- perts s ay, do something re- pulsi vc. Drool. act insane - unything to turn off your at- tacker. Now there s a mechanical a.id to m ake yourself repugnant: It envelops a woman in a dis- tinctive skunk odor. and it's not likely to entice a would-be rapist And the device. which as a few months away from marketing. also comes with a deodorizer lo undo some of the skunk ~tench after it's used Canadian inventor Paul LeBlond showed has device to the Los Angeles Police Depart- ment . and Sgt. George Harris. comme nt e d , "lt ha s possibilities. But we:re not tak· m~ a PoS1t1on for or &Raanst. "Ir a guy has a cold. maybe It wouldn't stop him. Who knows?" Le Blond says the synthetic s hunk 011 as encased in a s mall plastic capsule that can be broken open with one hand in case of an attack. The product, which clips onto a bru. has been tested for ac- cidental breakage .. rr it·., worn an the cleavage. it c·an 't b<> broken b; running into a filing cabinet, .. Sa} s Le Blond How effoctave 1s the skunk 011'> In Vancouver, the only place it has been tested. a woman broke open a Rapel capsule. and her would-be rapist ran off "Police found him 25 minutes tater in a restaurant," said LeBlond. "They followed his trail. Once an attacker has been doused , there aren't many places he can hide." tnvestication will turn up any serious violafiona of paUenls' ri&hls t.htre. FBI olnclal.s reported earlier this week that they are tn- v ea tl 1atina Falr'vlew and Pilot Logbook Metropou~· State Hospital in Norwallc on behalf of lh• U.S. Department of lustl~. Dr. Crlnelta said tbe alle1•· lions deal with posalbl& viola· Uons ot rilhLs m tbo way pa- Don't Dare Rain On THE Parade By .JEKllY BBRTENSTIDN Of .. OMlr ........... It wouldn't dare rain on tbe Tournament of Roses Parade.., Tbe Pasadena establlsbmet simply would not al· low such a thinf. Upwards ol 125 million wat.chlD.g TV can't aee it rain· ing in Pas~ena. Heaven forbid. After~ it baan't ralnecton the parade tar 23 years. Monday, parade day thls.)'ear, it didn't rain. But it ~red Tuesday, after the TV eameras were gone The television audience doesn't see the parade's white-suited officials directing the floats in two tricky turns as the parade enters and exits Colorado Boulevard. THE "ICE CREAM .. MEN keep lo one side of the float.. the one away from the cameras. D~pite their efforts. a monstrous NOTJki h• three-wheel float, billed as a combiil.atloo of "modern en,lneerine and desip .. pearly scrambled those alttlng on the north side ot Coloncto 8J it failed to mate a ri&bt turn off Otange Grove Avenue In Mooday'a parade. • It took two backings before tho thlng 1ot golnr .strai&hl . To lhoee at the parade such incidents are humorows. All the humor, however, isn't caused by mishaps. The University of Michigan's marching band raised an uproar when its members, unlike most precision-oriented outfits, simply sprinted around the turns. TUE CROWD CHUCKLED AND delighted in Michigan's somersault.ing cheerleaders. Moments wbeo the male cheerleaders hand-walked down Colorado, clap· ptng their feet, were particularly amusing. Monty Montana, a parade regular. was a comic rut Al one point the cowboy threw a noose around an of· ric1al movie cameraman. Several times he lassoed f'ront row spectators. There was only one "upsetting" incident. A rider for B Troop, 4th Regiment, U.S. Cavalry from l''ort Huachuca, Ariz. was thrown when his mount reared. THE HORSE LANDED atop the rider. Limping, the cavalryman managed to grab the horse, bring it under l'Ontrol and continue. The cavalry was the final unit and the parade ended as il began predictable. Coast Panel Backs HB Condominium Desp&te appeals by a Hunt- ington Beach environmental ac- tivist against it, the California Coastal Commission bas upheld regionaJ commission approval of a 45-unit condominium project In lhe llunllnglon Harbour area. Mariners Savings and Loan Association plans· to build. the two-story units ln an open area bounded by Santa Barbara Lane, Edinger Avenue and the future extension of Saybrook Lane. Coastal Commission members meeting in Burlingame ruled ob· Jt'~lions to the project represent cd no truly substantial issue un - der terms of the Coastal Act of 1970 which created the agency. Aileen Brock oC 20701 Beach Blvd., Huntinl(ton Beach, who frequently addresses the south coast regional commission when it me~ts in Huntington Beach, chaJlenged the condominium permit. She argued lbe open land on which the condominium homes will be built affords the last open space providing access lo lhe Huntington Harbour marina waters for public recreational use. Com missioners who ruled on the matter at both the regional and state levels see il dif ferently. They pointed out that single family homes already have been built along the waterfront at that location and lhat the remaining land lying vacant Is not technically open access to the waterway. tlenll\ are committeod. It has not been an.nounc*1 wbo filed. tho al· le1auons. '"Tho allqatlons are part ol •he movemfflt questionln' the •t tnstituUonall1atlora of ao1 cltlzo.n. •• Or. Crinella aald. "We hove to look at whetb~ or no~ lbe beneCill to be derivtd from treatment are sufficient lC> warrant the confinement of any person to a structured environ· meat such as Fairview.·· be said. Fairview treats mentally re· larded and multiply hall· dicapped people . .. We do believe the records W8' have here would be aufllc.lenl to • take care ol most ot the •Uei_.. • tions that bavo been made and we do feel that our patieota re-'• ceJve due process.·• Dr. Cri.Mlla said. He aald another brvestlntion. • one which P'aln1ew ltaelf 1s CCJOo ductlnc. concerning its form«" director, Dr. M.tcbael Levine. and two other stan'en, ts almost complete. The chanres Involve the use~ hos pital facilities and atafr time to prepare and send letters and reports to numerous agen- cies exoresslnll oersonal con· cerns about hospital policies. Or. Levine, who stepped down atJ director last s_ummer but wa~ sUll serving on staff, quit last. month to accept another posi- tion. Dr. Crinella said hi& de- parture· was not related lo lhe . charges. · Two other staff members re- main suspended with pay. , Dr. CrfueUa said evidence has been fathered and the only stei> that remains t. to determine lbe- dollar value of time and iooda· used. He said the three accused people will be asked to reim- burse the hospital for its costs. Plmw Wreck Report Said Vnfoumled _ .. Officials at the Riverside County Sherlffs Office and the • Federal Aviation Administration' have listed as unfounded the re- port of a small plane down tbig • weekend on Santiago Peak. A search for the craft was ·- launched Saturday when air traffic cont.rollers at Ontario In- temaUonal Airport reported re- celvlng a sfgnal rrom an e mergency crash locator • ~ air Sl!&fCb of the l"Ulied pelit w~· ''tratt(f'\~s lb~ Riversl(Je ahd Orlln~e county line, ret>ortedly turned up the wreckage ot a Jlgtit plane, in an area aecessible only by foot. Ho•ever, members or the Riverside Mountain Rescue Unit who walked into the area Sun- day reported Cfndlng only lbe re- mains of ad old wreck. long. since r eported. Using dlTectlons supplied by the pilot who had spotted what he thoueht was wreckage, the • searchers returned to the moun· talns Monday but were still una- b I e to lo cate any other wreckage. A spokesman for the FAA said the pilot new back over the area Tuesday and was unable to find any wreckage al the location where h e believed he had sPotted airplane remains before. The spokesman s111d the search "'as dropped at that potnt because no aircraft had been rePorted missing or overdue on weekend flights. • llB ·toses Surfing Meet? ·Gem Talk Champiomhips May Move to Malibu By ROBERT BARKER oi 111ie oau, ~1e111a11 The president of the American Surfing Association said today he will pull tbe All American Surf· ing Championships out of Hu.nt- iqton Deach because.he ls "out- ra1ec1·· by the actions of city leaders. i,r. Gary tilosa, president or the ASA. sald his organisation wlll bold the 1urfing cbam· plonshipsln Malibu ne"t year. ••we won'taubJect ourselves to the whJms and caprices of the cl· . t.J council,•· he aald. Despite the controversy. FU91-a caUed I.he tournament..· which wound up three days of komvet1tlOll last Frh\ay, one of hlttorlca1 importance to the WOfld of1urlln1. · "It was the flrat national Jmateur meet ln the history ot ottt country," Fll<>10 sald. Pllo11 ldded. howove.r. thathla apoclatloo ta outHfed b)' the bebavlor ol lM city councll. ff• 1aid the ell)' had no right 1ellln1 lnvolvtd ln a dispute between his organization and the United States S\lrftng AllSbc1a· lion <USSA 1 Filosa aJso claimed lhat he was blackmailed into stgntn1 an agreemart that be w6Uld resign rrom tile-ASA an<J not serve in any capacity l.n that orpniza. tion. The ASA •• board of (OVetnOrt re)ected. FJlosa'• rul1natlon Thursday and the HunUniton Beach man says he will continue in office. The All Amerlcan SurfinR Champtcnth,IPI were funded by an authortzatt<e or $8,600 from Ule clt..v. ltowever. when 1hl rival surf· tns tr®P rrotesled the acUon, ell)' councl lelldert held a meet.- int deelped to r•tore harmOny betw~ thetwo-1roups. 'l'~ resleneUon or Ftlosa w one of tM kt>y item• worked oot In the a~eement. Vincent MoCll'bO\iae, dlrtttor ot the city's barbcxt a.nd beadles, uld u.at FllOu.'a *u~ Pt•· sadency was not tn the spint of lhe agreement "I feel that it was a subterfuge in which Uie ends justified the means,'' Moorhouse said. 1',Uosl said that he signed the controversial agreement in order to "$ave the meet." He said the city had no right to , interject itself ln t.he dispute and consld~ed discussions regard· tne hlt f'esignaUon a.11 blackmail. Shenkman sald that Filosa's resignation was not a city de- mand . Sttenkman added that, in his vie\\', the aurlin1 group can take Its meet toAustralla jf it likes. "They are welcome to come back ifthey act like sentlemen;· he sald, While tho city authori,zed $8,600 for the tournament. il wu ltGrnod that actual e'Cpenscs wert In the neighborhood or $3,000. Moorhou1u~ aald costs were lcop\ down btcauH crowd were llm l\ed by t.h~ POOT w .. th..-. 11/E SAL~'A<JEH,\ prot•f' that ra/11f' 11 ''"'""" Nobody cares e about tM customers of a store than the owner of a st e. Ours is right he,. to help you choose the precious gem that i1 fotev91'. lt'a too pel"$0nol, too importont a moment to trust to long-distance management, we soy. You agree? Stoe by ond see the·bou. Or coll. ond m?ke on ap- pointment. Either way, the owner-whow lifework IS the study of diamonds ond coloted stones-is ot your service. It mokei o difference. Remember, nobody co1es more. ' (RIU.S 41 i'EVER: The dis· ea4e, when'lt strikes, comes up- on the vtcUm suddenly and with 'a great heat. It hits the young, the old, the professional person ~nd the blue collar worker. Professional women or housewives aren'timmune. Jusl this week, it struck two retired police chiefs. one in Westminster and another In 'Fullerton. The fever also got to a taxi driver in Laguna Beach and two students in Co~ta Mesa. ; It also infected a retired radio jtewa peraoo ln San Clemente ~nd a criminal invesU,ator in 'Fountain Valley. THIS STRANGE, unpredJct.a- 'ble malady can give the chill& .and fever lo almost anybody "But this is the ume of year it ~its the populace. We call it running for public office. Today, this weird political in· lfectlon has spread all across Orange County as 19 of our cities 4are. girding for city council elec- •tions on March 7. Jn all, there are l49 people who have answered the call to ~ubUc duty, seeking election to 148 open city councH seats. Why do they do Jt? They have 'read all about the aches and '.;>ains suffered by politicians who, in their antics. are often held up to public scorn and ridicule and suffer the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune. But the hapless victims still get the Running Chills and fever. He or she ha!! this com- pulsion. A dnvin& force con- ),umes mind and body. They ean 't control themselves. They have to do il. They MUST run, ru n. run. ALAS, JT JS also true that once burned by the chilli and fever in holding local political of- fice, you are nol granted Im· munity from catching the dread )llalady again. t In our region, for example, .two former mayors. scarred and 'battered from previous bouts in the municipal ring, are trying to win city councH seats again. They arc Art Anthony in Irvine and Jim Thorp downcoast in San Juan Capistrano. But anybody can catch this councilmanic virus. Policemen :.eem p<.irticularly susceptible this year In addition lo the a forementioned two retired chiefs, the fever got to a retired cop sergeant in La Palma and former T-Man, for goodness sake, in Yorba Linda. Three attorneys have become candidates for lhe Irvine City Council, which Is noted for hold· ing marathon sessions that st.art one night.and finally cloae in the next week. These three lawyers must not have much to do around the of-fice. A STUDENT AND a novelist are running for mayor in Garden Grove. For the Grove council, candidates Include a dry waJler, two senior citizens and a telephone man. Jn FountaJn Valley, a traffic operator and aircraft foreman have toe5ed hats into the rina. A fireman and an elementary school ptincipal are running in Westminster. A clock manulac· turer wants on the council in Sari Clemente. Clearly, when the chUls and fever strlke, po occupation will make you immune. ' 16 . Men Jailed ... In 'Pot' Raid PORTLAND. Ore. (AP> -Bail bu been set at ~.ooo each for 18 men arrested durina a aea~de faid l4 wblcb officials aay about el&ht tons of marijuana valued at $20 mllllon wu aeiied: -''We're not dealing wlth desperadoa," defense attorney Norm Sepenult told U.S. Magistrate Georee Juba during the arraJan~ent Tuesday. "We're dealing with ·people with some background while hltchhJldng on U.S. l~l and education ." about three mlles south of his Questioned by Juba about home. their jobs, several of the defen· dants said they were aelf- employed carpenters, one .• freelance model, one a tennis pro, one an accountant and one a University of Massachusetts ltu- de n t. Th~ Hated homo ad· dresses in se\ren states. FEDERAL OFFICIA~ said five of the defendants were ar- rested in a liferaft after alleced· ly abandoning a 100.foot freighter" used to carry pot.en! ·marijuana known as "Thal sticks" fl-om Southeast Asia. The federal· complaint alleges the defendants possessed mari- 1uana with the intent to dis· tribute it. Assistant U.S. At· torney Kenneth Bauman said the charge carries a maximum penalty of five years in pnson and a $15,000 fine . AN AFFIDAVIT from U.S. Customs official Frank Grimes attached to the complaint said officials became suspicious about a beachfront property shortly after it was purchased by Arthur Allen, 33. Allen was to be arraigned under t he same complaint today after being arrested Monday GRIMES SAID fishermen and buntera cotnplaln.ed tbat Allen would not let them cross his land to cet co public land .. J)ffviaus ownera had done. Grimes 1aid cuscoms patrol offlcets 1totlced ampb1biou.s craft track marks on the beach 1n early December and i>fflcers at varioua times between December 17 and 31 saw "llgbta which appeared to be vehicles movt.ni up and down the beach as if on patrol." · On Deeember 29 and 30, he • said officers spotted • abip with no running Jlghtl ott Allen's beach and "there appeared to be lights signaling between the beach and the blacked out ship ... · AFTER FURTHER sur- veillance, the raid began Satur- day morning. According to the affidavit, one of the men arrested was found buried in the sand under a log wearing a wet suit wltb no shoes. Another waa picked up in a nearby field of sheep. Those arralped Tuesday list· ed addresses from Massacbu.setts, Callfomla, ll- 1 i n o is, Colorado, Texas, Washington and New Jersey. ~ Million Savings? Military Base Closings Viewed WASHINGTON (AP) -Pentagon leaders are preparing for a new round ot military base closings and reducUons that they calculate will save $250 million to $300 million a year. They have instructed each armed service to liat bases that can be eliminated or cut back. An aMouncement of Installations that • may be affected is likely late this month or in February. · "We'll have to get at some bases that are very hard for the services to give up,'' said one senior official. Border Conf lirt •wa r' BANGKOK, Thailand CAP)-Vietnamese forces control the Parrot's Beak of Cambodia but apparenUy do not plan to drive de- eper inside the neighboring Communl.st country, Thai miUtary in- telliJ(ence oJficers reported today. -------------. Cambodia broke rela· ( J lions with Vietnam on Satur-/N SHORT day. and each government brought its diplomats. home Tuesda~·. Radio Phnom Penh today described the border conflicts as "an undeclared and pre· m'editaled war launched by the Vietnamese.·· They said Vietnam has about 600,000 soldiers in the South with more than 1,000 tanks, a wide range of artillery and more than 300 . fighters and fighter-bombers. They estimate that Cambodia baa fewer than 100,000 soldiers with virtually 110 tanks, some 300 artillery pieces and only about 20 planes, including trainers con-verted into light bombers. OH P o(ictl P re••ured WASHINGTON CAP ) -The United States should apply economic leverage if necessary to maintain its access to fore11n oil, the General Accounting Office says. This could mean withdrawing U.S. economic cooperation to oil-producing countries that fail lo act responsibly in oil polic¥, the GAO said Tuesday. Indian Cla i• t o ,.,,.,, BOsrON CAP> -The claim by the Mashpee Indians that they own S30 million worth of Cape Cod land went to the jury today as U.S. District Court Judge Walter Jay Skinner began a. le.n&thy charge behind closed coutroom doors. ··Pack an overnight bag," Skinner had told the 12-member, all- white jury which will be sequestered until it reaches a decision. Skinner said the jury mu.st determine whether the Indians of Masbpee conatttuted a tribe on five separate dates, raogin1 from July 22, 1700, to May 28, 1870, when the town was incorporated. North Gets Warmer Air Rain Continues on CotUlt, Snow Falls Inland Callfot'llfa • PRESlD~NTCARTEAAfllRfYlllHIGYPT'fl!ORTALD wmtAHWAA IADAT They Walk Paet N.....,. • AWPott .. .._. Wlh ~"" Ct1rtW • . Carter;· Sadat Confer Both Sha~e 'lde ntical Views' on Peace Steps .·'. ASWAN, Egypt (AP) -Prest· dent Carter met for an hour with President Anwar Sadat of Egypt today and afterward expressed s upport for "the legitimate rights of the Palestinians.·' Sadat told newsmen he and Carter ahared .. tdenUcal views"' and bad decided on "specific steps" to be taken for peace. But Carter'• endorsement of the rights of the Palestinians dld not go . beyond hla p~vlous state- ments. HE ltEFRAINED, for exam- ple, from endorsing the indepen- dent Palestinian state ~ma.oded by Sadat and other Arab leaders and rejected by Israel. Readiq a p~pared statement as a desert wind lugged at his coat, Carter enunciated "first principles" for a lasting peace between Israel and its Arab neighbors. TRUE PEACE, he declared, "mus t be based on normal reJa. lions between all the partl~s." •'There must be withdrawal by Israel from land occupied in 1967," he continued. and there must be secure borders for all parties . And "there must be resolution of the Palestinian problem'' insuring the legitimate rights of the Palestinians, and the Palestinians "must participate In the determination of their future." As in the past, Carter did not mention the Palestine Libera· tion Organization. with which both Israel and the United Stat.ea refuse to deal because of it.a <iedloation to the destruction oC the J ewiahltate. CARTER AND SADAT met at. the airport outside· Aswan, the. Egyptian winter J?layiround on the upper Nile, durin1 a 90· minute pause in the American president's flight from Saudi Arabia to Paris, the sixth stop on bis seven-nation forelan tour. Sadat uked for the meeUn1 att.r Carter said he favored a PalesU- nlan homeland linked to Jordan rather than an lndei>endentat.tte. The two leaders were relaxed aod am.iUni after their talJc and embraced warmly alter their statements to reporters. Sadat grinned broadly, Battered Tot Dies Of Heart Failure CHESI'ER, Pa. {A'f.') -Three-year-old Karen Millei:, kept alive on a respitatOr after allegedly being hurled to the floor by· her mother's boyfriend and suffering brain damage, bas dled oC heart failure. A spokesman for Crozer-Chester Medical Center here said the girl suffered two cardiac arrests while still on life-support equip· ment and w~ pronoun~!! dead at 11 :17 p.m. Tuesday. TUE GIRL'S divorced parents and the hospital bad sought court j>ert'Ilission to have ber removed from a respirator after she was declared clinically dead December 23. • But Delaware County Judge Robert Wright ruled Friday that the court could not make such decisions. He pieced the matter in the hands of the child's parents and her doctors. THAT WOULD have allowed doctors to disconnect the respirator today, but -Karen's court-appointed lawyer appealed l() • the-state Superior Court. Hours before her death, the Superior Court stayed Judae Wright's ruling to give the court more time to consider the case. • Well, maybe so .....•• • But talk I• 10 cheap -and •o transftory . • When you want food bargain• -price• you can count on d ay In and dAy out. the l)!OOf is lo._prt nt. •••• In the grocery ads In the Dally Piiot • • Confused by all the confflcttng cf alma? • Shop the Dally Piiot, get the fact•, co~.,. ••••• then you know you're realty getting the most for your 1."0ney. ' SACLUIENTO CAP)-Gov. Edmund Brown 1r. Hya a bW 1lvin1 CaJlf ornia bomeowoers and nmen tlJO inllllon annually in tu. relief "cu a.d4 WW be puMCl'• within eo days. The Domoerat!c sovernor made that predlc· uon. but cll4 not offer apeclflca of a tax plan~ aft.er meeting Tuesday with Democratic leaders of th& at.ate Senate. Brown continued to praise a tax cut plan favored by Assembly Democrats to &Ive most of the tax relief lo low·income Californians. But he aaid he expected the btu that reaches hls desk to be one favored by Senate leaders which gives more relief lo middle·lncome homeowners. IT WAS THE SENA'l'E WIDCH killed Brown's $4.8 billion, five.year tax relief plan on the closing day of the 1977 Leglalature lastSepL 15 That wu one reason Brown met with Senate ·leaders on the opening day or the 1978 Legislature. ... " ' ,._ .-.-A....l.91--~--- ~y. Jan1.1ary 4, 1178 Assembly Votes TUX> Overrides SACRAMENTO (AP) -The California A&· sembly I.I startin1 the new year in a defiant mood: It overrodetwoofGov. Edmund Brown Jr. 'svetoes, That compares wltb ool.Y one veto override in the previous three years. But a short time arter the Assembly vote Tues. day, the Senate su.stalned one of the vetoes. That w-.s on a bill lo establish on paper, but not to finance, " new museum. AS FOR THE SECOND BILL, TO ADD two new judgff, the author said he expected to negoUatewith Brown rather than seek a Seo ate vote. Since 1975 when Drown took office, only his veto L/SC DAILY PILOT &den Race Ken Maddy. ·state as-se mblyman from Fresno who publicly considered switching to the Democratla Pat'- t y nve years ago~ formally announced hls campatgn •for governor today. . - ot a new death penalty law has been overturned in ------.....e:.~i.:r::=----------­botb houses. And that was onlythesecondoverrideof any govemorsince1948. A third Assembly override vote was avoided Tuesday when Brown aereed lo negotiate a com· promise on a bill for state funding of a $20 million raise for low·pald workers atnursinghomes. Tl:L\T BILL'S AUTHOR, Assemblyman Loa Papaq, b-Daly C'ty, said Brown agreed to provide the ~ot·an-bour raise ln the bill, AB1427,,nd the only diaagfeement involves the timing of paJment. "We mapped strategy on an immediate prop; ~rty tax relief plan," Brown told reporters. "I'm working very closely with both houses to obtain a property tax relief bill within 60 days." ' The author of the bill on judges, Assemblyman B 0 T ff. P LAN S B E F 0 R E TH E legislature )¥OUld be financed without. tax in· creues from the aurplus in the staLe budget, now estimated at $2.5 billion to $3 billion. Gov• BROWN PREDICTS.TAX REt:"EF ......... Bill McVittie, D·Upland, said }\e expected to negotlate a compromise to avoid a con!tontation Sen. John Holmdehl, left, Panel Chairman witb the Senate. The legislative deadlock has been over something caUed the "circuit breaker," a property tax refund plan pushed vigorously by Brown last year which would gave the biggest rebate checks to low-income homeowners and renters Spurring both Brown and luwmakers in both houses i!I a voll'r'>' initiative by tax relief advocate Howard Jarvie.. LA Integration Nearing? IF APPROVED BY VOTERS JN TllE June. 6 primary, the Jarvis initiative would require an im- mediate two·thirds cut in local property taxes. LOS ANGELES lAP 1 Superior Court Judge Paul Egly has Indicated that the city school board·s integration plan m11y ~o Into effect next September as a first step toward full desegregation. In his pretrial order, malled to attorneys over the New Year's weekend and made f)ublic Tuesday, Egly Indicated he would give the district a favorable initial rultng so student integration can begin by Sep.- tem ber. But he noted the Prot~tion Demond~d St\N RAFAEL <AP> About 100 Sausalito houscboatcrs jammed a meeting of the Marin Coun- ty Human Rights Commission, complaining bitterly a~out last months' violent clash with sheriff's dep- uties. -'.fhe houseboaters Tuesday night demanded pro· tection from further efforts to evict them from the mudl'tats and shallows of Gates. Pt•nishment Sclwol Ban Lifted? ruling may be modified as ( ) ~f~~~~auon hearings con· STATE .. Drunk Prograa Appro1'ed Now we've made It easier to get away with America's favortte seafood. Just pull up to our Orive-Thru Menu, place your order, then drive around to our Drlve·Thru Window and pick It up. Everything on our inside menu Is available on our outside menu. So when you can't drop In , drive In. "lt is the court ·s opm '----------'-LOS ANGELES (AP> -County supervisors LOS ANGELES CAP) -School SuperinteA- dcnt Wilham John!>lon will rl!commend the 21 :i-) car-old ban on corporal punishment an Los Angt·lcs city schools be lifted an September. his deputy hus indicated ion that any further de have approved a program permitting people con- lay m the physical desegregation of the Los Angeles 'icted twice of drunken driving to undergo one year Unified School District 1s an tolerable, .. Eglysaid. of alcoholism treatment as an alternative to a jail i.entence and lo:.i. of their driver's license. James Ta)lor. deputy !>uperintendent. spoke for Johnston at u school board committee meeting Tuesday lie said Johnston no longer will recommend that rndivldual schools be ga ven the authority to continue prohibition or the punishment A state law passed after the adoption of the board 's ban prohibits corporal punishment, •Jsually paddlinJ:, unless parents give prior writ· ten consent. J OHNSTON RF.COMMENDED last Sep- tember that the board lift its ban. but allow in· dlvidual schools discretion to imeose bans even if parents wanted their children to be · physically d1sc1phncd . Linder th:.at proposal , principals and com- . munity advisor~ councils. composed mainly of parents. would decide whether lo ban corporal punishment Saf ef. fl Del'i<'e Removed -H ENIC'IA. Calif <AP 1 State investigators have pointed to the my:.teraous removal of a safety device as a major clue in the deaths of three men working in il tank at Exxon's oil refinery. Investigator Michael Schneider saidf Tuesday the safety device was designed to block poisonous gas from entering the 100-foot tall sllo·shaped unit. ' .fflnorft11 Posit 1011 Defended SACRAMENTO tAPl -State schools chief WI Ison Riles, attacked by black groups tor his vote on1 University of California admissions, says he doesn't have to apologize for his record on minority issues. · "I don'thavetoshow my credentials for trying to help minorities. for trying to lower barriers against them," Riles !>aid an a KVIE television interview taped for showing Tuesday night. .. For 40 years I've been doingth1s " Saudi Invests • m South &mmpland Rich in Natural GaiJ, Minerals? f'rom AP Dispatches ment conglomerate MCA Inc., and his wife Edie donated funds to p rovide $100.000 a year in scholarships to students at Brandeis University. Ghalth R. Pharaon, the Saudi Arabian busi· ncssman who is buying controlling interest in the National Bank of Georgia, is making another ma- jOr Investment in the South. His attorney, Frank Van Court, said that Pharaon's company lent $10 million to investors to complete the purchase or swampland near New Orleahs. Van Court said there is a possibility of deep natural ,::as and olhl"r minerals on the property. The fund will be for needy students from mid- dle-income families, a spokesman for the Lew and Edie Wasserman Scholarship Fund said. Brandeis University is in Waltham, Mass. * Walter Cronkite has written the Rev. Don Foran that he Is .. dehizhted" the Seattle oriest Pharaon Is attempting to buy 60 percent of all outstanding stock of the National Bank of Georgia, including abo\Jt 120,000 shares owned by Bert Lance. former director or the Orhce or Manage- bai1es his weekly Tuesday night Mass on the CBS Evenfng News i f'oran. 34. a hterature and theology instructor at Seattle ment and Budget • l'nl\ <'rC\1t~. says he tries to en- Actr~si. Karen Valentine anri composer-writer coura~c students to see the re· Gary Verna have been married. lat1onsh1p between the day's The wedding began e news and the gospel. second marriaJle for Miss "For years I have tried to Valentine. 30, an Emmy Award inspire high school teachers to winner for her role in the tTI use the newspaper as a daily television series ·'Room 222." It reference In their courses.·· Cronkite wrote. ''Now I is the first marriage for the find that there Is a teacher who ia using that ap· 29-year-old Verna. proach, and I amdellghled ... Comedian Larry Storcb, * who was appearing In Reno, Fresno Congressman B. F. Slsk, one of the top . was a witness at tfte hotel suite 30 m embers in seniority in the U.S. House of . marriage. Representatives, announced he * will not seek re·elecllon af~r When Out magazine ran a sexual satire of the . his term expires. classic Marx Brothers movie "A Night al the Sisk made the announce· Opera ... it used photograph&that seemed to show ment while speaking lo the the comedians in bed with nude or nearly nude North Fresno Kiwanis Club, an women organization to w h ich he Oii1tricl Court Judge ( J belongs. Morris Lasker ruled in PEOPLE He said it was only lhe past New York that Playboy weekend that he made ·tt\e de- Publlcations Inc. did not clslon \.0 retire after his term haye the right to use the expires at the end of 1978. At piC:tures "for the purpose of trade." that time Sisk will be 68 years old. . He sent the case lo federal court in Chicaio • • where Playboy Is headquartered -to determine . With · hecklers 1boutin1 nearby for jobs, ho,r much in damaaea should be awarded Groa.cbo atebard Call'1drl wu awom in u Plttsburgb'a Mus ProducUont Tnc. 53rd mayor and promised an admlnlstration • dedlcatedtohardwork. Former Black Panther leader EJdddC• .. My etyle ls work -bard, dedicated wo'rk. Cltner won a delay ln hla trial fot attempted And that, my frlenda, la what I'm 1otn• 10 do from m\irder aucl auault when the this time. on," the 4&.year-old former clty coun· Ca'UCornia Supreme Court cllman told weU·wisbera on t&kinl offlce for a full aareed to decide wbetber to tetm. auos>ress some evld nee. Call•ulrl, act1n1 mayor nine months, was Four Ju.sUces votoo to 1rant sworn In durln1 a ceremony u a handful of· a l)earlne on whether aearchet • pla~~rd·bearlng demonstrator• chanted. "We need . ro11 the evidence were le1al and ..Job•, not hoc. alr1" • or'fered the 1''eb. 2• atart or bl• • Al .med• County Super ior Coun .. trial delayed pendln& a d•· liitl 8P111b won the actjoumed 14th cheas tel'Jlllnal on. • aame 11a1nat Vlkor Korehno& In Del1r1d• tn their Cleaver. 11 charc•d with o..u = mak-h leadlni to the world champlbnahlps. 1 thiwt counu of attempted murder and tbrte '4 Xard\nO! toada 7.1 lo 8.5 pO{nta tn their 20- 0f 1uaault with a deadly weapon dutin1 1 ee· • same match. Tbe winner will play world cham· Masked Men Rob Fallbrook Family FALLBROOK CAP>-Four masked men who forced their way into a Fallbrook home and robbe<1 a family of four apparently aren't the same ban- dits responsible for a recent series or rape. robbe~ies in northern San Dle~o County, aulhontaes say. 3095 H~ 8Jvd. In Cotta MeM "These men apparently wen~ ~·cans and were wearing different types_ of 1nask and their operation wa:> different," a sherjfr spokesman said Tuesday. ''There wa( no r:s>J involved" \fl Monday night's anc1dent 1n Fallbr°", he said. p.,.i tc.Uth °' the s.... Diego ffMIQ\I, 9Q09 froni Fedco,) 1315 w. Whlttl.er Bllld. In La"*• (Ju.t aatt ol ~ Blvd , bctw««n H8dcnde and ldlho ~ • .., t ,, YOUR SALE. LAST4DAYS& FINAL REDUCTIONS! STARTS TOMORROW SAVE Sportswear, Dresses, Coats, Sutts and Pantsuits, Designer fashions, Young Attitude. Of\JMOST ITEMS INALL F~HION AREAS . WOMEN'S, MEN'S AND KJOS. Shoes, Handbags, Blouses, Jewelry, Children's. Men's an.t:j morel •• . ... .. .. i . I • • Putber abooC.out ln Oakland on April I, J.MI. On• pion Aaat.11 Karpov of th• soviet Un!oo for the U.· Paptber wu 1hot to death and two ~cemen wue •later thl.I year. i wo dtd 1n thatlncldent. ... .. _ Spuaky won the same acijoumtd Mond•Y _. • an•t twohoUn. ll wu h1J fourth victor)' 1n a rqw. Mon·Fri. 10·9 :30. Set. 10-6, Sup 12-5. Bullock's South Coast Plaza, 3333 Bri1tol1 C.M •• 558-0611 l . . . IAWW....,.u, board chairman ol atataln· • • ~ lltb pme 1' 1ebtduled ~· . ' . f ,, •· J. It's Not Your Eyes, • • Freeways Are Dim· Motorists who frequent the freeways or our Orange Coast area and commut~ into Los Angeles have com- plained in increasing numbers that the Ugbting system seems to be fading away oo our superhighway routes. And they are correet. The California Department of Transportation, known as CalTrans, has confirmed that night lighting on our freeways has been growing dimmer and dimmer. Two conditions are involved in the gray-out of our freeways. First was the energy erisis. Jn an effort to save electrical power, some freeway lighting has been de- liberately darkened in Orange, Los Angeles and Ventura counties over the past two or three years. · Secondly, other freeway lights have been doused simply because the U'-bts burned out and the main- tenance program has tailed to keep pace. In truth, our freeway system is beginning to get old. We have more than 700 miles of freeways in Southern California. Some sections of the system are nearly 40 years old. • So in addition to more bumps and potholes in the "' pavement, it can be anticipated that the electrical system of lighted free\f~ signs and overhead lamps also would begin 'to fail · . A recenl spot chcc~ o( one local interchange, the OD· ramp from llarbor Boulevard to northbound San Diego Freeway, s howed that not :.i single overhead light on the ramp was operable. Further, you cannot drive many miles on the San Diego Freeway without finding several dark directional signs. And the San Diego Freeway Js one of the newer ones in our freeway :.ystem. CalTrans officials say they arc aware of the lighting deficiencies. They note that the freeway lighting budget for our region was $2.4 million during 1977, an increase of 25 percent \\hem compared to 1976. • But the dimming of the freeways has increased almost insidiously-just a litlle at a time-as main· tenanc<:' has failed to keep up with equipment failures. Af~am. CalTrans spokesmen have blamed "budget limitations" for the dimming of the system . On the other hand. California motorists continue to pour gas taxt's into the state coffers at a record pace. And \\ c :.in· clearly not building new freeways or adding im· provt•mcnls at the same level \\ h1ch absorbed those taxe~ in pas t ~t'ar~. Lo~1e thus suggc:sb the money should be available to etl'C'l'l<•1-;.1te the frecw<.iy maintenance program. Sun·h the· !'!late oJhcials ha\'en·t been caught b~ ~urp11'.'.c• 111 tht· fact th al as the fr£'eway syslem gels older. it n·q 1111·t•s mcrcascd maintenance. \dequatc freeway lighting 1s a safety factor for motorrSLs. It s houldn 't be ignored. Further, allowing the system to deteriorate may ~imply be a false economy. The longer the state lets it go. the more a massive rehabilitation will cost taxpayers in fulu re) l'ars. A Modest Figure If the usually pleasant Orange. County Transit Dis· lrict information operators sound grouchy at times when the new Sunday information service resumes Feb. 12. don 't take offense. The operators like~ will be overheated -working in u clo~cd down to\\ n Saata Ana office building without air conditioning. where windows won 't open c.nd where t em· perutures soml'limes reach 100 degrees. Transit d1slrn:t directors balked &t providing air con· ditioning for the Sunday service because 1t would cost abouJ S21fi 1wr Sund a~ Thal ·s becau..,e the system opcratr!-i lo conl the whole.• building and not Just one small office urea. Directors felt the Sunday st·rvice would hr needed when new roull' changes lake cff ect Feb. 12. That means the operators will be asked lo \\Ork Sun· days in a stuffy building until they move next summer to new transit headquarters in Garclc.•n Gro,·c· Directors would ht• kmd to reconsider the minonlv µositwn of Directors Hobin Young and Al Ilolltnden and µay the' mockst co::,t of air eondilioning Otht'rwise the Sl'rnee s hould be s hut down until lht' mon· takC's plilcc~ until a suitable cooling system can be devist·d or until a temporary, more suitable work site 1s localed. • Opinions expressed m the space above are those of the Daily P~lot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is 1nv1ted. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321. Boyd/OWis ByL.M. ROVD Far too few people realize that no owl can roll its eyes. They 're fi xed in their sockets, those owl's eyes. That's why owls always look like tax accountants. They're formal. Direct. Positive. In· capuble or culling a flirtatious glance. Am now advised the wise matador probablv cleans the blood ofr h.is suit of lights by scurbbing it with meat ten· derizer, which i said to work in· a dandy manner to scour up such stains. Fascinating, if factu1l. Neme is was the Greek· 1odde11 of fate who punlthed Gloomy Gus Future historians wllJ have to view tho Tournament of Roses 'Parade as the elastic ritual of a hodoni1Uc aoctcty. What a waste ot money and enernr G.B.B. ' 41MmY Gil> t-..u a~ ••t• "'"'•' • ., , .... u ·~ •• 11•• ~.~-' -vlfW\ .. U.. ~'t:l.r"",..e-t --~ • people who showed the symptoms of an overdose of pride. She's the lady you meet when you meet your nemesis Numerous help.wanted ads for burletique show girls in the 1920s stated: "No one un- der 150 pounds need apply.·• Remember. all bees are grounded when the wind speed rises above 15m.p.h. Q. "Where's "Eisenhower Platz'?" A. That's what the British used to call London's Grosv~nor Square. U.S. military offices surrounded It during World War IJ, and the British thought It quaint at the time to dub it so, somewhat sardonically. Q. "Any way lo keep from chipping the plaster when driving a little nail into the wall to hang a picture?" A. Might try pulling a small square of cellophane tape over the spo~ first and tap tho nall throu1h that. • Q. ''What was the earllest newa event put on motion picture film?' A. The coron lion or Russian Cur Nlcholu JI In· ia96. Q. "Do fJsb s colon?" A. 1t1octdo. Sharks don't. __________ ,,,,_ ____ .... + .. .,.___. 1A1tl I • Robert N. w..d/Publlsher Thomas 1<"'4111/Edltor Jack Anderson • . ... U.S. Policy Aids DPDg Traffic WASlU~GTON -Bribed Lalin American olficial1 have opened the !loodiates for the drug traffickers who are inun· dating the United States with tons or cocalne and spreading the $2,500-an-ounee eoeaine habit to every corner of the country. Yet a timid State Department has hindered the drug enforce· ment effort for fear of of. !endtn& cor· ru pt Latin American leaders and upsetting the status quo. Thes'l are the !in.dints, still under 'wraps, or an aghast Congressional Select Committee on Narcotics Abust\and Control. Chairman Lester Wolff, D·N.Y .• made a personal inspection tour of six J.,atm American nations . According t.o lus unpublished re· port, only Chile is making an honest effort to stop drug smug- gling. Earl Waters Two or the other five, Peru and Bohvta, are accused of flouting the internatloJ>al laws that seek to cope wlth the llllclt drug traffic. And In ~razll, Colombia and Ecuador. tho re- port allet••· connivance between government officials andJ(lrug traffickers ls rampant. Wolff and his investigators un· derstand why underpaid customs and pollce offlclals take payoffs to look the other way at Latin American alrfield1 and seaports: But tbe report doesn't spare the State Department for its dithering. "OUR OWN State Department is actpig as a restraint upon the Improvement of enforcement ef. rorts by the 'Drug Enforcement Administration," declares the re- port, "for fear of tilting our pre- sent status quo with foreign na· Uons." For an official document, the language is blunt. "The commlt· tee." il charges. "found the Drug Enforcement Administra- tion to be understaffed in many countries and often hamstrung by action or our o•n Stato Dtpartment." The report claims the ••cb an or corruption" extend$ to ••the upper ecbeJon.s of 'overnmcmt" and "provides the kind of pro- LecUon. any rackell'~uires if it ts to flourusb." That the corrup.. lion reaches high into the rullna ctrcles ol Latin American gov- ernments is spelled out in a country·by·country summary: COLOMBIA -Enforcement ls sluggish "due to the Ingrained high-level corruption wbic~ permeatea its enforcement ranks." Tbose who resist cor- ruption ·•race the danger of 85· sassmation." During Wolff's vis· it, not a single maJor trafficker was surtermg the discomfort of a Colombian jail. Yet there exists a 200·memtx>r smuggling com· munity whlch barW. its millions in Florida , Panama and Switze.rla.Qd. They operate from an estimated 300 clandestine airfields. ferrying to the United. States 70 percent or the illicit CO· caine sold in this country. E C U AD 0 R --T h e i n • vestigat.ors came back with "the dlatinct impression that enforce.. menL •. lS weak (and> cornap. tton is widespread. Many in- atances or blgh-ranlclng govern· ment officials involved ln cocaine traffickine have been rePQiled and documented •• _ Judges have been known to vie for major (drug) case., knowing that the right verdict can briJl8 a ISJ1able payoff." Not unw recent· ly did tbe State Department hive 41any direct cont.act with the highest levels of 1overn· ment" to curb an illicit cocaine trade with a street value of $8.S million a month. PERU -Although a signatory to a 1961 International covenant to prohibit narcotics production. the growina of the coca bush - the source of cocaine -is legal, and growers generally ignore u lip-service law to regulate pro. ·ducllon. An esUmated 70 to 80 percent of all Lalin Atnerican cocaine originates in Peru. SUms up the report· "Politicul instability, poverty, social tradi! tion andtor compheily on the part of corrupt officials" may render coca·growing control im· possible. BOLIVIA -At leai.t 20,000 families make a liv1og from cultivating the coca plant in a country which also pledged by treaty to curb the narcotics trade. Framtic customs •gents, trying to cope with the cocaine rinJ, have two jeeps to patrol more than 400 miles of terrain dotted with unmapped airfields. There is one government aircraft for surveillance but no pilot to fly it. BRAZIL -Drug. traffickini::. though it breeds corruption irt ·Brazil, is not flagrant "by South American standards." A Brazilian group which controls Chrysler marine imports and deals in real es late as alleged to be lied into the eocaine trade, the re· port says. Only m the iron-fisted mihtan· dictuto.rsh1p or Chile did llw comm ittee discover some ;if. flrmatrve action and this. the rt'- port adds, was mainly to butter up U.S. and world opinion. Even Lhore. the report notes. 2:i nclrcoties suspects were deport· ed to this country, only to ha\'e 20 at them released and sent back to Chile. The regime therc- grumbled about t: .S. "le· nlency." Time to Peer into the Political Future This 1s the trad1t1onal lime for political pundits to peer into the future and enlighten the1 r readers with their all knowing wisdom of things to come, The in- trepid ones, safe in the knowledge that by the year'!. t•nd none will re- member their prediction!>. will pompou!.ly gave forth their' 1eY.!. as to how things will shape up in 1978 a!> though their prognoi.ticia· lions are 1n1!lsi\utable Yet. 1978 being an election yeur when the state must select 1l!. top officials for the next four years. nothmg could present a greater challenge for political soothsayers. California has long dem· onslreted its comp lete unpredictability when lt comes to elections. Probably no better example of that is the case of Richard M. Nixon. More than 3.250,000 Californians favored him ror President in 1960 over Paul Harvey .John F'. Kl'nnedy yet two years whieh wall materially affect his later he could muster only chances. the first fact is thal in- :!.750.000 \'Oles in his unsue· cumbent governors invariably <·l'~"ful attempt lo unseat Pat get fewer votes when they seek Brown <ts governor. r<'·election than they received in Or take the case of Pat Brown winning thr office the first time "ho in 1958 won election as gov· Pat Brown won office with <'rnor by more than 1 lflillion 3.140.000 votes in 1968. got re· 'oles and eight years later lost elected with 3,037,000 votes an his bid for a third term by the 1962 and lost in 1966 when he got Th , h · only 2,740,000. Ronald Reagan ~ame margin. en .• oo. t ere 1s 1 Alan Cranston who. riding high was e ected governor with from his ckction as State Con· J . 742.000 \'Oles but received I roller in I95a and re·electlon in 300.000 less in 1970 when he stood 1962. wai; defeated in his own par· for re-eleetk>q. h b d f In view of such damat1c tvm is 1 ortheU.S.Senatean di •. h. r 1 •• 1 1.964 and turned out of office by mtnis ~ngs o popu ar1t,. on the Houston ~ourno)' in 1966. yet part or Incumbent governors one came back to win a seat in the would have to conclude that Gov· tr .S Senate in 1968 and ~ernor Jerry Brown, wh~ won in election m 1974 1974 by the s mall margin of less -·than 200.000 votes out of 6 million WITH SUCH illustrations of cast, will have no easy victory if the whimsical nature of indeedhesurvivesotiall. California voters how then is it possible to predict what can hap- pen in th.is New Year's elections? IL opens with Governor Jerry Brown being favored by many to win re-election in November. But aside from the contingencies Wllll.E MUCH will depend up- on the Republicans' choice of an opponent for B.-own, the No· vember election may hinge upon some other fact.ors not the least of which may be property truces. Br o.w n and Demo c r a tit legislators, well aw<Jr(' or th1~. wilt assuredly put tog<.'lher a t:i\ relief measure early in the ye Jr The ques tion 1s ..... 11 1l hl' enough to head off the Janas an· iliatlvc which, if adopted by lht• voters in June. will really upset loca I governm<.'nt and branJ! 'nath down on the governor Other initiative l'fforts are cont an uin~ lo place such issues as th<.' d1.• ath penalty and homoxcxuality on the ballot "'hach. 1f surccssful. han onl y prn\'I.' emharrassin~ to Brown. ALTHOUGH these conlmg<'n cies might develop to wh<'re ·Brown could he dereat<.'d by almost an~ opponl.'nt. the r<' alist1c '1<'w is that the Republicans had better put their best candidat e forth And, d~spite the polls showing Al· torney General Evelle Younger to be leading, the inside view of many experienced polaticoli around the state's C::ip1tol is that Assemblyman Ken Maddy would be a sure-fir<.' winner 1f he can Qn· ly gain the Republican nomino· lion in June • I More Young Adults Mo~g Away froni Home If your teen·age daughter wants t.o move out -i( she wants an apltrtment of her own it may be your fault. But chances are it's not. Tbe aenlor demographer of the Census Bureau, Paul Glick, says "young adults tend to live away from home as soon as they become self· maintaining. · The ••e at which this happons i• youn1er and younger." He cites 1970 throufh 1976 atatl1t.lcs. The number o "heads of households" 14 through 18 nearly doubled. Females setUn1 up housekeep· Inc aw1y tro") their parental bomea used to outnumber •the males; more recently that raUo hu been reversed. They make up •II orts or r a· ions to JusUJy UvlD.i alone or wtth a roommate -but Brown University aoclolo1t.st Frances Kobrin tells The Los AnuJ~ Times that the separate domfclle promises more sexual freedom. · Other sociologists argue that youngsters have always wanted thus to assert their independence but only in our increasingly ar· fluent society have they been able to afford it. -Oarent-chlld probkms br°'-lJht to bis office his tlrst effort IJlUSt be to eet lbe parent "off Ute child's back.'' • • Re says it would help P•rents to understand the young adutt U they would recognize thi! paralJef problems of the aging ad\Jlf. PARENTS are inclined to forget that for anybody lo Uve with anybody day In and day out creates ''pressures." FOR BOTH. the future looks black and unappealln1. Both are intenuly self-absorbed. Both can . be extremel)' hypochondriecal, concerned abOu( their bodies. In the parenl·chlld relationship those pressures are increased when parents ask too many ques· lions, when they insist on di.a;. cuulne which the younister does • not wan\ to discuss. It Is difficult for many parents to ace pt the fact tl'lal •dol · · cenu 1re becoming oldtr youo,er. Toda)'. lf a parent has not. de· veloped a mutually respecttul re· lallonahlp with hll youo1ster b~ the time th•t boy or 1lrl iJ twelve or thirteen. oddl are be M\'U WilJ. I · Dr. Jam Arit!H>dy, St. lA\i1 •. pocboan&Jyst. HY• that In moat ... , And both are heavily engaged in the battle for independence. For both lhe young adult and the old adult, the suicide rate ln· creases. Most young adults imagjne that their problems in the home arc related lo the home. Thus they can't wait to gel out on their own. Most eventually discover that · they have taken their problems with them and. out or this aware· ness., many develop a renewed understanding of and respect for their parenta. What should the parent do when the youngst-er who sUll seems so youna. so vulnerabl • struggles against the apron 1lr· ing1? Bite your lip. Make 'certain they know that you love them. And pray. Perbapt you'v heard the ono about the census taker who asked the lodyolthe house, "Any chUdr~''' She said, "Three." Heuld, "Uvlng at home?'' Slie .aid, "Not yet. They're Dot. ~m~rfiednow." .... Starved to Death Man, 26, Dies at Religious Retreat LANSDALE, Pa. (AP 1 -The day Robert Wallace dted of starvation at a relieloua retreat, the hosptt.a.I wbere the Pasadena man worked as an orderly mailed hlm a lermloatlon notice. It said hiJ work had de· leriorated because of Ill health. But officials at North Penn Hospital say they had no way of savina the 26-year.old Prtncelon graduate, even though they had noticed his marked weleht loss a month before he died on the fioor of hls room at Kripalu Yoga Aaharam, a spiritual retreat near the Montgomery County hamlet of Sumneytown. By the tine Wallace\died1 hls five-foot, 11· inch frame nad shrunk to 80 pounds. "HE WAS a· very nice boy, very pleasant," Rosella Burcin,, the hospital's d.Jrector of nursing and Wallace's boss, said Tues- Comatose Woman Guarded by Alanm MORRJS PLAINS, N.J. CAP> -Karen Ann QuinJart"s parents have bad a burglar alarm and electric lock system ins talled to keep intruders away Crom the comatose woman's room, nursing home o((icials say Officials at Morris View Nursing Home said Joseph and Juha Quinlan, the 23·year·old woman's adoptive parents, paid for the de vices The Morris County sherlff's office had satd it would stop pro- viding s pecial around·the·clock guards on New Year's Day because of the cost for the guards 6,000 Enlisted Women Backed ·For Support Units W ASlilNGTON CAP> ·-An Army study concludes that an addi- tional 6,000 enlisted women could be absorbed into a variety of sup-port comJj'anies The :.tudy, which covered a nine·month period, found that com- p~ny-srze support units could be staffed with as many u 35 percent women walhollt significantly ar- fectinit <.'fr1c1ency. Army of fic1als said women make up about 5 ~r("cnt or the personnel in ~ut:h companies TllE REPORT Off'EREO no Judgment as Lo whether support units could absorb u IHgcr percentage of women bee.ruse JS percent was the largest representation studied in the tests of 40 companies in signal, military police, medical main- t enance and trllnsportalio• specialities. .. Extrapolation of test results ••. shows that we could accept up to 6,000 more enlisted women than provided in current assign. ment planning,·· the report said. There are about 46,000 enlisted women in the Army. THE STUDY, CALLED MAX- WAC , 1s one of several being conducted by lhc Army in at- tempts to, determine the future role of women in its ranks The report said about lwo- thirds of the ofClcers, noncom- m1ss1oned offlcers and enlisted personnel Involved in lhe MAX- WAC lest reported their com- panies performed al an "out- standing-very. well" level with the number of women assigned. HOWEVER, MAl,E officers STARTS December 26, 1977 and enlisted personnel rated the performance of men higher. Among other lhings, the re·· port concluded there is a need to give ins truction to noncom missioned officers and officer:. on enlisted women's problems. '"so that appropriate leadership may be provided." NY Toilet Goes Unisex NEW YORK (AP> - City Hall bas the first unisex toilet of its 16S·year·old history. Carol Bellamy, first woman City Council presi- dent, decided Tuesday that her private toilet could be used by members of either sex. Reporters found this· ~ign on the lavatory door: "This facility is now be- ing utilized by men and women. Please determine whether it is occupied before enterin&. Thank you." day. •'He was stutlng to get very Jrritable with my people which wu unusual for him. He thanked me tor telllnc blm. I thlnk it bad aomethlna to do wltb bis general health." But she said the problem 10on woreened. "Later was when J got con- cerned. I ln1lated that he see a pbyaJclan.'' she said. ..Other than that I don't see what else l could have done for hlm." WALLACE APPARENTLY did vt1lt a cbiropf actor whQ treated him for a 1in\ls problem, but did not have a tborouah phy1ical. 9etalla of Wallaoe's lut days, including the termination letter, did not be&ln comlnt to U1bt un- til several weeka after his death Nov. lS. The fetter said in part: "At that time (OcL 18) we discussed your appearance. You stated that you would attempt to im· prove In all areas ... Your performance h88 not improved and comments are made by the staff physicians on your un· healthy appearance." LEADERS OF the retreat. founded by the Indian Yogi Amril Desai, say they promote yoga and vegetarianism as keys to spiritual and physkal well· beine. Meals are ta.ken in small amounts, with light fasting the- rule for most there once a week. But they say they do not en- courage radical fasting and never knew anything was amiss with Wallace. When Wallace entered the retreat nearly a year before his death, the former competitive swimmer weighed lAS pounds. At death. he wei11hcd "no more than 80 pounds, possibly even 6S pounds," doctors said. Or. Stanley Goodwin, the Bucks County coroner, gave the cause ol death as malnutrition and.dehydration. F RIENDS SAY that after Wallace ,Kraduated in 1972 from Princeton, where h e studied EngUah and creaUve writing, be went back to Paaadena, to live with his parents for a wblle. then took a te•chlng job in Leesburg, · Va., so he could be cloee to a girlfriend. But the romance re- portedly went sour about the same time he became dis· enchantedwilhhis teaching job. . Wallace, Who friends say threw himself intensely lnto things that interested him, had become tnYolv~d In East81'n reJlglon, and moved to Lanst!ale in late 1976 to ·study at the center. HIS PUENTS, Mr. and Mrs. John Wallace, had caJl~d him last week from Pasadena. "lie sounded so weak and it was around lunchtime." his mother said. ''I told him to please make sure he was eating well and not to miss lunch. I asked him to come home for Christmas and he said he wasn't sure he could make It." ENDS ~ January8, 1978 ·o· • •" -A HU• 'Ntdneed~y.J1nu1ry 4, 1978 DAILY PILOT Tower's 'Leaning' Rate Off PISA, Italy <AP) -The Leanl.r\g Tower of Pisa stood still In 1977 ror the first time alnce s ophisticated devicu to meu_uro Jts rnovernent were in- s talled In 1913. • Professor Giuseppe Toniolo announced that the inclination of the 179·foot . 804 yettold landmark 1s exactly the sa• as It was Dec 31 , 1976 THE TOWER LEANS 17 feet off the perpendicular giving more than 100,000 tourists each year the feehng of being at sea as they navigate the stone steps. Toniolo, in charge of the monuments on Piaa 's Square oC Miracles, said experts are not certain why the lean didn •t in- crease. But the rate has been slowing, averaging half a m1lllmeter, or JUsl over mne- hundreths or an inch. each year from 1974 through 1976. It. tipped more than lw1<•e that in some previous year!>. LEANING TOWER STOOD STILL IN 19n ONE EXPLANATION I!> that the pressure incrca~ed somehow on the water.bearing stratum under the tower. This would shore up the base of the tower. ( t ·sooo·~.· Pomona First Federal introduces Goal Accounts! These spec1a.J savings accounts take some of the myl:ltery out of interest rates! Open a. Goal Account at Pomona First. Federal, an<'! you know exa.rtl.v how much you have to deposit at one L1mP. t.o reac~1 a. cert.a.111 savi nes goal in a given length of time! Come in t.oda.y, and Your .1"1na.nc1a.l P'rtend wm explain all the details! For example, a. four year Certificate for $3, 704. 19 at 711: % per annum wlth tnterest compounded dally will ret.11r11 you $5,000 at the end of the term. And, of course. you can plck. longer or· short.1•1· ,· terms per the handy growth chart below. At Pomona. First. F'ederal, 1n addtt.1on to a. var!Pty of sav1nr,~. oerttttcates, we also offer our Flex-Account.! Your funds earn a full 6'1•% per annum, and you can deposit. or wtt.hdraw your funds ti.I. any time. with no loss of interest.! In any of Pomona. First. Federa.l's Select Accounts your funds earn high interest. and are federally insured safe up t.o $40,0001 It's all pa.rt of our .1"1nanc1al Friendship that's been growing since 18921 8AVINOI GOAU 125.000 10,000 7,!100 5,000 2,500 Here's What PFF's Financial Friendship Means to You! Find Out How lo AHCtl Your 8.lvlng• Go.I •I ~F 10Yre. 8 Yrs. 5Yrs. 4 Yrs 2\i Yra. OHE-TIME DEPOSIT 111,518.55 $15,704.16 $17.182 91 $18,521.04 $21.118.32 4,607.42 8.281.67 6,873.17 7,408.42 8.4H 33 3,455.56 4.711 24 5,154 87 5.556 31 8,335.50 2.303 71 3.140 84 3,436.56 3,704 19 4.223 67 '--1.151 87 1,570.41 1,718.31 1,852 12 2, 111 83 1 Yr. $23,428 82 9,37073 7,028.05 4.685.36 2,342.69 ereetRate: Int Ari 773"-7 50"i. 675~ 6 50')(, nuelYleld·• 8 08'4 7 79'\ 896% Fedefll4 tegulatl0"9 noqulre • oubelen1 .. 1 ~nalty In lh• eYonl nl o ••r w•tl>d<•w•t •l•Nd onlnt....i c.........,.,.,_ d.t•ly 6.72.,.. JHg Free Services J'rom Your Financial Friend! IAn DUOSIT IOXH r ..... ~ ......... ..._,,,~1111.,,,... OI \1 '00C"'°" -) NOTI AHO TltlnT DU:D ~•Ylllll!NT CQU.fCTIOff _,,,, .... "'9f ~llr~J ~19 It ·-·~OOfl'I Ul)cl'il•?" MGltHllll'D MONZt ICIYlllMO •o~• t<-t-.d ~-ed IO .... n l"'9 return ol )'QJ' •• IO fO>' • TllAtt\.IM Ct«Cltl 11-•<frll~·~"~ ...... _ .. ""'Ot~•Ol1>.o.A). L-ol~.OOOlft~\. OtltMflOH I 0.. • I ttMt L" 'W't• " jlTlllHTMAH lJ' r l'J\ .. •11,..tllTI IP\• •mo•.t ,,,._.. _.. ... wft'f1 tiy PF-f· HOT°"'Y IEllY!Ce I ~ '' c.vMt'WT'llW, al evt"fy <'t "° llllOMIY OlllOflllt .., -· 51.000 -IMW'gl ba1anrA. l __ ,,,.,..aay DOCUllll!HT C<»YINQ LID 10 !> -r»t tM-f ,..~..,,,,,. u-.rlnga 119'..-.c. GI~ ~. .,,.,. .., ltAll for bnfn c:Jflinow4'a 9iftO ,..tttO'•"••''~ F ~ ... ~ .... ~408 -~Pomona First Federal SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION Ol4MGI I JO.._... T.tHlt A"•· ,_--...c~ 6l>·I 110 t f • • i . ; t ~ • DAil Y PILOT Wedne9day, Januaiy •. 1171 '' anua ea ranee a e'' Sale starts Thursday, 10 A.M. January 5th. Quai1ities Limited JCPenney • ta•hion ls1and store oniy • newport beach • Women's N'est-ce Pas Jeans Assorted styles, jr. sizes orig. •1a.1 .. ~NQW 10.99 ·Men's Athletic Shoes Rust coJored suede, sizes 71/2 to 101/20 ortg.12.99 NOW 8.88 Women's Canvas Shoes Sizes6to10 orig. 7.99 Selected Handbags Women's Costume Jewelry orig. •2.-•3. NOWS.SS Save 30% NOW99e Fine Jewelry 40°k off selected Stone Rings SOo/o off all Turquoise Rings Women'• Sid Jackets Bridal Gowns· one of a kind sample sizes 9, 10, 12 Women's ... .... Velour Joggrng Suits blue. rust, gold, broken sizes, limited quansJties Women's Designer Sportswear assorted separates blouses, pants, sweaters. 50o/o off 30-50°/o off Women's Dressy Long Dresses many styles and colors, broken missy & junior sizes 50% off Women's career Pantsuits • Poly Gabarqjne and knlts. 2 & 3 pc, M$ .& Jr · sizes 30°/o off I\ Women's Casual Pantsuits 2'-pc. poly/cotton, safari styling, khaki and rust, blistered seersucker, beige only ortg. 2s.oo NOW 20.88 Women's Jumpers in super suede pastels, Jr. sizes ortg.•21-NOW7.99 Women's r Cotton Wrap or Draw Pant Brown & rust, small & petite sims or1g. •12. NOW 7 .88 Women'• . Blouses and Pant Tops Assorted styles orlg.from&.99 NOW 4.99 Women'• Skirts Tiered, ruffled & gored orfg. •12.-•24 / NOW7.99 Sweaters putt.over and cardigan• orig. •12. to •22. Assorted styles, broken etzes, Umlted quantities ·NOW 8.99 24.99~ 30% off I The JCPenney dress slack. Sale 9.80 Reg. S14. The JCPenney dress sleek, superbly t.itored of 100% Dacrona polyester. Two-tone stretch wa11t· band. slaxh poci(ets. Many fashion details. Great selection of soltd colors. Men s sizes. Matchfog Blazer reg. $45 T Now 29.88 Matching Vest reg. $15 Now 9.88 Men's Reversible Belt orig. 6.50 Now 3.99 Men's Broadcloth Dress StJlrts. Long and Short Sleeve Save 30% . Men's stripe dreaa shirt• long and short sleeve Sale now gotng on Save 30% Assorted Girls' Tops orfg. 2.99 Assorted Girls' Pants NOW99e 9'19· •9 • .S11 30%-50o/o off Assorted Flannel Sleepwear orfg. 6.50-•7. 30%-50% off Infants' One Piece Underwear. · · M&L White orf'g. 2.99 • Aborted Girls' Dresse• ortg. '7.-'20. NOW99C Boys' Match Factory and· Gearing Up Jeans · ot1g. 7.50-•15. Now "' 50°/0 off Soya' Assorted Jeans sJzes4-16 Ong. s .tM.99 NOW 3.99 NOW gge O~ MON.-SAT. 10 A.M. to 9 P.M. SUN.12to6 ite ~ . -. . . ' 00 ~UIU-- Wednesday, Januaiy 4, 1978 DAILY PILOT A• vent · ·Now Goin·g Qn! ' Sale 2.96 tw'n flat or fitted < • •<J -· . . . : •/, Sa~e 1,.99 !:!",~~ Reg. 2.79. No-Iron white muslin sheets: Long wearing cottonlpolye&lor, ... Full Ital or fitted, reg. 3 59, aa.-2;M.• Standard pillow cases, r9i1. 2.09, Sale ;1.t9 White percale no·lron co!ton/polyester sheets. TWln flat·Of' lilted, reg. 3.79. 8•1• 2.93 -• . Full flat ar fitted, reg 4. 79, Sele 3.93 Standard pillow cases. • • reg. 2.99, Sale 2.13 .. . S a:I ~ 12. 80. twtn bfenk•t Reg. f1a. W~derful Vellux-St-.kets • • Full aize~Ng. $19 ........................... S.le 15 .. 20 Queen size, reg. $25 ••••••••••• :.~H ....... "'.'8•1• *20; King size, reg. $28. • ••••.•..••••••••••••••• Sale 22.40 . Reg. 3.99. 'Laura' floral prtnt sheets or cotton/polyester percale. Pretty colors. Full flal or fitted, reg. 4.99, Sele 3.N Queen Ital or fiated, reg. 8.49, Sele 6.96 King flat of fitted. reg. 10.49, Sele 1.96 King pillow cases, reg. 4.79, Sale 3.96 Standard pillow ca&e6, reg 3 99. Sale 3.0. r =' .. ' ' Sale 1.99 twin flat or fl\ted Reg. 2.99. Colorful 'Caroline' patterne<l no-iron cotton/polyester percale. Full flat or fitted. reg. 3.99, Sele 5.ff Queen flat or fitted, reg. 7.99, tale 5.99 K1ng""1lat or fitted, reg. 9.99, 8• .. 7.99 Krng pillow cases, reg. 3.99, Sale 3.29 Standard pillow cases, reg. 2.99, Sele 2.29 ") The famous JCPenney towel! Sale s4 bath towel Reg. $5. Our greatest towel • value ever is now on aalel That's right. •. our OWi\ soft, absorbent towels of combed cotton/polyester that are as big and beaull· fut as towels that ~IJ elsewhere for much. much morel Choose , several rn exciting dacoratOI' colors. -1 . ~ :• . ' Hand "f!O"Wel. Reg. 3.50. Slle'2.80 Wash cloth. Reg. 1.50. Sale 1.20 ~~· .. •._. " Sale 3.20 ~:!