HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-01-05 - Orange Coast Piloti
maha Beach Reca • e .. ,
1
f • ..
I
Lightning Strikes
Huntington Home
THURSDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY S, 1978 . .
YOL. 71, NO. I, • SICTIO..I, • f'AO•I
4 -(
..
• • • ~
Violent Storm Floods h·vine Area. l
0.llf f'li.t SLtfl ,,_,.
HE GOT INVOLVED
HuntJngton Beach's Maneaa
0911y f'llet Mell .......
HE RESPONDED, TOO
Costa Meaa'• Spear•
Students
Prevent
Assault
BJ AR111tJR R. VINSEL
Of It. O.lly f'li.t SIMI
Two young Orange Coast men
who didn't hesitate to get in·
volved are credited with saving
a 16-year-old Huntington Beach
girl from the violent attack ol an
alleged would-be rapist.
·' l t was beautiful work.
They're heroes," says Hunt·
angton Beach police detective
Art Oroz of the two rescuers,
Robert Maness, 23. of Hunt-
ington Beach. and Michael
Spenr .. 24, of Costa Mesa.
He si>oke of the capture last
Thursday by the pair of a sus-
pect who allegedly dra11ed the
teenager off busy Beach
Boulevard Into a grassy gulch
near Adams Avenue.
Lon Dean Vickery, 24, a Hwrt.
lnaton Beach ahort. order cook,
today remained in jail custody
in lieu or $10,000 bail.
He is accused of the attempted
rape in a criminal complaint ill·
sued earlier this week by the
Orange County District At-
torney's Office.
Investigators say Maness, the
Initial witness, and Spears to
whom he cried for help, pounced
on the suspect as he pinned the
girl down In a field.
She was not sexually assaulted
before they intervened, but her
clothes had been partially torn
ort an,d she was hysterical,
police said.
"They saved heir a lot of
anguish ... a lot or mental
torment. .. a lot of trauma. I
talked to her aaain the other day
and she seems to be doing just
fine now," aald Detective Droz.
The fact Manesa, a Huntiniton
Beach resident and advertl.slni
<See m:aoES. Pa•e AJ>
2 Escape Injuries
I Can't Bridge This Gap
o.ltr Pflle ...... ..,..., ......
CULVER DRIVE IN IRVINE WASHES OUT OVER SWOLLEN FLOOD CONTROL CHANNEL
Maintenance Workmen lnapect Damage Near Main Street; Culver Waa C1oaed
At Omaha Beaeh
I Debris
Closes .
Roads.
By PIDUP ROSMARIN
OltlleOallf ... letSt.lff
Wednesday's rainstorm bat·
tered South Oranae County and
flooded streets in throbbing
waves of heavy downpours that:
-Hurled lighlnini into a Hunt-
ington Beach home with such
force that firemen at a nearby sta-
tion reported being jarred from
their beds.
Flooded Costa Mesa City
Hall.
-Send bluffs slipping onto
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
HIT BY RAIN-AS
STORM GOOD NEWS
FOR SKIERs-A3
Paclflc Coast HJghway in San
Clemente.
-Pelted parts of Laguna
Niguel and Irvine with hail.
-Forced flood-fearing Laguna
Beach merchants out into the on-
slaught to pile sandbags infrontof
their at.ores.
In Irvine the situation seemed
worst. The city was pelted by af.
ternoon hail the size of BB shot
that caused drivers on Campus
Drive and other street.a to stop
their can; some car engines·
were dead.
Pendleton
Marine Held
In 2 Killings
Carter Promises
European Freedom
Residents this morning were
trapped in their nel&hborboods
of th• Woodbridae, University
and the Ranch developments,
which became peninsula com·
(See RAINS, Page AZ)
OMAHA BEACH, France
CAP) -President Carter Joined
the presldent ol France today at
t&is World War II beachhead
and, ·~ by at.art white
Dolltu: Takes
'Sharp Rile'
Coast
Weather
Con1lderable cloucnness
tonl1ht beeorQlng partly
cloudy Friday. Fifty per-
cent c~ance of 1hower1
tonltht decreqln1 to •O
percent Friday. Lowa
tonlaht 46 to ao. ffiahs Frl· day~to62. •
JN81DE TODAY
1'hh111·az ~· °"'' Ccrl Ko~ hUdwd Mt MC dog ..:cirt to a tfOr. Olttl ..._ laJt
Amtrkoll DNo?ft conw trw. ' 10d4J, lw OIOflif thC chofn Of Corl'• Jr. n.Caromt. U.
Ftaturing, f'QOf CJ.
.
i
I
-.
~. 12 DAILY PILOT
Sunshine Saturday?·
But Rain Forecast Friday, Sunday
By JACKIE HYMAN
Ol IM °"'" .. , ... , .... Waler, water everywhere, and
more to come -but maybe
&om~ sunshine this weekend,
predicts the .National Weather
Service.
The forecast 1s for a 50 percent
chance of showers tonight, 40
percent Friday and clearing on
Saturday, w1lh a slight chance of
showers again Sunday. ·
Weather s pecialist Don
DePa uw s aid the unusually
heavy rainfall Wednes day was
due Jo thunderstorm type
cumulooimbus clouds, which, be
said, are unusual for Southern
California.
DePauw said Wednesday's
conditions are what is known as
a squall line, a fairly unusual
weather condition in Southern
Calliorrua. It occurs just ahead
of a weather front where cold
and warm air collide.
A squall line results in severe
weather, including heavy
downpours like the one that
swamped the Orange Coast late
Wednesday afternoon.
DePauw said high tem-
per at u res tonfght and
Friday will be in the low 60s and
lows will be about 49 degrees.
The squall line resulted in a
circumstance also unusual for
Or ange County -more than an
inch of rain in many places dur-
ing a 24·hour period.
Fro• Page A I
Officials at the Moulton Niguel
Treatment Plant in Laguna
Niguel Uus mornini reported a
rainfall or 1.13 inches for the
past 24 hours. The season total is
6.78 inches, up from 3.58 inches
last year at this time. BERSERK MARINE. • • In addition, about 30 seconds
of hail fell on the Laguna Niguel ' non.commissioned officers in
the photography and audio-
vis ual departments and wai;
quoted as saying he would seek re-
venge.
Acquaintances said Holl~y had
unclipped an ammunition belt
and laid down his pistol, then sat
on a table with his legs crossed
waiting to be taken after the
s pree was over.
"He'd. done what he had ~
do." one sa.id.
Brown said Holley had sou.ht
private talks with his supenor
officer s s hortl y b efor e
Chris tmas in which he com-
plained of d1ssatisfact1on with
bis j ob after being transferred
from photography to the audio-
vis ua I supply room
"Spt-(•1f1cally, he presi.ed some
grievances toward more senior
men" in the photo departmenLc;,
Brown said tn a telephone LO·
terv1ew Wednesda}
A Marine account of the ram·
page said Holley attacked three
of his victims at the center. then
tan to a nearby photographic
laboratory where he shot three
other men
"When he came into the first
hu1ldin,::, he shot one man and
ignor<'d two others, then went to
a s upply room and stabbed two
m en . ignoring s evera l other
wo rk e rs a man and a
woman," Rrown said.
llolley then went to the photo
lab where he opened ftre on
three non ·c ommls~loned or-
fi rc·rs. again selectin& them out
of a crowd, the colonel said.
n rown said Holley was a com-
petent photographer and other
Murmes described him as quiet
and introverted.
In October, 1976, Holley re·
t·e1 ved a mt-r1tor1ous promotion
to o;cri:tcant.
· It was a personality thlng,"
one Marini' said .• Holley felt
"h u sl'fl b y o ther Marines
bl·c aUS<' of incidents "like em·
harras-;ing him m front of other
pl•oplC'
Thi• :.sx he wanted ... they
wt·rc 1n the power s tructure,"
tht• M arme said.
T hl• wounded were identified
;.is Master Gunnery Sgt. Jose L.
Pe nalosa, 40, or Vista, Calif,
lit> ted in stable C:QJ\dltion. with
gunshot wounds to the left thigh
and face ; Slaff Sgt. Lee Connel-
ly. 25, of Decatur, Ill., senous
after undergoing surgery for
multiple stab wounds; Gunnery
Sgt. David E . Ostrander .
hometown undetermined, who
was treated for a bullet in the
right shoulder and released, and
Gunnery Sgt. Manuel C. Concep-
cion, 36, of Oceanside.
Concepcion, a supply man at
the audio-visual center and the
only victim who was not a photog-
rapher, was reported in serious
condition after surgery with
Effort Hampered
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The
cbances of an anll·buaing
measure qualifying for the June
stale ballot have practically
ended with the defeat by the
Senate Elections and Reappor-
tionment Committee Wednesday
ol a bill that would have
c b a nged the last date for
legis lative passage of June
ballot measures from Jan. 216 to
Feb. 10.
DAILY PILOT
-----~ area at 4:30 p.m. Wednesday,
,,, ............
ACCUSED OF SLA VINOS
Sgt. Earl H!>lley
multiple stab wounds in the
c hes t and abdomen at the
Regional Medical Center.
Holley was held at the base
correctional facility pending a
confinement hearing, officials
said.
observers say.
At Orange Coast College in
Costa Mesa, Charles Lewis re·
ported figures of 1.50 inches for
the past 24 hours, 6.36 inches for
the season and 3 76 inches for
last season at this time.
Bill Shields of Laguna Beach
Hardware noted a 24-hour total
of .44 inches, for a season total
of S.16 Inches compared to 4.29
last year.
Rainwatcber J . Sherman Den-
ny ()f Huntington Beach reported
1.09 inches for the past 24 hours.
6.28 for the season and 6.32 for
last season at this time. He said
an unusually large amount, 4.03
mches. has fallen in Huntington
Beach between Dec. 22 and to-
duy.
J ohn Gietzen or the Orange
County Flood Conlrol District
recorded a 24-hour total of .62
inches for Santa Ana. The season
total there is 5.64 inches, com-
pared to 4.46 lasl year.
At Santiago Peak on Sad·
dleback Mountain, be said.
today's taJly was 1.S inches, for
a season total of 17.2 compared
to 11.0 last year.
One inch of rain provides an
estimated 10,000 acre feet of
replenishment for the county's
underground water basin,
Orange County Waler District
officials said today. ·
* * * Fro111 Page A I
RAINS DAMAGING. • •
m unlties surrounded on three
sides by flooded streets.
Irvine police dispatchers and
r e cords clerks were busy
answering telephone calls from
residents asklng how to get out.
Traffic was routed north along
one of the few unflooded sections
of Culver Drive, to the Santa
Ana Freeway, east to the
Laguna Freeway then south to
lhe San Oiego Freeway.
Police officers stood at flooded
major intersections to dissuade
motorists from trying the un-
derwater roads.
City maintenance crews
worked through the night shor-
ing up undermined sections of
roads , with the worst road
des truction on Culver Drive,
where at one point, at the San
Diego Creek Bridge, nearly a
full lane was washed out.
Closed roads today included
Culver Drive from Main Street
to Barranca Road and from
Bryan to Irvine Boulevard; Jet-·
frey Road from the San Diego
Freeway to Irvine Center Drive:
Barranca Road from Culver
Drive to Jeffrey Road ; and all of
R1dgeline Drive, which was cov-
ered in mudslides.
Police estimated Ridgeline
would not be fully cleared of
debris for a month, though city
public works said the road would
be passable by late today, bar·
ring more rain.
Parts of Culver were expected
to stay closed for a week for re-
pair.
The police department report-
ed that a majority of lta com-
munlcatlooa lines were put out
of commission by rainwater
seeping through the roof, thouah
emergency lines remalned open.
Roof rainapouta couldn't ban·
dle the loads and water backed
over fioodproof copings.
Fil'emen and Pacific
Telephone laborers worked four
to five hours to keep the remain-
ing lines open and restore f 1e
douaed ones.
Phone panels were dried with
hot compressed air blowers;
some had to be hand-dried hY'
towel.
Throughout the county, there
were numerous traffic accidents
caused by slick or flooded street.s
and low visibility through the
drenchinc downpours which
came in waves.
There were no serious injuries
reported.
In Huntington Beach, a home
in the north part of the city was
struck by liahtning which
burned a bole through the roof
but was quickly doused by
firemen stationed just around
the comer.
Damage in Newport Beach
w as sll&ht although city of·
ficlals said streets in low-lying
Balboa Peninsula and Balboa
Island remained flooded hours
after the storm passed.
Umcer Victim
TU171S Picket
FRESNO (AP) -Frustrated
at refusal of physicians to turn
over her records. a Fresno
woman treated for cancer has
begun picketing their office.
Louise Crossley began parad-
ln1 ln front of the ortlce of Drs. R . W. Wolk and A . Pad-
manabhan, demanding that they
release to her records of ber five
years of cobalt treatment.
chemotherapy and three opera-
tions.
Her husband. mother and a
friend jotned ln the picketing.
,., . .,..,.....
Fro• Paflf! A l
CARTER .•. 4 stood ramrod straight, loolung
i.traaeht ahead.
ln has remarks al the
cemetery, Carter noted that
90,000 American servicemen
trom two world wan lie in Euro-
pean 1raves and that 200,000
uniformed Americans serve in
Europe. •·Wo aro determined with our
allies here that E urope's
freedom will never aaaln be en-
dan1erid," he declared.
PolnUn1 to more than two cen.·
tutlea of French-American
partner1blp, dat101 to the
American Revolution. Carter
told his French audience:
"We're proud of wbal we've
done together. We're sure our
friendship will be everlasting."
Brought by bus from Germany
for lhe occasion were troops of
the U.S. 1st Infantry Division
that lost 2J)OO men at Omaha
Beach oo 0-Day.
epresentaUves of the French·
armed forces joined them, as
did some American Legion
members, s urvivors of the
wartime French resistance
movement and a French military
band.
PRESIDENT CARTER DECORATES GRAVE OF U.S. SOLDIER
At Omehe Beach, Homage •nd Vow to Protect Eutope
Carter. who walked alone with
Giscard to the edge of the cli!r
for a view of the beach at the
end of the ceremon y, was
bundled tn a short white rain-
coat and scarf.
Frona Page Al Glscard d'Estaing wore a
sweater under his gray suit but
was otherwise unprotected from
the cold. Mrs. Carter, in cloth
coat and boots, carried a scarf
in one hand. HEROES HAILED. • •
I maJor at Golden West College is
.a normal, r<·d blooded young
man may hav1• !;aVC!d the hi gh ·
school girl from the horror of
violent rape.
"I was dn\'m~ down Beach
Boulevard and I noticed this girl
walking alongside the road I
always look at girls,'' he ex·
plained rather shyly.
"Then I saw a man walking
rapidly behind her. ft jus t looked
funny. I pulled up a t lhe red
light and looked m the rear vi ew
mirror. I saw him grab her from
behind and drai her mto the
fi eld."
Maness hit the a ccelerator and, tires squealing, sped into
a n adjacent service station, yell-
ing to bystander Spears for aid.
S pears, an Orange Coast
College engineering major from
Costa Mesa, ran to help as Ma-
ness confronted the suspect later
alleged to be Vickery assaulting
the teenager on the ground.
Neither is a physically large
man, compared to the suspect.
•· Everythil)g happened so fast,
it just seemed the right thing to
do," says Spears. "It took both
of us to get rum off her and s ub-
dued. I guess we wrestled him
for several minutes."
''They really did super work.
fl was just a lucky thing he saw
what he did," said DetecUve
Droz.
The two leaders then drove
from Omaha .Beach to Bayeux.
the first French town liberated
after the D-Oay landing. There a
flag-waving crowd of several
thousand cheered as both Carter
and Giscard d'Estaing engaged
in campaign-style politicking.
The French president was
quick to follow the lead of his
guest, who lost oo time reaching
out for the hands of welcomers
held behind metal barricades.
When a small tow-headed girl
wearing the colorful traditional
cbstume of the Calvados region
presented a bouquet to Mrs .
Carter, the American president
s wept the child lnto his arms
and, to cheers from the crowd.
kissed her on the cheek.
RCA 17'~XL-100 portable
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RCA 15'~,
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remote control
RCA's Signal Sensor
electronic remote
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.
RCA
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all fro m across the
room.
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RCA
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RCA 19'" Ol1gonaJ Portable Model FX-488 ••• 1379 90
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Several Other• to CfloOH From
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7
l
·Orange . Coast
• · EDITION
Today's Clo In g
N.Y . Stoeks •
VOL. 71, NO. S, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JANUARY S, 1978 N/C TEN CENTS~
Brown Calls Legisl~tiv~ T~ Session
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov.
Edmund Rrown Jr. today or-
dered a special session of the
California Legislature on prop-
er t y taxes and asked the
lawmakers to send him a $1
billion tax relief bill by the end
of this month.
$1 Billion ·Relief .·Bill Tops Agenda brieny on a wide ranee of issues.
But be save details ol rew items.
Brown described 1911 as "a
good year'' in which California
-..In .a ~.ranging _add~s tq, a
joint session of the LegrsTa&.ore.
Brown also said he will support
"substantial increases" in state
funds for mental hospitals and
community care programs. But
be did not sgell out specifics.
The Democratic governor also
called for abolition of the busi-
ness inventory tax, long sought
by the business community.
He also said he will ask the
Legislature again this year to
appropriate funds for new state
prison.s. A similar Rrown re·
quest was denied..last year.
Rut Rrown~~:J rn hi s
"Slate-of-the State" message
that properly taxes are "first on
the Ust" of challenges facing
California in 1978. "Homeowners and renters
want relief. The rapid economic
growth has driven up assess·
ments," Rrown said.
"Before Ws month is out, you
should put on my desk a billion
dollar property tax relief pro-
gram."
Rrown asked for a tax relief
bi 11 containing no increases in
ot•er st ..... -hx~-aivl ui.dr. i~ _
should include •'stringent con-
trols" on local government
spending. He ordered the special session
convened l~ hours after the
conclusion of bis speech.
Brown did not 1ive re.a.sons for
convening a special session
when the Legislature ls already
convened ln its regular session. clearly fueled by a voters' tax enjoyed "an economic boom un-
B ut that is a parliamentary initiative on the June ballot parallelled 1n the nation.
maneuver that can gel around which would cut local property "This is California -a good
delaya required under regular t-xes by about two-thirds. environment, a healthy economy
house .rules without going; to The measure, known as the and. a cou:unilment." to social Re~blic.11~. JI\. !el....a tw~thtrds..--Ja~ibJ.ftitHH:We, weWd ~ _ll!fil!_ce. -. • . maJ.orn.~ enues forcities, counties and local Brown said ID addili~n fo re-
81.111 passed i~ the rerul~r schoolsbyabout$7bllllon. qu.esting .funds .t~ bu1~d new sess1on1.don't take effect unW prisons, his adm.uustration will
Jan. 1, 1979. But a bill passed in Brown's fourth annual address also be cracltin1 down on prison
a special session takes effect 90 to the Le1ialature was a few eangs.
daya after that session 18 ad-eeconda abort of 10 minutes long, Reaction to the speech was
journed. which continued Brown's lradi· predictable. Democrats praised
Brown's desire for quick ac-lion of brief formal speeches. it and Republlcans were
lion on property tax relief is In that Ume, Brown touched generally critical.
Student Pair Capture Rope Suspect
HE GOT INVOLVED
Huntington Beach'• ManeH
•
'The y 're Heroes' Says Police Detectjve
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Ol t .. 0.ity ""-I StMI
Two young Orange Coast men
who didn't hesitate to gel In-
volved are credited with saving
a 16-year-old Huntington Beach
girl Crom the violent attack of an
alleged would-be rapist.