~, Reg. 4. 'matrix' sheared towels in solid fashion colors wtth comtemporary sheared jacquard pattern. Cotton/polyester • Hand towel. Reg. 2.75. Sale 2.20 Wash cloth. Reg. 1.75. Sale 1.40 Sale 2.40 ~:~, Reg. $3. 'Paradise' towel ensemble of cotton/polyester velour with fringed jacquard borders. Decorator pastels. Hand towel. Reg. 2.20. Sale 1.78 Wash cloth. Reg. 1.1 o. Sale 88• ,Sale 4.40 2b2.•" contour rug R!Q. 5.50 "ParfaiT" BA TH ENSEMBLE. 24' ,>e36" oblong, reg. 5.50 •••••••••••••••••••••• S•le 4.40 27"x45" Oblong, reg. 9.00 ........................ ,. 7.IO 34''x36" oval frfnge, reg. 6.00 •••••••••• , ••••••• S.I• 4.IO Unlvereal Lid, reg. 2.99 ........................ S•I• 2.31. I • 8TOREHOURS MON.4AT. 10 A.M.·t P.M. IUN.12..S ., ... Wednesday, January 4, 1978 DAILY PILOT A 8 ite 80 vent · Now Goin·g On! Sale 2.96 twin fl•t or fitted . ~. '. I §.~I!whl~m:.JLQ ~·,~= Long wearing cotton/polye.ier. , Full flat or fitted. reg. 3.59, lal-2;tt.• Standard pillow cases, reg. 2.~. lale 1.t9 White percale no-iron cotton/polyester sheetL TWln flat or lilted, reg. 3.79. Sale 2.93 • • Full flat°' fitted. reg. 4.79, Sale 3.93 Standard pillow cases, reg. 2.99. Sale 2.83 Reg. 3.H . 'Laura· floral print sheflS of cotton/polyester percale. Pretty c~lors. Full flat or fitted, reg. 4.99. Sale 3.f6 Queen flat or fitted. reg. 8 49, Sa .. •.H King flat or' fitted. reg. 10.49. Sele •.M King pillow cases. reg. 4.79, Sale 3.M Standard pillow cases. reg 3.99, Sale 3.0I .. ' . ,,.. " .:-.. . . ' .A > I '~· .... ,. ~, ) · .. -~-.-1 t . ' ,. «-\'' , .:- f •/'~ " ) .. . .. , .. Sale 1.99 "' . ... twin flat or fitted Reg. 2.H . Colorful 'Caroline· patternecl no-iron cotton/polyester percale. Full flat or fitted, reg. 3 99, Sale 5.H Queen ll11t or fitted,. reg. 7.99, Sale 5.H King flat or fitted, reg'. 9.99, 8ale 7.tt King pillow cases. reg. 3.99, Sale 3.29 Standard pillow cases, reg. 2.99, Sale 1.29 The famous JCPenney towel! Sale s4 bath towel Reg. $5. Our greatest towel . • value over Is now on aalet .. That's right. •. our ~ : ... OWi\ soft, absorbent ... towels of combed cotton/polyester that are as big and beaut!· ful as towels that !Mtll elsewhere for much, much morel Choose several 1n exc111ng decorator colors . .,,. .. Hand t o'Wet. R~. 3.50. Sale 2.80 Wash cloth. Reg. 1.50. Sale 1.20 Sale 3.20 ~:!~1 Reg. 4. 'matrix' sheared towels in solid fashion colors with comtemporary sheared ja¢quard pattern. Cotton/polyester. Hand towel. Reg. 2.75. Sare 2.20 Wash cloth. Reg. 1.75. Sale 1.40 S,ale 2.40 ~:.1 Reg. $3. 'Paradise' towel ensemble of cottonfpolyester velour with fringed jacquard borders. Decorator pasttlL Hand towel. Reg. 2.20. Sale 1.76 Wash cloth. Reg. 1.10. S•I• 88• r,:: _ __._ ............................. _..,._____. ~~ ,._,;JI ..... , fr ----------······· •\ ) , .... , --··-. .. I h i : ~ ...... ! l . '. ' . 1: .••. .-: • .. : '1-..r.-::11-•• -.:;, ••••.. -·. I . : :-:~~ .. --.. --1{_ i I dl~ r---, r' -"i I !r"·~ ~.) \ ; ti .., Ji:~ \ ::. _ ..... ,. ~ 'r .. ! 7 ·> l i • ' \\,~ lh .J \ .. ' I ,. -~·· -·· ..._ ··--·~ Sale 4.40 21x24'' contour rug A~. 5.50 "ParfalT" BA TH ENSEMBLE. 2'4' x36" oblong, reg. 5.50 ...................... lalt 4.• 27"x45" oblong, reg. 9.00 ...•••••.....•••.••••• 8ale 7.ao 34"x36•l oval fringe. reg. 6.00 •••••••••••••••••• Sale 4.IO Universal Lid, reg. 2.99 •••••.•••••••••••••••••• Sale 2.31. STORE HOURS MON.'9AT, 10 A.M ... P.M. IUN.12..a • • ' ' ~ I .. .). I \ \ J•CWl.VP'll.OT PVBUC NOTICE ....... ,, ' WednMday, J l\'*"f 4, 1171 QUffNlE be& • ., • .... ".. . .. I ··r I Workers Get OK Three employment firms specializing in temporary otflce help wlll be used to fill some s hort-term jobs in Orange County govern- ment tbi& year. County supervisors su .. 1:111ow coun o,. TH• approved the contracts STAT•O .. CALl'OllNIAl"OR or up to ... ""',()()() A•ch THI COllNJY 01' OlllAN08 ....,., ""'" N•.A·t4tu Tuesday wlth T·Glrl "o T 1 c. o .... , A" .... o o.. rr M r 1 1 K 11 lllflTION l'Olll ""OUTl 011 WILL • an 0 rv ne, e y ... ,.o un111r TUTAM•Nu111v, Services of Orange and ,.0111 AUY1to1111tAT10N To Ao-.... e People Machine of MINISTlll llNDllt THI "'' 1"fo1:,.1Not:NT ADM1101T1t•Tt<* Tustin. o .. aSTATISACT ~ c nt p l h•••· ol GEORGI CLAlt.: -, OU y ersonne RAMuv, .... CLARK 1uMuv. Director Bert Scott said o.<u...i o-p---. ... ,____ 1-'4 for many years the NOTICE 15 HEA•ev OIVllll l,,.t ·---------------------"'Ounty has used tem-OONALO T llO'>ENFELO •lld EL· " • L1orr w 1TT.,.,,..,,, ... ,,.,.,n • .,.11 "Oh,oh.That'•loialtobeoaewell-donebotdoc&••ben porary help firms to 11-tor ProbeT• o1 w111 •no l•-"<t o1 he comea ..._ ! " l k L•tt•n r.u•"""'·'~· .,, .. 1or '"""'u supp y extra wor era •~t11orl1••-to 410mlnl\ltf' -· 11\f ..._ _____________________ during election time. tndt.,.lldtnt .otnlN1t••llon ol f\IAltt Act .. refl"~• to which n "'-die tor •UJ•hl• .,.._,,<.,1.,, •no 1n.1 '"" 11me A NEW STATE law •n° P 1 f<• 01 "'"''"V '"" '•m• ,,., . now pe .. rm.it.s county gov-,,_.,, Mt tor J1tn"'4'Y ti, '''ti .tt 'O 00 D aiL-El he .. '"'I: • m . ,,, IN <ourlroom OI r ••. , •• ,.,,..nl e If.II •D-9•, r~ ernment lo contract for ~o >o4~a <ou'' •t1ooc1"'''""'•' 0~.....,1 'Ci' th k I d t Ortvt W .. t 1n1M(•tyol'>•"leAn• 0 er pea . Oa em- C•l•IOtllt• porary help with such o.i.4~~r;::·~\;~~"" C HA R L 0 TT E day at his Park Avenue agencies, he said . count~ c• .. • E . .. . r 11 Scotl said the county ou11G1 c. u cHuv AMJ\Ll • Vmdn Islands home alter a 11rae 1 will have to pay the RosaN11no,M1.vuHusMAN IAP> Cyril Emaauel ne111. ,.., wu.111,.. """ K h f i r m 8 a l a s Ii g ht I y ... ,,,r Nitta, cA t0110 Ing, 56, l e governor ot · -higher rate than would '"' um 11t-t1M the U S. Virgin Islands · •tto'"fY' for C.Pe1111onen d'ed M K be pa 1d workers hired Pu1>ll•1>odo.. ••• °' l""''' l••111 ••1101 since l974, 1 onday. NEW YOR CAP> directly by the county, J•" ,,,, 10.1911 Kang was the Cirst black Paul Ackerman, 69, but the firms will be PUBLIC NOTICE H IO" to work on a U .S. former music editor or able to get workers to ~enator 's staff when he Billboard Magazine and their county job assign- joined Sen. Hubert H. one of the nation's lead· ments more quickly, he llumpnrey, D·Minn., in ing authorities on coun-said, and the contracts 1949. try music, died New wiJI save county ove1> .. ICTITIOUS aUSIHCSS NAME STATl:MfHT lhe ro11owmootot\Clf"t' •t•dOmotJu,, N\,,e1 Year'1 Eve. head in recruitment and PULPI rs RY PAYSE. ,,. T•r'"'"•' W•Y. Nu 11. CMf_. Me,•, C•lllOr"'• '1611 !>•loty R•ll• ,,... • C•llfornl• <<1r po1•hon •1' ff'rm.n...I W~y No 11 C O\t • M•w ... C •1ttu• l'h4 9nt'1 f ru\ l:J\i1Wne\\ I\ (Otw'kfllf"d t>y • trx .,.,., .. n TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) setting up payroll re· -Harvey Seabury cords. lo'ord, 62, an associate . WINTER PARK, Fla. • ORANGE COUNTY I OBITUARIES Airport Changes Nixed' Supervisors Retain .Conunission as Advisory By KATHY CLANCY OfU.0.llyl"JltCSC..H There won't be any change in operations of the Orange County Airport tor the present, aupervoor1 aareed Tuesday. The board voted unanimoualy to keep airport. administration under t.be umbrella of th• COWlly General Services Agency (GSA) rather than treat· ing a separate airport department. In addition, supervisors decided to hep the five-member Airport Comrnisalon as an advlloty croup instead of tJ'yln1 to delegate •"1 docltlon· makina power to tbe tlUiena panel. HOWEV2R, SUPERVISORS DID speU out 10 general topics for the commis1lon's purview. They asked that commjuion recommenda· tions on those 10 subjects be present.ed to the board before any final decisions are made, unleu lime preventa commlaslon study beforehand. Those topics Include the airport'• annual budaet, proposed airport rate. and '"'ta!.~ bu..ildlne proaect.s, lOQ1-ran10 alrport p other special reports, Supervisors uked County Administrative or. ficer Robert Thomas in October lo review airport administration u well u the poasible expansion of the airport. commlssfon'a powers • THE REVIEW WAS ORDERED over the ob- jections of Supervisor Thomas Riley, who called lt a "crime" lo tamper with the management framework. But Supervisor Ralph Clark, at the Umf', noted a survey of airport tenants who sajd they believed the GSA had placed the airport within a large bureaucracy that ls slow to make decisions. The same recent study showed that some ten- ants viewed the commission as another layer or bureaucracy without decision·makinc powers. And some commissioners complained that tbetr advice often is not sought on import.ant airport ma~rs. would have one additional depa.rhnent bead rt· portlne dlrectty to them Thomas' report siud under exlttlng state Jaw the five-member Airport. Commilllon may only have advbory power, not declalon·maklni po•er. However; he said, supervisors may be •blt to ·appoint specl•I airport officers who eould htve the say.so on some issues as defined by the board. Otherwise, he said, supervisors mlght want to propose now le&islatlon that would permit delega-tion ot aome declalon·m•kin1. Thomu sald supervison might save $l.2,793 In yearly administration cost.I by c.reaUna a separate --------------------airport department, but noted the aavtnp alone ( l wouldn't warrant lt.8 removal from the GSA. CONSUMER J ADVOCATES THE REMOVAL, THOMAS said, would take away some administrative review and supervisors In the .• M ff'fy H•1h. '"' ~f\•n<M A P~h\~ \litr~tuty fr••\urf't' editor of the Toledo (AP> -Natalie Ahlborn Blade and author'of the Gurney, 62. wife o( book "What The Citizen former Sen. Edward J . Should Know About The Gurney oC Florida, died J\rmy," d1t'CI S<tlurday. Sunday at a nursing DAILY PILOT IN ADDITION, the ar· rangement may help avoid potential un -~------------------------------------------~ employment claims by 1,.,, 't•I•"''"''' ... , fl••d w1tn IM <~ur'lh (1110 fit O••ng.9 (Quflft on Lit(t t'f\O.t' l"f ,.,, '911U Publl\hiMJ °'''"'I'" r o "' t.J.,,., P·~or J•,,u•ry 4 tt 11Ji I\ 1111 \4 It n ric:r1nous auso•cn HAM( SlATEMEHT r fl•· follow1noy ""''\Of\\ "'t' C101nQ bu\1 ti('\\., NEWP()Rf PUllll ~HIN(, OIVISION, 01 Wt\l,.tly PIM I, No t 10 N•woof'f fM«Kh ( 11f1torn1t1 •2'60 P 0 Ho• w. "'•wi:iot t lh1c11. C••••orn•• •166) HtC C0tPor•t1on, • <•llfo,ni• <or· por111011 4001 Wolt~"Y Pl«•. No 110, P O Bo• w ,.., .. pon 8ou11, C.•l otornl• ~66) f Ill\ DU\IM'I " <ondu< t.G 9y • (Qr _po••l1on Hl((OrOOtaloon Konl Pow.it View PrW\tdent .., ~,, •••i.m.nt ... , lllod ....... ,,_ •ut1t~ c1,,_ ol OrAn~ Count on o .. rember 11. ,.,, ,,, Publl\'-0 <>•,,,,. '"'''" O•lly J•nu•tY • 11. 11 l) ltt•a Pl 'BLIC '\'OTfCF. '1CTITIOUS aUSINEU NAMI STATIMIHT 1""' foflowtt\•~ ""'\On\ Ire t o1nQ bu·~·"~'•., I .. £ HO\J~l ooc toq o'° Cem P•" 0fl¥t, Suitt 11~ """l'Ort 81~1> (A 91660 c:,,c,,.ow l .-..,Tull J1'S Cor•t .A\'• . C 011• M• ... CP. •lolt) JO"'P"' \ Ul'lll"t' )'))qot Orrll41nQ W•Y L•OvM Hill• <A 9?•U Thi\ bV\•~\\ •\ < onaut It'd by • o~•ral P•''""'' \h1p ' GrorQt" l HAm111 '"'' 1il•t.nwn1 w•' Mr<t wl(ft 1hf' C qunty Clor\ ot (J,.nO" County on Doc 16, 1'11 l"llOU Publl1hf'd 0.•,_ Co.,t Delly Piiot, Ot< 21. 11, 191/ J•n •, 11, 1'11 USO.II ------------PUBLIC NOTIC•: l"IC?ITIOO$ •llStH•U NAMa ITATlMlNT Th• folto••t\9 O.r\On\ ere doir,v bi\;.)'""'., \ICI IM,,OIHS SPffO CCNTf'q U~A TREHO AOS, RIOf.11 WEAR J!>Ot lltCI Hiii Awo . C0\1• Ml•• CA .,.,. Euro Ml'1ltl1"Q Int C•hlornl• 3001 II.cl Hiii A•t , Coo .. NltM, CA .,.,. TM•.,..""""'" tonou<1r<1 Dy• <or IM>'•l-f,;ro""'4r~.-unq Hedy M<tt1•< .... , Vl<t .... .-lcltftt ,,,,, $1•t•,,,.,,t .... ltlt<I "''01 tlw C °""' r Clerk of Or ano. Counl y Oii 0Pt I, 10/ "'"12 PuDlll~ 0--Co<l•I Oall'f Piiot O•t 71, ltll, J"" 4, 11, II ltll H'1·11 PUBLIC NOTIC' F: P'ICTITIOOS •t1S1Hat1 1111111111 STATlfM .. fT Th• ro11-1no ""'-••re dolno .,..,. .... ,.u TRACT 1111 JOINT VfNTURt, IOI 81r<ll St.-.et, Ntwport 8u<n. .•llto"'ltt7MO Wllll.,-n C Nll••m,, No S L4>0untta fl1un1 lt«.11. C.lllo•nl• OU/ . J Scott f'•wott, *'n HuCl•tn tl•tr Clrclt, Fountao" ll••ley, .•lllO•fllt ,,,. Tllla b11a1ne\\ I• condu<ttd Dr • -r•l per1,."1\lf> Wllll.-nC Mtr-• Tlll• ,,.,_, Wtt lllld wll" , ... :t\Hlt., c:'.ltr~ ef Oranoe Ce11nty Ofl >.<em .. , JO. "" MONTPELIER. Vt. <AP 1 -Dorothy Moore Lewis, 81. c.in award· w1nn1n ~ hroadc ~ Journalist who served as president of the Interna- tion a I Al\sociat1on of Women in Radio and Television, died Sunday. home. She had been ~ridden since March 1970 when 11he surrcred a cerebral stroke. temporary workers 1r new federal laws ex· lending unemployment benefits to local govern- ment workers ls upheld in the courts. Scott said. S"UllLOCIC CHARLES DANIEL !>PURLOCIC, I ON DON (AP) -Sir •o• ••. P .. Wld •w•y on D•ombtr 21. ' ffl7 •I COf>CorCI, Ce Born O.ctmbtr A I a n W a I k e r , 6 8 , u, mt 1n "'-111•. Am-. ,... 11_, chairman of the Thomas 111 Newp0rt e...:11. c. for u v .. , •. HI\ fathor w"' Ertw\t NHI Sj>urlock, Cook travel group and a moti..r e1,.1 o.. 10oot,.1 Spurioc~, deputy Chairman Of the Joyo R09tn 10 wflOm ,_ *•• m.,.. . r ltd on July Jt, lttS In S.ll l...tU City, Ml d land Bank. d led Utei.. Ht fH•.lf'Vfwd by"'' Wiit. two T u e 1 d a '' . · W a 1 lt e r •..,,,,•w•. Cynf"'• 01 s.11 uu City, k h .r. ' ~ tnd O..rlo"• ol Provo, Ut•ll..,. nU~~ted Jn 1975, W8~ brOIMr FloVdof <Ao><ord, C.., 1-ti .. president of the Basa '-•• Mr1 Jove• Bu•'•""-of Gton Ch · b d•lt, C• Arltllf'• ..... Mtt N•n<Y . arrangton rewery st••••• 01 CNnd1er, Ar11-.,...,.,., The rirms will charge. from $3.42 to $5.85 an hour for clerical , secretarial and .key punch workers, depend- ing upon the skills their temporary assignments require. Scott. in a report to supervisors, said the county spent $5 mtllion on temporary help dur· ing the 1976-77 fiscal year. f1rl?)l;nd a member of 1trvlot .......... r ... ..,.., J11111 .. ry l. • • 1911 In s.tt Lot~• Clly Ul•ll L.,tln A • t the nt1:.h Railways MOrtu.ry S.lt Ukl City, Ut•ll •lft<· 1rpor boatd. too. MclCl:llit• JULIE LYNN M<ICEHllE ••\ldent GEORGETOWN, Tex. of S•nt• ,.,.., c. p,._, .... yon a• CAP> -A er and ~,'.;";.":: ~,.::::,.:'c';,,:r ~,~'. Repairs Approved marshal or the Touma· for "'"'"" AlfU•ll Comp••w 1n l r R · p d · Ht•POrl 9wclt. C• Survlvfll by lwr men o oses ara e 1n P•,.nl• Mr .. Mo All"" M<IC•ni•• o1 1949, Mrs. S. Perry s.nt• An•. C•. D•ori.., S•••• "Rozlna" Cavett Brown, :-:~~·~~~.~ .. ~~'!':'.~~~~· ~~"'·~~ 82, d1t>d Sunday in a Cuumono•. C• Ud Ounn• local hospital He r M<teonr1001S...1•An• C• l'uNr•I • "'"'' .. Wiii .. lltld IOOtY Jt nutry •• husband, Col. S. Perry ..,, •1 11:00 "'"" •• Ti.t c ..... ., Two repair proje.cts at Orange County Airport were given a unanimous go.ahead by county supervJsora Tuesday. Br own was na t lo n al C!>tpel et c..i. ,... ••. c.. "'"" P•••o• Clluc-Sll'lhll olfl<l•llno II\ lieu of C 0 m m 8 n d e r 0 ( l h e llOwtr1 Ille l•inlly requt\la IMI doM• American Legion. Hons 1>t m..w 10 1,. c1mp k110fera11lp Fund •I Otlv•ry Ct>epet of Cott• M•M. JIOO Sowtll F'•lrv•-. lllnl• Me, OAKLAND (AP.) -C•., tn memo•t•I or Julle Lvn11 MtlCtMI•. Smllll Tutn111 Umb C•••• General Manager Alan "'•w M0'\1My c11rtt10" ..._..._, The board approved plant to repair and seal nearly 1.1 million square feet o! ·aapbalt on two airport runways at an eulmated cost ot $101,()()0. L. Blngham, 52, of AC wrLL•AM ~:O.":eoTT. 111 .. , •• Transit, collapsed in his ,1...,101c.o.1d~••.C• P•-•••Y office Tuesday and died on J•""•"' '· ,,,. •It"" -oi 11. "''· of an apparent heart at-~:!:!~, ;:!. •u::,:!,0~,:.. '~r.,~~~ tC.ICk for 4 Yl•r\ Ht It lUrlli-by Ill\ wll• Sylvia Al>C>olt of c.o.-. /NU, C. • - Wllll•m .._I, Jr • of CO.It Mew, NEW YORK (AP> Max AscoU, 79, founder and publisher of the now-defunct magazine The Reporter, died Sun· · "8CIHOTHHS 5'o41THS' MORTUARY 827 Main St Huntlngtori Beach 536-6539 PIM PAMILY COLOM14L ,UMll.U HOME 7801 Bolsa Ave. Westminster 893-3525 P4CIFtC: YllW MIMOll4L P411C Cemetery Monuary Chapel 3500 Pac1hc View Onve Newt>ort. Caltforn1a 6'C4·2700 McCObetC• WOITUAllU legun1 Beach 494-9415 L19'!"!i.Hllla 7 elfll'"VW3f San Jv•,, Capraltano 495-1170 -IAL~MaoM N•ALNOMI Cor~ *'Mar 813-G450 Cotta ...._. 6'0·~424 - C• • •laltrt Ct•11d•ll• Hym•n Of 1t1.,.a1>11r9. ca , A-• htlor tf H•w Meitlco, -.Cly Mc1A9111 of 11111\0tt,...., Henriette Llfdtrt of Wltcontln, llM two or..,Oclllldr.., C.ll•tll' or•ntlde ttrvlces wlll •• lltl4 TlluH'•Y Je11u.,., t, 1911 el TM ICl"ll-f Of .. lrt't ~ttlrf, King•~ •• ca. $1111111 Tut/1111 '-""Cl C...lf ~ _...,y 41~·-~ "ULL•ll WILLARD E FULLEll. rtt..,.nl of Cttl• M._., Pt-•••r Oettml1er JI, 1m. H<1 It 1urv1.,.., bY -..,., ...... , ll. "1111., ol Arllon•, OM dl\ltllltr, ~IM Pell"' Of CloflMc• SUPERVISORS also agreed to spend an estimated $12,SOO to replace a leaking roof on the restaurant in the airport tennlnal. Supervlson1 put off for a week a decision on the locatlon for temporary air fre\aht facilities for Hu1bes Air West and Air California Jnc. 1tttt1, •IM wothtf', H-,. ... ,., et 810 THE FEDER A• Avla-, .. ,, C•., ftl.,;e Lind• "~It -1 ,..., o••nd<lllldren G•••••ld• 11rv1cea lion Administration ha.s ••rt ...,ct on Wtont\<Ny Jonuary '•t k d h i Ii " AM L°' ""°''" H••..,,.., c. ...... ,,. a1 e t e a r nes to w1111 111a11op u,,v w.,,..., offl,lft1nv. m o v e their tr e I 1 ht 8111 9•NC1w•r ';:;,~Y oirecion. fadliUea from haogars MAAALOA IC, l'RIGI!. rHldtlll ot at M arttn A via tton Coron• dlll ,.,,.r, P6•Mf•w-Y J.nuery beca~le 0( •a~etv and I ""· Born Mtrch 1', , ... 111 l'trron. o 1 J l.h.,., u. " '""''* br "'' 1111MN1nc1 ae.cur ty problem&. CllerlH, '°" ""''1 .. w ,.,tu of L.tke A I t. ftl l I "'"ow11uo. oauoM•• ••tty ., .. ,. 1rpor o c a s re- Mcu1101111n of Coron• dtl Mar, 2 tom mended that the Q••ndd•uollt•••. I or•••·'' m· be II ed to ·n Or•nd<ltu(lllltr. II-al HMll<" Wiii r " 8 OW l • 11e ,..Id 1 PM Fr1c1ty J-ry ••I stall temporary air P1t111c vi.-Ol.t1»1 wltll "••· l•uc• C • ht tr ·1 t !Currie olllt&.llnt 1'1ttr..-t P11<lllc rel& al era On WO View Mell'IO<'l•t "•rk, PKlllc Vltw 1 6 , 5 0 0 • 8 q U Are · f 0 0 t MtrtiMr10irwc1ora parcel's north of the MAllQllllK , LoitenAM w.111c1l4u.m1<1enc airport 1 temporary of F•11111•ll\ V•lltJ', ...... ., •w•y parkin" lot Each firm • JMl<lllr'f t, 1'1• Slit It s!IMll"94 ty J ~ • ~,.,,, "'1:,• Wlfl4..-. .. """t· wouJd pay S330 a mootb ::=.,~..JC~~' rent on mootb·to-mootb .,. ..... ,, • .. ,,. ,.M .. ,. .,..,...,. leue1. <'-"' c::::,~ ..,..,._ ., .... ., -------~---­a... I 1,........., flrleflft INl' Citll .. .,_ l\'Wtl.Wt' t11 W ...... .... ' , ..... ·~· """' hV ., ..... , MeftMf'\t Oll'WCtWa. """ 'i!IAIUAH L KAOD, ~-Hiii• 11,..i. ~ ........... ., "*' ... '" ,, 1t11, l•r11 1:111•111••• 1, ltll4 ht lhllll1 ... ,~.~ .. WrmM rt ~ Alic.. ., Hllllt• lllftt11 ltKll, I hter Mar.,rtt Wllll•Mt ti L.ta Allftle,, I .__ ... iltill~!'iiil ...... llllii .... _.I fttJlfclllldflNI, 1 ftHIJfal!4Hll. --:-~-:-......,-..,-..,;,.;..;.....;;_, __ ,lMettl MMCtaWlll IN t,, lllurMll.- Hlllljlry s ~--, ..... vi.. M<lll"ltrl•I ~ Atv, lno 111. J(llrrlt ~ l"IM~ "'9<11l' "'"' ~1111 '•1r11. ,ec1l1< vi-,Mtrtvery Dlrtttwa. Which investment rolls up the larger profit? The f936 Cord, with front wheel drive and a Lycoming VS engine of adv:Jnced design, was d91tlned to become a classic from lhe moment or i1s appearance on the $howroom floor. Price brand new: $1,995. Maintained in good condition, unrestored, subject to ups and downs in the colleO!ors' marktt It sells forty-odd years later for $l0,000. For proftl, a close second 10 a Lo~ Allgoles Federal Savings ac- counl, where the same $1.995, over the same years, with compound interest, adds up to Sf0,126. But high inreresr is only one of tho advantages or becoming a Lo ~ Angrles Federal Savr~r. There aro many services you r~ probably paying out cash for now that ;iru yours without charqe whf'n you have a Los Angele:. federal Sovings passbook. , INCOME TAX PREPARATION Thi.:. yc1r. spare yourself th,.. drudoery of filling out income tat forms With a m1nunum dC'.pos11. a !'>f)f'!C1,1hst at Los Angelf'?S Feder.ii f..avmgs will f1qure yOl.Jr deduchons. r1o the math, thr whole 1ob or preparing your nerson.il F1 dcr.it <ino California standard return~ .. no charge. It's one of many valuable services you're Ml1tlf'd to as a Los Angeles Federal Saver. • Suggestion: reserve your tax appoinlMenl now and avoid the b .. 1-m1nute rush. Besides, !he :;ooncr your returns go 1n, lho ::.ooncr your refund check c rn be mJ1lc?d. PLUS 20 MORE SERVICES In edd111on to income tax preparation. !here's a long list or add111onal services you don't have to pay for With a minimum deposit, you can have a safe deposit box. checking acoounl ar a co- operating statewide commercial bank., Travelers Checks, money orders. documt?nt duphcat1on, oven trust deed and no1e collccllon. What you save each month on all these services can be earning add1t1onal inlerest for you Isn't it worth a minute of your t1mo to start your money rolling up more profit 1n a Los Angeles Federal Sa vings account? · Annual INVESTMENT CERTIFICATES Current Yreld $1000 OR MORE Annual Rate · 8 06"/o 610 10 years 7¥•%' 7 79110 4 years 71/'l°lo CERTIFICAfES OF DEPOSIT $1000 OR MORE .. 6 98°0 30 months f) v. °'D 6 72°·0 12 monlhs f, 'I.• o" PASSBOOK SAVINGS ACCOUNTS ANY AMOUNT 5 39% Day 1n lo day out 51/it % ALL INTEREST COMPOUNDED DAILY Funds prematurely wltt}drawn from Certilieate Accounts oem Interest al the Passbook.rate, ds provided by Federal regulation, tor tho full term of Investment. less ninety days • LOS ANGELES FEDE ML SAYINGS Savings insured to $-40,000 \ • ' . I ( j , I • I I f t • > , 1 I I ~ecb Cur~ DEAR PAT Plt!aSe help me locate a OO<f recipe for curing black olives I ave one that doesn't detail Lbe rn '&:edients 'or time for curing. My re cipe calls for curing sail. I assume that is like rock saJt with water added, but the quantity was not stat. ed. It also requires soda lye or caustic soda, and this Is impossible to find. G.B . Huntington Beach ant• to ~cl on tbe plflltll; DlR aad1 dust sbouJd be removed from Lbe • plants becaus" they destroy &lilt ln· i.ect 's n~tural enemieii. If llueetlclde 1>pray m~l be u.'ied, a petroletlm oU product lit leasl harmful to the friend· ly wasps. BHl.s B oggling DEAR PAT: Does the state or ftoderal government regulate what utformalion is required on monthly bllls or statements mailed by depart ment and specialty stores, and where this information 1s phys1ca1Jy located on the bill? It as extremely confusmg ·a11 A~WI .......... HAS NO REGRETS Archie Simonson Wldneaday, Januarf 4, 1971 DAIL v PILOT A I I Ousted Judge Retorts ·~ · Says Women 'Stoop Low' ta Make a Poim I • "1ADlSON1 Wit9. (>A.P.). Former judge Archle Simonson. driv~n out of office by feminist groups as a result of his com- ments m n teen-age rape case. say11 he has less respect for women's groups than before ·'They stoop ai. low as they have to stoop to get their point across." suid Simonson in an in· terview four months after berng ousted in a recall election ..Yfiµo-ql4 gifl afl a Madison hlgh school. · • ' · • Serving tbe la.et year of a sax· year elected term at the Ume. Simonson noted revealing, no- bra fa 6hions around the University of WlSconsln campus, nude dancing at Madison naehtclubs, X-rated book.stores and then put the boy on proba· t.Jon. tervlews by characterldn1 · wdn\en bS' "sex objects whether they like It or not.·' Durine a summer of cam· palanlna aeainat five challeneers. Simonson stead,· fastly refused to temper bis re· marka. He clalmed the only is· sue was whether a judge shouJd be recalled Jor mak1ne an un· popular decision. The Cooperative Extension ls mall· Ing a copy of Its "Home Pickling or OUves" book.let to you. You sbouJd f\nd thls recipe easier to follow. The extension recommends using the type of salt used to make Ice cream and 1ubstltutlng regular household lye ror the barder to find varle\y. Other readers who want to preserve olives can request the "Home Pickling of Olives" booklet llXT 29 or lfaflet 2758 by writinJ to : to try to analyze a monthly statement ---------- to determme the full amount due. SIMONSON, A LA WYER in private practice now, com- plained that women's groups have unfairly characterized rum ~ a slavering, dirty old man. "The press, they are the ones that incited the women," he said. "Are we supposed to take an impressionable person 15 or 16 years of age who can respond to something like that and punish that person severely because they react to It normally?" Simonson asked then. Arter he was resoundin&IY defeated by Morla Krueaer, a 33·year-old lawyer , Simonson said he would never run for judge aa&in because too much ' pollllcs was involved. LAST WEEK. IN a cue ln· \10Mn1 tlmilarly coatro•..,lal remarks by a jud1e, Col orado District Judge Dean Mabry dl.s· missed a sexual uaault charge· acainst a man accwsed of break- ing into the home of a 20-year· old "1dow, falling on top of her on the floor, kissine her, break- ing the zipper on her pants and placing hls hand lnslde. Cooperstlve Extension. Home Ad· visor's Office, 1000 S. Harbor Blvd., Anaheim, Ca. 92805, or from a branch library. ltlaitellie!f t o r Heal DEAR PAT My "gardening ex pert'· neighbor claims my orange tree as infested with woolly wh1tefhes1 I can't see any insects at <.111 Just some sticky, white sub- sta ncc on the underi.ides or the leaves. She claims I shouJdn't use any insect1c1de. and that the :University or California is releasing wasps of some kind lo kill orr the •Whitcflies. I find all of this rather difflc ult to believe I N .C., Irvine Your o.-lghbor Is on the level. The woolly whllt•rly invaded Orange t<'ounly in 1973. This insect causes the !underside., of citrus trees and several other plants to look white and woolly, fdue to the large numher or nymphs ,present on the undersides of the ,lf'ave!>. It also wcrt-tes a substance •called honc:tdr~. \\hlch coal., the l1eaves and makt•!> them very ~ticky. The leavrs mav brcomt coven d with la black, sooty ·mold that feeds on the ,hone)dew. The \\OOlly whltt'Oy ha~ no natural enemies ln tbi~ state ~o tiny. parasitic wasps have been Im· ported. Insecticides harm the wasps. bbt other controls an• possible. The Cooperative Extension farm advisor's ofrice recommends strict ant control to help the wasps survive. ,Insecticides can be used near the In· 1/ested plants, but not on them. Also ir~move any foliage that would allow A.M.E., Fountain Valley Both state and federal Jawa re· gulate all matters regardlng eredJt. U you are confused about a atore's bUllng procedure, contact that store and ask for an explanatlon. This ad· vice goes J or bank charge card ac· counts too. Computer bllUng bas changed the appearance or most cb'arge account statements, often <'liminatlng 1>pecific J1ll'rchaodlse description, but the total amount due should be easy lo flnd. Also saH~ all yo ur saJes rtteipls for comparison wUh the statement's charges. If you want detailed information about aU credit laws now ln effect and specific regulating agencies, re· queat the $1 booklet, "Consumer Credlt Laws," from the state Depart· meat of Coo.sumer Affairs, 1029 N St., Room 588, Sacramento CA 9581 . . ,., EARL'S • PLUMltltG H[ATING IUll COHO ~· l 1t 111•>1 ~· '•tCtct ltmit· '>ldtl oJI YC>Ut Door 1(.i111f ~·Oft' ~1 &.1fl·"tt Ye>t.;f A't'•> con• Mu.642· 1753 1U•H•w-tll•<I. Ml\\tOH Vil Jo495·0401 Jen? C...mtno C41PtSlr•no lS•.n o • .._ Frwy •t Aver• PkWf t HEED A LA WYER? low lACJlll FM "' Divorce • BankrU.Ptcy • Criminal * WtllS·PrObate • tncorJ>()(alton • Acc1denf.ln1ury • Eviction 640-2507 h HR. CONSULTATJON·tlO DEGIN THIJ JPRING ENROLL FOR A JPRING LEARNING EXPERIENCE AT= Oranqe Coa1t Colleqe 556-5735 Coa1tline Colleqe 963-0024 -- Golden W01t Colleqe OQ2 • 77TI ext. 42Q Gumnan Chopped SAN DIEGO <AP > "Don't do anything fun · ny or I 'II blow vour head off," u gunman told llex Huffman outside his apartment Huffman said there was cash inside but once therl' flattened the would be robber with a karate chop. Huffman, 22, holds a purple belt in karate, But he insisted that his ideas on sexual permissiveness have not changed and that he would do' the 11ame thina again. "I wouldn't be able to llve with myselC'H I had ~ny regrets.'' said Simonson. 52, in the law oftit·cs he reopened after his loss last September lo a feminist candidate in the first Judicial recall election an Wisconsrn history. THE STORM ERUPTED around Simonson last May as a result or remarks made from the bench during a sentencing hear- ing !or a IS.year-old youth found delinquent in the rape of a 16- THE YOtJTH WAS sent to a stale home for boys alter break- ing the probation imposed by Simonson by allegedly steallne a bicycle. Simonson's remarks, includ- ing mention of how he used lo pay money to see women dressed us skimpily as those seen on the streets during the summer, drew swLn and harsh criticism from women's groups. Women an granny gowns and bikinis. raincoats and nighties. picketed the courthouse and launched n recall petition drive which resuJted in nearly twice the 21,000 signatures necessary to force an election. THE JUDGE FANNED the fires in 11ubsequent news in-. The judge termed It "an at· tempted seduction." Assistant District Attorney Michael Argall said the judge's remarks were "a slap across the face to every woman in the country" and said lie wouJd ap· peal. There have been no reports ol efforts to oust the Color ado judge from office. GREEH CRR PET TRERTMEH MRHESYOU FEEL 'GOOD Rll OVER Ever have a smile a mile wide? You will when you walk into Perpetual Savings. It's the only place in town where you get, not red, but Green Carpet Treatment. Like waltzing through the Green light Express no-wait· ing line. Like the Action Desk where top professional people jump into action to helpyou. Likeourtime-sav· ing Preferred Service -just call and reserve a time to come in and do business at your con· venience. And our higher-than· any-bank interest that makes you smile all the way to Perpetual. Come in and let our people give you a free sample of Green Carpet Treatment and the widest smile in the West."You'll feel good all over. ---·-I .. .... .._...... ... ·~· ................. • 19 .... ------ Intrepid Sold to Bq,ron Bich month ... 'MILFORD. Conn. CAP > -French ballpoint pe n maanale Baron Marcel Bicll, 11rbo t.brM Umea ha.a trlecl \Jnaucceufu1ly to win the famed • America'• Cup. has purcba.aed the two. time American defender or the Cup,ln· ••w• plan to brln1 Intrepid to Newport ~.Sao Dteco Ju the 1prin1, probabl,y AJm}" or May, and there we will race J'raoce I and France 11 acainat Intrepid," he iaid. Newp0rt, and bu the lM4 auceeutul American defender ot the cup, Coo· atellallon. and a another 12·meter. Chancaeger, both tn Europe. Bruno isaid, "We are worklnf on another new 12.meter tor the 1NO challenge.·· trepid. - Bruno 'Bich, son of the baron who la sales manaeer for the pen company that hu made millions of dollars for hit lather. confirmed Tuesday that Intrepid Fr1nce I and Prance u. two wooden 12·meter yacht.I owned by Baron Bkh are in Newport after havlnt unsuccess: JuJly tried to win the challenger lights l<> meet the American defender of the cup last summer. A new French 12·meter yacht wilt bring the number of the fast expenaiva racing machines that Baron Bich owns to six. has been purchused "for less than $200,000 ... BRUNO SAIO, "WE ~xpect to sign the papers to finalize the sale this BARON' BICH HAS more 12·meter yachts than anyone in the world. He owns France l and France II in Erma tella 1t Ilk• U I•. In the DAILY PILOT Minney Wins San Diego R~c . Owen Minney of Newport Beach, wtth his brother Joe as crew, won the anriual San Diego MulUhull Association New Year's Day regatta in his new P Cat 2· 18. The regatta, cosponsored by the San Diego Union newspaper and the San Diego Yacht Club. drew 13t mullihull boats of all classes and 67 m onohulls Minne.> dcsc r1hcd the P Cat 2·18 as an improved version of lhc ramed P Cat now in its 20th ) car of compet1llon The catamaran was de- signed by Curte r P.>lt• and was first produced by Newport Boats in 1958 T he new 2· 18, according lo Minney. who now produ<:cs lhc "cats" throut(h his firm Westport Marine, <·<1rrics a different ng than the original P Cat. The new rig hui. a higher aspect ratio. There have been no changes in the buU. Minney completed the 10-mile course in an clapi.ed lime or one hour. 12 minutes and 26 :.cconds for a corrected lime of 1:17.761. Newport's 'Allan Regatta Chairman Rohl•1 t !\1 Allan .Ir . i.tuff commodore of Newport 11.11 l1or \ JChl Club and a Stanford alum· nus. 1 ~ h11nrn .in 1·ha1rman of the Intercollegiate Nation.ii ~loup Ch.1mpwnsh1 ps in Hawaii. now un- der w;n Allan 1.., a mt•mbcr of the sailing Hall of Fame. having <·nmpt'lt•d 1n the first Pacific Coast In· t crcollt•g1att• Championships nearly 40 years ago. During lhe intervening years he has contributed to the promotion of Junior and collegiate sailing as well as marine safely. USC will be representing the Pacific Coast In· tercollcgiate Yacht Racing Association and will be competing with eight other finalists in the ln- trrcollcgialc Yacht Racing Association of North. America The other schools are· University of Rhode }!;land. Ncw En~land . U.S. Naval Academy, Mid· d le A tlant1c. Charlesto n Univers ity. Southern Allant1t l n1vcrsit> of Texas, Southeast; l 'n1\t·r~1t" or M ic h1 ~an. Midwest; Queens l 'nncr:.1l\. C.1nJda . Vn1ver:.1t} of Oregon. !\01 lh\\ (·~t FINAL 16 DAYS MOVING ALL GREATLY REDUCED • Gowns & Pe1gno.r Sets • Pa1amas • Warm Robes • Shps & Y.i Slips (Short) ft Slippers l Shoes • Blousn & Pants ft Hostess Gowns • Jump Suits • 86 So. Yds. Red Carpet & Pad • 42 SQ. Yds. Red & Black Carpel & Pad • 2 Electric Adding Machines • Chock Imprinter • 3·Drawer Metal Desk Bras 32B lhru 4200 ".oo· Body Shapers 34C thru 380 11.0t Panly Girdles & Girdl• U.00.U.OO CELEBRATE •71 AT OUR OPEN HOUSE PARTY! Join U5 in welcoming the "l New Year at our ''Bright and Beauttful '78' C~liibrdllon R1gh1 now at your nearbv Amcncan 5av1ng). we"re having an open hou~I' P~rtv and \l.1' d hke vou to come We rt-celebra!lng w11h refreshments ""d llr'Slt\ • <11•C1>r.i11om lh<il maklr' our open houw a BRIGHT and BE AUTlfUl ..alu1e 10 tlw 'Jev. Year' BEGIN THE NEW YEAR THE .. BRIGtrr AND BEAUTIFUL" WAY AT AMERICAN SAVINGS You 11 find our offices conveniently located throughout Northern and Southern Cahfomia. And American Savings has longer hours to make saving easier. We're open Saturdays from 9:30 am until 2:00 pm. weekdays from 9:30 am until 5:30 pm. and even later on Frtdays- unl!.l 6.00 pm. MEET AMERICAN SAVINGS' BRIGHTEST ASSET ••• OUR SAVINGS SPECIA.USTS Come in aod talk to one of the s,tvl19 .~. SpeclaU5ts. They're ready to e:sstst you In selecttng • pmon1llzed avlngt-p\&r) 10 help you mm your hncia~goats v. Let them M\(1141 you how your greatest eKpcctatlO~ can btcom. r,alldn with the proper avlnQI Pf091'1N'!· ASK ABOUT OIJR DOUBLE YOUR MONEY ACCOUNT Wuh Amencan's highest lntere$t Certificate Account >our money will earn 8.()6~ annuallv in a 7 '4"0 Interest ral\t acc.ount, Interest 1s compounifed daily and Wh«!' an onq1nal inwsiment of SI 000 is ~lllined u.uh interest for 10 year. 1 \~111 grow to $2.170 4>1 I • "' •1U~'K""' ripqu..r• • \vh l.tn•ia• nr~t~: pit-r\Mf\. lot • A'~I w 1hd1 ....... ,..,,.,, Cn'l•llc•IP -""""- • • f,•• l•wer 9.ntce•: Wttli $5 '"'"'mul?I ba~· Socfal ~t'll~ dlNct ~II * Trew~u ch«ctc. "Owr 62• chttkln9 .cccwnll IWICh • 11a1cwlcM comrnercl.i t>.nk * MoMy orckn Sev~·by-mall HMet * Trenamadc' nvtngafl~n p.ym.nt tervlcc *Notary 1uv1Ce St•tcln*nt S.tvtnga Wirh $1.000 rnlnlrnutn bolonce· Safe dcpotlt bo11H * Trw1 deed •M noce coll«tlon TelephoM Trentkt/Oial+Check Mrvlu * Chedllns accounta with• commnclel benlt With $5.000 minimum bolonc.: CMdc·•·momh pl•M * M)of d.Ulils. Safe, Strong and Friendly AME BIG AN SAVINGS Assets 0\1er $7 Billion Convenient office• .. "!Ing Southern and Northern Callfornla, Including: ·•11'1 825 Sunflower Avenue at South Coast Plaza 979·9800 BUENA PARK 8231 La Palma Avenue at Buf)na Park Center 522 .. 2801 GARDEN GROVE 12141 Garden Grove Boulevard at Harbor Boulevard 534·8690 HUNTINGTON BEACH . 7830 Edlnqer Avenue at Huntington Center 848·2222 - ' f .t ;; ~ .. . ~ ' ' # t r \ I I ( t ·----.............. ~-·-· .... _._ ...... _ . - DAU..Y PILOT A Ji We're brim full of Clearance Bargains and ready to sweep them out- because It's time to clean out the Old and bring In~ t~e New. anuar In the beautiful Mercantile Buildlng- 4 levels of Miraculous Merchandise Qameamenahlp ' Vinyl bridge table covers regularly $7.95-now $3.95. Rummy Z tile-card game regularly $35:00- now $15.00. FX Schmidt games of Braas Balloon strategy-regularly $12.00- Met•I Sculpture now $6.00 (street level) 10% off on anything in the store. Hum Ml lmHrt• Coffee Trader • Norltake a~oiwware cup & saucer Special copper & brass Harmonica ' 12 piece set $10.00, Beautiful Tea Kettle permanently polished. Kutani r1oe bowls-4 piece set Needs no polishing. Regularly $7.50 (4th level) $34.00-now on sale at $25.00. Jewel Connection (Street level) Come Fly A Kite Beautiful kites of all nations on sale with 10% off. (4th level) Dlemond Head G•lley Chinese items that are truly unique and of fine quality. 20% off on everything in the shop. (4th level) Fed Sh•ck- We Print Anything Shirts Display, odds and ends shirts on special with 50% off. (street level) 10% off on most finished jewelry, dolls, gifts & weaving. 10% off on macramd wall hangings, pots & brackets. 10% off on sterling silver rings. bracelets. buckles, charms, crystal balls. (4th level) L' Academle Art G•ll•ry Frame and print sale! Sliver and gold frames less 400.4, plastic see-thru frames Jess 25o/o, matted prints less 25%. (4th level) Olive •ranch AnOgue• The Stelgh Christmas. decorative items, & needlecraft-20% to 50% off. Ne.edlecraft classes and workshops forming in January.· Enroll NOW. (street level) Sportawear Comer Adorable women's fashions weft worth looking Into: Paquette Pants from $8.99 to·$12.99, Knlt tops $3.99 to $7.99. Dresses-20°/o to 50% off. ("4th level) Touch of Whlnt••V 40% off on Twiggle Plaques, DAB nostalgia plaques. 300.4 off on ladies nandbags, Rock Creek stone sculptures, 25% off on one of a kind Tiffany Lamps, VEL pictures and mirrors, handmade dolls. (4th Jevel) Wine, Ch••••• & 'culinary, etc. For the gounnet cook-up to 25% 6ff on aetected cutrnary items, Delicious Danish cream havarti cheese at 100A. off. OnTtteMall Calleo Coualna 20% off everything In the store. Fantastic savings on large sele(:tion of oak tables, chairs, dressers, collector's accessories. (Entire ground levet) Quilts, dolls, pillows, unusual Olive Branch handmade Items. 20% off on EVERYTHING in the store. Butcher Block Shop C 11 t .., C o eo o" • omer- 20% off on EVERYTHING I Butcher ' Stamp a i.nd Coln• · block tables, chairs pJus-brass & copper planters. The most.unusual baskets In town. (3rd level) .. Skanaen Scendlnavlan 20% off on well known littala glassware from Anland. Highball, old fashioned, cordial, wine glasses. (street level) 20% off on all supplies, stamp packets, misc. items. All stamps 10% off. Most coins 10% off. Contlnent•I Imports Porcelain-Decoratlves- Ceramics-Antfques- Beautiful & exquisite European craftsmanship. Up to 20% off store wide. Dal•• Footwork• At DaJe·s. January sale means super buys on today's hottest fashion shoes from Sbicca, Bare Traps, Famolare & Bort Carleton. Save as much as 40%. Fantastic savings on handbags. Ge~tto'a, A Chlkl'• Fafttaai Tremendous ehlldren'a clothing sale. Name brands. 25% to 50% off on fall & holiday wear. Boys to alze 7. Girts to size 6x. 0 Hiiand'• Tobacco Locker The finest of pipes, lighters, humidors & pouches from around the world. Now on sale with up to 30% off. Hotly·Lllndera Stoneware Discontinued numbers lampshades with 50% off. H.U.D.D.L.E. Up to 40% off! Colorful designs for modem living. H.U.0 .0.L.E. fabrics, couches, planters, lamps. Our specialty Is children's f~re (very, very specials January 7th on) I Framed It Myseff Sweep 20% off the cost of any matting cut by itself or in connection with a beautiful custom picture frame you can build yourself • 1.8 Tortuga 40.% off on women's pants, long skirts, sportswear, men's shirts and pants. 25% off on jewelry, baskets. tinware. Specialty items from around the wortd at all times. M•rchand'• Smart women·s apparel. 50% savings on 100% f Ina cotton 9alico print dresses. · Marina 81ffln Art Gallery Works of art and supplies discounted up to 25%. Leroy Nefman. Peter Max, Norman Aockwe~ signed and. numbered •lithograph& now by request. P!ja Flowers on the M•ll 6 inch Indoor sel.eeted plants at $3.99. Dried flower arrangement clocks at 25% off. (Kiosk) Rug Crafter• 20% off on all latch hook patterns. 50% off on selected speed tufting kits. Free latex with purchase of any speed tufting rug kit. Spatola T•llorlng & Men'a Wear t;lne quality men's suits reduced as LOW as $99.00. Tailoring for both men and women at all times. \ St. Ives. Offering 20% off on Dutch copper. brass & pewter. A fine sele6tion includes planters. wine pitchers & beer steins. English antiques-our specialty. VIiiage Pet Center 20o/o off on standing bird cages, dog beds & pillows, all cat scratching posts. 50% off on all Longlife Fish Foods. Woef & W•rp Fabrloa Sale on graphic remnahts. 4004 off on eeersuckers. $1.00 a yard 'on new come·• shipment. Hours-Mon.·Sat.-10AM·9PM Sundays 11AM·SPM • I t. . . . . .. AJ • OAl y PllOT Midwesterner Wins Liars Title With a Dot Tale BURLINGTON, Wla. <AP > - Charles Porter of Odon, IJ>d., has won the llUe of 1977 World's Cbamp100 Uar with an updated version of the tall tale about heat go bad you could fry an eg& on the sidewalk. The Burlmgton Liars Club an- nounced that this Ile had won: . ••1T SURE WAS hot here last aummer. Jn fact, 10 bot you could take a frottn hambur1er f,aUy out of the freoer. toa it nto the air and when It came back down you had one that was cooked well. •• The only tbW you had to do was watch out and not toss it too hl&h. U you did, it came back down burned.." ~ Liars Club President Otla Burllncton Lian Club. Hulett aays the cont.est baa been around since 1929, when be THIS YEAR, THESE tales s pread a story that Burlington's "'were among those tbat won police chief and his cronies gol honorable mention: to&etber over the holidays to tell .. It. was so cold this wloter championship quality lies in the that I saw two dop with jumper chtef'a ortiFe. A newspaper cables trylng to start a rabbit." printed the story. and then news <Gene Ludwie of Salem. Wis.> ,aerv1ces apuad wol'd .o1 tbe ''There was an ins~,.nce company noted for· Its quick service lo paylnC lta claims. They tlad oUlces on lbe fifth floor of a to.story buildlng. One' or thelr policy holden wu work· ing on the root and lost hls , balance. ADd 111 be dad gum It they dldn 't pay him oft when he paded t he wllldo~. •• (Bob _Bosley ot Kansat City. Mo.> ''Nice'n Soft'' ''Bounce'' Wild Holley Sardines T OILET T ISSUE Proc tor ·Silex 4 ROLL ·PACK ELECTRIC Juicer F.ABRIC SOFTENER 10-CUP Mr. Coffe_e JACK'S CALIFORNIA DESERT CROWN PRINCE • -••soMETIDNG WAS ...,,..J inc my com, so I staked ~ out in the comfleld one Dilbt. At mldDJtht. I saw a bli blac.t bear 1atherin1 up corn in hla anm. l followed him back to hla den. where he wu lat~ VP a amall p!I for 'l'baU.lil.mt:• (Floyd Foret cl Ma~> LIQUID BLEACH GALLON Gtt.LITTE Super Max Fresh juices in seconds. Vi1th automatic collee saver. 1100 Watts for fast dryin&. • 1000 Watt rowd brush dryer. r'J -1 '1-C 13.95 A new concept in • contracepl1on. 11CBS700 28.88 THERMOMETER SAV-ON aRANO 79 ,_ Oral. Baby " or Rectal. ''White Woolleh' 'MIST ,' SCENTS Rain " Iiil I HAIRSPRAY ,,. Air Refres~er ...... ~ As.sorted • Formulas.. Aerosols 1n assorted lra2rances. ~~· . l . -:, ..... 79c 1.4 oz. 1.49 ... SAV -ON "LONG LIFE" BATTERIES ~=· 9·VOLT "AA" SIZE ..... , ... PAK OF 2 SLAYMAKER COMBINATION PADLOCK or STEEL CASE CABLE LOCK For 1ood 199 securit~. 1 EA. COLGATE Instant Shave Refreshing assorted scents. 11 oz. Dr . Scholl's Odor Destroying INSOLES Elltra strength. Destroys odors 1n 3ways. 98~. NORTHERN CEH'fURf HEATING PAD . VICKS "Formula 44 " ~COUGH ~· ro~I MIXTURE :. 44 iiii·u BR EW MASTER ELECTRIC POT ~ke your instant coffee • RUBBERMAID . I DISH PAN COLGATE Toothpaste with Fluoride. 7.7c s oz. TUBE VISINE EYE DROPS Gets the red ool. 1/2 oz . 99c WINDOW SQUEEGEE I #ST-4 #9~50 26.88 . 19.95 TYLENOL REGULAR STRENGTH BOTTLE 2 66 OF 250 1 "Slim-Fast" PROTEIN POWER DIETr SINUTAB r;· -····. ..... .~~! , ... ~ I ·.................. t .a I . ·-~ ' For sinus 1 49 relief. ~c, TABLETS 1 High Inte nsity LAMP 1.09 2.59 • . . ... w.dnetday, Janl&llY 4, 1971 I . We don't pretend .to be· different from · other Savi!Jgs and Loans. 4'. ' ( L ... #. FfdeQly Federal, services make the differenca Services you don't have to pay for. Services for savers and businesses that put you; money ahead. Take a look ••• and figure the savings. 1. No 1Nltee Fees on Individual Retirement (IRA) and Keogh retlrerneflt accounts. Now's,the time to move your account here ••• before the fee is due. And if your spouse was not employed in 1977, you can add another $250 to your contribution. You can tax-shelter up to $1750 in two accounts, and pay no trustee fee on either account. 1.~2 · 2.. We Accept Stock from your previous pension or t profit-sharing plan. We'll roll it over into a tax-sheftered IRA' ' savings account And wa won't charge you a fee. 3. EanUntereet on Eacrow Accounts~ Going into escrow?l>ut your deposit where it earns 5Y4%. Interest compounds daily. and you get f1V8ry dollar of It when your escrow closes. Ask your realtor, or con&act tJs. 4. Free rea-Account Service lets you transfer company funds by telephone from checking to a Fidelity federal • -- eavil'\TS. account. You preser\le ·Uquldlty. N-the same tlme, you put idle funds t.o work earning SY .. % }Ust by picking up the phone. • 5. A Cost-Saving Keogh for companies with employees. You get all the benefits of a standard Keogh: you shelter lhe mot'ley you want ~red, and you provide an attractive retirement program for your employees. The dffferente is. your cost can be 25% to 75% less. Ask us about it. 6. f"'8 Reporting and Accounting for your company's pension and profit-sharing plan with a ' minimum balanca We're now saving companies as much as $5000 each year with this service. 7. Tax Preparatfon Service for yqur personal federar and state lncome taxes. Save yourself the headaches and the time. You could save the cost. too, dependlng upon the size of your savings balance at Fidetrty Federal. .. A • Does your bank or savings ~nd loen otter you these services? Or do you pay for them? Think about It. Then move your savings to Fidelity Federal. Especially It you have certificate accounts maturing this month. Here. ~·n earn Interest as .high as any savings a,nd loan pays •.• hlghet than any bank pays. And you'll see what a difference our servJces can make. In dollars·and-cents savings. Please bring this coupon with you. ----------------------., I ,. ..... Pmt I ~ I I ~~ I I I I · ary St•te 71p I I O 'My Fldtllty F«l«al eevlnge aocount n&#nbtr Is: I I I I I I 0 I do not have a Bav/nga eccount at Rdellty FedMal, but I I em lntefested In t>pedng ons. I L------~--------------..! I Services make the difference. Just for comparing our differences You'Ve aeen this beautiful Sunset book at better stores everywhere. 223 pages of breathtaking color phOtographs of all thars beautiful in Caltfornia. Come tnto •"I Fidelity Federal office for your free copy. Come soon. though. Suppliet are limited. Please bring the coupon ab~e with you. This offer la available to adults only on a one· copy·per·family basis. • \ I J ... \ ' I • .. • .4JIDAn.Y PlLOT -NIMAlogk~., . f_ ,~ ~,,,._ ... ,.,,._ .. ~l,SAAt<. CllAN't ! LEr's ltATTLE. A~OUHo :• ' .......... I w~. Jantwy "· 1978 HEALTH Doctor.Jf~ighsHormones Versus Cancer , I hne terrible ne1t1. I'Dl very nenoua. J ean "t aleep nlCbtl. I've beeome a wooywart about what mat happen to my bmbud ad cblldreD. Dear Dr. 8aelllmllm: I don' know 't!fh1 J keep aolni to D11 doctor. J pea became he baa a reputatioi for ~ one of the belt ~ la oar dtJ. But w dil...,,nta me ii that be doeu't MelD to ha•• _SfJ1 1ympatbJ fer a patleat'a hel-1Dg1. I almost bee blm to let me keep takinl •troteSW for my symptoms. He refuael. l'm ln the chaoae. I have friends who don't. even know U..,'re IOiDt throup It, but I ac:tua111 aulter. 8UT KY DOCTO• ls ltubo l»orn. He~ there'• a dancer of lllJ' .WU cancer U J keep oo wltb die boftDoaee, He baa G • amlned me and 1aya l outbt to be tha.atlul that my P~ test and otber ••am1aaUo.n1 are •1•ttve. I'd like your oplnJon, t>r. St,elnc,.am. I 've been taking bonDODeS 1or ~ulte a (ow yura DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE and l'm tree of 1ymptom1. WbJr .abould be &e IO eoncerned with cancer now? -Jin. P. COMMENT: I think one of the reuOD.1 your doctor bu a ftne reputation ia because be la so 1t,,ubbo"-ID tbia Instance. It would be euler for blm to p,. scribe and DOt to make explana-ittoaa. 100 % ACRYLIC INlnlNG YARN - ,,,_..., -·•"...... ,,,._. & ,., .. """"*,....., _ ......... ................................ ............. _ .. .._. SAVE! MANUFACTURER 'S CLOSEOUT ..... Sbes,.dlk .... But be know• there bu been sufficient evidence lately to at le11t make us tu1plcloua that takln1 eatro1eu may Invite cancer. ll•PLY PVT, 81: cloel.D't want you to take tM ii.slL Jt'• true that DOt ,,.,., ,.u.nt wbO tak11, or bu taken eatrotms. will ret cancer of the uterus or breast. Nevertbeleu, be feell )'OU 1bouldn't Samble. Tbantfullt your recent ex• amlllaUons have been oe1aUve • E\le?J woman wbo takea or bu taken bormolMI lbcNld bave a NICI llDICll PllQ Pap test and asplratton ot ln· terlor of the ute rua (for ex- amination of cella> twice a year. I THIN& YOU& doctor re- allse1 how uncomfotable you are. But be hu to weip the pouib~i-ef rour 1ettln1 eaneer I&~ ,.....t un· coaaforta feelli ... l \o. , Perhaps ~ t.rui;a•Uben will b:!:J® 1et o~the rough 1pota your 1ym ms be&ln to dlaappear. Aa Hid, not •••ry woman wbo takes estro&eDI ts ln dto1er, but why aamble! It'S 10UJ' ddctor'• job to try to k• ~ out of &rouble. teSUht2.SlteJ.J• 5 • C gge IMWllC3 C SUPD rm&mc lllllCID ffEINZ IOSHER 7.oz. ROSE MILi ~A~"':L .... £? ASPIRiN •=:;:•3e PllCI •• ta. mu 13.oz. • DIU SPWS SllN CUE LOTION BOTILE OF 100 TlltJ._,.. ..... M«. ._....,..,...._ ,_,.,..... HAIR SPRAY ...... S.,.,, lleKeMe4. MAXFAOOR'S •Mtltletl hHHI U.4tt Mthtp 6. 99 AFTER SAUi l2116·IM. 3tt 11 OPINlllGS 5. 99 lFT1I SAUi 11114 INOllS 2'' ·--•a-.llt " , .......... •Dry -c--o...i. ... •Actttt ... ,. ............................ "-· lomato ."" ~,. .. 1 IF PERFECT WOULD BE 6.48FOR 6 SAVE NOW in 'l PRICE SALE ~ ''°·79c ttC 100 MR. COFFEE COFFEE FILTERS Ailtt4 ""' filttn. I I I 1 INSIDE: •Stocks •Business ------·M·o·v-•s--·r-e•-n-is_~"------~----ll!lm------11!'9~~~~----S~i,...Orts -w.dMOday, J•••"'I' .. 1971 DAIL v Pit.Of K • ~~owb.oys ;F~vOred :By Five ' ! LAS VEGAS -Oddsmakers tanhe Union Plaza Hotel and the ~hurchill Down:s Sports Book !!!_ave installed the Dallas ,cowboys as a strong 5-poiot·ear- f ly favorite to defeat the Denver Broncos lo the Super Bowl at .New Orleans on Jan. 15. But at least one book, the Del '_Mar Sports Book in North Las f\legas, makes Dallas an early ~~-point choke to u&>end Ute ~merkan Conference champs. l On straight bet.a wlthout a point spread , the El Cortez 1Sports Book rates Dall.as a 5.9 ,favorite, while the odds on tbe Broncos stood al 8-S an 'l'ueaday. ~ ,Stoee Ad.,atace• W ASlllNGTON Belly Stove ttrui:&led thrpug,h he r firs t ound match Tucsda \ he fore onquering Hrig<'ll t• C'u ) per .... I Ii, 6-4, 6 0, iri a w ornt.'n's tennis lourney I The big upsl't t•uml· in tht' ~ay 's last m.atch as ll1lhc J elin ing was beaten, l ·fi , 6 3, 6-3 by eglna Mars1kovu. ·Martina Navratilova won h<'r rst match. defeating Sharon alsb, 6·2. 6-0. ~ Jn a mild upset, Viq~in1 Ruz1c1 ousted Wendy Turnbull, 6·1. 1·6, V·6. Other first-round winners were Greer Stevens. who defeat- ed· Krisl.Jen Shaw, 6·1. 6 1, and J(alhy May who defeated Kath> ){uykendall, 6-2, 6 O. Canl.o Triumph11 KORIYAMA, Japitn M1 gu~I anto of Mexico won a split de t sion over Japan 'c; ShOJI Oguma o retain h1~ title in a fa~t pact'<!. eavy h1tt1ng World Boxing ouncil flyweight champ1onsh1p out toda~ poneu Lauded • DALLAS Running back Tony horsett was selected the As ~oclated Press National Football League rookie of the year Wednesday. Dorsett, or thf' ball as Cowboys, became only the _.ighth back in NFL hi$tory to gain hi ore than 1,000 >a rds in his took le season. Dulle Sele<-ted NEW YORK Dcfons iv<' Jackie A J Duhe, a key part in the reconstruction ot the M1am1 Polphin defense, was selected the National Football League's Defensive rookie of the year toda)' by the Associated Press. Jtztec l•Jured SAN DIEGO Son Diego Stale starting ruard Mike Dodd ls recovering from surgery to re- i>air a broken cheekbone sur- lered in a tall. , t Trainer Bob Moore said' Dodd, i . 6-S juruor, may be ready to l lay Saturday night against nzona State in Tempe, Ariz. ......... • o Topples Cal, 83-75 Cauthen Selected Athlete Of Year ~ ARCADIA (A,P) -The son oC a blacksmith !aLber and a horse. trainer mother anci too small for mos t sports, Steve Cauthen seemed destined to be a jockey. His destiny was realized with amazing speed a.od impact in 1977 as the 17-ye~·old riding phenomenon from Kentucky burst to lhe forerront of sports with a string oC riding feats une- qualled in horse racing history. Tuesday, Cauthen was select- ed the Associated Press Athlete or the Year. becoming the flrst jockey so recognized in the '47 years of the award. "I certainly appreciate the honor," said Cautht'.11, who rode 488 winners in 1977 and won purses worth $6,151,750, the flrst time a rider has topped the $6 million mark. "I try to take h on ors in stride," he said. "I try never to Jet mysel! get loo excited or loo disappointed. I just go day·by- day, try to ride the best I can every day. I don't dwell on awards, but wUl just try to Jet another next year. "Thanks," he added with a wide grin. A 5-foot-t, 95-pounder, Cauthen topped such outstand· ing athletes as baseball's Rod Carew, football's Walter Payton and basketball's Bill Walton in the balloting among sports writers ahd broadcasters. Cauthen received 79 flrst- J>lace vot.et while Minnesota's Carew.got .CO, Chicago's Payton 33 and Portland's Walton 24. Other first-place vote-getters were Cincinnati outfielder George Foster, 20; New York Yankees outfielder Regeie Jackson, 19; retl~ Cosmos soc· cer star Pele, 18; Masters and Britis h Ope.n champion Tom Watson, 10, and Heiaman Trophy winner Earl Campbell of Texaa,8. The past year was fllled wilt\ notable sports achievements such aa J ack$0n's World Series homers. Carew's .388 batUng average and Watson's dramatic victories. But Cauthen's ac- complishments overshad<>wed even thoee. Highlights of his year included ridinl six winners in a day on three difle.rent occuiom: win· ning Aqueduct•s Gold Seeker Pune Ob UtUe Happiness to go over the ~ J'Jlllllon mark, and {yl..59 ~riumph . -·N"erhum · Dei .. ;f OR:Ples Barons ~ ~ By DA VS CUNNINGHAM Of .. DtllY 1!1M4 llAH Aweeot:ne Verbutn Det High ot Los Ao1des ia still undefeated, bUt It got a scare from host Fountain Valley Tqesday night before pulling out a 64-59 n<>n· league basketball victory. Ranked by a national maganne as the No. 1 prep basketball tetm ln the naUon, Verbum Del wu seriou1ly chaUenged throughout the f&n1t half by the Barons before run· ning its r ecord to 13-0. The score was lJed 13 times in the first half and Fountain Valley even held a two-point lead on four occasions, bul in the end Verbum Dei's towering height and stunning jumping abiUty were just loo much Leonel Marquelti, a returning :ill-CIF forward and prep All· American, w as particularly damaging to the Barons' hopes. 1 le scored 22 lo lead the Eagles in that department and was responsible for most of Verbum Dei's 12 blocked shots .• Roger Holmes was again the most potent Fountain Valley scorer. tallying 23. He was in- strumental in a fo1Jrth-quartq rally in which the Barons closed'11 12-point Verbum Dei lead to just tour points. players who stand 6·6 or taller. Marquelti, who can reportedly make a vertical leap of "2 inch· e1, helped the Eagles finally take command in the third quarter by acorlng 10 of his team ·116 points on inside sbol!s. Fountain Valley bad kept the eame cl0&ein the fll'St}lall by an effective zone defense, but Verbam Del ~k>w~ the pace in the second half in an attempt to pull the Barons out of their zone. Although Fountain Valley maintained its zone, the defense was stretched out because of Verbum Dei's wide-open of· fensive alignm ent, and that enabled the Eagles to start hit· t 1ng some crisp inside passes to players breaking toward the hoop. The lead grew to nine polnt.s with juat under three minutes gon~ from the third quarter, and was extended to as much as 14 points in the final stanza. * * . *: "'"''*"'Def , ... , Mettu.ttl WHll•m• Lewi• l"ruut Watkins JMllM>fl POllM Totals .. ltflf. ,, 0 11t s 1 0 '1 • 0 • • s ' z ,, I 1 I J t 0 2 • I 0 0 2 2t .... Otl~.....,.v~~ .." ... Helmet 1f 1 'J> Eppt-'!elmtr1 0 I Z ...ioe 10116 llf'Nld'f f 2 J 6 Atlll I 0 2 2 Ma<I< 3 2 ) • S!ll!Ntl I 0 0 2 Toi.ts 21 S IS ff Seer• by O...rt•n Vtrblim 0.1 16 11 1' IS--44 Fountain V•ll~y 16 1' f JO......ff riding three winners bls first time out without an apprentice·s • five.pound wei&bt allowance. Cauthen, already leading tho Santa Anita jockey race in the meet that began here last week .. a lso proved he was a durable athlete. I He suffereft a broken wrist and ribs and facial cuts when bis mount at Belmont Park, Ba)' Streak, broke a leg and fell l8.$t M JY 23. A month later, Cauthen came back to win with hi• first ride since the accident. scoring l aboard Little Miracle at Bel··\ 1nont. ! STYMI o' -FV•s Charlie Reiff (32) ls blocked from shooting by Leonel Mar· quclli. But Holmes didn't start the game as hot as he finished. The 6·4 forward missed his first four shots of the game and connected on just 3 of 13 attempts in lhe firs t quarter Despite Holmes' chilly start.· Fountain Valley managed to keep pace, mostly by successful· ly working the ball inside and taking its share of offensive re- bounds. LA_ Free Throws O.lly l'llot l'MlM llY Gary A"'broM FV'S ROGER HOLMES SCORES AGAINST VERBUM DEi. In the first half each team pulled down 16 caroms, despite Vorbum Dei's distinct height ad- vantae e. The Eagles start four Devine Gets Last Laugh Notre Dame Voted No. 1 Football Team By Associated Press Less than three months after cntk s were clamoring ror his s calp and "Dump Devine" bumper slickers were nourishing in South Bend , Ind., Notre Dame coach Dan Devine is havin§ the last laugh and basking lJl the gJow of college football's national cham- pionship. The Fi~htin1.tt1ish, whose over-all wuming fercentage of .774 enteiing the 1rn campaign was the best jn hfst.ory, added another ch~pter to the Notre Dame leeentl' Monday wh.en they were voted natiop'al champions by the 64 votera In the n a- tionwide As•ociated P ress poll. In a race amon1 five teams with idenhcal 11·1 records, Notre Darne's 38-10 Cotton Bowl rout of previously No. l ·rated Texas enabled the lrisf\ lo win out o,hr AlabamJ, Arkansas, Texri and Penn State. . ''TbeN1S a lot of personal satisfactJoo ln a job well done and ma1bo tb!s ft h.,-d to un· derstand but l~ happter IOf the I , team than for myself." Devine !laid when he was informed that Notre Dame had won the AP Na- tional Championship Trophy. "I have a combined reeling or being humble and thankful. ·•1 usually try to hold my emo- tions in, but I'm kind or quiver- ing all over right now. I'm just so thankful that my staff and my players are the kind or people they are." ~· ·-· Both Alabama's Bear Bryant and Arkansas' Lou Holtz ex- pressed disappointment that their J.eams w;ren't voted in as national .champs but also cqn· Campbell Sidelined MOBILE, Ala. _.. A mini·figbt between the Senior Bowl and the ltula Bowl over the services of Holsman Trophy winner Earl Campbell of Texas bas ended with a technical knockout. Campbell safd Tuesday he has an injured ankl• and won't be playfn1 in any aU·atar football contests. In contrast, only about three Caaa• 1b6wed up et 8:30 a.m. Dec. 20 when the football team left for Lo• Anaelea and the Rose Botti. Tbt, JJusk1ee downed favored Unlvtr1lty of Mlchl1an, 27·20 Manda)'. Ont ot the first people .hmH 1re ted after th• chartered jeitlintr touched down wa• hi.a a.year-old dauaht~. Jeni, Who clutched hLI coattail and 100ked frltbtebtd as I.he)' jostled throuab llae hand· cl• plni. back· l1pp1na croWd. Jam~ said after tbe arrival gratulaled Notre Dame "I think Notre Dame is the on· ly team that could have jumped over us," Bryant said. "I lhink we're as good as anybody and Notre Dame's winning it is just some people's opinion. "Naturally I'm disappointed for our players and our staff because they did.4Jl outstanding job thls year. We came so far this year against one of tbe toughest sctiedules in the coun· try. But Notre Dame has our- congratulations.•· Holtz said he was "naturally disappointed, but happy for Notre Dame, l'JJl not upset and not bitter, but t think we're the best JootbaJI team in tbe coun- • try." 'TM 'Top r-11ty 14'•11'11111 'Tht A\to<lalMI PrMf llnal coll• lootll•ll poll, wll!I "'"·o•eu ..,... in P•••11lllt-ellCI -'°" rKordt. 1.NtrO"' 07t~) tf.1-0 11.0lll•SI. ..,.. 2 '!Mm• <1" J) ,.., .. f2Ntb .. ).0 l .Ark CS~I 11·1.0 ILUSC ..... •tu 121 IH-0 tU1....St 10-t-O ~P•"""· ,,.\.t u. 11.etl!ord .. >O "ICell\IKJlf 10-1• t6.Satt0 ..... 10 1.0 7.04&1• 10-1-0 11,N.Cer ••1 I.Piii »• 11.MtSI. ,.,.. t .Mldl , .... 1ta.m-... , lO.W-" .... ••vu tM -· -. ----.---- .- Turn Back Knicks NEW YORK (AP) -"Il's a great feeling t.O win one on the road," faid Los Angeles coach Jerry West, whose Lakers start- ed a seven-game trip with a tense 120-117 National Basketball As- sociation victory over t~ New York KnicksTuesday night. The Knicks can sympathize. since the loss came in their last appearance at Madison Square Garden berore embarking on an eight-game road swing that wUl take the next three weeks. "If we would have won, it sure would have been a good send- off," said Knicks captain Earl •Monroe. "We just h ave to pull ourselves tQgether and play the same type of ball on the road that we played tonigltL In most C?ases1 it would have been good enough to win." But not against Los Angeles, ~h got 26 points apiece from its starting backcourtmen, 11~ year veteran Lou Hudson and rookie Norm Nixon, and which outscored New York M-11 from the free throw line. The Knicks were called for 11 team fouls plus a technical against Monroe in the third quarter, when the Lakers scored l4 of their .fO points from the free throw llne. Knlcts coach Willis Reed laughed at the disparity in fouls ln the game off1c1ated by veteran Richie Powers and newcomer Mel Whitworth. Reed, who was fined earlier Ulla uason !or criticizine game ol- fOTd, 13. "He said the bus was fOlng to pull out.'' Airport w•lls were drtped with ~aper aigns welcoming the Huskies 'back. The banners shouted ln paint: "Huskies Aro For Real! .. "We're super, Good Job1 Guy~~ .. "Husky Fever!·• A cat.Mnc Rervfce rolled ln a popcom lt.iNl ancl aet up a ho\. dot dl1~Dllr1 at the-ed{• ot the crowd. A. J>etr-company cot I~ name oa a banner a.nd a radlO 1Uition offarect s:so for the btc· •est tJan be1rin1 the 1taUon'1 call lettttl. ficials, was quite restrain ed. "Thls just Jets you know that some nights you shouldn't show up," he said. Hudson scored 22 of his points over the first three periods, then Nixon took over with 10 in lho fourth quarter including 8 in the final 3:31. J The lead cbangeel bands 13 times in the fourth quarter and 10 times in the last 3:.C.C. The closing minutes were a battle between Nixon and Bob McAdoo, who was brilliant !or New York with 38 points. l.OS ANGEi.ES UlO) -OAl'lllrt f7, Wlflllt ff, Abdul.JMlblr 20, Nllcon 26, H-2', Seo« 10, RCIOle<ll J, Gllrr '-TotelHJ M-40120. NEW YORI( (1111 -Ha...-22, Slltl"" tt, McAdeO JI, OHmoM f, ""°"1'~ 16, ICnlaflC f, Williama I, llterd •. Gondra1k lt :z. McMllll .. 2. TCIC.etas.JIH•lll. LosAnollltt ,. '1 •0 ,._,20 N-Yont 1S 31 ll ~117 Foul_,, out-Nc!N, Tot.I foull -l.ol AlioefeS 11. New Vork 2'. 