"ll was beautiful work
They're heroes," says Hunt·
ington Beach police detective
Art Droz of the two rescuers,
Robert Maness, 23, or Hunt·
ington Beach, and Michael
Spears. 24, of Costa Mesa
He spoke of the capture last
Thursday by the pair of a sus
peel who allegedly dragged the
teenager off busy Beach
Boulevard into a grassy gulch
near Adams A venue
Lon Dean Vickery, 24, a Hunt-
ington Beach 1hort order cook,
today remained in jail custody
in lieu of $10,000 bail
He is accused of the attempted
rape in a criminal complaint is-
sued earlier this week by the
Orange County District Al·
torney's Office
Investigators say Maness, the
Initial witness, and Spears to
whom he cried for help, pounced
on the suspect as he pinned the
girl down in a field
She was not sexually assaulted
before they intervened, but her
clothes had been partially torn.
off and s he was hys terical,
police said
•'They saved her a lot of
anguish a lot of mental
torment. .a lot of trauma. I
talked to her again the other day
and &be seems to be doing Just
fine now," said Detective Droz.
The fact Maness, a HunlingtQn
Beach resident and advertiaing
major at Golden West College 18
a normal, r ed-blooded )'OUDI
~
man may have saved the high
school girl from the horror of
violent rape.
"I was driving down Beach
Boulevard and J noticed this girl
w alkin1 aJongalde the road. I
always look at girls," be ex·
plained rather shyly.
"Then I saw a man walking
rapidly behind her. It just looked
funny. I pulled up at the red
light and looked In the rear view
mlrror. I saw him grab her from
behind and drag her into the
field."
Maness hit the accelerator
and, tires squealing, sped into
an adjacent service station, yell·
ing to bystander Spears for aid.
Spears, an Oran1e Coast
College engineering major from
Costa .Mesa, ran to help u Ma-
ness confronted the suspect later·
alleged to be Vickery assaulUQa
the teenager on the ground.
Neither la a physically large
man, compared to tbe auspeet.
.. Everything happened so fut.
it just seemed the rtabt th1n1 to
do," says Spears. "It took both
of us lo gel him off her and sub-
dued. I guess we wresUed him
for several minutes."
"They realty did super wort.
It was just a lucky thing be saw
what he did," said Detective
Droz.
Maness is more blunt about
what he and Spears did while the
shaken leen·aged victim ran back
to the service station to call police
who found Vickery held captive
inside on arrival.
"People bitch about crime,
but they don't seem willing to do . --'"'" ... ,._...,....-. ....... _
anything about it," he said.
"I think it's time the public
wasn't afraid to gel lnvolv~."
o.llt ...... St.ff .......
HE RESPONDED, TOO
Coeta Meta'• Spear•
Violent Storm.· Batters Coastal · Area
People's Protest
Legi«;>n Chief Sees
Canal Pact 'Death'
Robert Charles Smith, na-
tiCln al commander of the
American Legion, predicted
Wednesday night in Newport
Beach that a wave of protest
from "the people" will kill the
new Panama Canal treaty.
Smith spoke to a crowd of
about 150 Orange Coast Legion-
naires and their wives during a
dinner sponsored by Newport
Harbor Post ~l.
friends are going to be sending
their input to their congressmen
and senators," he said in an in-
terview prior to his speech.
He believes there is great op-
position to the treaty among the
American people, but because of
apathy, that opposition mi1ht
not be expressed.
Smith said the Legion can pro-
vide the means for the public to
express its views on the treaty.
"Complacency of the
American people is the biggest
problem of the United States al
this time," he commented.
Dollar Takes
'Sharp Ri.se '
LONDON {AP) -The
dollar rose sharply in
E urope today following
major U.S. government in-
tervention on foreign ex-
change markets to prop
the currency,
Bul trading was
cautious, and many of the
market's big operators
stayed on the sidelines
waiting to see whether the
Carter administration
would continue its support
action.
The British pound was
quoted at $1.88 ln midaf·
ternoon, a drop of nearly 8
cents from its Wednesday
close at $1.9590 and down 2
cents from its opening to-
day at $1.90.
He said ratification of the
treaty, which would phase out
U.S. control of the canal and
Canal Zone, is going to be the
most pressing Issue facing the
95th Congress which reconvei;1es
next week. (Related story. M .)
The Legion, nationwide bas
launched a campaign in opposi-
tion to the treaty in which "the
rank and file members and their
Carter Promises
European Freedom
C o ast
Weather
Consider able cloudiness
tonlg.ht beeomlng partly
cloudy Friday. Fifty per-
cent chance of showers
tonight decreasln1 to 40
percent Friday. Lows.
tonight 46 to 50. Hiaha Fri-
day SG to 62.
OMAHA BEACH, France
(AP) -President Carter joined
the president of France today at
this World War II beachhead
and, surrounded by stark white
markers over American araves,
vowed that "Europe's freedom
w 111 never a a a ln be en -
dan1ered."
At a simple, movin1 ceremony
at an American mlll~ary
cemetery atop the windswept
cll!r overlootlng Omaha Beach,
Carter and French Pl'etldent
Valery Giscard d'E.staina placed
almost Identical wreaths a,t a
bronze memori-1 to the
Americana. wbo d led iD the
llberaUoo of Europe from Nui
rule.
Gtacard cl'E1tatn1 told 1
•olemn, Ctilllcd Pth•rlnl~ 0 All thla l'r ance remembers. Sbe ex·
PfHHI ber aratltude for all
tbose who fell for her ft"eedOm,
to their fuiillies and to all tbetr
frieod1.'1
Carter and the French leader,
who n ew to HOnnanC:ly from
Peril aboard NPU"•l• beUCOp.
ten, atocfd tide bf aide d_.. a
~ayer for tbe t;a Ame~ana
bWriid Mm' U. Wada wbeN
...., Of &Mi r.u ~&Mo. =~lfwl .... Gf ~ ..
At one point, the American
president bowed his head and
pa11ed a band across Ilia eyes.
The taller Glacard d'Esta!n1
stood ramrod •trailht, lookln&
straight abead.
In hla r emark • at the
cemetery, Carter ~oted that
90,000 Amer ican ser vicemen
from two world wan Ue ln Euro-
pean graves and that 200,000
uniformed Amertcan1 serve ln
Euro~.
"We are determined wttb our
allies he r e that E uro pe'a
freedom will never aialn bO en·
dan1ered," be declared.
Hail, Floods, Lightning Reported
By PIDLIP ROSMARIN
Of .. Deily ..... llMI
Wednesday's rainstorm bat-
tered South Orange County and
flooded streets in throbbing
wavesofheavydownpoursthat:
-Hurled Usht.ning Into a Hunt-
ington Beach home wllh such
force that firemen at a nearby sta-
tion reported being jarred from
their beds.
-Flooded Costa Mesa City
Hall.
-Send bluffs slipping onto
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
HIT BY RAIN-AS
STORM GOOD NEWS
FOR SKIERS-Al
Pacific Coast Hilbway in San
Clemente.
-Pelted parts of Laguna
Niguel and Irvine with bail.
-Fon:ed flood-fearing Laguna
Beach merchants out into the on·
slaught to pile sandbags in front of
their stores.
In Irvine the situation seemed
worst. The city was pelted by af-
ternoon hail the sue of BB sbol
that caused driven on Campus
Drive and other streets lo stop
their cars; some car en1ines
were dead.
* * *
Residents this morning were
trapped in their neighborhoods
of the Woodbridge, University
and the Ranch developments,
which became peninsula com-<See RAINS, Page A2)
* * * Slwwers Forecast
Friday and Sunday
By JACKIE BYMAN
OI .. Deity f'I ... Slaff
Water. water everywhere, and
more to come -but maybe
some sunshine this weekend,
predicts the National Weather
Service.
The forecast Is for a 50 percent
chance of showers tonight, 40
percent Friday and clearing on
Saturday, with a slight chance of
showers again Sunday.
Weather specialist Don
DePauw said the unusually
heavy rainfall Wednesday was
,
due to thunderstorm type
cumulonimbus clouds, which, be
said, are unusual for Southern
California.
DePauw said Wednesday's
conditions are what is known as
a squall line, a fairly unusual
weather condition in Southern
Calllomia. It occurs ju.st ahead
of a weather front where cold
and warm air collide.
A squall line results in severe
weather, in cluding heavy
<See SHOWER, Pa1e AZ>
DAILY PILOf N C 5. 1978
Fan.era BapPJI .
•
'Berry Good'
Storm Hailed
By JERRY CLAUSEN
Of Ult o.11, ~ .... J!Mf
While raim that fell Wednes·
day . and early Thursday are
ca us1ng some harvesting prob·
lem s for Orange County
farmers, most concede that the
much·needed water is doing
* * * From Page AJ
SHOWERS •.
downpours like t.tie one that
swampt!d the Orange Coast later
Wednesday afternoon.
DePauw said high tem-
per a t u re s tonight a n d
Friday wtll be in the low 60s and
lows wlll be about 49 degrees.
The squall line resulted in a
circumstance also unusua l for
Orange County -more than an
inch of rain in rnany places dur·
ing a 24-hour period.
Officials at the Moulton Niguel
Treatment Plant 10 Lagun a
Niguel thls morning reported a
rainfall of 1.13 inches for the
past 2'1 hours. The sea.son total 1s
6 78 inches. up from 3.58 inches
lust year at Uus time.
In addition, about 30 second<;
of hall felJ on the Laguna Niguel
area at 4:30 p.m. Wednesday,
observers say.
At Orange Coast College in
Costa Mesa, Charles Lewis re·
ported figures of 1.50 inches for
tbe past 24 hours, 6.36 inches for
lhe season and 3.76 inches for
last season at this time.
Bill Shields of Laguna Beach
Hardware noted a 24-hour total
of .44 inches, for a season total
of S.16 mches compared to 4.29
last year.
Rainwatcher J. Sherman Den-
ny of Huntington Beach reported
t 09 inches for the past 24 hours, r. 28 for the season and 6.32 for
la st season at this lime. He said
<tn unusually large amount. 4.03
inches, has fallen in Huntington
Beach between Dec. 22 and to·
day
much more good than harm.
A county agriculture com-
mission spokesman said early
today that farmers tn the Irvine
Ranch area are havlng some d.if·
ficulty harvesting cauliflower,
celery and broccoli because of
mud but that the rains are doing
the "strawberries nothini but
good."
He said strawberries grown on
small acre agea throughout the
county are not scheduled for
harvest ing until late March
through June. "This rain will
19Hh the root structure and do
wonders for the crop,'' he added.
F re d Keller, Irvine Com·
pany's agriculture vice pre.i·
dent, said the inch of rain that
fell acr06s the com pany ranch
has slowed down cauliflower and
celery harvesting and has halted
work in broccoli fields.
"~<can't get· the tractors ln,"
he sald, adding that the com·
pany's avocado harvest also has
been temporaril y stopped
because of the rain.
However, Keller was happy
about the condition o( Irvine Co.
grazing land. Late last month he
had predicted the firm would
import hay to feed its 1,000 head
of cattle.
He indicated thls morning that
grasslands are now 1n good
gr a zing cond1lion
A Rancho Mission Viejo
spokesman said this morning
that the latest storm had
dropped approximately 1.25
inches of rain on the ranch's 40,000
acres of grazing land.
The county's southernmos t
ranch is running on!y 600 head of
cattle on 1ts range this year. Gil
Aguirre, vice president for
ranch operations, said last
month that his company is
s tocking no range beef cattle
this year because of drought
conditions. Normally, he sald,
the ranch runs up to 4,000 head
of cattle during the winter
months.
* * * * * * .. -Ff'Olll Page AJ
RAINS DAMAGING. • •
mun11 1cs surrounded on three
s11lt•<, bv noodl•d 5treets
I rvin'e pohct' dispatchers and
r c· c· n r <I ~ c I erk s were busy
am•\\ l'l'ing telephone calls from
f1''>1rl<·nb asking how to get out
Tr.1ffte was routed north along
orw of the few unnooded secuons
of Culver Drive, to the Santa
Ana Freeway, east to the
(,i.Jguna Freeway then south lo
~hC' San Diego Freeway.
Police offi cers stood at flooded
major intersections to dissuade
Q'lotorlsts from trylng the un-
derwater roads.
City mainten ance crews
'+ ork cd through the night shor·
in~ up undermined sections of
roads , with the worst road
dC'st ruction on Culver Drive.
"h<'r t? at one point, at the San
D1e~o Creek Bridge, nearly a
full lune was washed out.
Closed roads today Included
Culver Drive from Main Street
to Barranca Road and from
Bryan to Irvine Boulevard; Jef·
frey Road from the San Diego
Freeway to Irvine Center Drive;
Bar ranca Road from Culver
Qrive to Jeffrey Road; and ail of ~idgeline Drive, which was cov-
ered in mudslides.
Police esli mated R ld gellne
would not be fully cleared of
debris for a month, though city
pµblic works said the road would
be passable by late today, bar·
ring more rain.
Parts of Culver were expected
to stay closed for a week for re-
pair.
The police department report·
ed that a m ajority of its com·
rriunicatlons lines were put out
of commlsalon by r ainwater
S4'eplng t.hrou&b the roof. lhoueh
emer1ency lines remained open.
Roof r ainapouts cou.ldn•t ban·
dfe the loada and water backed.
O~AMGICOAIT I
DAILY PILOT
over floodproof copings.
Firemen and Paci f ic
Telephone laborers worked four
lo five hours to keep the remain·
ing lines open and restore the
doused ones.
Phone panels were dried with
hot compressed air blowers,
some had lo be hand·dried by
towel.
Throughout the county, there
were numerous traffic accidents
caused by slick or flooded streets
and low visibility through the
drench ing downpours which
came in waves
Io Huntington Beach, a home ·
in the north part of the city was
s truck by lightning which
burned a hole through the roof
but was quickly doused by
firemen stationed just arowid
the comer
Damage m Newport Beach
was slt~ht although city of·
fl cials said streets in low-lyini
Balboa Peninsula and Balboa
Island remained flooded hours
after the storm passed.
Much of Costa Mes a was
turned to an asphalt-bottomed
sea as many gutterless roads
were transformed to channels
com plete wtth flooded cars and
floating garbage cans on State
Avenue near Wilson Street.
A section of 19th Street was
wholly Wlder water ; Costa Mesa
police detour ed trafflc onto
smaller downtown ar ea roads.
Costa Mesa City H a ll
employees r epor ted about an
inch of rain -on the second floor
-because drain pipes couldn't
handl(t t he f11t·fallin1 rain.
Firemen drained the backwash
with water pumps, confining
dama1etoa so1pcarpet.
In San Clemente there wu
1llpp11e ot bluffs alon1 Pacific
Coa st HJ1hway. one l(lne or
wblcb was closed because ot mud&Udet, from Eltaclon north
to Camino 8an Clemente.
Flr•men ln Laguna Beach help~ downtown merchant. pile
1andbap ln frobt of tbelr •tares
to Prf\'fllt flood1n1i it worked, aecord!U to reoona.
Several 1mill m\adlU<\e, ·~ uported In tbat-cltt, on. ln ~
800 block ot Blu.tiild,
Southern Callforni. Sdl1on
Co. r~ ~ blackout. Wad.Deaday .n.niOGD. and tati1
toctar. tn PountalD V•ll:.tJ Newport Bach. COlte llt1a tmne.
IA l'auntabl Valley, u UDder-
ltoWld cable f allect at I a.m. to-
d•.Y • atf«t1Di .. cwtolnftl ta
t.b• area Of San 1.Crie• w•t et Euc114 ate«. PoWer wu a -f::.i.d ~ bl-Hl\ortid Ulla men·
bj ,Nftpcwt~ ....... w• IJt.lL Wftb I brief J10Wer OUl•
••• at .... amet of U.**'8 at
DOOft W ...... dt)'. About 1,llO
hom" on lldt &nl 11tb ltNeU between Newport Boulevard aad w..wur 'Drl" 'ftre wtt.ltiou& ~ ............. .
palm l1'Glld waa blOWn bJ Wt8dl
lalO•hAP.V'Olt.aeeHIM. ..
, ..
-
Crowds
Hithy
Tutmania • By R A \'MOND ESTRADA JR. Ot .. 0.llYl"lletll.Mf .
About 45,000 Oran1e Coast
r11ldeots flocked to alx area
stores this week, bravlnc long
llnes and rain to buy most or the
available tickets for the treasures
of Tutankhamuo EnpUan art ex·
hibllinLosAngeles.
· DeltrPMltM.it..,...
KING TUT FANS LINE UP FOR TICKET' AT COSTA MESA'S SOUTH COAST PLAZA
Duc1t• for Egyptian Art Show In Loa Angelea Go Feat on Orange CoHt
Orange Coast store managen
said the culture-seeking crowds
were ot all ages and very well
mannered as they waited to buy
tile tickets ror the lour-month
tXhlbit opening Feb. 15 at the
Los Angeles County Museum of
Art. .
Stamp Burglaries ·Told Store officials said most of the
Tut tickets were sold Tuesda)'.
The Orange Coast stores were
allotted between 7 ,000 and t 000
ticket.II each. '
Huntington Beach May Com-
pany and Broadway department
store officills said several hun-
dred ticket buyers waited in the
rain for several hours Tuesday
and Wednesday befor e receiving
the Uckets. Lines also were in
evidence at Broadway, May Co.
and Bullock's ticket outlets in
Laguna HiUs and Costa Mesa.
H11ntington Reports $45,000 in Theft ,Losses
Huntingtob Beach police said
today they believe a stamp col·
lection burglary ring bas struck
three times in their city and
may soon hit other Orange Coun·
ty collectors. ~
Police Detective Marty
O'Reilly said stamps valued at
$45,000 have been taken from
three Huntington Beach collec·
tors during the past two weeks.
O'ReilJy has advised all area
stamp collectors to lock up their
treasures because the thieves
are using a mailing list of
philatelist club members to
select their victims
Police believe the thieves
found a stamp collectors club
mamng ll5t at the home of their
first victim who lived in a
mobile home park.
O'Reilly declined to identify
the victims because that In·
for m ation would tip orr other
burglars as to where to find the
valuable stamps, he said.
The !irst vlclim, a 72·year-old
former McDonnell Douglas
Company employee, told police
an old mailing list of o\her
stamp collectors was taken in
the Dec. 23 burglary.
The burglary victim told
police the m ailing li st could tip
off the burglar as to where other
prominent stamp collectors In
the area are living.
The name and address of the
second victim, a 74-year·old
traller park resident in another
part of the city, was on that list.
O'Reilly s a id t h e stamp
thieves struck while the victim
was away from his home, As in
the first theft, a door was pried
open to gain en try.
Store officials said that by
Wednesday after noon only
"singles" and Uckets for exhibit·
times dwi.n1 the week were sWl
on sale. Most tic k ets tor
weekend exhibit times were sold
during the first few hours Tues-
day.
NB Doctor Eyes
Governor's Post
Jn the second break in, which
occurred Dec. 31, a mink coat
was also taken. Despite this,
O'Rellly said he believes it was
the work of the same stamp
burglars.
''They were more selective in
the stamps they stole the second
time,'' O'Reilly said.
St or e officials at the May
Company, B roadway a nd
Bullocks eaid they expected all
the Egyptlan exhibit ducatl to
be s old by today.
Officlals a t the Los Angeles
m useum expect about 1.3 million
Southern Californians to vlew
the precious artifact.a.
Som e three million people
have seen t h e exhibit i n
Washington. D.C., Chicago and
New Orleans where it closes
Jan . 15.
Dr . Eugene Atherton. the
Newport Reach physician known
for his authorshjp or environ·
mentally onented initiative
campaigns, will be seeking the
Democratic nomination for gov-
ernor.
Atherton has until Feb. 23, to
get the sienatures of 10,000 reg-
istered Democrats in order to
qualify as a candidate for the
June primary election.
Otherwise, a •POkeaman fo r
tf>e Orange County Registrar or
Voters said, he will have to pay
a $982 filing fee lo gel his name
on the Democratic ballot ll\
June.
Atherton's last try for elective
office came in 1976 when he ran
agains t Tom Riley for the Firth
Dis trict seat on the county
Roar d o f Supervisors. He
finished a distant third to Riley
and Max 8inswanger.
Atherton, who has associated
himself wtth a variety of causes
generally aimed at protecting
the county's natural environ-
ment, has written a handful of
Initiative peititions which have
been presented to Orange Coast
area voters In the past two
years.
On e, which qua lified In
Newport Beach and was enacted
by the city council, calls for the
dedication of five acres of park
land per 1,000 residents or new
developme nts . The c ity pre·
viously required two a cres per
1,000 people.
A sim ilar m easure als o
auth ored by At h erton has
qualicted for the March ballot in
San Clemente.
In Newport Jleach, Atherton is
cur renUy working on a petition
requiring dedication of access l9
bluff tops alongside the Newport
Ray or the ocean.
He is ala<> circulating another
petJtion he wrote which calls for
Teacher Suit
Proposed in
Saddleback
Saddleback Vall6Y Unlfled
Sehool Dlatnci Trustee William
Kohler wanb the dlltrl~t to aue
teacher• for the , eoa~ of lu t
year's strike.
Kohler PfOposed Wednesday that trustees find out bow much
the 1\rike COit and brinl a 1u.lt
a1ain1t the teachtn tor that amount. Th• t.rultetl did not d1a·
cu11 hla propoeal but 1tohler
said later that 119 b01* the1 wlU eonal4•r U durtn• tbelr next m .. tl.Qf.
He explalDtd ·tbat. t.tie
Pua4enaMbool 1yatna 11 amn.
lta teae.blra fart.be .-0.000 cOit
of • •trik• in tta itehooll. SlDee th• eowu bav• Mid w.·eouW
be doae aild tbe state SUpree
CoUrt bat cl•ld the teaclllft'
apptal. be wet, •hnilll" ICtloO
l\OW fa Ol*l to GthW tthoio& dia-
ttlcta.' • .
, 'KeUld~a1ttc11aow
CU tie COQlldll tM 1-W IO
IUUi• u. W.CIL bl *' ~, teaeben bavt eon*Mled ~u..at
tlleU' ........ -.,, ... bf lb• Jaw W11M' tlae'" nOt
1pectfteiall7 ••~la IM la•.
~
a county ordinance requiring in-
creased park land dedication
from developers and w~d pro·
vide incentives for low-cost
housing.
The third s tamp theft oc-
curred Monday whlle the 41·
year·old victim was away at the
Tournament of Roses Parade in
Pasadena.
The show also will travel to
Seattle, New York and San
Francisco.
RCA 17'~1egoNC XL-100 portable
color TV with Signal Sensor
remote control ~~~~~
RCA's Signal Senior
electronic remote
control
T~e Pro~11 17 Atmolt
lilodll El3lell 1r 11aoon11
Easy-chair conven-MOJUS~~~~:: 1ence Change chfln·
nels, control volume,
turn set on and olf-
all from across the
room. RCA 19'~ Colom&k table model
. -.
RCA ~ ~-
1 ColotTrak I ~ -...... . _,,
·~
I
!l'
II
SUPER VALUE
For o ColorTrak
Tatite Model
RCA 151dlagon•I
XL-100 portable color TV
lG~1~: t~L·100 l till I ! ltt __ . J ~ I ~-rm
Tiii Proftcll IS
Model EX354
• One of a Khtda
• F1oors-.a.1
• Clot..Outs
RCA 19 .. OllQOn•l-78 Extended Lite
Chaasls Moder FB.C<l3, One only . , • '369 90
RCA 19" Oiagonat Portable Model
FX·466 .• 1979 90
RCA 19 .. Olagonat Portable with
Remote Control, Model FU-4 78A ..•
'469.90
RCA 19. Oiaoonal Table Model Wllh
Remote Control, Model FA-.488 • . •
1479.90
Several Other• to Choose Fro"'
lncludlng Conaofe Models. Subtect to
Pnor Sale.
\."I .. · ,,,,,,,,Our(·., .. ,,,, .... ,. Prot•·•·tiou Plt111.
275 East 17th St.
Costa Mesa
,. ;. . . .
''
Thursday January 5 1978 DAIL y PILOT A3
.Is Juvenile Justice Systeill Fair?
Tbe man in charae of a $100
mflllon·a·year federal provam
to keep non-crlmlnal Juven1le of.
lenders from being locked up
tl'aya up to llO percent ol the
')'Oungstera detained In lnalllu·
lions •h9uldn't be.
That is what Frederick P
Nader, dePuty administrator for
thf !ederal Law Enforcement
IAasistance Admlnistrallon, told
Oranae County ofhcials Wedn~·
day.
"None or us thinks in any kind
ot nai~e sense that every
youngster ought to be just
,.
Convict
Hurt in
'Escape'
A Jail inmate was seriously ID
jured Wednesday when he made
an 111 -Cated attempt to escape his
captors by clinging to the un
dercarriage of a iihertH's bw.
that was returning 50 prisoners
trom Orange County Courthouse
f0J811.
The self-imposed nde taken by
Jlichurd Gonzale.i: Arellanes. 40,
of Los Angeles, la!>ted only from
the courthouse basemerll to the
drive leading to C1v1c Center
Drive
Jt was there I.hat Arellane-;
either fell or was scraped from
his undercarriage hiding place
and then run over by the bus dual rear wheels
turned Cree ," Nadu said
··There are some youne people
that pr~ent a threat lo the com
munlly &nd a threat to
themselves
"The quti:.llon ts how many of
those youngsters are there real
ly and wh1tt do we do about those
others?" Nader continued
The youthful ofrenders Nader
was referring to are those who
have committed ::.uch offenses
as truancy and running away
orrcnses "'h1 ch would not be law
violations 1f they were adults
He al::.o was talking about
abused and neglected ctuldren
"'ho often are locked up tor their
O\\ n protection.
Nader told supervisors and
eounty law enforcement 0Hic1a1s
that correct10ns experts belJeve
only JO to 12 percent of the
JUVenlleit in U.S corrections
rac1hUes really belong In locked
institutions.
The other 88 to 90 percent, he
contended. are not a threat to
the community, and the serv1tes
they receive in institutions are
considered by many as ••grossly
inadequate.··
\,,,
...
A~WI .........
The seriou.-;ly injured man was
taken to UCI Medical Center
whnl' he underwent emergency
surgery and is reported to be in
guarded condition today.
LIONEL WILLIAMS (RIGHT) HELD FOR MINEO MURDER
Jail Cell In Michigan Bugged to Get Evidence
Arellanes was arrested Mon-
day bv Santa Ana police on
charges of impersonating a
poll <'l' off1ct>r. robbery, a!>sault
with a dc~udly wca1>on und kid
n<ipping
Al the time ur hs~ arrest hl'
us rd the name Albert .M arlmez
lit.> allegedly was at the wheel
of an auto that led police respond
1ng to a robbery call on a 100 mph
chase through Santa Ana and
Orange side streets before he and
a companion were chased down
on fool after the car crashed into a wall
Suspe ct Charged
In Mineo S laying
The two men were suspected or
attemptltra to rob a resident at
1900 W. Civic Center Drive after
posing as policemen to gain entry
into the hourse.
Arellanes was in court Wednes-
day morning to be arraigned In
~un1c1pal Court ;rnd was not
seen crawling under the bus
wh<'n he and 49 other prisoner!-.
began lhur t\\o block JOU rnt')
back t•) (Jran~c County Jail
!ihorl ly artt•r noon
LOS ANGEi l::S IAPr A
M1ch1gan conv1N who!.e 1a1l cell
<'On vcr sations about Lhe stabbing
death of ac·tor Sal Minl'o were
bugged by police ha~ been
l'harged \\1th murder.
A single C'harge of flrst-degrcl.'
murder was filed In Beverl>
Hllla Municipal Court on
Wednesday against Lion~I R.
W11llams, 2t. who is slated to com
plete an eight-month fall term tor
for.iery atC&lhoun County Jail in
Marshall. Mich, on Friday. <;a1d
Deputy 01stncl Attorney Burton
Katz
Culhoun County Sherill KogPr
lkan said today that Wilham'>
1ntlintll'd h<' won·t fight extradt
t1011
County Doctor Ball
Services Set Friday
run<'ral services will be held
Frid ay in Santa Ana for longtime
Orange County physician Dexter
R. Ball who died Wednesday at
the ageof8:J.
Dr Ball . who practiced
medicine in the county for more
than 49 years, was one or the
founders of St. Joseph Hospital in
Orange
The son of a physician who
m oved to Santa Ana from Quebec
ih 1887, Dr Ball was a graduate
of Santa Ana Hiah School, UC
Berkeley and the UC San Fran
cisco College of Medicine
He opened Ms general practice
In Santa Ana in 1922.
In addition to Dr Ball and hill
father. the family includes five
other physicians. Dr Ball's late
brother, John, was a surqeon.
His three sons, Dexter T., Robert
and Donald all practice med1clne
in Orange County, as does his
nephew.Dr JohnD.BallJr.
Dr. Ball leaves his widow, Ed·
n a, of Santa Ana; his three sons.
a sister, Arvilla Witmer, of Santa
Ana, 11 grandchildren and two
great-grandchildren.
Services will be held at 3 p.m
at the Waverley Chapel in
Fairhaven Memorial Park, Santa
Ana
The family suggests memorial
donations lo St. Joseph Hospital
High Risk Infant Nursery.
Guilt SAived
Shoplifter Gives $40 to HB
A person ln Salt Lake City. probably suffenng from a
guilly conscience, is t.rylna to make thlnas right in Hunt·
ington Beach.
T HE APPARENTLY reformed shoplifter sent two S20
bills to the Chamber o( Commerce, asking that the money be
distributed to three stores lnthe city.
The anonymous leUer writer directed thJl $10 be 1lven
to Alpha Beta, $10 to Safeway and $20 to Zody's.
Ralph Kiser, the chamber's executive manager, said
the request wu a first for him.
KISER SA.ID he would carry out U'le letter writer's re·
quest immediately.
The envelope. which had a Salt Lake City postmark,
waa addreaecl to lbe Chamber of COmserse, Hunnln1ton
Beach.
••About a year aro,0 the letter said, "J toot a number of'
"item• from 10me stores tn 1our clty, and I would aprtclate It
verry much lf >'OU •ould 1lve this moo•1 to tho.• atoru:
(alnc t no fl&er llye ln the 1t1te and am oever down
lbtlr. "), . ·
A ·~•man 1t ~·· heldquaner1 in Los An1eles aald tbecompaJ\1 ~ rDOMY:in the Qlail about-once a
montb , IO~el • UUl• u 50 ctnta. •
Ir that happens. Dean said.
Wt I hams "'111 be handed over to
California authorities for return
to that state "hy the weekend "
In tape.-recorded conversa-
trnn~ in June and December,
\\.-1lhams talked to cellmates in
Marshall about the Mmeo case
after his jail cell w•s bugged at
the request or the Los Ang~''!s
County sheriff'~ department.
Dean said the •ape·recordtd
conversations ••contributed lh·
vPst1~al1H' lead11 .. we went In
there and interviewed all of
Wtlliams' cellmates ··
Uean rC'fuscd lo Sa) \\-hCll "'as
on the tape recordings or ..., hat
evidence was ~leaned from in·
terv1ew1ng prisoners housed in
W1lhams' 12-man cell
Dean said Williams' cell was
bugged alter a search warrant
was issued by a Calhoun County
circuit judge.
Meantime, Los Angeles Coun·
ty Sherif( Peter Pitchess said
authorities believe the killer act·
ed alone In the February 1976
s laying "and killed Mineo with
the apparent motive of rob·
bery," although investigators
were puzzled because money
was found on the 37-year-old ac·
tor's blood-stained body.
A bunting knife apparently
was the murder weapon,
Pltchess said, although he of-
fered a terse "no comment''
when asked af the murder
weapon was found
.. We think we have a very
strong case," Pltchess said.
Good Skiing
Forecast in
Sierra Ne vada
By The Associated Pr~IS
New snow was reported today
at most locations, foreshadow·
ing excellent skiini for the up·
comina weekend in the Sierra
Nevada.
Hei-e are the cond1tions a11 pro-
v ided by t.&e California State
Au to mobile Association.
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What Is needed. Nader sa1d ,
are cooperallve efforts between
those in Juvenile JW.llce and
those who ofCer human services
soc1al workers, mental health
workers and educators, for ex
ample
''Someone who says delln
quency is a problem o! the
JUStlce system 1s maktng a mis~
informed statement," Nader
continued
The juvenile offender who ar-
rives iQ court n:iay face health
problems, education problems.
mental health problems or prob·
lems in his home environment,
l'-iad<'r s aid
· 1 suggest to you that the
1usllce system 1s probably the
most poorl) equipped to handle
those problems ·' he continued
Yet. he said there are whole
professions of human services
official::. who are paid with tax
dollars to help youngsters and
families who are troubled.
"It is time lo say . here
work with them," Nader
Supervisor Thomas Riley
asked Nader about some $6
mlllton in Juvenile treatment
Teen-age Dri nking
funds withheld from California
by federal authorities
Th at allocation Includes
$330.000 to help finance Oranae
County programs Uus year.
Nader said state funds have
been withheld because the
California Youth Authority mlx-
es adult and Juveniles offenders
in the same institutions. a viola·
t1on of rooeral regulations.
He said negotiations are under
way to resolve the difficulties
and federal authorlUes don't
WlSh to withhold any funds from
the state.
NBC-TV May Face
I
Lawsuit by School
HARTSDALE. N.Y. (APJ -
llartsda!e school board officials
say they'll meet lo decide
whether to Lake legal action
against NBC television con-
s umer reporter Belly Furness
and the TV network for serving
an alcoholic beverage to 15 un-
der-age high school students
who look part in a show on teen-
age drinking.
But NBC says Miss Furness
warned officials o r the
Westchester County school that
she would be serving 30-proof
drinks to the students, aged 12 to
16, durang a Nov. 28 taping or a
·•Today" show segment that was
s hown Dec. 13. The state's
minimum drinking age Is 18
Miss Furness was unavailable
for comment
Hartsdale School Superinten-
dent Robert Frelow s aid the
school board directed lawyer
Richard Gyory to explore legal
options The board will meet on
•
the m alter Tuesday
Frelow su1d the producers of
the NBC report on drinking
among teen-agers · mis led·
teacher s when they got
perm ISSlOn to use !>tudents in the
report
I-le ~aid school officials were
unav. arc that alcohol was on the
menu when the telev1S1on people
..told us that they wanted to do a
consumer panel with some
youngsters .. who would sample
·'subtly enticing'· snatk foods
The products wt>re various
flavored drinks of Malcolm
Hereford 's Cows, a sweet,
milkshake like , 30 proof
beverage which Miss Furness
offered to the students S.he then
elicited opinions about the
drinks
M 1ss Furness said in her re
port that Heublein 'ii advertising
makes "liq uor look like
somethmg that should be sold at
the corner soda shop instead of a
liquor store."
A Heublein spokesman. said
the firm was misrepresented in
the broadcast and that Heublein
1s considering a lawsuit
A s pokesman for NBC: said
Wednesday that a counselor on
the faculty at the school, Robert
Petrillo. had given permission
for students lo participate In the
report He said the network pro-
ceeded under lhe belief that the
school was acting "'in loco
parentis" in the place or
parents
The Westchester County dis·
trict attorney directed the school
board to file a complaint if it
w~nts his office to investigate.
Convlcllon for v1olati-on of the
state Alcoholic Beverage Con
trol Act is pumshable by a one·
year ~entence .and $1,000 fine, a
spokesman lor the distract at·
torney said
snoP~OW!
Extraordinary specials in all departments!
Drexe~
Heritage
WINTfl!
Drexel Jnd Hc1 1tJg1· r llf 111tur c
reduced up In 20°10
Day after day. our Drexel" and Heritage • sale 1s
drawing the most enthus1ast1c crowds in town! It s
an opportunity not to be missed! Now while the
selection is very large. shop for upholstered
pieces, d1n1ng room and bedroom groupings. oc·
caslonal furniture. The price reductions are most
welcome!
-
Thu.Way, January 5, 1171 ' . NATION /WORLD
! c~::.g Q Treaty Oianges Due
; ...... ~ TomjOs Heetls Baker Warning
I To~! PANAMA CITY. Panama lposaluitelcalis r~~:~an. !h.ltocbhmlSayowntn .. ... (AP) -Acknowledgine a arp De warning that. the Panama Canal elude a bid for the White House.
DIRTY DEALINGS: Up In our wondrous County Seal, a
Superior Court jury has been
locked up in the back room for
some lime now, trying to ffgure
out how much indignity the city
or Sant.a Ana suffered over 11
sex mms.
This is the case or Santa Ana
versus the Mitchell Brothers,
who operate a movie house not.
far from our grand C1v1c Center
and just a stone's throw away
from Santa Ana College.
• \ The Mitchell& specialize in
1lesh films. Thua for some time,
.. our County Seat municipality
1las been trying to figure a way
to show the brothers to the city limits.
After numerous legal efforts,
plus the City Council closeting
ttselC for hours in a back room to
ponder still photographs of the
awful films, success struck.
SANTA ANA GOT the Mitchell
Brothers and 17 of their films in·
to court. A jury then suHered
through the agonies or witness-
ing all or these X-rated skin
flicks. These included hard-core
tuts with names like "Sodom
and Gomorrah" (which should
give the prospective viewer
some hint as to conlent), and
··Behind the Green Door"
(which perhaps only slyly hints
at content).
Anyway, the jury sat through
the agonies or all this sex and
finally ruled that 11 of the 17
films are obscene. ·
You are left to assume that the
other six motion pictures were
tame enough to be considered
only sort-core X. Or maybe
you'd call them X-rated fakes.
This leaves you with the ques-
tion of whether or not the
theater patrons who witnessed
those six films not condemned
can also file a class-action
lawsuit against the Mitchell
Brothers. They might allege
they paid to see somethlDJ real·
ly sexy and instead so~ flim·
flam med.
ANYWAY, MONEY is now
key to the jury deliberations.
Nobody is trying to get cub
from the Mitchell Brothers oa
the six films that weren't dirty
enough to qualify.
lnstead, the City or Santa,.Ana
is asking the Jury to give It near-
ly half a million dollars because
the brothers Mlt(:hell screened
the 11 really pornographic ones.
To be precise, the figure asked
is $480,500.
This sum allegedly represents
the Mitchell Brothers' take dur·
mg the 382 days in which the 11
Awfuls were fllckertna across
the s alver scr een out on 17th. Street.
treaty is doomed to failure in the Following his meeting with u .S. Senate, Gen. Omar Torrijos Baker and two Republican col·
and other lop Panamanian leagues at his seaside villa at leaders are looking for ways to Farallon, Torrijos called top
salvage the pact with a aeries of poll Uc al advisers, Including
changes. some D)embers of his. cabinet.
Senate Minority Leader into an emergency conference.
Howard Baker. R-Tenn., told The meeting lasted five hours.
Torrijos on Wednesday that the Another will be held'before the
treaty cannot be ratified without senators leave on Saturday,
important modifications, and aources close to Torrijos said.
that. he could not support it as THE PANA•ANIAN leader
written. said he hopes to have some pro.
IT WASN'T THE first time posals for Baker to take back to
Torrijos has heard that. from a the United States.
visiting senator, but Baker's Neither he nor the senators
message carried special clout. were willlng to give details on
The senator holds a crucial vote the Issues at ataJce, but Baker in-
on the treaty and concedes the dicated that the major problem
Hall to Close
Largest Theater Failing
NEW YORK (AP) -Radio City Music Hall, the world's
largest movie theater and home of the high-kicking Rockettes.
will shut down after 45 years following its April 12 show, the
president of the Rockefeller Cenler landmark announced today.