'Tldlnlcels-Ntw Yor\ &t•llW w-.1•11. Motiro., ,._,,,,... Husky to Be· Dismissed? SEATTLE (AP> - A University of Washington foot· ball player arrested in connec· tion with a burglary will be dls· missed from the team If he ts convicted of law-breakinf, says coach Don James. Tb~ player , reserve Milce Oailvle, was released on his own recoenh~ance after being arrest- ed early Tuesday morning and booked for invesllgaUon of a burglary at the Registry Hotel in Irvine where part of the team was staying for the Rose Bowl. authorities said. Witnesses saw two men forcibly enter the girt shop of the Registry at about 4 a.m. and called police, . Irvine Police Lt. Jorry Boyd said. Officers found Ofilvie, a freshman from Bellevue, Wash., Inside the gift a~op with "numerous Items .. stuffed lnaide his clothing, Boyd said. "If he l!! 1unty or breakinf lhe law. h will have no coMectlon with the team ln the Cuturet Jamct Nld. •·1 don't want to ate thlS ln beadUn COi t to ~a.at. I don't thlnk tho kld or tho pro- sram ~escrve it ... . ' I j , '4 --• ' . 81 DAILY PiLOT Wedn..aay, January 4, 1t78 .Laguna Falb CdM Gains 53-41 Victory ByBOWABDLHANDY • 0t•De11rf'tlll1Uff A blJ( second quarter, sparked by the outside, ·atiooUng ot guard Dave Koehler and a tight zone defense that stine<l the hos t Laguna Beach ArUsts, gave Corona del Mar High a 53""1 South .Cout League basketball :vtetory Tuesday night. ; . The win put CdM on ~P of the league stand- ·ings with a 3-0 record. tltussion Viejo fell to San :Clemente to drop from a :first-place lie. : • In Tuesday night's ·'llrattl&; ~LBIJWHt Beach Jplayed CdM eventy for Jlhree quarters. But in that fatal second period, 1CdM out-scored the Art.lats, 21-6, and that was tbegame. . 1 Koehler hit four baskets for the Sea Klngs in that period and 'e nded Uie game with 18 points, high for both telJDS. ([t was fortunate for I coach Jack Errion's Sea i K,.l.ngs that they had the ;hot band in the second period, canning 8-of-15 ~ wbile limiting Laguna Btach to 3-of-9 attempts. : otherwise, Laguna out· 's~ored the Sea Kings, 35-! :1a for the other three !Periods . . put the Sea Kings in command, 33-16, and they coasted t o the finish line. CdM had a big height ad vantage over the scrappy Artists who bat- tled strongly to the end with a zone defense of their own that kept the ball away from 6-7 center J eff Burden much of the night. Burden didn't score a point in the second half. The Laguna defense held the Sea Kings without a field goal for 5 :11 of the third period when CdM hil only two from the ftetd but added seven at the free throw line. C hris Johnston, a transf er from Brea High, played in his first fame f<» the Sea Kings but didn't score in a re- serve rote. Aller starting with a torrid first period when they canned fi-<>f.7 from the field, the Artists fell to 40 percent for the game. CdM hit 43.2 per- cent including a 3-for-10 I effort in the final period , when reserves were in the lineup. Cer-•t~r (UI ft It Allurn l 7 Rains 2 • lh1ro.n S o 0..-S 1 0 KMhler 8 l Star ... , 0 0 Pie-ell o 0 Tolal1 " H ~-111411 lq fl ~ 0 pf ·~ I 13 2 10. 1 10 1 t 0 It I 0 1 0 9 )) pl Ip • I 10 I "We have had a ten- dency to get in front, then coast and not go tor the kill," Err1on said .hefore the game. The s econd quarter surge Ha11911t Nichols C.lclerWOOd Smltl\ Alcllardlon Llp$0n 0 0 ' 0 1 0 2 0 Dally Pilot_,......" ltk N .. KMltlw THROUGH THE NET -San Cle mente 's John Carson (31) goes through the net in an attempt to rebound a loose ball. Look- ing on arc Mission V1ejo's Jim Feicht (21 > and Ri ck Krf'uzer . ~onarchs, ' Pa Ill.on -· LHll~ G•Hno Tola I• 3 2 1 1 0 0 ' 0 I l 0 0 18 ~ Sc~ lty Ou•rten 4 • l 4 l • I & J 0 I 2 1 l 1 0 11 •• . eve Roll Corona del M.or 11 11 11 t l Ma tt·r De1 High of .S11 nta Ana and Laguna laa<ll 10 " IZ 1J -01 I Capistrano Valley Chris-Basketball \Jan both pos ted non- • h.•ague basketball vie- • tpnes at home Tuesday : night. Standings ; Behind a defense that ; ~llowed JU.St five points IOUTH COAST LUGUli fin lbe openin& period, coronaoelM.ttr wJ ~ ~= ~1~ i~~ter Dei's .MO'l,'!.f..£!1s_o•naH111, 1 , ,., m 1 111 ed ·SL· Bef"ftoet:;"·-~.10 ~ i :: :~ 1 P.lay a del ~Y > 62~. .* c,aoUf\e ae'"'" , 1«1 "' l , .Q B 'l ~ """" ll"ri Oflmtn1e 1 n• U1 • . Jll~on ll scor: (:;) . tllllve-slly 1 Ill 112 t~ints <.1nd Rick rucn c°''• M•w o i "' ,.,, ~ ad 21 potnt~ and ~ re-. :~.an~ !.,'7=t;r~~ ... eucn • unds as Oaplst'1'!no 41 : 11 l'y .• .chr 1 s·ti an lllo•oM '"''•M•••~• t · , Oi1t"• H1t1\ M. Un1ft'r·,;r, \' • bPd V1ctcry Chris ·s • ., c,,......,,.10. "''"'°" v~,o ., 'ff' rf C" I b d l ll 53 T"""61t •Game t n ) ,.r S a • . s .... (:lemrnl• et C.,,,IJI '""""' II) ! j W :l .., CV(' S l h I rd ,._Ml.ty•s c;..,.... :-.~ra 1 ght "m. M; 1~~~~;6::~~~~11<1 M•• Dana Hills-Wins; El Toro Rmnhles Dana Hills and El Toro both won South Coal\t League basketball games handily Tuesday ni~hl to remain' in a log-Jarrt ror second place In the league standmg6 at 2·1. M 1ke Samuels and Chris Goll er combined fo r 44 pmnls as Oana ll1lls pasted University High llrvmc), 66·55, 10 the w1nners' gym Poirier KUl>OI\ SloUoll CMllln 8aQlty TIU .. Tot.els Unl-.lty (SS) • It II ·pf 1, • .s 1 17 0 s l 2 s 14 0 2 • 0 s It 0 I 1 2• 1 11 u 0.1MH"ls!MI ,, 11' pf ., Jafltr\ • • 2 11 $ntyth 1 0 l • !Momual\ • J l 21 Golltt M ) 1 13 Wll•on l O l • B•11•r o 2 t I hOfnton o 0 I Tolal> 7t 11 tJ 61 k ..... l>y°""'1 ... Unlve,,lly u 8 '' i t S~ Dana Hiii~ 1' 10 JO ,._ .. Diabw11 Shslled Carson Lifts SC, 70-47 •a, LAUllENE KEYS Ma•Yltletm °' .. 0.., ""'..... .. ft .. . San Clemente m,b 's :!::-' ~ ; ! John CanCJo poured ln cvmm"'o ' a 1 28 polnta to pace bis ~ ! : ~ teammate. to a 70·47 teeca, 1 1 a South Coast .Lea1ue ~~.., ~ : ~ basketball victory over .-.1c11t • • 2 the vlsl.i .... Mlaaion Vi• T.W. 11 '' M -a.a...-.09> Jo Diabloa Tuesday , n "• night. tei.t" l Tbe M senior starred =.. ~ •' ! oo defense as well, ac-~ 1 .s a counUnc for numerous ;':~ : ~ : reboundl, ateala and 1D-s. M111ue-' o • terceptions as the 1~':.t. s~ : .: Trl~nsout--hmUed the ...... ...,... Dlabloe. Mtu111t v1e1e • 11 U '~ San Cleuumt~~ s..~ 11 .. ..._ out to an earll l~Td. • ?.Uaslon VleJo dld not n .l.."Jlcbos acore ltl tint polnta UD· Ult tJl three qilnutes bad ' ., elapsed ln the flrat s'I'· • . qu.gi:i~in; liy ts mld urYJ.VAa; way throuth the second ~ , period, M111lon VleJo Bona £1~1i narrowed the gap to ~ lllJ seven u Mik~ Roberta • c onnected for three Crall ,Stahl aank bath quick baskets In the ends· of a one-and-one closing minute of the free throw aituatlon with halt The score at In· six aecOadf left to pre. lermiuioD •aa 32·27. 8 e r .,. e s a c1 cU e b a c) T)le Dlabloe came out College•a 95.91 non• sbootlnlf in U•"· third coarerence baaketbal1 quarter with Roberts victory at' Mt. Saft AD· g~Ulng the first two tonlo Colleae T\l•dy buckets. Minion close4 nisbt the gap to five, tralllnl oraap eout eonece. 39-K wlthJ:i3 left bl the m~a.n-wlUle~ mlued quarter. flve-'foot Jump shot ••U. But that wu a.a cloee 13 seconds to ao that as they would eet u the could have pulled lt to Tritons. turned il on within one ln Che a gain an the fou~th Pirate.' 75 .. 70 1011 '4 quarter with so~e fine Bakenlleld. • outside shooting from Swingman Tim Shaw • guard John Stephens. had an outstandllil nhtht BASKETBALL I MISCELLANY Stephens s.cored. 19 for Saddleback, wb[ch ~ints and wu ered1t.ed won lta ntntb straight witb several key ~slats. game to boost Its record Also In do~ble figures to 15·1. Sbaw scored 26 CONCENTRATION -Mike Wade of ·San ror the Tritons was poh\t.s, including 18 in Clemente battles for a rebound with Mis- s enlor forward Mark the first half, and sion Viejo's Rick Kreuzer. Klein with 10. Mike grabbed 12 rebounds to-......... ----------------- Wade accounted for lead the Gauchos in both eight ~lnts and was a departments. defensive standout. Artie Green contribut· Rtc k Kreuzer a.nd e d 22 polnla tor the Ro~rta were tJ:ie ht~b Gauchos, who host LA scor~rs for Mission Vie-Harbor toniibt (8). JCTW1~.10 apiece. ~ oranae Cout wasted . Sed'lor Mike Boster a brilliant s boolln& pi.eked up eight for tbfi performance by Pe\t D1ablos and led Mission Ntunian.o in iti tl\lrd defenaiv~y. straight defeat Uial aaw The wm gives San the Pirales' record dip Clemente a 1·2 league to 9.6 mark while Mission Vie: Ne~mann hit on seven JO su ffered H•. first of eight shot.a from the league defeat <2-U. field, wound up with 17 San Clemente travels points and also pulled to Costa Mc~a for a down eight rebounds. Thursday night (7) Orange Coast shot 61 gam e. per cent from the field (31 of 53) and out· CV, Irvine Lose Despite a 45-polnt performance by the Charles brother&, Capistrano Valley HJ&b dropped a non-league basketball decision to host Saddleback, 77-69, T~esday nieht. ning streak ClOme to an • en<t. 1 nine rallied to tie Hawthorne at 45 with .. J :30 lert but gave up four free throws in the waning moments to l.Ole. c.,lstrMt Vali.J IM) .. ""'-In another non-leaeue· :: ~~:;:: : ~ : ;~ iame, Irvine High had a ...... ,... 1 o 4 z scoreless third quarter O'Halloran 2 > s 1~ • llt'Y•nl • , 3 • and wound up los1ng to °""'"'" o , • , host Hawthorne, 49-45. Toi••• 2' 11 11 .. . ...,...,o-ten Cet>!Mr-1J II 24 10-tt Bob Charles scored 23 s..csdt•ti.~ir. 10 n 11 1s.-11 poi nts and broth er ,,,,..,. mi . t.. Mol!P del IUI tlf'iluna 8"Cll •• Un•""'"'Y l, .... ~.:. T ·~ ~ ~' OUHOI Ll~O~I '" ,,. • oh ' 0 \ S 4 c.<iyon I O 110 1/0 ocham 1 1 \ ' er.• ' l 1q1 1~7 El Toro got excellent \C oring from Ron Holmes. Rick Reid and Mark Walker as it cruised by winless Costa M<'s a , 84 59, on the losers· court. Area Wrestling rebounded Bakersfield 33-22. The difference came in the turnover de- partment wnere t he Bucs had 19 infractions to their hosts' eight. Robin chJpped In with a ft " " e. season high 22 tor ~ ! ~ ~ ~! Capistrano Valley. But Monteverde 2 • 1 10 the Cougars fell behind =:r ~ ~ ~ ! I • ' ] '" EI Oo••Oo 2 t/J 10 I •li>O<lv J 1 • La Habra 1 117 1116 l ltl t O I 1 V1t•nc1a 1 115 ta.> • ullGers 1 O 1 u Sonora 1 1~ 111 : ' ol•I• 71 8 '° •2 Fullerlon o 161 1'3 '• '4:~ ltyQv.lrters ill .. ••nta O J IH IU t ~ llern•nl s 11 u u-o T-•y't s. ..... \ ~ter 0.1 •1 1S IC 11 62 C•,.von &7 f ull...-ton ~ , • C•~ Valll'f Qwlllla11 "'· Vl<lwV L• H•l>r• M, -· s. , '<:tttlsllan U f' I Ooralto SI. Val encl• S} loO It Caph lrano Valley Chtls\fan -I••• n E•oe•an•• ~ 1ll•ller "· -•. p &owan '· '"IEWAY LEAGUE '1 'Me .... r\ 10. GNotn 21 S.tellvar t .,/VI Ana"''"' ... 8u+n<a P1r~ 4S l 8owt" U , LIYl"lf\lon I&, AOOrlOUtl Lowell 6' M.ll(lllO!la U l ~ Hallltme CV Ct1;•han S6-2S. ~Olern H \a1tanN1 ~ \UM Y Hlll\M Troy J7 I Race Results "°' T-•Y Oll9l•e11IO ......... TrKlt~ (Mll(helll •• •OO ''° .. lltST ltAQ 400 y•rOa 3 y .. r ChMlll• Te (Wardl l.?O 2 10 I Qfts. Cl•lmlf111 ~ i2 eoo · Wln~•n Lark 1c1er1Sw l 110 I "'°"'" Alal>Jelt T Im• -11 11 1<;11-oerl • oo 2 .o 1 40 Ho scr11<N1 : ~tcrtr Vltlt rTrH SUrYI • 10 , '° ~talor IAdatrl • ?O SltVl"TM ltACI -UO yardt 3 f .}.~m• -11,. tHr ~lls. Allowan<• "°'" 11111••· i'\ho ran -A· Trwe Bac!oar, Soma Punt \A,200 ZOIH, Vain Elllma. SwlnQ Ille 0Hr Bridget Holmes, a 6-4 j unior forward, hild 23 points while Reid , a 6 -2 forward, scored 21 and Walker, a 5-10 guard. added 19. The Chareers helped their cause with some blistering shooting. In the first half, El Toro sank 17 of 28 field goal attempts (60.1 per cenU and was 16 of 28 in the second half Costa Mesa shot well in the first half 04 of 28 > but went frigid in the second, maklng just 11 of 50 attempts (22 per cent). El Toro had a narrow marJln ln the rebound· ing de,Parttnent. 45-42. fQOIS Jo-• Ellle Tt fCarOot1l 3.00 ) 00 liJT-(M) l tl+WK, Sllout ti Out, IN Maje, AP/11 ITree&~I H IO .S 10 4 to I. 'No 1U a1Chet • Slyllsh O•lsy IWlfCll S.?O .. ft ; A·Ruu all Harris lr•lned enlry Time -1111 R. Htl-. 1() > 1 u e.-.,,,..,. 111.w.tt a i. Scfatc""'-Telk 8.ck c.r1anoer , 2 • , VIiie, ..... •tt.• ..... n. l·DMr ~ ..... ••Nta M HOlmn 0 0 --Tt, ll'et4 '11S to llelCI t l COHO ltACE 3.SO yarOt 3 -W•lkar I J old&. Clalmlf19 For malda11•. •IOHTH RACI -400 Vl•d\ > GtorO" 1 1 $2,000 year old\ & uP Allowance. PurM Wll-1 1 .... ,0 ..... I.ff 1 4 thelf) 11 «I 5 10 S '° l..,_faQO Ttloll 32 It ,. .. 2 2 ,, ' . 2 0 ' fl 2 ,. 1 • , t I • IS '4 <tMr 8111y 0.CklWatr.on) '10 6 <10 IH••ll I 00 1.40 210 C..laMaea(,.) C .rltol Brand (._lrl • 00 • Tu~-Junction flC!Wgl\t) i 00 1 40 ' ft II pf i. J!lm• -Tt.tt Jeb'a .Jal (Ga<Ooral J JO Stavr lcO\ o O 1 O ,jteren -ICl,.y~,MiHSclr, Tlma -loti O.we t o 4 , I it ..,.,, Mias --°"· W..O•• HO \CratCl'le• lllH•tl 4 0 3 • •Cuti, Clllt lllld veil\, PaH.,.. 8otllt --• Mllltr 2 , s • i ~cr•tcll•• -Tll• ASltOIOttt, NIN+H ltACE -Ul ., ..... 3 ., .. , lffllty 1J 3 t .. ~llyme H -..... Mt Coftwnand, 0101 a 1111. Claiming.. PvrM 1:2.100 Falke > ' 2 10 •llebO HeM Tlmt ... A9a1n Wlll~am 0 0 2 0 --11.lollltml uo UO Ut ld-I O O 2 f '. fHlltD ltAC• -110 yatdl. t Ytttr ll'tfll'IY'tll"'ll (Cltf"lual J 00 2M AICl!arOtM 0 0 2 0 ~;ow, & ... Cl•lml• Purw UMO H11M1ln BllQ (Watwnl ,.., HIKOCk 0 0 2 0 •~I~ Tlma -It.It s..ttertltflt I 0 I t l 't'......,_. ~ Ml Ut uo ·scre1tMC1 -Oii 'twill. Al aoy, Teut• u ' 1' Jt IK!I • Merl> UO 00 Yot" 1,frt, Mr 8•Y'Mn l!l J IC-..,~lt 2l-t4 n ~·,.._ fo.temoal 4 olO U l•ala .. Tl_ .tM AIMii & .. . ent It IS I I* -•t 1lflit -&It "-r'• L.lflllt, '•'-...,... Coal• Mas.a ..-, .... , ... -........ Htttle .. l.M, ' Katella saus ~ ~'u" Col1Y'• Tlttr. '1111y 0 1aMcMd-o.. Teo ; ............. "'"* ........ ..... .,. .. . JI04J •Ttt ltACtl -ISO yard.. t .., ..... a.1~-..... IM!Wftl • ..... OllllM ) •• 10 ..... ....... CWMlonl CM t,eo "MaClllwott> a.• '111119-~.a .. -·-· ---..... -... ._Hie, •Uttn '•If' Lety, Olrit<t We,, ltlelt Oelltltt, Tiii ._ Oielntnd over the vhltors. Earlter th two had col· lldtd in tournament ac· VAltStTY Ne--' (I) (441 MID._ Vlefe t1-Ftllt,.,.n IMVI P•Mecl Lyle 0 44 IOS Spalult• IMV) won bV lorltll. 11• Brown INHI <14'< Barlltll. & 121 F•lt~ IMll) O.t Mu•-lt·I. ltt-0..CloS (MVI dK Ounn S-4 US-Grellljar IMVl oe< ll'lu lu 1·2 • 1'0 erowr1 !NH! Cit< AOO.,U·f 141 1111\11 IMVI OK Bu ucN mp • l ISi> Levy (NHlllPCI H-·J ,,,_<><_ (MV) oec 0.1\I IW 111-Wlllt• IMll) won l>y lorlell 1'1 Net-. (MVI OK BM-er ._, H•I LAN> IMV> dee Prover1ca tJ J Jwllw Venlty N•W"'1 (11) I") Mlaa._ Viejo '1 46ubl•-I 10l>-ltw.k IMVI -bY lorlttl 11'-Buroeu IMVI Pl"'*' L.tMll 0:21 122-BI" IMVI IM!IMCI Kovellltlo o. 11 t1'-,,r111ltf\ovH (MVI WCWI Illy fonell. TJS-Owk"CNGldtc ... 111-5·1 .• 140 Wiikins (MY) OK El Illar 11.0. 10-,alfNf" (NHI -by ...... II. 15'-0"0ely INHI llM MCOenalCI Prep Soccer VAltltTY u•-.11y., '*'-"'"' ' UnlvUalty-Wllll>, Willer 2 • Colllt ntft. Au lll•-Cet111110,., H...,eNflitle, O•n• Hllla.-.....s1,,.. ;a.I. JUIUOl1 VAttSITY u .. _..., 1, o... """ • U nl Ytr MIV-'IVfltltel VAltSITY Mlu le11Vltja1,ktl ClalNMa I Mlu lon-C.lel...., J, H•r11•Y J, L•ltlltm. F.clntlll AllltU Culelalln, Hertlty, Scarml11acll, L•llllef'A. !.en c~.-o.~·· 2. Atillb-Nuno VAltMTY C:.W.. •Mir' ........... IMCll a Care11a-H1r•r 3, He111ar, Hallolall- L~ 0.-2, Hgyen. l U•tOll VARSITY Cenlll .. ,.., ......... llNCllt ltodltl\lttO, WGoel, Alllgetr1. leMe AM t. lit.Mda t And, Kate1Ja had the advant•C• ln the physical aa~t of the 1ame, aa Newport wu torced to shoot Lhrouab heavy and rou&b ll"affie!. Wltb Katella'1 lnaldt fame P., well and the Kol•hta 1ett1QI 1ome nifty outside 1hootln1 Whleld~, early and could never ro1e1s ,. u 1 o recover as thev watched ,_...,ONftan ..._ lntlna 10 11 O 1~1 their three-game win· H•••-1• 1• z .,_ o~~~====~~g, UY or LEASE FIAT ~t-t;p 120 W. WAINER, SANTA ANA 157-2132 ~F.!lllr Pro Scores I I t t 'I . I -. ---~--' --. ~ BASKETBALL I HORSE RACING DAILY PILOT 83 Estancia Plays Tonight Racing Entries for-Los Alamitos Est an<' 1 a I Co !t ta t ~ u:e has hit 37 pomL~ In Nesa 1 H1gh'!t Eagl\'!t c1 ac1mt The 6-9 !>land are gi\en a t.hot at sue out packs 220 pounds cessfully defending thetr anll ran htt from out· 1977 Century League ~JtJt~. c1lthough he'b basketballchampionship usually nearer lhe -but If they do they'll basket have to knotk Villa Park llere's how the Daily and El Modena out of the Pilot sees the race way. 1 El Modena (3-4 >.' lt start..~ tonight (7) m Trumbo 1i. the over· league action with El "helming force Modena and 6-9 Steve 2 \'Illa Park <5 4 l Trumbo prov1d1ng the Mark Ciarvm apd Max opposition at the Estan-Aland arl' the best of a cia gym balanrcd and toug h Trumbo 1:1 the leuding Spartans unit scorer m Orange County 3 Eb ta nc 1 a 15 5 1 with a 28.2 average and Lo~i.t•s b~ ~6 <ind 29 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ points m their tut two games damoge the Eagle!>· prestige Doug Jardine (6· 7 > leads the way. 4 Foothill (6-4 l. Terry Allbritam <6 5l gives the Knight s ample rtrepower to beat dnyone1nth1sleague 5 Santa Ana <6·3 1 Herman Brown (16.5 i.conng average l paces the Sainti.. who a r e a lways tough at home The also-rans: Orange < 3-S 1, Tuslln (l 6 I and Santa Ana Valley <2-5! ,., Te•tM "'""-'·~ 914' , • ., ....... ""'" SJ.tOO ,,.,,., tt&1m1"t ..,, ~-. '' 000 p,,fltl Mt """"' fC"'''\M' I 1)1 ~ .... ,. llCn· -~· • , ... ,, .. e,_., IK"'11111 I •n El Cll.\roer O. IC.lff••Ml •11 I 1014TM •ACI J'IO ,.,a, I '" l't4' ot°' A w At~•n<w Pur~ •U n OOol r-•ST •ACI 110 y.,o, J Y••' 1 It Mr ~\ler '°"""" ... 'I l"t Pl'l<e •l\OOO Toff•-1.lmlt (( .. ,.~-. Wlllle Net-CWel_,1 •• • 1141 Cl•I"''"' ""'" 11, 100 Clill"'lnt "Ice U 000 C..llMl<t<I Mr Alemlloo ~ Cllet1k>I In A•y-re <A<Nlrl 111 Oil Cl>MO• IW•t<on 1 11• Pop,. ltoc••t IM11u .. I 1 I• H••H• !loyal 1tM-.. l Ul Oii hrl" l~I Ut 1 HUV 1•tr .ftf !(f•(lllQit'fJ II• lOUI"" \A-I <NIC-""'•I lvrl11 Jel 18en~> l 111 hl ... 1 o1 G1otv IC.JJ l Ltl .... • IW.i-1 ~r0ort\f11nner 18.onllU 111 Cele,.. Go <Hert I I If c .. ud• Coc>Y CO.Ion>~ I n• It od Ptpo.r <Nlcooemu• I llt "IHI Tl"' ICMOOul Ill Midway M~ (l(nl9t11 I I If 'W1f1 ftf.'l(Jl.lt fft••Wf'ef ,., I lf NutNr v.-rno.., ( ''••""'" llt Mr w111-~''"<I• lltouQn 1 flt H<111d P•O.tcl <W•rdl IU Zip's Sein ICMdOr•I '" I I' 121 '" Ill 119 SIXTH llACI )IO yerd• J yu• 11/ tld> ' llP Allo<wer.<e Pur .. Y,000 Area Calendar w~,u ... •1 H••t Good O.• 10.to...O.I Prl"u el 1111oo ... IK,,191111 lloyel 0.0 Fl•I ICMGOl• I Mr 1 lger RO(kll IC..rt• 1 0.. Tiie HOOA<I <A<Ml'rl Ftn4t AiUi1JOl't tMYf*\I ... fOU~ TN •ACf l$O ratd> J Go°"'' ,....,." ,,, ~..Sow-W•ll• tMylnl in l•\k•ll,.11 El ~· •t E •L111 cle, ltt......,., ti EOI..,., I.I JOINA at Hu,,u11elon """ I•" •I 11 544 dltDeO Hl9'1 at lrvl11e MIQI\, LA Htrbor •I SedllleDe<k Colle9e !.ou111trft C..lllom•• Coli._ ti Ct l l'o •w Pon.on• telletll. ll(ONO •AC( 000 Y••d> J Y•., old f'NUt»ns Puf'"" Sl .. i600 Ltme< lllU9 Ml\I l~•l)ftam I 11 r Somt Kll\de f i.sn Uo1c-m11\ • •n Fl .. 1 Alool fTrHsu<wl 111 O\lttft 0 Or .. m, (Myl .. I I I I Cllarll• "-' fHertl t/2 !MH'llUMl Ml .. l..ou 18..,._>' I II Soorltr Mount IAlll>0nl 111 $a••belle (l(,,'Qll( I '" TMt•O •ACI lSO 'r••d• J vur 't••' old\ a. up Cla1mir\9 Put\.e Al'\ AllDI ("9-r I llt 9-1t .,,., 1w .. 01 •tt u.-''''""no"'"•" jOQ A<t MOOft lltftlqMl "' So"'" Mm '"'"' IU Oct.,,""'" (O.lomtw 1 I url's H ..... tNlcOClem<li I Fr•ttldly Sh1p ITt .. Wrf I ~•Qt Oii CMltcl>tll 1 11t Truly'• E•M" ICMdot•' 1tt NIQM SP<Md IAO•lfl GoJtt <Ceroote I Mr. Bo''''"'" ILlpll•ml 119 ,,, '" 112 IU "' 1'1 l'TH •ACI 110 Y••O• l yur OIO\ .. UC> Cl•1m1no PurM "'100 HlllNTM •ACI lSO ord• l Socor IMll Gerd•"• at Huft! tft9IOll 9M<I\ II. JOI. yUr old• a. up Cl•lmlftt Purse U. SOO. Cialmlno Pf'ICt \1 ~ Tt11CU9ld INl~•I 122 wr .. ulno e1 c-1,.. •• Golotft 1 tt Nol Coli.oe 11 101. An<UIOr (Alll-.l RotUloller CWt•OI Chlllt" for Ol-r <Wet'°" I K•l....,,•1110e4-l 1n Glrh lk>IO M<My-.C.W.,,.. c1e1 M•r 121 .-\ HUftllft910t' hilcll UI, Uftlftr .. ly Ill ti lu\llft I) UI. '-'•t\ Kind Cfrl!t\ur,., ()fl l •W><O (K,,oQllll O.vtd c.,.ri fUWm I Jet $jty IW•l-1 Lo...iy Ufl• 10..emllo.t I Wetcll St-K"'OOlal . 111 11? ,,. '" ,,, ... 111 ltl IUttTM llAC9 • l>O 'retfl\ J ••• Old> Clt""l"I Pur>• U ttlO Cl•11" ,,.. 1ttl<e HADO Fourl0tty ""'"'"' ,.,.,., .... 111 "' Cutt N lru IC"''' .. 1 111 Ju,,. r.,, ,,,._, 1 1tt wer l'ancy t6"nk• • 1 It H ... VOft CV~ I 11• CMro• 819 CHerll tit ((mer Go (Oef-D.t I U• Brew BrOWft "•"' IC¥ao•• 1 112 f1Ju•n• Go IMMirl tit Al•mllo' Moon 11"9 "'·IC-mu•I UI SPECIAL VALUES FOR TODAY THRU SUNDAY COSTA MESA FULLERTON SANTA ANA I WESTMINSTER 120 E. FIRST ST. AT CYPRESS .15221 BEACH BLVD. PHONE: 547·7477 PHONE: 893·8544 PHONt: 549·1533 · 2946 BRISTOL ST. SO. OF SAN DIEGO FWY. 1530 S. HARBOR BLVD. PHONE: 870-0700 Se habla Espanol $ A1t-IJ rtU$ II 7l ,,, $ WHITEWALL TIRES 30MONTH * LIMITED WARRANTY $21.'9 C.71" SU.ft 171 l • $25.tt ,,, , , $26.9' 011.u $27.ft G71 U SH.8' H78-1' $30.tt • CtNHR l'\Jll .. AllfS WllH !>AfllY ll VU e •U.fl HUI SPOICf ~ OtAR l'tOtfOO« .. ~WTON OPEN MQ_N. THRU FRI. 8 A.M.·9 P.M./SAT. 8 A.M.·6 P.M./~UN. 9 A.M.-5 P.M. • ,..0 IATffltY OR tVll flfl'lACfMfNT • "'~" avnoN SWllCH . NOW PEP BOYS AND Purilatar\ NTRODUCE THE 15,000MILE DUAL OIL FILTER The new Purolot« 15,000-Mile Dvol Oil Filter" deilgned to provide longer oil filtration than ever before PEP BOYS' $198:: SPECIAL PRICE RTSMOSf ,· PLUS AM~~ $1°0 REFUND FROM PUROLATOR S.ftat00 ..... yow-...yOMfr•V1 ------- Njlf't~)I .. -_· 1. v•r --1 s..... l<p -- I· 12 CHEM TOOL 11.0-TH•U -------~ CARBURnOR · CLEAllER KIT Wml ~ °'9U, & HllOB Solve your corbur•lo• ptoblenll. Ciao" IM "'"ci. of Y°"' carburetor wtlafe IM . probleftlS Ote. lmJWOVel 1 '8 ' . p•• I or Monce o"d ;,, • cr•o-lu.l n11le099. A """' for <OO wllh <Ok>· I - lytk <-''" 16 02 (A"ll-----J •• 11-j DAil Y Plt.OT P ll BUC NOTICE fl1BUC NOTICE 1t1111 1u1>a11u. C:OUllTO' n.1 N01'1c;1 fOCJllOtTGet ITATI CWCAUl'OtttNA ,-.,. _...,.,_ TMllCIOOWTTOI'~ SU,.l•te» C.OUaT 01" TNI ............ STATIOl'~ll"OtnlllAl"Oa NOTICa 0" MIAllUtO 0, TNI C.OUNO Of' OtlA.... ..TITIOH l'Oll HOa.t.Ta 0, Wll.L Ill lll• Mette< ., .... ll•l•I• OI ANO Lln••s TUTAMINTA•Y. HILMl>O HA&.L.0.C.-AUTNO•IZATIC* TO AOMINLSTlll NUllU it IW<"1 ...... Ml CAClli.<t UHOla THa INOl,IENOINT AO- hev•nv ''•""' --· """ SOf<I 41iot• MINl$TllATION °" ISTA'tal ACT .,.nt ,. Ille ....., claim• In 4llf offiU Of lttete .. 1.AW..INCe e STOHf. fM Cler~ O! ,,_ ... wtlel c-1 er to ake LAA .. Y Sl OHE, O.C .. \ed. .,, ... ,,, lhern le lhe-rtltMCI et nw NOTIC8 IS HllllllV 011/EN IMI 01110 ot DAlllO .-....EH l"l.AX, At OOAOTHV DAVIS 5TOHE lllJ t•lf'd 10<nov •I '--• 11121 ,,_ ••vo , "'"'" • .,.tltlon tot-~I• OI Wiii """"•• c;.IHwllie '°'°'· -l<h M4tW ~ 1uuenc.e of lAtte" l"~t••v olll<• I• .... IH.C• Of~· Of .... --'°" ttUl~UllOll 10 '"'''""'SIM un oertlgned In tlll nwll.,, i>efl•lnlfltl lo ..-'"' lncll>peoldltM Aclmln1,1r1llew1 or ••Id e>lete SIO<h cltlm• •1111 !he l!"atn Acl rl'ferenc1 to wttlcn h necenary ¥CM1Ci.r. mutl oe rn .. or m•oe lor' lllr1tler pat11<.ulars, ..,. t~I "'e••nted H •t-.. ld wllhtn four ,,,. time •ncl,..... Of'-'"' tM Mm• mont"' Alltf' Int llttt jlUbtl<•llon ol h•• ... n >ti tor JWI, 0 , 1tll,"' 10:00 11th noll<• •· "'·· In ""',_,,_... 01 0.PMtm.nt Oa1eo J.,._., a, 1'7' ~ J, 01 ~Id court, •t 700 Civic C•111¥ OOIU>OH 4. OAHU•C A 0.lve WHI, tn IM City of Sent. An.t, AdmllllllrMtr .i ,,. C.llfornla ••.-•9ftelf o.c.cMnc Dalee! DK-1', ltT7 OAVIO ALLIN ,LAX WILLIAM E. StJOHN, Att-Y·*UW C.N!IVClerk 1tfH ,._......_, ltOMN a M.ANOC Art .... ,~""1 ...... 11 .. "lf>l...t Tell QUI-~ '-" ......... CA *14 l"llltt,_. Ol'.-Qt CD.e o.lty .. ,.. ~. ettu ••'4GI .lanuerv •. 11, 11, 2S, 1m t "'' Alt•••• ftr• ~ l"\llllltlwd Or ... C.... Otlly Piiot, PUBUC NOTICE Ja11.l.•.10,tt11 u&n SU,llUOtt COUllT 0, THI STATI 0' CAl.l'°llNIA '011 THIE OOUNTYOllotlAHOI PUBUC NOTICE JkA"'4Mt .. ~~ M•Tlce 011 MeAatNe 0, NAMllTATWMCWT •ITITION...,. HoaAH 011 WILL TM follow!no PHIOll ,, dolllO bud· AND LITTlllS TISTAM .. fTAll"' -U& AND '011 AUTHQRIZATION TO AD-SUN OOW N SW Ii E PIN C. M I N I IT I• \I N 0 I • f H I .. AVICE• 1111 "''"'1!4r-•- 1050 - lOOO - 950 - 900 - 850 - 800 - nio 700 - 650 - (J(J() - 650 - 500 - 450- 51' • Business VIET NAA4 PE4C£ AGRHM£NT DOU.AR Of\'Al.UAllON $ NIW Dl900UMT 9'ATI UTOUIHID \ AT&T AHT'ITMl8T 9Uff 11M SUIT * REVERSED ,,." TEN-YEAR DOW JONES INDUSTRIAL AVERAGE lAH(;I AESICNA T '°"'/ Of.'! I" .. HUI ~IC( tGVPr-ISRAr f IAlK!> !>1.\111 It' I 11 t t' t f It 11III11 I I I It I I If I I I I' t 11 I I I I I I I I I I I• I If I I 11 1111 I I I 11I11111I111 I I I I I It I I t I 111I111f11 f I I I I I I I I I I tt I I I I I I I I I I I 1968 Ht&. ~ .1970 1m 1'72 1973 1974 1975 19'76 19n -lOSO -1000 -950 -900 -850 -800 750 700 -650 -&oO ... -460 INDC,.INDINT AOMINllTllATIC)tj -~ .., Ill -me ll~fft, H1111U1>9lOllllNdl,c.lllOo'"'•'JM1 ~ Yi , A O'llSTATIESACT. John Ch•rlet Lempo 1111'> ~ ears 0 .,~.......-. E\l•I• of LOLA MILOAl!O FEIN, C•llfer11l1 Str..i. H\rilnglo~ Butn, ~·· ~----- • Decu .. d ~llr..111•~ L;~.~· ~~ .. :tsH::.~·:.s~::~~~ .,!:::!.~~._ .. CfJ'llN<t~ lh •n on-The best nnancla I news about 1977 m4 be that it's over. The Dow mtd-1970, and for lllD5t or i.,74 and into 19'1S. President Carter's energy' • pell loon lor Pr~•· of Wiii •nd I\· JohnC~•les L•mpo J f 30 . d tri 1 .. la into t d d ll f lat...• ·-m to '"ava-n...•e -·-and at.ock·m--i..et reaction to E:Jtt t uonce Of L,.4-11••\ Tfil•IMm•ry 10 ,,... Thll ··~ .... lllt<l wun In< ones average 0 1Jl ua aia pse a I ea y ec ne or a . p IUO -~· 9JUW cu_., ...... - fol1t1ooer llnd ,.,, aulflortietoon '" .... Co..nlv Clll'll of o. ... ve County on net los5 or about 17 percent during tho year. This 10-year chart Israeli talka can't yet be measured. Ten-year chart is provid y m•nl\ter undor IM lncltpenaent AO Oe<.•mNr tt, 1911. DA. WJtte d Co J m onl\lr•hon of lh t.1IM-'<t, r•f .. tnte "17Sll Sh0WS that WOCSe time& Were With U8 from late }969 through van ran •t DC. . t o wh I( II I ~ M•de for turlhfr ,.,. .. ,Md Ol'anoo CMSI Delly Ptlol 1----------------------------------------------------------------------PM ll<ul•"· lllCI 1ne1 tM Orne .tnd Hflu•ry4 n 11,U lf1t • 18 Pl.tu 01 r. .. rlnq Ille \.a-h.U bOll .el ' ' ' PtJBl.JC NOTICE tor Jenuerv u , lt7t, M 1t •·"' , In ,.,. covl'1roern of O.perlrnetlt No. J 01 ••I• court, •t 700 Civic. c.nier Drt.e WHt. In ,,,. Cllr OI S.M.l M•. c..111orn1•. 1------------1 O•led Of'cemo.r 30, tt71 , ICTITIOU' •USINEH WILLIAM I . It JO+IN. NAMl ITATaMllNT Count'r Cle" Tfle foflowlr19 P'lflOll Is Clol"9 bus!· C>U 11 YE A, llANOOL,.H, MALCOLM ""'Hl •nd DALY OLO MISSION STAINED GLASS, AllW'lleYt M...... •1 Alkl• ,..._t, IM. ?07, MIS$1on ••1 MA<....,..-....... ...... c.1~•" Now~ ...... c.11 ...... U66J JA"'h v. Slo:l'OOtl.l. ~tu Co<dllltr• Toi: OIODMnl ~1119,Ml.-vtefo,utltWtllat»7S ··~ ... ,,..,,,.....I_ '1111 ....,_ .. ~by ... ~ PuhlW..CS Or .. ~I Dal.Jr Pl.kl Mclu.I. Jonu1ry 4, S 11, tt11 1• J-V. ~rocill T11'9 •t.l-·~ t1i.o wllb u.. OUnly Cieri! of OrAn111t C-ly on PUBLIC NOTICE O.cember 1t, tt'1 -----------4 '"".,. 'llblltl!M 0r-. 0.... Otllly Piiot, lllf.rrf, 11, ll,U, 1'11 l ·ll PUBUC NOTICE Inst•ranee 'Blaek ~f,ists' BeVealed · HARTFORD, CoDD. <AP> -HaYl.nt troalM ' HacMr lmuance Co. Jll1:I artlltle pnlOllll• 1ettina automoblle IDlurance? If JOU'n an ent.eflo . anskilled ccnatructlon worken, foocl DNPU"ltloD t.alner, pro at.hlet., aenictmd Of Bolla BoJce worken U4 DIWlpaper ~rteal a11.cl pboto- owner lt mq be next to lmJ»aeaible. arapbtn t111n1 CUI on tbt Job u bYIDa .. above A new ConneeUcut law nqulltDf auto In· anrace lou potentla1..., nnnce companies to submit thelP "~ sutd•liMI" '° the Stai. InauraDN Departm.t BVBN •oaas atlU, a~rdla1 to the provld.S a 1Umpse lnto wbo cu rMd111 bu1 J.D. Hanover iuldelln .. , art bellboys, museurs, aura nee and who can't. olUield worar., m1l1t.ar)' wsoni*, unmanted AS WOULD BB EXPSCl'BD, the documentl 1tudtnt11 profeuloaal albletea and Ute un- abow that tnaurora frown on bad driving recorda employeo. · and heavy UH of drus• or liquor. Ttavele.rt htauta.nce said the most desirable• However, they alao reveal aome ltss gentraJly pollcyholden are proprietors and mana1en of known criteria uaed by insurance compUita, wholesale •t.abllsbments, followed ln ordtH' by many of which have headquarters ln Hartford. farm manaaer1, finance employees. reUred Kemper Corp. aald it tells its agents not to MU WOl'ken, ,.. .... edacaton ad ... ~ alftclall. . • Tr ...... llld tbt "wldJe oeeapaUoa ... .............. 1t1t~. ~. 41X· ~-... darmJ.De • deftDite nltUonlblp .,.,. ......... -nrWn oceupaUoul croup1np-ud ... ~.. ~ AS'IWA un a CASVALTY ul4 occupaUon 18DOt•--1da•tlon. HoH'•• Aetna said It aeerallY does not io- IUH Bol1t Royc:e1, Lud Rover., -Bqattis and Corvetta ta.ca ... replacing parts may be very ex- i>enaive for such high-priced cars ISr "low produc-tton .. tnodell. to military personnel whose ranle 111below1er1eant unless the company has in1ured the penon as a civilian or the applicant does not have a car Mar the base. ROBERT DOWLING, KEMP.BR'S brDch manaeer in Connecticut. explained tba.t the com· pany believes enlisted men tend to drlve on brier weekend leaves, to loan lhelr cars to then and '° Over The Counter *SDUetlnp be transferred frequently. . Entertainers should not be sianed without company approval, Kemper tell• U.1 a .. nta. because "by the very nat.u.re ot t.belr oceupatlon, tbeae l.Ddlvidua.ls may be tarpt.Sfor lar1e laws~ add thus may need extraordinary Jimlla ot Oabllity .. Microdata Tells Quarter Gains CAPITOLIZE WITH CAPITOb-.. CAPIT!l.IZATI~ MEANS TO' CCJflERT CAPITrl TO OOH ' I . , ., .. STOCKS I BUSINESS ne ay' lo ins Pri - •• Wedneeday, J&nuatY 4, 1978 DAILY PILOT 85 NYSE ·coMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS Debt Profiled; Guidelines Set I~ LMI In• LTV LTVCppl S La<Ge\ I 10 I L•rnYe t I • L•Mllry IO I ll L•,,ler 10.ii I L•wtCll «> t Lu<~ tO S S5 l..Nr S Pl7 2S 1l \AHW I'° • , ~lN n10 0 LMton• 1 • 11 L~Velly • 17 t..eMfln I 2Je l!J 1.A-r 10 1 UllOa 1 9 Ill LHfl•y «lb t t L.evll'dC U ""'"'" .1S•.. IQ IAY!Str I 10 S 112 ,..... . ,~. + .. "·-.... .... \ - . ay SYLftA PORTEa ff~:~ M(Drr J S lo..J SJ .. • 1>11 ""'IMr 1.,11 llU .. ....u. ! 111 t ~I ~· I\ MfOtf.... 11 ti'• If Pt>lflnf .)t 7 14 •Ill+ \It o ; t It + WI ""'15-l 101•1~ so ~."• ~1 "4'4 1 • 11-.. 1oo v~ • tf "" Mt 0 ..IO I J1t U"' -'-. PNI.... I ' ~ .... ellV . 000 11 -'• • lie. I • t 7t "'11VH .. 10 1 t + I\ PJ 1 t .. 1. . ....... ..... . Have you uked tor a MW' Jou belaff repayln.a an old \. ""• Yi ,,, .. ~l.d , .. I 4'I 211• '. Pitt" I 30 S 1t .._ + 111 e6 • I ni.-1, H 11)10 ..:i If I, PlllllrY 1•19 lit ··~ I I J 1* I' t I) pt I lO It l1 p1e119, I to I U1 21\lo t71 I! • }I -'' Mcltllyr I t 11000 11 • Ploflrff lje 1 l IO'•+ i-. , ~--••• u 11. u .•• ~. ..... ,1:: M<Klf• I b I It'•• '• PH,,.yl I I 117 l"t .. <ICIRtl "1 'IO 1'11 i't • M<ll~ )I I l6 11 •• 1, PllU'r9 eo. I 1 '"" '°' '>luWQ( 1" s •• .. ,, • Mtl..OUI It 114 10 •• '• Pllb"' IJO I W U'-t '-~\IWPI 140 ~ llO'o •o • M(,.it to • • 11" 1 • Pl.,,Rl< 1 17 "' S...vSno to • l I'''• 111 MMdCtt I ) UI 111• 't PIM\tr11 OIU 40 119\t Vt .......,PrO 110 7 IC)i. • ' Mll"fn •WU U II .. '• Pl•"f .. Y 1l1S M 1"-t '' \unC.111'1'1 loO S I to 1, ..0'. '• Mldlrn lOt t ''"" 111• Pl•"My .... 10 1 11•, • '• ~ 2 SI • ti tl • '• Moi<lvw 1 1 81 1' • Pn. .. mo 1 s 14 O\o )<ai(llf 7 JS , 10 &l '• ,,... " lO''. '• ,,... . . 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H'• • Mu"Otd tOlA H I'• o A;ymnd I S 7l n-. ~ Thom•t 114 S4 JI' 4 >o -dpt 411 • I'• A Ill 110 IM »" fl"ta<fll" tlll> 7 S II • • =: ~ : 1: :~:.: • 11!!..e"el I I 1lS U-:: ·~ ~~ 1 ~ : ~ l=~~ 11: ,,_.rp()tl .to t 113 ~· 1 ==~Mi 3tt :w.·+~ T1<or 110 S Jl ,._._ '' Mutr!IO 1 • u to•.' 11..,. ••. IMI I .. ~-"' TIOw .. , bO 1 12) 101 'H .. MilllCJrft 1 lt )() U • • A•k.11~ .U • 11 0 111 • lo; T191r1M ,. I '°' in .. '' Ml"'tl..Wl.40 I ' I'>.... II I' .. •~-7 J .. u fkNI" I )0 ' 17• ff • '> -h--e •1-.-.... • · · • Tlmel 1111.,,.... 6 \lo-, .. HCR MI !041 >l'e• 11 Aef"tf UO I .. »~•I\ n...M 1 ' 4SJ S + I \ NLlllll I.JO I JOI 17• .. -•, Aeln(>p AO 4 IJ) 24~ ~ fl~ J JW t j iOtt.-'• NNLT t .·~ ! ao.17 261'9-_ ~ llelGpi J·JO· • t ,..... ·· · · T1.,.,,..11ik21 11' , • \ff ,. • • =~~~ i::: ~IS 11::·_:·~ r•"" 1 Sil • ~J.S)ll l9 411"-• ~ J = TOOO!ifl ••• U o '• Hetce-~~ 1¥• 11_,,, , .. s :;·i4 ro1~ J 1a • tt Jin .... ,_Cit M I lei 14'--... 11=..., l4 TOIEdplUf . • '•····· ....,,... , 1 I~ .. ..,,_ .. 11::-,,:-I U" ~ .... \4 f~ tt20 • ._ ••• !!Alrl .S02' 2IO I• .... 11•• 1 _ footllel -to J ~ .,. .... IOt. • ~. ... ..,.. • -····· Ttecor JI 7 u I ..... c:.. ... I 17 "'• '• lln\'Oll .•IO IS1 ll -'-rr-1 i. • tt "11-.. .. ~ 1·:li ,; ~~-~ =~~AM ft ~;._._ " ,, ... ~ I fl 7 JI 12 .... -\lo ~a.... .... •• ·~ 11-r• , 1 ... ,k~. ~ TWA • 11f ...... . ·~ ~I>!\; 'SlS i. ;;,-:-... A;vt°" 1't0u ~ .;;;_ lt ~=~~ 1 J e :~::.~ ~ tNIOi>I I .0 6 W to> ll••h-.JOIO !Cit 14 -'II r • • N41CllG 2 14 I 11 t•• ;_ •, Aun,. •• • • 16'--1-, '•"'"' IO 7 I t6 3-' Ill -~ 1 Iii I •It IS • • Au""' t ... I " I ;••"!,"': ~o • ~ 11~. ·~ Nat~ >I l Aeynl" J.IO 1 nt ,.._ "" 1•"~0 -~. • • · ''I NMIO' 4011 17S JSA., Reyl" plJ.tS t ·~ I'> lr•nkn U t • '"-• . N~I! .. t IU 16 t II t y M I I l'I I • S 0 Trg~ US JIOOO to'l'l +I NM1nt~v 5'12 l• ,, ~ 1 Ju n .. • '• ~~GP•;:! .. i~ ~:::::. M ..,_..,,, 1 jC) b 171 18 • ll•yM 9f4.i0.. If rv h Tr OP pl 1 lO t 2''--\'t ~~' " •n ,~ • • AeyM pn 17 •• J •I'•. '' Tr•"M>" J1 • D I>'·-,, ~nd .. 1 •; H • • '• Af<llC. 1 IO • S. I•\. '' Tr•"*' I tO 1 to 23... ~ •• N~1rc11 : ::,~ m !:": :=r,: ~ ~ r2~ 1. r,..,,. 1.lt • m '°'-····· .. ~:~~~ 2 SOii ~3 l!". • :::g~~ :: , ~ n"" • .• ~~r~~·ri.: . 1: ~. ~ N.i11om • .oo • ~·o JI" , •W•Ald n10 u "" :~ "''"P1 t,. s JO\, 14 •. , ~~.~ l.tO A 21t 21~ ... ' ~·. R-ltw 1.IO 9 Q It'->\ rn!r: .. l~ ;~ "' ,_.,. •• _ SO • • • Aobl!ift 1 7010 76 1'\11 '• frleP•c 10 s 10 fl~ .-. 1, !!!v"~ : 601• I 11301 p,;,: , : AotllM » 10 11 10 • •·· Trtnlyln 1 • bl 12.,, ._ '"" ,... RocltO I «I I 11 11' • Troplu" 112 703 »•• '• JI~ .,. MnPpi 2 >O • 1200 1• • • A0<11T1 1.12 t 10 11·~ • '• T..c•nG 1 16 t ,., IS'' '• .-.. .,. ._,,.~ 1 tS > 11 • .. '• llooowr • • • 1-\It f-ncn 10 • 24t 21•· +I :1% Ne 11 .. t 1' 23• • • llockwl J.JO 1 ,. 1'•1 ''° Twl"O' 'O I 21 \llt 'I> + 'Ai ,. N 1.44 I II II o h llki111fll( 4 H t 7)111 + I'> T • • "' 7 :'.:. H '1112.1• • JO\•• '> 11 .. "11'4 I H . 1 __.. 1., yco .. •v ·-IA 1>'-• "' u • ... H f 2. ' .. .JS~· I. "°"'"" I '610 21 31'-.. T, .. ,,.. .. 1 174 "'"· .. .._ NYS G 160 t U 1t '• fte!Vfl" 2' 111 ~ ._.. T""'tllr 1l Ul Z1'-• '" ~ 1At N'ttpt J.IJ . uo lS '• ftetllnl IOIO IOI lt''t UAL -:;. ~. 61' -·11 •, ,:.. V. =II .J6 10 • Ill>.. . . 11911-IO ,_. ~ -• •v .t020 201 "'•• •• "-' 1,..·5 1 ,, .. ·; i' ut. , • • JA n-. " I~ \lo ....... flf •.SO 7 6'~.. 11-4! tt = ,,._ " Ii I HS. i IJllD :ID' 1 • '!> H-.-~ ='I~: '" 1~~:-~ ::::·".ii;; UI ~-: u "~.:. ;i :IB. ;: .,.. .. '-~ SA0 •• \-20 "'•+ '• llorfbCel 1 I a 1-. •• vv1.-, s .. ,~ • .; llllt •• • 1 t;t .°a: ~ • '-:=.: !::J 'tll n"' -Wiit~ ':: • S 44 • '• ~; ~ ~~:· 'rt~~_,,, ==~°' J: m a::~ VA~<~'.,.: : =-.-~ === t JJ 1 'J16'-\\ -~ -v ..... , u J4'Ao-') ti'> NICWlll UO i Jl'o •·•· ~ 11 ut , ... f :u ~ ;· It .• ::~ HorfWll l..M I 40J hJ•_'·~ I 4 1 1:1 1..;; -.: ·~·.. . ;;1:= .. s.1• , re. tJ .. 7\4; \It " '·... tt""-..... ., ,, .•• • ,. v, ' • , -.. == ~ if.:···;· 2~17 '!{ ~'.If.':!: ~"'" ... r:: ~ •h:-:-.... "' L10i '~! Wio-·~ ·~ J ii. ,. 1·~-'·• II.Ii•.... fl ~ 7 t 41 -~ .. .It• 3 ~· ••• ....... ·• I~..... . ":~ . ~ , ••t;; I Ji·t.~ Ji111::.·-. ~ I:'° I ~ ,,. = ~ " .r Ji· o: =\-= :: 1.» I 1., I~ ;~ t::~ .. .JO• 4 .: '"'-·;. io; ,._ J ~ • U"lryel I" I ., 110 a .. • '- ,..... ' • .... '" .,.. .. • II 1)1•-~ oo•" ' .... ·Are you t.alcln1 cash advance& from your credlt cards --.: to pay for routine monthly expm&tS! • , Are you con.alderins \ r~que slin1 protec· Uon Crom bill collcc:tor:s by taking out. 11 coo· eolidation loan. so you can. rep~ them and be Jett with o.ne bl• monthly Money's Worth payment.! , rt your answer la yea t.o ope of theae q'*Uom. you probably are over your head ln debt. • (1) A workable yardstick o~r t.he yean: -Jf you are mini 10 P«ttnt of your tako·boDM pay to repay Joans, ex~hadinl mortiaae. your load ls eo1Dforta· ble. -Jr you are usln1 15 percent for repaymebt. your load is m•nqeable. -U you are ustnc 20 percent or more, you are • daneerously overloaded. (2) HOW M\JCU IS TOO MUCH DEBT! Tbe followlnc are clear warnina al&n.als : -Lenethen~rep•)'ment periods OA inatallment purchases and putting down am.tier initial pafmeots. Simultaneously, your Interes t load is lncreasiq because you are sinking deeper Into debt for longer spans oftim~. -Debts on revo'lmg charge accounts .iso are cUmblng steadily. -BEFORE LAST MONTH'S 81~ are paid, this month's are pibnJt in . Bedeviled by m any separate bills. you turn t.o a tend· mg institution for a loan to ··consolidate" and pay orr debts, leaving one big loan Continue to buy on credit. adding more new bills on top or the big loan. HERE AllE WORKABLE GUIDLJNES t.o stop the vicious cycle. Fiat, three alternatives: <1 > Keep debt load below 20 percent of U\.er·t.ax in· : come Coot lnclud.inl the home mortgage). • (2 > Do not owe more than 10 percent of what you could· pay out of yoor Income within the next U moathl. (3 > Do not owe more than one-third or discretionary in· come tor the -yeaT, meantng the income remaining after--. you have paid for the baste needs of food, clothlnl and shelter . PICK ONE SYSTEM AND follow It faithfully. In dedding bow much debt your family can handle comfortably, ask yourself: How stable ii the breadwin· ncr's job and income Cor both breadwinners' Jobi and in· comes )? Don"l ever depend on overtime as a re1ular part of salary. Next 1/ you are re/iued a loan. Decline in Dollar . ·\ ' Hits Stocks Again NEW YORK CAP J The stock market. declined aeain today, and even the promise of federal lnt.ervention tt> booat &.be saatnc U.S. dollar wu ~e to spartE a lone· lastinl( rally . The Dow Jones averaae of 30 industrials was off 4.16 points lo8J3.58. Losers held a 3·1 edge over pinen •moaa New Yort Stock Excllan& ... Us~ issues. After fa.I.Uni to new lows "8iAll. MVeral lud1q loreien currencies TuHday, the dollar conlintaecl ,lo ahu:np today until the Federal Reserve and U.S. Treaftl'Y pro. mised to actively Intervene to fonflft exc:hanae tradlJli. : " Tblt prompted a brief. mld·aft.ernoon rally, but the martet sooo resumed Ila downward trek. Later, the marbl closed stronier. A.11.o affecting tbe martet. MPtiveb' wu Q ... that factory orders dedlned in November, the fint aut'b drop ,..,11141 •• 1. t ! .. ~·L=~ ~··-f 17 7""t" E=r' : ·7 ,.; ;r~; ~ u.'..~ ,'Jh ~ ~.~ Wt1 . 1 t ,.,,_ tt u;t1n<.a1 M 4 ru ,.,~ . . --------------..... --------------- lllf . . , ••• • UllGrlt •• ,. J " U\lt -.... .1.11-•·-In ra.---~ ··--~ -r·---- since July. · l le " 1 f"'"·· ·· Ulliwm '·J: 7 u -· v, ;y _.._. ne .,,..,917<11' _...,., ~ ._.-... ' r: ! ;: 111 ... : :: 8~'m=t..i-·1~ i:w.::.·~ spoclf9'at .... "_..,. .. ,FIMl~---- YIN A l.JA 1 Ui:, \ ~ UlllllM • lf 7 121 ,'°',~-= ~1 ITOal.a · • ••• ·• .... · • • • • · • • • • ••• ·••• • • J I J .. • \It UJerl• l.IM , ,, .....-y .~E,:, '!~ ':r:;.. ~ ~·. i:::~. JO ,,.. I~.» t~ ..'t;; .'?:::-f.t't ~ 40 • U4 IS ''t UNucl UOI 1 71 llll'I + I\ ,.j;'. yo,;'._Slec'll Ea~ IH11t•. lO tr11 I tWM JM.J• J\J.l• llS.G-0.)4 S.... I IU S • '> Vnl'ltMl'I · · a. 11't II I IS Vtl I UeM ltlA1 I ... 110.7._ t.ZJ kMttfer II " ·~ .... U11ll•!• .. ' s ,.... .... ,,.., .... __ ,,•I mote M • . u 5tll I .............. ._.,_ t.OJ ' ~Pio Ill t J7l ""' UU$S"F•ld$0!.I~-; n161 2161:.." ..... !•!.0.~ • .'. m~ ;:-:h, l!MM ••• • •••• .•••••••• / J.,6U,• '!'" bill 11>1 II•• '1 -' -• __ ,. ,_ T I ltO'llO '• ml> I 1011 514 11 •·· U$0yp\ l t0 t l10 ,,._, \It ~~'.' ~.l....:.··· m·,: m~ • ~ U~~ •.•••• : •• : •••• J:::. I JV:...0 1 Aln 1 • 41 19 + ,.., UIGYPl l lO t 1•1'>•1 """'' --· 4, .,11 l / ..... _ I.Ml JU6 ll S'> v Hem 1f ) 100 1 -"" ~rsAll .•• • 111..100 '~"' '· ... • •••••••• ••••• •• ·-~,.•t 1.40 1 ,. 161. '• u '"" .si 1 m ''"-. ., •rt• oo no.-1 •• , .., .---------------Fa< I I ll JI" V L.e .. 9 «> S fl 1l1• • '' w Ch. · 111,MO -~ • '• P 7• 1 136 1~ ;, us,.,,. u •'• · Citicorp · 147·• 12" 1 M'Jtat !titO«'b Did $coll~ 1• 11 IS "" • v~s-110 • Ill 2>"" 16 ....... Fl...,. UJ,OllO A~ •• ,.,. 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"'"-• •-s"l" • 10 n -c. 1Pt + ~ ""' s.o t I ~ SJ i._ WlllWI . 10 ~+ U llW 2111l + ~ UP ~ .'J ·; ~·+· ... :::.ii~ s~+·._ ff i:. m • ~ t= • w ~· * "U .e 1 + tt u, • m tt:--. {I JI '" • ; !t! • ' j ~fi' r ,.. -::i .~ • t ~1 -,_ _____ ... ---· ~-~i l,jl §i WM'« .c ~ ' I • , ... ., ... • .. DAil Y PILOT WedMlday. Jam.&ery 4, 1971 Television TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS ' . . \\1 11\1 ... ll\' ~ MO I CM NIWI • NEW8 ~ONE PWMledlo O.SOIO mell• • medical dedelotl on hie own and Dr B•~eu ~ wllll • cloctor wno opj)OM8 Ille pwamedlo progr-G MO\'\£ * * * "Cluh Dive" (1143) Tyrone Power, Anne Buler Two omur1. ln\IOIYed In .ubmatine -· l•1e In the Notrn Allantlo, fall In love Will\ Ille same woman (2 hr1 I G) THE 81\AOY 8\JHCH I THE AOOIOEI El.ECTIUC COMPANY m FOOOS~THE M0C>EAH FAMILY "Cooking For Otl8 Ot Two" QI ABCNEWS l:IOIJ MOVIE * ** "Tllel\lc" (11153) Clllton Webt>, Barbu• Stanwycl(, The 11vee ol J> .. ~, •board Ille dOOln9d ......... lte -both !*ore Ind during the tr agill llinklng. ( 1 hr.. 30 min.) Well Trained I tlY THRE! SONS OVER!ASY Tom Hamilton !right) resents having his sports car overpowered b y a locomotive driven by Gebrge Brenlln on Thursday's episode of CHiPs at 8 p.m. o n NBC, Channel 4. John A.In; peuanl •lew: wrlllng your eonor-n. C!) FAMILY PORTRAIT "Sucx:euful Parenting" CJ) C88NEWS Q:t MERV GRIFFIN GUMla: Eva Oebor. St9Vo Garvey, LA11y Galhn 7:00 0 NBC NEWS II LIARSCLU8 0 A9CNEW6 G) I LOVELUCV Cl) ADAM-12 &!) MACNEIL / LEHRER REPORT ~ YOGAWITH MADELINE CJ) TO TELL THE TRUTH 7:30 0 SHA NA NA Guella: Aarlllnne Barbeeu. Dr. Joyce Brottwa. U NEW\. VWEO GAME 0 MATCH GAME P.M. G) TiiE 8AADY BUNCH d) l£TS MAKE A D&.AL fD LA. INTEACHANOE "Snapttiota" m 8TAR80ARO "Spring Canyon" (]) 1121,000 QUESTION (tOJ FAMILY FEUD a·oo I) CJ) 0000 TIMES II a "No MOlll Mr. Nice Guy" wnen J.J. decldea to leach Michael what he befi8V89 IS I bldl)l neeeled le.non In reaponslbll!ly 0 ORIZZl..Y ADAMS "The Spalter•" Two lnapl lftver proapector• unw11- 11ng.ly lhrNlen the Wffd«. ,,.. and It• lnhebltanlt by pollutlng the atrNma with mining cherrlkala. D MOVIE Cltann~I Luting• IJ KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles II KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles D KTLA (Ind.) Los Angeles D KABC-TV (ABC) Los Angeles CJ) KFM8 (CBS) San Diego G KHJ. TV (Ind.) Los Angeles ®l KCST (NBC) San Diego CD KTIV (Ind ) Los Angeles CIJ KCOP· TV (Ind ) Los Angeles fJl) KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles O!> KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beach * •• "Dr. Slranoel<>Ye" ( 1 Gii•) Peter Sell art, George C. Scott.A pay· chotle Air Force general lmprovllea a .en-to send bOnlt>«a lo atteck Ruule 0 @) THAT THING ON ABC A v;arlely apeclal u111ng Ille talent• 01 Cneryl Ladd, Jolln Ritt et, Bill Bl•by. Hanny Youngman and Jonn C1M1ron Swayze Q J()t(ER'S WILD G) CA'IOL BURNETT ANDFRIEHOS C!) MOVIE • • • "Dead Alngar" ( tGM) Belle Davia, Kart Malden. A twin .rater 1a1eea _..,, Mr llater• boyfriend through. lalae pregnancy and many prObleme atlee In their lfv-. ( 1 llr.) &!) NOVA "In The EY9fU Of Cataalto- pne" The o.t>ale -cMI ClafenM • can -llKvMt a nuclear war? ~ MAOIC OF OIL PAIHTINO "Winter And Summer Landtcape" 1:30 fJ CJ) 8ZYSZNYK f~'a on low, and Nici<'• edvk:e on tile aanc- tlly ol marriage backfires wt>en I he young couple Jim Nabors to Host r ) Own Sho'W on KHJ ; Jim Nabors returns to televisipn as the star of his own one-hour daily nriely show, The Jim Nabors Show, premiering on KHJ·'tV, Monday at 5 p.m. on Channel9. Guesting on the premiere show Monday will be Jim's good friend, Carol Burnett, along with Burt Reynolda, Greg Monahan and Susan Ford, daughter of former President Gerald Ford, who will be a regular on the show. mall•~ 10 elope I OOHCCN'TAATION CM>M-WITI OVER EASY JoM Raitt; l)eMant llew; wtmno your Congr..,,..,,. l~D CMMOVI& • *'-MTha OrMI Scout And Cllbouee Thuftday" ( 197111 Lee Mervin, Oii.., Reed A bored eoldler of fortune. h1a Harverd· Mucataa. half·lndtan com- patriot ene1 a or!IZ!ed old cowboy decide to kl<lnac> a ~~ of bordello girt.a U Ill.ACK SHELP IQUAOA<>H 'Wotvaa In Tiie Sheep Pen" Pappy, out 10 hnd an an.my radar anlp, la autlled by a no..ic. lighter squadron ol Navy "wotvea" led by a brun young commander (Tim Matlleeon). 8 9 CHARUE'S ANOELI "Game, s.t. Death': The Angela ln.,..tlg•I• prorea. IHln8I tennis lo ltnd out """° .. eiln'Wnatlng the lop temale pleyer9 prtor to nwDhel with Ill _tg!PQ. ch•inp. Tiffany Bolling, 8'111 8eedl OU-I at•. 0 IAOHllOE "Spealt No Evil" G) Ml!.RV ORlfFIN G~: Eva O•bor. Steve Garwy, Larry Oallln, Dave LandHbetg, Franceaco Scevutlo. Cl) 0£T SMART fl) GREAT PERFOAMAHCES "Paul Taylor Dance Company" Two reo8<11 Taylor compo1illon1, Eaplanaae t and Runes," are performed '1!) A~N CITY Ll~IT8 "Jerry Jell Walker And Tne Loll Gonio Band" I]) MOVIE ••• "A New LHI pG71) Walter Mattnau, Etatna May. A lazy playboy 1>1ana to murder • WMfthy woman aher m~ !Mw, but dllCOYtlr& he haa fallen In love. (2 h~) 9:30 Cl) SEAGEAHT 8IU<O 1C>.OO D l"OUCE WOMAN "Blind Tenor" Whel\ an accountant (Tab Huntet) UllOO'YW$ ~I bOOk• keeping, he ~ Illa tatoet of g.,.i.,. """° ete determined 10 keep tha truth hidden. Sandra oaa, Jactr Carter QUM1 star. DG NEWS G O 8AAETTA "Hot HOtM" Two wily old gentlemen ateat • valuable r.ce llOfM from a ~lll'M 11«aethlef and lake the animal to their apartment 1n expectellon of • reward ~ TUBE TOPPERS KCET 9 8:00 -Nova. A debate over civil defense and the capacity of the United States to survive a nuclear war CBS 6 9:00 -"The Great Scout and Cathouse Thursday." Lee Marvin heads the cast of this 1976 western movle comedy as a cowboy with an intellectual Indian companion <Oliver Reed) who kidnaps a group or bordello girls . KOCE 9 10 :30 How We Gol There: The Chinese. The Chinese com· munity in the Western United St11tes i examined by a historian. * * '' ''The ""*° Atfw" t 1M7) Jotln Hodlak, Gecwoa Mu<pt1y. A. w11e lgn«ed by '*' 1"'81Nnd .. Or.-toa~olher llutblftd'e, ""° .. lnYOMld in.-....,oe.~ Qlr1. !! 11r •• ao mlft l 12:11. 0 MO MVITaY tilOY9 •'Tll• Spao .. wa1011 Mwdlft'• (PY9mlerel TllNI ~ Joan Caultleld. The ltrnala -0-of a ~~la the ~-tl:AO. (I) KOJAI( ...,,,_ Com.tpW" ln-tf- gatlng the muoglrtg -dar (llf • )ew*y comc>anY eMCUM, Ke>Jak llnda a ..,.,. ,_ ~· IMtllled In IM \llctlm'a peaoe. LOia Albtight, Scat• tnan Cl'olNrt ou-t atw. (~ 1:00 U TOMOMOW oweea: Greham Karr, tlM tw • 30 """ I .... '111&y Hlgfl" (195t) Sid Mellon. ~we L~. A for. .ion agent OOll\rNnct. • r~ con1tol ~ (1 br .~intn) 2:'6. MOYta ••• '"BenQllZI~ ,,.,., Ndlwd~~ cant.. A O'OU9 of _,..._ --In ...,di of lllddafl gold ... lrapj)ed In ..... ly d•Mtt moaqua lly Bedouin trlbeemen .no .,... dMth .. a pana/ly. (1br.3S'""'> a.-001 HEW8 4:b0 MCMI * "S.-Of Bab~" (19$3) Aicl\ard Cont•, I.Jn.. da Cflrlstlan. A young lar6- eltte, In Babylon aa a ........ mUW ptan1 to 1JM1ke anotn« man klno-tllan Mallla him keep • P<omlaa 10 ... the ,., ....... ,.._ llOma. ( 1 hr 20 min.) " ' being pmled Cl) OET 8MAAT fl:) OAEAT PEAFOMitANCE.8 Hoet: JohnnyC-. 8 U>VI. AMl!NQ>.H 81YU ---~ GounMt. an411hlawlteT-.a. GtUV WMa irw.tlgatlng, tn. fll)'ltllrioua ~ of allled ftlgllta t1Yf/I( Gr-. Tlaursda•'• Da9tf111e Mo.,Ja. ., . "Thr.. By ,,alanahllM .. Memberw of the New Y«k City 8allet perform 'S•renade.' 'Tarantella' and 'Duo Concert1nt,' thr.. work• by George Balanchine '1!) SP€CIAL "Whitewater, Pa." Canoe- ing Ind kayaking on the Pennayl\lanla nv.ra 10-.30 G) f8 NEWS Qii) HOW WE OOT THERE: TliE CHINESE An lllstortan'a view of Iha Cnlneae community In 1he weatern Unlted State tt oo fJD0 Cll9 NEWS 8 MOLLYWOOO COHNECTIOH 0 MOVIE * • * "CfHll DIYe" ( 19•3) Tyrone Power, Anne enter. Two olllcara. lnYO/veel In 9Ubm.VIM WI/• f-111 Ille Nor1h Allantlc, 1111 In kMI wllh the -womarr. (2 In.) G) TliE 000 COUP\..£ -~ Gueata: Part 1 of an lnler· vi.w with Paul w ..... ona of ~·· moM di.ttn-gulehed pN!oeophera. 'l!) MACNEIL/ LEHRER REPORT 11:30 fJ (I) HAWAII FIVE-0 A IOOlproof plan to rob the lloelt exchange of $40 mtl· hon QOM awry when a aeries of unplanned mur· det8 put• McGatrett on Ille trail. Aictlard 8...,,an guest 11lrl {R) D TOHIOHT ··~And Ttla ~ Wlf9 Tt:toww AM 'Jlltt. He" • 0 '°4.JCE tTORV "ColliPon CourM" The ciu-tton of wNlher OI not ~ ltlol.tld tie ... led to ride "' patrct care la twougM 1.0 • head during· • oun 11at11e w1tt1 two kl1141ra. Sue A11"9 l.slgdon, Deen StoelNMI, Jerry LM Lewie. Murrey Hamllton, H1'9h 0 '8rlan ~1t1r.(R) ID NEWS Cl) OET SMAAT -~ABC NEWS MOMIHG 12:00 D TWIUOHT ZONI "Elegy'' ID FOAl'aR FERNWOOO Tom makee a decialon; EleMor arweys Annabelle; 'f4m_ JiMnlLJl!t mattlod; Mac gllla an °'* from Loretta; Annabella IUf· "'*9 TOftl and 1>9M)'. • MOYi. .. • "Then T'*9 w.. T'hr#' (1112) A* "'°°'· Franll ~A o.mari ~ oeta lilled by Ills own man wtian ha trtM to captUN M Italian partlean. ( 1 ,.,, ., 30 min.) 12:t0 D MOVTE * * * "The Dlfk Angel" (1935) Fredrlo March, ...... Oberon.. Bllnd- ,_iy deatroyt • coupla'• 1unwe. ( 1 tw .. 25 mil\. I G) MOVIE --· .&ob.IJ.IAAIL.and Jtoott 111counter uneicpaotff tt'OUtlla from the ... .., ..... of.,...,. girt. 1:30. MOW! *** "Ul'llMlodel-~-Girt" (1957) IC.ey Celard, Paul Carpent«. A -oezN writ« 00-..... ~ to bfMk llP the London dopa rlf'l(I that cauaecl h..-bnltt!W..,..... death. (' tw .. 30 !Nn.) 2:001~ •• "Who Kin.ct Mary Whal'• 'Er Name?" (11171) Red Buttons, Alice Play. ten. A r•llr•d bo••r ~-10-a.--. 8*111'1 after the murder of a streacwalker. (1 Iva.. 30 min.) * * * * "Oat• 01 Hell'• (1953) Maolllko Kyo. K~ HMagaw.. A 12111- oamury~ ~ women QhW1 .. • victor'• ,_.,cf lo a aOlifTlr ~ dleth -Illa -.-.11 tv~30lftln.) • MOYIE *"' "War Of Th• Morwtws'• ( 1"8) l<ojlro Hoftgo, K)'Olio Enaml. Ela!IM'fa and llarvgon wreak llavoC In JapM until INy -~royad. (2 Iva.) 2:20• NEWS 2::30. MOWS *. "The L.edy Crawd Excl1ement" (1950) Hy Haull, MlchMI Medwln. The --of • group of art ..,..,.. .,. ltlww1ed by a mghl<*.tb ant«talner. ( 1 MON.a ti:aO D *** "Hiida ~· ·-Uffe) Jean &1fMIOllJ. llw MadltOll. A YQjJl'lg ~ ,.,,,,. llofM to ........._ ... twr llte .,.., IWO 111- fai.d marrlagae. (1 tw. ~ min.I 10:00. ··~"Three a-.. for The lrlah" (1t40) Tilomaa Mltoflell. PJ1cMa • ~ A retired New Yortc· pollcarNno nine for aldtt- man attar being par'IUadad 10 do eo by Ills daughter. (2 "'•I AFTEAHOON 12:00 m • ·~ "Het HlghnMa And The Bellboy" (11M5) H•dy Lamarr. Robert -Wall!«.. A EllfOPUll prtn. ~ and • hOlel bellboy comtllna lorcee. MC11 few •heir own Int~ (2 tn.. 20mln.) 2100D *** ''OoctorAIS.. .. ( 1954) Dlftc 8ogarda, Mo Oltla Berdot. A Youno clOct.or, working on a c.rgo ~ to ftOld a "'"'9d INr'rtaga. gala ~ wlltt a tiewttiul F'9ndl g111. {2 lwa.) a:oo QI * "L.edy From Shlng- hal" (1048) Oraon Wellaa, Rite ~ Art adWn- tur• ,... In io... wlt1I • -and her lluaban6- lllW)'9' oeta him ""'°'*' In • murder. ( 1 hr~ 30 ~.) a:aq • * * * "Slnoing In The Rain" (tll62) Oel'9 l(elly, Debt* Raynolds. An actOf at1elTlpft to make Ille.,_ tltlon "°"' anent flltM 10 lhe ''tallclet .. (1 tw .• 30 min.) .. i .. l ABC's 'That Thing' l ' Sho~~ 'Skituation' ~ Makes Bow Tonigij -By JAY SllARBUTr ( __ · _w_RE_n_EW __ ] tos ANGELES CAP > - "Firal came Laugh-In. Then came Saturday Night Live. Now the wac:kiesl cc:imedy hour of all is here," burbles lbe network ad. The network is ABC. However, a gtheood moment Its ad urges us to watch such escapes now and n. One is a as Cheryl ("Charll4:'S Angels") reporte on a monster calle<fBig.: Ladd and John ("Three's Com· squat, which has terrified a rural pany") Ritter tonight at son a town by. lumbering about ,and one-hour special called "That sitting on his victims. Tbl ABC "Ch l Grouses a farmer: "Hall m' ng on • anne 7· noc was nattened. Tbey looked Each star appears for less la'ke bi" furry P ...... akes." Im· than a minute. Eaeh does one • ... "" joke by phone. You .uu me an possible. a scientist says, tests ; HOSTS OWN SHOW Jim Nabors Other guests on the debut week will be Erma Bombeck. Jim Stafford, Ruth Buzz.l, Bob Barker, Tony Orlando, Tom Bresh, Bob Eubanks, Sonny Bono, Susan Anton, Lawrence Hilton.Jacobs, Bonnie Franklin, Chuc k Woolery a nd Tom Dreesen. The Jim Nabors Show will be tel ecast Monday throug h Fridays from 5 to 6 p.m. , THEIR THING -Among the performers on "That Thing" tonight are (from left, front) Deborah Zon, Paul Tracey, Shelley Long, Will Porter, Denny Evans and Judy Carter; rear, Andrea Martin, Mandy Patinkin and Marsha Warfie ld. easier way to be a star and I'll show it takes at least 400 pounds do a fan dance at high noon in pressure per square inch "to J the Brown Derby. squat an average mouse.·· , "T~G" IS A series or skits BUT FOLKS ARE terrified.-, and Monty Python-like cartoon the reporter notes. arid .. iii bltl. Composed by five writers. Decatur County, Idaho, picnl~ it is not the wackiest comedy are a thing of the pasL" Sesame Street Goes Hawaiian Television's .. Sesame Street" pays an unusual visit to the Garden Island of Kauai in · Hawail tor five programs to be aired on consecutive days begin- ning Monday, Jan. 16, on KCET, cbannel28. . Preschool viewers of the popular educational series wUJ see Bil Bi.rd and his MUPPet and human palg from the street make their first airplane lourney to new adventures and eal'Jling experiences in a mulU- cultural society against backdrops of the Paciflc coast and mOWttains. Televiston·~ largest fantasy character, Snuffle·upacus, makes the trip with Bi& Blrd, Oscar the Grouch. Mr. Hooper (Will Lee ), Marla (Sonia Manzano), Bob (Bob McGrath> ·and Olivia (Alaina Reed). Their' host is singer Buffy Sainte· Marie, a regular gueat on Sesame Street who lives on Kauat. "GOING TO BAWA.II is very good for the show because it is a multi-ethnic society where many lessons can be taught about race, color and cultural diversi- ty;• says Jon Stone, executive producer. "It also bas an ocean· oriented milieu that we've never bad on the series." Many Hawaiian children participate in the shows. Three of them are direct descendants of King Kaukualii, the last· reigninJ monarch of Kau&_;i (In the e(ll'ly 19th Century) and two are directly descended from the noted King Kamehameha, who roted the island until his death in 1819 .. By coincidence, the protrams will alr during the 200th an· nlveraary of tbtt landlna ln Hawaii by Captain James Cook, but most of the segments deal with the Jore and traditlold of, the islands that predated the Western presence, and with Hawaiian culture today. hour of all, alt.bough it does beat Trouper Ma-ha Warfield also "Love Boat" for laughs. ·"' It's malnly ful~ efforts does a good solo, raising ques. of nine young t.roUpen relatively lions we'd all like answered. i new to TV. Two of them, Shelley Like: "Where does Ralph Nader:_ shop?", Long and Denny Evam, co-he»t They start lt with two in· IT ALMOST works, but as thlncs. J troduclloos. In the second, with most everything in tbe Evans takes a pratfall off at.111e. show, the '°Tblng" troops pusb Jt may make Chevy Chase cry, too hard and lack the split.I .. Author! Author!" second timln1 that makes the l · dlUerence be\ween a weak OTREa IKIT8 are equally El· dluckle and a belly laup. ~ Bombo, ·namely those concern· inl women•s makeup, eon-You allo get the feeling ABCt fldence·bulldtng, a Civil hired Bipquat to sit on routln8'! War romance. a chat wltb lohn the troopJ thought funnier tbaa Camercin Swayze, a tennis match what actually wound up tn tht{ andasilentcomedyt'ilm. show. I ' --""' ... ,.,,, ·. ' ENTERTAINMENT I MOVl~S · Wedneeday, January 4' 11r78 DAILYPCLOT 87• ·, Death Daunted Entertain•ent WoPid~ in· 197~ ) • By BOB THOMAS HOtLYWOOD CAP >-~From the roclc 'WGrld to opera, from films to tele~ion to the lei1Umate theater, t6e entertainment scene auffered an ·un· common number ot traalc deaths in 1977. Show bualneu biltorians cannot recall a year in whicll more lwntnarles died... · ~ longtime Hollywood observer offers this ex- Si Zentner.Preparing planation: "The 1930s and 19'08 brou&ht an ex- plosfon -dl taleiirtr movi&r, ra4lo, lbeater and ~\ll•r mustc. Tile ,stars of that era· ant ~ in thetr 608 and 708 or older, so the Dumber of proml· nent deaths naturally 1eema hlcber ... BUT THERE WEBB DBATB8 of younger perfor~ as well Freddy Pd.me. star of TV"s . , .. Blowing Horn for NJ Casinos ' "The lut mtrHle I did wu tile t9e9 Mets. Before that I tlltnk you llave to 10 back to th' Reel sea. That was r .... lltJ..~· . • . '"ChlC9 acl the van.·• was on1122 when be sbot himself-bl Id» 1* Aqelllr apa11ment Jan.-29.- Tbree memben Of tbe Lynard Stynard rock group, leader Bonnle Van Zant and Casale and Steve 9a1!1ei1 were lcWecL when lbeir c:Jaartered plane ciunea ln lllulatpDl Oct. a. - ElYil Presley, wbo revolationlnd popular maatc 1D tbe-Imel, 4led of a ta.ft ataaek at~ iD h1a Mempbls home. au.a dled after Joa• and brUllant careers . The screen•s sreateat comedian. Charlie Chaplin. at 88 wa the vlctlm of old age at bla home near Lake Geneva, Swltsei'land. The inimitable Groucbo M~ suffered a long decline until his deathat88. . ". . . . , , . .. OAIL V PtL.OT Wecfneedav. Jamwv 4, 1971 AndNaw a Bad Word/or Our Spousa.,, . . . Mon.-Frl. 7:00 9:30 •• ··-Ill'""-114.AHO lllW'°'1' C£NTD M"fWHll McAlmtUll ANO ~I AT ,ACWIC COAIT HIO)tWAY NoMIJN • The Fever is Spreading MOW PLAYING ... ... ~ .......... -•. .-an l'OWf .... fA&UT ~ ................ ,. . .,. .. ... --c•U'Vlf JI •••••••••••••• J7J~I OU. ... . OU. .... MAU .......... Uf.,41 ..,, __ C:-4 ...............••. .,... ... ---c-.. .. , .. _ .. __.19Mofti CO~lf4 ... -I.A_.. .................... -... •a•...,. --SY-9.1. .................. ,... """••at 11ens.iou •..•••• .u1111-..." 5.• ,:;F..io I; !:s~:-m:~ ~ IUWIHSI flliU&&.aa COSTA lfeSA UA SO. COAST 540-0594 ORANGE CtNEDOME 634·2553 ... ... ENTERTAINMENT I HY GARDNER "THE PINK PANTHER STRIKES AGAIN'' PUJS (PG) "ANNIE HAU." • INSIDE: •Featuring ... •Ann Landen •Club Cale~r •Horosc.- Code Number !V~vearPlant \ 1976 Month Date November l7th Bottom of package Year 1977 Plant Date 10th Month October CA»Q.e ' ' Breakers . If you've ever wondered4t tf}at ~an of . S()Up · is f till good, the answer is right on the can ....:_ in code. , . BY LOUISE COOK ~ ............ Have you ever wondered if that can of 1reen beans stttJng in the cl~et lHUll good? Or tried to figure out-.Ow Jong the aoup oo the supermarket atiell bas t.D around? • · The answer "debt on the etn -U you know· bow to read the code. Food dating c:oc1es uaually indicate when a product was packed or wben i\ •hould be sold by. Tbey may appear on the ~t ~ or aide of -tlre,,roduct.-They may-b&-emGOIMG,-.anped~-­ ptinted. They consist or numbers and letters and should not be confused with the Uni•ersal Product Code, a series of thick and thin lines de- signed to be used with electronic acannen to identify a product and its cost. Efforts are under way in some areas U> force manufacturers to date their products in an easily understood WJY, To call attention to the problem, the New York State Consumer Protection Board recently published a guide, .. BliJ)d Dates: How to Break the Codes on the Foods You Buy," based on a su;,-vey of 84 food companies. Some codes are relatively easy to figure out. Several companies, foe example, indicate the day of the year with a th°ree dilitnumber. A lbt· lng of 001 means Jan. 1 -the flrJt day of the year; 002 l.s J"an. 2; etc., throulh 36S'-Dec. 31. Other codes are based on letten: A ls January. B is February, etc. Note: A few codes allo cover things like where a product was packed. In complliDg its guide, the board said it ln· eluded lnfonnaUon It believed would be most helpful~ consumeta .. u left4utcompanla which provided eodes only for candy, gum or soft drl~k1. ProductA..marked with an "open·• date, not m code, also were omitted. • , The board printed more than 100,000 copies of its guide, but ran out quickly and, said a spokesman, does not have the money to print more. Here ls a list of the companies and products ln"'"ded ln the book, tbe codes used as of Sep· tem ber 1977 and what they mean: BA.KER· BEECH NUT CORP. Datini policy: Products coded with packing date. ., Shelf life: Company says products good for at least two years after coded date. Sample code: first four digits: '1115. Seven refers to year -1!111; next two dtaita refer to week -11 means 11th week or the period from March 13through19; 5 refers to day of the Wffk -Friday.' BMTIUCE FOODS CO. -LOUIS SHEllllY ICE CREAM CO. INC. ... Datina policy: Product.I coded with paek.ID1 date. · Shelf Uf 4': Company aays lee cream eood for 3 to 12 months after codM date. Sample code: CJI. lTndu this eode, A II I, B Is 2, C is 3, Dis 4, Els 5, F ls 6, G ls 'f, H la 8, I ls 9 and J is 0. First leUer refers to month -March, third month. Last two letters refer to day -09. BEATRICE FOODS CO. -SBEDD'S FOOD PRODUCfS . ' Dating policy: Products coded with packing date. _ Shelf life: Company 511ys peanut butter and prune juice good for at least one year alter coded date. Sample code: 056L7. Numbers before letter r efer to date -Feb. 25. the 56tb day of the year. Letter refers to the plant where the item wu packed and last number refers to year -1971. BORDEN INC. Dating policy: Only Kava Instant cof1ee II coded; compaQy failed to provide lnformation about code; conaumer board said it wu paclln1 date. Shel/life: Company says Kavacoodlor five years after coded date. Sample code: 6203. First number refen to year -1976; last three numbers refer to date - July 21, the 203rd day or the year. '· BRISTOL·MYERS CO'RP. W.W. APPL& SNACKS Dating policy : Producta coded with packin& date. r Shelf life: Com&>any claims product ,nu not eetslale. Sample code: 6C10SA4. First number refers to year -1976 -followed by plant, date -April 1', the ll5th day of t.be year -sbl.ft and produe· Uon line. BROOKE,BOND FOODS INC.. ' Dating pOllcy: CompaD¥ did nOt ~pond to request for informaUon; board sais producta are coded and identified cod& on Reil Rose Tea u • packing date. • Shelf life: No lnform•tlon immded. Sample~e: 1596. i'int three dl&ill refer to date -June 7, the 159tb day or the year; la1t digit indicates year -1976. BUITONI FOOl>SCOaP. Datin.a policy: bod~ coded with packing date. • Shell llfe: Compan1 says frozen foods '-without sauce 1oo4 tor eight monthl; froien food.I with sauce eood for one-,»ear; pasta pro- duct• 1ood for at least ooe ~ar; 1pa1betti aauees and c_. foods 1ood for •l least three years Samt* code: Cll7 .. lAUer cona))ODda to month; A II Janurt, a II February. C lJ March, ~ .• uatou0 L for DlcQlbv. Nest two nu•bers ref er to date -tbt Jab -and lut number pro- videa year-1*11. CPCIHTEAINC. DatWr potJcy: a No 8tSCt Cooklnc SpraH ArlO, and DDr7ea ~ eoded~JtMltiac•• Jlt8: ~, '~~lluo&a No aid IOOd tor clM ~ tCWI'. ~ --~ l)t'OtecUan bout --...,wt .. for corn Nrchel. ~ • ... ~.#ife~~ -\ln?i..~ • o"......J._ P: ·~.t~:'.:l"..d!f ~~con .urdlll llilt _. ta: \; D;'flilttWo ..... i't'*'td~.... ~ : ·iiY-:q: .. ..,.. ~P' ....... I. ' "sell Month September Top of can T2 PS 9L7BPX Date loth. 16th Year 1977 .. - a I .~ I ~ .. t· I It , ' I ,,. 1 ( Cranberries and cheese team together. Team Up Cheese; ·Cranberries Cr anberries and cheese are avorite foods that are naturally :ood on their own, and when oined together they make a lavorsome, versatile team ·omblning in dishes that cross he recipe gamut from soup to lessert. The sweet and tart ·ranberry in relish, sauce and lrink blends well with cheeses ·anging in taste from mild to obust for a variety or recipes hat are pleas ingly unique. CRANBERRY CHEDDAR CHEESE SOUP WITH CHEESE TOAST 14 cup butter or margarine I large onion, chopped 1h cup minced celery 1 teaspoon salt · 1~ teaspoon pepper 4 eggyoks I cup (4 ounces) Krated Swiss or Cheddar cheese 4 egg whttes, stiffly beaten Sance: 1 tat,lespopn _ butter or margarine 1 small on.ion, chopped 1 can <8 ounces> whole berry cranberry sauce 1 cup thick applesauce . I ~ I 1h cup chopped celery leaves If.I cup all-purpose flour 1 can (10~ ounces ) ondenud chicken broth. ndiluted In a large saucepan, rpelt butter and slowly stir In flour until smooth. Stir in salt, pepper and egg yolks. Add cheese and stir over low heat until cheese is melted. Cool for 20 minutes. Fold in egg wh1t~ and spoon carefully into a l·quart soume diah tied with a collar of foll 2 inches h1th. Bake in a preheated moderate oven C350 degrees F .) for 40 to 45 minutes or until puffed and brown. While souffle is baking, heat sauce ingredients untU bubbly. Serve souffle at ond with each serving topped with some of lbe bot sauce mixture. l quart milk l 'h cups cranberry juice ocktail 1 bar (10 ounces) sharp 'heddarcheese, grated Salt and pepper Cheese Toast: 6 slices French bread, l lnch 'lick . l cup shredded Swtss or , ruyerc ch<'csc : In a Outrh oven melt butter to nrl cook onion. celery and leaves or 5 min utes . 'i t1rring , ccasionall ,\ Stir 1n flour. radually stir in t·hick<>n broth. hen mtll. C'ook. '>l1rring onslanll,\. ''' .·r lim heal. until oup bubhlt•., ;.ind thickens 1 lightly SIO\~ly -.t1r in cranbert} d u1ce and t'h<'<•sc. Heal. slirrinf( onstanlly. until soup is smooth •nd cht>C!-ic 1s melted. Season to astc with salt and pepper Pour oup into heated bowls or tureen. 