It was the latest in a series of "closing" announcements
since 1962 by the financially troubled theater. But each time
previously the tourist. mecca has man6ged to survive for
another season.
ALTON G. MARSHALL, PRESIDENT, said the action was
"taken with a deep sense of regret." and with appreciation of the
efforts of its employees to keep the showplace of the nation open.
He said the 6,200-seat theater had operated for the past
several years with heavy losses and projected it would drop
more than $3.5 million for 1978.
Through war and peace, from depression to boom times,
Radio City Mu.sic Hall was a fixture in the New York City
firmament. While styles changed with the aea.soos, its. Art Deco
balls never changed. ·
MARSHALL SAID A1TENDANCE bad fallen from 5
million annually through 1967 to less than two million last year
and finding family films had become increasing difficult.
"We'll do everyt.hlng we can to see how we can keep il open.
If it were closed, it would be terrible," Mayor Edward Koch said after the announcement.
Radio City Music Hall opened lta doors on Dec. 27, 1932,
with a bill lh•t included Martha Graham, Ray Bolger. Jan
Peerce, the Wallendas, and tbe comtfdy team of Weber and
Fields.
'Bardlg Bel~ It'
Boeing Suspects
Reds Copied Jet
SEATTLE (AP) -The BoeJ.ni Co. says it suspects the Soviet
.Union bas copied the basic desip of a mllltary Jet transport being
developed for the U.S. government.
Not likely, says a Soviet embusr official in Washington.
The Boeln.g design at issue is for. a sbort·takeoff, short-landing
transport, designated the YC·l(.
lies with the treaty provision for
joint U.S.-Panamanlan defense
of the canal after lt Is turned
over to Panama in the year 2000.
In conversations with re-
porters, Baker repeatedly re-
fused to give further details.
"MY NEXT JOB is to canvass
the people on my side of the
aisle and aee if a packa1e (of
changes) can be put tbgether,"
Baker said.
But he said any further recom·
mendatlons from hla party to
Torrijos would be channeled
through the White House and
State Department, because "we
did not come down here to try to
renegotiate the canal treaty."
At the worst, cban1es in the
accord could require its re·
negoUaUon and approval by a
second national rererenduot in Panama. Voters here g_ave lt a
2·1 majority in a plebiscite last
September.
However, Baker said he
believes it iB possible to modify ·
the treaty through amendments
or reservations that would not ·
require another vote in Panama.,
Based on bis discussions with
Torrijos and Panama's chief
' negotiator, Romulo Escobar
Betancort, he added, those of-ficials agree.
Cloud Dusipa_tes
A 10-mile-long cloud of acrid gas that drifted into Pen-
nsylvania today dissipated with "no serious effects," the
state Civil Defense Council said . The gas was released
from a ruptured tank at a Procter & .: Gamble factory
in South Baltimore, M<t., where some 100 people com·
plained of respiratory and eye problems.
Budapest Gets Crown
C~ntroversial Symbol Returned to Homeland
W ASKINGTON (AP) -The
controversial Crown of St.
Stephen, symbol of Hungary's
nationhood, is heading back lo
its homeland.
An Air Force jet bearing the
legendary crown left Andrews
Air Force Base in Maryland for
Budapest today, accompanied
by a delegation of 24 Americans.
The State Department refused
to announce where the crown
was kept before its departure,
citing security precautions. It,
was secretly tranaported hereon
Wednesday from Fort Knox,
Ky., where lt bad been kept in
the U.S. golddepoeltory.
KNOXVIU.E, Tenn. (AP) -The bodies of five people killed
in an airplane crub and !our
helicopter crewmen who died
trying to rescue them remained
( INSHORT J
on a densely · wooded moun-
tainside more than 24 hours
after the initial crasfl.
Rescuers said It would takP all
day today to recover the bodies.
·'The terrain is rugged and
there's dense vegetation," said
Roger Miller, a spokesman for
the Great Smoky Mountains Na·
tional Park.
It'~ Dleoree
MONTGOMERY, Ala. CAP) -
Gov. George C. Wallace, bis
marriage ended in divorce, says
there are "no hard feelinp"
between him.aelf and h1s wile ot
seven years, Comella.
Under terms of their out-of-
c our t divorce setUeznerit
Wednesday, Mrs. Wallace. 38,
will receive a $75,000 cash award
and some of the couple's personal
properly, including a lot on
nearby Lake Martin. They had
been married seven years to the
day.
Oalle 'Closed'
SANTIAGO. Chile (AP)-
Prealdent Augusto Pinochet says
there will be .. no more e1ecuons
or votings or consultations"
following bis massive victory in
a referendum rejecUog foreign
crlUclsm ol bis military regime.
The C.yeat-old army 1eneral
also told thousands of suppos:t.ers
wavlnc torches, flags and
placards outalde the 1ovem.meot beadqWllUn Wednesday night
that Chile was cloeed to U.N. in·
veatlgaton wanting to in·
veatJgato the human rights situa· tion.
IT IS UNCLEAR if the figure
includes profits Crom popcorn
and candy sales at lhe con-
cession stand.
"IT'S OBVIOUS to UJ that we
gave the idea to them by show-
ing and talking about the abort·
takeoff, short-landing plane,"
said Bill Clark, a spokesman for.
Boeing's military enterprises.
Jaat month, is a copy of the Boe-.
ing versloo.
Anyway. Santa Ana's lawyer
pleads that the city ought to be
awarded the money to punish
the Mitchell Brothers and to
compensate ror "a corruption of
morals."
How the already-corrupted
morals of the theater-goers wiU
become uncorrupted by the cash
fine is slightly punting.
That aside, after the jury
awards Santa Ana all that
money, surely the City Dads
won't keep it. They'll surely
donate it all to a worthy cause
like a children's hospital or for
aid to the aged or needy.
Santa Ana wouldn't want to
dirty its own hands with money
from pornography, now would
it?
·~
"We didn't make any secret ot
the basic concept. Jt ls obvious
they saw it and they might have
copied it. It looks like our
airplane in so many respects
that I can hardly believe It."
Why didn't Boeing make it a
secret?
.. BECAUSE THERE is no
point to it," said Clark. "It
might be kept secret a couete of
years but eventually you f1Y JL
Anybody with an airplane can
fly alongside and take a pie·
lure."
Clark noted that Boein" has no
way of knowing for sure the So-
viet AN-72, unveiled in the West
"They have three design
bureaus in Russia.'' he said.
.. They might have come up with
the same design we did. I don't
want to cause an international
incident."
A U.S. MILITARY intelllgestc&
source lo Washington, who
asked not to be identified, would
aay only that the Russian plane
.. resembles" the Boeing craft.
An engineer with McDonnell
Douglas Corp. at Long Beach
aaya the markedly similar de-
11i1n raised eyebrows there.
.. We saw the picture of the
Soviet plane in the paper and
surmised it wa.s copied from
Boeing,'' said the engineer, who
asked not to be identified
because bis remarks were not
cleared by the company, ·a Bo.
in& compeUUor.
Oregon Coast Flooding
\
• • • and
how
does
'YOUR
garden
gr~w.?
Whether It'• •bout • almp• ahrub, • aophlatloated bed of flowers, or
• tatty ..,ectlon of veget•bf••· the Delly Piiot'• garden pege
bfouo~ every S•turdaV with handy hlnt11 and delightful f41aturH.
We'll give you tip• on when to pf•nt, when to prune and when to
pluck. Our writer• •110 brighten th• g•rden aectJon with lnter•1tlng
featurH on local peopte who grow unu1ual pl•nte or achieve
excepdonal rHutt1.
Our crop of ltorie• come• up new every Saturday to hetp you have
ft\Of'e MICCH• end more enjoyment wtth your growfng. If 10ur thumb
,. ''""• u .. It to.flip to the garden P•9! In SatuYd•V'• Deify ptfot.
DAILY PILOT
. .
t
-. ....
CALtFOANIA Thur9day. January ~ 197rt" DAIL 'Y PILOT A5
OOBirds
Killed
~Slick
·North Pounded by Rain· A TIOltMIY AT LAW 1:
BANKRUPTCY $95 ::
DIVOICE $95 1:
UDConlated f
By Tbe Associated Press
¥ore droueht-defytng rain and
Sl'\O)V wete forecast for Northern
California today in a one-day
follow-up lo the powerful storm
"'THERE IS AN f'\IR or OP· t1m1sm here, but we're tryrng
to be realistic," said BUI Clark
Wednesday at the state Drought
Information Center in
Sacramento.
over, despite the pr~itttattOb. --;=::=;~6=40.~J~5~0;7~~~ Major reservoirs art etill very ;
low and rain is Affded this
month and iR 'ebruary. Of
critical importance in gauging
the situation will be the depth of
the Sierra snowpack next SAN DIEOO CAP) -
A mysterioua 011 slick
bas kllled about!§() birds,
piostly sea ducks, and
harmed about 25 others ln San Diego Bay, the
state Game and Flab
Department aaya.
that slammed into tbe state with
howling winds and gushing
showers.
ln nearly all districts of the
lop half of the stale showers
were predicted into the night.
Travelers waminas were issued
for blowing snow in the Sierra,
expected t.o descend to 3,500 feet
at times. Chains were requited
on most. mountain routes.
PARTS OF THE BAY Area
Clark added the drought ls not month.
3 Prized Redwoo~
Lost to Vandalism
reported thunder, lightning and PIERCY (AP> -Three of
hail during Wednesday's s.torm. California's prized ancient
The Coast. Guard
Marine Safety office
said patrol boat.a dis-
patched after the dead
birds were diseovered
found "a lieht 1been" of
l>il on tbe water on the
CoronadoaideoUhebay. Service Bolted Some areas reported winds of 40 redwood trees will fall todity, the
miles an hour. victims of vandalism.
THE GROVE WAS popular
with to1'1(ists. Two o f the
stricken trees bad walk-throu&h
tunnels carved at the base and
were popular settinea for photo-. OFFICIALS said the
aouree of the oil was un-
determi!Jld but no spllls had been reported.
They speculated that
oil from street surfaces
tnay have been waabed
into the bay by heavy
rain. But a Coast Guard
spokesman said it was
.. hard to believe this
would be enough to kHl
the birds."
The NatiMal Weather Service The three 11ant r.rees, each
Stuntman EH·I Kn1<.>vet talks \\tlh found anQthJ!r .wel..we.alhe.r r.e.achillg.wme l~a.-a~.at><we
limousine chauffeur<; he hired to take system stationed off the Oregon the eround and meaaw'ing more
work furlough pri~oners to and from their Coast, suegesUng even more than six feet in diameter, were
jobs Wednesday in Los Angeles. The precipitation may be on the way hacked at the base wlth a
livery service upset the sheriff's depart-beyond the forecast period. chainsaw.
ment, and .Knievel has decided to call a Wednesday's abowers dropped One tree was cut all the way halt to il. rivers of water onto the land. around the base, wlth only a 2-
-------------------One thunderstorm dumped an foot core remaining. The others inch of rain on Oakland Intema-were slashed randomly with a
ti on al Airport between 4 p.m. series of cuts. D . ney IYJ'orld ands p.m. JIM RIBBERT, manager or lS ,,, ~ MARIN COUNTY reported the stale park lands in the Piercy
·heaviest rainfall, ranging up to area, said the trees stood in a
E S 1 '1'.i inches by late afternoon. grove oC old redwOO<ls. ranging Xpans ;on et Rain-slick roads ·caused many in age from 1,500 to 2,000 years. ~ accidents, including a whopper The grove, in the Smithe
of a 22-nr pileup on Highway 17 Redwoods State Reserve, is in
-Kraph9.• ' ------· Hibbert said lbe damage was
irreversible and the trees would
be downed today by a private
contractor. He said the highway
would be closed to traffic for two
or three hours.
Despite high wihds and the
severe damage, the trees were
not in danger of falling over and
did not pose an i.mmedlat.e
threat lo traffic, Hibbert said.
THE TREES· WERE struck
ALL MAKES!
833-0555 .
some time between Monday at-Ask For Our
lernoon and Tuesday' be said. I ratr s•et•• trT The state parks dep~rtment is ~ n AU•• at
investigating the vandalism and HOWARD 0..vrolet
FRANK TODD,
curator of birds at Sea
World, said a light, high-
grade diesel oil was
reaponslble for the
deaths. He noted the
birds "displayed all the
~y mptoms of such a
spill."
BURBANK CAP> -Walt Disney Productions has between Los Gatos and Santa northern Mendocino County,
unvellc..'<i plans for a major addition to its Wall Dis-Cruz ju.st before dawn. Traffic some 200 miles north of San w i 11 seek f e Ion y c rim in a I eor.. of Do.. •""0ua~S•• NEWPORT BEACH I charges should anyone be ar-========~ rested, according to department ney World complex in Florida. was backed up for an hour and a Francisco.
The project, to be called The Experimental half, One oC the trees was more
Prototype Community of Tomorrow (EPCOT), All the precipitation activity is than six feet in diameter and
"will be devoted to the ---------buttressing notions that the two were some 11 feet across.
spokeswoman Gene Cone.
The Mendocino County
Sheriff's Office waa investigat-
ing the case, but had no suspects
or motive for the vandalism.
Call 642-5878.
The tnJured birds
were taken to Sea World
,ilrter Project Wildlife
volunteers washed orr
the slick and pl~ed
them in beating pads.
advancement of intern a-Land, Transportation Call!ornia drought is getting a The grove ls just some 100 feet
lion al understanding and Space. good working over. • offCahtomiaHiehwaylOl.
Put a few words
to work for ou.
and the solution of lbe ---"'---------------Aiiilimiiiil problems of people
:..... Todd sai d th e
creatures will remain at
Sea World for several
weeks until they re-
cover.
Dog Ban
Delayed
SAN DIEGO (AP)
A ban on dogs at most
beaches In San Diego
would cost $100,000 an-
nually, lbe City Council
has been told.
everywhere through the
commun1ce1tion of
ideas." the company
said in its 1977 annual r e-
port.
Disney said the EP
COT Center would havt.•
two maJor areas. F'uturt:
World and World
Showcase. The com1>any
made no estimate of
when the new center
would be complelcd.
FUTURE WORLD
will include a major m·
troductory theme show
called Spaceship Earth,
Dis ney said, accom -
panied by whe1t the com-
pany called a "global
marketplace of new
ideas" called the Com-
munJcore. Beach patrols and
communicalions gear
are needed. Also pl ttnned c. re
A final vote on the pro-pavilions dealing w1lh
posed ordmance was de-E n e r g y. L 1 f e a n d
Javed Wednesday. Ilcallh, The Sea. ThP
State Senate
$150Tax Cut
Gets Support
SACRAMENTO (AP> -A plan to give four million California homeowners property tax cuts
of $150 or more appears to be gaining support in
the state Senate.
But there was still no
decision Wednesday on ( ) the plan for across-the· ·.~TATE
board lax cuts -roughly ...__ --------the aame amount for
both rich and poor
homeowners. Another Democratic caucus was
scheduled for today to decide whether to oCfer lhe
plan to the floor. • ·
The plan !aces a rival bill giving the biggest
tax break to poor renters and homeowners.
WOlllGn D~• fn ll~lated Leap
I LONG BEACH (AP) -A 22-year-old woman
bled to death Wednesday after severing her
jugular vein w"}len she crash~ through a window
lo escape a roaring apartment fire that killed
Angel Palanco, 2, who waa -left in her care, po-•
lice said.
The woman, ldenUfied as Paula Archuleta,
• managed to save her year-old daughter, Angelica.
by banding her to a neighbor through a small
opening in the around-noor window before laking
her ill·f ated leap, fire officials said. ·
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• l6 c Thomas Keevll EdltOf
o •angoeoa>t o .. ,, p,101 Editorial Page ............................................................. --Robert N. Weed/Publlsh•r
Tnursdey. J1nuary 5. 1978 Barbare. Krelbich/Edltorlal P~e Editor
Critical Choice
For Costa Mesa
As the 1978 Co~tu Mesa c 1l} council c ampaign pre-
p un•:, to m ove into full :,wmg, ninr candidates a nd incum -
hL•nt Mayor Norma He rtzog will be vying for two sc<.its on
the counc il.
One of t h ese t wo s eats was hl'ld for the p ast eight
)t!ars b} J ack Hammett, who last week decided not to
~ee k re-clt!ct ion lo a third term on the co uncil.
• While J lammctt 1s correct in saying that serv ing
m ort' than two-te rms in office tends to r e m ove on e from
the pulse of the community, he s till will be missed
P rior to his dt!d1 catc d scr nce on the council, wh1dt
inc luded a stint as muyor, Hamme tt ser ved se\'e n yc:irs
tis a c ity µlanmng commissioner
llis 15 year s in city government ha\'C helped l11m d e·
\\,!lop, a sense of leadership tiult will soon be missing from ~ counci1 that is fairly inexperieneed for the most pa rt.
, T his makes the upcoming elect ion for two seats on
the five-member counc il eve n more important. A high
J>re mium must be placed on the leade rs h ip qua lities of
the potential counc il m e mbers.
There also will be m or e unit) required in the future
from Counc ilma n Dom Raciti the councilman with the
m ost long evity - -and Ed Mc Farland itnd Counc ilwoman
\1ar) S mallwood, both of whom have ; el to complete
the ir second \-ear in office.
The l'U r rent tounc:il hm; pi·oved to be a generall)
1·..ip a ble u111t t ha t has addr<'ssccl m ilny of the city's p rob-
le m s with po:-.1ti vt· n •sults There's no need to think lh<.it
tht· loss of I la m m elt\\ 111 mean a h<.1Jt in the r 1l) 's p rogrC'ss
llcmt:\t'I'. he h a~ bl•en a ke\. member who d esern·s ;.i
ht·art) th.ink ~ ou t rom the l'ommunity fo r his g uiclunct'
.incl sernt'l' to l'osta M t::-.tJ .
School Sessions Stall
Follrm ing a narrow Tucsda}' night vot e, it appears
th at a c·1t11l'n-, · ud\'1sor y committee appointed by the
'X,cv. porl-1\k:-ia School Dis trict has had enou~h public heat
.1ri cl 1s fl t•t•mg the fi ery subject of school closures.
The com m 1llC'c 's decis ion was a classic non -decis ion :
.1 dl'<'lari.1t1on that n o m or e rct·ommendations would be
rn <•ell' to school trus lel's on e lem entary school closures for
''~ u ~ <· .. u-s. Wh1 k this t'l•rtainly eases the minds of parents whos e
·.tuclt•nts .ittC'nd \'icto na. C alifornia or Mes:i Verde schools
Ill Costa !\ksa. a m ajor question rem ains unans wer ed.
•1 Can l hl· dis trict a fford to wait two \.ears before it l'~>Sl'S mon• schools because of what a ppears to b e an fr-
1 ~\ e r s1blt• dt·C'ltning e nrollm ent l;ituation 1.md th£.~dverse
1 •ffl'<' ts of the Serra no d e cis ion?
\\.di, thl' c·1ti1en-; · adv.isory comm ittee, which 'had
t uht·n firm :-.tands m the past, has decided to tackle budget
n lt'i a nd Je ave the tougher and m or e s ensitive task to
school trustees.
T rustel's con ceivably could r e je ct this n o n-
' ~t·omml·ndution a nd tell the comm itlee to get back to its
:\;~1gnml·nt, or perh aps a ppoml a new committee.
At a ny rate. the committethas apparently choked on a
t'rueial isslll'. Al lea st the com mittee action ser ves as a
lc".;son as to \\hat t an happe n lo a group when faced with an
• un popular <ll'l'ISton .
Signals Needed Now
11 d111 SI\ I I .1kl· ,l g1•nius, nor s hould 1t take a ratal a c -
t'1tll•111 111 r t•.d1/\· th;1t the tralltc s ilual1on in north Co!>la
\II t''•• 1s J.!0111g t rnm ha<l to worse, es pecially with the ad
tflt 111n 1111tw Corona dl'I Mar Freeway hnk that ex its ont o
r\<'.11 "'ln·d
I hi" " ..... t hl' s~<'lll' of the c·1t~ 's latest traffic f atahty
la:-.t "t·1·k "twn an clciC'rly driver dro ve down t he offramp
and .1pp.1n·nt ly through a stop si~n· al the end of t he off-
r a mp. Ill· \\tis killed w he n his c:ir was bro:ids ided by un on-
<·om mg p<1l1C·t· unit.
En·n ii motoris ts halt a t the offramp s top s ign, they
-.t 111 must 1·rns.., the busy thoroughfare if they wis h to tur n
11nrth tm\anl So uth Co ast P laza . Southbound traffic on
lh·a r Strl't't 1s not required lo stop. thus makin g the cross-
lllJ.. ('-..pL·c1all~· hazardous dunng peak hours.
T ht' f n 'C'''·av connection 1s under U\c j urisdiction of
I he st ull', which n o r m ally waits a few years before m -
it 1uting a study t o d eterm ine if traffic signals arc needed .
Tht'\ a rl' nL•t'ded badly.
:fht' l'1ly plans to complC'te the s!gnalizat~on of ~he
nellrb\ Bt'ar Strt'el /P aularino Avenue mtersecl1on durmg
th<' nC'xt fi~<'al 'car .
If the s t tJlt' would quic kly initiate a s imilar project -
po..,si hh .1 Joint e ffort with the city -a nd synchronize the I'' o sC'ls of s ignals, a safer tr affic flow would be assured.
• Op1n1ons expressed in tho space above are those of the Daily Pilot.
Other views e xpressed o n this page are those ot their authors and
artists Reader comment Is invited. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O.
Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (71 -4) 642-4321.
Boyd/Cat's Eyes
By L.M.BOVO
History records tJint cer·
tnin ancient Turks claimed
tht'Y could tell the time of
day by looking into a cat's
eyes. Might be something to
it. Believe I recall having
r ('ad somewhere that the
pupils In a cat 'i1 eyes con·
tract and expand predictably
in r e la tio n s h ip to t h e
wh~renbouts or the sun Will
ruearch this furlht"r, Stand
lly.
D ar
Gloomy
Gus
rr the po&t otrico a nd
Amtrak haven't con·
vlnced us of covern·
.menl"• inetticitncy, tho
oner•Y pro1r1m cer;
lalnly l hoUld. c.s.c.
QuesUon cropped up a.s lo
how "fire'' came Lo mean
d is missed trom a job .
"T hat•s obvious, dum dum,"
wrltAls a swlfL cllent. "Fire is nlt~o u synonym for discharge
meaning to get rid of In a
hurry, zap!" All riaht.
Yo ung ln experlcnccd
!llN1mcm aboard ship in the
old British navy were a l·
lowed 14 lnche.1 or space In
which to &lint their canvas
hammocks. The older petty
officers were authorized 24
inches ot 1pace. Some ht~.
torlans lff1 this ndmlrally
r4.tlo to live more room Lo the
seasoned sailors wae a 1ubtle
recognlt.foooflb-«\ thinit raUed.
mtddlta« pread.
Flft.c-tn percent of lhe people
In thl• country provide •
all the food, c9od1 and
urvlcea fo r the en l're
popglaUon. Or so HY ibo
1tatl1Uclans. tnterullna. if tru•. And Jt tnie, It'• quite a
mHaure Of U.S. teeb•oloay,
I• I\ aot! But what •te tb°'e OtMi' l'1 out oC 20 peoc>le do·
ln1, m•Mllme, pray? Thi.I
cu 1e\ pntty deep. Time for
aup.
Earl Wate r K
Truck 'Cra"ckdown' Questioned
Il a~ the California l11ghway
Patrol <:racked down on speeding
trut·k:-·• Its recent n•port of more
th;in 5,000 c1 tat1on:, ha\ mg been
1 .... suect t<> :.peedmg truck driver'
during the month of October :.u~
gests thut. at long last, the com-
plarnls or motorists ha\'l' Sl'l'pt'd
throulr(h to CHP Commi~s1onPr
rn1•n Cra1g.
A I mo..,l I rom lhl· mceptwn uf
the 11nrealist1 t· 55 mph :.peed
I 1 m It , l h I'
mo t or in g
11 u b I 1 t' h a '
bc-t.'n plt'udmg
for prokl'lion
f r o m l h 1• •
behl·moth:. of
the h1gh"ay:-
\\ h 1 t· h
thunder do~n
from on high
o n frl'cway
t r a vellers. t a 1l gat1 ng a nd
ol ht•n\ 1,l' tcrron1.mg d rl\ l'rS
"ho ha\c tht' tcmt•rilr to ..,land 111
t h l' I r \\ :.i y b ~ 11 b' ~ n 1 n g th t·
"JICl'd Ii m il.
L.1,l M1 mn11·1 (·,.Hg unnotmt•t•cl
,1 • cr;id .. du"n "" lhl· trut·k.., and
the < h'loher 11·1mrt l(·ndcd to
..,how 11 "as lw mg carr11:d out
And , :ii though lhl· at·llvity shim n
a mourlll•tl to barl'ly more than
one tr uck sloppc•d during the
month In each ..,t<.ite tr:.iff1c of
f1ccr, 1l ;till would be s1gn1 f1cant
had lht· target indeed been t hose
roaring l~a:.t' of the roau about
~ho rn thl' µubllt has bet·n com·
pl<iin in~
BUT AN cx<1m 1nution or the
fo ci ~ <·~11-1 some doubt about the
"crackciown." While there :.ire
only ahout 00,000 t ractor.., rl'g
istcred 1n California a n c•slt mal·
cd 300,000 such units ent<'r the
s tall' l'ach H'<lr. Thesl' ar<' the
motor11ed "components which
pull th<• huge freight trailers i.t•en
ru m h Ii n g up a n d do" n I h l'
fn•e"a.\~
J\nd. although 1t 1:-. not kn<iwn
how mu<:h or the ti me• these
truch, out of slate and home
ba-..ed , are actually on California
highways. thl! rl'lalivcly !imall
number t'omparl'd to the tolal or
1rnsscn~er cars, might make
5.000 speed citations ~eem a
heavy t!nforcem.nt effort.
llowever , CllP sources dis·
t·losc that the count was not limit-
ed to the type of trucks which
l'Oml· instantly to the mind of the
motorist but tncluded a m ynad
of other types. There are nearly 3
mlllion "trucks" reg1:.tered m
the state. These Include paneb .
1>ickups and t.tat1on wagon:.,
w hich we r e n o t c o unted .
although mnny two-a x le and
other small trucks were. So the
tot al or 5,000 is no way indicative of the CHP effort agamst the
+You'~e stroddl irig ihe wron~ (Amel."
Nicholas Von Hoff man
m •11n m oth1> about which lhc
public com plains.
I N COMPARING the CHP rec ·
ord on sJ)<.'ed dtations to trucks
against the overall of 89,0S2 issued
10 vehicles of ull types it might
still seem a good performance,
be ing more than 5 per cent,
t·~pec1ally whentthe number of
trucks 1s matched agains t lhl'
IH' a r 12 m 1ll1on p assenger
\ t!hicles reg1:.tered. liut comparing total registra-
tions is n false measuremenl.
With rare exceptions passenger
car:. stand idle far more than
they are ln use and many of lhem
never or rarely vonturc out on
the freeways. Not so wilb the
monster trucks whose high costs
make 1t cssl!ntial to gel the
highest usage poss ible. The only
real measurement then would be
<) c ompa rison or mileage
travellt.'Cl on state highways by
trucks versus passenger cars.
One thing the report clearly re
'ea led 1s that speed occupies
nearly 50 percent of the emphasis
of the CHP for the total number
of tickets written for violations of
;111 types was only 195,194.
ALSO misleading is the total or
traffic officers on the CllP, re-
ported as •l,165. The five-day
week r<.'du ces the number availa-
ble for duly lo about 3,000 while
sick kavc, courtroom lime and
other causes further erode the number to where there are prob-
ably no more lhan 2,000 reporting
for duty on any given day lo cover
a 24·hour per iod. On certain
holidays, when super efforts are
made, the patrol m ay field as
m any a'> J.000 al one time but
overtime earned then reduces the
('II P strength on i.ubsequcnt
days.
It is tlus force which musl nol •
only cov<'r both sides of the
t-tate's 3. 79-1 miles of freeway and
more than 11.000 additional miles
o f s t ate highway, but also
thous ands of milcs of county
roads .
Is Rellledial Education Money Wasted?
W ASlllNGTON -Every few
month~ from one s1•1·uon of the
country or anothf!r comes fresh
news confirming tht• fact that
many 1·h1 ldren pass in. through
and out of school \\ 1thout learn·
JOI.! to n ·art or r1gure.
So pan·nts a nd othf·r tax-
p a\ l'r!> 11t.'m,inrl th;.11 ki d' who
cl11ln 'l l .. a rn
JO\ t hing IJC>
hl'ld buck, a
111 ;1clice that
\\<J' J.!l\Cn llp
sn m c vt•ars
a go whc>n
s om <'h o cl y
no t1Cl·d that
the> fir s t
g radc at P.S.
·10 had 11 six-
ruot<'rs tn it
Being a 14-ycar-old Big Stoop
in a class of otherwise bright
and profi cient 10-year-old chums
is thought to cause a nxiety and
inferiority feclings in the larger,
laggard scholar who may lhen
wap his htlle buddies around in
~1 paroxya;m of misplaced resent·
mi-nt
To get around this problem 1t 's
hem~ s uggested that kid~ who
don't even know the easier part
of the multipli cation t able be
Mailbox
:-hunted off t o s p ecia l
cl asses ... a ::.c holasllc cham
izang where they will crack their
rock-hke hcuds learning that fi x
R equals 48. If they don '-t learn tn
rcad, as they probably \\On't, ut
lea .... t they "111 be failing out of
sight i\nd no more d1plo mai; for
·the boneheads; henceforth all
thev l!<'t is a certificate or atlen-
darlCl'.
BE HIND all this concern and
a ctivity arc some propos1llons
which may or may not be true.
P roposition one is that schools
are lo teach reading and writ-
ing: proposition two is that when
tht>Y don't it's the teachers' fault
and the taxpayers a re getting
chcated: number three is that if
)OU donl have an abnormally
depressed I Q you can and you
mus t l earn to read and do
c lC'm cntary arithmetic. o r course, all de pends on
number three We know from
ours elves and our friends it
doesn't follow that if you can
read you can count. Some of us
arc whizzes a t numbers and can
ha r<'IY read: thl' reverse ls even
more common. As for the ~oat of
a totally literate society. wh!le 1t
may be possible to teach every-
onc but the menta lly ha ndi-
('apped how lo read, 1t also may
be very e xpensivf'. Somewhere
Wt.' hit the law of diminishing re-
turns.
T H t-: COST in teac-h<'rs. re-
m edi a I r<'ad ing ins tructors,
c•o u n s e l ors and th<' rapists.
physical ancl psychological, to
drive Nasty Nate and Snide Sal·
ly into learning how 'o read 1s
much too expensive. The society
isn't going to get its money back
on that investment.
Is 1t necessary to teach every-
body. how to read a nd figure'>
What about us ing the millions
that m ath instruction is ~oing to
cost us to give away hand-held
calculators to all thos e who can't
count but signify a desire to do
comparison shopping at the
s upermar ket ? If there is no
readily apparent reason why so
much money should be spent so
that everybody -literally every-
body -in our society, can do
long division, the need for 100
percent literacy is not apparent either.
Work is another question. It
i.., generally agreed on the basis
of the scantiest information that
you can't hold down a job it you
lack these two basic skills. 1f
that's so. the reason has less to
do with the work itself than with
how the Job requirem ents are
set up . Why docs a bus driver in
an e xact-c hange-only s ystem
ha\'C to know how to add and
s ubtract ?
TeachPrs who are suppos~ to
"larn" the recalcitrant dunces
clon 't care fo r proficiency ex·
:.i ms: lht•y prefer lo speak of in-
5truclmg their obtuse charges in
.surh things as ''life coping
~k11l o;," a n odious expression
ha tc hcct in the gasl roinlestinal
tracl or u professor or ed-psych
no doubt. The danger is that
pupils "'ill be made to pass an
exam in this amorphous subject,
and those flunking Jife coping
will be adjudged socially incom·
petent at an even higher finan·
cl al cost to the community.
All children must go to school.
T hem is nothing else to be done
with them once they escape in-
fant exposures. but all chlldren
don't have to learn while they're
there. For some, rom ping about
with the coping sk11l!i teacher is
the answer, while the rest of us
acknowledge defeat a nd a dmit
that occasion ally high standards
aren't the best standards.
Congresslllen Prepa~g for Televised Sessions
To the Editor:
Many thanks fo r your kind re-
mark!t regarding my efforts in
o bt a in ing a one-ye ar
moratorium on the relocation of
ft derally protected witnesses to
Soµther n Culifornia . I um
pleased by the Justice De part
ment's decision, and 1 plan to
Wlllch carefully when a Senate
.. Judiciary subcommittee con
ducts hearings on the witness
protection program sometime
next yeur
be d i s appoi n ted i n th e
11erformance of the House, 1 am
certain.
MARK W. HANNAFORD
Member of Congress
To the Editor:
I read your editorial e ntitled
"A Lovely Present," (a bout U\e
F estival of U ght.s boat pa rade>
and Indeed It was. J am ..an ex·
patrlate, newly arrived from lhe
vast wasteland oft.he northeast.
EARLV this m onth, you a place founded by the Dutch ln
e d It 0r1~11 y men ti 0 n e d th c 1623 and <:Jailed Manhattan.
# • I l used to enJoy New York city "~:llutary effect" 01 televu; on durina Chr1stmas. Jt wu al$0 a
coverage on the Florida state fairyland and sparkled _ FU'lb
legislature and ~poke or con· areH lonal debute on the subject Avenue, Park Avenue, lb•
· ol televhllon and radio access to lights. tho stores, Radlo City,
tflo. floor ot the J louse. On Oct. and the people -even amidst :n. the H~ approved by 1 vote the bustle, txlJUc, pushlnl aild ~ 342 to tM Hou o Rc!loluUon 866, sho~lng there was the frlmdli· ness of Christmas. which provid s tor television and But the F tlval of Llshta boat radio ~overaae of noor proceed-ings. The cameras ond ca bl ore parade was absolutely lovely. I
belnl lnslallcd rt&Jlt now, and t e njoy ed this Cbrlstmu ln
.11:pect. that the 1rV and rad.Jo Southun Cautorn.la and love my n~tworkS Will lit t•klng full ad· n e w homo. Than le y ou,
r l.,;I j Southland. van ta.cc o ln11 progrea:<t ve move JlOBE1\T OORDON
l>Y the Con•" wh n we recon ..
venelnJanu&J'1.
The Ammcan peopl~ deserve lfeflcla•• Lene•
lo He firathan(! bC>W th r fOV • 70 ... J:dltOt:
arnmeat operat•. 3'bey will Mt. Your td.Ltoriol, "Campa.s lled·
----·~
dling," Dec. 20, s hows how Car
go\•ernment 11trlngs twist.
Private Hillsdale College, that
h as never taken government
runds, is being harassed for hnv·
Ing students that do.
The students may be e etllna
them as veterans, for disability
pay. pensions or any other In·
d ivldual reason. But If they
choose to use them tor education
instead of clothes, vacations or
beer, HEW, the Health, Educa·
lion ru)d Weltare Department,
snys the ed~at.ors are the rttJp.
ient.s of tho federal a id and so
are subject to their government
cont.rel.
It ls a iood warnlni . to bep hand ore gove rnment st rings,
that the ciUea should heed. To
touch those strings, no matter
bow fr,htly, Is to be cntanrltd In '
aove rrunent'a mystic maie.
GOLDIE JOSEPH r .. c ... 11
To the tdit.or: '
1t occurred to me today that
perh1P6 some of us are r J)OOJi·
ble for the u,Jy trealmtnt tomt
men are bcstowin« upon us. How
loni hav. we womea U wu
once) been ao cuual "llh oui1
bodies and Outselvu1 How l~
bave we daUict anu 1n.t0
will1nl11 lllCOUl'aled an aff alr? . .
••
I a m ghocked always b)' tho ,
wom en..here who dress so lewd-
ly. ls 1t an accident o r un-
conscious copying of others? Or
is It a call out to l'Mn. It may be
ignorance that makes a girl or
woman dress 10 immodestly. Or
is it a bold statement or her do-
slre? A desire to be loved.
How many women tblnk they
can have lo.ve if a man physically
loves them or is attracted to
them? Finally, is it. a bold negat-
1 n g of long-s tanding values
naturally attached to women such
as modesty, 1weetness, bunrtUty,
quJct.ness and consideraUon?
Women will have to examine
tf\eir evet}'da y actions and
drculnii. It seems Lo mo that
men are still tho same: a
woman attracts them. Women
are lucky. Let us eajoy the ~ ••
bul be a wareorwhaUtutaUs.
PENNY ALEXANDER
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1UT lhaf .I To write the Dally Piiot/Bolt 1560, Costa M~. CA 92626
Orange Coast Daily Pilot 1 r .. ore !!!''-·~'·~'~·-·0~~'1!119'·----Th-u•rsday•-· J.•.nu•a•ry•S•,•19•7•8·-------T·o-C•.'.' the-·O·•·ll•y•P•ll•o•tn_t ... M.2·432-·1 -----~fl
Bob Greene '
A Columnist in Search of a Home of His Own ...
Tbere comes a time in every
man's life when he Nallzes that
hem ust slA>p pouring money down
the bottomless rent hole, and buy
a home of his own. So it was the
other afternoon that I telephoned
the offices of Arthur Rubloff and
Co., Chicago realtors.
"I am interested In purcbaslnl{ a property which you represent,
l announced.
"And what
property
would that
be?" the re-
ceptionist in-
quired.
.. The build-
ing al 1340
No.rth State
Parkway," 1
said.
"But that," said the recep-
tionist, ". . . would be the
Playboy Mans ion."
"Correct," I said. ·•1 wish to
make It my ·new place of re-
sidence."
A slight delay ensued, after
which a Mr. David Feinberg
came onlA> the telephone line. "I understand that you are in-
terested in buying one of the
properties which we r epresent,"
he said. , "Yes," I said. ''The Playboy
Mansion."
.. MAYI inquire to what purpose you propose to use this pro~r
ty?" Mr. Feinberg said.
"I intend to make it my home,"
Isaid.
And that was true. I had read
that Hugh Hefner, enjoying the
life in his California Mansion, had
decided to rid himself or the
Mansion in Chicago. Ever since
the time I was a mere child, when
I had snuck copies or Playboy out
of the bottom of my father's shirt
d rawer, I had dreamed of that
Chicago Mansion. And now 1t
could be mine.
"You understand that we are
handling this account very dis-
creetly," Mr. Feinberg said. "We
have placed no advertisements
and sought no publicity."
Sydney Harris
··But you do represent tbe
Playboy Mansion"'' lsa1d.
"Well ... "fdr Feinbera sa1d,
"yes ."
"Fine." t said. "I should like to
make an appointment to meet you
there."
And one mid-afternoon I ar-
rived at the front gates of the
Playboy Mansion, where Mr.
Feinberg was waiting for me.
"I HA VE to be clear about
this ," he said "You are serious
about purchasing this property?''
"Sure," I said.
We walked Into the house.
There by the doorbell, to greet us,
was the famous brass plaque
bearing the Latm translation of
the inscription, "If you don't
swing,don'trinc."
"This 1s going to have to go," I
said.
·'Let's not get ahead qf
ourselves," Mr. Feinberg said.