'heese Toast. Sprinkle toast vlth cheese and broil unlil heese melts. Place cheese toast •n soup. Serve at once. CRANBERRY CHICKEN PARMESAN 6 bone less and skinless :hicken breasts, halved Sall and pepper 1 egg, well beaten . l lh cups Italian flavor bread :rumba Oll, ~Inch deep 12 cup cranberry-orange t·elish 2 tablespoons instant minced mion l cup t.omalo pizza sauce l package <8 ounces ) Mozzarella cheese, cul Into II ->lices, then halved lengthwise 13 tablespoons grated Parmesan cheese<~ cup> Sprinkle chicken pleees wltb salt and pepper and pound li&btly to make pleces Y.I inch thick. Dip chicken into •H and then tnto crumbs, llrmly pre11Jn1 crumbs in,&o oblcltell to mak• tbttn adhere. FrY cblcken tn a 12·bach skillet in tiot oil unUl ~rown oo both aides. Place fde4 cbickeit ln lar1e aballow bald.D• pu,· aide l>Y llde. In a bowJ, mJx cranberry-oran1e r9ll•b, ob.ion and plua sauce. Spoon ml~• over fried chicken, coverinl ,acb pl.ce comp\etely, ~Ol' each chlck•n . pl.co 1rilb a 11lce ot Moasarella c.bMMI Sprlnkl• each wttb 1 tabletpoon 1rated Parmesan ch"5• and bike .tn a preheat'34 bot ovell (400 delfee F.) for 10 to lS mlnO~• or untU Jlptly brOWiied. l . CHErf3t1~E ~ CllA .... YAPPLE8AUCE SMftll: ' cup battftor ma.r1linne ~all·~floer lt4~JnUk .. CRANBERRY ORANGE CHEESECAKE Crust: 11 2 cups graham cracker ('rumbs 2 tablespoons sugar 1 ~ ('Up m elted butter or margarine Filling: 2 pa('kages !8 ounces each J r r eam chcc~e. ut room I cm pcratun.• 2 cup~ 11 pound 1 creamed colt age chc<'sc 11 z cups sugar 4 egg!i Grated nnd and Juice of l orange 1 2 cup all·PUJ1>0Se flour 1hcup heavy cream Topping: l cup cranberry-orange relish 1 cup well drained crushed pineapple Dash each clnnamon and nutmeg Garnish with oranae peel, optional · In a bowl, mix crurnbs, sugar and butter. Press mlxture firmly and evenlY onto bottom and sides of a 9-inch s prtngform pan. In another bowl, beat cream cheese· and cottage cheese until smooth. Gradually beat in cream. Pour ·mixture Into prepared pan. Bake in a preheated moderate oven <350 degrees I for J hour and 20 minutes or until golden on top and firm to touch. Cool and then chill for several hours. In a bowl. mix remaining ingredients and cblll. When ready to serve, run a spatula around the outer edte of the cheesecake and remove aide ot pan. Spoon crpberry mixture around outer edfe of top of cake and a mound ln the center of the c;ake. Garnish center mound wtth petl,l1 cut from strips of oran1e pe ; tf desired. . ' • CABBAGBANDti:ANIALAl> 8 Jlf ces bacqn · ... .. • ~ps cabb&at cut ln lq tblb Jbl'eds t can (28 ounce•> JKN"k aad beana with tomato sauce i.4 cup vJne1ar . 2 tablesppoooa au11t I.n aldllei, cook bacoia until, crt.sp: remove and crumble. In drlpptn11. cook cabb11e until te2'd•r. Add r•snalnln1 tn1re- dJtDtl tllcept becon. Heat; 1Ur occHto•ally. Garnl1~ wllti bacon. Makes about 4 cupe, a• .ervtnp. Short OD tlm• beCaUH •. of holiday •~T Build a 1-..p-, perm eou &J'!MlM: · YOUHG TEMDER POsmt OR BCD flMMS FRYI• I IOMIEL!SS . BEEF ROAST · __ au BEEF LIVER FRESH . 59c SLICED lb RUMP ROUHD CLOD 1~' IJ.I59~ ""-------------------------"' FtlHH IHF CHUCK GROUND BEEF 31 '' IOUMD IOHI . 109 NottoExceect30%Fat lbs · BEEF ROAST • IAR-M 89 FAlMll JOHM SLICED BOLOGNA. :. WIENERS JIMS RAMCH· Flt!SH LAltGI HADE M 6 c 89: AH1HOMYS ... 1°' BREAST ·. • DUIUfi)UE COUNTIY MAID BACON '' oz. ··~· 259 150%. 4o' s1· CAN ' R SPAGHDTI I LI. PKG. SPRINGFIELD IEA .. S PINTO nl 150%. CAN s'•o::•ELD BEAMS 's oz. KIDNEY nl CAN .... _, ..,.,._ ·~ kllNS TOMATOES ,ALMOl.IVI DiSRW' ~111HG DETER GEii 32 01. 303 CAM AUMT JEMIMA I REGULAR PANCAKE DEL MONTE SWEET AURORA. TOILET TISSUE 49c I l r • I f l cl bt le le w. OD sa in1 or dr dr. oli ba; ml eel pl m t -PJ• P•l :1.~ &o n FOOD ; Try :runa Custard Pie :,. Tbe opuleclce of tbe tilev.ork •ecorating sidewalks, houses and palaces. isn't the only fa.sclnatinc upect of Portugal. ,The cuisine, too, displays a ncb and vaned inheritance -from l'rance. and from other countries i)f E\lrope, Asia and Africa wtuch S>order I.be Mediterranean. Portugal is truly the land of .. allora and fishermen. Fish and 4eafood are the cornerstone of its cuisine. And, even more than m Spain, egg;; accompany or are in- corporated Jnto all kinds of re· cipes. As a matter of fact. pud- dings and custards are an impor- tant part ol lhe table · -and it 1s only natural that these appear in main dishes, as well as desserts. One of these is a seafood custard pie, which the Portuguese call Alun E Ovos D<T Paralso. A relative of the French quiche, elegant 1n eye and taste appeal, it is sturdy with high pro- tein nutrition -and fillin~ enough for rueced types. It is also a special occ~ dlab t.bat. is pleasantly frueal in cost, especially when made, as 1t 1s here, with canned tuna in vegeta- hle oil. • While the French counterpart 1s served unadorned. this Portuguei.e cµat.ard ple is em· belbshed with a rich sauce or eegplant and tomato. lo which there js a wQ.isper of farllc and herbs. It's a luscious contrast. or colors and navora. Anyone who bas traveled in Portugal and other Mediterra- nean cOWltries knows that twia 1s to be round regularly on restaurant menus, as well ~ in home cookery. J'Jot only 1s Jt u popular Ingredient on its own 10 authentic redpes but it doubles beaulifully tn "t11an$1atiQna" from other classics which call for more expensive seafood ingre· dients. POR'nJGUESE TUNA CUSTARD PIE 1 unbaked 9-inch pastry ,bell 4eggs l '12 cups light cream or halC· and·half J,~ teaspoon salt ~teaspoon Tabaseo pepper sauce . 2 cans (6~ or7 ounces eachJ tuna in vegetable oi~ '~cup shredded Swiss ch~se 2 tablespoons chopped c hn es Bake paatry ahell in 42S"F. oven about S minutes. unW set but not brown. Beat together the egis, cream. salt and Tabasco. SUr in tuna, Swiss cheese and chives. Turn into partially baked pie shell Bake in 350 degree oven for 4.0 minutes or until Up or knife Ulaerted in center or tnling comes out clean. Remove from oven; let stand 10 minutes before cutting mto wedges. Serve with Egg· plantSauce•. Yield: &servings. / *Eggplant Sauce ,, 2 tablespoons salad oil · 11,. cup chopped onion l small clove garlic, minced 2 cans (8 ounces each> tomatouuce 1 medium eggplant. pared andcubed(about4cups> 11.4 teaspoons salt 2 teaspoons sugar l teaspoon dried Jeat bull ~ teaapoon dried leaf oregano 14 teaspoon dried leaf tar· rag on Heat oil in medium.saucepan. Add. omoa and garlic; cook until tender. Add remaining ingre· dlents; bring to a boil. Reduce heal and simmer. covered. Jor 20 minute~ . :t. Tuna Rataouille ' for a budget dinner. Tuna Ratatouille Is Meal-in-One In the southeast of France, bordering on the s apphire -co lored Mediterranean Sc3, is the re~ion ca lled Provence. Here they make a dish ca lled Ratatouille. a most sav ory m<'dley of vegetables onion. zuc· chini, eggplant. tomato with whispers of sweet herbs. To this cl ass1c combinallon. you add de hcateJy.navorcd tuna, to convert it into a delecta- ble main dish. one of the best buys today in main dish foods. Whal docs "Main dish food" mean? H's a food that has complet<' prot ein, the body·bu1lding nutrit•nl that 1s mdispcnsahle in the d1cl. TUNA RATATOUILLE 1 1 cup butter or margarine l garlic clo\ c, mashed 2 medium onions. thinly s!Jced 2 small zucchini, sliced 1 small eggplant, cubed 1 teaspoon Accent 1 teaspoon salt 1 ~ teaspoon dried leaf oregano l can 05 ounces> tomato sauce with bits 2 cans <6 1 ~ or 7 ounces each l tuna 10 vegl'tahlc oil Tuna Custard Pie with eggplanMomato sauce. JEN04S 'PIZZERIA STYLE SAUSAGE PIZ7A ~9SLICES ~ ' Though the dish is gourmet in every way, it's a country "meal· in-one" and the cost is low. That is because oanncd tuna is 1 4 teaspQOn pepper lll'at huttt'r 1n 11 large ~kllkt Add garlic and onion and cook until onion 1~ tC'nder. but not bro" n I.ayt•r r<'maining 'egt•tables m skillet. sprinkling eaeh layer with A9'ccnt, salt. pepper and oregano. Add tomato sauce. Cover. Cook over low heat 15 minutes. Add tuna and cook 5 to 10 minutes longer. until vegetables are tender. Yield: 4. to 6 sen in gs. They're Gems 4 tablespoons olive oil 2 large tomatoes egg. then in crumbs. In a large skillet, adding the oil as ~ed. Cry the egg- plant until tender and browned. Cut each tomato into 4 slices. In a foU·lined shallow pan place •gplant slices In • single layer and w~ll apart; io., 1Vith tomato, cheese and bacon. Bake in a preheated 350· degree oven unW cheese melts and bacon 11 crilp -about 10 mlnutee. 9CUTS ABOVE THE REST! ~ slices cheddar che~e 8 long strips bacon, cul in half crosswise and partially cooked Rinse eggplant but do not peel; cut eight ~­ intb Ulick slices trom the JENO'S BRINGS YOU THIS SUPERB QUALITY SLICED PIZZA-THE KIND THAT'S AVAILABLE ONLY AT YOUR FAVORITE PIZZERIA •. PIZZERIA STYLE PIZZA SAU- SAGE, CHEESE OR ASSORTED -NOW IN YOUR GROCER'S FREEZER •... AT A '-CONSIDERABLE SAVINGS TO YOU! I ....... i .... J. ~ -' . ~ ! . ..• J . _, \ With ~ tlme to f\lll l'wfn1 -aacf the Ctr lace aeuon dead nhud -it'• time to talk abo 'ut Lbe wal1twatcber'1 m oat ulorle1ate anack: pop. c-orn. Even the two- tisted snack-snatcher flnda lt hard to scoop up more than ~ calories worth at once! Gou....et By Barbara Gibbon• -lo use up the 1as. An<1 <You have to move a lot you Jtave to move your to use up fooda with lots body Lo uae up calories. of calones. Some foods have 10 much food ruet -aave1 the f\lel by tum.lag calories -that lt'• it Into exceu tau almOll lrQP051lbJe to uae So tboat unwanted lt au upl ), bulle. are notblnt more If a ear'• cu tank ls than the extra tee cream full of au. you can't P.Ul you ate lut week or lut In an{. more. But tbe month. body ditrerent. You How to cet rid ot those can ALWAYS eat more! bul1es7 Eat IHI food What tbe bodl doe• with fuel than you need Loday extra too fuel -so your body ls forced to calories -1' save them run itself on the food fuel for latet in cue there'• stored up in the excess no food tcmorrow. And it fat. And be more active .. FOOD .... More walklna. runnlna foods AftE low in you eat httb·calorte and blke rldin~ helpa use calories: fresh tndts and tood1, you canJ•ln up more calo ea. ve~etables. lean meats, welaht -and 1 be. But 10Jng hunary or ch cken, flsb, atcim milk, hun1ry and tlred! akipplnc meals tsn't the low-tat cheese. If you eat answer, because foo<I nourlthlnc, low·calorie The way 1 "take tb• hu more than calories. foods. you can lose c.lorles out ot .-.cJpee" You need vitamins, wet1ht without being is to 1« rid al, « M minerals and other bun1ry or tired. down ::I in1rtdJeDU nutrients to keep you On the other hand, hlah in oric• -tbJaf. healthy. Fill up on foods some bJ&h·calorte roods like sugar, fat, stare , hJab lo nutrients, but low are low In nutrients: Oil, butler, Crease - in calories. cakes, candy, cookies, while leav~D tbe Many hl&h nutrient sweets, mtcka, aodas. lf nourlabint. fooda. Consider this: Plain popcorn is lesa than 30 ca lorles a cupful <and you'd need two hands cupped to1ether to col· lect that much at once.) Oil-popped la about ~ calories. Buttered pop· corn? That depends on who does the buttertna. but even so, it's rarely more than 100 calorie• ~ cupful, and less fatten· in1 tban ·most alternatives. Differing from chips and dippers, popcorn ls ''self· contained." lt 1ioun't collect calories in the form of cheese spreed or sour cream dip on its way from lhe cocktail table to your mouth. Popcorn is even high fiber! Popcorn Is more than a spectator snack, ·you A1WAYS ·SAVI! it's something to do ' Popcorn-making is fun for all ages. Popcorn Is an unpretentious, friend· ly feod that goes best with fireside floor· sltllng. Speaking of fireplaces, that's the least fattemng place to make popcorn ... in I one of th ose wire baskets specifi cally de· •1 signed for popping <·orn. No fati. or oil!. needed I POPCORN WITll LIT· t TLE O H NO l"J\T You can :,till makl' 1>011corn with \ery little• l or no 1 fat <1dded The hest apphaOC"t• •'- <1n el<'l'lrtl' 1·or n 1>11pµer dei.1gned for tht· Joh chooi.e on<' w11h a non· stick fini~h to minimize tht> risk of <.,licking or burning There a re rti odels with a revolving 1nne>r arm lo keep the J(erncls moving as they Jiop ... better yet! Lacking a com pop· per, choose a big, heavy, deep pot with a nonstick finish. lt should be cov· <'red with the lid slightly nff center. That allows 1 he steam to escape and 1.1revents sogginess. To make popcorn with little or no fat, spray the ins1<lc well with cooking spray for no-tat frying. If you wish, add one tablespoon <no more is needed 1 of cooking oil ~not butter or margarine). Add two or three kernels or corn a nd turn heat blab. When the kemelS" pop, add one-halt cup fresh popping corn. Shake the pot or pop. per to keep the corn moving. When the pop· ping stops, it's ready. Empty popped corn Im· m€'diately into a bowl and season with salt or butter-flavored salt (no huller needed I. SEASONED POP· CORN --tr )OU prefer, sprinkle the hot popcorn with garlic s alt , 'leasoned s~1lt, hickory· s moked sa lt <or ~alt 11ubslitule, for folks on low-salt diets 1. Everybody talks about calories, but lots of peo· pie don't know what to do about them! Some peo· pie don't understand what they really are, so let me explain as simply as I can. Calories can't be seen or touched. They're not llkq the seeds in a grape or the peel of an orange you can throw away. ··calorie" ls Ju1t a measurement word, like the words "mile" or "minute." A "mile"lellJ you how far. a "minute" tells you how long. What does the word "calorie" tell you? It tells you how much energy or "food tuel" )'OU can get from a cer· tain food. Your body runs on food fuel, Just aa •.car nma on auollne fuel. You need food fuel t o 1tay alive, move around, keep warm °' irow. Two "TwtnJdea,. have 10 tlmet more food fuel than a handful of ll'•JMll, 10 we can say tha\ the .. Twinkle•" have UO calories and the arapes only 32. Now, 1lnce you Med ood fuol, you mtaht lbln k that the more 1 nloria food bas tbe bet· •wr. Nottruol Simply eatlna calorlt111 ... ••tooct fuel" -d~'t ••an that your bodJ Will ... it all up any more Cban Puttlnl IH in 1 car •nee tt 10. You have to' eove the car -drlv~ I~. WITH srArlR BROS. LOW-iow PRICIS CllHK 8TARll U08 ..... , y c•n•••• .... •tt•CIA1S A •m·llll'LI 79• muu -· ~ uac MAaAIRQ •tuUn .... n ........ .., fYt•Y"l.CI Ol MfAf I\ fiNCONOUtt)H.Alf. Y OUAllllANftf 0 101"\lA~ t(IO M'f(>UMM()M_Y *~' Ot t ••ttlfUHt•lf,l'ftfOtO 1un1,.110• • •w .... 11u• llK"lD WNCHION MlA TS !~~' OIC•ll"AVlll•&Hr llOV .. DOA~Aftt s1 •• VARIETY PACK 1101 ,..~ • • lA s1 1• <lllMt <llOll .. TURIOT FILLET ,, .... "llOlf" CATJISH l• s1 at II '1 '' l• $1 1' -1' ~H CK AST CHUCI STUK . .. 1.11 1tll'•L,OllOHHO $149' IUB STIAK I t Hlr •LO"' $119 T ·BONE STEAK . •• PORni.t'ouSE l• $19 5 a1u • L<ltlf. •UH. '°'4LIH $1 " TO' SlllOIN . .lt .... SHOULDIR C •S!f.!' LB . s1 2 ! ··~ 'i • -..... -., ... ~ ..... --,. .,oll! • I ' .. ' . . w.dnelday, January 4, 1878 DAILY PILOT ca TBsty, Economy Dinner Jl you are a bodaet- mtDded a-bopper with an eye toward ta1Ly, ecoaomlcal meals, Banrian Stew will be a welcome -4cUdoa t.o ,-our m•u. Btcill 1ri&h l&ew· lnl beet, • perbape eut your owa &eef cubes from chuck steak, ao e..-elall1 1ood buy when offered.as a weekly apeelal at the eroce.ry sto~. The key to this aauerbrat.en·like stew is a combU>aUon ot raialns. vioeiear. apd an envelope of onioo gravy mix. Cnasb«t ~Pit. a freque:aU1 used iApe. d lent lo aalbeotlc sauerbrtl&eD. round out tbe aw..wour flavor. Unlike moet ate••· cbUDkl ot ntetabl• are conapleuou1l7 abant. Howewr, ratMr tban a. In• omlUed from the f9o clpe allolether. potatoes have aaaumed an un- uaual new position on top of the stew. They have been transformed lnlo delightfully dttferent potato dumplings. These dumplings are as easy to prepare as tbf/1 anddlc.lous. AD•· velope ol potato pancake mla, complete with 1ta OWD 1ea10DiDll, eJJmiD.tlia all the Ume-couumma won. . Stace tneat and potatoa are alrHdJ eombJ.Ded ID um dinner, a 1reea ftfetable, pum· bernlckle bread, and baked applm will com· plete 70'U' meal. BA VAIUA.N STEW 1to1~ pounds stew- ing beef or chuck steak, Clllincubes 1 tablelpoono1I Homemade yeast breads are special treat Breakfast Swirl "1td Bubble Ring ~ -Nothinf wanns a cold winter clay like the welcome aroma of hom emade yeast breads. Fruited Breakfast Swirl and Coffee Praline Bub- ble Rin g a r e two particula rly attra ctive coCfee cakes, to shar e with family and friends. The basic yeast dough for eithu coffee cake ts a moder11bed version of old·fasbioned potato Celery Has ·An Accent bread. However, tbfs l cup s ifted conrec· streamlined method Uoners sugar and 1/.a s implifies preparation teaspoon grou nd by using instant mashed nutmeg; beat unti I polalo flakes. creamy. Stir in. 1 cup FRUITED BREAKFAST SWIRL 6 to 7 cups all· purpose nour 1 cup mashed potato flakes chopped walnuts and the CUt·UP prunes. Glaze: Stir together until smooth 11>'2 cups sifted confectioners sug. ar and 2 to 3 tablespoons milk. 2 envelopes (-14 OZ; COPFEEPRALINE each) active dry yeast BUBBLE BING ltablespooosalt. 4 to 5 cups all· l 'h cupe water purpose flour lh cup milk l cup mashed potato lh cup sugar flakes mar~~P butte r or 2 envelopes <~·oz. MARINATED CELERY 2 egis, slig htly each) active dry yeast ITALIANO beaten 2 teaspoons salt 1 bunch celery c p Fill ¥.! cup water 2" quarts water · reamy rune · ~ cupmUk '111 mg <recipe below) l large onion, peeled Glaze (recipe below) H 1' cups firmly and left whole Combine 1~ cups of packed brown sugar 2 teaspoons chopped the flour potato flakes v, cup butter o r fresh p~lcy yeast, an'd salt in mixe; margarine, softened at 1 teaspoon dried lcar bowl. Combine water, room temperature thyme milk, sugar, and butt.er 1 ega, ~lightly.beaten S~t and pepper in saucepan; heat unW ~ c u P f 1 n e 1 Y I cup olive oil very warm. Add to flour chopped walnuts 1fJ cup fresh lemon mixture. Blend at low lh cup butter or juice (21emons> a peed, then beat a( maraariae, melted 2 tablespoons dried medium speed of electric 1 teapoon instant leaf bull mixer for 2 minutes. Add coflee powder 1 tablespoon pre· elfl• and 1 cup nour• Combine 1 cup of the pared JDUStard beat 2 mlnute1 at flour. potato flakes, 1 thspooo salt tdJ •oeed Stir ln yeut, and 1alt iA large 1 tomato, coanely m umdour · re-anlxer bowl. Combine chopped malnlng by band to water milk "11 cup of the Wash celery. Leave tnake 8 attff douab. brown suau, and '4 cup bunch whole and cut off Kneadonflouredaurface butter in saucepan; beat leafy portion : chop unW •mootb and aaUny, untJl very warm. Add to leaves.and reserve. Cook 8 to lO minutes. Let rlae flour mixture. Blend at whol~ celery bunch , lo warm place until lltht low apeed then beat at onion, parsley, thyme, and double in alze, 40 to medlumsPeecSolelectrlc 60 m lnutea. Prep are mixer for 2 minutes. Add salt aod pepper, in boil· Cteamy Prune Filling eao and 1 cup flour· beat ing water, ror 20-tninutes wblle dough Is rl1ing. 9 • • or until celery is tender, Divide risen dough 111 2 minute• at medium drain. Remove onion, thirds. Roll out one thlrd speed. Stir in enou1b ot drain a.{\d chop. Comblne on fl oured surface to 18 x remaining nour to make olive oil, lemon jui ce, 12.lncb rectantle. a stiff douab. Knead on bas il, mustard, and salt~ Spread with \ii the prune floured surface uolll mix tb(Jroughly. Place filling. Roll up, atartlDI smooth and 1atlny, 8 to celery bunch ln large wltb lS..lncbllde.CUtroll 10 minutes. I.At rile ln p las tl • b .J f • pour in ball lengtbwtae. Twlal warm place unW U1bt marinade aver celery the two bal"8 toptber. and doal:lle in 11.ze. 40 to and secure end of bas.' and form • rta• 00 well· eo mlmlta Dlvkle risen Place bag In shallow ireasecl cootie •lleet. doqb lnto walnat .. lle &>•n; rdrl&erate over· Repeat with remi•n•n• IMc& Combine remain· lll1bt. Combine ODlon. dou•b and Ill.Una. 1 0 bas l'6 c:up brown augar eeler1 1,ave1 and ln• three .rlllp. Letm~ wlth nuts and coffee. t o m at o • 0 • • • r , ,qlln until Ugbt and dou~ powder. Dip pieces of nfrll.....,~ ble lo 11ze. Bate la 350 d<>'!Sh tnt.o melted but- To Hne. remove de•ree oven 30 to 15' ~'\then ln brown au1ar ale.ry from baa to plat· minutes until deep mt;Xture. Place In well-ter. Meuure "4 oup iolden brown. Cool 1reued 10.lncb tube pan. marln*le and combine slitbtly then brush or or bundt pan. s .prinkle wltb °'*"· tomato mix· d l b 1 Wit.la any remainin1 nut \ure .put at ult loosely 1 Pre a w t I • z e · tnlxture and drinle with l>etwe'"' celery ribs. Makes3cotfe4lcakes. remain1D8 melted but· Oarnllh root end wllb • ter. Let riM again until tomato .... 11 tf desired. . Creamy Pnme PUUll'! Uiht and double tn 11H. To i"'epare tomato Cut 1 eup cooked, pitted Bake ln 350 derree oven •bell, ~tom• in balf, prunes into 1ma11 plece1. for IO to SS m!nutet, unUl .coo~t P'l1P• cut .Let 2 packaces (8·01. deep 1olden brown. Let s'awt<illf'b tdC• with each) cre1m ebeHo atand5m.lnulel; remov• kltebeltiPllan • 1harp 1ofton at room t•m· froDl p~ Maket l lar10 partlaalllllfa. »erature: comblno with eotteenne . • l~cupewater 1 enveJope (7 JI-oz.) onion tnVJ mix "11 cupralains ~ eup9tne1ar 2 tableepoaaa brown 1qar 4 1ta1eraaapa, Cl'Ulhedlntocrumb9 cut steak lDto cubes; brown lD oll ID large skillet or pan. Add water, cactenta of gravy mlx envelope, raisins. vlne1ar. and brown sug- ar. Cover; simmer 1 to l lh hours, or until lender, s tirring oc- casionally. S tir in gingersnap crumbs. Spooo potato dumplln1 batter on top of stew. Cover: 1lmmer 15 minutes' longer; ·until dumpll.np are ftrm. f t.o &aervmo. POTATO DUllPUNGS legg lhcupwater 1 tablespoon butter, melted 1 envelope (4 serv- ings) potato pa,ncake mix 1.4 c u p fin e l y chopped green pepper Lightly beat together egg, water, and melted butter. Add contents ol pota to pancake mix en· velope and pepper: let stand 10 minutes. Drop by spoooful.s onto bubbl· lng Bavarian Stew. 4 lo6 servtnp. Add flavor interest to dinner with BavBTian Stew. .. ·: .. ~-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------·· . 15 SO~on you can save · Scope. Pick one. While helping you fight bad breath, Scope9 obviously hasn't Jost sight of your budget. The attached coupon saves you 50¢ off the total cost when you buy any 2 bottles ofSa>pc in any combination shown. 1bat'san C1ltStanding buy on an ootstmding mouthwash. Because while Scope gets breath clean fike nntiseptic mouthwash, it leaves your breath smelling minty fresh. Not mediciney. So buy 2 bottles of Scope and save 50~ on the mouth· wash that leaves your breath minty fresh and nice. Scopcfllllts ............ without ..... '°" meclklM brutlt .. 6 oz. ilnd 12 oz. 6oz.and l~o:. \ I 12 oz. and 18 oz. 12 oz. and 24 oz. 18 oz. and 24 oz. 6 oz. and 6 oz. •' ,1 ,. ,I ·: '• ... '• " ,. ., •' .. I• ,, .. .. ,, I t l ' I : . .. '"' . I \ I -· ' DiTine Divan Spread Wb a tbe c:rowd Cook broccoli accord· eeJery curt., radl1he1 browned. about 3 plben •l y-our bom~ ln& t.o puckaee direc· and gberklns. Makes minutes. Makes 6 Hrv H'• 1ood to bave tJon•, undercooldn1 by2 abouUcupslilUng. in11, 2 halves each: or ... IOl'DcthiDa oo band tbaL to I' minutes. Drain well, V arla&loa1: Broiled. abouU cups filllna. .. ts quick aad euy ID pre-then cool. Mix broccoli, Opea-Faeed Broe coll Baked Broccoli Divan ~ paro yet rather apecial. cblck~n. celery, mayon· Dina Sanclwlcbes. Split Sandwiches. Mix ~ cup :... Sandwich tpreada of/er naise. 1herry or used I. 6 English MwCins; place grated Parmesan cheese thisopporiunity,uthere mustard. salt, and oobaking11heetandtoast tnto the filling and mt 8 are almost endless Worcestershire sauce. lightly on both sides. hamburger rolls. Wrap , possibllitleg for Spread on six slices oC Spread fllllng on mur-individually in creativity. bread; cover with re· Cina. using about 1,-.> cup alumlnum•foll and bake Broccoli Divan Spread malning 1.tices. Cul for each half. Sprinkle in preheated 350 degree , is a great variation of diagonallylnl04secUons with ~ cup grated for 20-25,minutes. Serve traditional chicken salad and secure each section Parmesan cheese. Broil h o \ . M a k e i. 8 tbal ia fast to fix and w i th a tooth p 1 ck . 6 inches from heat until sandwiches; or &ibout 4 ' .. .... FOOD OJopped broccoli combines with poultry fol" a aandwlch spread. J /i . ,l • I • ,ideal for drop-in guests. Garnish wllh carrot and bubbly and JlghtJy ,cups filling. ChQpped broccoli pro-~~~~~~~~~-=,--~--~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-,--~~~~~-----------~--~--~--------------------------~::~!.;fti:~~i~ Key BU.·y savings· on Lady Lee dllcken or turkey along , .~~fig~~ and Harvest Day canned goods 'You mieht say Jt takes the place of celery. , Jn additlon to being a , delicious crowd pleaser. this filling is also ·versatile •erved as a sandwich or as a dip ror crackers. If you prefer hot sandwiches. mix Parmesan cheese into the filling, spread on hamburger buns and bake. For a quick and . easy open faced , .sandwich, just s pread filling on English mu!Cin h alves or pita bread, sprinkle wilh Parmesan cheese and broil. Mugs or hot tomato soup, a tray of rclisbes and a pol of coffee are convenient extras to add to your spur-of -the-moment menu. BROCCOLI CHICKEN DIV AN SANDWICHES 1 < 10-ounce > pack<Jge froten chopped broccoli 2 cups chopped <·ookt'd d11cken or turkey brca!>l J .I C U p (' h 0 p p C d celery '~ l"UP m<J~onn<11..,c or salad drcsl.1n~ l tablespoon sherry <optional> l teaspoon Dijon- ::.lyle mustard 1 2 teaspoon salt •1.z le a s p o o n Worcestershire sauce 12 slices bread, plain or toasted It's All Greek w ll"s often s:ud of the convivial Greeks thal when a Greek meets a friend , they l:>ll down <Jnd cal. The same could be said of Americans who Jove to meet and chat over thick, juicy ham· burgers. Mix the two happy traditions \nd what do you get? Savory, yogurt-lopped Herbcd (i reek Bur~en,' You can USC the popular Gret•k meal. Jamb. or the i\merit•an favorill', bed. for the burgers. Eilht•r meat, with the special addition of quick or old fas hioned oats. will cook to juicy perfection. And when you bite into thl' burger, you'll savor <•II the ex· citcment of Greek seasonings: the fragrant thyme and oregano that abound in Grecian fields, GERBEDGREEK BURGERS Burgers: 11'2 lb. ground lamb or beef :i,. cup quick or old fashioned oal'l, uncooked :i~ cup plain yogurt 1 medium-sized onion, chopped 1 ·, c u p g r a t e d Parmesan cheese t egg, beaten 1 teaspoon salt l garlic clove. minced 1,2 teaspoon oregano leaves, crushed 14 teaspoon thyme leaves, crushed 14 teaspoon nutmet ~ teaspoon pepper 6 ViennabreadaUces Topplnc: l cupp1alnyogurt 1 cup chopped eucumber ~ cup chopped tomato 1"' cup black olive slices \.ii teaspoon ealt For bur.gen, comblnc •11 h'&redlent1 except bread; mix well. Shape to form alx h3·Jnch burg era. Broil about 4 ln· cbea (tom heat 4 to 5 minutes on each aldo or until deslred donenoaa. For topptnc, combln all insredlenblt m\"1"1 llaht.l)'. To 1erve1 place 1Nr1era on bread 1licea; •poon to_.Ppln1 ov• l>Dfaers. Sprinkle wlt ' m~panley, lf d Mlktlit1ervlnp. - At these low prices they have a way of jumping off our shelves. Dress up those vegetables: There's ~omeone m every household who Just won't eat their vegetables. ,, We suggest you try camouflage. Like mixmg chopped spinach with cheese At this ltme of year. when your budget fl'els like 11 !> down (or the long count. the color ,ind !>pc.1rkle lht1t our products can bring are cb welcome as the sdv\ng-.. So we'd like you to get to know them all. That'i. why we've worked with the growers and canners who pack products for us,·to provide promotlondl allowances on a re presentative selection ftom both llnes for this entire '-duce and spooning It Into scooped-out-~ato halves. Prepare It ahead and refrigerate ur frl't!c!c 11 1111 you're ready 10 serve 11. Tlwn warm it to ~rvmg temp in the oven. b!own 11 undl'r the broiler ... dnd it'll makl! an ordindry dinner look like pnrty-fare. On .1 ~1mpll'r notl' . ..i ~prmkhng of hard-bolled egg will guS!>y up nearly any vegetable. We know d lam1lv who adorei. (..hopped nui. in mixed veg1es. And of course. that old ~tandbv. the !>mal{ can of mushrooms c2n do wonders. too . Guaranteed Value Per Measure: When you shop with us, you can be sure the larger size of any canned or packaged product is always the better buy. And that goes for all the Lady Lee and Harvest Dav items. So leave your portable calcularor at home, and purchase only the size ••• of anything •.• that you need. Remember, there's no savings at an to your budget lf you month . You get a chance to feed your family, who-knows-how· many different cl111ners, by buying widely as well as wisely. use only half a can of something and the rest goes to ~fld:l!'ll'i1i-~'-......;.;.:,> waste. Get acquainted with quality: you'll be Impressed --11· -c-· \I\ I f.rtfe·-- .; - ~'*""' .......... _..;, ... -,i -----.... ~ • .I ~ Fresh Meat~ DUNGENE55 CRAB HU ~t 'WH ,.. jl (llA'•f I T-DONE STEAK OONOlD Ol If l -'·'' .. .98 !l 119 TOP SIP.LOIN STEAK 197 •11 r .J , ~ -., CROSS RID r~~t.0.~~'.:~~~ D(~'.. lO. 13 9 CHUCK ROAST Ill.A(){ CUT DON0tOm1r .. IU .68. CHUCK STEAK A f o,. If LAP.GE END P.ID ~TEAK LAP.GE END P.ID ROAH I •1 ft• TIP P.OA5T • ! .76 1.59 1.49 .. 1.56 ~~E~~.SHOUHD~TEAK 1 .26 TOP ROUHD STEAK I• •·•.H> "'' • ~I 1.66 POP.TEAHOUSE ~TEAK oc~OfOG1ll1flw •• l~ 1.69 SMOKED HAM SLICES ~ .. , ~ ,, ..... c-.a... .... 10 1. 96 OOMEl.llHTO/ING DEEF oo~ocoow . . •.... to. 1 .48 POP.K LOIN ROAST >"'•Oo'<COI , •••• lO. 1 , 29 POP.K LOIN SPAP.E AIDS COVWIMIM • • ••••••• LO. 1.26 POl'o.K LOIH CHOPS ,.. ... . ....... 11.1 .78 POP.K LOIH CHOPS ll•O(fl<O.,. •••• lO. 1 , 98 OKAP. MAY£R DA.CON i c& tO(h ., IN .J lA~Y.LEE SLICED. DA~?,~,, 1 .14 Dairy & Frozen L ~~HGE JUICE • 1.~H ..••. 43 b ~IJ>·O·TOPPIHG l IM? Ofl.E5SIHG "·r' • .4.:) I' GINOS OAG·O·PIZZA i 15 0 tMIU& • • • 1)01 PKG. • P KMMnLEPoS 0 ~ .. <.SIAA • ,,Ol~ .67 MUlfTIMOfOM HAc.f tNIO l ltOOI04U"tT t1'QIT •LA flllllAOA LA llllUD.t tHO#IHGI CINTP Canned & Packaged CLING . ;: PEACHES lAOYlCf 45 HALVl~ ~ll(!CJ ... '2Q0l C"N e !HAP.VEST DAY 37 TOMATOES '"',., ('41J • HARVEST DAY 21 PEAS . • • • I 1 01 (.Arl • .f'1ADYLEE b.~~~~~-O; OIL e 6 9 L ~~~TOMATO~t ..... 33 ! LADY.~EOPIHAC_H •H .. z.u~ _29 ! H~~':~ST~1AYCOP.~ '•~ •27 b ~~~~~~r DAY GP.E~~,~~~~29 l HAP.Vm DAY5LIC~~ DE~s.35 L ~DYLEESAUEP.K~~ '"" .29 b lADYlEEFP.UITCO~KTA~~ •• 3] P HARVEST DAY AAAICOTS 0 t1Ai4Vl\ • , , , #00/ CA•I .59 b ~D~.L~~TOMATO~)~~~~w .23 _t ~~~l.~E.!?.~!.~r,~ri .41 L ~o'..~~E APPl.E Jut~~·~ . 63 L ~~~-~~.!0~!.?.!~H .. H .49 L ~~~-~~~.~~P.ICOT~~R~P._59 l~~Ff~~-~~~1.69 ! LADY LEE CHILI 09 WHlf.t"-J MG t 1r •'!)01 C• .. 1 , P lAOl'U£ CHU,... KY SOUP 6 Olli (HICW< • 100/ CAH .57 l LADY~£ ~P.K u D,~~~~ ... 4 9 Household & Pet '•:>u..59 I' NICE N SOFT TOILET TISSUE b lU • f'll( ,l(C(Nf A\ I 14.H I h,.:;. • 7 9 1' DIXIE PAPE" CUPS .b >Ot . 1"'0tl "'G. 1 .06 r PUfl.EX DETEP.GENT 1 5"' 0 llO\IOll\ID. 72 Ot t.:lt • \J 1 ~D~~~ •• 6tOUOa 1.25 L ~~~~~."°'CAI' .33 b ~~1-GUAP.D Vil AMI~ ~ 1 . J 7 p MEDf-GUAP.D VITAMIN C 2 "9 0 ~""... , ·"' b ~W.1:.~UAfO -'10C<,,•.tl\I• c 1.47 ! KOPE MOUTHW A~~ 1 . 99 Delicatessen SLICED ·!BOLOGNA lAC>Vlf l Cl(lf 1"lAT . . . 170l P•.G .87 b ~~~~~=~E~E FOOD :l. 99 P MOZZAP.EUA CHEESE "'"''°'~ •oc,,,. ... ,1.79 r OL " VIP.GIHIA FAAH~ 0 Olll I • 7 5 b ~~t.~ ~,?~EP. PIC~E5 .,, • 85 b ~~HG~ORH CHEESE . 1 _89 r OAK COOKED HAM 0 >.J(.10 .,., 1.89 Liquor b ~AfJl~J~.!c ~!~~ o• 2. 99 LUCKY VODKA e'""OO< ............. er orL 3. 99 LUCKY DEEP. .............. '7/llCl Oil. 2 .09 Produce CHEP.fW .49 TOMATOES 12 OZ. OA!>KO • • • •. EA. FRESH .19 EGGPLANT SI.ICING 01\Jl\YING • LO. ITAUAN .29 SQUASH CXCCLLl NI OVA HY l[J D'ANJOU .29 PEARS U ~NO I 10 RED .39 GRAPES ~SFINGf,,lO -0..._.~_ ...... __ .,f'< ......... ft • ..,. ... , .... """""~"" '°"'""'"' ·~ ...,,......., _.°"" ... . c.....,. •• , • ..,.-s-......... __ ,,.,._...__ . .._ ... _.,_ -i,llN~-NOCI .... ,_ .. _, with our lady Lee and Harvest Day products. You have 21 choices on Key Buy to start with: ... what discount is all about. 6"'1.1.VITON 1~ NO. ttAYOMOltO •GUDEtOflOV. • MUNTINOTOtf HACH IM1 Afl.ANTA AVUtUI 11t11 llAOMOU• AV&. • ITAN"JON ,. TUITllf 7'111 ICATIU.A AVI-1WO NIW'ORT AY'UIUI •w•nMIMITI!fl •WHTMINffP •WHITTID •aA•TA ANA Uit to. •!'lt'fOI. etRH1' ... WUTMIMiTU~V.N\lf. non '"''"OOAl.I aTlllST 1 ...... MUI.IP~"· ·----~--- (j • FOOD Bring back the good old days with Banana Ginger Cobbler like graridma's. Cobbler Is Top Banana Remember how good it was l~ be in grandmother's kitchen on baking day? All those mouth-watering aromas fill ed the wa~m room with prom i ses of scrumptious treats to eat. And how impatiently we a waited their <'mergence from the oven' Although much has changed sine~ grandmother's day, the JOYS of <·reatmg special d esserts still ('ndure. And, here·.s anoth er time-honored tradition -u si ng versatile hananas as an anvalua hie dessert ingredient. M anv vitamins and minerals ure round in bananas including 1 \'1tamm A. potassium I and cal('lurn. Whal·.., more, bananas are • cholesterol free and low , an sodium, too. 1 BANANA GINGER COBBLER Biscuit Topping: 'h cuplkt.ns1.fted all· purpose flour 1~ cup finely crushea ginger navored cookies • 2 tablespoons sugar 11 '2 teaspoons baking powder 1 ~ teaspoon salt '~ tup butter or marganne 1 1 cup I egJ,: Fruit Filling: 3 1 _. tups s liced hJnanJ "> ( ahnul 5 ml·lhum 1 1;: c-up coarsely <·hoppt'll, dried pitted prunes 11 c·ups \\ alt•r I t ahll-:-.poon lt•mon juict• 2 tahl<'spoons finely cru:.hcd ginger rl<n orcd cookies '• t easpoon e1n · namon Dash nutmeg For b1scu1t topper stir together flour. cookie crumbs, sugar. baking powder and s <1lt Cut m butler until mixture re · sem bl es coarse meal. Lightly beat together milk and egg; add, all al once. to dry ingredients stirring JUSt enough to moisten. Set aside. For fruit filling, combine all ingredients in medium s aucepan. Cook over medium heat, stirring co nstantly, until bananas are almost tender, about 3 minutes. Pour filling into lightly buttered l ·quart baking dish. Spoon biscuit lop- p c r over filling ln 6 mounds. Bake In 400· degree oven 20 to 25 mmutes or until cak~ tester inserted In center of biscuit comes out clean. Serve warm wath cream or ice cream. NO-BAKE BA.NANA C'ARAMELCUSTARD :14 cup sugar, divided • 1 c up water 2 envelopes un- flavored gelatine •~cup cold milk l cup milk, heated lo boiling 4 eggs 1 'h teaspoons vanilla extract 6 icecubel . l 'h cups thinly 1Uced ripe bananas (2 medlum bananas) ~elt ~ cup sugar in large, heavy stillet.qver low heat uotU goldtn_; add water slowly., and carefully. stirrin& con- stantly <take care steam does not burn hand). Heat slowly until caramel completely dJs· solves. Pour caramel in· to six ·8-ounce custard cups; rotate cups to coat bottom ; set aside. In a S<up blender con· taaner, sprinkle un· navored gelatine over 'h cup cold milk. Let stand 3 to 4 minutes. Add boil· 1n~ milk ; cover and pro· <'C'SS at low speed 2 minutes. Add remaining !4ugar , eggs amt vanilla.. Add ice cubes, one at a lime. and process at high 1-ipeed until ice is melted. Pour in lo large bowl; ('h1 II, stirring occasional· Iv. until mixture ls con· s'astency or unbeaten eag whale:.. Fold in banana slices. Spoon mixture In· to prepared custard cups; chill until firm, about l hour. To serve, loosen edges of custard with knife: invert Into ~esserl dashes. Yield: & servings. Eggplant Plus STUFFED EGGPLANT HALVES <Serves 4 to 6) 1 large eggplant, cut into halves lengthwise Salt 1 •CUp oiJ I large onion, chopped l green pepper ,seeded and chopped 1 clove garlic. chopped 1 '-'l pounds around lamb 1/4 pound mushrooms, trimmed and chopped \a cup sliced pitted black olives 1'2cupltalian-navorbreadcrumbs l,h cup ( 'h pint) plaln yogurt ~cup grated Parm ea an cheese . : With a sharp knife, sc<>21> out ,,at.,il, leaving a shell ~-Inch thick. Chop r.moied ti• IPIU& and'!flac. ln bowl; 1prln~lt 1'"b'1ah •n~ ret stand at room temperaturt for l hoU~ la • J.2.lncb skill•. beat oil; add onion. ;.,,.... alid garlic and'sidle 5 minutes. Oraln c ped ••· tplant and add It to aklllet. la a 1mal aldlltt, cook lamb unlll brown and crumbly. Drain fat · and aUr lamb Into egaplant mixture. IUr ii mushrooms and olives and' cook ov•r low Mat • for another 10 minutes, atlrftnc oco .. *-allt. Add crumbs, .)'ogurt and puslfy. Stir Until well '*nded, and season to taate !" 1al\ and per. Spoon mlxture Into ecsp ant .aa. • U:iUet and p&ace·1luff •SI at Ml I ·add ehoach hot "'ater to Uie illtt.• 1== *111 bicb. Simmer gently lor 10 ... ..._ -.at with Pormetan ch. ~ broUet and bn>tl until browq.,:R.emave frotD broiler, two or w .. pottlons. and.pla oa ... dilb. . . . .. Almond coconut bars. ) • w.ctnetday, January 4, 1978 DAILY PILOT CT .. Modern Bar Cookies There are so many kinds of cookies it's impossible to estimale their number. There are drop cookies and rolled cookies, pressed cookies and bar cookies. Some are soft, some are crisp, some chewy, some crunchy. Every country has its own favorites, and so does every family. You might say cookies have come a long way since the first scraps of dough were baked by lbtjfty Dutch housewives lo test their wood-burning $loves for baking temperatures. They called them "koekjes" or little -UJctL ~ JQ~tradUion .ot cookie-baking got its starr.--- Modem cooks like the quick, easy 'bar cookies, which don't have to be rolled and cut out, juat poured iolo the pan and cut into bars afterward. This rec~pe for Almond Coconut Bars is sure to win favor because it can be ,t1,.1rned into three different kinds of cookies just by changing the baking techniqu e a nd the finishing touches. They're perfect to carry along on a pie· nic. Begin with a shnple, basic cookie dough. Bake this as a bot· tom layer, then add • cnulchy, sweet topping that includes easa. brown sugar, coconut and chopped almonds. Bake a second time, and you've got a delicious two-layer LreaL ALMOND COCONUT BARS FlntLayer: ·~ cup (1 'h sticks°> butter 1 cup firmly packed liaht brown sugar !egg l teaspoon vanilla ___ -a:eupta1~&.irpnoenour Second La.Yer: 3egga To prepare Fit3l Layer: In a large mixin1 bowl cream together butter and sugar. Add eu. and beat thorouihly. Bl~Jl in vanlUa then flour. Pat evenfy in a 13X9x2-lnch buttered baking pan. Bake ln a preheated 350· degree oven. 2S minutes. To pre- pare Second Layer: In a mixing bowl beat eus until thick~ gradually add su1ar, then vanilla and beat until well blended. Sift together flour, baklng powder and aalt; blend into ecc mixture. Fold in coconut and almonds. Spread cu~rully over Ftrst ....La~r. Bib ~25_ !dciltional mrnuta. COol on wire ntt.~ into bars. 1 cup finnly packed light brown sugar 1 teaspoon vanilla VARIATIONS: En1U1h Toffee Bars: Prepare First Layer as above. Bake2S minutes. Renlt>ve 3 tablespoons all·purpoae from o•en; sprinkle 1 package (6 flour · oz.) semi-sweet chocolate pieces • 1 teepoon battn, pqwder over top and allow to melt; \lit teaspoon salt spread evenly over top. Sprill1'1e lean (3'Aaoz.)flakedcoconut with ~ cup chopped walnuts: 1 cup blanched almond.a, press UghUy into frosting. Cool chopped and toasted . on wire rack. Cut into bars. NICO lfflmYI _"9.._Ma.41919 'IWl..~11,ltJI. AU__._,._,.__ •M&.119 ___ _ .......~ .. an_.,,. ___ .ADVEITISlO ITHI POUCY ---Wei ____ ....,.. ... ,.....,.,......,. ... .u ............ _.,...._,_ ...... ... _ .. __ ., __ 9'_ .. ,,...,.. __ ... ______ .....,. ... _ -··-*' .. -.......... _ -""" __ .... , .... mAl IAT1SIA<n.-MAllAllllD :.:.-..:...-:-:·.::~::.=::.~=--==~==:: ... _ ... _ ............... -.. -· .... --:::.':ii:.:----·---------..... -- • I . ... ..... . . . . . . . 1 Q OA1L.Y PllOT • • • Code Breakers (~rn Page Cl I A. GOODMAN I. SONS INC. • Dallnc policy Produt<t:. coded wtth pack1n11 , date Shel! hfc Company says pasta products good for at least two to three years aft er coded 1 date : matzo good for at least fl ve years. Sample code 3636. First three digits dale Dec. 28, the 363rd duy of year , last digit is year 1976. HUNT-WESSON FOODS INC. Dating Policy: Most products coded with packing date. Shel! life: Company says producls good for at least three years after coded date. Sample code lop line on products with two· line codes: R6T45. Le tte rs give information about packing plants. First number indicates year -1~6. Second number denotes month -· APrTI : f tnl'oligh Tare ~11nuary-ttr. vuBh-Sep- tem ber ; A, Band C arc October, November and Deeember. Last digit Indicates day -5th ; 1 through 9 indicate Isl through 9th; A through F indicate 10th through 15th: His 16th; J throu~h P are 17th through 23rd: R through U IU"e 24th through 27th: W through Z are 28th through 31st. INTERNATIONAL MULTIFOODS Dating policy: Sun Country Granola and Crunch and Kretschmer Wheat Germ coded with packing date Shelf life: Company says granola and cruneh good for eight months after coded date; un· opened jars wheat germ good for one yeur Sample Code, Sun Country Granola and Crunch: L70601. Louer refers to plant ; first number refers to year 1977; next two refer to month -June. the sixth month~ last two num- bers refer to day -the seventh. Sample code, Kretschmer Wheat Germ: 706071. First number refers to year, next two re· fer to month and next two refer to day. Last number refers to plant. KEEBr.ERCO. Dalln& policy: Products coded with packing date. Shelf lire: Company says products good for 4 to 12 months alter coded date. Sample code: A003. A Indicates bakery and year: letter before numbers denotes odd· numbered year, 1977 : If after, would denote even-numbered ~ear. Three digits rder lo date -Jan. 3, third day of year. KELLOGG CO. Dating policy. Salada ;ind Junket products coded with packing dale Shelf hfe· Company i.uys Saladu and Junket products good for three years after coded date. Sample code: 7265. First digit refers to yea r 1!)77. lust three d1g1ts refer lo date Sept. 22. the 265th day of year LANO 0 LAKES INC. Dalin~ policy Frozen turkey toded with packing date Shelf hfc Com puny says frozen turkey good for al least one year after coded dale. Sum pie code : 0997 . First three digits refer to date · Aprll 9, the 99th day of year: last digit re· fers to year -1977. LEVER BRCYl'llERS CO. DaUng policy: Lucky Whip Aerosol Topping, Spry Shortening and Mrs. Bullerworth's Syrup t<odcd with packing date. Shelf life: Company says Lucky Whip good for more than 6 months after coded date; Mrs. Buttcrworth's and Spry good for more than 18 monthi; after coded date. ~ample code~ 07097K. First two digits refer to mQlll.h --Jyly .. .1Ul month; next two refer to dalc ~e9th, laste!igll refers to year, 1977: and letter r<'fers to plant. TtlOMAS J. LIPTON INC. Dating policy : Tea coded with packing date Sb:elf hfc: Company failed to say how long tea woWlf last; board s~id 1t found out tea bags sho~ last 18 moolhs and iced tea mix three year~. S4pipll' code: 4C08KF First digit r efers to 'ear 1974 . C refers to month -March, under code Jn v. h1ch A through H represent January through August. X equals September, and J , K. L arc October, November, December. Digits im· mediately aftertetter 08 -denote date; K re fcrs to machine, F Indicates plant. C.•'. MUELLER CO. Dating policy Products coded with what hoard said is packing date Sht'lf life. Company says producL" good for 1 wo or three years after dato of packing. Sample code: 117. First two digits refer to week of year · 11th week. March 13 to 19; last digit refers to year 1977 OSCARMAYER&CO. Dating policy· Pre-packaeed fresh pork sausage, canned ham and lard coded with date of packing Roumsnlan Msmaliga with cheese. It's Roumanian Roumanians speak a Janiuace lbat is akin tO Uallan. And most of the ~le look Italian. Not at.range when one-think~ about lt, slnce they are dtse•ncled from ancient. Roman conquerors . Shelf Ufe Compuny says canned products good for at least one year after coding date Sample code 77-0123 First two d1g1ts in d.Jcatc year, next t~o 1nd1cate month January and last two 10d1cate date PET INC. DaUng policy. Product:, coded w1lh packing date. Shelf hfe: Company says Wh•tman 's candies good for 1>1x months after coded date. Old El Paso foods m boxes good for six to seven months, in jars for 12 lo 15 months and in cans for 24 lo 30 months. Sample rode, Whitman's Sampler candies first three digits: 166. Indicates date -June 15, the 166lh day of the year Sample code, Old El Paso cans bottom line: 16975. First three digits indicate date -June 18, lhe 169lh day or the year; la!>t two indicate year -1975. • Samptc 'l"O\Je, 'Oft! El Pa91./wxer.t8997S::'ff'M .. -_ three digits indicate dale -March 24, the 83rd day of the year. Last two digits indicate lime and product, t>cHird· did not g1v~ key to this part of co(fe. • PILLSBURY CO. ' Dating palicJI : Most products oodec$: w~th packingdate. · Shelf lift•' Company failed lo provide useful information on-how tong products would last. Sample code: B7W15 Fi,rsl place denotes month, FebrU16C)', under eodc in which A tllrough L stand for January through December. Second. µlace Is year 1977; third µlace indicates plant; und last two places indicate date -the 15th PROCl'EK It GAMBLE CO. Dating policy: Productis coded wrth what board says Is packing date Shelf life: Company failed to provicfe useful infortrU,\tlon on how long products would last, but board says it fQund out Crisco and Flulfo oils are s upposed lo be good for six years after coded date, Ji! peanut butter and Duncan Hines tnixes for four years and Pringles Potato Chips for two years. Sample code-Jn use bffore Jan. 1, 19'16i 153Al312. Fint two dlgi{s indJqate week :-15th week of year,' ~pril 9 t.o 15; Urii'd digit Indicates year, Im; next two places -Al -indicate plant and line: sixth place refers to day or week; fast two digits indicate hour. Sample code in use since Jan. 1, 1976: 6005A209. First dlglt refers lo year -1976; next three to the date -Jan. 5; letter and number Qn· mediately following it denote plant and line' and final two dleits -which may or may not ate in· eluded indicate hour PROGRESSO FOOD C01lP. Dating po.Hey: Company did not reply t.o board request, agency says products coded with packing dale. Shelf life Board s ays 1l found out products supposed to be good for two years after coded date .. . . . . . . . . . Sample code boltOITl line· 178F6. First three digits refer to date June 26, the 178th day or year; letter refers lo s hift: last digit denotes year -1976. QUAKER OATS CO. Dating policy: Most products coded with packmg date. Shelf life· Company says coded products good for al least six months. Sample code: 6022G. 1'irst digit refers to year -1976: letter refers lo plant: next two <t1g1ts indicate date -22nd: las t letter denotes month -July -under code in which A through L ore J anuary through December. RALSTON PURINA CO. Dating policy:• Products coded with what board said is packing date and last month or sale for cereals nndi·Ktl•P< Shelf U(e! P'11Y failed to ptovi.de utDful Hl~nl!atH»l-. ilJW:.foo1t~uctda.t,..buU1oa.rd said it found out Bonz, Freaki~$. Grins .. Moonstones and Wtteat Chex supposed &o be good for 6 DlOflthS a(ter J9acklnJ date.; Corti (.Dle1', Rlc.'e Cbex and Ry-K.rlsp lo~ 9 )'nonUlsf.and f\ot cere•I fbr 12 months. " • Sample code: ,B·229-H. f.lr&' \~11 lndtcatos plant; three digitS' dtmote date -Aue. 1'7, the ~29th day or year; last letter refers to month un- der compllcatcd code. In odd-numbered yeara. '\lnder code fo't' ~onz, Frealcies, G'ins. Moonst~es and Wheat Chcx, G ts January, His February J throulh.'W are March ~ough ;fu~. P through T are• Abgust thrOl,lgti December. Undc~'for Corn-Chcx. Rtc&Chex, Ry-Krisp and soft·moisl cat foo<f, D through Hare January through May, J through N are Ji.me throu&h Oc· tober and P and Q-are November'8nd_I>ecember. Under code for hot cerel,ll and dry cat and dog food, A lhrough Hare January through August and J Chtou·gb M are. Sept.ember through December. ln even-numbered Y.ars. under code tor Bonz. Freakles, Grlns. Moonstones and Wheat Qaex, U, thrQUgh. Z ar6 Jamrary throu.gh lit ay ,.eJ\d' A througrt, 'F a1e Jul~ th.rough Decembf.,-r. ~r ~· for ('pm . i;:bex, fl ice Chex.. • ~Y·,ltrilp !aJld iioft.mol.st ~t foq(l, .R ' thr4>tlgtl z are•J'atun~ through Septembl!t ahd A through Care October throueh December. Under code for hot eereal and dry dog and cat food. N ts January and P through Z are February through December. ' SCMCORP. Dating &>ollcy : Products c~~~ wi.µI packing date. . SheU life: Company sa ys anchovies &ood for s ix months alter coded date: packaged cMonut and egg mixes good tor e~ht months; olher pro- duc!t~ good for at Jeast ~year. ' Sample codes: &me products hj.ivc notches on label thal cannot bt read without special plastic card; others have one o( two codes: C7147A. First and last letters indicate plant and production information. First number indicates . I) cc FOOO,.. . ~ s . rt vear 1977 , last three numbers lndl~ate date May 27, the 147th day of year. 06H09. Flr$t two digits Indicate monlh • Ju.ne: last tw~ dlclls In· • d1cnte day the 9th. Letter indicates year Wlder t•od which began with A in 19'10. H ls 19iT. ., MRS.SMITH'S PIE CO. .. Dating policy: Froien pies coded with pack m&dale. Shelf Ure: Company says froren pies good for M least a year after coded dale. Sample code first four dlait.s: lCH'J. Flnt. , number refers to sbm and l~st. numbet. reftJ1 to year -1977. Letters refer to ftionth under code II\ which A through L are January tbrou1h December and date under code in wtilch 1 through 9 are lit through the 9th, A thtoueb H are 10th through 17th, J throueh P are 8th throu1h 24th, R through T are 25th through 27th and W , throueh z are 28th through 31st. .. J .111. SMUCKER CO. _ DMi.J>olicy.:.. Product.s cQd.ed..w.ilh.JlA,kap( date. -· -• - Shel! lift': Company says Goober Grape IOQd for six ~onths after coded date; jel.lles, pce- servatives, jams, Slenderella products, Crull syrpps, peanut butters and most ice cream top· pings good (or one year; pickles good for 18 . ' months. :. Sample code : 16Kl2B. First number refers to plant and second to year .l!l76~ Fi~ Jott!r , refers to month Novemt;>er under code an which A through L are January through December: next two digits refer lo dale -~e 12th: and last letter r efers lo the shift involved. St1NSIUNE BISCUITS INC. DaUn_g policy· Products coded with "seU ., by" dates. , Shelf life. Company sa~·f-product,s &ood for , about six months after coded date. ~ Sample code: 02247$. First two digits refer to monll\ -February; next two refer to date -the 24th; and last digitindlcates year -1977. The let- ter rele.rs to the bakery. .. VICl'OR F. WEAVER INC. 'Dating policy: Fried chicken and live·poUDd Ct\ le ken Roll coded: board did not say whether code indicates packing or sellin& date. 1 Shelf life: Company says frozen products good for one year after coded dale. Sample code first four digits: 3163. Add first a nd ,fourth digits to get month -June, sixth month of year. Middle two digits indica.te date - 16th. WELCl,I FOODS INC. , , Datlng policy: Products coded with what bonrd says is packing date Shelf life: Company fail~ to provide in· formation on how long products would last. Sample code: GN03L2W. First digit indicates year -1976; first letter indicates plant; next two digits refer lo date -the third; second letter de· notes tnonfh ~-December -un~E!r code tn which A through L arc January through December; last number and letter refer to shin and product. .. __ ,. ... • I , I FOOD Wednnclay, January"· 1978 ' DAILY PtLOT C9' -.How to Clean Up All Those Holiday Mess.es • By~'!.2.~~!.1'-~_.N~JC [ ] flush w1th water, then w1thabsorbentmaterial dr)l'leiinrng sohent agamunl1lnomorestaln ltotiday entertuinlnA: 1., apply a mixture or a few Continue as long as any Some types of glue can. can be removed. Then often followed b> cll'an Q i _A drops of liquid band dis· stain is being removed not be removed b\ JO) apply a small amount of up problems. Here are ._., hwashing detergent, a l''lu8h with dry cleaninl( method. • a mixture of •a cup white l!>ome common po .. t _ rew drops of ammonia solvent. Repeal until no vmegurnnd:::icupwarm holiday stainl'I and ---------------J and a hltle water, then mon• :.lain is removed P [ T UR IN•; ON \\ater. Blot. apply more methrods for th I tamp wtth brus h or /\llowtodry U stainstill CARPET soluhon,nndblotuntilno moval. er re · dr.v spolh·r" m1"<ture moist with dry i.polter spoon. Blot oc"as1·onally Bl " remains , try amyl olupasmuchhqu1d more stain c3n be re· CANDLEWAX madl• from l purl andblQttmgocca!>1onully Flush wllh water. being acetate <f ingernail a!. possible as soon as moved. Cover with u .,. ('O<'onut u1I and 8 parts with ub6orbent material. "ure to remove all am· bl 1 On U.blcclolhs and " polish remover), cover poss1 e w1th absorbent inch layer of white tas· th. . . d rvdt•un1n~ boh cnl Continue as lon° as any monia. · t • A t o er washabll' fabri(~ ( • mg s tain with a pud of ma eria . PP Y small sue. weight It down, and Scrape rt h · rsub~tllutt.' miiwral oil i stain is being removed. "P LASTIC GOOP" a6sorbent material dam-amount or u solution or l allow 6 hours l d JC 0 as muc wax \OU can't find col'onul Sponrrc withdrycleaning Manufacture r rccom· bl . 0 ry. as possible w 1th dull · " pened with amyl acetate. la espoon housebok stain stlll remains, try kn Ire Pl l oil l Tamp gl•ntlv with solvl·nt. Place tissue mends using alcohol lo Keep moi st for 15 ammonia mixed with :1 , commercial t I • 3 cc s a 1 n :,oft brush or !>.Id<' or O\ t'r :.tain and allow to h d · pc ur ne between sev~ral layers i.pnon. keciHn" s l,·iin remove t is oro ucc. minutes. blotting QC· cup waler Blot. apply stain remover, rollowlng or absorbent paper and ., dry. 1f slain remains. Da~pen stain with cas1onally. Flu&h with more solution. and blot d1rectionsonlabel. press with warm iron to r---=:----=-~--------=---~=---=--~~---:'."""'."'--------.;..;....-~.::..:..:~_.:,::.:.;:..:.:.;:.::;.::::.::....:..:..:..:;;:.:.......:.:..:~-------=-===:.....::.:::~::..:_::::..::..::..::.:.:.::::..::.:..:..:~~-- melt a.nd remove wax. Use J\.111 strength liquid detergent or dn c:ll•an1ng solvent tO' reihove rC'· malnlng greasy stain Launder. If color re· main s. lrC'at with chlorine bleach follo\\ mg dirc<'llons on bottle <hut test fctbtlc first to be sure bleach docs not change f:lbtlc color 1 2. <;>n carpel ·or up holstery Genllx :;<-rape Or peel Off aS much WU/( as possible with dull knife. COVl'r st11ln \\ llh absorbent paper µnd pre- !tS 'with warrn iron Sponge slam \\1th dr) cleaning solvent. Ir color remains. s ponge with alcohol' diluted \\ ith t '' o parts wuter, then rinse or sponge with waler. Cover cleaned area with tissue and allow to dry. 3. On wood surfaces Gently scrap(' or pct•I wax off with fingcrnu1I or firm CdJ.lC' of cardboard Burr \\1th furnitun· polish C R ANBE R R \' O il OTllEll FRl'IT JUCE; RE D Wl1't: ANU OTll ER AL('O llOl.IC' R t:vt:RAGE~; SOFT D R I NKS : ('OFFt:t: .\ND TEA I On tahll'l loth or uthl·r Wa!ihahl1• fabnl' If ... :.if(~ ror fahri<:. pour boil 111g "aler through slaUl from hcii.:ht or I to 3 fl•l·t Stretch fabrit taut O\cr howl when pouring w:ill'r. Or. soak slain in .1 ... olut1on of 1 qµart warm watC'r, •,teaspoon liquid hand dishwuhin~ de- tergent, end 1 tablespoon vinegar for 15 minutes. Rin :.e wHh water. Sponge wit.b alcohol Launder. H 'l'ltain rc- m~11ns soak in soluliol\ or Pniyme PJ'•wash product for 15 minutes, then I a undt.-r•a,:ain. 2 On carpel or UP· hohlcry . Biol up as mul'h liquid a!> poss1hlc .1s soon as poss1hl<' Sponj.!e s tain "1th '' <1lt'r and hlol rlry Ir Main n• mains makl' ,1 \\t•I "POlll'r ... olut1011 h\ ml\ 1ng I part i::lyc·l•nm• 1 part hancl <h ... h~ .1:.hing dt'l<•ri::C'nl. anri H parh watt•r <Thi" m1--.tur<' c·.in ht• .. 11111•<1 .Ille! llhl'd 1111 stains a ... needl'tl ShHl..l· .,.,.,.11 bdon· t•a1·h Uhl' ' :\ppl) \\d spolll'I' and a fC'W dropo., of \ 111l•g,1r to slain and lamp i::enll) \\Ith :i sort bru~h or l~C' edj.!l' of a spoon. Blot oc casionally Continul' a ... loni:: a!> an~ sl:1111 as n· mo\ c•d. Flush with waler and biol. H slain re· mains, apply alcohol to slain and cover with pad of absorbent muterial dampened \\1th alcohol Let stand as long as stnin is being remo\'cd . Change pad as it picks up stain and keep stain and pad moist with alcohol Flush w1lh w at('r and blot. Cover cleaned area with tissue and a llo" to dry Golden Premium Meats IHI Chuck·Bl1d1 Cut Chuck Steak per lb. II 3 lb. Pecbge or L1rger Ground Beef per II lb. so a .. 1 crwc-·Clod cur.11011.0 ~.: c~ Boneless Beef Roast '::' 121 :r .89 8111 C~uck r.\c0tr 7-Bone Roast l"f AouM1·80fl ... H ~:0~ Beef Tip Steak P•r lb 1'' ·B"fllound 179 ~.-..o~ Boneless Round Steak '::' U OA G•ullo• Bltfbecue ,. 1 Beef Rib Bones Any Sitt P1c~•0<1 Ground Chuck LHnCubtt .. Stewing Beef U c·;H Liver Wines & Spirits ~ 88:,d~~·vcd'ca ~ st;~igtie~· · Pll .99 lb per 12 .. lb per 141 lb .,.. 121 lb ' tst ')II ,,. .. '9 76' 3•• ,,,., 7SO 311 ..... IHI Chuck·BOflt In Roundlone .. Roast per lb. II Pork Loln-Conl1in1 3 End Cull & II Centlf Cul1 Mixed Pork Chops per lb. D ,Of-Loffl Sirloin Port< Chops D i>;t1~1>s De~~ style Ribs, D Ra1iph;c8;on D &;t:o :F;yer ~C~uBeef Brisket Dci. .. ,,., ..... Rainbow Trout Oi~rt;t F111et Super Bakery :39 141 SM' lb "' .98 "' pot lb 1ae 1 lb 12• Ctllg p .. .89 lb pel 149 lb Uo1 11• pkf .,.. 159 lb ~\ .50 ,. ... 59 ...... • 1:;:.79 ns ....... ~. it,...,.. &# ·-.. --·~~ ...... ...... . . ~~ .! ..... ,.,... ~-:,,...:~ I .__ ___ __, Relpht-Dtllclou1 Olympic Meal Bread 240L loaf R1lpht·Fln11t Qu1llty Golden Premllln Ice Cream qu•rt II ctn. Frozen Fooda Pantry Fillers ~ s&lti;;crackers ~ Aii~eromatoes ~ T"~~"i<etchup l;2l F>c;;t& Beans ~ r~iet'rmue LA Pure \leo-ltblt ~Wesson Oil 1001 35 P'I I 1101 59 bo• • 2101. 45 c1n I Uor 39 bll I )IN 47 (Oft I 4foll 63 ..... 41 01 bll 111 Health & Beauty 501 99 C_.ft e 7'1 01 75 iar I ~iiitiiiiili1~- llOllll.E CUON ";" .~~ -=-·-...:.".~ ... 1 I .. tt. .. w.' ...... ~~ .. . ~ ... ·~·_, .. -. ...._ ___ __, Relph• Own 8rend·C1nnld All Star Peas T1x11 18 oz. c1n Red Grapefruit Super Produce D o~ Tangelos D c"~inbers · rA ,,..,, ~Hawaiian Pineapple ~ ': .29 2.0f .29 .25 0 .-. ... , 39 Red Emperor Grapes ':. • Super Deli l;2l c~i-~11. 1101 .11 Pl<• ~ R&tPhiwater ·~· .19 ~Mt1t0t8HI Ral~ Wieners • 8 1 lb. ...... 9 ~l(r.i1$11c9d 12 Ol. 121 American Cheese P•t· D sb;,;'c~r per 2111 '" ~o-.,. Plumper Franks lib. 99 ,-,, I ~o,s ~ ... .,. range "One" t'' If. 1a• t t I :I On wood o.,urraces c white spots 01 .. tUl'\g.tiJ Dampen cloth \Vilh j{\Jm turpentine· or a rcwdrops or ammonia RuJT1the s pot hgbtly. Wipe 1t dry. then buff Or mix rot· tenstone or table fln lt with hqu1d pohshing wnx, fum1turl' polish, or sewing machine oil. App· ly to spot and rub lightly with your fingers or a cloth. Wipe off, then buff Super Flo1'31 *'' MCll 211 Home 'H Leisure ~ P;o1eum Jetty ~ POiish'F4;;',o;e; ~ii~Aspirtn 401 49 bll • IOOct. 99 bll • I ,, . ~ a·&;Oot Row ~&;~Row •Kii , .. 2" Pral~Jan.S thruJln.11, 1978 Wt,...,. hfllli to M « ,.._ ... toCOil91¥"Jli .... « •111 ..... &Witch to -'"'~-.t••••,.~ ........ _ -·~,. ........ ·-........ ~ .. , ' _t , :I 'J'I ·''-11. ··h "" ,.,, .. , 1'1 . . . \ • ~.Janurf•. im "COMICS I CROSSWORD , 1MlRMADUKE by Chutes M. Sdlulz by Br1d Anderson BOOMER by Wm. F. Brown ind Mel Casson . ,..-~~~--~~----~----~---~~~~~---.. PEANUTS f-4- c .. ;;: i I .. 1 ! MISS PEACH ~·"~ A 816 ®He£. &.#/{. t'vt (,OT' A "'~ •1 i.i l(MU'f~ f " ••. And then the cake Jumped off the table and hit us In the facel" FUNKY WINKERBEAN I I I'D LIKE C.,lOO 10 PUT llllS INFORMATIO~ ON roRM 0-11 f ~IU"-1.a...A.--~~.J.&....._ __ _ I CASEY l GERIATRIX WHeN ~y Aa-OU~ M.AN'VA70fl.Y ~llZEMEN't I THOUGHT l MIGHT GEi GeOfZSI CUT' a: ~c~~! ElrJIJE! I Do<;~ONE:IT, JOKE-· I HIRED YotJ IN TH' Flll5T Pt.,Ace 'CAUSE: You ~AID you KN5W CARS INSIDE AND OUT! GORDO JUDGE PARKER TUMBLEWEEDS by Tom Batfuk · PftlCIOUS SU&M POI.Li VOUVE COMI! •ACK A-f J..AS1' ! l'M IN A NUTTY MQOO TOOAY ~ by.Mell · ' ,~ ~s r-rn1NK TME ONLI( THING ™AT KEEPS ~ GOINS 15 THE ENCOVAA61N6 woeDS OF Ml/ COACU- 6ROUX., SVM'l, SNAP, ~ MRK, WOOF! DOOLEY'S WORLD by Roger Bradfltld OR .SMOCK NO, NO, YOU NINNll!!S.' l. SA I c::> we NSEiPt!P ,..He H6A.R1" -re.AM/ MOTLEY'S CREW by Gus Arriola by H1roldl.1 Doux MEANWHILE HEXT TIME YOO 5EE THIS 1(10 RUSTY. FIND OtlT If He'S ~NA PICK UP Nf'f ~Of. TMAl STIJFF ! Al.50 ~HO OO'T WHEflE ,._--~ HE GOT rT! TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS •& tnolv1ou1hal •6Chat 1 T1mpor1ry 48 Not 1!1r11! 1tructUf• &<>Scotch 5-·-uncle Mltbollam 61 H11bored 1 O Arrenge the grievance halt 63 P1111 14 Mal>!• further tell\lt 67 Reouctto 16 Love. lft flM Oell09 partiCIH 18 Per111n 61 In.--· 1111the1111tlcl1n RouUnlred '1 Grain 62In1111 01 ...... :2 64 Bog UNITED Feature Syndicate Tueld1y'1 Puui. Sot .. d ~-------- WOfdl 65 Court 19 Coln of India OfOCHctlng1~~~~ 20 A1p11111tt ee "''°' 1 ~~::.lQ.~~~ comPontnta eludy of 21 &et out 87 Ha119 brllkly ee -···'"Gin• 23 True's 69 Slipoery 25~:n: DOWN SllllG 1 Woooen :z& Ul)(igllt . bltktt Dial llOM alabs 2 Fttl pity 29 BaMt>all 3 Encounter 1tatl1tlc1 • ~,.n,...ment 34 Oocl'e .. 35 Vtllean City 4 Chlldlth 1111 aounds 37 Scolllah 6 Dami itl•nd 8 Entert1ln 38 NtbrHkl 7 Slonil IOf' cOftlmunity help • 3118111bt1 l1nd 8 ·-· 1nd pttCH Crtltt '1 -· · rule 9 Al1ln R .-- Otntr1lly ·····Fr 42 Good novtfltl uome>le to B11c1t tluld: 0 •••• 2 W()(dl lllcor111y 1 l Allantt't trtna man 1 2 Lion t11ture 39 Varnish In· 13 F1tltMr Qrtdlent 18 Buoot1111 40 Logical church 1n reuon1no Japan 43 f'Teventtd 22 "..... 46 ....... time Thtme": 47 N19llger1t "Doctor 49 GOd ot love Zh1va111>~ 52 Meon• ...•• tune 53 Runwey 24 Causes 54 Canad•- herm U S. ltke 26 Emotlonleas 55 Become 27 Slow· mua1c .our 28 German clly 56 Pltnl 30 Prtv1nl dlstHt aul11e>r1t1tlv1ly 58 Arrow 31 AllOWIO hlvt 32 Altlat'I ac;- ctnory 33 Trep 38 ElnalOI' pa1son 59 Ftrvor 60 Rot1ry c;urrenl 53 Alt mode bt .. I I ' i I I .... FRUIT COCITAIL ~-39° Fruita 17-0Z. •· Clll • Cit• ... _..,_ CCING PEACHES Halves or 221-ozsl SIJcea ·z-~i . Cana· lCltllH ..... •llloel.-11«.SI') PINEAPPLE GRAPEFRUIT -' -. TOMATO SAUCE RlchAnd 6 '1 Thtek I-oz. • Cini (1..._ ... "., TOMATO CATSUP Rich Flavor 32-or. 790 • Bottll STEWED JOMATOES or Whole 3 Greene.ans 90 • 18-oz. Can DELMONTE DOLLAR BUYS BEEF ROUND STEAK \ USDA Choice Boneless ' Beef, Full Cut BEEF RUMP ROAST USDA Choice Boneless Beef Round SLICED BACON 1-lb. Pkg. Smok-A- Roma 19 FARMER JOHN SPARERIBS Pork Small Sizes Frozen- Oetrosted Boneless Top Round Steak usCfu~roic~. •1 1• Boneless Beef Cube Steak lb. •1 •• Corned Beef Rounds p~j~~gi~y 1b. •1 4• Frozen Flshstlcks ca~::~~~cfk~~ce 1:::· '1 '' Farmer John Pork Sausage . , . 1=· 99c . -,.VITAMIN C TABLETS • Gr •• ri •..... French Sliced -.. &·ounce Can • Green ......... Reou11r Cut ........ 8-ounce Can •Early Garden Peas s •,.oz can •Canned Splnacll 7•,.oz.Can • Fruit Cocktail Blended &\,.oz Can •Sliced Peaches C••nos e• •. oz Can •Whole Kernet • Golden Corn •Cream Style 8'.-02 • Stewed Tomatoes 8-oz G 8 • Regular Cut • reen ean• • SeHOf'led 16-oz . • Canned Spfnacfl 1 S-oz. Can • Go..._ C •Cream Style or fUllllllH Ol'ft Whole Kemel 17-oz • Green Peal 1e-oz can VARIETY PACK ~~~~:rand 1 9 C ~ Plcg. ~ot1• . OWN HOUSE SPAGHITTI ~~Mc:c:=a $1 Sm.a Shell or Selad Mecaronl, 16-oz: . --· PllgL . .... 2 ~Enchiladas ~::1!~~::e 3 ~=-s1°.0 · ,&.i bi>Swiss Cheese l~~ -;::: 79~ _ ,&.nci>Bel-air Pizza Fr~~:n~~·~ 1:.-:· 79c- ~Bagg1·es . FoodStorageBegs o",11. age. ~ .Strong, Clean, Sanitary 50 Cotillion Ice Cream ~=~~,~~ a:. •1 34 Lucerne , 0z. 79 C Sliced Pkg.· Pr!~~~·~·~-1.0° ~,!!~ .. -._ .. 