We walked into the living room
that has been embedded ln
millions of American memories.
There were the two sults of
armor, the Picasso nude, the
descending movie screen, the
stereo setup. But the Mansion was
deserted. No Bunnies. No butlers.
No party.goers. As Mr. Feinberg
and I walked over to a couch, our
footsteps echoed.
We satdown .
"I havl! to mak• certa1n that
you truly are a serious buyer,"
Mr. Feinberg said. "Mr. Hefner
has asked us to make sure that
anyone g.i ven a tour of the house is
in a legitimate position to
purchase the Mansion. So I think
we had better discuss price before
we go any further.··
"OK." I said. "How much is it? ..
''Two and a half million
dollars," Mr. Feinberg said .
I pa us~.
"Does that include carpeting
and draperies?" I asked
Mr. Feinberg sighed "I might
as well give you a tour of the
place so you can see if you want
it," he said .
·Why Can't They Learn?
Wh11 Don't the TV and Radio An·
nouncers I::ver Seem lo l earn That:
-There is no "day" in ''Sun-
day," no "gon" in "Oregon," and
no •·win" in "genuine."
-There is no "door" In "am·
bass ador," no ''hives" 1n
"archives," and no "ray" al the
end of "lingerie."
-There is no "lug" in "lux-
ury," no "pair" in "irrepara·
hi e ," and no ''pull " 1n
"pulmonary."
-There are only three
s yllables, not four, in "dis-
astrous" (the other night I heard
a network commentator call a
plane crash "disasterous");
there are four syllables, not five,
I n "electoral"; and four
s y ll able s, not three, in
"medieval.''
-TDERE IS no "dol•" in
"doldrums," no "hU1'1 in "ex•
hilarate." and no "add" in
··naccid."
-There is a hard "g" in the
singular word, "fungus," but a
soft" g" in its plural, "fWlgl."
He puabed a hidden button and a
door whirred open. A revolving
staircase led up to the fi rst of
more than ~ bedrooms and
playrooms In the house. We
walked through bedroom after
bedroom, bathroom after
bathroom. 1'Thesetollet..s work?" I asked.
"The plumbing Is In excellent
condition," Mr. Feinberg said .
We entered a kitchen that
stretched as far as the eye could
see.
"This kitchen .was designed to
provide high cuisine 24 hours a
day." he said. "It is capable of be-
ing used to entertain as many of
your friends as you could con-
cei vat)ly think of lnvllill.i pver."
"I don't have any friends," I
said.
"Let us contlnue, then," Mr. Feinberg said.
THE TOUR took us through rooma the grandeur or which waa
comparable to an ancient Roman
palace. I kicked the baseboards to
be sure they weren't loose. We
passed through bedrooms with
Tasmanian possum bedspreads,
through s tudies with ve)vet
wallpaper. We inspected the pool
with the hidden grotto, and the
game room with the do~ens of pin·
ball machines, and the meeting
rooms with ornate mahogany
tables. l checked every lamp to
see that the ligbtbul bs were there .
We descended to the un -
derwater bar, with its porthole
looking into the swimming pool.
Deep-cushioned lounges were
built into every corner. On the
wall were color transparencies o!
past Playmates of the Month.
"Do you think this room could
be converted to a small chapel?" I
itaid.
.. Perhaps you would like to see
Mr. Hefner's personal quarters
now," Mr. Feinberg said
"Lead on," I said.
Mr. Feinberg unlocked a series
of doors, and then we were in
Hugh Hefner's bedroom. Even
though Hefner had not ~en ln the
Chicago Mansion In a year, the
clutter a.round his bed baa been
kept exacUy as he had lert it. Mr.
Feinberg pointed out to me a
videotape camera, complete wlth
n Vietnam-type see·ln-the-dark a sniper lens. whlcb was pointed
directly at Hefner's round bed .
"Never mind that." I said.
"Whataboutclosetspace."
"l lhlnk you'll find it more than
adequate," Mr. Feinberg said. He
flung open a cl06et door -and
there were dozens of Hugh ffef.
ner's paisley shirt.a a.nd approic·
lmately 50 pairs of his black
shoes, all of them the same style.
"I 'II want these out of here," I
said.
"Of course," Mr. Feinberg
said.
During the earlier part of our in-
spection tour, Mr. Feinberg had
taken me lnlA> the electronics
room, where Hefner kept ha.s
thousands of feature-leneth mov·
ies al'\d record albums. I noticed
that Hefner had taken ooly one of
the records into his notorious
bedroom, and I w~lked over to the
bed toseewhatitwas.
IT WAS a Nelson Eddy and
Jeanette MacDonald album.
Mr. Feinberg continued to lead
me around the house. The com·
plete examlnaUon ol lhe premlaes
took welJ over an hour. Finally we.
were back where we had started,
in the llvingroom.
Weaatdowna1a1n.
"Well?" Mr. Feinbertaald. .
''I'd like to buy it," I said. "bo
you think Mr. Hefner la at all neJ.l·
bleontheprtce?"
"I sincerely doubt lt," Mr.
Felnber1 1&.id. "Mr. Hetn.er
believes two and a bait mlWon
dollarg la a fair uklng price, and
he's pretty firm on ll~ And tbat
doesn't include $40,000 a year, 1n
taxes and $60,000 a year lo
utiUtlea,"
... AG BEE that lt ·s worth It, •'1
said. "'The thing Is, I have a lltUe
cash·flow problem at the •
ment. l have just recently u~
my payroll deduction for the Unit·
ed Appeal by a dollar a week."
"Well, ii you don't feel you can
do It, then you don't feel you can
do it," Mr. Fel,f\berg said. "We
have other prospect.. CountrtM
which need a consulate, or co~
poratlona which need entertair,).
ing and ,utstfaclllUea. ••
"Oh, don't show it to anybody
elae just yet," Iaald. "I plan to 1et
back to you withln the week."
And I wtll. But first tbinl• flnt.
Rl1bt now, I have to 10 out and
kidnap me a countess.
-THERE ARE only three syllable s , not four , In
"ngmarole"; three syllables,
not four. in "mischievous"; and
three syllables , not two, in
"diamond."
-There is no "r" in "sherbet"
and it does not rhyme with
"Herbert"; there is no "ham" m
"Bethlehem"; and there is no
"pen" in "penalize" (which is
derived from "penal" and not
from "penalty.")
-There is no "oloay" in
"genealogy," no "bee" in
"obeisance," and no "bo" in
''boutique."
-There is no "chase" sound in•
"chassis," but a "chlc" 1ound.
-There are two pronuncla·
tlons or "frequent" -accented
on the first syllable for tbe a~ec
li ve, and on the aecond syllable
for the verb; likewise, two pro-
nunciations or "paient'' -with a
short" a" meaning a government
arant Issued to an Inventor, and
with a Jong "a" meaning "ob-
vious" or "evident."
Required readin
great second hal •
fora
Free.
-There is no "seer" in "sin·
cerlty," no "s ick" in
"psychiatry," and no "pick" in
''despicable."
. UBLICJ" AUCTIO
ESTATE JEWELRY & FINE·PORCELAINS, CHINA,
BRONZES, RUGS, FURNITURE, SILVER, OILS, Etc.
1Ya Million Dollars Worth
Don't miss this important sale!
Fina Chine, Crystal, Porcelains, Bronzes, European Fumltura, Oils, Etc.
FIRST IMPORTANT SALE OF THE YEA~.
Alao, many fine piem of antique and conttmpollrv }twllry Including f int
watches, solitaire diamond rings, earrings, gold cttains, cluster diamond,
ruby, sapphire, and emerald rings.
INSPECTION
2:00 P.M. -5:00 P.M.
and 7·1 P.M.
Sii I Nights.
TERMS•~• MmetOl1t1111
P1rsonel c:fttdl • C.lh • Some ext•~ term. can bl errenoed.
PIOP#fY mov#J for conwn~ ol ul• to:
Dec. 27th-Jan.13th We~ ~.~ndate Federal • '
Savings. And we believe the second half of life really can be the
better half .•. provided you're prepared for it. That'• why we're giving
away free copies ol this compreheruive blueprint for a sensible and
:-.uccessful approach to what is perhaps the major challenae of the
second half. :
Retirement Game Plans. In it, Herbert Askwith will tell you how to:
•Obtain au the beneAts to which you're entitled.
•Capitalize on the 1y1tem of preferential tax advantases for retirees.
•Make the most of Medicare and save money on life, health, and
automobile insurance.
•Plan a 10und inveatment policy.
•Build a second care~r or start a business for extr,a income.
•Choose a retirement home.
•Approach retirement aa a aingle man or woman.
•Further enrich your lei.sure yean if you•re already retired.
•And, in brief, avoid the pitfalt. and enjoy the rewards of a
comfortable and carefree retirement life.
Your free copy is waidng for you right now. So come on by. When
you do, we hope you11 al10 take a minute to 1ay bello ... fmd out
about our Second Half Information Center and our other free aer•
. vices ••• and perhape open an insured saTinp account. We. look
forward to welcomin1 you into the Olendale Federal family.
Olendale Federal Savinllo For a ptat .ecoad half.
GLENMILE FEEERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN A~~OCfATIQN .,..._.,aa-... .................... J~"~
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'f"urtday January 5 1978
Jlov an S laying
Suspects' Lawyers
Seek Trial Delay
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Ot tM o.ity ~lltll Slatt
Attorneys for three defendants ln the slaying of Stephen John Bovan
have asked the state Supreme Court lo delay the pendmg Jan. 23 trial
in the case. ,
The delay as being sought while Supreme Court justices rule on
another casc6imalar to the Bovan case.
Attorney William Sheffield
sa1d he argued the case of People
vs Levins in which he contends a
defendant m a cnmmal case has'
an absolute right to a pre-
lim1'!ary hearins:
T H E LEVINS CASE u. !>lm1lar
to the Bovan case because the
seven defendants in the Bovan
case have not had a preliminary
hearing
Preliminary hearings are con-
ducted al the municipal court in
order to e:.tabllsh 1r there 1s suf-
ficient evidence in a case to bind
defendants over for Superior
Court trial.
No preliminary hearing was
held in the Bovan case because
the defendants were named in
Orange County Grand Jury In-
dictments. Because of the Indict-
ments, the case was taken out of
the municipal court prior to the
preliminary hearing and moved
directly into Superior Court.
start over if the Supreme Court
rules that a preliminary hearing
is required because of the Levins
case ." Sheffield explained
Deputy Distncl Attorney Duve
Carter, who is prosecuting the
case. s111d he believes the m.otlon
was made as a stall tactic. "I'm
ready to go lo trial. .. he said
"'But there 1s absolutely no ad
vant~.8• to the defense to go
now
CA RTE R SAID HE als o
believes the motion may be the
initial move of an effort to get the
three attorneys' clients -An·
thony Marone Jr .• Raymond
Steven Resco and Alexander
Kulik separate trials In lhe
complex case.
or the seven defendants, one,
Joseph Fedorowski. has yet to be
apprehended by police.
• PLAIDS and PLAINS
• LA~ SELECTION
ORANGE COUNTY
INVENTORY CLEARANCE .
MUST REDUCE STOCK
COST ••• NEAR COST
REDUCTIONS TO 50%!
Short Slff•••
'fff•d R"""1
a.autlful 'attmt• Ir '9oiw Color
IRTS
12ss .
OOllble knit
andG~IM
LOf99 SthdJo..
Slut 30 to 44
SLACKS
14ss_ R~ 2s.oo & 21.so
NECKWEAR ·
a..tfful Setectlon
of Pottenls-Stripes .....
Clftd rtaln Colon · 7u t. I 2 ..
Siies S to X Sep.
3" 4as SH
SHl!:FFl ~LD SAID be and at-
torne) s Tom Crosby and Philip
DeMussa arc asking the high
court to delay the Bovan trial un-
til the JUstkes have made a rul·
mg in the Levins case.
Police allege that Kulik,
F'edorowski. tbelr two business
partners and KuUk's wife, Elsie,
hired Resco, Marone and a third
man, Jerry Pet.er Flori, to kid-
nap and kill Bovan.
Bovan died Oct. 22 outside a
Newport Beach restauran~ in a
murder police believe was
motivated by revenge for an
earlier kidnapping of Kulik.
• POl YESTER, WOOL, WOOL MIXEO
SWEATERS REDUCED
Coat& SlpGM
IOKle y.,.
0Ally ~Ii.I SIAll --
Sf PARA TE TRIAL?
Alexander Kulik
"We could get aJI the way to
j ury deliberation in the Bovan
case and have to go back and
Cost Hangs in Balance
C ounty Tallies Pos~ible Juvenile Hall·Job
By KATHY CLANCY
01 .... 0.11, ltlleotl!Mf
Reg. _'7000 to '135"
s49_ s59
S69.
Sizes: 38 to 48
ReCJUlar. Short. LOftCJ
Wool Mixed & Casl1111er"H
WIND BREAKER
,~UnHn"'-Ha.y·T .... IM ·
DISCOUNTED
USE YOUR CREDIT CARD
ARGE CARDS ACCEPTE
Masht-Chorcp • lcmkAWMrtcwd
Orange County officials may have to complete
~ Sl 25 m1lhon re mode ling job at Juvenile Hall and
spend $250,000 a year to meet prO}>Osed 'tlew state
standards
have to make a determination as to whether struc-
tural conditions at Juvenile Hall "are so unsuitable
as to cause a d~nger lo life, health and welfare lo
minors." NE.YI PORTER MEN'S SH OP VISA
Or, the county's cost for meeting the suggested
1uvt•nil<' hall regulations could be as \lttle as $200 a
~ r ur, def)<'nding upon how rigidly the proposed
... tandards :.ire applied.
As for new heating and cooling equipment, she
said, such instal1ation "would not appear
necessary" based on information obtained from
Riley.
'. 1107 Jamboree Rd. • Newport Beach 644-0366
CALIFORNIA YOUTH Authority ofCicials have
-.J1 d t hey int<'nd to setk a "reasonable application'"
of the propo:-cct regu)atlbns, but so~ judgments
""ould bl' mJdt' on a case-by-case basis.
Su1wrv1sors approved t his week a tally or how
mu<'h thl· proposed standards for juvenile halls
might co~t local government.
Thal inventory will be combined with similar
-.un "' s from other counties and submitted to stale
offl r 1 ;; Is
Wlli\T {'OUNTY ADMINISTRATORS don't
know yet is how strictly the proposals would apply
10 e'< isling Juvenile halls as well as to new ones be-
ing built.
If Orange County .Juvenile Hall isn 'l
"grandfathered ... or permitted lo exist as it stands,
the county would have to apend:
Sl million for a new air con~itioning and
hN1ling system to meet the proposed 65 to 81 tem-
pcr&iture rani:c
-$100,800 TO INSTALL new lighting in 288
<'htld rcn's rooms
$17,700 for doors with smaller glass view
pan<' ls lcadmg into 159 sleeping rooms.
S00.000 for new holding rooms for children
""" a1t in~ court
-$35,000 FOR AD DITIONAL showers, new in·
l<'n 1cw rooms and additional hold1hg area for
children's property
Pearl West. director of the Cahforn1a Youth
Authority. said in a Jetter to board of Supervisors
Chairman Thoma.OJ Riley that stale officials would
Bay Plans
Accented
Endangered species in
Newport Beach's Back
Bay and plans for the
bay·s future will be the
topic or a slide talk Jan.
17 before the Sea and
Sage Audubon Society.
Chuck Schneebeck, a
Fullerton College pro-
fessor, will give the talk.
The meeting will be held
in the Spurgeon Room of
the Santa Ana Library at
7:45p.m.
Installation
Zenas F. de Camp of
Huntington Beach will be
installed as w1n·shipful
master of the Seafaring
Lodge No. 708 Saturday
at the Masonic Temple in
Newport Beach.
n....,..-..• RllMLOf UI --
How One or Two Rooms with lntertherm Hot Water Heat
Without Plumbing Can Greatly Reduce Your Home Heating Biii
HERE'S HOW IT WORKS: STEP This 1emptr11uro uniformity 1n
STEP W/lother you have grown up
1 children Hvlng oway -or young
children ltving at home 'Very
hktly there are rooms 1n your
homo 11'181 ore seldomly used
II so, heat 11 waeled in those
roomt every day. Beceu'4!. with
acentrsl heating fumeco, there·s no way of eon1rolllno heat In ln-
divlduol rOOf'lls exQtPI by clos-
ing the damper• which doea.only
part of a Job.
STEP INTERTHERM h•atlng provldel
2 the nearttt floor·to-celllng com-
tott In lndlvldual rooms of all
heating me1hod1 letttd.
3 Hld1vldual rooms saves up 10 30% on heating coals /
STEI:-So safe for children -you can
4 cover heaters with blan1<e11 with
absolute safely.
STEP The hot water 1emperah1<es pro·
5 vlde cteanolt as well ea health·
lest heat in home.
STEP There are portable, plug-In e model• for 1ingle, cold room1.
STEP There ere perm1nently lnetalled
T model• for entire homes.
STEP Simple to ~ for your 1ndivldual e room•, er\llr• f\Omea, aparl-
tnentt, itc. More than one mil·
11on have been told'
0
YOU
EXCLUSIVE
We have an attractive wine guide for
you. It's poster sire, informative and ·
easy to understand . You'll never have
to wonder which wine to serve with
which food again I It even includes a
Vintage Chart so you can tell the qual-
ity of your next wine purchase. ~-
Come in for yours today -
LIMITED QUANTITY!
WINE GUIDE
J • • .M4\rinets pays 7.'JS % • on savm~
and that can mean a b ig 8.06% annual
yield. Combine our high interest'With
our many free servi~ and friendly
staff and you have reason enougli to
switch your savings to Mariners. We
hive many savings plans to fit your
nleds. Our experienced savings coun-
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,
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OBtTUARJES I NATION
c ............... ,..~··· .... ,.,. _.. . ..,.. ...... "
"Don't brlnj up equal rlghta with him He doesn'rreason,
he just 1heuta."
Deat'lu Elsewhere ,. .
• SAN FRANCISCO
!(AP) -Pul Jacobs, 59,
an orpnizer for the fn.
;t.ernat&onal Ladles Gar·
,ment Workers Union
:who later served as an
international r epresen·
ta t ive for th e Oil :Work~rs lnternaliooal
'Union, died Tuesday. He
~------
: Deatla Noti~f!•
"BCIMOTHIH
SMITHS' MOITUAlY
627 Main St.
Hunlu'9ton Beach
536-6539
PHI FAMILY
; ~OC.0Ht4l FUHH41
HOMI 7801 Bolsa Ave.
Westminster
893·3525
PACIFCC YllW
MIMOll,U P4H
Cemetery Mortuary
Chapel
3500 Pec1fic Vlew Drive
Newport.
C..ltforn1• 64 .... 2700
•
was an author or a
number of books.
KA NSAS CITY, Mo.
CAP > ·R o bert J .
Chenoweth, 73, a found.
ins member and former
board chairman of the
Humane Society of the
United States. died Mon-
day.
LOS ANGELES (AP>
Comedian Biiiy Gray,
73, famous in the 1960s
for his "My Fairfax
Lady·· parody of the
L e rner a nd Loewe
musi ca l "My Fair
Lady ,'' died Wednesday.
TOKYO <AP> -Sbojl
Hamada, 83, one or the
world's great potters,
died today of pneumonia
in Mashiko, the town he
raised to international
prominence as a pottery
center.
For the
Record
..
Thurlday. January 5. 1918 OAILY PILOT • .\8_;.
Carter J/iews Site of Noah's Ark
0,. FRANK CORMIER
PARIS (AP> -There was Prest·
dent Carter. flyanc over Turkey al
33,000 feet on h1s hands and bees. He
was lookiog for Mount Ararat, lC not
Noah's ark .
Carter dropped to his knees so be
could better divide his attention
between a map ol Turkey and the
view out a window or his blue, white
and silver jct. Joining him in Ule ex-
ercise, and also on their knees, were
Secretary of State Cyrus Vance.
rorei10 policy adviser Z~igniew
l\riezinski and press secretary Jody
Powell.
The presldent 's currenl travels to
seven nations are doing won~ers for
his circle of Intimate friends. The cir·
cle. in fact, soon may reach reglmen-tal proportions
When Carter visited Poland, he
added communist leader Edward
Gierek to b.ls roster or "close personal
friends " At his next s top, he
declared, presumably at least half m
Jest.
"SOME RAVE ASKED why we
came to Iran so close behind the de·
ligh tlul visit we r eceived in
Washington from the Shah and Em·
press Farah just a month or so ago.
half hour with PoUsb security agents
who denied him udmlsslon because he
Jacked .a staff credential.
A reporter, happening upon the
scene, helpfully informed one of the
Poles, "If be told me he was the pres1
dent's press secretary, l wouldn't
believe him ellher. · ·
Powell eventually w,s extricated
from his predicament by Richard
Keiser , who is Carter's c hief
bodyeuard
told reporters Amerlcans aren't suffi
clently concerned beeause "It's th~
luod or chicken that doesn't com
horn e to roost untJl 1985. · ·
He added:
·'The time span of most people i~
measured roughly by the NFL sports
season. Anything beyond that is re.
mote."
Organic Food
Curbs Urged
A BIBLE TEl\CllER in his home
to1,1, n before moving into the White
House. the globe-lrotUng president
long has been familiar wiUl the story
of Noah and lhc ar:k that be piloted to
refuge atop Mount Ararat during the
great flood
··After they left our country. l asked
my wife, 'With whom would you like
to spend New Year's Eve?' And she
said, 'Above all others, I think with
the Shah and Empress Farah.· So we
arranled the trip accordingly.
U.S. government employees travel·
ing abroad are instructed to patronize
American air carriers wherever
possible. Because or this, an 11 ·
member a dvance party sent to
Tehran to arrange for the president's
visit fl ew from Washihgton via New
York and Frankfurt.
SACRAMENTO (AP ) -Foo
labeled as "orcanic" would have i.
meet stricter slate standards under •
p r oposa l in the , Californl
Legislature. •
When Curter learned that Ararat
would be visible from Air'Force One
during his flight from Poland to Iran,
he called for the map and interested
his advisers in the project of finding
the mountain.
But perhaps Cart.er wasn't Joldng al
all. A few minutes later lle declared
lhat his friendship with the Shah is
''irreplaceable.··
Only five of the 11 arrived in the Ira·
nian capital with their baggage. The
luggafe of the others was around the
globe. One ofCicial's suitcase finally
was tracked down in Hong Kong.
Assemblyman Vic Fazio, ~
Sacramento, introduced tit.B 213'"'
Wednesday. It would require foo&~ •
labeled a.s organic to carry a label' •. ;
say in& that no chemical pesticides or .•
fertiliters were used on it.
In Warsaw, press secretary Powell.
bound for a meeting with Carter at
WU anow Palace, argued in vain for a
s
The question of U.S. energy policy,
or tihc lac) of one, has come up m
Carter·s discussions everywhere.
:Foreign P?hcy adviser Brzezinski
This one
The label would also have tC)
certify that no synthetic or chemical
additives were used in the production
of the food.
to
can help you save.
Saving money is easy at fir!>t Federal avin gs. \\l· pay maximum intcrel!t on inl!Urcd
savings. And offer a ho!lt of \.'.U~tomcr ~en in·~. Stop by "('On. \,\\: want to ~how you just
how friendly a savini;:s in~titution can be.
SAVE WITH AN ACCOUNT THAT'S JUST RIGHT FOR YOU.
Type of Account Current Annual Yirld• Minimum Ttme Rcyuircmcnt
5.2.5% Regular Accou nt 5.39% O ne Day
5.75%• Certificate Account 5.92% Three Month ...
6.50%• Certificate Account 6. 72% O ne Year
6.75%• Certificate Account 6.98%. 30 Month!i
7 .50%• Certificate Account 7. 79% Fou r Year~
7.75%• Certificate Account · 8.06% Six Ye.ir~
•In accordance wltb Federal ttgulations, certain fo~cJ·ll rm, fiu·d-rate accounts may vary in
availabdity. In the event of early withdrawal, there will be a suh~tant1al intnc111 n:uuct•lin.
• Effective yields based on dally compounding, credited i.tuMtcrl)-1
FAST, FRIENDLY SERVICE SAVES YOU TIME.
Courteous, efficient service is another important part of First Federal Savings. That's
why we have some "very s pecial people" who check all of our offices every month for
"a smile at every window." These people, whose identities remain a secret, perform
actual transactions to evaluate teller performance. Late r, cxtra~courteous employe~s
receive cash awards for a job well done.
With these "courtesy check~ups" we're taking extra efforts to try and give you the
bc!!t service in town. Come in and see us today.
IMPORTANT CUSTOMER SERVICES HELP YOU SAVE, TOO.
Free Safe Deposit Boxes ($1,000 Minimum Balance)
Free Travelers Checks ($1,000 Minimum Balance)
Free Checking Account At Leading Bank ($2,000 Minimum Balance)
Free lfuJt Deed Collection ($1,000 Minimum Balance)
free MoneyOrdets (No Minimum Balance)
Free Photocopy Service (No Minimum Balance)
Free Color I.D. Card (No Minimum Balance)
Free Social Security Direct Deposit Service (No Minimum Balance)
Free Telephone Transfer Scrvkt From Checkin~ to Savings ($1.000 Minimum Balance)
"We want to give
you the best
.-service in town!"
,,
'I
. '
... . • •
• 0
• • • }
11
JI . p
~
ti
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\J
ti q
f
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'J
e
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1IJ8 OA.ILVP\LOT 'fhvrtday, Janvart ~ 1971 AT YOUR SEi=\VICE !1'1Al IONA«t
"Cot a pr~'f T~ write to Pal Dvnn. Pat will
cut rM tape, gtlbng.,,. OMWerl and.action JIOU need
to 1ohie meqwtie1 in Qovernment and bwmeu Moil
JIOUr queataon. lo Pat Dunn, At Your Sennce, 0nmoe
CIXUt Dally Pilot , P.O. Boz 1560, Co,ta Meaa, CA
92626 . .M m4n11 l«tn1. 41 pouilU wtll be Q116Wned,
I 'but pltofvd anqvirie1 or letleTI not 111Clllding the
reader'a full oome. addreu. and bulineu houri' phone. i number cannot be considered. T h13 column appear a dai·
I .IY t:rcep( Solurday1... •
Bote to G~ Bar:adle ~I~
DEAR PAT: We've read so much about the ad-
visability of obt.ainlng catastrophic medicaJ-
hospital insurance. So far, I've not been able to find
a compapy which sells this type of insurance. Can
you tell me where I could obtalJi the names of these
companies?
H.R .. Newport Beach
A complete li'llt of companies selling'
eatas&ropbJc health lnsuraace ln CaJUornla wlll be
provided If you write the American CouncU ol LJle
laHrance, Inf ormaUon Services Depanment, At·
&entJoa: Arlene Lilly, 18SO K St. N.W., Wuhlnf&oa. nc. 20006. AJtbougb A YS knows ol several com·
paole1 offering this type of coverage, )'OU wocaJd be
wise to 1et tbb Uat, contact each company and then
compue the ~fl&a and cost ol ffverage by each.
Pre.leg~• Ott t1ae Wq
llEAB PAT: I ordered two sets of "The Elvis
Presley Story" records from Candlellte Music Inc.
on Sept. 8, 1977. One set arrived, but the other did
not. I've written two letters, but I didn't eet a reply
to either.
B.J ., El Toro
A YS contacted Candle lite, and your other re-
cord set ls being malled Immediately. A sblppln'
error was blamed for tbe•aondeUvery, bot no ex·
planation was offered for the firm's Jack of
re1ponse to your letters.
BolD Far Can Rqoaeaer Go"!
DEAR PAT: Can a car repoeaessor take a car
from the owner's locked garage? How about when
the garage is unlocked ? Please Jet me know as soon
61S possible.
Budding Actress
Elizabeth Ray, center or* the congressional
sex scandals in Washington last year, poses
for fashion photographer Francesco Scavullo
'in New York City. Miss Ray is studying act-
ing.
P.osh Estftte on Block .· .
But Takers Lacking for $7 Million Mansion
NEW YORK (AP) -Another
of the gargantuan Long Island
estates on which the wealthy
ltved in cocoons of silken luxury
is going the way of the gaali&ht.
Built by a horse doctor and
pharmaceutical heir, the 556·
acre Bell estate on a half.mile of
whit.e sand in Easthampton went
up tor sale two months ago.
WBEmER IT'S the asking
p'rice of $7 mUllon or the real
estate taxes ol n.ooo -a week -no one bas made a serious offer
for all or part of the wooded
estate. . The sale beepeaks a vanishing
era, propelled to a precipitous
end by rising taxes. the expense
of maint'""1ng huge staffs and
the ravenous appetite of the
middle class for housing in sub·
urban Nassau and Suffolk coun·
ties. "Even the rich couldn't af!ord
to maintain this klnd of losing
enterprise," said Arthur Kunz,
planning coordinator of the
Nassau-Suffolk Regional Plan·
ning BE~· ••
WHERE ONCE 60CM>dd estates
rambled eastward across Loog
Island: ~ro~ New York City,
perhaps 100 remain. Of those, on-. 21-room Georelan·style m1U1~
ly a few approach lbe slze or the on a bluff 80 feet ab~_"._~ Bell estate. Gardiner's Bay ln 1914. TM~
"It has to be one ot th• bfg. followed a manicured park \b.'
gest, if not the biegest, one still the Enallsb style, a sped\c
in estate condltion. ·• Clark 1arage just for two Rolls-Roy1•
Halstead Jr., regional vice pres· limousines, a chalr·llft to t.l\f
ldent of Sotheby Parke Bemet"s beach and four furnished lueif
real estate division, 1aid Tu~ house&, now rented summers ti#.'
d lhe Bank of Tokyo as an ~~ ay.
Gardiner's Island, a 3,3oo-acre ecutlve retreat.
estate which bouts a bird BELL ~ED his 70·f,....! sanctuary, la stlQ lD the bands of ~-"""" family heir Robert Davld Uon yacht at hls private pier. And~
Gardiner. So are the more kept a staff of 28 malntalnln
modest, but nonetheless vast such luxuries as .his marbt
estates of the publishing Whit· fireplaces, his mahogan1.:
neys and the banking Morgans. paneled library and a •lUS+
enclosed solarium. ~ • GONE ARE the estates built Solheby's Halstead said Bel
.by the likes of Frick, the coal and died in the early HSOs, bi
steel magnate and art collector; widow about a decade later. The
Poat, the cereal king; Tiffany, estate went to cbarlty, and real
the jeweler; Phipps, tJ\e horse estate developers Laurence
breeder; Pratt, the oil magnate. Tisch, Preston Robert Tisch and .
and Vanderbilt. the railroader. Charles Benenson bought it as an
· One estate on the famed Gold investmentinl969. Coaat had its own steeplechase
course. Another had an attached .. They now feel that tbe a
dormitory !or a staff of 25. Now precialion that they hoped t"
they have become housing de· garner has now happened
velopmenta, golf courses, ours· H ·a now tirne to sell It,·.
lng homee, C!olleges, parks or Halstead said, adding that the
camps. bought the Bell estate for a
Dr. Denniston half the present asking prlce. ~~~~~~~m;a
Gl11ZLERS Brazilian Fruit EARL'S
Pl.UM81NO Hf.AT ING
AlllCOND !>I Loe 117•~7 MEASURED
BRUSSELS, Belgium Recalled by FDA (AP) -Luxembourgo
citizens are the biggest w ASJilNGTON <AP> -The Food and Drug Ad·
drinkers of bard liquor in ministraUoo has announced the recall of nearly
the European Common 200,000 cans of the Brazilian delicacy, hearts of
M a r k et w h l le We$'\ palm, sold throqghout the Unit4!<1 St.ates under six
s.,, •ice l 1nw SIMI> •I v.,..... Door IC•ll !>tor• Neore•I Your A•••>
c;O$TAMESA642·17S3
,~.....,_,., ....
MISSION v1uo495-0401
2ttz2 CMNM ~llrIS-0-. f#Wf ... A_., PllwY.I
Germans consume the brand na.mes.
N.N., Santa Ana most beeY, the official The FDA said Wednesday the recalls resulted II the vebJcJe is In a locked garage the re· market publlcatlon said. from fa'1ure to control acidity in the canning pro.
possessor caanot legally break ln to get It as this T h e w e e k 1 y cess, which can lead to the erowth of deadly botulin would leave him open to be 1ued. Some re· Euroforum said that in toxin.
poaaessors will take a vehicle from an unlocked 1976, the average Lux· The brand names are Bonavita, Tropic Palm of ~arage when they only bave to open t)le door, and embourger drank 4 l
,.,ome will not. All of them wUI grab a vehicle l.n the liters (about 8_2 pints) ~f _B_r_a_z_il_._ Ibe_l._F_an_c_y_F_ood_._,~_u_c_k_y_Bo_y_a_n_d_R_y_k_of_r_._
driveway or from a carport. They also search the distilled alcohol, far oul· THE st 1 M
• 01voroe
• Bankruptcy
• Cnmlnal
• W1llS·Probate
• Incorporation
• Accident-Injury·
~idence. Remember that no one bas the rtgbt to take Germ ans guzzled 318
a motor vehicle from your personal possession pints of beer per citizen Wednesday 640-2507
• Eviction
270o w. c;.°:;!.i;.~ ~·
Travel Bag
Your one-stop shop neighborhood for severitl blocks In all dlrectlons if distancing the average GOURMET Recipes to add dining pleasure
the car is not parked within sight of the owner's re· German at six pints. The ~ while subtracting calories.
without your consent. If any~ lries to take the compared with 306 per In the _ ~HR. CONSULTATION.-,o ,'l
vehicle while you are pruent, they are legally Ila· ~~p~er~s~o~n~iniBei,~~iu~m~.ili~iiii~~~~--~~~~!~=~=~~~i-~~:~;~~~~~U~~i!~~iiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiii~=~ ble for any harm done you or property 11 It la reil·
:o.onably related to their acUona. You bne Ute right • • ,
t.o protect younelf and tbe motor nblcle without
liabWty to yourself, but you cannot s&art aay hosUle
or violent behavior if none ls used aiaJut yoa. A
•omplete rundown of tbe Ins aJMI eu&a ot tar re·.
fOSHHion ls Included lD tbe book, HBWpa,en'
ltlghts," by Attorneys Peter Ju Honl1sber1 and
for travel
Carpet ToWlis
JlaJph Warner (Publisher: Nolo Press)~
Dad'• Marfllft Butorie Items
· DEAR PAT: My son has become very interest·
ed in the marble collection l used as a boy. He's
asked me about the background of several of my
prize marbles, and I must admit I don'tknow. Along
lliith several agates and a tigereye, my prldt is a
sulphide glass marble. It"s clear and has a tiny
::;Hver eagle figure inside. U you can provide some
.iJlformation aboutit, we'll both appreciate it. c. w.,Laguna.Beach
Agate marbles, a type ot traaaparent 40art1,
1-ecame popular Git American playlJ'ODdJ ~ the
l9301. They're 1tlll being chipped fl'om the
chalcedonic stoae of Germany's Nahe River ud
pollsbed in lda.r-Obenteln vUJa1e. The &tgereye
from South AfrlH la golden quarta embedded wlUl
asbe1tos. It received Its name from &M aniqae UgbV
renHtloaa that occur lD the asbestos aa lbe marbl•
Js tlll'Jled. Your 1Glpblde glau ttlarble la .omewhat
ol a collector's Item. Produced In Germany from
185t to 1910, the figures appear to be silver, bat they
are actuaJJy cblna clay.
'Per..a..e..c' Edge Ges F..t
· DEAR PAT: I received several Permanent
preH blouses and some slacks !or Cbri1tmas. 11
there.any way I can avoid the problem l"ve had
lllerore with this material lQOking worn along crease
Jme1. cuffs and collan lone before the reat of the
material shows any wear?
P.L., Mission Viejo
A lab test at UC Davi.a lndlcates that 'tHlblnl
SO/st eoUon and polyetter blend dotldag wrong side
out, ashlg slow agitation ~ OI' a shortened
washing cyde, resulted lD tbe least edie abn1Joa on creun and cuffs. Dryln1 for• loai time, ulna
u eazyme pre-soak or wublng In cold water
tuded to raa1& la &be mo.t edp abQJSoa. It also
wu found &laa& allarp pennueat presa erealff
showed a ~r ra&e of Ml• abtuloa after laan·
derlDI than softer enaset. In anotber 1t11d1, over·
ctrylD• couaa -brotddoth db.cable prea fabrics
wa• load to be tbe e~I eaue el ecl&e abruloa,
,. fol.lowed b7 rtgh& slde nt laund~ f • • t
...... ,.,,,,...,,. c~ Ce••e Otd :
· DEAR PAT: HeJpf My dau&hter ~pllled wax
from a red Cbrlstmaa candle on my Ught rreen
·carpet and it seems to have sunk right into tho fiber.
Oan I gel this stain without rubUnc \ti• carpet 1n the
~ocees7
C.P •• Newport Beach
HopefDlly, Uals met.bod wW work. Flue otl
•Y loole wu with a dull knlfe. 'l'lllee, plaee browa wrappilll p~ (D4K IJ'OHI')' blp) over &M wu
Ud preN JllllU1 wit.It a Wll'ID -llOt Iii& -lroL
Tbe Ilea& 18 IQ90led IO pall tM ..,.... WU llp ·
aad allow ll IO be •Norbecl bJ Ua9 paper, l&eDea&
.. ., ptoeal' two or &Hee U.... JI Wi doeeia't won. a PIOl_,_al mJAt.-.. e1e-. 11 ,.. ••• ..w. ft
OUR LOWEST PRICES EVER
ON TWO BEST SELLERS!
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One of the most outst•ndlng values
we have ever offered I Two beautiful
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best selections, not all colors In all
stores! ·
SAVBM.OOMJ-P•
The new soft look In a mulU..tone MDConv
plush nylon pile that hes been heat-tel for great81' texture retention. Select from many
vivid coloratlona. Sele prices effectl'ie as
long as Ql.48n!ilies last-hurTY tor best
selections.
_.,.$11Jl9-now s7~
' CHOO .. MYLONtfl.LD IQJU'TURED
'"OM Contlnuoul NYlDll
fii.m.nt nylon mo ='-= MANY In• dllUnCGYe
OTHO ~Item. Avan.tllt ~ . .,.,.
&practical clnl:lle, ~ """° anu• COlor1. ~ RIDUCID
'°" CIJIAMMCa s4n
SWIRLPAmRN tf HO
Abrlght~ pd8f'l\d1~ ~ =:I.'t'°"' ........ ~
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SAVE sa.oo aq. yd.
A luxurloul cut & loop sty1e In tlltre eoft, yet durable nvlon pile. sec.ctffom new, IOft
ooloretlona. H\lfTY for best selections, thJ1909Clat sale la a fll'tt com., fnt 1t1ve bUis.
Regular1y$1,_~~ S"J99
quantities last ta. vo..
•
' . CAREERS I NATIONAL . Thursday, January s. 1979 DAILY PILOT A J l
Washington: Eulogy With. the Knife THEFAMILYC•Rcus.
By Bil Keane
ByWALTERR.MEARS
WASHINGTON (AP > It
sounded as lhough Jimmy Carter hadjustflredSuperman.
"He ts so wise. He bas so much
experience. Ills record 1s so
superb. Ills integrity is perfect,
almost."
AND BESIDES HE was a close
personal friend.