35° Squash 350 ltatlan ......... ~····· .. •••••"-••·• I ) ...... Cf2 Dl'lLY P\l.OT Wedneeday, Janu.aty '· 1971 . . ' ANN LANDERS I HOROSCOPE Let's Bear ·From the Wife DEAR ANN LANDERS: Who anoint- ed you the world authority on everythln1? I'm so mad u I write U11I letter that my blood pressure must be up tO point.. A•• £••den te•tlmoalal for motberbood ta the flnt J•ye laM from a father. Row •Uftlou that yo" lane lowed every sing.le ml••te of belaa a paNll&. AM .ow I'd Uke Co llear ti.. yoar wife. You told a mother of six, who said she en- joyed every tnlnote of raising her six cbUdren. that she had a very poor nietnory. How do YOU know? Do you have a magic pipeline into other people's beads? Maybe she ,PID enjoy every minute of those years when she W$8 raising those six k:lds. We bne roar cblldren &f)d the fifth is exl)eeted in a few weeks. I can hardly wait till the baby gets here. Our youngest is now three and lt will be wonderful to have. a baby in the house acain. Every stage ol raising children ls different - Calendar JlJNtOll LEAGUE OP NBWPO•T BARBO&: The IJ"OUP will meet Tburllday, llUL 5, at the Newporter Inn. Jlmmy Riley, of Ranny Riley and A.ssodates and Career Design of San Francisco. will speak on Findioi the Real You in 1978. WOMAN'S CLUB OF LAGUNA BEACH: The group will meet for lunch at 12:30 p.m. Fri- day, Jan. 6, at the clubhouse, 286 St. Ann's Dr. A program at 1:30 p.m will feature Lydia Bogane, motivational s peaker whose topic will be Stop Complaining and Start Uvtni. EBELL CLUB OP LAGUNA BEACH: The tradlUonal Let Down meeUna will be held at '1:30 p.m. Monday, Jan. 9, at the Emerald Bay . tioine of Mn. David Young. Members are re- quested to wear their oldies but goodies wblch will be oflered later 1n the annual March rum-mage sale. LIDO tsLE WOMAN'S CLUB: Americans in Love With Their Country is the program planned for 11:30 a.m . Tuesday, .Tan. 10, at the Lido Clubhouse. Guest s peakers will be Mildred Younger, wife of California Attorney General Evelle Younger, and Bruce Sievers. Sievers will read his poem, "America," which became part of the United Stales Congressional record in 1974. RIVIERA CLUB: The group will meet at 11:30 a.m. Wednesday, Jan.11, at the Airporter l nn. Lecturer and psychic Sydney R~balcoff will be guest speaker. A ME RICAN ASSOCIATION OF UNIVERSITY WOMEN : The Huntington Beach B ranch invites the public to help them rate the priorities in education at 7:15 p.m. Wednesday, Jan.11,atEdisonCommunityCenter. Topic of discussion will be Jill and the Bean StaJk ••• How Does the Education Plant. Grow? JUNIOR EDELL CLUB OF IRVINE: Priscilla Neufield, state president o{ California Federation of Wom<m's Clubs -Junior Mem- bers hip, will speak Wednesday, Jan.11. ORANGE COUNTY ASSOCIATION OF OC· CUPATIONAL HEALTH NURSES: Hospice Orange County w1Jl be the subject of the pro- g ram presented al 7 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 11, rn the Elk.; l.odge, Fullerton. A social hour be1ttn'-al Ii JO p m Speaker.. v.111 he .la m Jett, MD, clinical as· :-.ocidte in internal medicme, psychiatry and human h<·havior at UC Irvine, and Betty Wood . HN. ~crontology ger iatric nursing specialist They arc co-founders of Hospice Orange County. Reservations may be made with Sena Olson. 871·3232, Ext. 3881, or Lela Woodhouse, 525·1891. KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA ALUMNAE AS· SC)CIATION: The Southern Orange County group will hold a coffee at 10 a.m. Thursday, Jan. 12) at .the Corona del Mar home of Mrs. William Kull. The Newport Beach Paramedics will be gtlest speakers. Reservations may be made w rth Mrs. Kull, 644·2604. or Mrs. Wllliam Lanz, ~-2541. WOMAN'S CLUB OF HUNTINGTON Bk A CH: The group will meet at noon, Tuesday, Jan. 10, al the Club House. For reservations, call Ml.llle Addison, 536-7118 .. • THE NINETY-NINES: Wally Funk, air slfety tnveaUgator, will be featw-ed speaker at the group's meetinc at. 7 p.m. Wednesday, Ja. U. at the Harbor Racquet Club, Costa Mesa. Club QJlendar',...,., fQCh w~ in th~ DaH11 ,,.,, and COfdabsl nattaH of'°°"""'• and~ club meetinot and ewnt• for ""' follotoinfl 1ank -nun.. q thl"Ot4Qla WidnadaJI. Se'l'ld noCket to Club Caln- ddi', DaUJI Pilot, P.O. Boz 1580, Cotta Mesa, CA 92626. »• 811re to il'll:h.IM f/OUr' tJOrM and phone num~. Jl~ices must be in our hondl two weeb in odoonce. To reque1t a pkture, write or call the Features Dlpartment, 642.-4321. Picture• are UmUed ro fund- T'a&aer& <men to the pa4Jlic. and no two cblldren are alike. I bave enjoyed every tnlnute of beln& a parent. ao now you can call me a liar, too. - MAD DAD IN BRIDGEPORT DEll DAD: l'U ad- 1Dlt '100 b4 m& fooled for • mlaa&e. Yoar DEAR ANN: Well, you blew lt this time. You were wnmc·to tell .. Mad in Unionville" to feed that cb.ain letter to a soat. You said yourself, .. Chain letters are WegaJ -aothlng but a racket.•• How then do you expect people to put an end tp_ these con games if tti~ ·Just t1· nore the perpetrators [ Boroseope ) TllUUDAY, 1AN. 5 By SYDNEY OMAKB AB.IES (Mar. 21-Apr. 19): What you say and do baa solid Impact. No time for hitting and nm- ning -you are orr the sJdellnes and committed to the cont.est. Gemini, Virgo and Sagittarius figure in scenario. Yes, the change occurs and you get .. written notice" concerning lra'9el. T.AVRVS (Apr. 20-May 20): Accent on heal- ing domestic wounds. making concessions to loved ones. Be kind, diplomaUc, remember special annivenary. IJbra 11 in picture and so is Scorpio. U •lnale, there ls Wk ol marrlase. If married. a contract eou.lil ~ tublect or dls-C&Wion. • GEMINI Olay 21.Jane 20): Go slow. wellh pros and com; see u b. avoid sell-deception. Money la Involved and some would like to have what belalO to you. Enllgbtened ult-interest now ia essential. Act accordingly. Pia~ is in- volved. CANCER (June 21-July 22>: Organize, bring priorities into focus, drive towards goal, in- vest in your own capabilities. One who appears to oppose you actually could provide you with what is needed. Capricorn could play significant role~ Stick tonumber8. LEO (July 23-Aue. 22 ): Conclude transac- tions; get valid property appraisal. You gain wider recognition -you begin to sense extent of your own strength, impact. Arles, Libra figure· promlnentJy. You are vindicated -a lean. hard, perceptive person could become your ally. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): New approach to thinking, to relatives, neighbors is indicated. You have no reason to be Intimidated. Stand tall, let views be known. Don't accede to something which is foreign to basic beliefs. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22>: Collect, analyze. consolidate. Refuse to be taken for grante\'J. Aquarius, Cancer and Leo individuals figure prominently. Teach and learn. Give full play to intujtive intellect. Yes, the money situation runs in your favor. You'll see! SCORPIO (OcL 23-Nov. 21 >: Insist on direct information, not warmed-over or second-hand releases. You know what should be done. Key is to summon courage of convictions. Accent on personality, individualt ty, pioneering spirit. Take a chance on -you! SAGITrARIUS <N ov. 22·Dec. 21): Cycle swings upward toss aside fears. doubts, "brooding secrets." Be specific concerning de· tails. You gain access to privileged information. Aquarius. Taurus, Scorpio individuals figure in scenario. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19>: Social life accelerates . You may have reason to celebrate. Finances are highlighted -you are awarded, compensated, reimbursed. Gemini, Leo and Virgo could be part of scenario. Judg- ment.is vindJcaled, AQUABIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 18>: You get what you actually need, not necessarily everything you want. Mesaage will be clarified. Member of family plays significant role. Domestic adjust- ment i.a oo agenda. Taurus, Libra Individuals are featured. PISCES (Feb. 19-Mar. 20 >: Accent on journey, publication, defining terms, seeing Iona-range prospects, detecting fraud, pomposi- ty. Be analytical enough lo differentiate between nurr and "hard news ... Answers are available ff you put an end to self-deception. lf Jan. 5 11 your btrtbday you are a "com - municator," a fagclnating conversationalist, a natural reporter. You are "pulling together" \'arloua facton, aaaets. You are golne to be on more aoUd ground than in recent pa.at. April will be your most aipiflcant month of th.ls year. Gemilll. Virgo persona play Important roles in )'our llfe. TblJ month. January, finds YoU malc- inl valuable cont.eta and di.splaytn1 creative tafenta. 80t1DI OOAST ACl'OBS OO·OP '•lf•r• lral"'"' trld pou fbl• •Mtl4oV\"lellt '" 11.,., , .. ..,,,lo!> end comm.tael. All •ve• tnd IVPtt. (714) 967-0282 and let them 1et away scot free to contlnue their sames, eventually stealing moae1 from tho naive <or 1tupld, 11 you vtcUma ot thele acheiaa are the OD•• s chemes are the onea who can least alfCll'd U -the elderly. You should have told .. Mad'' to brtq ~ let· ter to the attenUoo oftbe postal authorUle1 and cooperate 1n seein1 to It that the creeps who started the chatn are brought to juaUce with hefty fines and ••n· tences. • Con artiats are In Qae business for cne ~ - MONEY. Hlt them where t.beyllve-in tbe pocketbook. It might not put them Qat ol buainell permanently but at IMat they'll thhUc twice before they start another game. -MAD AT YOU IN TERRE HAUTE DEAR MAD: Yom .... niht. Feedla& claala let- tera to pata la DO sofa. tion. Your advice waa bet· ter than mine by a long sbot. I'd love a ucatJon. How'd yoa like to write tbe columa for a week? <P .S. I'm onl1 kldd.lq. Nobody baa -or enr wW&IMlltl•Aa.~ den.) DEAR ANN: 1t 7oa tell one more )'OWll lirl to live up blr beby born out of wecUoct. I'll 10 through the root. How can you be so cruel? Why don't you understand that the baby is probably all that girl baa left in the whole world? 1 know, it hap- pened to me. A social worker talked me into givine up my son 14 Ute· Tribe ·Led By a .Housewife· years ago and I've cried FORT DUCHESNE Ut h ·d "I · t 1.: .. .,. myself to sleep every • 8 581 • JUS saw some tuu.16s n 1 g ht since th en: (AP) -Her dark eyes that needed to be done, then I w be never 1 see a gleaming, Ruby Black grins.· talked about them and then 1 teenage boy on the then ~::fi:S• her left fist gent-decided to try and do street I wonder i{ he ly po g th,e desktop. She something aboutit." could be mine. is leader of the Ute Tribe. Her constituency is the 1..2 My life is empty. Had ••After seven children, I million-acre Uintah and I kept my child, my ure don't think this job is as Ouray Indian Reservation. would be full. You are tough as it sounds, But I love· Powerful in history among wrong and I hope you'll •t a d ho e I'm brl f11g th tribes d U admit it. -DEAD 1 0 P n e an na ODS of the .VIOLET somethfng to it," she sal West, the Utes are 8 people DEAK FIUEND: 1be Last spring, Mrs. Black facing many problems. social worker gave you was chosen chairman ot the The tribe, which has m. good advice. You abouJd six-member Ute Tribal Busi-vested in oil, a mo.tel• be aratefuJ. A woman ness Committee, the first r e creation complex, a wbo has crted herself to woman to bead the 1,600 clothing outlet and several .sleep evny ntg.tat for 14 member tribe. other ventures. bas been Jos- years would probably "I was a housewife to ing money in recent years, bave ra.i5ed a child with begin with and I'll always be say several persons associat· ~ 1· ' l\ . ·i i:l t 1 f\ ·~ • t I a mllllon problems. a housewife," Mrs. Black ed with the tribe . . DE AR ANN~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~----------- LANDERS : I am a 12- y ear-old girl who is a lready a n e r v ou s wreck . My mothe r makes me take my four- . year-old sister wherever I go on Saturdays and S undays. Shelly is spoiled rotten. If she doesn 'l get her way she screams. My mother gives in to her because she bas high blood pre- ssure and can't stand the noise. What should I do? -LIKE STUCK DEAR L.S.: The noise Shelly Is maklni now will be like wblapers compared to what will come later anleas your mother Ceta CObltol of the sflaatlon. Furthermore, the Is not being fJir to )'oct. I au&· 1est coUDselln1 for your mother at once. Show Iler thb column. C.11142-5171. Put a ••• word1 to wort for u. • •••r I """Mt~ , . .._ ..... SEMI ANNUAi .. s Starts Wednesday, January 4th, 10:00 A.M. •SUEDES • BOOTS and SHOES • CAPRIS •TOPS •COATS •DRESSES •PANTSUITS I I I l " . ....... W4'dnesday, J&fluary -4, 1978 OAIL V PILOT C 13° • Home at 6, dinner al 7 . . . that's the credo for many workina wives. And why nol? There are lots of hearty and appealing clliihea I.hat. can be prepared in less than an hour. To the rescue more orten than not comes America's sweetheart, lhe hambur1er. wilb its flavor helpmate, the pickle. Quick Shepherd's Ple uses convenience foods and ft is ready in about 30 or 40 minutes. The finished dish has eye ¥ well as appetite ap· peal and thanks to the cqunchy dill pickles a pleasing textural contrast, too. Carrots are added so you have a full meal all in one casserole. Hamburgers . with Sweet Pepper Relish doubles as a sandwich or main course. Serve on a toasted bun with mustard if you Uke..!>r on a plat· ter Wltb mubed pot.a.toes or rice. ·.1·bis 'burger a.nd pickle dish can be prepared in about half an hour. QUICK SUPR.EBD'S PIE 113 ~P cbOpped onion 1 clove aarllc, crushed 1 to 2 tablespoons salad oil l ~ poundl tround beet . l can uo~ ·oancea) cream of mushroom soup, undiluted · .1 can <8~ ounces) sliced carrots, d,rained. or 1 package (10 ounces) frozen carrots, cooked and drained cubes 1h cup chopped dill pickles or dill salad 14 teaspoon salt ~ teasl>OOtl pepper lenvefope (family size, 6to 7 servings} mashed potatoes · · 2 tablespoons Parmesan cheese 2 tablespoons heavy cream l tablespoon chopped parsley In large aldllet, aaute onion and garlic in bot oil. Adel ground beef and brown. Stir in undilut.ed soup, carl'O&a(dlll plcldea, salt and pepper. Sim· mer uncovered over low heat 15 to 20 minutes. Stir occasionally. Meanwhile, prepare mashed potatoes as package directs. Add cheese, cream and parsley to whipped potatoes. Place meat mixture in a 1.quart flame-proof deep di.sh or casserole; spoon or pipe potatoes over meat. Brown under broiler and serve at once. Garnish RA.111BUaGEU wrrR SWEET PEPPE& Ul.&SB 2/ICUPI chopped onlon 2 tablesPQOlll butter or marcartne 114 cup chopped sweet rnlld peppers l can <I OWlces) chopped mushrooms. P"\ drained l ~ ltupool\l Hlt '.'l 1 .. teupooo pepper I teaspoon oreaano leaves l egg 111'.i pounds iround chuck 6 hamburger bunl. split and toasted Cop· tlonal> In small sklllet, saute onton in butter until golden brown. Remove from heat and stir ln sweet peppers, mwihrooms, and '4 tea.spoon or the salt. Set aside and keep warm. To prepare bamburaers, place remaining 1 --c teaspoon saltJ.. peppe~, oregano leaves and egg in large bO,wl. iseat unul e11 is frothy. Add mut and ~ of sauteed pepper mixture. Toa until thoroughly combined. Shape into 6 patties. Broil patties 4 inches from source of boat about 10 minutes, turrung once. Spoon reserved sweet pepper topping on hamburgers and serve with or ' without~ as desired. ' ·~ with add1Uooal oickle slicet. Quick Shepherd's Pie features dill pickles and mushroo~m:::s~ou~P~·:.:·.-:..--------------~--.--:..;:.=~~'.:..:~~!::..:!'.::.::~~~~~~ A Fro~~y Pear Sal~d Featured here is a room temperature until luscious frosty salad their flesh yields to filled with chunks or gentle pressure. Then j~icy western winter r e frigerat e imme· • pears. It is sweet und diately. t tangy1 and a treat for the 'taste Duds. ' FROZEN ~ All three varieties of PEAR WALDORF Western.grown winter pears arc perrect ror J fres h western 1 eating fresh in salads or winter pears as· a snack right off the 1 can (8 oz. l crushed core. The spicy-flavored pineapple Anjou is in season from 1f.I cup sugar October through May, If.I cup chopped the juicy Bose is in the walnuts markets from October 1h cup miniature through Februar y and marshmallows the buttery-s w eet 2 eggs, slightly Cornice is available beaten through January. 'ta cupsugar Since Cresh pears arc •,.i cup lemon juice pic~ed before ripe and J,' lea.spoon salt k epl under spec I a\ V. cup mayonnaise at.orage conditions until l,4J cup heavy cream; r eady to be marketed, whipped t hey may s ti 11 be Core and chop pears. u.n d e r r l p e when Drain r in ea pp le, p urchased. To ripen. reserv ng syrup. simply keep the pears al.Com bin e .Pe a rs, pineapple, celery. nuts and marshmallows. Mix welJ. In a saucepan, combine eggs, sugar, lemon juice, salt and pineapple syrup. Cook over Jow heat. stirring constantly, until sllghtly · thickened. Cool. Stir in mayonnaise. Fold whipped cream into cooled egg mixture. Pour over fruit and toss Jightly. Pour into an oiled 6-cup mold and freeze unlit firm. Let stand 20 minutes at room temperature before serving. Garnish with sliced pears and parsley, if desired. Makes 6 to 8 servings. Everybody loves a salad and fresh Winter pears are favorites during the months when fresh fruit is al a minimum. sl\.l s1111s .,.uasoAt JA11UAl15 9:30109~00 VlE W\ll BE ClOSEO vn.oNEOr>:< J~N. 4 10 PREPARE fOtt lM\S G\~N'T EVEN'T \ ' - r GENUINE LEVl·RED TAGS SLIGHTLY IR \. SIZE 2-12 $12.00 VALUE s7.99 GIRLS LUV·IT PANTS SOLID BRUSHED DENIM SIZE 4-6X $12.00VALUE s7.99 I BOYS ROB·ROY WOV'EN SHIRTS tARGE SELECTION VALUEST0 $8.00 SJ 99 S~ZE._7 ., . GIRLS KNIT TOP ONE LARGE OROU .. HANGTEN & OTHm VALUES TO SS.00 SIZE 3·6X SIZES 7·14 s2.99 s3.99 TRIMFIT INFANTS TE~RY STRETCH SUITS SIZES 6 MOS. • 2 YRS. S7.00VALUE $3.99 GIRLS JUMPSUITS ONE LARGE GROUP DENIM, KNIT & GAB SIZES 3-14 VALUE TO S15.00 r ., 300/o OF.f GIRLS HER MAJEST~ I WE ARE OVERU~T~~~t~e~n- We must reduc~ o \\y advertised ventor y o f nat1ona FLANNEL GOWNS ONE LARGE GROUP SIZES 4· 14 $10.99VALUE 300/o OFF ~ ,. .... bl£V~~·t~ui:f IT -CARTER'S - HEAl TH TEX -HANGTEN - HER MAJESTY - lUV-\l·-a9BROY- GIRLS HER MAJESTY "°' TODDLER FLANNEL P.J. SIZE 2·4 $6 99 REGULAR $9.99 • ~ WONDERKNIT -BRYAN ~GENNAWAY ;-D\TTO- HER MAJESTY BLOUSES ONE LARGE GROUP SIZES .C-14 ' VALUE TO $9.00 $4.99 PAC\FCIUGR· 11nRA~[ OotSPUM-r·-G--,R-Ls -01t-To-PA __ NT ___ s --..."II ONE LARGE GROUP BlLLY·TKE·KID -s~~0!.~!. 58.99 l.. .... ~~:::_~r.:i::::::-........ _.~'"'-s-1s_.oo __ v_A_tu_e __________ _,~ ~ GIRts PANTS GIRLS DRESSES BY DALE ON~ ~RGE GROUP JR. PEASANT STYLE BY DAlE AND OTHERS REG. Sl-'.00 $9 99 SIZ!S7·1"4 $3 gn SIZES7·14 e $15.00VAlUE • ~ GIRLS POL VESTER STRETCH PANTS ONE LARGE GROUP $7.00 VALUE SIZE 3-1 4 51.59 012/$~.oo CARTER'S BOYS & GIRLS P.J. SIZE 0..4, 4-8, 8· 16 ~OWoOFF , GIRLS PANTS ONE ASSORTED GROUP KNIT & WOVEN VALUES TO $8.00 $2 99 SIZE7·14 • GIRLS CARCOATS ONE LARGE GROUP SIZES 2·4, 4-6ic, 7·14 300/o OFF GIRLS HOLIDAY DRESSES SUES 2·41 4-6•, 7·14 200/o to400/o OFF '\ l \1 J ., ,. ¥ ~1 ESSON 39c IL· he one with '"waeon-alif1" • 24 'oi. omatoes • • • • • • 59c nt's red ripe aolid pack • No. 2 l: " -•' . ' .. ~ . ice turmurr •••••• ssc k and flavorful • Texsun 46 oa. Fryer Wings ••• 59t . ~ Hand cw (~ Giacif ~A'' .Wity . ... · Ii Ho Crackers &9c c2risp and butter·)' ••• Sunahine 16 oz. .... erns~ein 49c ress1ng . inaigretLe or Italian • 8 oz btla argarine •••.•• 49c e Bonnet for savings! I lb ctn C,Jam Chowder • s 119 ~x.see'1 New England style -26 oz. Bisquick •••••.. -. 39c t more than biscuit•! 40 oz P!I ... $OUR 59·. tREAM !. p airy goodncs:1 from Springfield! # Qranberry COCKT• • 75c ~an Spray . naturally good! Quart P.-Nut Butter SKrPY sgc <f)d Fashioned · Chunk, Creamy • 16 oz ,, -~~~on 33c ~toto, Split Poa. Tomoto -No. 303 ,,, . --.-,,, !!,~ .~!~~.!!~ ,,:;:, ,~sc , g Food ALIO ••••• 33c ef or Horsemeat Chunks • 14111 oz can t Food mn.. . 2oc varieties (except. Kidney) 6 oz. I ory Liquid •• ~ • 39c dishes • and your h&llds! 32 oz ~~LS 55c rted or Decorated • big roll Chicken Livers • 89~. r Freshne11 makee for better flaYO\'? , , ' ' I , l . lllli ~~A~ ......... !'.:: ... ilil/J. ~ . More value! Because-the King aiie offers moie meat in relation11hip to hone and heshn~ ol'roni more flayor! ffjlnd cut (1'(/rib cap) LAMB - SHANKS $1 5! • · \Yestem Choice! Freeh frozen '~ . ~=·s ]C)c ··._. 'CHOPPa.> $·139-- STEAKS .. • S~KS .-r..ean~ ~nd .•. :i per pound. ~ Flavorful! Pan Ready! 5 M ea. not exteed Iii'; rat. -. · CornBtl leiJf ~ ~~:lu~~~c-~ ... .-..... ~ .. 1llll AB lean as brisket can possibly be ••• and with that special n avor you Rel frnm 1-:1 ttarichu'11 cl*n ~cue! Whole or Point Uelf r'-A.... ' 7 Bone Roast • • 99 i Ground Beef :':"Ji~ s 119• · Sausage ITAUU STYLE • s 13! Chuck cut U.S.D.A. Choice beef Lean -cfnea not exceed 22•·; fat El Ranoho'A -with no nitrilea! . 0 Bone Roast •• s 1°! Chili Beef :U ... s1°! l Bratwursta .... s ~13! Chuck cut U.S.D.A. Choice beef Does not exceed 30''; fat content Pork, Milk-fed veal and aeaMll'llnl{ Center cuts from U.S.O.A. Choice beef loins. to a<;i.ure you of all the Oavttr, all the 1enclerne.;l< you expect! Sliced Bacon •.• s 1°! El Ran,s:ho'a thicker "ranch style'~ CHUCK . . . STEAK ~79~ U.S.D.A. Choice beef, of couree WE FEATURE MlX.fED VEAL The real thing ... for more value! BONELESS ROAST $1'! . Shoulder clod Cboioe lteef chuck Top Sirloin :r .. 525! J..oin cul of U.S.D.A. choice beer ' Beef Rill .-· BONES 69l Meaty1 Chol~•! Bake ftt ·barbec:uf Delica tessen PricfR in "l//<tcl Thur. Jan. IS .. tnl'QJ,IJlh Wfd. Jon. II Turkey, Ham or Beef· in the bigger 5 ounce package-" ~ . Parmesan .... $1 39 Opfn da1~·;9 to 9 Sunday UJ t<t 7 Nu 1101"r t6 dfalerx \ . . Fa~.Ql'l Y{aiklki menus! ' Sun~ con~trate -6 oz can Birdseye Limas 49~ Fordhook or Baby ••• 10 oz p~. ! Cheese Pizza •• s 1 s~ Van de Kamp biit 19-oz aize ~ ~ • Ore-Ida knoWt'I potatc>e11! 2 lb. Vegetables ~-. 59 HirdMye trroccoli, Cauliflower -I() ~ Waffles ••••••• ·• 49 ~ Downyflake auttetmilk -12 oz pk«i. . Hi~e ''Tin:.' and Tender" -JO oz. H om em aker Values PAIJY 69 HOSE !. lronweve Happy l..ep - all &hades ' Mr. CClffee -~-~ ol 100 , ' • j { . I 1 f ' t ANY NEW COURIER PICKUP ' --IN OUR BIG INVENTORY -. • ' \ t ' . NOW 50/ OVER REDUCED IOFACTORY TO INVOICE HEW 1978 MUSTANG JI 2 DOOR HARDTOP Bk! ·seals. 4 spd slk pin 53697 stripes. wtil covers. tint glass 8 76x 13 bias tires and mor.e IMMiDIA TE DELIVERY ON HEW 1978 .. T • TOPS!11 . . NEW 1978 LTD II 2 DR. HD. TOP Arr cond . pwr front discs and steer . auto lrans .. steel bit tires. tinted glass, dlx. whl covers, body side moldings, etc. Luxury at a small car pnce. Stk 104158 :Ser 11136967) VISIT OUR CUSTOM CORNER ,.. ••• EXAMPLE ROBINS DISCOUNT NEW '78 HOLIDAY WHEELS CUST. CONVERS10.I.--· LEASE DIRECT AND SAV.E WE LEASE ALL MAKE CARS AHO TRUCKS COMPARE GREAT MILEAGE GRE.A T PRICE Cust. paint, carpet. Vista bay window. mags an d s200~0 . OFF tires, rack and ladder. d~apes, bkt. seats. auto. WINDOW OUR COMPETITIVE RA TES! trans .. tint glass. pwr. steer .. etc. {Stk T476) {Ser S D #AG5446) (Wind. Stkr. $11.378.20) . TK~. '72 FORD ""·· s.4-4 cyt . 4 speed Radio Heater. Wheel Cov- ers. Vinyt Interior Lie 1!908FWA Stk 1!64A 5 1199 '74 MAZDA u.2c-.. 4 speed. AM/FM Radio Tinted Glass. Heater. Rallye wtteels. Low Miles Uc #959KXU Stl< 11519B 5 1599 '75 AMC rectt" 2 Dr. 8 cyl . Automatic Trans. Power Steering. AM Radio. Tinted Glass. Whltewall Tires. Wheel Covers Low Mtles1 Lie f833MMJ' Stk f T500B .., , '75 FORD C..try s.lr. w...-V-8~ At1tomatlc T'"rans .. Factory Air Cond .. Pc:>wer Steering. Power Dlsc Brakes. ~ Door L~. POwer Windows. Cruise Con- trol• Tiii S1eer1"9 Wheel. Luggage Rack. R.aolo. In Or'eet obnditlon. Lie f058M)(G Stk t 93A ·59519 '74 CAPRI 2100 2 Dr C-.• V-6 4 speed Air Cond Rallye Wheels. Radio Heater, Lie 11144PRC Stk "1>3112 52599 '74 CHEVROLET ...... f.H.tc.._k 4 cyl, 4 speed, AM/FM Radio Custom In· lerior. Rear Window Defogger. Tlnled Glass. Rallye Wheels Only 43 000 Miles Lie lt575SL.R Stk lt525A ~1499 '76 FORD Mat-,1+2 4 cyl, 4 speed, AM Radio. Tinted Glass. Heater. Whitewall Tires. Wheel CovetS. Lie #053REM Stk t389A .. s.1999.· 177 PONTIAC \ '73 MG MGll ... ftr 4 cyl, 4 speed. Overdrive. AM/FM Radio. Heater. Rallye Wheels. Ul. •321909 Stl< #252A 52299 '68 DODGE ~ 6 cyl. 3 SP96d Transtnlss1on. Heater. Len Than 49.000 Actual Miles Grear Work Truck 1 I 0 lt881505 Stk !!858A T s1799 '74 TOYOTA 4 cyl . 4 speed, AM"R':Sto. He&ttf'. C.mper Shell. Chrome Wheels and Wide White Let- tered Tires. Don't Miss Thi• Oner Lie IJ25184U Stk JT8e7A 4 cyl .. Au_tomatic Trana .. l uggage Alick. Radio\.. Tinted Glass. Wtleel CoY9ft. Heater Lio J558PCO Stk #113A . LTI>2Dr.H..., V-8 Aulomat1c Trans.. Power Steer. Power Brakes. FaCIOfY Air Cond . Stereo lape Vinyl Roof, Radio. and Heater I D If 158520 Slk JP3127 52099 '74 DATSUN 1·210 .. Dr. s.- 4 cyl . Automatic Trans .. AM Jfadfo. Trnted Glass. Whitewall Tires. wtteel Covers Lie 1983LKC Stk #412A 174 FORD BIN V-8. Automatic Trans .• Factory Air Condi· tion1ng, f>owef' Steering. Power Brakes. Radio. Heatef', Vinyl Roof, Whitewall Tires, Tinted Glass..wtieel Covers. Lie 1513LPB Stk f 10.A ~$2199 '76 CAPRI ...,. s,ort c..,. V-6 . 4 IPGed. Factory Air Cond . Power Steering. PowfU Olac Brakes, AM/FM Stereo, Custom lnt81'10f. Mag Wheels. A Super 8# Lie #967NPF Stk •225A SH AHD DIJVE EUlOftl'S MOST SUCCESSFUL HEWCAl IH HISTORY! IMMEDIATE DRIVllY AUMOOILS . '76 FORD Gr-..ZOr. 6 cyl Au1oma11c Trans R1~0 Tinted Glass. Heater Whitewall Tires. wtieel Cov· ers Uc 11328NLF Stk f1322A 52699 '70 FORD · Me•ertdl J Dr. 6 cyl . 3 speed trans • Vinyl Roof Cover. Radio. Tinted Glass. Wheel Covers A Great Economy Car Uc lt255TDI Stk. ll324A 5 1099 '74 FORD ···~· V·B. Automatic Trans. 4 Wheel Drive. Removable Hard Top, Power Steering,· Spoke Steel Rims. 10 00 x 15 OH Road Tires. Radio, Heater. Lie #909NKL Stk IT1340 Priced to Sell 171 TOYOTA Cellce S.T. c..,_ 4 cyl . 4 speed trans . Air Cond111on1ng, Vinyl Roof Cover. Mag Wheels. Radio, Healer Lie lt077JER Stk •10988 11 I * W!C!Meda)'. January 4, 1871 . , 1 • •UBUC NOTICE ~,- ?; PUBUC NOTICE PICTI nous au1n.Hs NAMIE STATIEM•NT foltowlng pwaort ............. .. . UMMEllWINO PllOPlltTISS, ,_.."" A-. C.O.C. -.e, CA Y'\W'lllltm Johll 1(-y. J r., 1'5t ~c Ori,.., Cot.Ill~. CA t1t2' •'{•111 butl11es1 11 coneklcl•d "" /1 jl!,1\1'" PMllltONp ·r WllllaMJo,,,.llt-yJr. Tfllt 11111-1 WU lllOICI Wltll lllf ~W Cltrk ol OrAl\oe Covnty on Jlf~ "· 1'11. Fl7t1' f'ltbll111td Or•n~ C:O.•I Olllly Pllol, 0tc. 21, 28, 1911, J ... 4, 11, 1"8 S2S6-7> P UBLIC NOTICE fllCTITIOUS euSINIESS H°""'ESTATIMl!NT n. foUOW1nQ ptraort I• OOlno 1>v1l- MM•t: ltlCE ANO ASSOCIATES, 1100 ONll $1.,Su41• 100. New1*18-.11,CA ~ 0rt9M"Y OaMld At<e, 241S 9eftnie Pl , .... -....cAnUI fllll -.,WllHI h t-1..S by -111- ~I • l; C.AEGOAY 0. RICE ..,.,.,, ... ,_, .... "'"" ---C-y C~k 01 Or..-ge Courlly Of'I OK. 21.JtH. ... ,. Pul>fw..cl Or-C.0.>I 0 .. ly Piiot. 'L'f.2'. 1'17,Jtn ••• 11.11, It/I ")4,, . PUBLIC NOTICE , ..... ~'I~~ 0r_.. Coe•I ~•v Piiot. .... ~· u , 11.u . 1tl7MW1Jan '· ''""1, .. *i PUBLIC NOTICE fl'ICTITIOUI IUllNHI HAMS STATIMINT nit lonowlno --••re dolftO ~· ~ff: I ANJIM M&CHANICAL, tSSI -..11, ,_,.,,,Valley, CA '210.t " Jllltlff A. Slfflt, USI Toucl!l'I, f• .. ln Vlllley, CAtllOI L•"'•n fl111.1lkner, Ut Fbwler, ~•.CA .Jltlt 111.1\lllUI h tOfldllCltd by 11 ~ ........... , ..... p Jt~A Sl"le 'tltl1 >lllltn>enl .... filed wttlt "'- !CMftty Clerk of Qt..,.. '-'' ._ 0,C.. I, lt17 P'IUP ""*'~ Or-CMlt Oalty Pitel, ~ ~t,21,11, 1911,Jllll •• "" "').11 . PUBLIC NOTICE fll'1'1T10UI a USINlll .. AM& ITATIMIHT ~ I~,.._ la dol"I •~I· _..., • TMI llACK PACK ERV, 24102 e....., 1tToro,CAt1'JQ 0.. wr11111, 24902 e.,.,..,., l!I ,..... CA '21.» ' ~-IMlllMSl II ~ b., ff I"' 1'!'1"1-'· • OonWrlQM ................... ~, ........... dmty Cterll Of 0Uft90 QM.Wlty Oii fil"" ».. 1'71. 2'...:. ...,.. 1'*1 0r-. C.0111 1>1111 fllllH • .. ,.,, Jllll ••• 11, "· "" • stn-71 .. 'J' 6 4 2 • .5 6 7 8 o· A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s ·1 F I E D 6 4 2 ........... ...................... , 'This newspap1r will not k°YM'Willgty a~pt. any Mlverllslng lor real REAL EST A TE SALES ' 0 .Ung t two 11( nsed &al • ~ople, experienced Ot" unexperlenced, but mu.at have willingness to work & strong desire lo succeed. Well established ore, . super loc, progressive commission. "" PERSONAL training. Start the New · Year RIGHT. C.U Larry Whitesides for morelnf or. .,,, MANAGER--IEAL ESTATE NEWPORT B~H A prime opportunity with an outstand- 1P& real estate organization + high earnlr1,s! Experience is a m~. Prestigious location. All applications held in strictest e<>nf idence. Please reply to Ad #68, Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1560, Cosla Mesa, CA 92626 estate which is in viola-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ tionoft.helaw. = for s• ....... '002i•••ral 'ooz ...................................................................... G•MNI I 10021:-m ..................................... . ......................... .... SULA POIHT CO.OMA 4 Bdrm., 2 ba. home. All amenities. DIL MAI Lovely area. few steps to beach. 3 H111e BR, I We BA. $189,500 dea, dlnlDJ rm, 2 sty UDO 15&.E w/26' opai beam ceil· · • l odeled bd d 1 inlS we entry rrplc New Y rem 4 rm., en, .. wet'bar, laundry r~·. baths, living rm. wicathedral ·ceiling. oversiied dbl 1ar. aooo Lge. master bdrm. suite. $224,950 Sq. ft. or Ve1'7 u.nlque liv· ... CAHYOH 1Dgspa$cel.49 SOO •4 BR, fam. rm., 3 baths. Beautifally • decorated Broadmoor Plan 3. on extra JACOIS RIAL TY large lot. $325,000 675-6670 BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR MESAVIRDE saz.soo 341 Boy\1d1· Or11o1 .. N 8 b l~ 6 161 Freshly painted home ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ with a used brick fireplace and 3 bdrms . ~ , I 002 G••ral I OOZ &Jpcr xtrns In this faml· •••••• .. ••••·-·~•••• ••••••••••••••••H••••• ly home. It's a new list· OtiiEYEAR MIW ing and a new year· let's L get you together wllb BM.EVE each. 546-2313 3 BR, 3 BA. highly UP· OPfN Iii 9•" s FUNTOlltNIC'E' graded, with atep-down [ ll!llii ~ S I livina room, raised din-.; .. Jlljf fll'i: ~~~~u: :;~::~ 54G-3~66 • WIK~lan • MES~VIRDE .· A I Al I \1.\fl .:IEDUCIO Roomy 3 bedroom, 2 bai,h with crackling brick-------- fireplace. Super Meaa1·-------• IOACUS R ancho California. Prime avocado coun· try! I Gr eat Income )) COMMlaCIAL LIASI COllOMA OK. MAR -in the heart ol Coro~ del ..... ,\.pProlllUlelY •OOO scntare feet ou cround tloar plus 2 11N1ll apa.rtmenb. Parkh11 for up to 30 mtomobll-. 15' hr ICl'iarefoot. COLE OF MIWPORT REALTORS 675-5511 potential. Good terms -------- . . WKCOME ABOARD!! We have just launched our firm into the world of computerized multlpt~ listing service. When you list with us, the co~~:ter will make your informa· tion av ble to all salespeople within our bbard (Approximately 3,00C,, wit.Mn minutes. ' '·' Come in & let us demonstrate the "high speed terminal"; it is nothing ebort cl miraculous! ~, .... 759-0811 Ot..i w..-. 'BUf. CAMEO HIGHLANDS $179,509 View of qcean & hil.laJ A deligbtftd area -qdiet llving yet close to shop- ping. See this great family home w/4 bdrms, fam rm. formal din.ii)& + bonus rm. Private front court-yd for entertaining. 3 Privat~ beaches. WISLIY M. TA YLOll CO.. ~TOU 2tl1S-J ........... M .. IW_'fat_19T C841&. M.L '44-ftll ------------ G_r.. I002kh.nl IOoZ ...................... -1-.. ••••••••• ..... •• .. •• MANAGER~EAL ESTATE NmORT BEACH A prime opportunity with an· outstanding real estate organization + blgb eamingst Experience is a must. Prestigious location. All appllcattons held in strictest confidence. Please reply to Ad f68. ·• Daily Pilot, P. 0 Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA92626. IAY'ROMT MANSION wnM,_ At lastl Prlme SQ. 8•1tront loeatlan! 6 bedroo1Da allld .... upataln. downatatra 11 • ltll bedroom Pl• Kth pl• alldliC.roca plus the eiltire N•port 11MbOrt A'• lant~tict Ome to the at.ores, on a super beac:b. yet sUU quiit!,Ala~ home ol ctisttncUon. now vacanL. Presentalllt$5)(~. , IJNIOOI: tteMU "IAl~ 87MODO ~ t..allilteo.t~.~cW ... ' 9bo In.._. V.n:le. It 646·6990 JUST 111M1 °' d' -aeao Sq. tt;. 4 Bettnns. 3 Ba~. formal dining and the bl"est kitchen lA Mesa· Verda. _Quiet street in dignified ~~borhood. Reduced to $139,900. C4Jt. =••a, MIWYMll....--~w ltft this New Yeai' wltb SP-· Townhouse. Plctuie SUll_;.a~ ..,. &ha SAUNA. lftel" • brl*""""' -POOL all for tss.ooo. Cll 6Ml61. ,. . I . . \(. , •. 1 '.II ' ... , " : . " I r) ... tl Un• '• . , ' ( h • • ,., •I n ! , I c ' - G-fil 1002 8•11.. t• ...... ••••••••••••• .... •••••o ... ••••11111111 .. ocUMvaw $96.100 Hud to • ftncl one atorJ coodo w/2 bdrm +den, 2 ba w/ooaua pool. Secm1:Q & sauna. Walk lo the ... ,........,_ beach. OUr exclusive . 3 B•drai. 2 batll. F\~ lh~ OQ market. bNakfU~ D0ot. dble -~ ~=\.: Gtw-al 10020-... 1001 ~-~ l ~··::::·:i;;~~.,·:·::::·---.,~Real ... 1_._El;..tate ___ .. ~1:-tla Prtced to Hll today I ~me. located walk· • 1&$111.• tnc d.iataAce Crom sbop-• OWner' D'\Ult mcne, •ee p lnc. No nel1hbora mlP ~ Walkr.r 1: lee Wa tidy, cbee7 2 BR ~ only & 7ean old. C,IL -homo "'itb attached Pool. jacu&zl. " 1anae. Air cood.lUoned, clubhou .. .FAM mJ.A pri• ... ..Uo aad many dealcable features. fromS.CoutPlna. $9,900. 714-7800 PETE BARRETT -REALTY-. IU·S2tl .,, ..... . '64. .. ~--t.-tae rum stre1t. Bin' -aparkllnc fatally ~~ kitdMA. 3 Kini slse4 •-------~ 3Bedroom,cornerlotVA bdnns, pool sized lot. I•-------• • .. r.v t9'ms' $72 500 '&llller •cceu tool l>oG'l CdM DUNX .,..,..._. · ' w&Jl. call 752-1700 Ven'le location. Close to schools, s hoppln1 & freewayc;. New palnl & decor. The owner is anx· 1ous to sell. Full price now 1s $79 ,900. CA LL 751·3191. C:SELECT .. 3v a1 I. Consider ex· change. SS0,000. Call Completely remodeled, S 165-000 3 Bedroom + famlt1 in omH••·11',.,_'cutwr• MARYaOUS new paint ln/ouL New Unique im'ome pro hvtn•'• Greentr .. 1 Mo.._. .a.co kitchens. Each unlt has 2 w/room to ada 2 addi sat.900 ~--THi:: R[iU """' bedrms, brick: rrplc, Uooal units. Xtra lar~e Call us aboul lhla irn· great location., walk lo owner'• ulllt w/forma Brand new Eutaide I PROPERTIES 54().1151 ESTATE~~ mac:ulate one owner, 2 ever ythi ng. Aakln1 din rm Is ~lllle mast bedroom + flnplace-;111------0--- VA TH.MS bedroom, convertible $178.500. suite. Xlnt. lncome. Call $19,500 $49 19 5 OHLY$62,500 den home lD Harbor fordetallalt&-7171 BeauLtf'1)Jy maiotahltl -~.fi:. HERITAGE . • REAI TORS VI ew Homes. 'The Bemodeledatart« .auk .a,--••• la Be&t tKG' ia tbearea. Alr1 ________ ,.1 owner's meticulous care wllh fireplace I Low ldeal loea~nearahtl'- condltloner and some to every maJateoaace • down! VA or FHA OICI -a th6 beach. Can"'\ other nice xtra'a. Calling 5 BR & 2 BA need wtU lmpresa you. $17,900 10 •t•na w/tbll btd us is 3 must -The dog Wood floors wood And the hlchty com ·~~~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~ 754-1202 ~ct prpperty &S\lda bites! A quick escow and shln&le roof, fireplace, petitlve price of $136,500. = --------~. a lowpriCe ..... 771.1. l his Ye a r • s b es t dble garage. 164.~00. lee will please your HUNTIMGTON Christ ma" present Js GUFHA !lnanclog nail. pocketbook. !•-------.. MUST SB.U Y':/~i. ~'?,1i?, lO rl N•CI' Sam.a Ana near warner. c• 644-7211 OCEANVIEW Great coulo, 2 bclrms., 2 IEACH . Roy McCwdl• • baths, lge. patio, lower FOUR UMITS Eeal Fat.ate [~~,~~I. :111:~1 c'c:::=:~;~9 ~~~~t~~~ it! =tial~~:venient ~~ii:sur;,~~:.~ CATAUMA ~·l _ _., -t carries. Owner 3 Dclna.. 1 ))a .. ldtchl!e. ""' ~ cott.ue Oil levd wUl trade. For prof it PTO-Jot, j~ 4 iilks. from 1------•. _ _.·G-rel 1002 ~aMNI IOOt a~UllM 71 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••• .... •••••• I Hester·Bruwn Does the lhqht appeal • • . · to. you? u 10• constder d urr White Realtor ... Jedioe iach1dla« taa daWntowu Avalon. Vaca- abelter benefits, please ticahaapot! f76,000 :;;=.. _______ , call 962-1788. lfU. GlUMOY IHI 833-9781 •l •LIOR~ jomlng the pre1U1tou1 D ctfices of Unique HoD\e. for a fantuUc 19711. Ac· celerated commlealon schedule, ln·hoUle swln1 loans , creative sale• aids, coapater t.ermlnal & active tralmn1 • ad· ministration. a. unique in '78 with Unique H'omea Real Estate. Contact Jlm Wood at 875-oooO. 2901 N~O(t Blvd. Ntwport Beach, CA 92663 ABANDONm llANT CHIMACOVE ~ K€Y BM.TOil 67WIH On SbeU st .. Corona del V A£ALTOIUh ? y _. 9e&US "I Mar; newly. pro· ,.. •~ fessioaaU1 decorated.. 21-------i 56"" _...0 bdrm.. + den . 3 baths • 3 ...., 0.. Tlte M.t&tt Y 1..., v • tt«Y bome w/eJevator; MUST SEE TO AP· Qspu So. Huatlalt• ~ aitda. all teak PllECIATEI Cypqll&llJ .-'-ew/(rplc, (le .. caMraeca•Oool'~ \ltet bar, rtdecorat .. ~ ,.. :::-L::lloa. OWHC' lfl)lc. Som• bay view, DPlei.d 'befrllD i-e. Must Sell. too! St'ePI to beach & Kkcben Ute new. T'Nlh eanmt111.645"'7221 fful•tS!lrin~ab&lb. bat..:'.;!°°1ayPtop. ·~::~·1:t~e:! ~ 30'x21' family r oom. ..._.. •tatem,justtol mealMlll• · Maulve Palo.I Verde * 675-7060 * ~:J~~.:~;:r::. rock fireplaH ln runllYl~~~~~~~~~Jilla nry attractive . rm. Used briek la nvtni blme,eallMMl\llO Westdlffli "'°"'" Wet bar & much MB .-r? much morel Vacated, Helpyounetftoa owner delpe.rale. Take Heaptni aelec.tion ol .Sv1l1ll9'e NOW. • Qaallliecl Hopeluls J.C.MASHRLftS ifttMDAJLYPILOT 140-5101 H.&PWANTEDADS 1002 •C»CfOM- TOP GOl.P COURSI YllW 2 Bdrfn. O~ 19"/Prime loca- tlon clOse to tef:Ws. Pool • JacuzzL Lgo. enclo1ed front patio, 2 balconies on the View aide. Formal Dlntna Room, Wet Bar. Fireplace. Large Muter Sult•. $.174,500 includ· ~g the land. .... ' IHG4nH Jor S. KoMsH FoT ~ • Hov.tt ~ ~ w.dntlldty. January'· 1978 OAIL v PflOT DS * ' • • • • .... • • • • • • ... •• •• • ••• • ... • • • • • • • • • •• •••• •• • • .. • • • • • • • • • • • • •••••••• •• .:.;.;,;;;.;.;;:;,;;:.;;£.;...;;.;;;;.;.:;;;;;.!...;.:....;;.;..;:....,,_, _____ ...;;.._..;;;...__....;..~--;;;;.;• ~-~~ ...... ~.'.~~ ....... ~ ...... ':':.~ ................. !~ .... ~!!.~ ~ ............ !!~~ ~~~~ ..... ~!~! ~.~.~~· ....... ~~.~~ ........ ·-·····~~ .. : .. _ C....,.. . 100 C.0-.. ..._. IOU c.taMna 102.. WAtfTIYBtYTHIHG? Ownder. abr, 2ba. Top .._,,,... INctt 106' Mcwportleec9' 10" a.-• 1076 •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••··~··••••••••• .. ••••••••••••••••••••• £XJRA NICE 11 <:on Nu c?t•. open •••••••••••w••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• •------HOUSl .. LOMI I J View locahon 4 BR beam.ocean,u. Prinon· mcuTIYIHON• ,. .. B d f • 1 d . . . ly pis $127,000 4$4·1207 ho.Ju In awblleld!S BY OWNER la -.onh I.bi:. ence' But ROO M TO Bu 11 o 4 e r m . 2 "1 orma uuna room, -vuq ontt )'OU ran 11~e near the ~ently remodeled 2. balbs, 'Meadow ho mt ~h~1elyr~oo3mB. Aw .. 'urJpJce: Canion Road ~~ u:::r':e~~ CtlstOM beach in CoronAdel Mar lx'Jroom home on R 2 Surrounded by new ~ """ ""'1 · ~ "" L• RICED RlGJIT1 5 000 ft , 1uwi hlt\'e ror \en1.1nt:. 10(. Gre•t income poten homeil Wa11L to school•. s~c street. over 2200 '>Q CUle cot •ge ~ll~ big lot. Ing 0 .. p Ul n.n.' , tq • help pay 1175.ooo. ual. $117.500. Cail lo~. fl. o< s~ruptuous hv1ng Ideal tor bwlder $use as $1M.500. Y8ouR w .,.AMI''¥ RCllldl Estate ~1 ..... 5 E a.... a\11 ! 1· l'-f.lP.4 area \our choice or office " const. yard . lllt'ge, 4 • r ""' Stable sr imah: nuud j """ " R A~ Y I I jGuili~ 1•J.lfIDCil '+»' «arpellog Located in the Many pos)1blhllea for Ru l&un home. loaded wl\.b tJ· · gu~i.t · ho':ne encio.:d * 494-1057 * • flllact1 :ii"nl • 54 ·8103 Turtle Rock Highlands tJu MIA 'ohed property. yu. 1Huae r.•1:· P-"•· ~~land for ~' 1ary or -Pra--"... · --~..a~~·000·40.'900 S98.500 <SlS) JCiA~\'~E~. ~~ arumal enclosurl' on ;ip r;s;.;.,0 6 ~ / .--NEWPORT l!ACH (O()k.ing I.hose steaks Oil proximate 3' 1 arrt'll $I l.450 DOWH 1.-oe CllUA!lS1'. NI r U.604 me TOWHHOME.I, ,,,.,lJ -... "'C •r•.,,.,.. ..... to...... the pallo aas BBQ. white 7411. flwClllto COROMA DEL MAR ---Upgraded, ideally lofat I I fHt::J two IHHlrooMt, tw• INltfll1, Ua kid11 play basketball Hlls Dr., Atulh.rm 2 BR. 1 HA home on R·2 MESA VfllDE ed, 3 br, 21 • ba in Foun I . ..t _.... ..t t or volleyball Ort the l>hown by llppl nnly to lot 1.J.ve in front unit TRIPLEX twn VaJlry. Convenient ___ , !lptr c c-,... .. IMJ ,.... puved court.. TRULY A q lWtJ i f 1 e d ti u Yl' , :. while building 2nd u01t MEW USTIMG l•' shoppin~ & i.l'h<>ob WOODBRIDGE ftoon • • · S , .. ,, tOO. f'AMlLY HOME. S!l.5CY.tJOO <7 H ) s~ 1 K4:IO 1111 rear or lot OulHland· (:real investml·nt. l'n mt· l'onv. 1-'ll/\ or VA lt.'rrns CROSSING -.. 99.4SS I BERTllA H ENR\' !'our'U.'!\V lo Hkr:. Intl 1nn::.lment Only locatlvn Co!llJ Ml•i.a·~ 1\ bar~urn' (;all fur dt· The VHlage of Wood THIWCUTIVI ~ REALTORS ------MIHIRAHCH $76,500 $134.500 be:.l ar .. a All units huve ta1l:1 bndge The ber.t of both Who dt'manda the tlnest LAG UNA U/\NA LAGUI';\ 215 Dcl Mar 492·4&.al pnv11tc pall~ & inMdl' 531 5800. evet>.963-0391 worlds. ArchtlecturaJly in qualt\y must 1>ce thu. NIGUEL POINT BEACH PRORSSIOMAL - CALl 955-0350 ,, I. •A"f'l an L.:U"il'Pi\l\l'f lll1U.lUU._ lJf..Jf,1.JPfM~ l11undry rmi. l"rpl<· in lnt1 RE Metwcwll unique 2&3 bdrm at· beauti!ul 4 bdrm .. 41\ 495·172tl 493·8812 4!17 3331 IU" "'I .... '--, uwnl'r:1 un•l Bt·ttt•r tach\l(I & detached re· bath home an pr1vatl! -""" hurn1 on lhl, one' 3 BR 2 Ba home, good ~idences from $96,990. oceanfront commumty. SanC..iementeprol. bid .. !>4$-SUll. art'a, sn,000 Ager\l S.~·1161 Asking $350,000 .,._111_ leach I 06' Mewport le.ch I 06' office tulles aoU. J.f ~~07M ---•••• :::-.:............. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rooms. Lar1e parldal WOODlllDGE m ftca area. Rent al~ per..._ ........... leoch I 040 PRESCOTT 'S!I IP& * * * Newport ri. Consider tradet tr .,,,, ,. II\",,"'".,,.,. 2 0 .... I Real U.lJtt-•••••••••• ,............ L&st Woodbrid&e'home ~tl'l7 c-.-:...10 ~· $2~2~SC>O. 49.l I R ~I " ---RAIU40ME s Bdrm or 4 Bdrm.+ den cttt-2eoo OWMEll MOVIMG unu ~ ~ llij!I: : GOROHADIL~I SPAMKIM' MEW". RAHrllCE Oveniied lot, full y 'Thi• Harbor View bm $79 5(10 .~iiP1 .c Prime area Jog to & on ~~f~S Rt~Otc: o O~ Only~ 4t the beach ~'fi":S&r~~~ ~~.~~ THIS ~::~~":J~!Pll::~~ ·'h Block ~o wes'tclllf "jj-~~ ;:::= Walker & Lee l'ri me area. J Bdrm house + hor'e corraJ1> too! 2\'J Acre:. Call now 752 1700 -.. thebeach Lne1none& UNDER CONSTRUC· minutes•wayfromth1!>2 p.iver..lile.A/C.Llv.d10 OLD HOUSE fantasticm.strBR·3addi· Plaia. Co1y 2 Bedrm .:-:-nia-~:.r ---------' rent lhe other . Units TJON-this cutlom 3 bdrm home. ~his cant rrns 3 bath 3 Car aar. llonal BR.Ji, 3 BA. Step· home with pool. Xlnl ;...\f.)_.- IMCOME!l show pnde of ownerliblp, bedroom. 2 bath home lust!><>call now· S4S--0022 Nr park. Walle to 1uke. ~E~~'I,~~SJ~5nTo ~ dn FR w/wet bar, beaut. buy. Ca.II now. 645-7221 (1' · FEE'SIMPLJ!: duplex. 3 completely repainted. with fireplace & fenrl.'d [a_.llfml!f fj(JP S186.000. Brkr/Ownr TIIE BEACH. OLDER backyard w/gaiet>o & ~ ~Ma 1oii bdrms , 2 bath., each un· SlS.1.500. yard ii. in lovely .E~a1tb1dl' . _J _ ... :J. ___ ;f 552-4l!J orSJS-3535 s p AN I S H ST y LE jaruni. OWNER IS .................. u l •i It. One! el(tta larlle rront VAL • 0 area. R J F.sl t HOME Detu1le-O U · MOVING J\ND SAYS . ' ,. owner's unit. BH·int., -IA IQ II • ea ae WOOOIRIDGE terior of llEAVY "SELL" : ~YIAIMIW.: frplc. Pri cedatS175.000 I n-""\ ~stot~-ua ~ $2000 DOWN BROADMOOR. " BR. Pl.A5TER. RED TILE $199,900 TRI-LEVEL ""~ ~ Plac• fam. rm · pool & :.pa. all n O O f' L t N E S & SUIMIT ... LL Olll!.lr.ll:RS• Westclff llfflty •' I','" ,\'"L,· ilus>lt". . p ti J(et'~ you Into this 2 lndi.t'P"·· deckino. fem· A rnio • 3 BR, 2 BA. hi&hlY Ul>· , ., ' ",. " rap-•• u1' ., l'A d h l' " ,.. AHClll:-:0 PORTICO EN· p c FIC oc ........ VllW aded b ... Hdrm home ._ I ·bdrm ---TSl-1920 "' u " " ' con o l a " u1g. gor~1?ou~ tmpro' c· TRY A I COAST _... It' • w1l sltlp-uown mcr11111·ai.:u;lnxlntlOl'a AboveChl"aCo•• 14000UAllStNfWf'Ollt1ACt4 cl<J1,eto lhcbcach.:1upn mcnls. moclf'I lrnml' PROPERTIEe COHOO,l.IDUCED living room, raised di~· taon.Prirl'<lalSl?:i.OOO 214 DahUa o;har)l & low puymenh tond.Mo,einready. 1 ~ $THOUS ....... DS$ ingroom,11lep-dnmas{f!r SH .... , CO .... DO CH t er •. rt 11 l ~ •1 !J..U(I (I A"t'llt a•o 5"'" io'()l"l\'\ll II v rm with bay 63' ft400 •nyttm-A" BR. l..u"ury p'··· offered fl13·3ti1~1 l~i:! i:!<.!5:1 Thi~ l·hurmini: 2 Br "' " llurr'',l'Jll ., .. '~' ""'' window. hm1 CENTER -v "' ,.. Reduced for a falll 11ale nl'"'a,s00 """ associated BRQl,lA!; llCAL fOkS 101' W Bolb'lo • 11 J•b 1 homl·, hu!'I 11 most ~Pel' EASTSIDE J 8907855 1'.IREPLM.:l':. "OLUfo;·· * * * Vacant It s~ller ill anx ..,.,. 540-3666 lat·ular view of occan & COST A MES.A o-IRVIHES fl NEST O A K I-: N I<' L 0 0 B S 1ous Beauufu.I 2 br end harbor Jelly. IC you hkl' Clean & n•udy for )Ou tu ~ TllRUOUT Middle cor 111o.1EWPORT unit w/fpk. C.Ommun1ly ht•am{-d l'lngs. unllquei. moH 1n. lcte111 ..,tarter ndor lead~ to 2 bdrms. & " pool, sauna & j11cu.czl, Al &pc.1l'cful li\'tnl:. l'l.lll lo· home fOf' )Ouni: or rl' :s Bt-droom pool home rentral both. l''ORMAL HEIGHTS lhi:. pnce It won't last! day $189,000 tired l'OUple I bdrm plu~ Close lo park'Wllh lenmi. D I N I N G R M . PRICE s• ·SHED flurrv! Call 64s.Qa00 Wftela11 klAL HlAll D RJ k.-&£.. Rltr courts. Pnct.>d right at ~ · · • • C ....... ruceden.cov'dpull<J &on 4 BH . frplc. very clean. S'98.500. WI MOORISH ARCH ---------1 95.S-Ol!l7 642·3263 strC<'t parking Jui.t ~teps $7l,i!IS Approx 1550 ~q fl opens to long kitchen SI 0,000! A•""" "1 ,._ta M--a I 02.. C"'I (or appt to ~eA nclw wner ou 0 s la 0 "' W ... 'l"tl:.llllfRO....... away Prime local1on o t f t I scparateserv1cerm A """aceful, arched entry FO~EST E OLSON FlXER-Yl No down, low closln& cos• t:., spacious 4 Br w/lit". S. Cst Plaza ar~a.. $69.950. Hurry ~ call! Agent.~ HOME ::': •••• :: •••••••••••• : !'>t~9ot91 ~ ~ 000 1t4-I --_ ~ Spacious r ear 'rounds ~~'.~1~U::~d!:~e~~v~~ with boat dock Could be 111o.1--....1-T LC lead to outside entrance modeled wt th impreulve • ·~-~ 3Br & 2 Br rental unil' or Just The "~ • •e to ST 0 RM TV PE lava rock fireplace 1t•---=:.....;.;~:..:.:;.::;..;;;~..::...-- 51ngle ram1lv hom(' F.x 3 Bdrm. 2 S.-$65,000 CELI..AS.. Might be c:on· beamed celling1 . In •HariMr View H~ •..c. •• l'cllent l0t-.1l1on \\ \ ll'\\ Two of y OU Real Estatt> Close lo Golden Wei.t verted & used ror WINE NEWPORT HA,RBOR 2 Bdrm. & den (or 3 ~!J.000 A condo is lhe perfect ---C-Olle&e & shopping ci:o· STORAGt; & TA.STING H I G H SC If' O 0 L Bdrm.) and 2 bat.b home. s-ttt L9pft• I ON • •••••••••••••••••••••• 0Wt11RW~LL - 15alleb•ry 1dt•a I "Loh .. m odel. N_,ew eoi:1'10b· 2 Br. 212 Ba. ten.So. C ...... 'f--'a IUty RANCH REALTY ROOM. Please call for DISTRICT, this roiy de· Italian Ule in entry le a .. lty :"e"I\ painted Popular -frplc s. l"~rami~ llle mo .... " -551 -2000 app't. hghl isonhugecomerlot kitchen 1136.$00. By b a I ~ 0 n ,. a re a 2 k1t1:hens & bath I ool & 546-5605 SI 01,500 FuN Price wit.b alley access & room owner Pnnc1ples only. J sp:. 6'154912 Broker ------C S [ Call 64().1440 673·6'00 bedrooms. eating ~rea. __ _ _ S&S Re..,ale Speciah.,ts [X LU IV SEETODAV!! foryourboal.!$1~.000. •-----·---- --------exlrn bath. Large living HANDYMAN'S 3.l or 5 bdrm modcli. GONETOMORROW!! 1£ .Quall l IYOWHER COMSIDlll • LEASE/OPTIOM on thi:. beautiful 2 .BR Villa PaciCica home. Cathedral ceilings, mil'· rored wardrobe. adult community. $87,500. ~~~s. $65,500. BKH. DREAM HOME ;;t:1~12 i.ome w,pool!>. COUEGE PARK ~Mls!.~~~Y~~:Jna Prapp~s2lac_,1!•2•0• WATERFRONT r enninJ.tton l'rnp(!rt1e-, A ~orgeous 4 bedroom P'hofte 494..071 I • TARBELL Fanu.:.t1c opportunity home with i.ep ur ate On gm al Bluffs Popular "'Ci" P la n on priv ate corner l ot. Beautifully decorated 4 bdrm.J bu. J,AHCHOUGI IHVUTMIMTI l714t 4f'-77il CONDO . for lht• hand~ mun M't'k SALE IY OWNER family room I cover ed 1•00 OUAllST. NtW'°IT HACH 1-:xllu;,1\t' 1'Xl't'ul1\I• 2 in" a lar"e work~hop JI pal10.TllHl-:EC'ommun1 1 -aHln• 1050 lld I 11 " " " 3 Ur, Ii, bu Condo Liv ....,_. • rm in pn·..,lli.:•· 1 < ~ "#I In Catlfontia" home Big i.t•p aratc rm. din rm & rnsidc ty pools and t·onvenil•nt ••••••••••••••••••••••• $165.000 Call {714)640·2331 NEWPORT DELIGHT 'Pool. 1>uuna, JOit' ·111tnl -----hu1ld1ng in hurk ::;uitJhl{· luund rm p,l. putw, W purks, M'hoob .... ha>P Townhome 3 Br, drn rm, ..,,.i·urat), Own,·r may1---------1 ror mct·h antt'. wood pool & gar lJp~raclt•cl pang & l rl'ewin .H .. !iv, rm, 2ba 1600 sq rt . Located near the famous Newport Back Bay on the Bluffs. Tb.is 4 BJ\ coo· do is n real delight. Call 1.111 for a privale showlng. OPEH HOUSE T•tln Io• l'On~11kr lt·a..,,. 1111111111 EASTSIDE wor k1·r. 1•ll•l'lrtl·1an. 11r l't-ss 'Nows11:1.!1110 $75.000 c:El 1""'• S23!l.5iMI COSTA MES.A ?•·• Ek>Ul'r hurn ' t'ull No commonwall 2 ~tory. ..., ""''' Call for Octa1l1i ••••••••••••••••••••••• B.ALIOA ISLAND lll•aut1ful youni: I ~o ' t u r v d u I.I I l' x w 1 t h 'Pal."lhU'> I & 3 hdrm Uri its. li.ikonit'' & patm!o lor indoor nu1do11r II\ in~ tJ\r in um• & t'llJO\ lhl• l1t•1wri1, ur ,, n 1111 nme prop<·rt \ Si:!'lll ooo ~15 O:lO:l 1~G·TS4~ Ph 962·3~7 NO $72,000 , .I H1•drm hu~e lot l'ompletc with hardwood WOODSY 2 STY lluor. dbl J:llr . coH·n·d Hui.Ile orl'hltCllurc with p.1uo &. c1wcl Joolrecl Uut o1bundll1't 'llass. Heavy tJ( ..,latt: owner nt'~h 1m :.hake roor. vaulted t·c1l mt.~'h,th• ~JI~ Supl'r t.u\ ••r ...... ....._<....,..... tnfif~ ~'ACl'l>IOJ; ma~le• hurr~'(.'aJl!>46·5K80 \lt">a\i•rctcGolfl'luh Jncl th1ldrco'<, \\iO)!. ~HERITAGE • .• REALTORS 5 Br l.mtu-.llt \I('\\ '• Open hearth r1replat'I' ,\l're S!!IS.000 Sho'A n hy M <I)!." l I n r Pe r re t· t uppt onlv 1790 Panu) k1t cht-n Mull1 purpo .. e Cir oren In the $70 s Onc 111 RANCH REALTY 551-2000 Univ. Park ...ovely 4br, lrg fam rm w/frplc Liv rm, din rm . Bltn r hrnu closet . Pror deco. 3 car J(ar Yr old Owner. 768·51B3 ~oNICJUel ......••..•.•.......... STAY AWAY ••• $11.8.!iOO VAWY ...... DOU HOUSE <>ML Y St2.000 HARBOR VlEW HOME Nl!Xl Dool-lo St. CeeiU. 3 Ur. 2Ba with many Qlun•h & School. pubtk appts Plam, to ad<I 2 :.chooli-. kindergar(lep more bdrmi. Most de thru 8 Acros!> the st . Cobv s1reablu area Onl)• lo shopping, freew&)'• St39.500 TUSTlN. i Br. l \oll ba ~· ~--do·-=.:·~-· 1-09-.1 RNttors. Eil 1907 (714) 175-eeOO . ..................... . HERE'S YOUR CHANCE Beaut BR bomf', ~ dn. C;ill no,,.., 24 hr - \A. \Tl Ill HCl'l 1101\11 ., REAL ESTATE t----------Agt. ~0 0608 631 WJO ----- our newer homl'-'1 Bkr 536-931L Dean Home, highly up· graded Willow Wood Mdl. Near park le pool 3 unlhs thl!> VA AS SUMABLE 1 bedroom home With pool & Jat"UZZI complete with :.weeping hllls1de view doesn't ap· peal to you . PRICE REDUCED TO $9"900. Trent yourself! You're l2 mile to beach. btfl con do professionally de cerated. 2 b1& bdrms, 2 batha • dose to pool, sauna & jacuui or walk down to beach. 756· 150 L. l IR + IONUS S(?mce 84G"'879 agt. $109 000 -- Fantasuc NcwJ>Ort home O.W .... Eatah ~ lBEDROOM S78,950 The ownen. at1e anxlOUb ! l'hev will include the rt'fr1 gerall)r w a~h rr. 1tryer :ind or rour~e tht- k1H·ht-n :.ink l I.flt' mnsh•r lKlrm ancl a k1ll'hc11, din 1ng area" 546·2313 IPof ,,I h ''., tlltJ' 'NI, U [®IH&itl PeriKt Ho.- I Bedrm. 2 Hath. super l:iq:c lwdrm!>, f1replal'e. renrel1 \'ard . covered patio w;lh huge bru.k barheque. full\' insulated & ~o uncl proofed . «eram1c ule in cnlry and kitchen. too many xlras 100 11 ~1 Won't last at "76.500. World W 1de Brokc•rh. 1'73·~~5 IYOWNER '<l~d Del :\1 ,ar. 3Br, 2Bu . fam r m. enclosed pul10. Top con<I. many xlrat., rw'A ly pror decor Sll2,5flO BIKE TO BEACH 1----------t1 BR. 2'h Ba. pr o r DOWHTOWM landscaped w/uaed bnck Two cam Collages on patio & planlers, gar. 50xl57' lot Exrellenl door opeoe.r, ceramic COl'.ld. Live in one and tile. Exquisite home . worth tl! rent ooe and watch your $142..000. 673-M37 1, 1 $63,500 investment grow .•----• • ~·.· ~ Kcahstically pri ced I st HOME --~ Private enclos<'d rronl $l25,000. C·21 Seabreeze. OR ~ A HEW YEAR'S Courtyard enhances t·ute 962-5521 712·1920 TOAST TO THE J Bdrm & family room 1--------..i RETIRlllo...IG?. i•oo ou111lnN1wP01t ''"°' HOUSE Trlr acc~s. Unus ual low ---------1 f"lll WITH price for areo. Veterans Then see this 2 bdrm .. 2 Unobstructed ocean view, THE MOST! offers encouraged. Take *I UMrf5 ba. charmer with formal Monarch Summit. 3br or A delightful 3 BR, 2 BA. advantage, Eight moo.t.ba. old. J ust din. area. Spaclour. 2 & den, sale or lse. w/2 cozy fireplaces on a J.C.Nosh Realtor1 llMcd •Call for mfo kitchen & low m ain I Sla5,000. Ownr. 496·1177 quiet cul·de>M!e Located 540 5 101 S41·042S patio areas. S88,900 ---------in prestigious Newport. within walking d1ic.lance -·-••••••••••••••••~· o< the wat.cr. K1ngs 11e Mobletto..H bedrm1 Jnc ludu\g a ,_.5* 1100 separate ma11ter sul te. ••••••••••,•••••••:o••t~· Luxurious living room Signature 73, 24x60 puas w /mass ive brl ck enckwcd ~h. S31,00t. fireplace & f>arquel F.ioUteSaJe.Afl.646-4380 floors. Bonus room • Triller apace 8x36 aduJl could be •th bedrm . park. · Family room, game ~73 room w/blt.n bbq & plen· Costa Mno-Hwltf ldl ty al room ror your game OOUBLEwtbE table. Call t oday, LUXURY HOME 646-7171. Lovely 2 Br It b lh Y Ol'F•~ 111v•11Hur.,,oal M<1 • adult pet k 0 8 n -----· World Real F.s tale PLUS. you own the I and ' HIC#UEI. SHOIES Please call -Mei;a del Mar 4 br. 2 ba. --------i GARDDI HOME 540-3666 Near shop:$, school-;. ten ------ 754 116.1 eve!'> MESA DEL M.AR [WIUMI =~~~;.;;;ilr! . ==• •=-flowers. roses. climber.a. hummingbird feederis. et c PLUS swimmt11s pool. jacuzzi. sbufOelln. social activities 11alote~ 3 Rr 2 BJ, new c·pts. fplc. prof lndM·pn~. Redwood jac·u1Z1 many '\lr .... Pnn<' onh SRS,000 14:.!K C.ortl.'1 645.·38b'1. n1:.. seo ~on n" n ,. r PACIFIC SANDS Ocean side ol highway ~7· tOMli l.argeM 3 Br model. I"• and !'lensatlonally de· Wllelan ha, PV Slone f'rplc wall. r orated. Very pnvate •, m 1 to ht-:ll· h u, rowtyard.5 with 32· pool llfAl !~IATl WALK TO GOT,FTElll~IS swa1 s1J.soo 4 BR, J BA. hidden 2 l) 5364&-l llWT'll'r 1 ST t 1 me off c r e d OUR $125,000. 't523 C.ot"" DI· IRVI~£ HAL PIMCHIH IEST IUY REALTOR 4 s pacious bdrms. 2 full ---------67$.-4392 b1ths, lge living rm w/ ---------I brick fplc, country kilr h Eashlde TrfpCH for family dinJng. Lge re· One year youn&. Li ve in ar yard for kids & dogs. one of these dlx 2 Br units Walk to irchools & golf & rent t.Oe other two. Bel· coune. Only $00.900. ter than money 1n the bank ! $185,000. Agl . M2-0434 or 552·05«)7 evs. COLLINS It ASSOC. 964-2425 MOVE OVER HEW CARPET A.MD FRESH PAIMTI ... with a most competl· tive price, makes this 3 BR California Home an outstanding purchase. All signals are GO for this nest home end the price Is only $79,900 red hill ~,,. 552-7500 ERNEST Ir JULIO ~~~~~~. VACA.HT Ir UMDB $60,000 2 Bdrm'I & d<'n. 2 bnths s howi; like a mode l 1164..500 J Monarch Bay Plaza Lacun• Niguel 49'-72U 131.0116 Here It Is! Ceramic UJe ent.o', wet llGCAHYOH TOWNHOME $159,900 Lee 3 bdrms, 21'2 bath Eldorado r.t odel. Near pool & Jacuui. tennis & 1<>1r course. Upgraded cpls. Sunken liv rm, wet bar. (rml din, Jge mslr bdrm w/baJCon)". Securi· t.uates. 7511-1501. ~ Walkr.r & lee bar, beautiful carpels, Real Ellstale superbly decor.ated, 2 ---------nlce BR's. Just a couplel•--------ol mlnuie& t.o ocean! Call Blutrs 3 bdr rn .• 21/• ba. for det1Ul1. Only $95,300 condo on lush sreenbelt. ('6) ao&e lo scbobls & s hop· pt'ng. Well priced at Sl35.000 with land in· eluded! C. F. COLF.SWORTHV YOU WILL love entertaining 1n Only $21 ,900. Li (' lh.1.s lovety 4 bdrm .• ram. ff09328..29 rm .. 2Y! ba. home. Has CALIFORNlA PACJP'lC 1us t been totally up. Mobtle Home ReaJt,y grad ed thro ug h out 2'106Harbor. Suite208 GOOD LOCATION . CALLS40-5S37 Pnced to sell alSlJS,500 1V1.'="'KIN.,,.,...,.G .... -~-x60-,;..._2_B_r_+._ FR.. lop cond. & loc. nr beach. $37 ,500. A,.t 646-4380 $100/Mo.hwhll •. COSTAMISA 1978 Skyline. 2Br, 2 b•, plut1h patio porch ft>r Utl t special couple or l)el'fon who enjoys luxury. t.o.e· 't523l'AMMDl~IRVlffE ly looat.lon, swlmmlW& ---~------1 pool, etc. <50813) 523.~. CALIFORNIA P~C.IFlC FIXUUPPEll 1 HOUSE FROM SAND • $98.500 A-NAME LIA.SE Moblle Home Realty 2706 Harbor, Suite208 CAl.L 540-5937 AcnocJe for s... I 200 ~=-..,..11 Several hOm~ to ch<>oio WAITIHG Cl\ arming starter. wood deck pat.lo. Ownor REALTORS M<H>02'0 $650/mo, ....................... TWO ACRES (n)Ctl J loc 3 4' 4 BR, w 100 dA or &a low n $2500 dn. Hurry for best setectlon Call now. •I\ S4M<l62. IUMITS l'lght month old J uat ll1tA!d ! Cill for tnro. 541-042$· Wottd Beal f.llta~ desperate' Need ra1t 1.;::;;:;;:;;;;;;;=:;;:==== sale. Onl)' SM.900 ~st ... Vhtfo 10'7 condo buy• C ;ill now ••••••••••••••••••••••• Peg Broms Rltr 645 1531 MCw'pWt .. _. I 06 Mlwpori le~h I 069 .............................................. ae:. 110111 ILlllS OD. OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE Many Families Do. Here's A One Of A Kind, &auUfuJ, Custom Built, a Br Home On A Spacious Street To Strada f..oc.aUon . Briabt.. Cbeerful Decor. Lrae. Liv. Rm . Wllh Fireplace. Lovely Sun-Room, Plus An Atlr,ac\ive Patio Wilh Southern · Exposure. Priced-Al ;$235,000 A "Joy Of • ewport" ListJmr ... Fixer UPI*' house., 3 ob'- garllle, bunldwuae, otft bldgll, fenced. Lota or tree&. Priced for quJ sale..Agi. (714) 876-5Il7 ·-, OR522·2080 - H IWLY PILOT .. -.-COWUTIL y 115TOUD Oll Spanlab man1io .sth 8ll ocean view. 3 un Jtt-ooe mile to Dao Pt:fntMarina. $215,000 MOIUNS IULTY : •4t4.aOS7 * ..wP0aT HltGHTS Houses ~shed DUPLEX ••••••••••••••••••••••• t"xlra sharp 2 BR units. G••.. 3202 bo4b w/pnvaie p1&uoi.. •••••••¥•••••••••••••• BTaro · l al2 If. 5z3r ......... "-•. t--. w .. ,. .... .._._. <Mtlerwtll help finance. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..-nr;,.,_ tl'\YlftC C.'3l·l•M _ C4 tlS..0350 ,_._._. LNM ~ c.iom ZBr. ma. n.rueroet 4 b f ~~~~~~~ ' •· ,,11 •)-"'11\IJ'I' l BR SS15Jmo. air. auacll1ar,1padoua, di r 2 ba ~~=~· - S5AcaclaTrffLa. 1M>mo.~1on A~a:l' Ja~. 3r'd . Lse: ~ Seavlew. It Br. 2 ba. ,, I 1 .. , 1 f°ll I' 2BR. vlew,$52.$/mo. Beautiful 4 BB. 2 Ba. Gror, water, aaa61l. Pool , &eaai a , Ja e . 2.D~~~=~-W/frplc, OW, Air~. cw. pd b)' ~. sm. $175/f00.1"Jm.o582 ~~Ul'J.IXtf-ooF:ic.nsm "!lqwr--.$dt.111417 AIJ • .5Cl·I0.13 Han. V... Ji\_ouco I _.Cc'-struc: -J BR.dell,vHlw,WJS. Aieat.NofM. 0r • .,.,.~ new l Qr, oe 2 1k' •-~· JQt TiO dela. 3 bedroom. 212.$ Y~ Radlut r r• Vtlley JU4 bdrm w/loft. Brolrn cpt. ~ .,..._,Jaci IJ'dnt. 2 .. be~t 2 story units, 2.BR,den, riaw.MOI. ... -.. -·-··-••••-1df·cleanta f oven. _ .... _.-4'1Jl_..,.. _______ 1 edb wiUl family room, 27Montanul'Ate Ntcebme.4BrZBa.wi. A\ld.,....SIZS/mo. att>. ...... no ~ r.. f~lace & approx. 2,000 ~BR., f780Jmo. DJW, woo6 burallta fpk, 55%·1"52 qatrtt auil. teamed. ~Kitchen overlooks 20tzPortWeybrldge dbl aar. enel buk yll'd. m:Gitsia. ~ garden a rea -4 BR.fa mrm,diarm. 1395.RA>xie642-42lfll·I'. •-letdt 3241 ---------1 etely landscaped. Vie. WIS/mo. -.--•-......_ • 201.llVadrtltesolute llutek19e.1eac1t 3240 _ .. _•••-•••0 -- • • .. • • '* • ' ' • • • .. Ii• 11.-:: ~ · ....................... 3 Bdrm. 2 b•. atr1um. c•'•-l.17• POOLHOME f r plc , c o mplet e l y •••••• .. •••••••••n••··~~~~~~~~~ a.--...u. 4 Bedroom . l '• batb, remdld. Wall to beach & 2br, 2ba dupln. Crpta, ..-.-,.7S2•t.,o• !.h arp -va cant. Only town. $100/m o . Pb drps. range. d1bw1br,r--------•, ......... _......_ __ _ ,_ou•dt~Tataa. '4.50/mootb. Ct.ill Mack .!'6-~ dblgar,$32S mo.49S·4268 BACHELOR APT. ut9'l2·7788. _ Z8 rl12 Ba . {pie, view, nr S..taAaa -3210 ALLUTILSPD• DUPLEX ltoMEFINOERS --------•I Lo bcb It shop&. No pd.S. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 100' from lbe bcean. CORONA 'IOOu1ands <1r Rt-nlals HAPPY AduJ\.s. $410 mo. 494-3223 Sllper value, 3 br, 2 ba, Semi-Curnl,tuid. Avail DEL MAR All ar .... as 11ll pnce1 .emeraJd Bay, ocean aide, fpk, DW, carpets. K!cu • now• 2CJI E. Balboa Blvd. Su•'"'r pnde of ow~r,.hip ~umple ..._.EW YEAR 3 BR, dea, ste..., t pel OK. S3t5. 913-4567 Yrly. S22.s per mo. NO "' ~ 1 Hr. furn. utal pd. n .. ~ Anent no tee F EE. Call : Sue al un1b with C1repljc{'!;, .. _ s-..A 1m In • brand beacb.S'J50Mo.,lUApril 05 • • ed h $200. 2 .... won't last. ut. ,,..-..... E ld B 5156-7107 Ume. en<"loc. garages, i. ake S295JBr.IUds/fncd yd n e w l>e ae h bom e . naera ay, oce an Wal .... • JHl~~~~~~~~~I roofs -completely re· Ul".E."l'IN~SERVICE $paclou&, upgr~lhru-side. 2 BR. den. .uper --.. ••••••••-•••••J:: lurbll>b.ecl. 557..0IU oot, ffl'lc., dbl. «arace. view. '850 Mo., .>'H r Neat 4 BR, ! Ba, wfctPt, Oc e a n •lew delu xe ! Bdrm apt. I b., tltdMo 11 ,ft .. -~1 --------1 pvt. yard. atUdren & 'l'ClUlld. fed yrd, cl111dre Ci pets Sib-let lBr Qt QaUI Nov. • .....-Pl_ .. ! 1--------•1 pets we lc o me. Oal)' ~~a~ ok. '405. me.. 963-4567 11. Park Newport Apta. --------or1 _______ _ -FREE *5Z:l/mo. Set Ull.J H . 1 Aient.No l'... $350rao.M4·70lr1 BlGCANYON S~T Praplfrti-Sl317th 8'. All· MMltl. ' JJr. d.n. 1~ batll, C•d•...... -....------U-:-3-tJ l.ovel)' 3 Br OD aolf l4000UAl'L'~~-~:2° '"'" orM6-Wl. ,....aim«: oceu view. U.tM•••• J421 ~ ~ ......... ~ ............. to1ar1e . $750 /m o . R£HTAl USJ M!6.ei-D11 ....................... ~... Ntw 3Br. 2Ba. ln 4·ol"· IM-GU,.....0. • TRIPLEX. C .M. We have homes lo eveey Sharp !!. beclno.1 ~2 -~ LAllll-... JUO Npt TerraceNu?bt,21>a.2 ..... ·• .. ••·::_~·····:~"06• AC, cpta, drpe, b\t.na.--S-PA-MKl--tf-MIW __ _ Great E ast s1de Joe, a r ea. VIilage Real crpt.a .... .,.. eoc._yllOI. ·-•••••••-•••••••• t ar 1ar, ;.oa, l llUDa, --enclaar.oopeta.586-7&87 K newer l br, 2ba, frplc, yd l::.stcite, 10082 Garfield $395. 963 4Sl7 A&•n&. 00 Attnctl"3 BR. 2 BA_..... Jacu111. 5541-totr t>twn ••••••••••••••••••••••• or-..all7 3 BR. 3"" Ba. Npt t.s (2) 2br, l ba. Pallos, encl. fee .....,. • .,2 ..... .._,_.., -~-s~c 2 n. ip• pg~ twrlun, 1 tar gar. enc Ave, H.B. 90-4~. No · •m. wttrpl fr A/C. Nr . ,._ or.._. • ....., ---• oU ": pa\lo, frplc, fO•t1tve gar $l6S,OOO Fee Townhouse, 2 br, Z ba , new. Oatl 4'4..e611 • COl'l'lpl tpt dt I • Toml..ee, RJtr,642·1603 ---------• new end unlt. Actult aver ,_.......__. Balboa. 7 t:mts. Sll'ps to 40. 9fl8-5"30or 962-4454 _,__ ~ bch. (6) 2 beds. l bach THINK BUY! ~~~!'.:s 1!Js~wncr. HOT REHT I ba condo. $29~. Pools. Chcaµl'r tha n rcntan~ play areas. rn.9468 ---------1 f::i,y and proratabl<.> ~1th Nace 2 Br Condo. J ~ l Ho.tsn-1 Lot-CM htLll' ca'lh needed. Call baths f...uc W/D paUo, leduced SI 0,000 lhll &lS :i.t78 • • .,. • • '..n..---s a1'd "S ELi-IT" *RB> C ARPET • rarporl. Cpts /d rps. "JW'11e1 -_ _ ___ $365/mo. Pb 963-2821, cell 'g11 & J99,500-Submll offer ~·•~bl.lie ~~(1141~ ~.e» HERITAGE . • REALTORS 3206 ~~-·~~~~-· 3 Br apt/condos. conve· ustilt 3190 nient loc. $unit.a avl. $400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• UJ>. 964-150'1, 6'0-1751 $240. UTIL IHCLD Weter. gas. eiectrtclty. 3br 2ba fplc bltns WO Unique l & 2 Br . hkup patio dbl 1Uach gar Complete recreationa l DIS. 545·3604, 963-42111 ruclUUes. Adult.a onlJ • ..... -r f.4e .2 Br, 1\41 Ba. 1 year UVE N ....__ .. _ b ' Sorry. oopet.s. v new. Adults only, no ear ..... .,.,.ac · C• .... •Apts '!J,, ., !'!!"!-... pets. l.a7·af!P Beac:a":::'u~pts 14932Newport.Ave. Clean 2 Br Tcnmh11e. l \ii Gas Ir Weter Paid. 1.Wti.n. Catltoday: GARDEN.ArTS b1, adlta, no pel.'1, 1843-B. 2J,8Sl Brook.harst, HB 83UlZ2 CORONA DEL MAR t'omona. $'Z7.S, M8-&l57 t62·'65l it.fl a t11aaft hnlllhH 2 Bt Townhouse, frplc. or u..fwlll..., JtOO Pool. leOJ:WI. Some ocean ~i!fE lg 2 Br 2 A.Ba, New dlx 4Plex. 3Br. ••••••••••••••••••••••• It Cat&lina views. Cloge 552~~;~-~ gt. Frplc. bltna, wtd bkp, 13742 Newland Street to Fuhioo b land &c fine · yard. gar 5395·545"*'• <G arden Oro v• >. beach. AJso l Bt. &44·21111 S300. l Br. l ba. loft style. 962-421.8 Beauuful 2 bedroom a_pta a---------1 frplc, xlnt loc. or all. TSL ~...a._ t n e x c e 1 l e n L MemtfW2 1803 neta~bot'flood. Privat~ Spot1-a. Walk ~beb. • 2 Br 2 Ba. new cpta/drpe, patfo view rrorn lovely 4Br3Ba Fntrm2lCIOlqfl 2 Br. Just redec. Pvt gar, patJo, nr beach'-kitc he n s ; encJou d Yr\y,DAc1cta4MS.ftMI tar/pado.Ad.lts.nopetg. s hopping, $310 m•. garagea ; p ool · ...,... $290/mo."'-1147 960-1271 clubhouse. $315/mo. Cali .,_ 2 Br 2 Ba. Uke ..w • .2 ur Cann (M Apt. 4) at gar, washer/deyr. M4.5 2 Br uruum apt.&. Starting en II'· mo.'75-ll3l:ot.a9&8 IODSOk at $20. Children 894-0485 or Wanda at 2Brl Ba. avail now. S26S wef come. no pet•. 752-1920or5411.assl. Quall Luxury l br w/mlnl ocean per ,._ No peta. 2l81J IMM907 & 636-0891 Place Prop, Inc. Costa Mesa 4 Plex. sangl~ Cotto M.sa lt!Yef. aU 2 Br 1 Ha. In· ••••••••••••••••••••••• r ome $1200 mo11lhly. EXEctrnVE t ~vi~ ~teps Plecutla. C&U Sue; 2 Unit&. each 2 Br. 2 Ba, 1 p~ ~~"G S. :rs.-&:-· rao. a.71'0'7 n•ar beach. 1 nr In· ........ ,._.,.."' ----------.•---------, _________ ~~~~~~~~!I te·rcommunlt y Hos p . MJNUTESTONP1' ~ E/llcli, or belt \ey, 2br, Fplc •gar-inckl.847.aa.&1 Bal. sus:ooo. 963-7600 or POOL HOME -North SJ9..0084_ __ eo.u Men. z Sty, 2600 !lq.ft .. 4 BR. 3 ba, form dan .• pool serv. Incl. $650 Mo. S45-'TS06 Dave 4 PLEXES llunl llt'h, Co\ln~oru.. pnml• lol'. 11111111 Tl d1 Bacb, 1'2 BR. > nuME LOCA ON Iba.. ::'i:· A ts. no 3 Br2Ba,4·plex.~lc.encl fromtm.f&up. ~ 1, 2 Is 3 bdnnt. $295. to dop. aar. fenced patio, carp, Adults. No Pets 't1 $495 . r 115-Z&ll ODe Studio Apt $165. lsl le drps, bltns, OJW ·Walk to 1561 Me.ta Dr. · K: mo. l " One 28 A S2SO park scbool11 & s hops (5 Blka Ea.tit. or Newport ' I lTIUD ac. 11.i ~h l n c. -------~P/Agl. Sl8S,000 ea.--------•! WISTCUff .A'9T. ys. HO FQ. i:'" laaL P!u ':, kid~ $375. MM 493; 968-4-961 . Blvd.> 1 • 90 2 &• f I , ...,, <>&.Loe: Def Mar/Nwpt. LGE2 Br2 Ba. fplc, DIW, 54i-98&0 \ • ... -p c, .enc .... , __ s_us_,.-_-.,,-... -.--2 BB. 1~ ba .. dbl. aar. 5'2·1141 gar $300 mo. 214142 12111 Flo-er St,••t T yard, fNt. trees, 2 car --View or ocean. $SSO. BrocikhLIJ"St 5SHS'79 (0 _...._ G .. ) T ··-1 I gar .. ipactooa, $600/mo. Nleely fl.Ir a. la rge & Wiiliam Winton Spac. oewty .,nt'd 2 Br. 1 ~._... :.;:: • "&;:~ 1.1t&laai.e'l'M545. amall 1 br. Adults, only. Real Estate 61S.J33.! ba, enc patio,. dJbwabr, llACHWOOOArTS ~p'OOCllpinl wn~ tab no~. ~110 Newport no chldrn or p ets. 8 lBa • · Atl.ractlve, clean, conve. 8'6-S2SL 2 BraB&.S21S, l r • c h Udren: 1a u•clry •---------$245. adulta. lle2·l800 racUIUes. •tt5420Sltno. Ut.llltlea paid. Call med. 1 Br ($250) avail 636-7343. Quall Place 1/15. D/W, decks, gar, nr Prop, Inc. . oce,n4 H.unl Hrbr. It..-4000 A d J t • • n o p e l s ................ -.... . 54M464 3 P&2,IA ---------i house, large yard l\vaal. -----------now. $3:50 per rno. Weal Side C.M . Call Sue: 566-71C17 ·• &UNITS Elgbl months oki. Just IJst.ed! CaU for info. --------•I ( 2 U ) 4 3 1 · 6 6 2 6, Roomw/kJtchell.u. 645-4840 ---Lali(una :-J1gucl Sl.50, !em. Pool. view. Call .bef'ore Spm. ~839_. ---~ I (' , l _,,; -- Add tt .•. Sutld t\._p japer i& ••• H mrne.f. fl .. , carpet lt. .. Cement it ... Wire 1t...t-t0e Jt ... Cltan lt...Move 11 .•. Pres l t...Paint it ... Nalt lt...Ptaster lt...Flx it .•. 1501 W•tdlff Dr • .Newport Finuci.al Cu ~Office Spoc• · Call oo Sit• Manager (714) M2·3Ul ext 246 lmc:llM•elowt.c «e apace In Newport· ,Airport Area. Reception. aerv .• conftttmce ldtch, aecy.serv, die· le copy macblne. From$290. <n•n52-n70 _JHE EfFICllNT ·Al.TEI.NATIVE I 0 It' n a TNWltg A I I ht .... An__. Opeoiqa For The Poeitiona o{; Office Worker CETA I S678 Per Month Aclministrati ve Support CEl'A Engineering $827 Per Month Word Processor a11Per Month Clerical Training .SZ.65 Per Hour Maintenance Support CETA Concrete $865 Per Month Malnt.enance Support/Trees $821 Per Month Maintenance Support/Mechanical $82"1 Per Month Maintenance Support/Parks Sll27 Per Month Classifiid C.ter Sales I leceptiOR ...... .... . .. ... ..... • • t ... .. , .a --n ' : ... '!-DAILY PILOT + • Wecfn..ct2 January 4 1t78 • Help W•ttd 7Ml0 H.lp W..tM 7100 MtfpW-.hd •710°0 jt.., w~ 1100 >lllpW..ted I o ······••••••·······•··· ....................... ···-···~·············· " . ' :." .. •••••••••••••••••••••~.~~ ••••• ?~~••••••••••••••••••! •• 0•• ~~OM ,_r ~" , -11 1 4. HelpW•ted . '71GOH•l1tW..tM 710oHtlpW_... ~00 <A?mpa1ua.n n~~ed re· ._ _.-n. · ... ~ ,......._ •••••••••••••••••••• .. • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. ti.nd r~m ovtr eo .. : ~·r Dtetary aula"4... 1-'\dl GENERAL f,\SAC ER For f1ber11 .. , " rC'IUJ PRODUCTION ~ TooUna mo expq In Mu11t llkti tu i.hot> " t'al Umt hnuH!d Ol)Crunaa w a n l e d I u r n c w comproulon mold1n1 D Ilk ffOpl 1 Secretmy p /fftM carpentry templataa & OUL Room .s, bo•rd ln<'I Lido C.:oovaloceot rest~urant chain centrul F~per req Other potil p oyou ·en }f.. 41llnaday.$elf,lart•r rtnllbed surfiue Sm alary lortahl lad> t:cntet,MCTT~ OC. '1u1>l ~ \f.'r)' cupa tlon. ilVa!I oo bl"' 2nd TYPIST o11t10~ open or I w •pleasMtpenonality4' 0.veloprnenl ol l&DUSUai ~ • --• -ble ol '111 11tart up rune &hlft.s. Apply 10 .,erion mcmnn.., co~n1elor lo pttoue m'1\ner Xlnl l>'P she . &u-226$ '•"' • DIJVHS uons -de~11:n . .site CAMBRO MFG IBM SELECTRIC II lulk w1famlhes about me, nic.c appear. Call '* • • •f Compaiuon for elder I> Early AM, 3.f dtilJ\ ery i;ele<.11on, operu.nc. train 7601 Clay Ave H B CW of funeral ft cemetary ar· '1S2·· uldoc Barbara. Tow TNclt Drivers• ex· man, p1&rt11ally bf'dnd Li\ Tirnea, C.M & • So lnj, etc With current Beach, So. or Carll~ld > Experienced accurate Typist needed r<Anaemenu before nHCJ. per'd. Top pay. Apply. den 17S 2159. 64S·957J S A 1350 mo <:•II mo1nagemenl ex per. EOE UDmedic.1lely. 70 wpm (must> Com mi sion "vnaae $ICllTARY·SI. Gl&WT0W1n1. lOOOlrvlne , wkncb ~ C177U Rob High income poll'nllal between $150·$300 per Xlot le(rotArlal 1ldl11, + Ave, NB M2·125a Call~ 5l06 Le«Jtlf S • week Sales eitp Pr• 11;\atl1llc1l typll\1 & ~ COOICS URIVl::I\ t;l~urtn1 hou11e ----ec Y Part Time ferred. Contact Mr. f.ll1Unt •p(.ilude rt!qulrt!d TOW TRUCK. DRIVER .. 'firukfast, I.unch. din 10 (.;ot.t.i Meu. drtvrr lienerllll Office ~':st bh!~e ·~~ni~~~e6 Thuniday & Friday Dar Shaft Pale. btwnlo-3. MOQ-Fl'i. tnr acctng depart. Must Need~. esp only ... u!lt. ' ner Exper'd Apply in w run 111zl"d Muto to do Sm electronics co w/xlnt C 1 f 8''1 604 Saturday Night Shift 5'&5.1158 • b6 sell motivated & have live 1n Qlet1 Met• a.s person Mu 80 rkn 'i. (}lckuPli 1n liU catlf M~t benefits 11>. looklns lor mo a 1 e~per. ....:..._ 1 #! icood public relaUol\i at· Mon-1'\'i M&-9831. • 1 • • Re:.taurant. 2ll E 17th be farmhur w uren, m~sl capable lnd1vldu11I W/Rd Lc&al Sec·y. Ma& II pre ... • ... Sales wanted. e-cper.~c. Utudc. Xlnt. Co. benefitt. St.CM be bondahl,• Some i.hlp· ph _recept 11k11ls & ace rcrrt.'d. Nun-:1mkr onJy .i. TYPESETTER •I "' Over 18 Who Are 'f~ose 714-833·9329' Tl.AIMHS • --ping & tecc1v1ng ~uttes. typing, 50wpm $600/mo Small. lracndly 2·glrl ... .. G\4,YI? N.B. (175-8fl9 catl L8dl• serioua abou~ lm- ---------1 S3SO hr + 14' m1 Call Applybetween9-llam. 11.B.of't· 8481400 Expenenced. Day shin position • fO!,.aPpi , •"-RIT"'IY proving your preant COOK Millie at &is 5800 art MM Lark Enernecnne --j ·' <Ml'-"" stand ol Uving, th~gh llOOWlt>thSt.N B. LEG/i..LSECRETARY SA.LES, OrderCoordlnatur concentrated p/llm'-" Ap~~Y1~~!1~~:son DELIVIRY 642 9'.l05 Prc~l1gioua Newport ExceJtent Working Condition~ · J'' Regional sales ore tor work with people. CalJ Aller~ PM Good <lrl\ Ing record -GEHEAAL OFFICE &iu·h Law rirm seeks Apply in Person MQN£V this world wide m11nuf. Exec. Women'aoCowacll, n-e Ancleftf Mariner Mon thru l''ri. 9:80 lo 1 l'lo.pr'd st:<"retary Salary 'I has 1&n openJna for a 640-8292 ExUlOS P~I S2 ti!i tu $2.75 hr Lile typ1ni: & bkkp'g open Xlnt ht'nefits, ~ulet secy/coordinator. :T 260'1WCoaslllwy,NR .Mcyerhor .. catenn~l'all Call 675 1636 for 1n 1133938! OranCJe Coast Dally Piiot (& PltOE) Pos. reefs accurate typ. TRUCK DRIVE{\ & __ Rick ~7 &32 ten acw Newport Floor - -1ng & good telephone COUNTER SALES, PT. - -Covenng I. e i: a I Sec rel a r y Tlme·Llf~"'L.~brorles, communkallon skills over 18. ex per ,ec. COOK •, ! :'Exper 'd onJy AU shifts •:. -Good pay & bcnef1Ls Ap , ply, Jolly Roger, 400 S Coasl Hwy. Lai:un<1 ~ch ----- ---Cnrrunal & c:t\'il liUta Inc., ha& 'hfel fyU & Exper. prel'd. but. we Walt's Wharf. (213) t:LEC:..IRONICS GIRLFRIDAY uon Charming 0Cf1ce 1n l30WestloySt •• CoatoM .. e ,...._....a.castor will train the rl&ht 598-4433Fred One girl omce, IJte book· Lagund Beach. Mu:st Ask for Paul Ward cirfielllilh •. ·-foya-. person. ~ood eal & Typist, lnyour"'......a.. lt'SEMBLER ki:eprng. 10 key, type, have xlnt l>ec'y skJUs & An Equal Opportunity Employer L-oll 1~ , .. _ ~ .beoef.tt.I. for appt. c-11 fcrttmpor•~ Ki> phone personality . ab I e to assume _.,_. •-Wwn• ~9am·5pm , _,_ 962-5591 rei.pons1billty. Pleasing toworitferallv... AMF. INC. 551-0134 Must have recent elec· GIRL FRWAY I. CPA per!$on•llty a must. • -.,;.. WE OFFER Polter& Brumfield Olv Typist-Rec:ept N.B. •n. Cook needed for conv ., hospllal. AM & PM shifts. F, time F.xper'd only. Apply m person, Beverly Manor, 340 Vit tor1a, CM ' ' ~ ,, .. COOK Raleigh Billi. lloi.p 1501 E. 16th St, N B Call 645 !'>707 COOKS Full & l'/Hmt \II Shift~ •TOl'l'/i..Y •GOOD IEHEFITS Apply In Person jojo's Restaurant \ Family Rcst.iurant Dt.-d1calcd To Quall l \ 2750 Hcrbor ll•d CostoMHo ~:m: M fo' • l osmeuc !'a)('~ t•x pt•r Jo' ltml' permant•nt 1mi. f'ro-.ui:1' l>ru.: Storl.'. IJi·h • tr 1•" :\1 r E I ~ u n d 1;75 u1.·.o Counter Help . I' lmwdays /\µply. Pup-M-Toco Drinup ~ lpm llurbor Wll:.011. <.'OST\ MESA tron1c assembly ex· • .or Salaryopen.4971789 u..&...W..t.cf 7100 L.a...L.'W.ted 7100 • ' 26181Avenida P/Ume. Appl'Olt. »'Bra Peri·n~e on pr1'nted oCc in CdM. Recent exp. ._,,. ~ Aer rto " , ~ not n e c 'B k k P g L!GA.L SECkET ARY ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • opue per wk. '40-s.M6. c1rcu1t boards. Ex· knowled&ehelpful nexi· HEWPORTCEMTIR Nat Co. needs 2 exp. REAi.ESTATE *GY.-.Hrty$"4ry SanJuanCaplat.rano • ...... fc!;~e~:ean~o s~fd~:::ge blehours 675·2070. Bnght. exper secretary telephone salespeople to Proresslonal, licensed •C:O...P.dWHldy EqualOpport:mployer W~JW~ Grow1ni; corporation Girl Friday, lite bkkpg, wt good ~kills needed by work from our off. m Irv. salespeople ~anted , •Grftlt.._ Pl• ==.0~~:: Wlth excellent benefit1>. typing & order desk attorney w general civil Salary + ~omm. & generous commleslons •PdTr-..PI• •SECUIUTYOFCRS• ly Viet.or Huao Inn. 361 Apply In pen.on Phone personality a praclke Salary open bonus .. Co. pu1d ins. For Advancetrolnln.i CALL TODAY Es\ab'I security firm CUMonrr.~· .. 1:!!'!_~•.ch. mU!t. Coa1>t Distributors t»O-ll!OO inter~·i~all ~0.:009!.. 642·5062 needs reliable men & .... .......... _ TRENDATA 540.7063C M -!':I G HT AU o I TO It Century 21 C k women for uniformed-------''"-- CORP. --GIRL$ ... EEO""" Locker Rm Attend. Exper'd, part-time. App. 621W.19tft.~M.,. START TOMORROW iecurity positions in WAJftESS • I n s;v For p\'t men's alhlellc ly lien Brown·._ Motel __ C-06ta !11esu. f"\111 or p/l Part Ume, over2t. Standcrd M..,..riH San~wich dell very. 5 l·lub Xlnt work in~ con· 31106 Coast llw y. So Rent Estate Sales People' 714-833-8095 schedul~ av tu I. Rl'llrccs ~ta ?tlesa. M2·9'16C _ DIYlsion duys wk. 4 hrs day. own cb. llrs fi.30um lo 3pm L"l(un.a. wJnlcd, Up to 00/lO'i< welcome . .Phone collect. \n /\pphed MugnelH'S Co tran.~p. 1':arn ovr $3.50 Mon . i-·r 1 Cu 11 Jon, - -l'omm aplJt. 'Nwpl Rrh TJME·Uf[ mrun ore for appt. (213) WAITRESSES .HOO w Segt'rc;trom hr Ca 11 8 am. J pm. Univeri.ity Alhll.'lil' Club. Nurses aide:.. Immediate 631.()9()() 2.'l5-01Sti ______ 1 P/Ume. Exper pref"dJ>ut Sant.i ,\na. 1 ',\ !.1:!71J.1 s.t0-8339. 7!'>2·7005 operungs all shills. Lido --LIBRARIES INC not nee. Apply in person. 111.ii:>t0-31i05c•xt21:1 ---I.<>TA'IT"'"•' DANT Convalescent C:t.'nler. RECEIVING Sec'r/modera t e Thurs 7am·lpm, Dick .,.,, 646-7764 .uSPECTOR 0 E M stallllacal typing exp. re· Church's Restaurant, HOSTESS& l'art&fullllml' -'" t:. · · fF qwred. Local CPA fll'm 2ft18NewportBlvd,QI Equal Opportuml) Employer J\1 , I'' DISHWASHER SS7-U520 :"-'URSES Exper tn quality ai. Npt. 714-833-9887 -LV N surance rormecbcompo· SALES MANAGER-. WAllHOUSl!MAM Apply Jn Pen.on LOT MAN • • nenl'I. Small Mf~ phanl In exper'd !ull·time for Scrv1c~ Sta Attendant, packing " 11 t e ~:lc<"lron1c <l ~~emblerR 11te~~;;.~arifteor 8am·l2, !'> day!4, 18 yrs or l'ull & Part Time 11 8 · Call 891·5351. specialty shop. 631·9936 erperd. Full or p/Umo. warehouse work. 1-;\P d or tratnl.'<'i.. /\pply ovr Cc11175.2-7100. Responsible & dynamic E.O.E. or7S9·99Sl Apply Arco SlaUoo, l?lh pleasaot cln wortlng I ~s 2 2l60'1W.CoasUlwy,NB ----&:lrvi.ne,C.M. _ .. -'d $3 1n pcnon !I I ." 4 VN. 7.3• 3_11 shifts. lndlvldualneededtotakeRecepllontst.Weneedglrl .r .... M-'W ...,...,p .. vac;st.art Rl">ear~h Dr . 11 ll --- -Im med. openings. Lido charge m small, modern, Friday who likes people ~" -v ~11 Service Statloo Allen· hr. Apply at. 6421 In· ELECTR - 1 I ...,.--Hostess. 7:30 to 2. Mon· Convalescent. 646•7764 con\'alescent tacillty. & wants to work 10 OPPOftTUHITY OF dant,, exper·d. Day ai d u a l r y W a y • C An Fri. Wage open. Apply -PM'i.&rugQt&Apply pleasant surroundings J.JfllttME Eves. FuU 4' p/tlme. Ap· Westmimter. Sml co 11cedsSyrexpr'd betwn3&S Jolly Roger, MACHINIST GnrfieldOon,•alesccnl for bu1y, active ex· Private Ciub Mem· pty1Sbe.11Statioa..17lhlt1 ________ _ de<.1nc1Jn. Top wagei. 1727 E. Dyer Rd . Irvine lloip ecuUves. Call 979·2161 bersh1ps or aail boat ll'Vlne, NB. W........ _ \\'oodl·o.,s Jo:leetr1c -----7781GartieldAve HB al t t ti ---------"""' • :'>l!i~l8i . Housecleaners Needed. G 4 Oay/40 llour Week (714)8'7·9671. Reoeplloniat/Typlat, ~iones ~.wha ~r roa ~a· Service St&. N1&ht Allend EriCSOR Yachts --~tature·Top S·car nee eneral machine work needed full lime for ter~li~::,,a e;itc~~:!1:0ci:i 2 Or 5 nlU• a wk. Apply, EXEC SECY ~1"°3,&15·3439 __ ~~,~~~1~1%n~:r~p:~~ HURSISAIDES Ntwport Beach actl\/ltles k;xp. fri'retail Sbell.~'llh&c lrvape.NB H3'F/Umeopeninpfor N at101H•~ 1-:dul· .1l1on al llou1tckeepcr, mature. semb1Je20. Muil be able to Exper'd only. Elderly Jcpu UIR~ng offlrm. Good lral'fic sale pref'd; cars, ex~:! W man in conv. bo-sp. DOW -.-oge 1rammar boo ... s. etc-Neat, " n91SC tlden ltrm " lookini: for top night shirt. 11 7 IO eue:-.l work from detailed plan sat/ Sun 8 um -8 pm. esi.entlal 615~30___ plnos":.ol & anjo-y· deal1"ng Ser\llce statf. on a_ttendant Full benel\ia: Medical • notch '"<l'l'I' d "cey lo ho~ CM 646 6716 nln~ 'ht·ch & hlu(.'prtnt!> " • " I d hill 4678 C.. ""rk 1111 lhl' l'rc-. & Sr -/\pply In Person Sat/Sun nights 8pm-8am, IECEPTIOHIST with the pubhc. Refs. re-or ay s · m · dental, optical. Please V1t•c Prl'i. of l-'1num·l·. HOUSEKEEl'ERS Monday Thursday Call coll ect •2 l :JJ ht <1uirt.'d 754·1782 pus Dr •• N.B. Corner apply at Security Ofc .• \ I l .. No X 1 t "'cl 1_ .... tri 1 '.!7!'i-~l30. Pvt. men's a.t etlc club, --· Campus & MocArtl\l.ll' 1931 Deere Ave, S.A. I.II> 1eant mu:-. ul' an al· ex per. nee. n '" er ,_, es nc --------NB. Xlnt worting c<>nds. SAUES PEOPLE trattl\ c wdl I{ roomed lieni:fils includ skk pay 4!101 Oovl.' St.Nu NURSES AIDES 'Hrs 6:30am-2Prn & 2pm· WANTED Service Statlon atten·1--------- 11roll''S1onJI rnd1\•1dual. Buyview Conv 2055 & ORDERLIES 10pm Mon·Frl. '152 7905. Tosl'll ud\'crtisino. Good d~ts. F/T & P/T. H~li Women for Houseclean· Skill:< of t\'ptnl( 70 +wpm. Thurln. CM 642-3505 MA.IDS " 4 12 3 10 Apply 2lli0 nrr Part U r f 11 Xlnt benefits . 1nrlud producers $25.000 t..o · · · · 1 .,. me o u Sll 80+\\pm & ),urnc a t" -l"ull & 11 t•rn·· ''t•od R•c~to..a1sT eouooo c l Harbor C M time Top sal ary HOUSEKEEPER ' ' u ' Mck pay. Bayview Conv. Iii lliJ"' "" ~. a yeur ar a · ' · · • (·ountlni: l'xpcr rN(<l ltt·nl'f1li. llol1day Inn. ZOSSThurin, CM 642.3505 Small Mission Viejo Mfg tuwancc, base. Taking Serv. Sto Hcl needed Im· 642 7207or646-48'11 Goud "turl111R ~al. xlnl 0 u r h c Io r r al h c r 1.aguna lhll!\. Contact Co needs neat appearing. interviews now 4' all ""·II P work I nie l'Ond & co w/lecna1ters wants full l'crsonnel 581i·f)(l()() courteous. exper person. (714)4\12-4560 ' med. ru or p/l. Apply. ll('nl'f1t:. 1\pply 1n person l'har~e hou:.ekct·per No -Nursing aide It some Bkkp'" exp helpful but 990 E. Csl Hwy, Nwpt k d k M \• l •1 s h hsekp'g for disabled fem .. n-h -!1 I:! I :i 30. or mail re·· i.mo e or nn . u 'I .• am enancc " un, •out not nee typing rc'l'd min SALES/RECEPT. ~ _ t'UST0~1 1-: H Sc n a 1• ,. 'umc to hke health (nod:. & a h\I.' O (.; urea. plumb•nl! lite Exp pref'd but not re C..stom Upholsterer i-:xpr'd only Top wagC's & benrrit:. Mii 025~1 Exp m•1· F1·mah·. htt• Nation~Syst•m• lyhome Nohve1n llri. l"arpcntry Own tool~ & qwr"<i. Uv~ in or out SO wpm Call L1ll1an l''us h1on orient..ed Sophisticated young '• 1yp1n1t. prof1c1cnc y C .-Lt & s alary fle'ltbl(.' tren<>p l''ull time. P/T.fl98.2233 581·3830 _ wuma.n. a beglnninJ woman: Girl Friday & • • w fJ~urc~. lO kc} add h> ~runon fliJ ti500 M4 093..1 ------p&s1llon wtth a future. if boottkeepitr (or art de- lOUt h ~.pbmt> t'xp •In 4J6l'ltrclt St. Npt Bch ----Office Attendant Recept/Se<refary you are s harp. a(!· aler, part Ume. 540.0808 YACHT SALES Experienced yacht salei; person wanted by rap111 growing FUJI / YAMAHA Dealer. Ql.1J SOUTHWESTEIN .. YACHT SALIS 1 714 / fl73..9'l ll formal 11(1 co,td Mc'-J 1 '\r o c i\irpu• 11 II () US E W I v 1:: s & \fi\Nl\GErttY.NT :\lature. resp. person. for mc.'<hcal field. T.YP· gress1ve & willing lo ,, JI.I hr 1 Jll Millll' ,1rt t-: o t-: ~ T t: D E "' T ~ • l'f:Ol'l.t-: Pt:nsoN P llme. Wknds. 4 30pm· in1t. It l>tc. -t-~en olc learn optical saJcs & con· 7·11 STORE. f"\111 or Part •1.\ \I ••l!I jH(,IO Hou'I.'' loaners n•·C"dl'd, Exl·c n.?00!. p1t1me as 12 . 30a m S2 . 50 hr work Mature llH 1.1rc:1 lact lcru. work. One part Time Clerk. Apply in YARQ MAN • .. ExKVtive se~·y l'.tr rcq. Up ln SlllO ~ k -.oc: '"wholc!ooak ~uppl\ Tla)'\'ICW Manor, 350 w &i2 1126 lime & oncfull lJme J>OSI· person 28933 Crown R al c l h UF I I\ t-; ll Y PF H SO'< B S C~ 642 3!'>0 lion The Optical Mork ct, V.alley Prk wy. Lag. tmt en er as open· .~ tu~ 'n1 urc.1 ~w:t u:.~ .~~1~~,t~ "~·l~Jo.1\~t~~,r!i\ •;'; ~6-t006. 673·8158 ~~.11!1 la I> ital 11. c <I a_}_' _l_, -·-. s R E Salpc; 2616 SJn Miguel Dr .• ND. Niguel. ~~h"an~c~,r k~o!\.:d~,: "" n l·,ar ,Int hou1 ., ,, •• ltk" ·.i last p,.11,.11 ,1,,\ --Painter. Ex'ftr. neat ap Ct..nlury 21 Adame IS now &a0-4363 h 1 r h ~ ~ t h d f Students 21·25 yrs old for c P uJ. D<'Jt andwnl-1,121111M1 111 lht· IJ~h inn hu~tnl' .. '· MEDICAL Sec:rclary pearance .. ust c c mlcn1ew1ng or !talel> W k f 111 , .. ,.,\' , ,di h..r\',, n Re<' c pt 1 0 n 1 s t pendable. Good pay for peopll'forlhC'1randoffi<'e SALES-RETA.IL bartender trncs No ex· 1WinJ:11 nc_5·_ e30e dNay ~ L De4iv-/Hewspoper ' H.S.GR"'DS F.XPERIE:.'IOCED. fc1r ri••ht penon 5-18 5100. 1n All<:rn Town <.:enter, orr I' & t per nee flexible hrs I lr<uu.19 e~rt •• , x :10 \.•I 11'\I !'\,d.1r) "' bw ·-000308 ICC l>Upp ies !ta· Mu~tbe~incutSJ.OOP~r 81,r"I l't·rm1n1•nt purl 11m1· )uh 'mnmcn~u rJl• " .ilt1h Ir COLLEGE TRAINED ~v G r ·s office. Mu~l ------------Gucro:,o; the !ilrc<>l from ~.n1etr1·0YnsF\ialvl "&II. ~htiomnee hr + ll?'f. Call Mr. Bea -------ddaH·nnt: t•arl~ mormni: l\ Bo nnie On\'tih on know tcrtn1nology, tn· -,, 1emco For 11ppt. call ,..,...., .. ..-...,._L_ ... I.\ Time .. to homt'., 111 ~urnnce knowled"c and Po": operator .. ror tele. Manu~I Adame. Brkr. or for appt. ~7•9212 r.ik for nett at 835·9400 10-4 Wed ~-M :Jl!H \ \arpnrt Loop Ur. No exper. necell'> No • " ans" serv Vaned 11h1ft!. Loui•e Juleau, •t"r. &Thurs ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' ., In 1nr NB c1.rea.,, 11.1u .... t ('\I .;.1n. ""lt." hkc ix.-oplc Startin.: al ,, · ' ., n " Mr. West. Newport Sta· '· ,. ~""' ,, slnkcs or ta.yoffs. Plcnl)' open full & pi t Will o"l ""'0 "'_oi•-8005 ,. ,: tll' n•l!Jhlc & hu\l' tlcpl'n --S700 mo. 6-tS-1631 Mon-. • · "" """ t1onen; Inc s ·t hb d O l -•• ,1.11.i,. 1 r1t n' Pllrl at 1011 of v.·ork Call 53\1 t 183. F'rt !I!'> train r1gh~ person Call -w1 c oar per a or s ••••••••••••••••••~••• 9am Zpm 541 3395 1--------s-........ 1-L s..__ Girls !~cl !,P2/time. W1ll tra1n . ..._ ______ _ ~ t\alan ~:1:!5 mo :wl\·02.'15 Factory Workers . Medical hck Ofc . -Restaurant Ne~c.' AJ;;rrt. Mbn· _ _..._ ... _ ... _____ ,·-MUSIC IOXES '1JEl.l\ 1:ny Man r11r 1:u1· 1,110 exper. & xray nee. Phone Schedulers HOW HIRIHG fi'ri. 10am..3pm. 556·0780 --------•I CLOCKS ' J\ \:\I, J.,\ T1nw-. hom1· 4 Day Work Wk __ N.R. Internist. 645·7172. 2 Openings. Un lq ue DAY HELP for appt. Telephone Sales e.ot l\fochlnes. Nlckelo· c-. ,J.·li\ ,.,.,, M\lt•· i'io rrtl ---Health Program. Part/ Apply bctwn 2·5pm ---""'""-------• .,. i:-.. l 1•1·t 111 g mu.,l h11\'t• 40 H ll~kpr/htecookllvcinfor Ml!DIC/i..LRICEPT lime. Day or Evenings. 10--4 deons, phonographs. ~·; •'1 •11lum1• .ti 1•ar .ululti. ours mat. cpl Art 11 C'llll ... I t Im c ( 0 r bu 8 y Nd meticulous motivated Wtftdy'• Old E World'• JargcsL ~let· ~· rtlll) ~'>hi '''·•) s:1~10m•1 .\pplylnPerson R33-~-----Pl'<ltatr1c111n!t ore Call inclividual-;.Gdbcnefill! FasMOMd s CRETARIES ON THAT lion . Al so gilts. •. 1wr mu \\'l'"' m1n..it·r Edler Industries Immediate ,opentnj!S full fM 0970 Health Exnminit1cs, NB HGmburger• & JYPISJS furniture, anti~!> ~ 11 n Ii: Bt• ;1' h ol r •• .• :!IOI Oovt> Street or p/time No exp<>r nt•(' • ('714)540·7442 26408. Briltol. SA SALES JOB Amencan lnternati al. ~ ••UH>l21i 'li1•\\))0rt lkach Ages 17 t.h.ru 28. S40 H-18. :\~f,IDICA l. R EfCtT . Printing Colloler. p/timc. -Uc !)articular & &et Ute ~~lJ;~~~~eJ.r~~t'. '·'{'. DELIVERY ,\('fll'-~l-'rnmOC 1\1rporl MarineCorp ·a al"y open. r nge . •L t-__..H_.p hest Work temporary GOOD hcncf1l<>. Spanish helpful Now accepting apphca Rn ___.,, -. · ( M & T s .11s11{nme.nU. with the ",. \1t·s~ln .. 1·r Coura l·r --1~coORDlu"'TOR llrii.lol Park Med t1ons or on uei> 2 DI llWASHER S , 1 ~ .., ",. """ nigh ... , '"' 1 ES agency that works for BUDOYf ·~~o d.iy \\k P llmt• am or r'oo<l pr<'pnrat1on IO 3 Posit I on 1' e q u 1 res Group, 722 Baker. CM. l luuts. "PP Y 9am· WAITR S, Barbary • :: ,.pm Know Ori: Co Mon 1''rt lltl!Bch hor h k Id r 4pm, Pennyr.aver. 1660 Coast Restaurant )OU. ~. IO.'>Jll~lbt~nR&. lUAM ·•~911:! t oug now e flC 0 Medical A~Mstant, exp'd PlacentiaCosta~fosa sts.8977 HO HES WHOLESALE TO THE TRADF; ,. all pha~es or J:roup prcf .l>ack&Crontofftce. -CallToda)' Thh is tlte llDSt ift· ~. DEHTA.LRECEPT. 1-\111 nr p ,1rttime. day health, casualty & pro· Fte>0blehours.Als0Part RestauranthelpforJack· ~Q~ office • ·:· lOO'" FRJ-:f; hour'! ~I r or \H•ckends perty lnsuran~e. as well time X ray technktan PRODUCTION In·The·Boit, immediate ....,_.,....,. ... ac1. hrtstfftcJ & f-. sales I 5292 lotso Chico '•' 1-.>.per d r e cept lo Perfect JOO for evening as clerical skills Llason Newport Beach area openinpona.llshlf\sal3 0 Overload I'. manJ"e rronl cl"·. k for ~tuclenl. retired or those btwn company &. in~. 714·84f·Sl94 PLANNER Costa ~Ina Store., rleaae :..: .. ·~ brokers. XI nl Co -----I I 557 "061 fott in Ormge Co. We H.1; l71'4JW9l·7509 offer o base,.,. ·1~~~~~~~~ 9ood co•"'·• d11tt . 1 _________ _ • hl\'cly grn I prac in So Yoho wish lo 1>upplemt'nt .. _ 1. 0 ,.,. 9327 M • app Y 11 person: -:;: Orange Co. family lncomt• Apply at JA:ne its. 114....,... l!O "ECEPT. $16,000 3851::. 17th St. 3123 Birch $. NB f' -DR. PERSONNEL t.~~~~ds. 700 w Coast Exper•J~~e~~'.1aml1Jar FeeP41id ~:,~r:.~d ~ ·~·· Agency or Orange <.:o. IMSURAHCE w/medlcal termlnolou Eoi\ab'l electroni~ co, in , 1201 W Lo Vet.a, Ste200 • · Large insurance co. has lo manoee Cront desk for primeOCarea. BS or BA i---------' • ranl(t 633·9710 GENERAL immediate oponin«s for congenial ramlly prac· de1. Prefer 3 yrs exper. RETAIL • -ben al -H.S. grads. Xlnt working lice. in production control j -; l A811ist. TrnmNI or conds & Wntnts. DR. -Rsouu•L planning. ,~ exp'd. X·ray lie F V LABORERS c...-1a .. .,. rs """"'" AttoF.-Jobs CLERKS •· Needed Jmmedhitely 2 yrs buslneH el'per. & 1201 W. Lo Veta, Stc209 Pe:;~_rg:!ke . Dental 1111si~lnnl Long & shprt term as· goodflgurtupttltlde, Orange 633·9740 Ne UTOTIM •Seo ttlries. G. Ofc: Too Many To Listi!! Employers Pay All Fees Uz Reinders Agency 4020 Birch. Ste 104 Newwrt Beit~h 833-8190 'i !J68.l648 ........ ,. A&tincy of Orange Co. ~ • Huntington Bt'ach s11(nmenta. lloUday & Cltril Typi1t 120 ewport Ctr Dr C:O.••IM• Morkeb ~ __ !:!.7.:.5413_ v a c 0 l I 0 n pay . 40 WPM. HnvY phones. Mlltcl Clerk & Maid, 9.3, 5 Ste22SCall"~e~72rt Bcl'I HelpW"nl~.. SECUTARY ~ NT -Ho1'p1talliatlon plan Goodor,ttmfzalli>nskUls. days .. NcarCoastHwy& u.•-<'VU ..._.._"\I Fo.,-Construction Co. j l.iDE Al. Sl'~CRETARY avllll:ahlc-.Stort.Tndayl Apply8am·2pm'l'ues·'P'rl Newport Rl vd. 12.65 hr. 1St.2nd4t3rdShifls Near Brookburat. &: bo•1 & c:oMSal ot• tl'IDtflll•• to go .... w/a.-staff INMfits. Ho door to door. Ow ofc. IP*• Is be•tlful a • ....,.w.tr•. SOUMO CM>OD? n.nc.tt RUllHDUCK Jt..T IJJ .. 095 TIME.UH UIRARllS Equal ()pp Emplyr m /f l ~i:'RECEPTION lST ror I SA.NCO Manner Motel. 30'i6 w l'\o.Jlty ··----· ~o_~pe.,~·!...eq'd We train Adams. H.B. can blwn 9 ewport Och orlhodnn· ~ ._. Co&Jl Hwy N B T-> "" --u"""" """ AJ>PIJ<'&nts A.\t ftS PM, ~66&1 ~ t, slllal")' open Wnte , ,,. ..41 • -IMSUIAHCE - . --TICHMICIAH apply ut Utoteln Stort•ii "'· <lualt100 Ad•lOO Dally ' COMrAHY ~!OTHER 'S. HELP ER l'.:lectronic ba~kground located ol StcalTARY ----'t PUot. PO Box \560, ('n11to 17~'108tookburatSt Uve if! Newborn ft 5 yr req'd , No degree nee UtJ)el Mar Aver.CM T)'ping & 11horthand req ~ f'H, Ca 02626 141 C-s+•• Drht FOW\Utn Valley old. Own room" olary AH open 1 mm ed l39(JN 'Vadflc C~t lho• cor ¥11\1111 ore SecretarinJ Telenhone Sales i {>ENTALtORTllO recep 546-4741 EqualOpporEmploYtr ~l.sp '!.5S'1·~ 11vallabtlily. good L11guna8c1cfl ' poeatioolH) So.1.iu:una. We wfi"r train. F.nrn • 'tionllt Nwpt Benefits. or~~~~'t:. ~~g;,rt 1 ~ ---MOTOR Ito UTE ~:'.~'1~0 Md:f :0~.11Y11!~~ ac>~::1~~ !~~~;!r ~~~~~~'!" 11~~~~: ~~ ~~ 3 :ommrnl:s~Jn j ~~~ Ortho Equal{)pPQrEmployer IMnMTOIY 2~1ly P11ol route '" 581-3830. " ___ cemenl.~711 Call JAHl'S AMTIQUE SALi Silver. ori1lnal oil ~int. IOI'• &c potPoUrrt aO .roe:, orr. Christmas decora- Uont \'a otr. 27211. Coett Hwy. CONMdttMtr 673°5752 l WHOLESALE TO'MIETRAD~1 NOW OPEN TO PUBLIC : OPF.Ni DAYS AWt;t;KV~ Suftdowlt Allff.,.sLtd I 5292 loba CWcct H.I. (714, 193-7509 ~. ,._ . Ci.HK •-Wl'Or\ Beach. Arter( _ _ __ ., . -.,_, Ald't t 631,..._ ~i. r-o ~· "' '' -noont Monday lhrou«b ea ourly i>1y I& Sec~. 1inblU<*s, '•l· """"'•a,... "" on • Dental Cbalrstde A"'"· GJMIUL ()JffCI t;tt,:{:.'c;~~'~ui ~~~ Prlda1 pt~ Saturday , 1.,_Giiw"'o.-=-C:~Olrtr..,....,,..of..!c boiwNi1 ~port. Pool• tractive you'.J ittrt~n Telephone Sates , '" • ~~7 Do you relate well GO+ wpm 10 1191 aoocJ 8 ,.0 A 1,, A 1 SUndq mornlllll•· Grot• ~. Orf,ngeCooMy"4:ttG4 w/ .. -tni ... 1 ... ~rap'g • Ad ..... ,.1 1 11 rt Dresser datea 1910 awlnl( • ~/Ptople. Full mnuUl ,.. • • ·t :.. . PP r, vne "' t:.:.~ .. ·~ •r.,. i ·~ _, . v-ua Ill· u or P• mirror S50 Old wooden ;' c~n•lrudion oractlce pa,r, non.-smolttr. New El c-t ron1 c. 350 S4001>ft'.rMDU\.$50Caab ·M '""' clerlca o:per. P• thnti. SJ,00 +comm. trunks$StoS:SO &evld HH• uper'"d lHl'Q ~~!...':'ar1n.e•71tan· McCctmldc,CM ~ ,. deposit. re41ulred. Good "" mner SALES~r. Women '• portonlty tor idnn~· Must be enthuilullc. mirror$l0.-.36'74 rae P.tiOft uwph; ...... . I I -.• .1 • fOC' coOt1~1tUcleol or 2nd Aero.pie. erOducb co. , .... Ever. pref'd. me.at; call 752·~.U.# OD~ t,ww \rain. 135.MJa or to ar::~ •• ro:. 9DfER.\UOt(ff.BKPNi. LaJ~. ~~b) 'l.:'!Mr ~omo~•ll 8.42·432C needs •• ,., d penoe '°' ,~'fraC~IMl\t. POt•lil•. S"lt.5" tt-.,_ •)ITT ... fl35.'72$8 .· -~--.... .-c.. 10 I 0 allnllt'\11.ew ,.r 14 r ....._,d 10.. d .pm&'Se ;..-..,_. tot uJation. ll!O•Ht~U"UcU &0$\ini. PP 1 '" pen.on, he"!..."" .... ,. ~1'1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ... . . . • ' "''l1Plni1o 'wp;Y,•ooct 49'-6531 ,i: ·.15 540.f281 ·MOYOllOU'TI '" dl.menaJ90pliNpect1on~ ~Gt~.2122wfo __ ~.;~forR . .r1.M#J:. FROHT DAMACF!:D rt'bF.N'I'~LA.';SIST. Expor. C'Omf>IU\1 bfntnt.i. ,~r·· ·-DYPuMCH • DIUV•Y woridnl to MIL.Q 9168A .. ~~r:-·8~~1! ~··eJt'!;~tmct..: ~.· nui'..to•'-NE ,. HOO'POIN'T SAL£."t3oa '.~=:.~r!y c~\ nq'd. Ntwpott Mfth. Dita ntrJ ()pr. Day 11 dell lart mot ·· proceduru. Send re· ::11•IH ladY, •at.re. t~l•lrv"'9 Od.-.ry ILLU"P W. Warner nr Harbor, , 1 , • _ • .i F/tlmt 11 P1Um•.K. abltl. lo·ffo •• Com· ,:,t 1:4;' tacu"a .:l ·•••• toL~~ Boa R, •H•llmark Glfl Sbop. 14 beoetiu.' APPW ' to SALES S.ntaAna.9'19·2921 ~i ,•· . a::::t'..t'!O~:'!""~ ~~Hi1C1 ::-'·.~~tr=..::~: k~.u;~~~~~~ =~~'j\;\~.J.utt: .c~.1-~~~~U6t.0 ~7:~~~ ~~~~"';~~ WortrPIMllft•tooneor FOf ~~~~~a.rrlc ~ lide ... i.-ttd P/T (Gt J Rerbfft f!'~~. Sal optn. tndde~ab&etnilo.UO t ·~ ~:-r ~oJ!r~~·~\lm ~~·:: ~aaornott5'1 .. U3 , ~-;;;;F '*9)' Npt Bch pnc· tut1\ J.wiilMI , ~-B· •Nworldnc aaah d•poalt re4alr.ct. MOWll'.'IMITMI 1~ ·-"!.?~ ~~..ic~... • • pllMure time tor ... ~ .. "'20 ~lJ~.Xlntopportforrlthl 1 SO.OOulFti ,._ '· aUonal For lnformaUon c:all for Jdll9 iiliiilMft to chedt OfPOl11•~1Jlr ~ Cl ·· ... ..~r.~v k -~ .v ., ~, __ ....... COit ~ • ,._ ,:; tr.' C~ .. <Ht "2"'"1, ut lat HHl'J , .. llallt PU•t Help -~ ,_,i S19111'A&T/LHll -~r,J~';,."~~• •••••••••••••••• .. ••••• r·1 664.---. i' wortt In th"ofc. \'u~7 a~Sl.' .,,. ~r oc ~tleyor l>ooY'llllam• -....... ii~ If 1' .. rwul ~, !.. ....... ••r~·,··~rc,-1' our.tl&t ltUvltlH. • USEORfKKS ~ :.o:;.J.ti , ~ i 'J. , aldUU• F.1'1* h.-1~; ... _s.:01'-,. t .1~-,.:. ~.. U..JO''YOa •lill fl llOt ,.... a Mii ka _ ~ "Of• ,_,,...,..+comm M ~bd. 8'11.1~.u. t,..dt' 1 "~;l~n-'l ~;\S~lST~~°t tlillhtilltl'.io Call 8'ta~;1a...~ ,~ l n~p11~=\W(;.~e, . ._.JQU..._ ..... fi111W Ille Orlftllt OiiiMl rr•:~,111~1 wpm1 'faAM.tt• viii. Cill or CYde•Co.>tllN .. ROrt "1 ',, ~iN'atur:..J: ,MolJ11.,..., I .~I 1·~~-,d~-, .o.w!YPJIDJ"'~·4-~~ !t-:ri·tt.~ ~ . m--~'-... _..,_o:f. ~Alllel•1'hnet -f '"~'~.c.~·:i'hl\O -... ~r ·~!I'· 'fl ~I w .. t.J. .•. l(i)J .. ;;:--~ t well IC.U 11f()W~ 11EltVICEDUl~Y W.lil!Ud W.IOO. ~ L.,/' ·2 ... ~.:-~;~ .. .;J .,-~ WIMl~ftOO .11 J 9: 'MD-ml )' 1i 9111 ~npl•t-~h q.lly .. ~"" -,_ n • ll'I!"' -· !:fff1 MUl1I. -• IUD •a.Gut I .....,.n . ---l ,, -lliiiiil ....... -1PUGt Want Ac1i1;>t' ' ' 4~Dri•H 9150 Aarfot.f.,.W w.ctneeday, January 4, 1978 DAILY PILOT • • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ocM••1Mtllhriatsl025 Mlle...... IOIO IMh.P.wer 9040 t112 ····~····················· ....................... •···•·········••••·•·•· F« :~-.. a w~:&.~ ~ Jlbir&lau lllftlatlu.: ""'..., J---... ll• au. TOP 'CASR DOLLAJ\ 1o SS9IDLISMm PAii). 11'.0lt YOU1l "--IMO J • WATCll&:s. -. A&T 0 ()(Jl.D, .... ~:.::::.:.·o--SILVER v1ce. uuu • ""'""~ Jl'lHE • 6 AN· v..,l'laoe•...,. nQCJIS. ~ Jdlm•arbn ~t--~-~--...--~1 LIUu Poodle ml•, UIGGA..,.A•S /ermle. 11 moatM. •• ,,_. JOUJ' ~card. _______ _,I ...,... s.t 6fte urd for e.ch 19' Seabird OMC ouUSri ve, ---------11.q ,W. one spare. We Bulck,150HP,trlr.$12SO. ~ .. Y• 1145 return per~anen\Jy Nd.s work. J{ow ard ··---·•••••••••••• sealed attractive lag " ST.J-4670, 644·'72C 6 ataotls Old White Malo strap, meeting alrllne ----'-------; KJtten. baa ahoL,. Needs 1.0 . reqwrements. Pre-.... WI '9060 . geodhonM. Mll-4127 aft 6 vent lou & theA! For• •••••-•••-•ftn•••• Shepbard/ColUe, 6 mo., 1• male, blk w/t;tn, had • shota. 551.oel8 personnllzed ~ enet°'e w•.n-RISUL:TS? wallpaper rabri c or "'"' '"Day Glo" •paper & we 'Seb~t't)()at thru Wlll ba<* & tribi your SOUIHW15TMM ,_,.,... 8050 ~gs Or tZ' two carda l"ACHTSAL!S ••••-••••••••••. ••••.. ack to bac . Ml~POltT STOREWID~SALE New a, used 1'im, appl 's. mlsc. Wllaon'1 Barga1" Nook. 5" • 814 W. J!>th, Clll. 142. 7930 • 548 3262 PRICES: •OIA' mte. S2 ea or 3/$5 "'"""'"' 4/5tag&SU0e&. ('1W)678.o!U 619tapSl 50ea ~· 1s1andcr Bahahla, ... __ ..... !~~~ JOormoreSl ~Oea. 1970 &HPJ;.-tnradt ... •-__ ..-,._.,,PU SJJcs Tax Included (nj>e'l·TOSS ' '" .. t .... _ · ·• " 5~ft.1Clllfemtompadd~ NOCARD? -l"' .t '1tes Oll re-, p•rlabl• ltar with Draw your own or send ...... SJt/ ar._, .... • multiple& tuner. a track name, addk"ess. phone Ir 0.... · f070 "12 o-tet' w/Cffl,Jlr •htil , &twntable-all are bwlt· we'U make one card per-••••• .. -• ... ._ .... II ..., Ir b*U. r..ilO ln•·Sllfl two cvatom ta&. Add25'each. Wanted illilboat berth. m1..aua__, W1'0Ulht Iron bar &tool.a. Send check or money or· N.wport'preferret. 1 !11-1'41. der to: &0.m2 "'()MC ... -.... PIS. ---...;..i..;...;.;;.;;..;.,;.,,;,~----.1 PILOTPWTIMG Pta, ,..-..... .-0 **1 IUY * * po Box 15'0 8'(),at Do•lt for r ent, Bell. 7-..i,t • GGOd wied f\lrnStura le Cost.l.Mtsa.Cll.~ :ie:rfe~l~·s~'.~:~ 'eoln~t .-. 1 AS1pJlan<lft-OR t wut ._ .. 1 ~..<& to (714) Blue k wht vaft. ~r no ~wSEILforYoo. ...., a. ......., c:us m urea. Nets uana-ap ., MAStaS•UCTIOM w/alt acceu. S600 or bst ......... mtotrbyllt/71.~ 6~16 Ir IJJ.96ZS otr. M2·?'4salt S:30 Sid tOIO ~a,ya ~$& .. ~ ud ---------i · · --·--•••••• ....... wknds -· CREVI ER CMR PAID Ml~ 18' o/b U5 lf.P ul ~at''",-~--.,...,..----For 14 UNd fur•. antt. WanW IOI I w/trw .,.._ s, 'si80tlbtlt TT r~ "216.: Xhst nlll· Sal•&nice-Leaslng quea&clrTV'1. 95 ·8133 ••••-.,-··•-••••• .. olr '$36.1'796t11.&.. nllli cio••· wlale ll. R~lr'f.r Inc. Kin&Sl.ae Bdrm Set · trt'm. 1ttr• ~"J ittraa. • Mediterranean fum: la· no spring or mattress Johnson Sea Sco\I' Tri lhltMll ~ ROUal540JamboreeBMW ble w/6 Chrs. 1 leat$27S. needtd. 556~ff llull, new ..,, OD, .u. -• >'-.r tl7' ~Beach ~ booktMCJaell wit d• Office,.lli .. • db\ ~alt taints. 110RP, ._ .. ._ __ ........ i---''------- on bottom $50, cablnt'l • w/trlr. S:ZC96. '154-4640 Doa Mbl~ c.t t1l I for lllereol1tora1c S135. Eqiilpmttt 8085 ce • .. ••••••••••••••••••••• alM dresser w1m1rror ... -.......... •••••••• 1'I Van. la11J C09• • "71 ~ ad cood auto ::O,.J,~ld ). Aft Spm, Diii eon.ct1nc Selectric ' • 1rtlll• CU01 xtr•. llllUt ... ~ fi~. SHOO/~ olt. • New Sou-4esatcn .....,_, antq. chr. &l\tq. •Dd tbl,1----------- 'l2 MG t.fldJt't Xlnt Mftd. Must sell. Asking tUOO (JI' bit otr. 842· 7083 MGt 9744 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1971 MGIGT 4 speed. radio. rally wbee\s w/new 11 port1 radlals & 60,000 oril1nal mllea. Oranae with black trim. "Very lreab Ot'l 1 l n al -IU NT! •' tBllCTU>. ' C11Y8 MOTOIS _ ............ ••••-.. "n PWD .... beut. 2000 anlq. aewln& mach .• beaul. picture , .,. .l>oobhell. Reas. 586-9171 WIUUY a.EaRlNC£ SALE •LlnLE. .. * SAVEALOT -----------PHIL t'C.clbc.C .... ..,,th'es . 11111,..... ••al. areal LONG ibape 11Mt. &4S .. 4o ---.;......;._;__ ____ 1 D evS/..t/ AM Porsc... .. .... ••••••••••0 ••••• Plf:a-tt60 .. • ........ •••••-••••••• Pacer x, Ja.e 08, oaly ......... •-•••••• .. Porache '74 911 Targa. U.000 mi. Loecledl Auto, 1'74 Pty. SaleUile -$te ............. '1.so UIH........,re .. ...,~tlon --•. CA91tOK MAPLE·MODERN MEDlTERRAN fo:A~ 44K mi, lndl• red/blk alt. stereo. etc. '3395. w ... t pau., Pl~ Pill • tnm. leather. lmmac 714:-96a;'J3.'~~5 PM . Alr. G4. Ures, lra,,ni. n. 7a. An H.,. All models & colors. '-dN:te ~nryTodoy! ~o-_ __ Mtll ttlO Cooter. -.ir shocks. 1970 tllT. 5 ~pd. ulloy11, S •••• .. •••••••..,.••••••• ~,., ..... _ ..... -.. tnller hilch. CB Radio opt. Xlnt cond. $6500 '73 Bsl•te Sta.. Wea. ., __ . ._ ,._, lod. Good ~-ta7;, 681·0600 dyi., 1·526·1247 stereo/tape. all pwr D4.-_ -· cvs. eqpt.$1D.64WOl9 "II Gr .. Torino. Blue ,... tt6S I 11 wlwbt w.rl. lop. Stereo. ... -••••-•••••-•• •• "'"o.l•wy Repossession WE BUY CLIAMCARS lrlbCKS Lut ·chance for fantuUc savinp on all remaining '77 models In stock. '76 9121::. Xlnl cond. 1973 Rega . A power. a tr, AMl~M. $3$00/bst ... ,_..... Na Ur• mags Load~d ! Muat sell, All·l"M 49000 ml. $Z5eo ~.4Q3 •• vav. • • $12.100 olr. Ut-767S aR I call811b.l08010 AM·nl....., caa.etle or wknd.I '1'I Onaada 4 •r. xlat ffda mi.or work. 60-YSJl W•eh•se COSTA ME4)A DATSUN ----------•U~St.aWp,st.-eo, cond elr AM/PK UICV407 '71 911T. hpd. Tart•. Al· Uipe, all pwr eqp(. $1... stereo: ....; w/..-tat.1·.,.-,_.--ac-()1-taDna,--s-l-nt i'MIMr:H l!IM5HARBOltBLVD. toys. new Plnll\S, /\JC. l&S-Sl9 »SU. fO·SlU 41ay. CDllll.o.bUOOtnllea.. .......,... 144M4l•l ... 111 lmmac.Sl0.500.CfM'fCS C =• Hll -..n...... -~ ' • CllVIOLET ..SPOaSCHIC:. .. ....... -.-....... ·n P\nlG waaoa. '°°°" t Wu• ft70 R.ebtl enc. new lht, rre.om • -miles. Many xt.r•. Nu.st --···-·•••• .. ••••••. toH ··-···-••••••••••••••---------~:~ ~!!d ~::: ~-Z::~d. paint. S.map, ~/orr. ..a.sao. S!l!f91'0 ~ 111 ,,,. "m1tib\&nt TB Mare. 15.3 ll . B1ldwln Ce rnpa ct lll00.6tUl•eA• 14&.1200 77a.•..c• ~-&llleves "11 Waaoe. PIS. Pff', ~~ •• ·' $3200 BEAUTIFUL SOUND. 'lbNUr Oraatl. Mod. CT ----.~---;... __ ..,;:_:_:_;,.=..::...:____ Detno It --~uttve sale Porsche 911 & 912 paru at AM/Fii nctio. Gd cood. 10t..-weskfor Fred F:n&ll•h or Westen. 2R,Lealiespkn.antiqae 'TrHondad*r.Loml WSPAYTOPDOLLAR nowco&ncon-hurry' d1scount~ll-S maas. • SUOl..0-lOM y._ tf74 \"<.'TY athlet.Jc. $2SOO/best •lute. gold tnra, $1200. )fust sell. Make ofr. FORTOPUSEDCARS •OOVESTREET Robert Ryan.·'Carrera·· 0r-c-·s •L.....-.L.. 9945 •• .r.-e•.W•••-••••• aCfer. 581 7156 542.5733 833·2515 aft 7PM t"'OR£1CN, DOMESTIC <Near MIC!Althur Blvd. 31Mith St., ff.B. -..,-_..,, - orCLASSICS "Jamboree Road > 536-2303 M0-0676 Sev,le c.nter ·-.. •••••••••••••• l!JH Vea ~hkk. Air. Jl!'W..., 8070SportinqGoods 1094 ·73HOSuperGllde lf yourcar1sextraclean Nl:WPORT"BEACH • '78MARKIV odto.LsUtGOttat•.PP ........... •••••••••••• •••••-••••,••-•••••• nuausene JlOOO. se.u!lfi1'11t 13).1300 Ll::AS£ 'Your Por•<'he 1976 CADILLAC LoaJed. low mllenie. ~ WA ..... TED f" h S p 11 u Ol-05et IAUERIUICIC --------1 rrom tb• experts at Pllill11S.400otw. Asltln.a --~-----" •sc er u er a 33$KarborDlvd ,~260Z ·DATSUN llorl1oa Leas ing . ,•SIWJLU SIOQO.Cara1tqffi froqi Cl .. lfi Ad.a ••ll bie Tor CASll DOLLAft. ~1~=w~1!:'1,.....s~Sd•/,.o LOADED $4300 759.1252 -?\11 feo~1.Ale.9 Upe. ~ ... e:n-~ lt,e,.a. •uP.aU ltema ~r f'AID FOR YOU'R J70c . i khl bln4· ·-_,... 9 Coe1a Mesa 979·2500 97t-$14$akforFted 1-----------~rulse con1nll • .U lM Dl·lMOT • a~llaaa.ICWill. JEWE1 J1 Y W \l'CHES · re w .....-••••••••••••••••• ---------1 1'75 PORSCHI de J •a e e x t ta 11 .1---------:----------- ART OR.JECTS. (,OLD. 6,. 7 tJ\AJ 10. S'f 50 $25 llent a 1977 Excu~lve v.-"T4 290 Z • .air . AM/F 914 2.0 C62!b.....,>. AlllM.Mew 9100 .._... "'00 ~ • • 1 , • m.i:s445. Ski "°8lll·slaes • T--M .. ....,.. • ~ ..,._ - !)lLVER SERVICE. 535 & s,15. Glrl"s' ice Motorhome or Min• DOLLAR tape. map. $4500. Call sspeed.stereo\.upe.al· · $'888 ••••••••··-~·:.:·~~··••• ............... !•• FI NE 1-·uRN & i\N skute11-S1ze5N skatcbag motor~~e from Herb P"'ID _546-_7_463 _______ 1 loy wheels wfradlals. cs1·n•·"76Sevilles 'MQUES 64"22fl0 & sk~le 4rea·sh:e te "1edt1111Uer. Call any of ~ low miles & MlNT' ~ '"H "' Crhl1d).all for $50. Call these numbers FORa.EAN ttn DATSUM you·~ looting for II"'~ Toa.ooise fTom ~.er. 01AMONnms. fl.i2-0138. nun1 2aoz2+2 t~thla_. .• r« yo!&! •• • Mctloosedtu S47Ci. ·~1 7777 4 8 ... ed, factorv alr NI Also ml t & ry -• r-, ( ). sc s on!'s JY. • rallmaster 200's wl~ l2'1-1888 cond., AM/FM 1tereo. CllV8 MOTORS ~Emeralds213 131;0!l72 Salamon ltind111•s & .silver metallic wltb " 11&• Btoedw ay lhett cit 8075 pol~.$75.CalU11·744'. MOTORHOr.tES bladt-trirn .. onlJ IOOO cn.~A ANA FO miles! "Showroom rt•~ ~u ····--···· .. ·········TV, Radio. R RENT ,7;1 IJRJ 171 Nabers Cadillac 2600 I l,11 ho1 Slvll Rec. Morgan mart>, hrokl• HIR. St.no 80H FromSUJO. wit. Tm-0644 ..-ol1'. CAIS ~~rn)~ res pect !!' ..,. to ride Ii c1ri'1'· blk ••• .. ••-••••••••••••• RENT Fireball JS' Self CltEVl!IMOTottS par.Se Morll.m icddin.: erat beaul. color TV"a ront Auto/air. CC, CB, All MODELS Jst•Broadway "72tl4. 4911. ~r carbs. Ct"'u MC\.& 5~0-'Jlllll -?:n1. We11 tl·r n <7 14 1 SStfU11.S&:STV.642·5l40 stctto.!.lpi;66-15·2283 ----~-----SANTAANA 3tr. 8 ltlraa rbl\, ••••••II!!!• w /rerelpts. S4695. 494·2130 ·72 El .00. Blue w/wht _331-1011 2052Newport81vd, CM. -----"'" 8J~ ~ 171 "72 zr J4Jn1-Motor Jlome ...-~ ..... Mitalla J9iiS 8080 NtKKO 5015. all Walnut 1 T ~Y Chassis mounl "'"™ SC. 2nd ownr. on&. 1 of \0lnyl ~. all lltrU. Xlllt cood S2 .tts. 673..c70 •••••••••-••••••••••• ~or best offer. See at. w clean cpl'd Open Road CLEAM ·n l>atsun 2-IOZ. 0 ,000 the finest Many xtras. · ·~.Niil 1£JS J549Placent1a.J\pt22iiA. a/c intr 49,000 ml. USED CARS nules,.f·speed. $7500.4923176 Eldo"i4. Xlntcond. Fully ~.O . ~-.. C\1 --1~. ,.._11 4, ... 7039 549.2305 f 6 equi p'd. U .000 rnt. _.., ~'""' '" HOW --------1RoltRnwce 75 s.59·1893or~ -ANSWERS -, Sony 11·• Trinltton eofor A111o S..ice, Perts CALL PAPPY 'TS Datsun 8210, 4·dr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• TV •---' XI l COlld & ----.......1 00 ........ Xlnt cood, 25,000 "'1 DEALER IN U.S.A. LEASE Y0111r Cld\llu ... "':.·~e -Scour -· ._e. 0 • A~n 94 ..... ...,. f th " t t ·•,._,.,-Wizard -S245 . ...-a ·--·•••••••••••••••• 540·5630 mi.s:rns.546-4044 ~ IOY J:~1u! r:!~t'n:. UPW01\MS EO. Those Linear 'SF1"7 Used Mostan1t .._. 9727 CARVEil 1a.ua MJ •ncle was an tu&~ amp, 1u1dlo 1no•itor ~ ~0'::; &;oker. •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• ROUS·RdYCC . -48..._Ced. __ 4-Dr-.-el-l-~-.-er-. 'rtmist. a. didn't lhil)lt ll*n. turnlbl. rte& to re· --·•"'· · 2626HARIOfl ILYD, tn.d Hew 177 ~~,·.. _.....~-· 11 •lr-·. 1t •JA ~ti to Just ••~li:at.«91'&1.edams-. 'IB~Dehaa .... ~.s.u --·-.--...... u ...... w• Ea~ SbGft He Will ell b 1 E _., COSTA MfSA.. HA.iD 11..• C-..... SlOOO olr. 552.7430 --~ .... ......_ way. Laced s Y P ecc. vs for parts. ~ "' ""' • -UP;uh WORMS. 494-8131 979-2640 WI IUY ......,., ClOSlO SUNDAYS CCIUllal'O tt• 7 BftAMAX. N11 .. Ide • USID CA.ISi T•Clih........ 'fl6 R.R. Sliver Shadow, ~ .......... --•••••• l BM S • 1 e ct r I c I I t"9 aost SJ.OIO. l*>O/bal for W• We're the new Chevrolet I lllli..llVERSITY x 1 n t c o n d W h l 76 camaro LT._.. C!Olld, -m...,~"~$3· 5°. rr0icrec ofr.1tYS*""-31 ou••••••••••••••••••• dealership In the Irvlno "" s1a OOOtbest orr." 631-0545 24.400 mi'•· ,.IS. P/B. •O· '" _, ~/ Auto Cente;-. We need OH •11 &bin cond, cons°" AMtrlf r. tu. Dresser 4 M~ cir TV. 19".Ci_,.a tllO yoerusedear! · H-. c ... • OMC ... __... 9765 ..... v.a.· Onv-.l,.,.,..:J!.t.ar. •0.~ d*1'. $IS. Sideboard Worka great. $275. An S ·-··-••••••••-•••• JOE ..__._ , ... , .... _ ~ ,~ <fillDltwbile> $200. Sm Clll1Mllae41a·8D Wbhaer. late ,40 •8 ·~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 7141640-.l9T2, N\1ht1 carfee1'bl~.556-0s25 &•triM Schw'nn frame, 1ood MACPHERSON 2850HarborBlvd. llFOllYOU _n_4_/8_4164 __ • ----• ~U* JatUt. tood cond. ' ; 'p:auA ninr.t. tB:50. MS-5TSI CH!VROLn Calta Mtaa , 640-9&'0 18.1. YOUI 0.1w•t S300, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 21 Autoc.enler Drive ·n Red Honda. 7,600 ml. TOYOTA, JpVWlton ss::: slanod ~ ........ :-'!k.·l~ 16i.~~2 .. aa.cor546-t.m. ~~Jr • top •011•r b•-tlU..,rap : Chagall, Dll«JHY, SIDic*'t •• "'.,._-------•,------~ ...._ 9711 MAAOUIS TOYOTA r r.o.r.. Dall. Calder It pllllSc. M« bsUlter. . •• ~ONVl&IO of.laiU'. I.ow prices 7..... Hl·2llO 4tl-lllO .....lll-...... f9JI GOOD SELECTION OF USED IMPORTS ;t 'AT DISCOUNT '14 'YW IU5 ......••.••• sttl 4 tp,. .... gd. transPortatlon car. tUoi--.,4 ¥W lua •••••••••••• 11,ltl 4 IP .. 1t..O. i fell beauty. # 1224 I) \'"ytw UUSEi:. IN STOC K \ ·. BRAMD NE 1978 CORDOBA Bucket sea t s . automatic FACfOlY All COHDfnONIMG 360 V 8 $ 6495 ffi~~~E~~~:~;l~~~r£. tlll steering wheel. Landau vinyl roof. tinted glass. AM/FM stereo. wire wheel covers. power steeril)g & d15j; brakes. Sec' llSS22J8R12&682 BRAND NEW 1978 LA BARON 2·DOOR AUIOtllah~ -Ml..,~·-~. tld.al tnt\. 3\1 \/ .. -_., .,.._ !NII,. ,.,.,.. COftl'l(ij _.,.,,. ...... --'d--.... •u•-_, control --AM/'M SIW«>. 1111 ll""""V -Lllldeu .....,. •oof t•o• str•o• ••'• '*"••I CO'i'ltt 8et I ,HUH8G20011 FACTORY All COMDI~ ·=~~D .197fc!g~ WAGON 56595 FOR FLEET SALE s5195 .· -~ ~Bench seat. 225 ClD-"6 cylinder engine. hnted glass., h09d silencer pad. vfnvt body •kilt mouldings. bumper ouards front & rear, power Slfff'ing, AM Tadio. detuJte Wheel OOY8f& Ser. tHL45CeB 1 i 9 OR LEASE INFORMATION, CALL PAT CREEGAN, BRAND NEW 1978 VOLARE 2-DOOR B enc h seat , automat i c transmission, 225 CID engine 6 cylinder. tinted windshield bumper guards front & rear power steering, space saving ·spare. Ser. #HL29C88127377 . BRAND NEW 1978 VOLARE 4-DOOR J l I I 17 VOL! 71, NB ... , .C SECTIONS, 46 PAGES . TEN CENTS Co111·t Delays Diedrich ·t?EoSeeution BJ GABY GRANVILLE OfU.DMly ........... Prosecution or Oran1e County supervisors Ralph Diedrich and Philip Anthony u well aa their two codeCendanta ln a political campalp CQMplracy case was put otf Tueaday by the California Supreme Court. The court ordered a halt in the proeecutico uoW it decides if District Attorney Cecil Hicks should prosecute the alle9ed criminal conspirators. More eorrectly1 the court said the prosecution anould be halted unW lt ·decides if It will review the challenge by Hicks' office. So far, Orange County Superior Court Judge Pbllip Schwab has ruled that Hieb and hia staff ahOuld oot act as P!'OS· Nixes Slaoaeers Thursdag Heavy Rains Due Tonight .. Sunshine brieny bri1htened the Orange Coast today, but it probably won't be seen again for a while, National Weather Service forecasters say. Rain beean falling heavily shortly before noon today and weather forecasters called for a 90 percent chance or more of the aameonThunday. "We're in kind or a storm pat· tern here and storms have the * * New Storm Heath for Wast Area .. l BJ Tbe Auoclalecl Prelf An lntensirylng new s\.orm marched toward the Northern California coast today as gale t •arnines for southerly. winds over 40 miles an hour, and coastal seu over 12 feet, were usued north from the Big Sur 'coast. The storm wait situated 700 miles out in the Paciric, moving eastward and expected to come ashore late tonight. Intermittent rains were forecast for most districts or Northern California tonight and into Thursday. Winds up to 35 miles an hour were predicted for the San Francisco Area today. In the Slerra, the California Department of Transportation Issued warnings that chains or snow tires were required over many mountain routes, lnclud· ing Interstate 80. Snow and ice coated many roads over the passes earlier today. Meanwhile, a 70 percent chance ol rain this afternoon, turninc to a 90 percent chance tonight, ls forecast for the San Joaquin Valley. Showen will continue throu'Ch tbe weekend with a 70 percent chance forecast for tomorrow and period• of rain likely tbrouib Friday ln the valley. Snow la expected to fall .in the Stena Nevada tllroulb the week with heavy, wind-driven snow eipected late today and toniabt. potential to keep coming in," said Don DePauw, weather service specialist. He said tonight's storm ls coming from west of San Fran· ciaco and should bring moderate to heavy rain. taperinl off to showers Thursday. DePauw said the storms are due to a low pressure system over the West. "These storms are likely to come through one after the other," he said. Highs Thursday should be near 60, with overnight lows around 50, be said. The Orange County Harbor Department today reported .42 of rain for the past 24 bringing the season total 07 inches compared to :u 1 last year. The Moulton Ntpet Water Treatment Plant recorded .32 inches. for a season totaJ of 5.65 compared to about half that last year. Bill Shields of Laguna Beach Hardware tallied .41 inches of rain on bis gauge during the past 24 hours in the Art Colony. The season total to date is 4.72 inches, compared to 4.29 inches last year at this time. lo Costa Mesa, Gharles Lewis or Orange Coas t College's division of physical sciences re- ported .72 inches of rain for a season total of 4.86, up from 3.76 last year. Oranee County Flood Control supervising hydrographer John Gietzen said that, although raln- (See RAIN, Page A.2) 'Unthinking' ·Man Killed REDWOOD CITY CAP) Police report John Francis Grlf· 11th, 36. was arguin~ with a woman friend near the railroad tracks at Main Street and absentmindedly walked in front of a train and was killed. The report said the Redwood City man was hurled 28 feet down the rieht-of-way Tuesday nlcht and apparenUy died in- stantly. The report sald Griffith had been drlrlklnc and walked onto the tracks H'Wlthout thinldns." ecutora of the two eounty supervisors and their codefen- dants. Judee Schwab'• rullnc was up- held tut month by an appellate court. Tbo.e declaions came after the def endaota said the DA should be removed from tbe cue beca'use ol alleced bias and prejudice l&alnst t..Vm. • Ski-masked Bandit Robs FV Station A ski-masked bandit stalked into a Fountain Valley service station Tuesday night, bran· dished a pistol and took about $200 lrom a terrified attendant. "This is a robbery . · .• don't make i( a homicide ... " police quoted the grim masked man as saying. Investigators said he then or- dered the unidentified attendant at the Thrifty OU Company out- let at 17475 Brookhurst St. to stay inside for a few minutes before calling police. The bandit, described as about 25 years old, then fled .from the corner station at Brookhurst Street and Slater Avenue and dlaappeared into the rainy night. Police, wbo said the holdup oc· curred sborlly before 7:30 p.m., searched the surroundine neighborhood for the Caucasian auspectwlthoutauecess. Program Adopted LOS ANGELES ~P> -The Farmers Insurance Group has a1reed to adopt a sweepinlf af. firmatlve actlon program aimed at hiring and promoUng women'1 a,nd minorities. In the lnltlal rnllnc 1udge Schwab nld be talltcl to flndi&nr. evidence ol true IK&s Jnd pre • udice. But, the jl.l~e .continued. , the appearance .8i.Q.d preJ· udice mltht ul\iennlle the credlbUil)' ol court proceed- inl•· The CNe becan wt J\&ly J wb~ tho eoet.J l!'IDd J'Y'J 1.Q. .. dJcted Diedrich and Anthony on multiple ch~ related to al· leged 'Ytolatloal ol 1ta• P9l1lcal eampalp regulaUons. ' lndlcted along with the two county supervisor• were Anaheim CoW>cilman WUUam Kott, Fullerton attorney Ml~ Remington and one tlmo political financler Gene Coorad~ Su_bnquel\Uy, Remlofton Follr Leap to Safety As Cmiser Explodes Four passengers leaped for their lives and swam ashore Tuesday when their 25-Joot cabin cruiser exploded and burned near mld·channel in Newport Harbor. Fire from the bloats reduced the vessel to a aeml .. ubmerted bulk. Two o( the four people who were aboard the vessel were in· jured ln the expJoslOft and fire. Harbor Patrolmen. said the boat, owned by Thomu Wakely, 49, of 23S Promontory Point Drive West, Newport Btacb. was pullinc away from the Union Oil .cu dock, 408 8. Bay F-ront near th• terry landing when two explosions in the forward bilses tottcbed oU the fire. Injured in the mishap were John and Olivia Blakely or Pittsburgh, Pa.' They were treat· ed fo_r minor burns and released from Moag Memorial Hospital. AlJO on board,, b11t unlnjur~ was Paula Pichon, 32, of 343 Baywood, Newport Beach. Harbor Patrolmen who fought the blaze from their fire boat said they bad the !lames quenched within a few minutes of their arrival. A second exploslon .however, occurred which patrolmen believe did major bull damage to the vessel. The boat was towed to a Harbor Patrol mooring off Carnation Cove where it will be kept pendine completion of lbe investigation. plea4ed aunty to • sln1te eon· llDltacy charae and the nmam.. =~ acaiost. hlm were However, none of the other de- fendants have yet entered a plea to Uae ettasea brought a1ainst tftm by the trand jury. Before the Supreme Court ecllct Tuc!Jday, the defendants (See DELAY, PafeAJ) a1 aOBEllT BAaKE& . °' .. ..., ......... 'lruntlnium Beach City ~en members voted Tuesday night to cut oft the 1penclin1 or any more ~payer money in the blt.tet dis- pute betwec two of their at- torneys. The countll unanl,oiously cfe. clded to tennlnate the services of a apec:lal lecat adviser on behalf of City Attol'D4Y Don Bonfa. Council members al~o direct- ed City Administotor Bud Belsito to inform all deputy clty attorneys and the us1'tant clty attorney not to provide a&• sistance to Bonta in the matter. The action does not preclude Bonfa from rep~enUng himself ln proceedings. ln additloo, special legal ad- viser Nlcbolu Counter was in· 1tructed to schedule three _pieyanc4l bearinp 81 IOOD U • po11lble that Deputy Clty At- torney John O'Connor bu f1lecl a1ainst Boota. O'C9nnor "'"' su,1pended wilbotrt »aY Dee. 28 by Bonla after tM two men were Involved in a physical altercation in O'Connor's office Jut Tuesday evenJna. Each claimed Innocence in the skirmish and accused the other or assault and batury. Votinc in fQvor o! the legal aid cutbacks for Bonfa after an ex· ecuUve session dlscu.sslon were Mayor Ron Pattinson, Ted Bartlett, Al Coen, Richard (SeeBONFA, Page.A2) Gloe Poured I In Factory Vandals uncorked a 500-gallon tank of glue at a North Hunt- ineton Beach skateboard factory some time over the New Year • holiday weekend causing $800 in damace,~DOlice reported. Dave Ci'ook. an omcial at the skateboard firm at 15602 Com· merce Lane, told police he found the slimy 100 on the south side oC th•factoryat10:56a.m. Tuesday. Who ever opened the slue tank valves alao attempted to bur1larize UM farm but no lesses were reported. police aaid. Coast Chance ot measurable rain incteasin& )0 70 per- cent tonlsht and to 90 lHtr~ cent 'tburac1afy. South to aoat.Masi winds lS &o 30 mph at times throu1n Thurida.y. Lowa tonJeht 47 to 52. Hii,hs Thursday 57 to 12. . I Q.\ll Y PILO'r HIF Votihg • lluntfngtoo Beach Clty Council members decldectTuesday ni1tlt to put pl'<>p()Ud cbangea in the city charter ob the June primary ballot instead of the Aprll m'1n.icipal ballot as orl&lnallY planned. The majorlty of the council said there ilo't enoup time to make chances In ~menda· lions and to dntt billot up- ., ~·~toru.e tseetJOa. CouPdl members Al CoeA Norma Gibb• argued unsuc- ce111fully that changes in the dty "cooat.ltutloo," wblcb muat be gtven final approval by cltlzem, should be decided earlier. Coen said th•t issues would be pot in abarper foetus in the Aprl.I clty elections. He said that local issues may be clouded by the Punks Pending Peevilh Pistols Pkreid ATLANTA (AP> -The British punk rock group called the Sex Pistols arrived quietly in Atlanta to- day and drove to a friend's house in the country until. Thursday night's concert, a spokesman said. . The.arrival was in contrast to the group's de- parture from London's Heathrow Airport, when bass guitarist Sid Vicious covered his face with a newspaper to prevent photographs being taken of him and then threatened photographers. The rest of the group joined in making the threats and the photographers challenged them to try carrying out the threats. The four group mem- bers backed down. The Atlanta stop is the first on the Pistols' first U.S. concert tour "to take some dollars o(f the Yanks." · Four previous scheduled appearances were can- celed because U.S. State Department offlcials denied entry visas, saying two of the fout members of the group had criminal records. Ocean View Raises Suggested at 7% By ARTHUR R. VINSEL OI Ille O•lly rllet St.If A slate mediator has filed his l"ecommendallon that. a seven percent pay raise be given Lo teachers in the Ocean View Schoof District. A long-running dispute on pay raises has focused on a demand by the Ocean View Teachers' Association for 8ll 11 percent hike and a maximum offer by district trustees of 6.28 percent. Arnold o. Anderson, labor· management dispute arbitrator for the state's Educational Employment Relations Board, says in bis report made public Tuesday it should not be an across-the-board raise. His findJngs -if adopted - would Jive majorlt)' \IY8flt ln· crease benefits lo those teacbers with more instructional ex· perience and more advanced college or university education. ··A greater percentage ln- creai.e should be awarded t.o mort' ex perienced teachers .... " Anderson said in his report submitted Lo district officials foUowing 18 hours of wage and fringe benefit pack•ge hearings. Anderson's rccommeodaUon l'alls for an average sevel\ per- cent pay raise to become effec· Woman Hit By Car, Hurt In Huntington Margrethe Y~um o( Hun~ inglon Beacb was reported In guarded condition today with in· juries sutfered Tuesday niCht when s~e was struck by a car while she was walking on Hell Avenue in Huntingtol'\ Beach. Mrs. Yocum, 39. of 4052 Ott- dine Circle, remains In the ill· ten1ive care unit at ·Huntington lntercommunlty Hospital. Police said she was struck near Caballero Street by a car driven by Peter Colllsson, f7, of 16932 Edgewater Lane, Hunt-ington Beach. Cause of the 8:30 p.m. accl• dent, in which tb• CalJISIOn car skidded out of control, Is under investigation, Uce said. OftANOI COAIT "'' DAILY PILOT tive July 1, followed by another five percent pay increase ~ following year. If the Bureau of Labor StallatJcs calculates any cost-ot- llving Jncrea.se over seven per- cent In the Loa Ange1et·L0nl Beach area • -which includes Huntington Beach in its frame of reference -n~)tf. year teacbe1'9 should get a six percent pay raise, he sugaesls. Attorney R.onald Ruud, of Palos Verdes. representing the district on the three-member fact-finding panel, submitted a report agreeinJ with many of Anderson·~ lindings. Fro.a Page Al TRIP ... total four hours. G1scard d'Estaing, an a brief welcome al Orly's VIP lounge, abo cited the long history of Franco'American friendship. But he underlined French in· siatence on independent foreign policy and derense ability, which has been the basis of Irritation in the past between Washington and Par.ts. Carter was visiting a cbuntry that w~ the United States· n.tst ally. he said, and which bu become "a modern, active coun- try, w,bich ls master of lta own destiny and defense and wants to work with you lo find the beat .sol ution to the problems of the modern world. '· Jt is true that we may have dlfferent vie~a on the paths to follow," said the tall, slim French leader, "JJut 1 am con· ·vinced that we will derive from our discussions useful elements to light up the road leadlnc to a more fraternal, more united and more secure world ... From J>arl5, tbe U.S. leader moves on Frfday to Brussels, headquarters of lbe North Atlan· tic Treaty Organization. FroaPageAJ RAIN ••• fall bu been considerable, lt'a been slow enough to eoak In rather than cauae erosJon prob- lem1. .Gietzen.. Hld today'• total kl Santa Ana wa1 .fl inchea for a HHon total ot 5.02, ®mparect to 4.4.8 lalt MMM at this tJme. . The hlibeat rainfall fl1ure Jttt had Wft for Santti10 Peak, w.bete ..80 tnclles tn the put ~ houn broqht the ltMOn tote! to 15.'10, ~ar.dt010.0 lut1tat'. No 1ertou1 dam11t ":from T ue1day'e ~In ••• reported elon• 11Kr0railf• Coan: ... lenc • ball~ Charter revJalon committee chairman llarOld Bauman also said that the election abould be held in Aprll ao that candidates could run on the basia of charter changes. · He alto said that the local b- suea mitbt tie lost on the lonaer June ballot. Rescue Copter Crashes KNOXVILLE, Tenn. CAP) - A military helicopter carryinc . seven penon1 cru\ed today while sear.,hine the Great ~oky MOl.mtain& N•dotaal Park for a small ab-plane which went down Tuesday nlgbt with five aboard, authorities said. There were u.nconlirmed re- poru that three persons aboard the bellcopter were killed and another unconfirmed report from • part ranger that there wu one aurviyor ot the airplane cruh. It wu not lm.medlately de- termined what caused either ac· cldent. A sPC>teeman fOl' the Air Force at IllincU' Sc:ptt Air Force Base, . which coordbudled tbe helJcopter starch, said ill those on the plane, a twin-enelne Cesena 4.21 cJ>arter fUtht ~ from Fort Lauderdale, Fla., to Chfcaco, were killed.., ;John Nance, chlet flllht con- troUer for~ Federal Aviation Admlnlatrat!Dn, said, ··~ un-d•ntand thefo-were seven on board tb4\ hJU,copter and that there were .tbree faWlti6, bu1 we haven't Cabfirmed t.bat yet." ~ance said a flicht plan wu filed for a ~rip from Fort Lauderdale Baiecut.ive AIJ'POrt to MacQQ, G#. Fretia,PageAl BONF~ •.• Siebert aJ1\i Huriett Wieder. lda yo\' Pro Tern Ron ShenkmaQ. and Norma Gibbs ha• left before._. decision. 1Juesday .U,ht'a action was a departure from past practices. The CO\lD~ll provided legal counsel to Bonf a fJ\ an earlier grJevance dl1pute betwen the two men. Costs for the attorney supporting Bonra at that lime are reported to be more than $10,000. O'Connor also has filed JegaJ action asking lbe city to pay for his attorney fees which he says are about $30,000. Pattinson estimated that total costs could reach '100.000 If the city provided legal couMel for !Joofa in the latest episode. Before the decision was taken. attorney Gall Rutt.on told the council that O'Connor was de· Died due p~ when be was IU8pebded wi~tpay. She sai(l-that. O'Connor wasn't given notice bi writing and was not allowed to r.espond to cbarse• priot to disciplinary ac- tion. 1 Sbe also ••let that alleged failul'e by Bonla to follow due process requlretoents "was a ne1ll1ent dereUctloo of duty and an open tnvitlltion for more lawswu baaed on the deprivation or ri1bta of employees." Mrs. Hutton la opposin1 Bonfa In next April's election for city attorney. Deputy CJty Attorney Mark Travis, newly elecLed presldeot ot a city management employees orcanization, also told the oouncU tbat be thoulbt O'Connor waa ~flied by the suspension. • He said theM-rntmber associa· tion la prepared to sake acUoa "to dowba&everiSrlatrt..'' • 0 'COlinor alto addl'elled the councll and accused Bonta of "malicious lalse charges and ac- cu.aU4lft!." 't'he teud between 1he two men rte-nu tr<tm a critical perloilJl•nce evah1atlon of O'Connor~ Bonfa ln 1974. Bon~wu o-. a btief vacaUon and nC pt'4Mnt at the council ·-~ He •114 lftvl°'*Y that the dlachara• of ~O'.QDnaor 1'U Iona . overdue b'4t) et effort. were haJUertd . .:)y a elYll .,.mce 1yat1m In Wblth tD)ployeta may file ll'ttf/MHI, BoA!a said ·~ ~ation ot O'Connor will F.tailY tncMue the tfficteacy IDd Acn-11• of the city aUllrney'1 cWlce and thiJ fie& tllOllld be Ol bite.rest to tu.-pay~.'' . H• iald that ~· would dis· ob•rt• o•eonnot at soon u the nece11.-y written notice •· ~ la .eeOrilance with tM ~ ~., acuon b1 tM '~~1[~)11 ~ d&nlCt tft'ttt ~ o• -. ._.... ~.~-~~-~=-.: »m!llM"-r-~ JJl'tol~ = ... !'f Bauman said that the panel hu labored since October of 1976 on the changes with the goal or getting the document ready for the April election. He said there was no hint until recently that the issues would be delayed unUl June. However. the majority ot the council indicated more time was needed to study the issues. Vol· BfKktoDC ,.,..,,.,.. Former Rep. Wilbur Mills, who once headed the House Ways and Means Commit- tee, will return to Washington this month as a corporate tu consultant for a law firm. County OKs Funds for FV Juarez Work Funds to reconstruct Calle Madero in Fountain Valley's Colonla Juarez community were authorized by Orange County Supervisors Tuesday. The supervisors agreed to the city's request to spend $115,000 in federal fWlds to install curbs, gutters and sidewalks. Earlier city plans called for spending the HoUAing and Com· munity Development tund1 to create a new street in the res· idenlial area. However, resi· dents asked officials to improve es.isling streets before building new one$. Construction should be under way by early summer, officials said. Eventually the colony's three other residential strttts will be rebuilt and three new streets will be constructed. inr Ill favor tho de.t.y·\HN Ron PattioMit, Ted Bart.Jett Bon Shenkman. Richard Siebert and Harriett. Wieder. .. Proposed cb&QCa include a number d controversial Items. Among thole iJ •recommend.a~ tion by the charter PJDel that tbe oflice ti dty attorney COD· tiDue to be eleetlve. , · T bll la oppo&e d by a n Ull0,500 Asked. l SA . Will Se~k Por.D 'Bamag"8' By GAJtT GBANVILLE or•o.t1Y ...... ..., A Superior Court jury WU told Tuelday UW Santa Ana should be paid sao.soo b1 the porno movie moguls who proftted from the ahowlftg ID a local theater of 11 sex films fhe same Jury de. cided last month were obscene. Attorney James Clancy based his call for almpet half a ..mlllion dollars in puniUve damages on the estimated box office ineome a t the M.ttchell brothers Sc~ Ana theatet during tbe 382 da)'lf the 11 fllms were ahown. In addition to punitive damages, Oancy pleaded for the city to be awarded an un. s pecified amount ln com· pensatory damaaes for the ••cor. ruption of morals'' caused by the public showini of such X- rated movie epics u' "Behind the Green Door .. and "Sodom and Gomorrah.·· But defense attorney. Joseph FVCouncil Meet Brief Fountain Valley Mayor Roger Stanton conducted what is believed to be the shortest City Council meeting on record Tues· day night. The session lasted a scant 13 minutes. The meeting was one minute shorter than one conducted by former Mayor Al Holllnden last year. The lengthiest it.ems on the Tuesday agenda were present&· tions of awards and appointment certificates and a two-minute in- voc atlon by Fountain Valley United Methodist Church Past.or Rev. Ford Miller. Winter Furniture sae Rhine scotrtd at CJ.anCy•• plea for compeanttoo to the city for damaees allegedly o•uHcl by operauoo of U. X.rated IDO'fie palace in a sbopplnc center ac.ross 17th Street b'om Sante Ana College. • Because no other ·Calltcrnla jury baa fOUDd any of U ft1ma to be obscene, °*9e ca be no malicious int.mt attached to the Mitcbell'1 operation ot tho~ movi~n= a~safd. He that a film must be considered legal unW a Jury finds it to be obscene. Rhine said in comparison to Clancy;s plea for $460,SOO ln punltlv~ damages that a $l as· 1essment would fUUUl tbe jury's obligation to assess pun!Uve damages. Youth Loses ~ Control; Car • Flips in BB A Cypress teeD·arer e1eaped serious injury Tuesday when be lost control of his vehicle which then skidded and flipped over near . a Huntington Beach elementary school, pollce said. Luis Perez. 18, told police his auto slammed into a mail box and came to rest on a telephone pole during Tuesday afternoon's rain. The crash occurred at 12:(( p.m. near Village View (elemen· tary) School at 5361 Si11011 Drive, police said. The out of control auto. which • apparently hit a mound of wet dlrt in the street[ jarr ed • telephone pole ln.swator loose. police said. • 1514 NORTH MAIM SANTAANA· 541-4391 Irvine EOlTlON f VOL. 71, NO. 4, 4' SECTIONS, "6 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Co111·t Delftys Diedfteh Prosecution By GAllY GRANVIUE Olt .. OMty ........... Prosecution of Orange County supervisors Ralph Diedrich and Pbili...J> Anthony as well as their two codefendants in a political campaign consplracy case was put off Tuesday by the California Supreme Court. The court ordered a halt in the prosecution until it decides if District Attorney Cecil Hicks should prosecute the alleged criminal conspirators. More correctly the court said the prosecution should be halted until it decides if it will review t~ challenge by Hicks· office. So far, .Orange County Superior Court Judge Phihp Schwab has ruled that Hicks and his staff should not act as PfOS· ecutors or the two county supervisors and their codelen· dants. Judge Schwab's r~ was up. held last month by an appella~ court. Those decisions came after the defendants said the DA s hould be removed from the case because of alleged bias and prejudice against them. In the Initial ruUn1 Judge Schwab said he tailed to find ~)' evldence cl true blu and preJ· udlce. But, the Judge conUnued, the appearaace of bias and prej- udice mJcht tend to undermine the crediblllty of court proceed· in gs. The cue began last July 1 when the county grand jury Jn· U.S. Dollar Pl~ges · .On Europe's Mark.~ts Oellf "*' ,..,. ~ THIS WAS All OF HIS BOAT THAT THOMAS WAKELY COULD SEE TODAY 25-foot Cruiser Explodes and Burne After Leaving Balboa laland Fuel Dock I Settlement I 'Reach e d b y Wallaces MONTGOMERY , Ala. (AP) - A Circuit Court official an· nounced today that a settlement has been reached m the divorce case involving Gov. and Mrs. George C. Wallace. About seven minutes prior to the scheduled start of the trial in the divorce proceedings, Circuit Court Administrator Frank Gregory told reporters the prop- er papers would be filed later in the day. The agr~menl reportedly ln- vol ved a $7$,000 settlement wttb a division of property. Attorneys for Cornelia Wallace earlier tn the day aban- doned plans to confer with a Judge prior to the scheduled start of the trlal. Last Sept. 6, the raven-ha!~ first lady moved out of the mansion, sayine abe could no loneer tolerate hel' husband's '"ulgarity, threats and abuse." Wallace filed for divorce six days htter citing as 1rounds '1lncompatlbltity" and an "lr- retrievabre breakdown" ln lhe roarrlap. Mrs. Wallace, in a countenuit, accused the partial- lJ paralyzed governor of "cruel- ty and actual violence'' aeatnst her and 1ought "llberal" alimony. The trial was threatened wtlh J)Ostpol\ement because Mra. Wallace recently had health ~blems. · Mn. Wallace was hospit&llzed ftom Dec. 22 u.nUI Friday for • entil And pbyatcal exhaua- (See DIVOllCE, Pase At) Explosion of Cabin Cruiser I njures TUJO By JOANNE REYNOLDS oe ai. Dau, ll'i ... s1att A Newport Beach commodity broker said today he is "just damn glad to be alive" after his 25·foot cabin cruiser exploded during a cruise in Newport Harbor Tuesday evenmg. The cause of that explosion which spread names across the . deck of the Miss Beth is under investigation today. Boat owner Thomas Wakely, 49, of 235 Promontory Point Drive West, and three compa· nions -including one non- swimmer -were on board the vessel when the explosion took place at about S p.m. Wakely said he had just filled his 110-gallon fuel tank at the Union OU gas dock on Balboa Island, prior to the explosion. An exploding ball of flames caught Wakely 's brQther, John, 56, a physician from Pittsburgh, Pa .. igniting his pants. John's wife, Olivia, 44, also was burned when she tried to help her husband, Wakely said. Al that point, with the boat 150 yards off shore, Wakely said he threw his sister·in·law into the 61-degree water and Jumped overboard with his brother and the fourth person. Paula Pichon, 32, of 343 Baywood, Newport Beach. Wakely said the four people at first tried to hold onto one of the boat's llnes because Miss Pichon cannot swim and they didn't want to try for shore in thelr heavy winter clothing. "But with a full load of fuel on board, I was ah'aid she'd blow again and there'd be gas all over (See CRUISER, Page AZ> Pound Goes for $2-plus LONDON (AP) -American tourists bad to pay more than $2 for a British pound on some cur- rency exchanges today for the first time in nearly two years as the U .s. curreKy took another pounding on European money markets. In early afternoon, an American Express otnce in Lon- don's financial district wu sell- ing pounds at $2.02. It was tbe rtrst time since March 5, 1976, that the pound sold for more than $2. On London's foreien exchange markets -where tourists pa' eo c:•Jhm~ona (or curreney eoov•...aon. -the doUar hov- ered Ju.st below the $2 e&chanae rate by early afternoon. A l~er, sort of wholesale1 rate, appUes Of\ the foreign excnanie marltets, where bankl exchange millions of dollars a day witb otb°'r banks. The pound aeemed ready In morning trading to rise above $2, foreien exchance deaters said. One dealer said It cot as high as $1.9960 Jn hectic early deals. This was a gain o( more than four cents over the $1.954G quot- ed at the end of bu.sines9 Tues- day. But b)' early afternoon, sterling had been trimmed back to about $1.9783, stUJ a 1ain of more than two cents over Tues~ day. The dollar mtlde a slight re- covery thiS afternoon. A dealer aaid the Bank of England purchased dollars to . stop the aterlina's ri~e. Other central banks in Eur~ also in· tervened on their markets to stem tbe.!Jlllof the dollar. European central banka don't want their currencies to rise too sharply aaainst the dollar because this makes exports to the important American market more expensive and less cotil- petltfve. The year-lone 1977 decline of dollar has picked up momentum in the first trading days Of 1978. In Frank:turt the dollar con- tinued its downward splr-1 by plunging as l9w -.a 2,0470 West German rtuuu In hectlc tradlne before recov-ering to 2.0625 marka by early afternoon. At the close of business Tues· day, the dollar was19uoted at a historic low or 2.w~8 marks. Today's late rate wu likely to set another record. Detten said the West German central bank bought $:53.4 million to hef p prop the dollar. 11\ Zurich the dollar w.u also on the way to another record low. By early afternoon, the U.S. currency was quoted ~ 1.9180 SwiH francs, romp~ to the record-low 1.tf70 Swlas h-ancs set at &bi iiid of bu.smess ~ day. ' dieted Diedrich and Anthony on mulUple chareea related to al- leged violations of state political campatan regulations. Indicted along with the two count:f supervisors were Anaheim Councilman William Kott, Fullerton attorney Michael Remin1ton and one time political flnancler Gene Conrad. Su_baequently. Remington Buddy SOves .. Paratrooper FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. (AP) -A Fort Brage paratrooper, plummeting to earth when both his parachutes failed to open, was saved when he fell on to p of an opened pa.raduua and slld ~own the lines into another soldier's arms. "He hollered at me to get off, but by the time I slid off the top, holding on- to his lines, be knew what had happened,·· recalled Spec. 4 Jerry Tindal, F1r1nFine d For Irvine Accidents By PIUUP ROSMARIN Of .. O.Wy ...... ii.ft A construction company build- ing an Irvine sewage plant off Michelson Drive has been fined Sll,3$0 following the investiga- tion of industrial accidents at the job site which killed one worker and seriously injured •nattier NoV. 21. State Dlvi1ion of tndu11trlal Safety lnvesUiators clalmed to have found slx "serious" viola· tlons of the California Ad· mlnlstrative Code by lhe coQ'l· pany, Maecon Inc. of Santa f'e Springs. A "serious" violation, accord- ing to state code, presents a sub· stantial probability that death or serious physical harm could re· suit from existing conditions, which the employer either djd or could have known about ii he used "reasonable diligence." Two of the violation. alleged by the lnv'8tlgators were for conditions discovered in pre· vious inspections of Maecon job sites,. and_ one was judged a ""Ultul" violation. A "willful" violation ls defined as one in which the evidence shows an empl~yer commitU!d an Intentional and knowing violation of the safety code, meaning he was conscious of It or made no "reasonable effort" to eliminate the condition. Jlm Brown, district manager of California Occupational Safe· ty Healtll Administration's In· (See SEWAGE, Page%> P endle ton Shots Kill 2; 4Wounded pleaded guilty to a slnale con· spi.racy cbarie and the remain· ing charges against him were dismissed. 1 However, ooneof the other"de- fendants have yet entered a plea to the charges brought acaillst them by the gl'and jury. Be tore the Supreme. Court edict Tueeday, the der~ndaats (See DELAY, Pa1c AZ) Swrm Raging In.North By The Alaotla&ed hen Heavy rains ·driven by gale· force winds slanted down on Northern California today as a massive Pacific storm front galloped over the region. Coastal showers fell from San Francisco to the California- Oreaon border and the National Weather Service said the downpour should grow stronger throughout the day. "The s torm is still ap· proaching but it's really starting to rain pretty hard here atr::eady," said Phil Swain of the weather service's San Francisco International Airport office. Swain said 46 mph winds were reported at mid-morning at Shelter Cove. Winds are considered to ex- ceed gale caliber when they sur· pass 39 mph. Winds of up to 45 mph were forecast for the San Francisco Bay region too. The blow was expected to build later this afternoon and then diminish tonight, Swain said. ' The Coast Guard posted gale warning:; rrom Monterey north. But no wind-re.lated sea acci-• dents were reported. Swain said rainfall from the fatt·moving front would "cer- t.alnly be more than we've had in the past week. All we've been eetting is dribbles ... He sai~ s now showers had beaun to hit lhe north Sierra and heavier snows would fall later today when the storm reaches the eastern sector or California. * * * More -n.ain Predicted • Tonight Sunshine briefly brightened the Orange Coast today, but it probably won't be seen again for a wtaile, National Weather Service torecastets say. Raln bepn falling heavily shortly before... noon today and weather forecuters calltd for a 90 percent chance or more of the same on Thursday. .. We 're In kind or a storm pat- tern .here and storms have the potential to keep comlne in,•· said Don De~auw , weather service speciaUat. ft; ., <See RAIN, Page A2) Coast Weathes:- Cbance of measurable rain incr~lna to 70 per- cent tonight and to 90 per- cent Tbura~ay. South to southeast winds l5 to ao mph at limes through Thursday. Lows tonight 47 to 52. Hiahs Thursday 57 to sa. INSIDE TODAY · EVtt 1UOllCkr f/ that can of grtni ~ii ltUl good? The A1aociated Prut IMu com· 'ptttd the cOfU of American canntr1 and pockogtr1 to t1U uou how to detttmuur 1h1lf UJe of groceriea. SH Food, Pagt CJ . ••• :ti 1\2 OAIL Y Pll.OT PARIS (AP) -President Carter launched a three-day vis- it to France today wlth an lm- prom ptu atroll down tb.e Champs Elyseos, drawlne abouts of ·•Jimmy ... Jimmy" Crom de- lighted bystanders crowdma the Paris boulevard for a glimpse of tbe American president- Carter, bare-beaded and coat· less despite the winter chill, tel olf under gray 1k1es down the wide boulevard wlth French President Valery Giscard d'Es· taing after placing a wreath at the Arc de Triomphe, the tomb of France's unknown aoldler. Cheers and applause erupted 9 Persons Killed Clwpper Crashes On· Search Mission . KNOXVILLE. Tenn. CAP) - A m1lit.ary hcltcopter carrying :.even persons crashed today while searchlnc the Great Smoky Mountains Natlonal Park for a small airplane which went down Tuesday night wlth five aboard. Authorities said at Jea!lt nino persons were dead. It was not immediately de· tcrmined what caused either ac- ddent. A spokesman for the Air Force at Illinois' Scott Air Force Base, which coordinated the helicopter .search, s aid all five on. the plane, a twin-engine Cessna 421 charter flight bound Crom Fort Lauderdale, Fla., to Chicago, were killed. John Nance, chief flight con-· troller for the Federal Aviatlon Adm1nistrat1on, s aid, "I un- derstand there were seven on hoard the helicopter and that the~e were four fatal! ties." From Page Al CRUISER ..• the waler," Wakely said. So he swam for the island :-.horcltne, dragging Miss Pichon while his brother and sister-in· Jaw aided each other. lie s aid they were not far from :-hore when two young men came into the waler to help the 1wo women. "H it hadn't been for those two young men, we might not have bceo able to make it," he said. The four were t.alcen to Hoar Memorial Hospital where Jahn was treated for burns, a puncture wound to hls rr1ht leg and a hairline jaw fracture. His wife was treated for more severe burns on her hands and legs and Wakely and Miss Pichon were treated for scrapes and bruise5. All were released. M eanwhilc, Orange County Harbor Patrolmen arrived to ex- tinguish the blazing vessel , but a secondary explosion shook the boat moment.a later, apparently !!plilting the hull. Nance s aid a · flight plan was filed for a trip from Fort Lauderdale Executive Airport to Macon, Ga. An FAA Flleht Service auperviso~ in Miami ~aid the pilot wu liated on the flight plan as Fred Philp, no aee or address given. An employee at Sky-Tell Jnc,, a charter service at the Ft. Lauderdale airport, aald the plane wu owned by General Electric Credit Corp. Fro.Page Al RAIN ••• He said tonight's storm is coming from west of San Fran· c1sco and should bring moderate to heavy rain, tapering off to showers Thursday. DePauw said the storrna ate due to a low pressure system over the West. ''These storms are likely to come throueb ooe arter the other," he said. Highs Thursday s hould be near 60, with overnight lows around 50, he said. The Orange County }larbor D~partment today reported .42 inches of rain for the past 24 hours, bringlng the season total to 4.07 inches compared to 3.9 inches last year. The Moullon Niguel Waler Treatment Plant recorded .32 mches, for a season total of 5.M compared to about half t.hat lut year. Bill Shields of Laguna Beach ·Hardware tallied .41 inches of raln on his gauee durlne the put 24 hours in the Art Colony. The season total to dtte Is 4.72 inches, compared to 4.29 inches last year at this time. In Costa Mesa, Charles Lewis o f Orange Coast College's division of physical sciences re- ported .72 inches of rain for a season total of 4.86, up from 3.76 la11t year. Orange County Flood Control supervising hydrographer John Gietzen said that, although rain· fall has been considerable, it's been !>low enough to soak in rather than cauae erosion prob. lems. Gietzen said today's total in Santa Ana was .61 inches for a season total of 5.02, compared to 4.46 last season at this tlm~ The highest rainfall fl,.ure he had was for Santiago ,Peak, where .60 inche. jn the past 24 hours brought the season total to 15. 70, compared to 10.9 last year. No serious damage from Tuesday's r.Jn waa reported atona the Orange Coast. Frora Page AJ from spectators at U\e wre•th- laylng ceremony. when Carter aauntered ae~eral balndred yarcla dawn the main utellne ot Paris. 1be crowd surted toward the president and white-1loved police were bard pressed to bold them back. Carter •topped several Umes CARTER M!ET$ WITH 8ADAT--A4 to ahake bands, and both presl· dents waved and uluted the crowd. They then climbed i!Uo a liaiousine bound for the Elyaee Palace to begin their fl1"1t round GI u!l!~~ ··"'. ,• • The French presldeot greeted Carter at Orly Airport today when the American arrived from Aswam, Egypt, where be met for an hour Wfth Presi'1ent Anwar Sadat. Carter described American ~e.. lations with France as "specaal and rare ..• largely an alliance of ideala" in a brief arrival ad- dreaa. He declar~: .. Dur approaches to specific quesUon.s may not always be the same, but our deep respect for the independence and leadership of France and our affection for your people have remained as strong for 200 years." Carter said he would discuss international economic stability, -disarmament, tnergy, M1ddle East peace, relations with the Soviet Union and its allies, and human ri1bts in talks with Giscard d'Estaing, expected to total four hours. Giscard d 'Eltaing, in a brier welcome at Orly's VIP lounge, also cited the long history o! Franco'American friendship. But be underlined French in· slstence on lndependent foreign policy and defenae ability, which hH been the basis of Irritation in the past between Wuhington and Paris. From Paris, the U.S. leader moves on Friday to Brussels, headquarters of the North Atlan- tic Treaty Organization. "*"•Miner• .............. China's Chairman Hua Kuo- f eng wears a coal miner's h at during a visit to maners in Tangshan, wblch was ~il b y a severe earthquake in July, 1976. By GAllY GRANVILLE Ot .. ...., ... Mlfl A Superior CourtJW'Y was told Tuesday that Santa Ana should be paid $480,500 by the porno movie moeuts who profited trom the showing in a local theater of 11 sex rums the same jury de- cided last month were obscene. Attorney James Clancy based hla call for almost half • million dollars in punitive damases on the' estimated box office income at the Mitchell brothers Sacta Ana theater darinl the 382 days lhe 11 fiJma were shewn. in addition to punitive damages, Clancy pleaded ror the city to be awarded an un· specified amount in com· pensatory d~es !or the "cor· Patty's (:onviction Rehearing Denied · SAN FRANCJSCO CAP) The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Ap· peals today denied Patricia Hearst's petition for a rehearing on it.a decision to uphold her federal bank robbery conviction. Jn a l~·page ·order, lhe ap- veUate court refused to re- conaider Its Nov. 2 decision af. firming the guilty verdict against the onetime kidnap vic- tim. Miss Hearst's attorneys ob- jected to evidence introduced at her trial about her activities after the April 15, 1974 , bank robbery. The robbery occurred just 10 weeks after her abduc- tion by the terrorist Symblonese Liberation Army. Her lawyers asked the ap· pellate court to reconsider lt..s unanimous decision. areulng that it erroneously interpreted the case law applying to the trial. Miss Hearst's next legal re· course would be the U.S. :::iu pre m e Court, and her lawyers have said they would -appeal to lbe high £.our.t iLI.be 9th Circuit retused to overturn the conviction. She has been sen- tenced to seven y~ars in prison but is free on $1 million bail pending the appeals. Tbe three-judge panel voted to reject the motion for ~ rehear· ing before the full 15-member court. It noted that Miss Hearst, re- lying on a 1947 decision, areued she was prejudiced "by tbe ad- mission ln the government's case-In-chief of the evidence of criminal acts in Los Angeles because the premature Lntroduc· lion of this evidence forced her to take the stand and thus deprived her of freedom of choice in framing her defense." The court, however, said, "The evidence of the Loa Angeles events went not to Im· peachment but the the issue of duress. Froa Page Al •'She took the stand to support her defense, not to respond to a premature attack upon her ctedibllity," it added. SEW AGE PLANT FINED. • • dustrlal Safety Division, said the Ma.eon tines are aroong the largest ld\teled by the agency in Oran1e County hbtory. "It's highly unusual," Brown said. He said the investigation pertains only to conditions at the job site. No determination was made about whether conditions led to the worker injuries, be said. Ray Lull, Maecon president. said today the Cal-OSHA find-· ings are "completely un- justified" and baaed on hearsay. The investigators said White "narrowly missed being im- paled '· on it. In Its 40-page declsloD luued last November upholdlnc the verdict, the appellate court said that "no reversible err()l' OC· curred and that the judament must be affirmed." Winter Furniture sae ropUon of morals ... c•Uledu the public &llowlft1 ol ••ch rated movie eplca as 0 B • the Greto Door" and "SodoOl and Gomorrah." B14t defense attol'l)ey. J~ep Rhintl scofted at Clancy's p~~ for compensaUon to the dty rw damaees alldledlY caused ~ operaUOd ol the X·rat~ movi' palace ln a 1bopp1nf center across 1Tth Street (rom Sant, Ana Oolleie. Because no other CaUfoml• Jury bu found any of 11 nlms i. be obtcene, there ean be no malicious intent attached to tM MttcheU'a operation of tho pomf movie house, Rhlcie said. He insisted that a lilm must be conslctered Jesat unut a Jury finds ll to be oblcene. Jtbjne u.ld lD comparilon tc) Clancy's plea ror $'80,500 id punitlve damag~ that a $1 as. ae$sment would fulfill the jury's obllcaUon to asaesa punlUvo dama1es. 1 Last month, St was the city'I special anli·pornoerapby at~ torney Clancy wbo won the dayi when the jury found 11 of 11 films it reviewed to be obscene. Simultaneoualy, the jury la'Ve a clean bUl of health to two other , movies and failed to reach a de· clslon oo the remalnln1 four. That ~enlb' flndinl ln the cue of the 11 fllms led to the second pbaae or the two-mmth trial, compensation to the clt.y for various forms of damaces. It will be Judie Marvin Weeks who will det.ennlne the amount. if any, of other damages the city will be awarded as a result of the X-rated movie diaplay between September of 1975 and April of 11117. For bis /art, Clancy said judee an jury would be justified to assess millions of dollars in damages if, for no other reason, than to serve as a deterrent lo the showing or such films ln other communities. Fro• rage Al . DELAY ••• were scheduled to appear ln · Judae Schwab'• courtroom MOCl· day to enter pleu and to belin what b expect.e4 to be a Iona aeries of pretrial motlom. DIVORCE ••• BaelctoDC Former Rep. WHbur Mills, who once headed the HouSt' Ways and Means Commit- tee , will return to Washington this month ns a corporate tax consultant tor a Jaw firm. ORANQI COAIT DAILY PILOT lion," according to one or her law yen. Before the setUement wu an- nounced, John P . Kohn, one of her attorneys, quoted Mra. Wallace's physician aa aayln1 the first lady "Is not eapable or being there'' 11 the trial were to begln on time. Jn addition to 1ivin1 Mrs. Wallace Ume to recuperate, Kohn aaid a potlJ)Ohement would give attorneys for both aides more opportunlUes to seek an out-of-court settlement. Survey Show8 Carter ~ead '4'" whnt the world ol d1~11n<.1111e hom' lum1shlnq~ is all about . • Now at seVlnos from I 0 to ~';\ •, Take edVll\t&ge of un· t>e~able ~111~1 on current and diaconclnued llnc\ through<>1.1t our entin: atorc ••• 1n all clt'partmcnts. You11 see room after room of d lin<\ive hOITlf! rumtShingJ tll t oml»ettl)' dccontted. ell ~rind. Yts. ll vltlt co our 'iorr can be the lllrt or I \lo<~e Mlll llf• -iyl4 for you.. ·(-P"W. ...... ...... , ...... 4 IM•-·" ........ ,.... ...... 1514 rtORl'H MAIM SANTA ArtA • 541!4391 " I .. i VOL. 71, NO. 4, .C SECTIONS, 46 PAGES Trustees By ANNE COOPER Of_o.ly ........... Improvements to existing school buildings and grounds were added Tuesday to the list or new school construction plans in the Capistrano Unified School District il voter1 approve a $49.3 million bond lasue in March. Trustees voted 7-0 to approve ''In concept" $811,200 in im- pr.ovemebts to bider district"' ·schools. Voters who live ln more de· veloped areas of the sprawling Capistrano district •~ getting the message th-.t the sehool board is doing nothin& for their schools, SupL Jerome Tbornsley told trustees. The district epcompasses 20 percent of Orange County land, much of it undeveloped as yet. It includes the communities o( San Clemente, Capistrano B_qach, Dana Point, San Juan Capistrano. Lacuna Nlcuel and part of Mission Viejo. Two previous bond measures have been defeated by Capist('ano voters, althoueb both rea~lv~ majqrtty support. A bon°' l.sSue requires two-thirds voter 'a.(>proval to pass. District administrators have said they expect Capistrano lhlified school enrollment tO jump by 50 percent in the next five years -from 16,000 stu· denti to 24.000 by 1882. Dlstrid schools are C!W'l'Glltly operatinJ at or beyond eoroll· ment capactua, altbouah a new arade IChool, a new JunJor bllb and a new b1Ch aebool opened thlsfall. , With the purchue of twp MW a~hool aitet, one in Klulon Viejo and all<ltber in Lquna Nlpel ar Mission Viejo. depend1n1 which ~mmw»ty crows fut.er. school con1tructloa fund1 wlll bave U.S. Dollar Plunges . . On Europe's Markets I I I ~!:~:~:~D~::awson, 19, of ed to change lanes on the rain-soaked road. He skidded into the tree on the me· dian near Moulton Parkway. Firemen freed him. Dawson was treated for facial lacerations and glass in an eye and re- 1 eased from Saddleback Community Hospital. 32162 Pacific Coast Highway. Laguna Beach, suffered less destruction than his compact car when it slammed into the oli ve tree on El Toro Road Tuesday. California rnghway Patrol officers said Dawson was eastbound when he attempt- Blufftop Law Aired Laguna Seeking Public Opinion on Setbac1$s Lagi.tna Beach councilmen will be looking for public opinion tonight concerning a blufnop setback ordinance wbicb was unanimously recommended for approval by the plannine com· mission 0:-t. 11. The proposed ordjnance. pre· pared by the planning depart- 1nent alter 21 month.I ot atudy and recommeqdatioa1 from Weather Chance of meaaurable ratn h1craslng to 10 per. cent toniibt and to 90 per- cent Tbunday. South to aoutheut windl 1$ to 30 mph at timea throu1h Thuraday, Lowa tonight •1 to 52. Hllha Tbvnd•Y 67 to 62. IN81D• Te8~Y I landscape architects and geologists, would define where construction could take place near coastal bluffs. The ordinance proposal was requested by the City Council la.at summer after public hear· ines on the Crescent Bay specific plan. The blufftop ordinance, if ap- proved, would include: -Utllhina either the atrintlln• method <a atralght Une between the two furthermost seaward extensions> or a is.root setback from the bluff to de- termine where a building might go. Because or Laguna's rugged shoreline, the ordinance would allow flexibility in determining the method of measuring the set· back. It would: -Allow public access stairs ll erosion factors allow. -Establish d efinitions of blurts, blufft.op and the crest of bluffs. If adopted, the ordinance would not mean reclusifying existlna homes near bluff edges trom conforming to nonconform· In~. Thole homes alreadv ate (See BLUFF, Pase A!) Pound Goes for $2.;.plus LONDON (AP) -American tourists had to pay more than $2 for a British pound on some cur· rency excbanees today for the first -lime in nearly two yean u the U.S. currency took another poundinl on European moaey marketa. rn early tfternoon, ·•n American Expreu office in Lon· don's financial dlatrict was aeU· ing pounda ~t sz.oa. lt ,,.. .. the ttntu..-... ..... s.--. that tM »ound IOld for ID«• th81l $&,__ On l.&doo ·s foreJp exchqe market.a -whe.r• tounat.a-pay no commJaalooa tor currency convel'lioos -tbe cloUar hov-ered just below the 12 exchani• rate by early afternoon. A lowu, sort of wbol~ale, rate, applies on the foreign exchanae Jl)arketJ, where banks excbAnae mllllons ol dollars adaywilbot.herbanks. The pound seemed ready m morning trading lo rise above $2, foreJen exchange de&len said. One dealer aald it eot as high u $1.9860 in hectic early deals. This was a gain of more than four cents over the $1.9540 quot- ed at the end of busineas Tues· day. But by early afternoon. sterling had been trtmmed back to about $1.9763, still a gain of more than two cents over l'Ues· day. A dealer said the Bank of England purchased dollars to stop the sterling's rise. Other central banka 1n Euro,ee a1ao in- tervened on their marketl to stem the fall of the dollar. European central banlu don't want their currencies to rise too s harply aa•inst the dollar because this makes exports to the important Amertdn market more expensive and less com- peUtlve. The year-long 1977 decline of dollar has picked up momentum In the llrst trading days of 1m. ln Frankfurt the dollar ~ tlnued Ila doWnward spiral by pltinginl as low u 2.0470 Wat German marks in beetle tradinl before recovedn1 to 2.0625 marts by early attemooo. At the close ot buainess Tues· day. the dollar •as quolell at a historic tow of 2.0768 marts. bffn depleted lD the district. The $49.1 mllllon bond me11ure Ind a $1.S mllllon at.ta apporti9nmeot measure have ·been approved by tbe school board for the Karch 7 election. The bobcJ Issue, if approved. would provide for: -SU.• m.111100 to complete Capistrano Valley High School in Mtssion Viejo, which would double the eurrent 1,200 student capacity. -$10.1 million to build addl· tiona al San ClesnODte Hieb School, whicb would raiae atu· dent capacity trom the eurrmt 1,800 1tudetlts to 2,400. -SU mllllon to buy and tn. stall 40 additional 1>0rtable claasroom.s at Ctpistrano Valley and Sall Cleuiente Hi~b Schools. -U mWlon to buy and ln.stall 30 portable Classroom• at the district'• 1• eMl!Dentary acboola, <~BOND, Pa1e A%) ~;:~f!: ..................... ........ SIGN? WHAT SIGN? ~otorlst ln Laguna Beach \g. nores detour slgn at botU>m of Third Street hill which was cl~ed tG traffic curing Tuesday's rains. City of· !iciali say oil and grease on hill, combined with water. make automobile ascension nearly impossible. But that didn't stop this impatient motorist who swung into OD· coming lanes to make his way to the top. Raitt Soaks Coast; More Due Thursday Sunahine briefly brightened the Orange Coast today. but it probably won't be seen again for a while, National Weather Servi~foreculel'S say. Rain began falling heavily shortly before noon today and weather forecasters called for a 90 percent chance of more of the same on Thursday. "We're in ltlnd of a storm pal· t~11 bere and storms have the potential to keep coming in, .. said Don DePauw, weather service specialist. He said tonight's storm is toming from west of San Fran- cisco and should bring moderate to heavy rain, tapering off to showers Thursday. DePa~ Hid the storms are due to a low pressure system over the West. "These storms are likely to come through one alter the other .. " be said. Highs Thursday should be near 60, with overniaht lows around SO, be said. Tbe Oran1e County Harbor Department today reported .42 inches of rain for the past 24 hours, bringing the season total to 4.07 inches compared to 3.9 inches la.It year. The Moulton Niguel Water Treatment Plant recorded .32 intlns, for a season total of S.6S compared to about half that last year. Blll Shields of Laguna Beach Hardware tallied .41 inches of rain on his gauge during the past <See RAIN, Page AZ> *· * * Another Stonn Marches to Cotutal Aretl$ • \ I By GUY GRANVILLE Of""' Del•• ..... , .... Prosecution or Orange County supervi.sors Ralph Diedrich and Philip Anthony as well as their two codefendants in a political campal11t conspiracy cas' was put oft Tuesday by the California Supreme Court. The court ordered a halt in the proJecuUon untu it decides i.f District Attorney Cecil Hicks sb.ould prosecute the alleged 12 Seeking Se3ts on ~ · IB Council .,..., ............. THIS WAS ALL OF HIS BOAT THAT THOMAS WAKELY COULD SEE TODAY An even dozen Laguna Beach residents will be vying for three seats on the City Council March 7, following a blitz ot laat-minute filings. by nearly half of the con· tenders Tuesday. 2S.foot Cruiser ExplodH and Burns After Leaving Balboa 11lend Fuel DocJt . Four Leap to Safety As Cruiser Explodes Four passengers leaped for their lives and s wam ashore Tuesday when their 25-foot cabin c ruiser exploded and burned near mid-channel in Newport II arbor Fire from the blasts reduced the vessel to a semi-submerged hulk. Two or the four people who ~ere aboard the vessel were in· JUred in the explosion and fire. Harbor Patrolmen said the boat, owned by Thomas Wakely, 49, of 235 ~romontory Point Drive West, Newport Beach, "'as pulling away from the l 1nion Oil gas dock, 406 S. Bay Front near the ferry landing 14 Compete For 3 Posts OnSC Board Tuesday's noon riling deadline showed San Clemente's March 7 City Council election with 14 candidates competing for three seats currently held by Coun- c alma n Ton y 01G1ovann1. Patrick Lane and Thomas O'Keefe. L<rne and O'Keefe will not run for re-election Incumbent OiGiovanni facei. a race with the following candidates· -f:nvironmental planning consultant Boyd Ames, Jr. Retired businessman Carlo llocci, a defeated City Council candidate in 1976. Retired purchasing agent Jack Brown. -Retired news broadcaster Ed Dleden. -Store manager Roy Hamm. -Buyer and college student David Dodson. -Real estate appraiser and former city councilman Charles Fo%, who d.id110t. see.lue·ele£tlon in 1976. -Water consultant and San Clemente Homeowners Associa· tion president Howatd Mushett. Home Insurer Charles Mitchell. Businessman Albert Popik. -Clock manufacturer Mirtls Wagner. -Builder and city planning commissioner Allan Wulfeck. -Robert Chester Rusin, who llsted his profession on filing paper& as "politician." Councilmen are elected to four-year terms. Mayor Donn. Wilkinson and Councilman Williarn Walker were elected two years ago .,,d will be up for re,elecUon in 1980. OftANOI C~ 1AC DAILY PILOT when two explosions in the forward bilges touched off the fire. Injured in the mishap were John and Olivia Blakely of Pittsburgh, Pa. They were treat- ed for minor burns and released from Hoag Memorial Hospital. Also on board, but uninjured was Paula Pichon. 32, or 343 Baywood, Newport Beach. Harbor Patrolmen who fought the blaze from their fire boat said they had the flames quenched within a few minutes of their arrival. A second explosion however, occurred which patrolmen believe did major hull damage to the vessel. The boat was towed to a Harbor Patrol mooring ore Carnation Cove where it will be kept pending completion of the investigation. Front Page AJ BLUFF ... de-termined as nonconforming because they fail to meet a 10· root setback requirement an earlier ordinances. In other action tonight, lhe Ci- ty Council will consider acquisl· lion of the SPCA facility on Laguna Canyon Road for the city· s own ani ma I s ervices operations. An appraisal of the facUlty, which includes several buildings and 1.9 acres of land, is to be re· ceived at the meeting. The council wiU also consider a private kennel operator's pro- posal to buy the shelter, which abut his kennels, and rent it to the city for $1,700 a month. sell- ing it to the city al the end of 25 years for SJ . Fro111 Page A J RAIN ••• 24 how-s in the Art Colony. The season total to date ls 4. 72 inches, compared to 4.29 inches last year at this time. Guitar Classes Set in Capistrano Six-string strummers are in· vited lo enroll in San Juan Capistrano·s winter g\Jitar dasses besinning Jan. 19. The classes cover beginning guitar through advanced in· st.ruction and are held on Thursdays. Fee is $18. For more Inform aUon. phone 493-1171. Fro-. Page Al ·BOND ••• as needed. -~ million to buy a fourth high school site, this one in Laguna Niguel. -$6 mllllon lo build a Mission VieJo junior high school. - $14.3 million to build three new grade schools -one in Mls· sion Viejo, one in Laguna Niguel and a third either in Mission Viejo or in Sen Clemente. -S.4 million for Dana Hills High School stadjum seating. Improvements to existing schools approved Tuesday by trustees include new lacllitles and landscaping. Five projects' expected to cost more than $50,000 each are: -A new stage and· music building at Concordia Elemen· lary School in San Clemente ($76,000). -A new music building al Las Palmas Elementary School in San Clemente ($55,200). -A running track at Niguel Hills Junior High in Laguna Niguel (*36,000). -Bank landscaping at Niguel HJ111 (~1000). -Bank landscaping at San Clemente High School ($67,900). All 31 projects drawn from the district·s faster building plan were app ved "in concept" by the scl1ool ard. Which projects are completed depends largely on how inflation affects bond dollars. if they are approved, Thorosley said. Capo Beach Streets Set For I Way Camino El MoUno, Calle Naranja and Calle Vele:r in Capistrano Beach will become one-way streets, Oran1e County supervisors decided Tuesday. The board followed the advice or a traffic consultant in des· i1natin1 El Molino &J a one- way westbound street and Calles Naranta and Vetez as-one.way eastbound streets. Naranja and Velez also will be made throu1h streets with stop signs to be installed on intersect- ing streets. Warning signs for dips will be installed on El Molino. County officiaJs said a survey of residents along the. stteets showed the majority favored the one-way thoroughfares. They said residents have ex- pressed concern about narrow· ness of the streets and speed. At the I UJ&est.ion or .. Supervisor Thomu Riley eounty orticlals also were told to include an esUmated $210,000 re- construction project for El Mollno ln next year's county budget. .. • City Clerk Verna Rollinger said five candidates filed peti- tions containing the names of 20 regi.stered city voters Tuesday. beaUng the noon deadline. A field of 14 potential can· didates took out petitions for the council election. Only one coun- cil member, Councilwoman Phylli.s Sweeney, will be running for re-election next March. Mayor Jon Brand and Coun· cilman Carl Johnson will not be seeking Jldditional four-year terms. . Candidates filing petitions Tuesday included businessman John Gabrien, taxl driver Tom Adame, law studfnt James W. Bishop, businesswoman Barbara Smith and McDoMell- Douglas executrve Miles "'Miken Esko. Other candidates who handed in petition• last week include · stockbroker Howard Dawson. Planning Commission chairwoman Diana Dike, busi· nessman Kelly Boyd, graphic artist Adena A. Gay. housewife Maggie Meggs, Fluor Corp. ex· ecutive Wayne J . Baglin and councilwoman Sweeney. Only two potential candidates did not return petitions by t.he deadline. They include cab com- pany mana1er Richard Scott and medical office manager Ann G. Graham. The city clerk said she will be verifying the petition sipalures or each candidate today or Thursday. criminal consplralora. More correcUy the court said the prosecution sbOUld be halted until it decides if It will review the cballenae by Hlcka' office. So far, Oran1e County SuperJor' to1,1rt Judie PbUll> Schwab has ruled that Wek1 and his staff should not act ea pros· ecutors of the two county superviaora and their codefen- dants. Jud1eSchwab'1 nallng was UJ)• held lut IQOllth by a.n appellate court. · Those declaioos came after the defendants said tbe DA should be removed from the case because ot alleted blu and prejudice qalnsttbem. In the initial rullnl Judie Schwab said he.faUed to find any evidence of true bias and prej- udice. Bot, the Judge continued, tbe appearance of bias and prej- udice might tend to undermine the credibility ot court proceed· lnga, Tbe case bel•" last July 1. wben lb8 COWll.Y 1t&rid Jw'y in~ dieted DtedrJch and ~thoQy ~ multiple char1es related to at- le&•d violaUona of etate political campalsn retvJatloos. C Indicted alona wltb th• tw~ county 1upervisors were: Anaheim CouncUmao Willi•fr\ Kott, FullerLoD attorney Michael ltemlnaton and one tlme( political financier Gene Conrad. S~b1quently, l\emio.aton. pleaued cµ.Ut)' to a a.ln&le coo., splracy Qufrae encl tho remain· in1 charC':S qaln$t hlin we~ <Utml.-t• -. Howewr, none of the other de- f ~dantl bav. yei..itved+.)alM to the ch&raes broufht ap.uist them bytlie_cr~d jury. Before the ~upreme Court edict Tuaday, the -defendants were scheduled to appear in Judge Schwab'• courtroom~ day to enter pleas add to becin what is expected to be a long aeries ot pretrial motions. ' Co11ncil to Select Iaguna· Study Team By Sl'EVE MITCHELL Of .. ~~, .... . The Laguna Beach City Coun- cil wnl &(>point two of its mem· bers torught to repr.esent the city in negotiations with lhe Rancho Paloe Verdes Corp. over the -tone-staodine Sycamore Hills development controversy. The 522-acre Sycamore Hills -part of the Laguna Greenbelt -is the subject of alx lawsuits stemming-from a ionin1 de- cision by the council Jut year that would allow only l5e houses to be built on the Rancho Paloa Verdes Corp. land. The company is seeking damages totalling $37 mUUon from the city, claiminc inverse condemnation due to the clty ac- tion. Rancho Palos Verdes oriellial· ly expected 3,000 townhouses to be constructed on the prime property, located beside Lacuna Canyon .Road weat of El Toro Road. But the r.onlnt'dedslon by the council would allow only IM homes on the 522-acre pared. The lnver'5e condemnation lawsuit, filed by lbe Rancho Palos Verdes firm, is scheduled Winter Furniture sae for trial July 31 in Oranee Coun· ty Superior Court. Councilmen tonl1Jlt are ex peeled to appoint Coun- cilwoman Pbyllls Sweeney and Councilman Carl Johnson to mfft with Rancho Palos Verdes officials Frid~ in Los Aoieles. Doug' Scbmlt&, tbe city's planning director, and City At- torney George Lotan will serve the clty oegotiatina committee in an advilory i!apadty. Councilwoman Sweeney said today the city team will prob- ably discues the six various lawsuits involved in the con- troveny, as well as the zoning decision during negotiations with the Paloe Verdes attorneys and principals on Friday. City Attomey Logan said prin· clpals from both sides intend to Issue a statement of issues, ob- jectives and Umetables follow· Ing Friday's meeting. Pending that meeting, Logan said, botbaldesbaveagreedootto discuss the pending ziegoUa· tions. The attomeJ would not di. c101e wblch side lnlllatea neeoUationa in the eilht-year controversy. , CAUFOANIA ln60Da!I• Property Tax Bill Promised SACRAMENTO CAP) -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. says a ball 11ving California homeownen and renters $800 million annually in tax relief ••can and will be passed .. within 60 days. The Democratic governor made that predic- tion, but did nol offer specifics of a tax plan, after m eeting Tuesday with Democratic leaders of the stale Senate. Brown continued to pr.aise a tax cut plan favored by Assembly Democrats to give most of the tax relief to low-income Californians. But be said he expected the bill that reaches bis desk to be one favored by Senate leaders which &ives more relief to middle-income homeowners. IT WAS THE SENATE wmcu killed Brown's $4.8 b1lliqn, flve·year tax relief plan on the closing day or the 1977 Legislature lastSept. lS. That was one reason Brown met with Senate leaders on the opening day of the 1978 Legislature. "We mapped strategy on an immediate prop- erly t~ relu~l..pl.an,!' .B.rowi.-~d reperters. t'f'm working very closely with both houses to obtain a property tax relief ball w1llun 00 days." AfW"-'- GOV. BROWN PREDICTS TAX RE~f Sen. John Holmdahl, left, Panel Chairman . Assembly Votes Tiro Overrides SACRAMENTO (AP> -The Callfonda As· sem bly ls startlne the new year ln a deCiant mood: Jt overrodetwoofGov. Edmund Brown Jr. 's vetoes. That compares with onl,yooe veto override ln the previous three years. But a short time after the Assembly vote T ues- day, theSenatesuslainedoneoftqevetoes. That was on a bill t.o establish oo paper; but not to finance. a new museum. AS FOR THE SECOND BILL, TO ADD two new judges, the author said he expecled lo ne&otiate with Brown rather than seek a Senate vote. s DAIL y "1LOT A5 Etakn llaee Ken Maddy. state as- se mblyman from Fresno who publicly considered switching to the Democratic par- ty fl ve years ago, formally announced his campaign for governor today. l J ·I 'J " 1 l , J Slnce 1975 when llrown took omce, only his veto of a new death penalty law ha.a been overturned in ------..-..----~-----------· both houses. And that was only the second override of any govemorsince 1.946. A lhlrd Assembly override vote was avoided 'Tuesday when Brown agreed to negotiate a com. promise on a bill for state Cunding Of a $20 million' raise for low· paid workers at.nursing homes. THAT BILL'S AUTHOR, Assemblyman Lou Papan, D·Daly City, said Brown agreed to provide the 40-cent..an·bour raise In the bHJ, AB1427, and the only disagreement involves the timing of payment. The author of lhe bill on judges, Assemblym'm Bill McVittie, D·Upland, said he expected to negotiate a cpmpromise lo avoid a confrontation wilh the Senate. Long John SilVer~. ANNOUNCB DRIVE·TllRU SERVICE I . • BOTJf PLANS BF.FORE T H E l egislature would be financed without tax in: creases from the surplus in the state budget, now estimated al $2.5 billion to $3 billion. -------------------- The legislat~c deadlock has been over something called the "circuit break<.'r," a property tax rt•fund plan pushed vigorously by Brown last yea1 which would give the biggest rebate checks to low-mrome homt•owners and renters . .Spurring both Brown and lawmakers in both houses is a vott•r:.' initiative by tux relief advocate Howard Jarvis. IF APPROVED BY VOTERS IN THE June 6 primary, the Jarvis initiative would require an im- mediate two-lh1rds cut m local property taxes. Punishment School Ban Lifted? LOS A!'l.GELES CAP> School Superinlen- dl•nt Wilham J ohnston will recommend the 21 ~·year-old ban on corporal punishment an Los Angel<.'s city schools be lifted in September, his deputy has indicated. J umes Taylor, deputy superintendent. spoke for Johni.ton al a school board committee mc:'ct1n~ Tursda~ lie said Johnston no longer will ri•commt•ncl that individual schools be g1vr11 th<' authority to continue 1>roh1b1t1on of the pun1i.hment A l>latl' law r>a'>l><'d after the ;idoption of the bou rd 's •ban proh1 b1 ts cor pQrnl punishment, 1Jsually paddlmE:. unless parents give prior writ- ten consent JOHNSTON RECOMl\'tENDED last Sep· tember that the board lift its ban. but allow in· 'dividual .schools discretion to impose bans even 1( parents wanted their children lo be· physically disciplined. l}nder that proposal, principals and com· mun1ty advisory councils, compQsed mainly of parents. would decide whether to ban corporal pum~hment Om break Of Fever Possible DAVIS li\P 1 The duc;t storm in th<' C<'n· lral Vnlll'Y las t month l'Ould bring outhn·aks of San Joaquin V.illcy l'cv\•r, :;a~s an l'" p<'rl on lhf' tll!.(';J ... C "I \.\OUld f'XfH'C'l that at 11.•a.st 1n lhc Jrea "hC'rt· tlw clu ... l ...iurm "'ai. re· ally Vl'n prom1 ncn t. thl'•" \\ ou Id he an incrca ~c·d number of pcoplt.· 111flictert," Dr Dcmol>lhe n<• ... Pap - pa~1an1s, he.ul of the medical m1crobwlogy department at the l'nivers1ty of California al Davi!>. "aid an an JO· ten 1ew pubh:.hc·d Tues- day. HF: SAID ll E hac; heard or no ca1>es of the rungus dlSNIS(' that may have been spread by the Dec. 20 storm. hut the incubation period runs from 7 to 28 days. The most likely place for outbrl'uks would be in the Bakersfield area, where the 11torm was most intense, Pappa- gianis said. VALLEY FEVER is caused by a fungus in the soil called coc- cldiodes immitis. There were 371 coses reported in California last year and 485 ln 1976. The disease usually goes unnoticed or re· suits in mild, flu-like symptoms. But in more aerious ca,sea the lu.ncus can cause serious Illness and even death. LA Integration Nearing? LOS ANGELES (AP> --Superior Court Judge Paul Egly has indicated that the city school board's integration plan may go into eC!ect next September as a f 1rstslep toward rull desegregation. In his pretrial order, mailed to attorneys over the New Year's weekend and made public Tuesday, Egly indicated he would give the d1slrict a favorable 1nit1al ruling .so ~tudent antegrat1on can begin by Sep· tern ber. But he noted the Prot e~tlon Demanded SAN RAFAEL (AP) -About 100 Sausalito houseboaters jammed a meeting of the Marin Coun- ty Human RighL'i Commission, complaining bitterly about last months' violent clash with sheriff's dep-uties. -The houseboaters Tuesday night demanded pro· tection from further efforts to evict them from the mudOats and shallows or Gates. ruling may be mod1f1ed as ( J ~~~~~ation hl'arings con-. .,TA.TE .. Drunk Prograt1t Appro.,ed Now we've made It easier to get away with America's favorite seafood. Just pull up to our Orive·Thru Menu, place your order, then drive around to our Orive-Thru Window and pick it up. Everything on our Inside menu 1s availabJe on our outside menu. So when you can't drop in, drive in. "ll1sthecourt'.s opm ..... --------LOS ANGELES (AP ) -County supervisors ion that any further de have approved a program permitting people con- lay in the ph~ s1cal desegregation or the Los Angeles vacted twice of drunken dnving t.o undergo one year Una fled School D1strict 1s intolerable," Eglysa1d. of alcoholism treatment as an alternative to a .tail .sen tcnce and loss of lbe1r driver's license. Sat eiy Det•it•e R e mored BENICIA. Calif IAPJ -State investigators have Pointed to the myi.terious removal of a safety device as a major clue an the deaths or three men working in a tank at Exxon 'soil refinery. Investigator Michael Schneider said Tuesday the safety device was designed to block poisonous gas from entering the I OO·foot tall silo-shaped unit. /tlbaority Po11ltio11 Defe nded SACRAMENTO CA P > -State schools chief Wi Ison Riles, attacked by black groups for his vote oni University of California admissions, says he doe.so 't have to apQlogize ror his record on minority issues. . "I don 'lhave to show my credentials fortrying to help minorities. for try mg to lower barriers against them." Riles said m a KVIE television interview taped for showing Tucsda} night. .. For 40 years J 've been doing this .. •DOMESTIC • FOREIGN NATIONAL PARTS SYSTEM 17202 GOTHARD ST.· 17141147·551S Hut-ITIHGTOH IEACH, CA. U'47 WE ARE •.. •COMPUTE • P'RICED RIGHT • J AM-P'ACl(EO WlrH AUTO P'ARTS .... Tlll1 OM! ANTI FREEZE $2'-5 AHY AIR CLEANER IH ~OCK MaSked Men Rob F allbrook Family FALLBROOK <AP) Four masked men who forced their way into a Fall brook home and robbe<1 ··~:::eii~~~~M~~Q,~I~ ~r-ICh a family of four apparently aren't the same ban-,. dits re~pon~ible for a recent series of rape- robberies 1n northern San Diego County, authorities say · "These men apparently were Mexicans and were wearing different types or masks and their op~rallon was d1Herent." a sheriffs spokesman said Tuesday "There was no rape involved" m Monda} night's incident 1n Fall brook, he said. YOUR 3095 Harbor Blvd. In Co.ta Maa I Ju•! IOU th ol th• !:Mt> Oie90 Freew•y. act OM from F•d. n ) I 3J 5 W. Whhtltt Blvd. In LA Habra tJ1 .. t "6>1 ol a...cJ1 Blvd bcr-n H. .. !l<l.o •nd Idaho) SALE ~ LAST4DAYS& FINAL REDUCTIONS! STAR IS TOMORROW SA\lE TO 2·5. Bull~ck's Sputh Co31t Plaza, ~333 Bristol, C.M .• 566-0611 .. .. Edit ri. I p · Robert N. Wftd/Publlloher Orange Coast Daily Pilot 0 a age Wlldl\99day,January4.1t71 S.rbara KNlblch/Edltortet Pege Editor --------~----....-------------------.... ---'fhomls K•vH/Edltcw It's Not Your Eyes, Freeways Are Dim Motorists who frequent the freeways of our Orange Coast area and commul.e into Los Angeles have com- plained in increasing numbers that lbe lighting system seems to be fading away on our superhighway routes. And they arc correct. The Calif omia Department of Transportation, known as CalTrans, has confirmed that night lighting on our freeways has been growing dim~r and dimmer. Two conditions are involved in the g ray-out or our freeways. First was the energy crisis. In an effort to save electrical power, some freeway lighting has been de- libera tely darkened in Orange, Los Angeles and Ventura counties over the past two or three years. Secondly, other freeway Hghts h ave been doused simply because the )Jghts burned out and the ma1n- 1enance program has failed to keep pace. -- Jn truth, our freewa~ system is beginning to get old. We have more than 700 miles 0£ freeways in Southern California. Some sections of the system are nearly 40 years old. So in ~1ddition to more bumps and potholes in the pavement. 1l can be anticipated that the electrica l system of lighted freeway signs and overhead lamps also would begin to fail. -A recent spot check of one local interchange, the on- ramp from llarhor Boulevard to northbound S~n Diego Freeway, :ihowcd that not a ~mgle overhead light on the ramp was operable. Further, you cannot drive many miles on the San Diego l''rccway without finding several dark dircct1onal signs. And the San Diego Freeway is one of the newer one...., jn our frecwav :-.vstem. Ca!Tr;.ms-ori1e1;.ils say thC'y arc awurc of the lighting dcfic1en<:ics. Tlwy n"t1· that the freC\\. ay li ghting budget for our region \\ J~ S2 t mil hon during 1077, an increase of 25 pereenl \.\hen <.·om pared to 197fi Hut lhl• chmrrnng of lht• frc1..'\H1vs has increased almost in'>1d11Ju~I.\ Just a little at a time as main· tcnanc'l' has failt'd to kl'CP up with equipment failures. :\gain. CalTrans spokesmen ha\e blamed "budget l1m1t ;.1lrons" for the d11nm1ng of the system . On the other hand, California molorists continue to pour gas lc.t,cs into the state corrers at a record pace. And \\ c arc clcurly not building new freew~ys or adding im- provrmrnts at the s<ime level which absorbed those truces jn pa st ) c•11·s · Logic thus sugg('st::; the money s hould be available to sc:c<'l<.•ralt' tht• frC'c•\\ ay mamtenanc:e program :--iurl'I) t lw st ate offtc1als haven't hct'n caught by bttrprist' in thc· la<'I that as the freeway~' stem gets older, 1l n ·q 1111 l·s rnt·re;Jst•d maintenance .\dl•qualt' frt>l•way lighting Is a safety factor for motorr-.ts IL :-.houldn 't be ignored Further. alln\\ mg lhe system to deteriorate may simply be a false t·conon;iy. The longer the state lets it go, t he more a rn<.1s'>1ve n•hab1lllation will cost taxpayers rn futurl') cars. A Modest Figure If the usually pleasant Orange County, Trcrns1t Di s- trict information oper<Jlors !-lound grouthy ;.it time.,\\ ht.•n thl' new SundC:JV informution !'>en rce rcsumt•s F<.'b. 12. don 't takeolfcnse. Tht' opl'rator .... lrkrl) \\Ill be OH=rltt•aled working in t• clo!-1..•d downto~n Santa Ana offlct• ht11ld111i:.! without air cond1lionmg, wher l' v. mdow!'> won't open ;md '"here tern perature-. .... nmt'l1mcs reach 100 <kgret•!- Trnns1t dist rid directors balked al pro\' id mg air con d itwnmg lor the• Sundar :-.erviC'l' bel'.1u-.c 11 \\oulll cost about Sllfi rwr Sunday. That 's bctaust• lhe :-.:-stem opera k s to cool I ht•\\ hole hmlchng and not 1ust om• sm;ill ol f1('(' .lrea })1rl'elors ft>ll Lht• Sunduy st•n·1c·c would be nC'edcd when nc" route ('hanf.(c•s take· effect Feb. 12. That mt· an'> thr opl•rntors "ill be asked to work Sun day.., m a stuffy huildmg until they move nt>xt summer to nrw transit headquartt•rs m Garden Grove. T>1rectc>rs would bt• kind to reconsider the minority ~>0s1 t1on of Direl'tnrs Hobm Young and Al llollindcn and p ay the modest <.·ost of air condition mg .. Othern 1:-.e the sen rct• should be s hut down unlit lhc rnovr takt•s place'. until a '>t11tabll• cooling S) stem can be l:leviscd ur unlt.l a tcmporar). murc suitable work site 1s localt•d Jack Anderson \ U.S. Policy Aids Drug Traffic WASHINGTON -Bribed Latin Amertcan officials have opened the floodgates for the drug traffickers who are inun-datinc the United States with tons of cocaine and spreading the $2,SOO·an-ounce cocaine habit to every corner of the country. Yet a timid State Department bas hindered the drug enlorce- m e o t effort. for fear of of- f ending cor- rupt Latin American leaders aod .. --UPS~ the status quo. These are the findings. still under wraps, of an aghast Congressional Select Committee on Narcotics Abuse and Control. Chairman Lester Wolff. D·N.Y .. "'made a personal inspection tour of six Latin American nations. According to his unpublished re· port. only Chile is making an honesl effort lo stop drug smug. gling. Two ot the other five, Peru and Bolivia, are accused of flouting the international laws that aeek to cope with the illicit dru1 lraffic. And ln Brazil. Colornma and Ecuador, the re- port alleges, connivance between government officials and drug lraCfi.ckers ls rampant. Wolff and his l.nvestiiators un- de ratand why underpaid cu&toms ar\d police oUicials lake payotts to look the other way at Latin American air!lelds and seaports. But the report doesn't spare the Stale Department for its dltherin1. "OUR OWN State Department is acting as a restraint upon t.he improvement of enforcement ef. forts by the Drug Enforcement Administration," declares the re- port, •·tor fear of tilting our pre· sent .status quo with foreign na· lions ... For an official document. the language is blunt. "The commit- tee, .. it charges. "found the Drug Enforcement Administra· lion to be understaffed in many countries and often hamstrung 1'HIS STU~'LL MAKE '(OU F"ffiGf T ALL ABOOT YOUR THREE-MARTINI LUNCM£5. Earl Wate r s by ucUons of our own State Department." The report claim~ thu .. chain of corruption" extends to "the upper echelons of government" , and .. provides the kind of pro- tection any racket requires if it is to Clourish. •• That the corrup- tion reaches high into the ruling circles of Lalin American gov· ernmenls is spelled out in a country-by-country summary: COLOMBIA -Enforcement is sluggish "due to the ingrained high-level corruption which permeates its enforcement ranks." Those who resist cor- ruption •·race the danger of as- sassination." During Wolff's vis: it, not a ~~le major trafficker was suffeffn1the1!61scomfort or a Colombian Jail. Yet there exists a 200·member smuggling com- munity which banks its miJljons in Flobda, Panama and Switzerland. They operate from an estimated 300 clandestine <urrields. ferrying to the Unilt.>d States 70 percent of the 111iClt co· cai ne sold 1n this t•ountry. ECUADOR -Th e in- vestigators came back with "the distinct impru;slon that enfol"te-ment. • ·.is weak (and) corrup- tion is widesproad. Many in· stances or lllgh-r&J\kinc 1overn· ment officials involved in cocaine trafficking have been reported and documented ••• Judges have been known to vie for major (drug) cases. knowing that lbe right verdict can bring a sizable payoff." Not until recent· ly did the State Department. h ave .. any direct contact with the highest levels of eovem· ment" to curb an illicit cocaine trade with a street value ot $8.8 million a month . PERU -Although a signatory to a 1961 intemafional covenant to prohibit narcoti~s production. the growing of the c~a bush - the source ot cocaine -is legal, and growers generally ignore a hp.service law to regulate pro~ .duclion. An estimated 70 to 80 percent of all Lal.In /.lllerican cocaine originates ln Peru. Sums up the report: "Political mstab1hty, poverty. social tradJ- tion and/or complicity on the part of corrupt officials" may render coca.growing control im- possible. BOLIVIA -At least 20,000 families make a living from cultivating the coca plant in u country which also pledged by treaty to curb the narcotics trade. Frantic customs agenu.. trying to cope with the coca1m· ring, have two Jeeps to patrol more than 400 miles of terrum dotted with unmapped airfield.., The re is one ~overn mcnl aircraft for :;.urveLllancc but no pilot to fly it. BRAZIL -Drug trafficking, though it breeds corruption in ·Brazil, is nol flagrant "by South American standards.·· A Brazilian group which controls Chrysler marine imports and deals in real estate 1s alleged lo be tied Into the cocaine trade, the re· port says. Only m the· iron fr!.ted m 1 lita1 y dictatorship of Chile did th<· <•omm1ltee d1 sco\•er some <•f f1rmath•e action and this. the n · port adds. was mainly to butter up U S. anitworld opinion. Even there. the report notes. 23 narcotics suspects were deport· ed lO this country. only to ha\ t• 20 or them released and sent hack to Chile. The regime thl•rt' grumbled aboul U.S. 0 'lt·· n1ency." Time to Peer into the Political Future This is the traditional lime for political pund1ls lo peer into the future and enlighten their readers wlth their a ll knowing \.\ 1sdom of things lo come. The in trepid ones. safe in the knowledge that by the year's end none will re· member their predictions, will pompously give forth their views as to how things will shape up m 1978 as though their prognosucUl- lions are indisputable. Yet, 1978 being an election yeur when the state mu:.t scte'ct 1ts top officials for John F. Kennedy yet two year!> I at f'r he could mu!iter onh 2.?50.000 voles in his unsuc cessful attempt lo unseat Pat Bro~ n a!. governor. wh1<'h twill m:itt>rrnlly affect h1~ rhan<'es, th<' fir:o;t fac1 is that in rumbt•nt gt)\ernnrs tn\ <tr1ahl" ~et ft•w('r ,·ntes '' hl'n th<·\ '>l't•k rf' t>lt•t·t 1nn ltwn I hC') rt>c·e~H:d tn '' innin,.: tht• 11ff!l0<' the first time P81 Rro"n "''n office v.llh J.140.000 votes 1n 1961!. got re- ('lected with 3.IJ:l7 .000 \'oles in 1962 and lo.,t in t9fi6 "hen he ~ot only 2.740,11()() Ronald Reagan was clt-clcd governor with 3. 742.000 \Ole!. but received 300.000 less in 1970 when he stood for rr~eclibn. ' l1•R1slator-.. "ell tm arl' nr th1 .... will assuredly put tog<'lhl'I a 1.1\ relief mcasur<' early 10 t hl' ~ l'ill Tht' que:-.t ion 1~ .,.. ill 11 h•· <'nou~h to head ofr the J iH\'IS Ill 1tiat1ve wh1l'h. if aclopt<'d by th1• voters in June, will really up..,l'l local government and bring wrath down on 1he ~ovcrnor. Other in ill at1 ve efforts arc cont111 umg lo place such issues as the de ath penalty and homoxcxuality on the bullol which. if 1>ucccssful . han only prove embarrassing to Bro\.\ n . AL THOUGH. these l'ont'ingen c·1es might develop to whNc Brown C'l')Uld bt' defe11ted by almost any opponent, the re I • Dp1n1ons expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. t>ther views expressed on this page are those of their authors and )!rt1sts Reader comment ts 1nv1ted Address The Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Phone (714) 642-4321. the next four years. nothmg could present " greater challenge for political soothsayers. California has loni dem- onstrated its comp l ete Or take the t•asc of Pal Brown who in 1958 won e lection as ~nv· crnor by more than 1 million votes and eight years later lost his bid for a third term by the same margin. Then, loo. there is Alan Cranston who. riding high from his election as State Con· trollcr in tlJ58 and re·elect1on in 1962. was defeated in his own pur- ty i.n his bid for lbe U.S. Senate in 196ll and turned out or office by Houston Flournoy 1n 1966. yet,. came back to win a seat in the U.S. Senate in 1968 and re- election 1n I 974. WITR SUCH illustrations or t h e whimsical nature or C•lirornja voters how then is il poss ible to predict what can hap· pe11 in tltls New Year's elections? In view of such dramatic diminishings of popularity on the part of incumbt•nt governon. one would have to conclude that Gov- ernor Jerry Brown, v.ho won l.n '1974 by the small marf{1n ot less· than 200,000 votei; out of 6 m1lhon cast, will have no easy v1ctor7 if indeed he survives al nil 1 WHILJ, M1JCH will depend up- on the Republicens' choice of an opponent for Brown. the No· vember election may hmge upon some othedoctors not the least of which mav be property taxes. Brown und Oemocra Uc a I i s t ; c v.i e w i s t h a l th e • Republicans had better put their best candidate forth . And. d~spite . the polls showing At· lorney General f:velle Younger Boyd/Owls By L.lU. BOYD Far loo few people realite that no owl can roll its eyes. ,They 're fixed in their !sockets, those owl's eyes. ~hat's why owls always look jike tax accountants. Tbe)''J'e tormal. Direct. Positive. In· cap:ible of cutting a rtirtalious glance. Am now edviRed the wise ~atador probably cleans the ood off hls suit or lights by curbblng it with meat ten· erlzer. which is said to work In a dandy manner to scour ~P suc.h stalM. Fascinating, .If /actual. ' Nernesi~ was the Greek· Jodde& ol fate who punished Dear Gloomy Gus Future historians wm· have to vtew tbe Tournament of Jt,pse1 "Parade as the clas1Jc ritual of a hNonlaUc 80Ciety. Whal a wute ol m oney and enerc.yl G:B.B. ......... ~ (_ .. , ........ .................. •11• •• !!ti __ ,,., l'WltU .. 111• ... a tf t-. =·""~ .... .. 1 p~ople who showed t.he !.y mploms of an overdose of pride. She's the lady you meet when you meet your nemesi~. Nutnerous help·wanted ads for burlesque show girls in the 1920s staled: "No one un· der 150 pounds need apply.·· R ememb-Or. alt bees are grounded when the wind 1peed rises above 15 m .p.h. Q. ''Where's "Eisenhower Plall'?" A . That's what the British used to call London's Grosvenor Square. U.S. military offices surrounded it during World War JI. and the British thought it quaint at the llme lo dub il so. somewhat sardonically. Q. "Any way to keep from chlpplne the plaster when drivinc a UWe naU into the wall to hang a picture?" A. Mlaht try putllnt • •mall square of cellopbano tape over the spot lint and. tap lhC nall lhtoueh that. Q. ''What was tbe earlteat n •i ~vent pat on motion picture film?" A . 'tho coron aUon or Ru slan Ctar Nichol ll ln l8M. Q. ··oofllbtte oton?" A. )if on do. Sbaru don't. unpredictability when il comes to elections. Probably rto better example of that is the case of Richard M. Nixon. More than 3.250,000 Californians favored him for President in 1960 over Paul Harvey It open.' with Governor Jerry Brown being favored by many to win re.election in November. But aaide from the contingencies iJ.). I ' .. ll lo be leadin~. the inside view or many experienced politicos around the state's Capitol is that Assemblyman Ken Maddy would be a sure.fire winnC'r if he can-on· ly gain the Republican nomlna· tion In June More Young Ad~t8 ~~vmg .~wa~ from Home· tr your teen-age daught.r Xobrln tells The .lAt An efei pareawh J4.problerna br911"1t to AJ1d both are heavily engaaed wants to move out -if she wants Times that the separate dolll.icJl• hls OfJiCJ bl first Cffort must be ln tbe battle for independence. .n apartment of her own -it pl"omlses more sexual fre~ · to get tat PJlt'Cnt ''J>J( tJie c~Ud's For both the young adult and may be your fault. Other sociologists argue that back." the old adult, the suicide rate in- But cbinces are it's not. youngsters have always wanted He says it would help parent.a crelises. The senior demographer of the thus to assert their independence to unde~tand lhe youns adult if Most young adults imagine Ceneua Bureau, Paul Glick, says but only in our increasingly af. they would recogniie the parallel that their probl<'ms in the home "youn11 adults fluent 10Clety have they been problems or the aiing ndull arc related to the homt• Thus tepd to live able lo afford it. . they can·t wait to get out on lh~lr a" a y from 4 FOR 1M>111# the future look! own. home u soon blaclnmd unappc11ting Both are Mo11t eventually discover lhet • a a t h e l intensely 11elf·al>l4<>rbed. Both can they have taken their probl"'m' become ael • ~ ••trt>Plrl.Y h,y~bondrtacal. with them and. out ot this awllte- maintalnlng. conccmt'd •bout rhe1r bodies. ncss, many devcfop a renewed ' 'fbe aie at understanding o( and respect for whleb tbls thelrparenl.'l. bappea1 It Wllat should lhc parent do 1ouf\1er and wht'n lhe youngster -who still younaer." seerll1 .so young, 1il vulnerable - He cltea ltTO throu1h 1978 atru1gles a,aain1t lhe apron slr· ataWUca. TM oumber ol "headl ings~ · of bouHbOld•" 14 throuah IS Bfl yout lip. Mako certain nearly doUblfd. they know lbat you love them. Pemalt1 HlUbl up houtekeep· And pr•>'· 11 away frown their parental Ptrhaps you·vc hoard the homtt UMit to outnumber lbo one about the ccn•us tu.ker wlio malea; more r«ently that ratio 41Jked thcladyofthohouac, "Any bas bffft'revened. cbUdrent'1 ~ n.1 meu lllP all aorta ol re•· Sh~ a&ld, 'Thrt? . " .dna lo jUIUfy llvin1 alone at fie tald. ''Livlnl at. homo?" wUb • roommate -but Brown Sbe,.uld, "Not yet. They're nOt. Uninnlly IOcloJotbt Frances .marn.dnow:· . ~ . ... Orange .Coast · ·EOITI 0 N , . VOL. 71, NO. 4, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Today' Clo Ing N.Y. Stoeks WEDNESDAY, JANUARY .C, 1978 N TEN CENTS I I Co111·t Delays Diedrich Prosecution \ By GABY GRANVILLE Ot .. Delly l'tlet Melt Prosecution of Orange Counly supervisors Ralph Diedrich and Philip Anthony as well as their two codefendants in a political campaign COfllplracy caae was put oft Tuesday by the California Supreme Court. The court ordered a bait in the prosecution unW it decides il District Attorney Cecil Hicks !!hould pro!lecute the alleged criminal conspirators. More correctly the court said the prosecution should be baited until it decides If it will review the challenge by Hicks' office. So far, Oranee County Superior Court Judge Philip ~ab has ruled that Hico and his staff should not acl il ~- ecutors o( the two county supervisors and thelr codefen· danta. Judge Schwab's ruling was up. held last month by an appellate court. Those decisions c'Bme after the defendants uid the DA s hould be removed from the case because of alleged bias and prerumce apt:nst them;-- In the iniUal ruling Judge Schwab said be failed to find any evidence of true bias and preJ· udice. But, the judge contJnued, the appearance of bias and prej· udice mlght tend to undermine the credJbilily of court proceed· in gs. The case began last July 1 • wMG the county grand..jw:y Jn. U.S. Dollar Plun_ges On Europe's ~arkets . Delly ..... ...., ""9 THIS WAS ALL OF HIS BOAT THAl'.THOMAS WAKELY COULD SEE TODAY 25-toot Crulaer Explode• •nd Bum• After Leevlng B•lboa lal•nd fuel Dock 'Damn Glad:' 4 Saved 25-foot Cruiser Explmles in Newport Harbor By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of Ult Oally f'llet Stafl A Newport Beach commodit,y broker said today he is "just damn glad to be-alive" a~r-bia 25-foot cabin cruiser exploded during a cruise in Newport Harbor Tuesday evening. The cause of that explosion which spread names across the · deck of the Miss Beth is under. investi1ation today. Boat owner Thomas Wakely, 49, of 235 Promontory Point Drive West. and three Mmpa- n ions -lncludlbC ohe non· swimmer -were on board the veuel when the explolion took place at about 5 p.an. Wakely Hid he bact Juat ftlled. Ilia 110-callon fuel tuat •l U.. Union OU IU ~ OA Balboa Island, prior to the explosion. • An explodine ball of names cauabt Wakely"s brother. John, 56. a pbyStcian from Pittsburp, Pa., liJlitin& hi.I pants. John's wlf •• Olivia. "· also WU burned wben sbe tried to belp ~r buaband, Wakely said. At that point. wttb tbe boat 150 yards ~ ahore. WakelY. aald be threw bis alatel'·bl·law lDto the • ll·defr" water and jum~ overboard wtth bis brotbef and the fourtls penae. Paula elchon. 12, of 343 BQwood, N~ Beaeb. WuelJ ul4 u.e (OQl' ~at first tried to hold onto one of the boat's lines because Miss Pichon cannot swim and they didn't want to try for shore in their beavy winter clot.bing. "But with a full load of fuel on board, I was afraid she'd blow aeain and there'd be gas all over the water," Wakely said. So he swam for the lsland shoreline, dragling Miss Pichon while his brother and sister-in· law aided each other. He said they were n9t (ar from shore when two youne men came Into the w"ter to help the two wom,n. ••u it hadn't been tor thoM two )~I rnen, we mlaitit not have been able to make lt, •• he aaJd . The four wert tak~ to Boat Memorial ff01Pltal where John wa1 treatect fo bun.1. a puncture wowad io h1f rllhl lee and a balrllM Jaw tractu.t .. Hla wife waa lreated for more severe burns on her hands and legs and Wakely Alld Mias Picbon wett treated for 1crapes and bruises. All were released. -14.anwhile Ou.ni,e Co_untt Harbor Patrolmen arrived to ex .. tinguish the blazing vessel, but a secondary explosion shook the boat moments later, apparently splitting the hull. Harbor Patrolmen and Wale~ ly were at a loss to explain the explosion. "I took the standard precau· tlon of running my bilge blowers after gasslng up," Wakely said. "In fact, if anything, I was more cautious than usual." Both Wakely and tbe patroJmen said they are puuled that the initial explosion did not occur until several minutes after the vessel pulled away from the dock. <SeeCRUISEB, Page At> Po11nd Goes for $2-plus LONDON CAP> -American tourists had to pay more than $2 for a British pound on some cur-rency exchanges today for the first lime in nearly two years as the U .$. currency took another pounding on European money markets. In early afternoon, an American Express office in Loo· don 's fl.nancial district was sell· ing pounds• at $2.02. It was the first lime since March 5, 1.976, that the pound sold for more than $2. On London·a Ionian excbqe marketa -WW. ~iau pay no commissions for currency convenloos -the dollar hov· ered just below the $2 exc""'e rate by earl)' afternoon. A lower, sort of wboleaale, rat.e. appU111 OQ the forellD exchange muteta, where banks exchange milllooa ol .dollars a day with othet' bank.a. The pound aeemed. ready in mornine tradlne to riH above $2, foreiin exchange dealers said. One dealer said it cot JS hleh u '1.-0 in hecUc eatly deal!!. Thia was a gain of more than four centa over (he $1.9540 quot- ed at the end of buslneu T\leS· day. But by early an ... noou, sterltng had been trimmed back to about $1.9763, still a lain of more than two centa over 'fuel.. day. The dollar made a all&ht re- covery tbil aftemoon. A dealer aaid the Bank of England purchased dollars to stop the sterlina'• rise. Other central banks in Europe also in· tervened on tbm mvketa to atem the fall of the dollar. European central banks don't want ttteir currencies to rise too sharply against tbe dollar because tbil makes exporta to the important American market more expensive and leas com· petillve. The year-long wn decline of dollar bu picked up momentum in the first tradJ.nc daya of 197$, In Frankfurt the dollar con· tinued lt1 downward spiral by plunaina as low u 2.0470 West German marb ln hectic tr~ ~eCore recoverlbll to 2.0625 marks by early afternoon. At the clOH of bn1tnn1 Tues- day. the dollar wu quoted at a hi1ioric lo'tlf of a.0161 marks, Today'• late rate wu likely to set an.other record. Dea.ten Hid the West German central bank bOught $.'52.4 mlllloo to belp ptop the dollar. In ZUrtch the dollar wu also on tbt way to another fecord low. dieted Diedrich and Anthony oa multiple charges related to al· leged violations ol state political campaien regulatJon.s. Indicted al<>ni with the two county supervisors were Anaheim Councilman William Kott, Fullerton attorney Mlchael Rem toeton aod one tlme polltical financier Gene Con.rad. . Subsequently, Reminaton · Buddy Saves Pcuatrooper FAYE'ITEVJLLE, N.C. <AP> -A Fort Brau paratrooper, plummetlna to earth when both bis parachutes failed to open, was saved when he fell on top of an opened parachute and slld down the Unes into another soldier's antiS. "He hollered at me to get oft, but by the time I slid off the top, holding on· to b1I lines, he knew what had happened," recalled Sptt. 4 Jerry Tindal. The other trooper. Nelson Peters of Fay. etteville, grabbed Tindal. and the two landed safely. Tindal escaped with a sprained leg.muscle. Bystanders Near Route Hail Carter .PARIS (AP) -President Carter launched a three-day vi&-· Jt to Frl.DC9 toc1ay witll u bq· pt'omptu •tn>ll down the Cbamps Elysees, drawln1 shouts of "Jimmy ..• Jimmy," from de· lighted bystuden crowdine Che Peria boulevard for a glimpse ol the Am.erlcu pJ"eSldent. Carter, bare-beaded and coat. less despite the winter chiU. set off under enY skies down the wide boulevard with French President Valery Giacard d'Es· CARTE8 MEETS WITH SAOAT--44 laing after placint a wreath at the Arc de Triomphe, the tomb of France's unknown soldier. Cheers and applause erupted 'rom spectators at the wreatb-laying ceremony wbeo Carter sauntered ~everal hundred yards down the main lifeline of Paris. The crowd surged toward the president and white.gloved police were bard pressed to hold them back. Carter stopped several times tQ altJn handl. and ~ pres\· dents waved and aaluted the <SeeT&IP, Pase At> Settlement Reached by Wallaces pJeaded guilty to a single coo· spiracy charee and the remain· Ing char1es against him were dismissed. However, none of the other de- fendants have yet·entered a plea to th~ charees brouehl aaainst lb em by the grand Jw-y. lrefore the Supreme Ce>urt edict Tuesday, the defendants <5" DELAY, Pase AJ> ·storm Raging In North By Tbe Associated Press Heavy rains driven by aale- force winds slanted down on Northern California today as a massive P~ciflc storm front galloped over the region. Coastal showers fell from San Francisco to the California· Ore1on border and the National Weather Service said the downpour should grow stronger throughout the day. •'The storm la still ap- proachine but it's (eally s\artine to rain pretty hard here already," said Phil Swain of the weather service's San Franciaco International Airport office. Swain said 46 mph winds were reported al mid-mornine at Shelter Cove. Wincb a~ considered to ex- ceed gale caliber when they sur· pass 39 mph. Winds ct up to 45 mph were forecast for the San Francisco Bay region too. Tbe blow was expected to build later this afternoon and then diminish tonight, Swain said. The Coast Guard posted 1ale waminal from Monterey north. • But no wtnd·related aea acci· denta were reported. Swaln said rainfall from the fast·aumng froot would "cer· talnlJ bt more than we've had in tb• 9'UJ week. All we've been getUni ls drlbblel. •• He laid snow showers had be1un to hit the north Sierra and heavier snows would fall later today when the storm reaches the eastern sector of California. * * * Say 'Goodbye To S11nsbhie Along Coast Sunshine brlefiy brightened the Orange Coast today, but it probably won't be seen again for a whUe, National Weather Service forecasters say. Rain began falling heavily ahortly before .noon today and. weather forecasters called for a 90 percent chance of more of the same on Thursday. "We're in kind of a storm pat· tern here and storms have the potenUal to keep coming in," said Don DePauw, w~ather service specialist. He said tonight's storm la comibg from west or San Fran-<See RAIN, Pace A2) Coast Weather Chance of measurable rain htc~uint ti> fO per· centJoniab\ and l0-90 per- cent Thorsday. South to southeast winds 15 to 80 mph at Umes throueh Thursday. Lows tonight •1 to 52. Hlebl Thursday 57 to 82. INSIDE TODAY Eoer 100l'lder i/ Chat con of oren '*"'-fa lflll QOOd? TM AHodoted PNU hat com· p.ltd U.. cocfl o/ A~ canMrl Ofld pocmotr• to ttU p how to d#tmnint llwlf JAi• Of grocmie1. Sa Food, PogtCJ. J\% DAILY PiLOT N ~School Closures Halted A Newport-M•a School Dis· trlct ciUiens advisory commit· tee voted 6-4 Tuesday nJ1ht not to make any more recommenda- tions on elementary achoo! dosures for at leut two yeart. The dlstrlcl-appolnted com- mittee wdl remam in operaUon and continue t.o study \he dJa. trlct 's decllnln1 enrollment situation, according t.o commit- . t~ member Ann Beaupre. However, she said any future school cloaures during tbe next two yean must be ln1Uated sole- ly by dalr1ct trustees, working without clUzena advisory com- mtltee ~rrtriiendaUonJ. School ~tees were not 1m- m edl ately available for com- ment on the latest move by lhe committee they appointed. The advisory commillee will now focu.s primarily on the dls· trlct's budget for the 1978-79 ~chool year, sajd Mrs. Beaupre. Tuesday night's public hear- 1 ng at district offices brought represent.aUves or Mesa Verde. California and Victoria elemen· tary schools in Costa Mesa. The three schools are considered c·andldates for clos~. But fears that at least one of the three schools would be rtt· ommended for closure by the commlUee ended followin1 a m o- Uon by committee member Alvin Pinkley. His motion t.o declare a two· year moratorium passed by a narrow M vote. Those opposed to the motions soucht the CllllblJshment or I m inority commit.lee, but this effort was tabled. A previous citizens advisory committee recommendation to close Monte Vista Elementary School in Colla Mesa in 1979 and use the vacant site for McNally ConUnuaUon School has been ap· proved by school trustees. Trustee,, will now turn to a committee recommendation to close Ba) View School in Santa Ana Ke&chU.. As v.1th all l'Om· mtttee recommendation~. trusttts must m(l)..e \.be l\nal d~ cwoo Surf Hearing Speakers To Be Curbed Newport 8eat'b Parks. Beaches and R•rut.toa com· n:uss1ooers said ~~ ~ey wUI enforce tirne limits on dtlzens apeP!ng during I publJe hearin1 °" tu.rfina 1cbedaled for Jan. 31. · They said five minutes will be I he lonaest anyone can talk hecause or the crowd expected to debat.c the posslbthly or set· ting u:.idc nn ull·day board surf· tnR areu 1n the city, prob11bly in West NE'wport. An all-day body surfing area would also be established under the propo1al. The public bearing will begin Ml 7:3Q p.m . in City Council chambers. Restaurant Meet Slated for Valley Orange Coast restaurateurs have been invited to a meeUng Thursday t.o discuss creating a cooporaUvo company to provide low ·coat liquor liability ln- 11urance. 'fhc: mcctin1 will begin al 2 r1 m aL t h c C r o 111 r o u d s Holll1 uranti 18050 Brookhurst St., Jl'ounta n Vulley. 1nforma- l Ion la available from Grei Scll,on ut Amello's Restaurant, 1~2·0434. Death Toll Low SACRAMENTO <AP) CaUfornla'• combined trafflt d ath toll for tM Chrl1tmH and Ntw Year'11 wtekenda wu 77, the lowt1t •Ince 1059, 11y1 the lfl1hw1y Petrol. DAILY PILOT A~WI ..... AMERICAN FLAO RAISED AT OMAHA BEACH PrHldent C•rter to Visit D-D•y Shrtn• Glory R e vived French Prepare Carter;, F ete VERSAILLES. France (AP> -The splendor that Louis XIV. the Sun King, and Napoleon created al Versailles will Uve a1ain for Prealdent and Mrs. Carter in a glltterinl state ban- quet and reception at the greal palace 12 miles southwest or Paris and its satellite, the Grand Trianon. President Valery Glscard d·EstaJng has rnviled some 4,000 guests to the reception Thursday night after he and Carter visit the beaches in Normandf where Allied forces invaded on D· Day, June 6, 19'4. It wil be held in salons of the huae main building restored largely by gifts from Americans, includlni the Rockefeller family. THE RECEPTION WILL FOLLOW a state banquet for about 200 guests In the pink and gold Gallery or lhe Grand Trianon, the smaller palace Lows XIV built nearby to eel away from the rleors ol power wilh his mistress Madame de Non· tespan. The menu has not been aM ounced, but Giscard d'Estaln1's omce said it would be "French. complete and excellent, as alwa)s." VISITING HEADS OF STATE have been entertained at Versailles ever saoce Louis XlV ordered France·s areateat nrchttt!('ts -~ Yau, Mansart. L<? Brun and Le Notre -to transform his father's hunting lodge and grounds into an elubonate reital playground. He moved into the pa)ace in 1682. mak1n~ VersniUes the capital or France. Tht> Grand Trianon, en L-shaped. single-story building was b111lt trl JU~t ~ix months an 1687. President Charles de Gaulle spent an t'Sllmated SlO million to restore il to what it had been in HI\' np0lrontc era so that lt could be used to enterta!n state vas- ttor~ lk Gaulle ga\•e a luncheon for President Nixon there in 1969 OthE'r guests of honor have included lhe Shah or Iran, King H as~11n 11 of Morocco, and Britain's Duke or Edinburgh and Prime Mtmster Harold Wilson. ,.,...ra~AI 'IRIP CHEERED ... crowd Th~y then climbed into 1 limousine bouod for the Elysee Palace lo be&:t.n &betr fin( round or tallcs, The French president greeted Carter at Orly Airport today when the American arrived from Asw<.1m, Egypt, where he met for an hour with President Anwar Sadat Carh•r dci.cribcd American re lutiun:. with France as "1>pcc1al ·ind rnre largely an alliance nr 1deu1,·· tn a brtrf arrival ad dress. He declared: "Our approocheiJ lo specific quE'sl1om may nol always be the same, but uur deep respect for the independence and leaderahip or France and OW' affection for ) our people have rem&Nled u ~trong for 200 years." Cart.er said he would dlacuas international economic stabiJity, rtisarmament, ~nern, Middle r-:ast peace, relationa wUh the Soviet Union and Jt.t aJllet, •nd human r1,ht1 In talks with Gucord d.:Eat.aln.I. expected. to total four hours. Glscard d·Estolng, In a brief welcome at Orly·s VIP loun4e, also cited the lon1 history ot f<'runco'American rrlendship. But he underlined French 'n· Slllence 00 lndependen~ forel&D policy and defense ablllty. which has been the basis of lrrJtatlon Jn the past between WuhJn1ton and Paris. Carter wu vl1lUoa a country that was the United State1' ttrat ully, he sald, and which baa become "a modem, active coun· try, which ls muter Of ita own Pre-school Program Set. d<'stiny and defense and wants to work with you to flnd the best toluUon to the problems of lhe m6dern world. .. It is true that we may have different views on the paths to rollow," 11ald the tall, s lim French leader. "But I am con- vinced that we will derive from 1ur dlscuulona useful element.II to light up the road leadlnR to a moru fraternal, more united and more 11ccure world " From Paris, lhe U.S. leader movea on Friday lo Rru111el11, hcadquarter11 of the North Atlan- tic Treaty Organization. Crash Victim Funera l R ite Set Tlwrsday Funeral 1ervlce1 are scheduled Ttnmsday at1 p.m. tn Fairhaven Memorial Park, San· ta Ana, for Che victim killed tn a mot.orcycle·auto cruh In Hunt. In I( ton Beach Saturday, Rius wlll be held In Waverley Church for Brian DlckaonL 23, ot 621 19th St., Huntintton H••ch, wltll ln~rment to follow thtre. An tnduatrlal lancl1etJ)t main- tenance •peclaUat, and 1t72 La Habra H11h SchooJ 1r1duate, Mr. Dlckeon 1ueeumbed to muatve head tnjurlu at Pacifica Holpttal Monday. lnvest11ator1 .. ld they ere •till problnt the crub on Golden Welt Street at Deop Harbor Lane, tnwhlch Mr. Dickson's 'cy· clo' was demolished when It col- lided with 1 left-turnln1 car driven by vtrstnla DavlJ, 49, also offfunUncton Beach. The vtcttm la 1urvtved by hl1 perenu, Mr. ,net Mn. Jam• E. DlcklOl'I, ot Corona d•l Mar; a brother Stephen, of La Habra; plu1 pa~mal 1randp1rent1 Mr. and Mn. Jamet W. Dtckaon, of Santa Ana and maternal 1rand91renll, Mr. and Mn .. Leland w. stack, of Coron• del· Mar. Spott1m•n at F.•lrll1ven Memorial Park, Which SI In ch1r1•. 11td the f 1mUy 1u11ata m•morJal oontrtbuUon1 to CbUdNB'I ffalpJt.&I ot Ora.nae County <CHOO> ln Mr. Dlckton'a name. claco &Ad UoUl4 ~ ~ to Mawy ta~ i1r 1h9Tten Thu *>'• • Porn 'D a:nuiges' DePa\IW aaid UM ·~· are due to a low PNMUN •Y \em over the West. "Th atonns are ·utcel.Y to (Ome, thrpugll ooe after the other," he aakl. Blahs Thursday abould be near eo. wltb overnlU.t lo•• around 50, be s aid. By GARY GRANVILLE OI U. Oait'I l'tle4 St•tt A Superior Court jury was told Tuesday that Santa Ana should be paid $480,500 by the porno movie moguls who profited from the showing in a local theater or 11 aex filma the same jury de- cided last month were obscene. Attorney James Clancy bued his call for almost ball a mllllon dollars in punitive damageJS on the estimated box otnce income at the Mitchell brothers Sant.a Ana theater during tbe 382 days the 11 mms were shown. In addlllon to punlllve damages, Clancy pleaded for the city to be awardad an un- s pec irled amount ill com· pe.osat.ory damages for the "cor - ruption of morals" caused by the public showmg or such X- Pendleto n ~hots Kill 2; 4 Wounded CAMP PENDLETON <AP ) A Marine shot two people to death and wounded four more in an unexplained sbooUna spree shortly before noon today, a base spokesman said. The victims wrere identified only aa noncommisaloned of· ficers. The first was killed by a nurry or shots in the audlo·vlsual center or Camp Pendleton, and the second dled later ln the Naval Regional Medical Center, said base spokesman Lt. Charles Owen. He said the Marine opened fire Inside the audio-visual center, hitt i ng three ot the non- com m lssfoned officers before running to the nearby base photo lab where \.be three others were wounded. The other wounded men were in e mergency rooms at the hospital. Their condition was not immediately known. Owen said a Marine, still un- identified, was arrested by base police a few mJnutes after the shootings. He was armed with a small·caliber pistol, Owen saJd. The shooUn1 erupted minutes after a formation outside the audio-visual center in which merilorioua promotions were an- nounced. rated movie epic• •• ••sehind the Gretn Doot'' and "Sodom and Gomorrah..'' But defense attorD'Y· Joseph Rhine scoffed at Clancy'1 plea for compensation to the cl ty foe damages alle1edlY caused by operation of the X-r•ted mom palace Jn a. abopplna center across 17th Street from S.Ota Ana Collqo. Beuuae no other C.Ufornla jury hu found any of U tilrna to be obscene, tb"'e can be no malicioua intent 'lttacbed to the Mltcbell'a operaUon of th• pomo movie house, Rhine eeid. He insisted that a rtlm mu.st be consfderect legal un\il a jury finds it to be obscene. ~hiue said in comparilon to Clancy'1 plea for $480,SOO Jn puniUva damaga that a S1 a · seaament would lu,ltW the Jury's obligetlon lo assess punitive dama1es. Last month, it was the city's special anti-pornography at- torney Clancy who won the day when the jury round 11 of 17 lllms it reviewed t.o be obscene. Sllnult.aneouely. the jury gave a clean bill or health to two other mo"ies and failed to reach a de- cision on the remainibg four. That obscenity tindine in the case of the U films led to the second phase of the two-month trial, compensation to the city for various form.a of damacea. It will be Judge M8"ln Weeks who will detennlne the amount, it any, of other damaees the city will be awarded u a result ol the X-rated movie display between September of 1975 and April of 1977. For his part. Clancy said judge and jury would be justified to assess milUoru of dollars in dama1es if, for no other reason, than t.o serve u a deterrent t.o the showing of such films in other communities. Panel Considered BALTIMORE (AP> -Pres~­ dent Carter will name a special commission early this year t.o look lnt.o the n~ for a nparate Department or EducaUon, Che flrtt step in h.ls drive for the Cabinet-level agency, accordiJti t.o admlnlatr•Uon sources quoted today bY' the Baltimore Sun. Winter Furnitu re s Tbe Orange County arbor Depart.meat tod_, ttpOrted .42 inches ot ralD foe tho past 24 hours. brlnginc. the season total to 4.07 .lncJiu compar~ to 3.9 inches last year. The MoultoD Nlfuel Water Treatment Plant recorded .32 inehea, foe-a ·HUOft tot1l of 5..6S' compared to about balf that lut year. Btu Shields ot Laauna Beach Hardwan UllJed . .fl incbes of rain on bil 1auie during tbe ~.-t 24 hours in the ~ Colony. The season total to dat• Ja 4.'12 inches, compared to 4.29 inches last year at this time. lo· C06la Mesa, Cbar1es Lewis or Orange.. Coast Colleae•a division of physical sciences r• ported .72 inches of rain foe-a Hason total ot (.88, up from 3. 76 last year. Orange County Flood Control supervising hydrograpber John Qieben said that, allhougb rain- fall bu been consldetable, Jt'1 been slow enough to soak ln rather than cause erosion prob- lems. Gietzen said t.oday·s total an Santa Ana was .61 ioch~ for a season total of 5.02, compared to 4.46 lut sea.son al this time. The ~est ra1alall flture be bad was for Saptta10 Peak, wbel'e .60 inches in the put 3t houra brought the seuoo totaJ to 15. 70, compared t.o 10.9 last year. No serious damaae from Tuesday's rain waa reported along the Orange Coast. Fro•PageAJ DELAY ••• were scheduled to appear ln Jud&e Schwab's courtroom Mon- day to enter pleas and to becin what la expected to be a 1001 series ot pretrial motions. J Fro. P a ge Al CRUISER ••• The boat was towed to • - Harbor Patrol moorln1 oft Carnation Cove where it will be kept pending completion of tbe invesUaatlon. Conie sre whac tho world of dlqjnctlveho~ futnlahlngs II .n •bouc ••• Now 4't savlnQI from JO lo '°% •, Take edv•ntaae ot un. bel~able NYlngt on t\Jrrent end dlteontlnued lln~ 1hroughout our entf19 lt«e ••• In 1111 dtpartmenlll. You'll see room ~ter foom of d!Mlnctlve h~ fumhhlngs •It Completf'ly decorlltftd. ell ecrtSllOlttf'd. Yf's. • vltlt to our 1101e Qn bo the 11nrt of wholo ll4!W life ~tyle lo' you. ., .. , ... ,......, _____ ....... '41 .. 1•• ........... l'I ............ 1514rtORIH MAIM SAMTA ANA· 541-4391 'I Saddle back EDITION t I I VOL. 71, NO. 4, 4 SECTIONS,~ PAGES Trustees By ANNE COOPEB. ~ °' -C>Mly ..... la.ff Impro.vements to existing school buildings and grounds were added Tuesday to the U.l of new school construction plans in the Capistrano Unified School District if voters approve a $49.3 million bond issue in March. Truatees voled 7-0 to approve ''in concept" $811,200 in im- provement's to older district ·schools. U.S. Dollar Plnng~s · On Europe's Ma~iets Conlpacted Car This car;s driver , Daniel Dawson, 19, of 32162 Pacific Coast Highway, Laguna Beach, suffered less destruction than his compact car when it slammed into the o live tree on El Toro Road Tuesday. California Highway Patrol officers said Dawson was eastbound when he attempt- ed to chan~e lanes on the rain-soaked road. He skidded into the tree on the me- dian near Moulton Parkway. Firemen freed him. Dawson was treated for facial lacer ations and glass in an eye and re-• leased from Saddleback Community Hos pital. Patty's Conviction Rehearing Denied SAN FRANCISCO (AP>- The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Ap- p ea Is today denied Patricia Hearst's petition for a rehearing on its decision to uphold her federal bank robbery conviction. In a l >,l.i-page order, the ap. pellate court refuaed to re- consider its Nov. 2 declslon a!- firm ing the guilty verdict agalnat the onetime kidnap vie·· ~· Miss Hearst's attomeya ob. jecled to evidence introduced at her trial about her acUvitJ .. alter the April 15, 19'74', bank robbery. The robbery occurred just 10 weeks after her abduc- tion by the terrorist Symbiooese Liberation Army. Her lawyers asked the ap- pellate court to reconsider ils unanimous decision, 'arguing that it erroneously interpreted the case law applying to the trial. Miss Hearst's next legal re- course would be the U.S. Supreme Court, and her lawyers have said they would appeal to the bltb court if the 9th CircWt refused to overturn the conviction. Sbe has beell sen· tenced to aev9Q years tn prison but is free on $1 million ball pending the appeal•. Buddy Saves Paratrooper FAYE'ITEVILLE, N.C. (AP) -A Fort Bragg paratrooper. plummeting to earth when both bls parachutes failed to open, was saved when he fell on top of an opened parachute and slid down the lines into another soldier's arms. "He hollered at me to get of{, but by the time l slid ofr the top, holding on· to hla lines, he knew tihat bad happened," recalled Spec. 4 Jerry Tindal. Poulld Goes for $2-plus LONDON (AP> -American touriJta bad to pay more \ban $2 ror a Brltl.sh pound on some cur- :rency exchanges today for the first time ln nearly two )'tars as the U .s. currency look another pouodin& oo European mooey mark eta. Jn early afternoon, an· American~ offtce UI Loa· don'• Clnand.aJ dlstrict wu sell· ing pounds at SU>2. lt was the first time alnca ¥arch s. 1971, that the 'pound, sold for more than $2. On London .. s foreip excb¥Ce markets -where towilt.a pay n• eotnm.l$Siens for currehcy converalons -She dollar bov· ered just below th $2 uchanae rate by arty aftG'JIOOIL A lo\ffr, aort of wbotesaJel rate, applies on th~ foreign n:enanie rnarttets, wbue banb excbante mlWoasof dollanadaywithotherbanu. The pound seemed ready in mornl"' tradinc to rise above $2, foreicn exchange dealers said. One dealer said it gpt u hl•b as Sl.99d0 in hectic early deals. This was a gain of more than four cents over the $1.9540 quot· ed at the end of business Tues· day. But by early afternoon, sterllne had been trimmed back to about $1.9763, still a tain of more than two cents over Tua. day. A dealer said ~e Bank of England e>urchued dollars to stop the-ster1iag'a rise. Other central banks in Europe also in- tervened on their markets to atem the faU of the dollar. European central banks don't want their currencies to rtse too s harply aealnst the dollar because th.ts makes exports to the important American market more expensive and less com· petitive. The year-looi 19'71 decline of dollar hu pi~ked Up momentum lo tbe flnt tractillc days Of 1978. In FranktUtt th• doUar ~ tinued {ta CSownwar~ splraJ by plunglni 8' 10.,.. as 2.0470 West Gum an marb 1D beetle traalng before reeo•erlnc to 2.0625 marks by euly afternoon. At the close of businesa Tues- day, the dollar wu quoted at a blatork low of 2.0'768 mark.I. SAN JOSE <AP> -A pileup which began with the colllalon ef two cars and a trailer rig mushroomed lato a tanate ot 22 bent vebleles early t-Oday on r1tin·slict Catlfornia 17 about l(t miles south of here, otftdalsaaid. No serious injuries •ere reported, lb• Calif oroia Highway Patrol said. Driving rain during ear- ly morninc de.rim~ was blamed for the chain· reaction accidents on a northbound curve known as •'Bil Moody,'' which winds through the Santa Cruz Mountains. More Rain Predicted Tonight • • 5u_nablne brieny brfOtetied the Orange Coast today, but It probably wott't be Mel\ a1atn for a while, N'ational Weather Serv\ce rorecast.ers say. Rain becan tamos bea.tly shortly Wore noon today ud. weather forecASters called for a 90 percerrt ~ ol more of tM same 'lb~Y· ··we're in ti • lton:n pat· tern bere and storms taave the potential to t• comlnJ tn,•• said Don DePauw, weather service specialisL He said tonight's storm ls coming from west of San Fran· cisco and should bring moderate to heavy rain, tapering off to showers tl'i\ll'Sday. DePauw said the storms are due to a low pressure •yatem over the Wesl "These storms are likely to come through one aner the other," he said. Htghs Thursday should be near 60, with overnight lows around 50, be said. · The Orange County Harbor Department today reported .'2 inches of rain for the past 24 hours, brinaing the season total to jj)7 lnclies comJ>aw to 1..9 inches last year. - Tbe Moulton Niguel Water Treatment Plant recorded .a2 inches, ror a seaeon tot.al of s.ss compared to about ball that last year. Jlill Sbi,elds of L-.guna Beach Hardware taWed . .u inches of rain on bis gauge during the past 24 boUl'I in the Art Colony. The 1eason total to date fa 4. 72 inches, compared to 4.29 inch~ lost year at this time. In· Costa Mesa, Charles Lewis of Orange Coast Collese's division of pbyslcal sciences re- ported • 72 inches of rain f~ a seuon total of 4.86, up from 8,76 Jast yeu. Orance County Flood Control (5ee MIN, Pap AZ) Diedrich. Case Delayed Br GA&Y GRANVILLE °' -o.lly .._ IUtf Prosecution of Orange County supervisors Ral~h Diedrich and Philip Anthony as well as their two codefendants in a poliUcll campaip conspiracy case was • put off Tuesday by the California Supreme Court. The court ordeffd a halt ln \he prosecution until It decides it District Attorney Cecil Hicks shoulcl ·prosecute the alle&ed criminal coaspirators. More correctly, lhe court said the prosecution should be balled until it decides it it will review the challenge by Hicks' office. So far, Orange County Superior Court. Judge Philip Schwab bas ruled that Hicks and bis staff should not act as pros- ec o tors of the two cou'nty supervisors and their codefen- dants. .Judge Schwab's ruUng was up. held last month by an appellate court. Those decisions came after the defendants said the DA should be removed from the • use because of alleged bias and prejudice against t.bem. In tbe initial ruling Judge Schwab Hid be failed to find any evidnc:e ol tr'ue bias ao4 prej. ud.Lce. Bot, the j\ljfge conUn\'aed, the appearance of bias and preJ· udice mleht lend to u.ndermJne tbe credibilil.Y of court proceed.· lngs. 1'he. cue began lut. July 1 when the county arand Jury Jn. cilcted Diedrich and Anthony on multipJe charges related to al· leged violations of nate political campaign regulations. Indicted along with the two coon ty supervisors were Anaheim Councilman William Kott, Fullerton attorney Michael Remington and one time poUtlcal financier Gene Conrad. Subsequently, Remington pf eaded guilty to a single con· splracy charge and the remain• ing cbarees against bim were dismissed. However, non~ot the other u----a fendants have yet entered a plea to the charaes brought against them by the grand jury. Before the Supreme Court edict Tuesday, the defendants were scheduled to appear in Judge Schwab's courtroom Mon· day to enter pleas and to bectn what is expected to be a long series of pretrial motions. Chance of meas1Lrable rain increasing to 70 per· cent tonight arid to 90 per· cent' Tbunda;y. South lb southeast winds 15 to 30 mph at timH through Thursday. Lows tonight. 47 to 52. Highs Thursday 5'7 to 82. A2 DAILY PILOT SB 4 Saved In Boat Explosion • Four passengers leaped tor their Jives and awam uhore Tuesday when their 2>foot cabin auiser exploded and burned near mld·cbannel in Newport Harbor. Fire from the blasts reduced the vessel to a semi-submersed hulk. Two of th., four people who were aboard the vessel were in· JUred ln the explosion and fire. Harbor Patrolmen aald the boat, owned by Thomas Wakely, 49, of 235 Promontory Point Drive West, Newport Beach, was pulting away from the Union Oil 1as dock, 408 S. Bay Front near the ferry landlng when two explosions in the forward bilges touched off the fire. Jr.jured in the mishap were John and Olivia Blakely of Pittsburgh; Pa. They were treat- ed for minor bums and released from Hoag Memorial Hospital. Also on board, but uninjured was Paula Pichon, 32, of 343 Baywood, Newport Beach. Harbor Patrolmen who fought the blaze from their fire boat. sa id they had the flames quenched within a few minutes of their arrival. A second explosion however, occurred which patrolmen b~lievc did major hull damage to the vessel. New Storm Heads/or Coast Area By Tbe Aa~lated Presa An lnt6nslfying new storm marched toward the Northern California coast today as gale warnings for southerly winds over 40 milea an hour, and coastal seas over 12 feet, were issued north from the Big Sur coast. The storm was situated 700 miles out in the Pacific, moving eastward and expected to come as hore. late tonight. Intermittent rains were forecast for most districts of Northern California tonight and into Thursday. Winda up to 35 miles an hour were predicted for the San Francisco Area today. In the Sierra, the Califomla Department of Transportation issued warnings that chains or snow Ures were required over many mountain routes, lnclud· rng Interstate 80. Snow and fee coated many roads over the passes earlier today Meanwhile, a 70 percent chance of rain this afternoon, turning to a 90 percent chance tonight, is forecut for the San Joaquin Valley. Showers will continue throu1h the weekend with a 70 percent chance forecast for tomorrow a nd periods of rain likely through Friday in the valley. Snow is expected to fall in the Sierra Nevada throu1h the week with heavy, wind-driven snow expected late today and tonl1ht. Fro• Page A.I RAIN ••. supervising hydrographer John Gietien aald that, although rain· fall bu been considerable, it's been slow enough to aoak in' rather than cause eroalon prob- lems . . GJeben said today'• total Jn Santa Ana waa .81 inches for a season total or S.02, compared to 4.46 last season at this Ume. The bJghest rainfall figure h• bad was for Santiago Peak, whet• .«) inches in the past 2A hours brought the 1t11on tA)taJ to tS.70, compared to 10.9 last year. No serious damaee from Tuesday's rain waa rtporttd along the Oran1e Cout. OMNQICOMT u DAILY PILOT • • o.11, '1• ..... ri.e. THIS WAS ALL OF HIS BOAT THAT THOMAS WAKELY CO\JLD 8EI! TODAY 2S.foot CrulHr Explode• and Burn• After leaving Balboa laland Fuel Dock Skateboard Clinic Set Armed with statistics about the dangers of what's becoming 1one of the nation'• most popular sports, a Mission Viejo savings and loan branch has scheduled a skateboard safety cllnlc for Jan. 14. Figures compiled by the Consumer Product Safety Com- m1ss1on note that "skateboard· ing now outdistances football as America's most dangerous sport," said Beth Crimmings, man ager or the s ponsoring Union Federal. Savings branch, 2S330·C Marguerite Parkway. In announcing the session, to be held at the branch office in Mission Viejo Village Center, Mass Crimmings said many area children received skateboards for Christmas. ''The commission says most Trustees Eye Upgrading Of Ball Field Saddleback Valley Unified School District trustees are be· ing asked to allow the Mission De Oro Bobby Sox U,ague to up· grade the playine fields al De Porlola Elementary School. Trustees will consider the re· quest when they meet at 8 tonight in the district offices. The league, which plans to pay for the construction, proposes to build one softball diamond with fencing, a brick dust infield, back stop, bleachers, dugouts and scorer's table. It would also upgrade and install backatops on three other diamonds on the field . Over 250 girls parc1llpate ln the Bobby Sox program at the elementary school field each year. Trustees also wlll be asked to approve structural ctianl{_es at Laguna HUis Hleh School re-quested b y the structural engineer and omce or tbe State Architect. The changes would cost an addltlonal $9,829. In other action, trustees will consider including three addi· lionaJ positions under their con· met of interest code. Fro• Page Al BOND ••. injuries are suffered during the first weeks of new skateboard ownership, so we're hoping to save many a broken wrist or ankle,·· she said. Sanctioned by the Interna- tional Skateboard Association <ISA ), the clltllc, scheduled from 10 a .m. to 2 p.m., baa been coordinated by Chip Wolfateln, author of "Skateboard Safety: A Guide to Safe Skateboarding;• Miss Crimmings said. WoUstein's book ia being of- fered free to clinic participants. she said. In addition to the author, others scheduled to instruct at the session include champion skateboarders Jeff Junilins, Stacy Peralta, Bob Mohr and Gail Webb, abe said. Carter's Arrival . Cheered by French· PARIS (AP) -President Carter launched a three·day vis· it to France today wlth an im· promptu stroll down the Champs Elysees, drawing ahouts or "Jimmy ... Jimmy" from de· ll&bted bystanders crowding the Paris boulevard for a glimpse of the American president. Carter, bare-headed and coat. less despite the winter chill, set off under iray skies down the wl,de bouJeverd with French Pr~sident Valery Glscard d'~. CARTER MEETS WITH SADAT-44 -· -solution to the problems of the modem world. - "It la true that we may have different vtews on the paths to f 0 JI ow... aaid the tall, au m French leader. "But I am con· vlnced that we wm derive from our diacuaslons uaelul elements to U1bt up the road leading to a more fraternal, more united and more secure world." From Parts, the U.S. leader moves on Friday to Brussela, headquarters of the North AUan· Uc Treaty Orgaaizatlon. Porn 'Damages' By GARY GRA!'(VILLE OI • o.Ny l'(llC ~ A Su,pertor Court Ju.ey •as told Tuesday that Santa Ana abould be paid $480,500 by the porno movie mocuJ& who profited from the ahowinJ in a local theater ot 11 tex lllms the aame Jury de· clded Jut mooth were obtcene. For his part. Clancy tald ~ud1e and jury would be ustlfled to auesa mlllloos of ollara lD damages lf, f()I' no other reason. than to serve u a deterrent to the ahowlng ot such films in other communiUes. F,...PageAJ' Attorney James ClaJloy baaed hie call for ahno.t half 1 mlllion dollan lo punitive damaaes on GROWTH. • • the estlma~ box office lacorna at the Mitchell brothers Santa Ana theater durioa the 382 days the 11 fi1lQS were abown. In addition lo punitive damac•. Clancy pleaded for the city l() be awarded an un- s pecified amount in com· pensatory damages for the "cor· ruption of morala" caused by the public sbowini of sucb X· rated movie epics u .. Behind the Green Door" and "Sodom and Gomorrah." But .c;leten.se attorney. Joseph Rhine scoffed at Clancy's plea for compensation to the city for damages allegedly caused by operation of the X·rated movie palace in a sbopplne cent.er acrosa 17th Street from Santa AnaCoUeee. Becauae no other California jury baa found any of 11 films to be obscene, there can be no malicious intent attached to the )4itchell's operaUon of the porno movie house, Rhtne aald. He lnsiated that a film muat be considered Jeeal unW a Jwy flnda it to be obffene. Rhine aald 1n comparison to Clancy's plea for $480,SOO in punJUve dam-aes that a $1 U· aessment would fulfill the jury'a oblicatton to uaeaa punlUve damaaee. . Lut month, lt wu the clty'a she H)'I. "People move up <tom1etor better homes> more rapidly ln this area," abe adds. "They stay, on the average, for only three to five years." The movement results in a service need -more real est.ale people, she s~. Tickets to the annual award.a breakfast to honor the aix top Hies peraooa or 1977 and the Realtor and Realtor usoclate of the year aren't even available )'et, but Mrs. Glanz guarantees all will be sold long before the event. A trade 8.S5oclation whf ch en- force• a code ol ethics in it.a drive to improve the real estat.e sales profession's Image. the board serves the commun1Ues of El Toro, Laguna Hills. Lake Forest and Mission Viejo. Its 1978 officers. installed Dec. 9• include Don Newman of Laguna Hllls. prealdent; Jm-ry Wlbon ol MJlllon Viejo. flnt vice president; Jack Haddad cl Ml.lslon Vl~o, aeeond vice Creal· dent; Betty Leonard of M ulon Viejo, secretary; Don HUdrelb of Ml11ion Viejo, tre11urer; director1 J.C. Nub of MlaJoo Viejo. Hal Fellows of Lake Forest and R. Jane Silva of Mia- slon Viejo, and Ron Maya of San Juan Capiatrano. Realtor- uaoclate director. .special antl·pornoeraphy at· tomey CJancy wbq won the day 'Wilen the Jury found 1l of lT mms u reviewed to be obscene. Restaurant Meet SlmultaneomJy, the Jury eave 1 a clean bill ol health to two other Slated for Valley movies and failed to reach a de- cision m the remaW!~four. Oran1• Cout restaurateurs That obeeenJty ng in the . have been invited to a meeUnc. cue of the 1l filma led to the Thursday to dlacuu creaUn1 a second phase of the two-month cooperative company to provide tJ1al, compea.aation to the c11y low-coat llquor liability ln· for varfoua forms of damages. aurance. It will be Judie Marvin Weeki The meeting will belin at 2 who will determine the amount, p. m. at the Croaaroada _ if any, cl other damaae1 the city Restaurant, 18050 Brookburat wUl be awarded u a result ot St., Fountain Valley. lnfonna· the X·rated movie display lion la available from Gree between September ot 1'75 and Seton al Amelia'• RestaW'aht. April of 19'1'7. 642·"34. Winter Furniture sae STOCKS I BUSINESS !loot •t ~a.. °" . _,._._ .t.c, , • n **---~~, n: ! t! l~·~ A us;J;~lo. A i .W JIV.-~ AO t4'Mot-V. I t ' ff t' --.... •1 }..__ ~ -I ,,__ .... A4e acl •. l!!_ •. M tJ\l>-1&. I ·;; • I r--~­ Ae nto·s lsi ~~·~ Allftlelll _. • U1 11\o'f ..... .,..... SS 111 1"< .. :t "' ,,.,d .• tO 413 1•'>-"' AArltfttl .IOU 103 tJ4-\It Airco I ~ 1 "' s.iv.-V. AkHM A011 ~ U -V. ••oo.. ,.... • 1 t~-"" A•o""' .14.. r20 •111 .. v. Aloftpf .... •IO fO ... .. 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""' \lo P~I t 113 ,..__ ~ l'litl t :....·.·.~,·. g~!~"•lltA Mt.it j ~ ~ '.; ·~ ~ ·· t ,.__"' Y,;r~3'1 ' ·+·G ' ' M "i4 ,... ~ ... \\ ,,.. a.. + ~ i' n ··~ ~· + :~· .,.._ 14 tr.. .rs~ ~: ~ ; • • .. ,.., ~l' t •·~... N ~ .. , 11----~ J _, • ...1. .. mg ;.;;c; .. t ,, '-ir·-ml ;:~.,.. rJt;;.:·: =mt't ; \4 lf12~ , ~ '~·s ~if'~·1 t~L • . u Is ~1111rff ~·! M'6'ff1'!~~:: E\111:,. I ~~ =· l i .. ~ 3-~~~.~ 'i''1ir~·~ l;u 11~·-~i.IJ,. ·; .. 0 -,. .,.. . . • a • l w.csn.day. January 4 1978 s DAILY PILOT 85 In the Red Debt Profiled;. . Guidelines Set BJ SYLVIA PORTE& ............. Have you uted tor a new loan before rep&Yin• an old 'one? . Are you tak.lnt c11b advances from your c.-.dlt cards to pay for routine monthly expemea? Are you COD1ldertna ----------. requestlns protec- ' Money's Worth tJoQ from bUI collectors by takln1 out a coo· eoUdatkm loan. eo you can repay tbem and be left with one tq moot.bly payinen.tT -· -l-... • If your answer 11r yes to one of these quesUom, you probably are over your bead in debl. (1) A workable yardsUck over the yean: -It you are u.sln1 10 pettent or YoW' tlke-bome pay to repay loans, excludin& JDOrt.aage, your load i. comforta- ble. -U you are usln1 lS percent for repayment.. YoUI' load · ls manageable. -If you are usin1 20 percent. or more, you are dangerously overloaded. (Z) HOW MUCH IS TOO MUCH DEBTT The following are clear wamtng allnals: -Lengthenln1 repayment periods on Installment 1)Urcbases and putting down smaller iniUal p11ment.s. Simultaneously, your lnterest load la increuln1 became you a re sinking deeper into debt for longer apans of Ume. -Debts on revolvin1 char1e accounts a1ao an climbing steadily. -BEFORE LAST MONTH'S BILIS are paid, this month's are pllin«i ln. . -Bedeviled by many separate bUls, you tum to a lend· Ing iosUtut:ioo for a loan to "consolidate" ~ P"Y off debt.a, leaving one big loan. -COCtlnue to buy on credit. adding more MW bllla on top of the big loan. BEllE ARE WORKABLE GUIDLINBS to atop the vicious cycle: First, three alternatives: . (1) Keep debt load below 20 percent ot after·tax in· come (not including the home mortgage). (2) Do not owe more than 10 percent of what you could pay out or your income within the next 18 monthl. (3) Do not owe more than one-third or dlscreUonary ln- come foe the year, meaning the income remalnln.i after you have paid for the basic needs ol food, clotb1ng and shelter. PICK ONE SYSTEM AND follow lt faitbf'ully. In deciding how much debt your family can handle comfortably, ask yoursell: How stable la the breadwin· ner's job and income (or both breadwinners' Jobe and in- comes)? Don't ever depend on overUme as a regular part' of salary. N e:r:t: ff you are re[uud a loan. 7 Clinics Detail Small Bwinesses Seven small business clinics will be pneeotecl on selected Mondays beginning Jan. t from 3 to 5 p.m. In tho Santa Ana Jn.tory Room at the Santa Ana Public Ubrary. 28 Ci.Ilic Cent.er Plua. · SPonsored by the Small Business Admlnlatr•Uon (SBA), the Service Corps of ReUred ExecuUvet (SCORE) and the Santa Ana Public Library, each free cllnJc will locus on a single area of buainaa deci.IJon makln1. A DISCUSSION OF MANAGBllENT problem• com· mon to small business will be pnsent.ed by BUI Davll, re- tired president or Western Consumer Induatriea and SCORE clinic moderator, on Jan. 9. Financial plannlng and alternate 1ourcea ot financing will be given by Garry HoUaar, SOORE, reUred president. of First State Bank of Litchfield. Mino., on Feb. 6. Seymour ·Levy, SCORE, retired president of IJle of America Insurance Co., wlll dllcuu analyzine the coata of going into business on Feb. 13. The March 6 clinic, given by Bill Davis,. clinic · · moderator, will be on advertlslne and ( T'"'KING ) marketing, and on n March 13 Georg e Russek, SCORE, re· STOCK tired vice president oI '------------------------franchiseoperaUonsfor Sizzler Family St.eak Houses, will dlJcuss franchlaing. Restaurant mana1emenl will be presented by Sam Eisler, retlred president ot Elster's Food Service Equip- ment, on April 3, and Ed Stone, Newp0rt Beach attorney, will lead a dllcussion on the legal and tax constderaUom of am all business ownership at the final clinic on Aprll 10. Steve Waddell, SBA, b the clinic coordinator. More In· rormaUoo b available from the Ubrary; 834...-.s • Mid Wnt Store OpetU Wild West Stores has transformed a former Fed Mart Di.count Store at u..12 Golcbln West St., Westminlter, lnto a new retail clothing outlet. Wild West Stores Coeta Mesa~ purcbued the 1'11,250- square·foot buJldtn1. localed on 3.9 acres of land, from Fed Mart Corp., San Diego. 1t bu been remodeled end opened for business u a Wild West retail ouUet. l'lejo 86£ Appro1'ed Allstate Savings and Loan Association, headquartered. In North Hollywood. has been granted approval to open an ornce hl u. ,lllsaloo Viejo Kall. currentJJ \JoCkr' conatnac· lion. The Mllalon Viejo M1111 1Cbedule;il tor compl.,Uon late thl11ear, w1U bouse the 2,400ilquare-foot Allatate SaTl.ql ~~ : . Ca I pGMIJ Liiilff• 88 811iWl119 T ' .· . . . . ... • ' ' .. CA.IL Y PILOT Tele1'ision . . TONIGHT'S LATEST tlSTINGS \\I· l>\.1 "'"·'' EVt..o .:00 II C89 NEWa o • Nlwa 8 a.tlMIHCY OHEJ ,.,.,.,...~~ • meaoc:el Clecieion on 111• own and Or Btiickell Cle9'-with • aoc10t wno oppoMll the pat..-nedic PfogfMI G t.tOVN! • • • wc,...n or..~ (19"3> Tyron• Power. Ann• 8e.11ter. Two olflcer•. lnvo!Ved In oot>merlne war- fare In tile North A11entoo. fall In love with Illa - woman (2hre> I THEM\ADY 9UHCH THEAOOKIES ELECTRIC COMPAK'f Et!) FOODS FOA THE MOO£RH FAMILY "Cootllng FM Ona Or Two" 9 ABCMEW• 1:30fJ MOVIE • • • "Tllenlc" ( t953> Clifton Webb, 8arb111a Stanwydl. The l111M ol puungara •board th• doomed YMMll are *-1 bolh before and during the llaglC alnlling. (t ht. 30 min) Q) MY THREE SONS fZll OVEA EASY John Raitt, paNM1t 11-. writing your Congreumen. li1!) FAMILY PORTRAIT "S~I Perantlng" Cl) C8SMEW8 II§) ~ ORlfflN GUMta: Eva GebOt, Steve Gatwy. Lwty Gatlin. 7:00 D NBC NEWS U UAR8ClUB f.I ABCNEWS m ILOVELUCY II) AOAM-12 fD MACNEIL/ LEHRER REPORT Cl) YOGA WITH MADELIN! Cl) TO TELL THE TRUTH 7:30 eJ SHA NA NA Guest•: Adrianne Barbeau, Or.,Joyce Brothefs 0 MEWL YWEO GAME 8 MATCHOAMEP.M. Well Tra ined Tom Hamilton (right) resents having his sports car overpowered by a locomotive driven by George Brenlin on Thursday's episode of CHiPs at 8 p.m. on NBC, Channel 4. G) THI BRADY BUNCH II) LET'S MAKE A DEAL fl!) LA.INT~I! ··~··· Cl) STAAIOAAO "Spring Cenyon" Cl) l121.000QU£8TION 9J FAMILY FEUD 8:00 G Cl) 0000 TIMU lt'a "Ho MOta Mr. Nice Guy" '*'*' J .J. dac::ldea 10 teach Mldlael wnat Ila balievee ... IMKlty nMded lasaon In niaponslblllty. D GAIZZL Y ADAMS . "The Spollara" Two Inept a.lvat pto.pac:10tl unwll• tingly ll'llNl«I Iha Wiider• nesa and II• lnhabi1an11 by polluting the ••••Im• with mtnlng c:Mmteala. 0 MOVIE * * * "Or. SltllflOelolle-( 196-'l Peter Sall•r•. o.org. C. Scott.A psy- chotic Air F«oa oener• lmpro-MM a ~ to Mtld bOmMra IO at11Ck Rueala. G ([I ntAT THING ON ABC A variety apeclel u.lng the llllanta of Chatyl Ledd, JoM Flitter, 8111 BU.by, Henny Youngmen and John Cameron SWeyM. 0 JOt<Elrl WILD G)CAAOl~ • AHO FRIEH08 G) MOVIE *** "O.ad Rln~r" ( t!NM) Belt• Oevla, KM'I Maldatl. A !win • .., IAk• away ,,., alltara bOylriend lllfougll • lalM pregnancy and many ptobtema .... In tllelf llllM. ( I IV J. Claann~I Listing• G KNXT (CBS} Los Angeles • MOVA "In TM E...,,t Of Cat11tro- pna" The daOat• -cMI delanM -can -IUfVlva a nuclew-? D KNBC (NBCI Los Angeles 8 KTLA (Ind ) Los Angeles G KABC·TV (ABC) Los Angeles Cl) KFMB (CBS) San Diogo G KHJ. TV (Ind) Los Angeles ®l KCST (NBC) San Diego m KTIV (Ind) Los Anqeles II) KCOP·TV (Ind l Los Angeles fl) KCET·TV (PBS) Los Angeles m MAGIC Of OIL PAINTING ··w inter And Summar Landac:apa" '19 KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beach 1:30 8 Cl) 8ZY8ZHYK F~I In '°"9, and Nldl'e edvtc. on the alllCo- tlty of rnenlaga ~lt .. wtwn the young couple J im Nabors t o Host Own Slww on KHJ Jim Nabors returns to television as the star or his own one·hour dally variety show, The Jim Nabors Show, premiering on KHJ-TV, Monday at S p.m. on Channel9. Guesting on the premiere show Monday will be Jim's good friend, Carol Burnett, along with Burt }\eynolds, Greg Monahan and Susan Ford, daughter or former President Gerald Ford, who wlU be a regular on the show. IN6c•l)lllr1llO~-I OONCIHTMTIOH Cf!IOM.WITI • CM!.Al!AIY John Allltt; peuMI tltw; wfillng your Congr-. t:OO 8 C88 MOVIE • * * "The OrMt Scout And CathollM Thurldey'' (1t78) Lee Marvin, Otlvar Reed. A bOfed llOlcllar ot fortune. 1111 Harvard- eduoated. 11111-lndiM - pelllo4 9nd • grizzled old ~ dadde to llidnep a V!._CIUP of bofdello gttla. UBLACK~ aQUAOAON "WolYH tn The 8haap Ptrt" Pappy, out to find 1111 •namy rader ahlp, la ..... ted by a novtoe llgftt• equeoron of Navy "'Wo!YM" led by • brWI young oommander {Tim Mati-). G 9 CHAAl.JE'I ANGE.LI ''Gama, Sat, DNUI" The ~ lnYMt!Qata prof- aionel 1-la IO find OU1 wl'C> la ellnllnallng IM top female playet9 prior to rnatcn.. with 1111 eglng cllamp. Tiffany &olltng, Bibi ee.ctl QUMI si.. a~ "SpemkNoM" G) MUtV GRIFFIN 0-tl: Ew GlbOt. St- G~. l.llfry Gatlin. Dew L•nd .. barg, FrancNoo Scawllo. II) GETISMAlln' 9 GAEAT ~ "Paul Taylor Dine• Compeny" Two rac«1t Taylor compo1lllon1. "Eaplanad•" end "R~ ... are petformad. G AUSTIN CITY LIMITS "JarTy Jeff Welker And The Loaf Oonzo Bend" Cl) MOVIE ••• "A New LHI .. ( 1971> Waller Malll\au, Elelne May. A laxy pleytlc)y p1en1 to mufdar • -'thy woman ehar mwrylng her. but diaoovarl he hel fallen In tow. (2 ht• ) 9::30 Cl) UAGEAHT BIU<O 10:00 G POUCE WOMAN "Bllnd Tenor'' When an aocount.arit (T .ab HI.In ltd ~~book­ keeping, he becornea the llfgel o! gengll•• wt>O 11• determined to 111199 the tru1n hidden Sanclf• 0.., Jack Cert at guMt atlf. ea News f.I (!I 8AAETT A "Hot HOtM" Two wlty okl gentlemen ..... a vek.l•bla rece llofM lrOtn I big-time hotMtnMf end lake Iha an.ma! to tllair 191f11Nn1 tn expectation of a r-ard TUBE TOPPERS KCET 9 8:00 -Nova. A debate over civil aef ense and the capacity of the United Slates to s urvive a nuclear war. "Th• Speo•·\lllllCll CBS fJ 9 :00 -.. The Great Scout and Calhouse Thursda¥." Lee Marvin heads the cast of this 1976 western movie comedy as a cowboy with an intellectual Indian companion (Oliver Reed) who kidnaps a group of bordello girls. Murders" (Premier•) TllM 8tartlfl0, Jowl Caulfleld. The ...... member of • ~Ip or-.. U'9 onlpfan«. 1U). Cl) Ko.we "'The ComlpW'. 1n-11- oattno tt1e ~ -darofa~~ ~ Kotllt ftnde a KOCE ISO 10:30 How We Got ---~t INtalled 11'1 the lltdlm'a There: The Chinese. The Chinese com- m unity in the Western United States is examined by a historian. ..-. u. Albftgllt., ac.t- -Ct~ guaat '*"· 1:00fi~ being poateO. I GETSMA!tf GMAT PERf()AMANCE8 '"Thr" 'By Belenchlne·• Mamb«I of the N-Y0tk City Ballet perform 'Ser«111da; 'Terantella' end •ouo Concartent.' tilt.. 'WOttl• by George Balanchlne Cl) SPECIAL "Whll-•tar. Pa.'' CAnoe-tno end kayaking on the Pennl)llVanla nv.1. 1~Q)· NEWS G HOWWEGOT THEM: THE Ct41HUE An hlltOtlan 1 I view of Iha ChlMM c;ommunlty In the W•tam United Stete. 11:00 I o a rn a News HOU. YWOOO CONHECTIOH G MOVIE * * * "~Mh Olw" (19•3} Tyrone Power, Anna 8uter. Two offlcara. Involved In eubmarine wer- ler• In Illa Nottll AttanOc, f .. In kWe wttl\ the - -.(2htL) G)THEOOOCOOPl.£ Cl) HOHEYMOOHl!AS fD Ota< CAVETT au-ta: Part I al .,, Inter· view with Paul w ..... one of AIMric:a'a moat dlatln- ~ ~RER REPORT 11~ II <;I) HAWAII FM-0 A \004P<oof plan to rob the 116clc exct11ngo of "40 mll- llOn ooea •Wf'Y wnan • -111• of unplanned mur- der• put• McGerr•tt on the trltlt Rlch111d Buanen ~t•tan..(R) U TONIGHT au.ta: Otllham Kerr. IM --Oaloplng Gourtnet. and hll wt-. T,...._ Ho9t: JchMy car-t. . . • 19" 8 LOVE.AMINCAH WhlN ~. lh1a STYLI ~a er...,_ of ''LO\'a And The ~ died ftlghU -Gt..oe, Wife/ loft And The W•· Robln1on and 8oott H•" •noount., un••paot4td •a POUCE STORY ttoub6a from tM ~ "Colllelon CourM" The • ..... °'.~girl queetlon of wtwt'-Of not ~. MOVla polcewon•• ~ be ..... ~ Giff' ~ to ride In pettol ( 11167) Kay c:.llard. Pall can la bf'ought to a heed C~I•. A ~ during a gun baW. with writ• ooee undaroowr '° two lllllara. ~ ~ tlfwlk up ttl9 London_. Langdon, o.t Stochlell. r1no Ula. c-.ct ttw .-rt t. lMwtl, Murrey ~ ....... de9lh. (1 Hamllton, Mugh O'ltlan fir~ 30 "*t.) • .::a<R> 2:001 ~ I GET IMAl'T • ._ "Who IOlled Mary CAPTIONl!D ABO Whlt'a 'Et Namer (1971) Haws Red BuUona. Alloe Pla1- MOfMHO 12:00. TWIUCJMT ICM! "Elegy'' CD FOREVSl 'lRNWOOO Tom INllcM a daclelon; EIMnOr ~ Annebellr, Tom ._,,. et.. method: Mee gee. an °'* from Loretta: Arwwbeha --prteea Tom and Panny. .., MOY1a •• "TIMln Thlra w- '"""" ( 11182) AleJC Hlool, Frank Latimore. A German capleln gate kllled ~ hie own '""' wtwn he triea to capture .,, ~ pertlamn. (1hr .. 30 min.) 12:30 8 MOVIE • * * ''The Oarll Angel" ( 193&) Fredrlo M•rctt. Marie Obaton. Bllna- 1-'Y daatroys a couple'• Mure. (1 llf~ Umin.) tD MOVIE 1en. A retired 110 .. r ffclO-to ~ • .,.. after ... murdar of ........... (1 ewa... 30 min.) ****"ON Of Her ( 11113) Machlko 'Kyo, Kaaio Haaegawa. A 12tt.. century .-..-~ -~-a~• '"'"d to • eoldlar 0-dMltl -hll ~ (1 hr., 30 min..) .M<WW • ~ ··war 01 Th• ~ .. (11MMI) KoJ!ro Hongo. Kyolto Eneml. Oamara and Barugon WfMlt hellOC In J..,an unll they -tlM1rOyed. (2 hra.) 2:201 .-ws 2:IO MOVID • • ''The Lady en-ct El<dtarNrlt" ( 1950) Hy Hull, MlctlMI Medwln. The plltl8 ol a group °' ar1 .,__ -.,__, ~ a nightdub ----· (1 ABC's 'That Tlai ng, fir. SO"*') *"' "IP!y Hlth" (1"1) lld Melton. Mlfa l.ynn. A IOf• algn egatll oommenda • remol• QOntfol plene. (, hr. :JO min.) t:M8 MOYIE 1'** ""Mloul" (1"4) ~ ear.on. NOIWd Con1e. A Q1'0UP of ~ .__ In ...-°' hidden gold -lnlppeCI In • -.. ty dHart moaque 1111 84ldoui'I 1ltba9men who dlctMadedlMa~ • ( 1 hr., II Mlft.) e:ool NlWa ~ MOYW .. Met-°'~ .. (1953) Richard Come, lll'lo- d• Ctwlltlal'i. A )IOUrl8 lar•' e111e.1n ~ ........ ~ .. p&ana to ...-. ~-~ !Nit•'*" keep•~ to let the ........... ~ tlome. '1 hr .. 20 min.) Tl1t•nda11'• D flflClme ltf e1'1es • MON•tca . ..., •••• "Hiida c.-..- (1Nf) J9en 8lmrnclN, Olly Medllcw\. A young ~ ,....,,. llolM to ,...... .. ,,., ... .,. ..... .. 19d man11911 (1hr,.811 min.) 10:00. ··~ "'nww a-. fOf' The fri.t." (1140) Thomae MltCMll, Prtclla ' Lane. /II rwtnd Nllw YMI' SIDMct ,., w tor-.. men.,,.,.,..,._ ....-..S 10 do IO ti, h9 ..... (2 tn.J AriEMOCM 12:00. **Yt"HerH~ And The 8ell~" (1848) Hady Lamerr, Rowt Walll«. A Eur~ prtn. -and • llOlal blllbC¥ CCll'llblne torcaa. aacll '°' !Mir own 1n---. (2 IW'I. 20 mlft.) 2:00 D • • • "Ooc:tcw At SM" ( 1958) ~ Bogarde, Mo oft.. Berdot. A Y°""9 doctor,~ on a cargo bolC 10 elidd • torwcl mln1ege, oete lnllOMd with • .,..,... f'r9ndl gift. (g_ ,_, 3!00 a.D * "Lady From $Nno- hlll" (11Mt) ~ w ..... Alt• Hayworttl. An *'-to turer ,... In love _..,.. a woman and ,_ huaband- 1ewyer geta Mm ln"°""9d In • murder. (1hr~30 min.) 3:IO 8 * • * "Singing In The Rein" (1952) o.i. Kelly, Debbie~ An actor ···~to melc• the"-litlon from allant fllma to ..,. "telldaL" < 1 hr,. ao min.) 'Skituation' Show Makes Bow Tonigh1 By JAY SllARBU'IT LOS ANGELES <AP) ..First came Laugh-In. Then came Saturday Night Live. Now the wackiest comedy hour of all is here,•• burbles the network ad. The network ls ABC. Its ad urges us to watch such as Cheryl ("Charlie's Angela'') Ladd and John ("Three ·s Com- pany"> Ritter tonight at 8 on a one.hour special called "That Thing on ABC," Channel 7. ( 7VREJ'IEW ) However, a good moment escapes now and then. One ts a reporte on a monster c8JlecfBig-squat., wbich bas terrified a rural towo by· lu:mbering about ,and sitting oo his vlcUms. HOSTS OWN SHOW Jim Nabors Other guests on the debut week will be Erma Bombeck, Jim Stafford, Ruth Buzzi, Bob Barker, Tony Orlando, Tom Bresh, Bob Eubanks, Sonny Bono, Susan Anton, Lawrence Hilton-Jacobs, Bonnie Franklin, Chuck Woolery and Tom Drees en. The Jim Nabors Show will be telecast Monday through Fridays from 5 to 6 p.m. THEIR THING -Among the performers on "That Thing" tonight are (from left, front> Deborah Zon, Paul Tracey, Shelley Long, Will Porter, Denny Evans and Judy Carter; rear, Andrea Martin, Mandy Patinkin and Marsha Warfield. Each star appears for less than a minute. t:ach does one joke by phone. You tell me an easier way to be a star and I'll do a fan dance at bigb noon ln tbe Brown Derby. "THING" IS A series of skits and Monty Python-like cartooo ·bits. Composed by five writers, it is not the -wackiest comedy hbur of all, although lt does beat "Love Boat" for laughs. Grouses a farmer: .. Half m• floe was nattened. They looked like bic furry pancakes." Im-possible. a scientist says, test& show lt takes at least 400 pounds pressure per square lncb .. to squat an average mouse." BUT FOLKS ARE terrified, the reporter notes, and .. in Decatur County, Idaho. plcalca are a thine oC the put." Sesame Street Goes Hawallan Television's "Sesame Street•• pays an unusual visit to tbe Garden Island of Kauai in · HawaU for five programs to be aired on consecutive days begin- ning Monday, Jan.16, oo KCET, channe128. . Preschool viewers of the popular educational series will eee Btc Blrd and b1a Mupi>et and human pall from the 1treet make their first airplane jouruey to new adventura and learnine experiences 1n a multl- cultural society against backdrops of the Pacific coast ~nd mountain.11. Televialon'1 lar1esl fantasy character, Snuffle-upa1us, maku tbe trip with Big Bird. Oscar the Grouch, Mr. Hooper <Wlll Lee), Marla (Sonia Manzano), Bob (Bob McGratb) ·and Olivia (Alaina Reed). Tbelr' ho1t 11 1ln1er Buffy Salnte- Marie, a recular cueat on Sesame Street who lives on Kauai. .. GOING TO BA WAii ls very good for the show because it is a mulU-ethn1c society where many leS1ons can be taught about race, color and cultural diversi- ty," say1 Jon Stone, executive producer. "lt also baa an ocean- oriented milieu that we've never had on the series." Many Hawaiian children participate ln the shows. Three of them are direct descendant.a ot Jtlng KaukualU, the last· relgniDJ mooarch of Kau~ (in the early 19th Century> and two are directly desceoded from the noted King Kamehameha, who ruled the island until bis death in 1819 .. By coincidence, the programs will air during the 200th an- nl versary of the landlnl In Hawaii by Captain James Cook, but most of the segments deal with the lore and traditions d.· the islands that predated the Western presence. and with Hawaiian culture today. It's malnly fuled by the efforts of nloe younc troupers relatively new to TV. Two of tbem, Shelley Long and Denny Evans, co-host things. They start lt with two in· troductlons. In the second, Evans takes a pratfall off staae. lt may mate Chevy Chase cry. ••Aut.botl Author!" OTBE& 8ID'J'8 are equally El Bombo, ·namely tboM concem- in 1 women's makeup, eon- fldence·balldlnc, a Clvll War romance, a chat with Johll Cameron Swayze, a tennla match and aallenteomedyfllm. . Trouper Manha Warfield also does a eood solo, raislnt quea· lions we'd all like answered. Like: "Where does Ralph Nader shop?'~ IT ALMOST works. but as wlth most everythinl in the abow. the .. Thing" troops push too bard and lack tbe spill· second timing that mates the · difference between a weak cbuclde and a belly laugh. You allo aet the feellnf ABC hired Blpqual to sit on routines the troops tboo&bt funnier than what actually wound up 1n the 1bow.