So much for Arthur F. Burns.
At the end or the month, he's out
as c h airman or the Federal
Reserve Board, a job he wanted
to keep. .
The preMdent's eulogy was in
keeping with the odd etiquette of
Washington. Nolhlpg so becomes
an official as the leaving of his
job, especially if it's involuntary.
When Vice President Nelson A.
Rockefeller was nudged off the.
1976 Repubhcan ticket, then.
President Gerald R. Ford said he
.. has done a superb job and will
continue to do so in the months
ahead."
For Carter, lhere was the Bert
Lance resignation, but it was dif-
ferent. Lance was the closest of
friends, and Carter's personal
anguish showed as he praised
a nd released his budget director.
under challenge for private
banking practices.
FOR RITUAL FAREWELL,
Carter peaked with the Burns
episode. One set of political
necessities said Burns had to
stay, another said he had lo io.
Burns to stay on as a member of·
the Federal Reserve Board. 1
It has seven members, ap-
pointed to 14-year terms. with
1>ne or them designated aa
chairman for four ye~a at a
time. Burns' term u a member
runs until 1•.
Burns said he hadn't decided.
His pay would drop ~.ooo from
the chairman's $57,SOO a year.
More important, hia visibility
would plummet.
CARTER SAID THAT if Burns
doesn't want to stay on the board,
he'll give Burns anolber job.
although. he was vaeu& about
what it mlght be.
BUT BURNS WAS a ·special,
kid gloves case for Carter. The
last thing Carter needed was to
have Bums, an economic hero to
much of lhe business establish·
ment, depart in anger.
Burns, 73, and chairman of the
Fed since 1970, was stron1est
whe.x:t .the admia~!.ration need.9-
strength: with the business com-
munity. But labor and Uberal
Democrats. includln1r some key
people in Congress, saw hJs con-
servative monetary policies as a
d amper on the very economic ex-
pansion they want to promote.
Havlng said all that, the presi·
dent bad a little trouble explain·
in& In his Dec. 28 t.elevislon in·
terview why he had replaced "Oolly'1 kiss in' Kittycot on the mouth! Will thot
such an exemplary public ser-hurt Kittycot?'' At _
OUT AT FED
Arthur Burns KID GLOVES
President Carter
vant. ~~~~~~~_...;;.~~-'--~~~~-~--~~-~~
Carter had him fl own to
Washington from a Palm Beach
vacation, with no less an escort
than Vice President Walter F.
Mondale. to tell him he wouldn't
be reappointed. Burns responded
with praise for his successor ,
businessmanG. William Miller.
Anyone who paid attention to:
the Car ter campaign could
marvel at the fact that there was
a possibihty the Democratic
president would reappoint Burns.
FOR CARTER HAD said that
presidents should be able lo ap-
point Federal Reserve chairmen
He settled on an old poliUtal
theme: it was time for a change.
Nothing personal, Carter said.
Indeed, they had become good
friends . He even insisted that
"we never had any sort of dis·
agr eements when we were
together."
PERHAPS NOT, BUT Bums
had an ample corps of critics in
the White House and a mong con-
gressional Democrats.
All told, it was quite an exit for
a Republic economist who once
headed Dwight D. Eisenhower's
Council of Economic Advisers
R l'mo111 with yd\ir prrst•nt state of
mincl or h1rak lrnu of 11 fo1ov o1.
If you a1P ll1vo1 cud, 5flµarato<I
or w1c1owcll u~I' a llrossful
s11t1a11o n o~ o ~I'• •nnhoard
to nrw orowth.
p_,~fo ':.'$~
'!>\ o,.'!>
""'
0Rn1n4lanO
} . January 6 . Friday
2600 E 7th St LB
8· 11 Pf11 $3donation
Whether pol ilics. controversy
or even scandal convinces a
president lhat somebody impor·
tant must go, the dismissal often
is cushioned with praise that
makes it seem the fellow should
have stayed forever.
• to terms corresponding with
their own ; that the board's
policies should be consistent with
those or the elected admlnislra·
lion ; and lhat he wanted an ex-
pansionary monetary policy to
help cut unemployment.
and owed his Federal Reserve,-;::==================~ .appointment to Richard M . ~
Nixon.
.
TWIN TRAGEDY
FIRED 'FRIENDS'
Richard Nixon EARLIER OUSTER
Bert Lance
RICHARD M. NIXON pro-
duced lhe 'classic example when,
amid Watergate, he ousted H.R.
H a ld eman an d J oh n D.
Ehrlichman, "two of the finest
public servants 1t has been my
pri v Jlege to know.''
Furthermore, Bums had irked
labor by opposing a sharp in·
crease in the minimum wage and
worked to block the $50 tax re·
bate Carter proposed and then
dropped.
FOR FAMILY
:J)ictionary Listing
2,100 Jobs Emerge
By JOYCE L. KENN F.DY
Dear Joyce: What are some or the
newer Jobs In the world of work? My
class is studying caret'rs.
' -M.M.N., Minneapolis, Minn.
The just·pubhshed fourth edition of
1 be Dictionary of Q('(•upational Titles
includes about 2, 100 new jobs. II ere
~Te a few with t•xccrpts from the
DOT defutitions ·
-Bonsai cullurlst --"grows
dwarf trees: sel<'cls seedlings or
ol.her small tre(•s s uitable for
Bon sa i. .. 'i lunts plant
j:O"owth .. shapes trc.'l'S in atlracll\ e
m-ra ngC'menls "
-Acupuncturl~t "administers
ttierapeutic treatnwnt amenable to
~upuncturc proC'<'durcs. JS md1cat-
e:d , by s ll p (' r v 1 s 1 n ~ ph ys 1 -
cian .. rcv1c"'s pat1C'nt 's medical
history .. selects needles of Hmous
lengths ... inse rts needle!> at
(various I locations Of body "
-Carf'4>r guldanl'e tel'hnlclan
"collects and organizes occupal1onal
data to provide sourec material for
school curc<'r inform ation cen-
ter ... assists stud<:'nts to take and
score selC-admrnistNed vocational
i.,terest and aptitude tests ... keeps
s~dent ·s work experience recor ds."
.. _ Industrial the rapist -"ar -
ran,es employment In actual work
ehv1ronment for mentally Ill patients
te enable them to perform medically
prescribed work ac -
tlvitles ... motivates and prepares
patients to resume employment out-
side hospitals. , evaluates patient's
p}'ogress. • . processes payroll re·
cr:>rds."'
( CAREERS J
-Cephalometrlc analyst -
"traces head X-rays ... using data
from tracings and computer sheets,
illustrates cosmetic rc1>ult of pro-
posed orthodontic (teeth' treat-ment.·•
-Human relations, or drug and
alcohol counselor -m military set·
ting, "assists social worker m de-
\'eloping. organizing, and conducting
programs Lo prevent and resolve pro-
blems of human relations, or drug
and alcohol abuse ... identillC8 dis.
c riminatory practices .•. recom -
mends corrective action."
Inspector, exbau1t emlasloa11 -
in auto manuracturlng. "Inspects and
t ests auto emission control
S) stems ... compar es computer
printout to detect variations ... ad·
j us ts a nd replaces defective
parts ... consul ts wi th department
heads or plant engineers to initiate
corrective measures."
The dictionary is available for $12
from the Superintendent c)f Docu-
ments, Washington, D.C. 20402.
READER SERVICE: To obtam tM
1978 Directory of Accredited Priuate
Trade and Technical School1. plti! two
leaflets, "How To Choo1e A Career And A
Career School," and ··career Shortcut :
Take a Skill Info Your Future," 1tnd
your po•tcard requeat to Joyce Lain Ken-
nedy at thU newipaper. A&k jor "Private
Job School Kit "
Burned Husband, 3 Kids
~·Tests Set for Slayer
'TORRANCE (AP) -A Redondo
JJ"ach woman who pleaded guilty to
the murders or her husband and of tlane children in a fire she set has
*8n ordered lo undergo 90 daya of
Jitycblatric examination before sen·
~acing.
•Superior Court Judge Tbomu W.
lfrederlcka ordered the tests Wednes·
ctaY and told Jdargaret Tanner, 38, lo
J11turu to court Aprll 5 for aentenclne.
tAuthoriUes sald Mrs. Tanner set the
ua. 3 nre ln the home she shared
th her husband. Rbbert Potler, and
the children by placing three lit
cigarettes in the front bedroom.
Mrs. Tanner pleaded cuUty Dec. 7
to one count of flrat·de1Tee murder tn
the death of Pot~r. and three count.
of second-degree murder In the deaths
of Potter's daughter Judy, 8, bis ion
Bobby, 7, and t.tlelr gueat, Mellftda
O'Brien, 8, ot Hermosa Beach.
Investigators said Potter apparent·
ly died while trying to rescue the
children. who died In their aleep of
smoke tnbalaUon. Mrs. Tanner wu
also bu.med ln the fire.
Those weren't Fed matters,
but Bums never was one to muf.
fie bis economic opinions and had
taken special pains to dem·
onstrate the Fed's i ndepen-
dence of any administration.
CA RTER'S SOLUTION : a new
chairman with impeccable busi-
ness credentials. G. William
Miller, 52, chairman of Textron
Inc. and a public request,to
PESlmGO, Wis. CAP> -A
father and son were kWed when
a barn celling collapsed and
burled them under 2,000 bushels
of grain, authorities said. Three
hours later, the son's father-in·
law was killed in a traffic acci·
dent.
The barn accident Wednesday
on a farm near Peshtigo in
northeastern Wisconsin killed
Frank Fetterly, 84, and his son,
Irvin, 56, according lo Marinette
County authorities.
lsilverwoodsl
AN::tSALE
Reg. $175 to $245
Collection of
Current Vested Suits
14P·2099°
Including famous designer suits by Pierro Cardin & Nino Cerruli.
Reg. $235 to $365
Hart Schaffner & Marx
Famous Quality Suits
19r-28P
Save on America's best known brand lncludlng all wool. premium
Sliver Trumpeter Suits by Hart Schaffner & Marx.
Reg. $185 to $235 Foursome Suits
159.90.199.90
Vested aulta with extra alact<s, wools & wool blends
Reg. $100 to $135 Sport Coats
84.90-109.90
Patterna & aolld color blaiers, wools & wool blends
Reg. $27.50 to $45.00 Slacks
22.90-34.90
lnchJdlng wool flannels & r1mou1 elutlclnd walatband alacks
Reg. $75.00 to $79.50 Ratnooats
59.80·84.90
With zip-In finer for •xtra warmth
E 1<ecut1ve Oll1co5· 78 t 2 Edinger Ave.,
Hunltnglon Beach, CA 92647
~"'IJll>,.rn c,.1,1. ""·I Rf'•Jl"n ll 011 "~ ·
& n') V.1ll"Y V "N SI Burn.1 P,trk CA 906~0
10· ! S Av.1lc1n [llvol, C.H~•,n, C.A !10740
• n1 •. 1 l tkA F to•&' Or (I T ''°'· C.A •1,&JO l•JOI ( tmporo.11 li"''i L 1 Ii ol"J CA \J0!\11
4 l 40 l0t111 Ol•d~h 81~'1 .. Lnng 8P,1Ch, CA !>0801
109:. lrvorH• Ulv•f l1"l1n, C.A 'J2680
2:1!> N Cttru~ /Iv • . Wc~I Cov1nu, CA 91793
IOIJ4l •10IJ~l~Q
ll NOl"
.4J2, D.t.11.Y PILOT * Thurld~y Jan'*Y ~. 1911
Synanon: Asceticism
Mixed With Wealth
BADGER <AP) -Synanon 1s a j study in contrasts.
Its men and women shave their
be1ds and make other major lirestyle
I changes as a unit in the tradition or
4 religious asceticism but live in com·
t fort and plenty in the tradJtlon or
c American business enterprise. .
: SYNANON STARTED as a pioneer
' rehabilltation center for hardcore drug addicts but has evolved into a
1 religion fueled by businesses worth
$22 million .
• c Jts spokesmen explain Synanon's ! beliefs and acllvlties with openness
and precise command of language in· 1 lerspersed with numerous expletives.
Synanon, which termi. itseU "the
I People Btlslness," is quiet to sue or
l invei.tigatc institutions its le&ders
feel oppose the organization.
"WE HAVE A PRETTY damn fun-
, ny l ifestyle," founder Charl es E
Dederich says of the communal
group's dedication to providing
1 material security through the free
1 enterprise system.
"Our CU1cetic1sm lakes other forms
' -forms thi4t require internal dis-
' cipllne," Dederi ch explains.
• "Nobody at Syhanon smokes, takes
mind benders, tukes any booze like I
used to. Nobody eats any sugar."
That philosophy of everyone follow -
ing the same discipline in personal
'We argau>~ laugh~ ~ry
and e.rplure aU neat1ner
ol per11onaL •• i••ue• in a
, lolally uninhibilPd way.•
habits makes many outsiders uncom-
fortable, Dederich feels .
.. LOTS OF PEOPLE in the U.S. of
A don't eat sugar, but we do a ter-
ribly frightening thing. We don't eat
:-.uga r m concert. .
.. There's something very fascinat-
1 n g and fr1ghtc·n1ni:: about that,
:-.o melhang very aggrcss1vl' ~nd
frai.:htenani:: about people who do ~hings
an concert. Wt.• clun·t do at to frighten
pl'ople.Ilisjuslwhutwcdo "
Dl'derich dl'na(•s that he dictates
lifestyle changl's for Synanon mem
bers surh as u dct1s1on lu st fall ror
1.·nuplcs to divorce, lht.•n form a "love
match" \\ilh unothcr partner
"I CAN'T DEMAND anything." he
!>Jys. "All they have to do 1s walk out
•.. I have to manipulate and con·
v1nte and can't get too far ahead of
people in dec1s1ons that affect their
\I vcs. t have to :-.e ll and be a
ll1plomal."
The changt.• of par1n1•rs developed
f1 om eonn•rn m l'I tht• nJlaon s high
<.lavorrc rate. IJcod1•r1t h .,.,~ s
"\\'(' Jskt.•d \\hat <·ouhl happE·n af
hum•hl's of prnpll' r.1lher happy in re·
l,1llon ... h1p-. in nrnnog<i mous s1tual1ons
would lt·a~e at the peak hf ~.;t1.l>fal·t1on. part friends at that
planl' in~ll'at.I oflhcdepths of anger.
11 E CONVINCED JllS daughter
~ind son-in -law to divorce. They "got.
other mates as other marriages
'Shaved head• are a
sign of •o•eithlng dlf •
ferent to ldentlly our re-
ligion.'
began lo fall in lane," says Dederich.
who also remarried because his wife
Hetty died of cancer last April.
"It was a domino erfect." Dederich
says. "I had my Hngers crossed. I
didn 't know If it would go or not."
A rew couples left. unwilling to
break up their marriages, but 230
couples c h a nged partners at
Synanon's home place in Utla Sierra
Nevada foothtll area and at facilities
around Los Angeles and San Fran-
cisco.
THE Bi\N ON SUGAR in food
followed Mrs. Dederich 's earlier bout
with diabetes.
Dederich. 64, does not always do
what he advises h\.S followers to do.
About 250 Synanon· men bad vasec-
tomies on grounds that the world ls
overpopulated, but Dederich didn't.
"I always sortoflag behlnd, llke any
sensible leader.·· he said. .
Dederich says the decision to
change partners resulted from "a
lon.r dialogue over years."
THAT DIA.LOGUE WWCR can
evolve into lifestyle chan1ea is the
Synanon game, a no-holda-barred
verbal jousting match in which mem-
ben say whatever they want about
anyone or anything.
Groups oC eight to 16 aather in •
circle in comfortable chairs aeveral
evenings a week to have at it with no
restrictions against cr lllctilnt
employen, teachers, mates or even
Dederich.
A Synanon brochure explains the
••1ame" lhis way:
"We arcue, lauih. cry and exptor. all mallffr of ~raonal and eom-
munll)t lllues ln a totally unlnblbtted
••Y ••. It b tbe •lnale mott laipor· tut element lb each Synanon ,..1.
dent'• ,..owtb and In the tu«., of
Synanon at a wbolt.
"IN TUE GAME, you ~an HY
a67thtna to anybody wllhout tetllnl
punched In tho n08e. Out of the SUM • .re pradke th Golden Rule:·
Expletive& punctuate much of th• t11lk of Synanon member1 ~ lbt
pmes llDd oUt. • "We \1141 bid laqu11e btcMllt It
... .,., rteb llteMlo~~ • Ult ~~·= .. ~·=~ ~-tlli11ot."'
.,.WI,._..
'I ALWAYS SORT OF LAG'
Founder Charles Dederich
STATE R ECORDS LIST
Dederich'a salary al $75,000 annual-
ly . He estimates h11> net worth at
$750,800, much of 1t from a $600.000
libel settlement he and Synanon
shared.
Synanon officials. claiming they
are victims of religious persecution.
h've filed several other suits or
launched investigations against gov-
ernment agencies and newspapers
they feel have treated the group un·
fairly.
Attorney Dan Garrell !>lre~ses that
the religion is not a tax dodge
because Synanon already has tax ex·
emptions as a non -profit charitable
organizatiQTI .•
HOWEVE~ STATE AND county
officials say they are studying
Synanon's various holdings to de·
termine which aspects involved re·.
habilitation and which are com-
mercial ventures or are used for
communal living.
Garrett says the group mffts "cer-
tain accepted judicial standards" in
its clatm to be a religion.
"We have a set of central beliefs
held in common by a group or people
who act in concert in thetr dally
lives. We believe that if we live that
way, our lives will be better. Also, a
religion usually is characterized by a
charismatic leader."
THAT CHARISMATIC leader is
Dederich, who is nevertheless called
"the old man" by other Syn anon
leaders. "Irreverence is a big part of
our posture," says Mike Kaiser,
public relations director.
"We're irreverent about ourselves,
sacred cows generally." adds Gar-
rett.
Dederich characterizes the shaved
heads, actually short butches oo men
and women alike. as "a slen or
something that l'ftakes us 1 little dlr-
rerent to identify our rellclon -
something that require• sacrifice in a hair-ridden culture like oun."
BUT DEDERICH SCOFFS at aua-
auuons lbat he t. a reUJ(oua pro-pllet.
"I Uke to catecorlH my1eU 11 the
onl1 noD·J>ropbct of thla non·prollt
roundatlon, •• be 1a1a. 'MJ phUoeopby is to 1et lbtnis done.••
' .
Jobless
Benefits
Reversed
•f 191 ·~~ .... ,.. s•
CALIFORNIA ..
Reasoner to Sign Off?
ABC Newscaster 'Bored' With $500,000 Job
.. ..
•
FURNITURE
ANNUAL
FLOOR CLEA NCE
Once a year and once a year ontvt RB Furniture doean't hove soles except for this annual event to
make space tor new season room settings. Hurry and take advantage of this llmlted opportunity to
select floor samples of regular RB Furniture merchandlae at great savings. There are different plec .. In
different stores and It's first come, first choice ao shop Immediately tor the best selectloru. One of a
kind exclusive RI or1glnals and famous brand name fumlture for every room In the house In excellent floor
aample condition. Decorating service, delivery and the famous RB warranty of quality I• Included,
at no extra coat, of courae. Aere's your chance to get the terrific bargain• you'll
have to wait one more year to find, so be on • early bird and get flrat choice!
' ~ I
•
~ . . ;--
Thursday, January 5. 1978 use DAILY PILOT A J 3 LOCAL I NATIONAL ----------~----~,:_~~~------~------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~:.
Efforts
In Recall
.Backed
FDA Plans Hair Dye Warnings
Based on results of a recent
homeowners' phone survey, San
Clemente Homeowners' Associa-
tion directors have decided to
continue efforts to initiate a re-
call of Mayor Donna Wilkinson
and Councilman William
Walker.
With two board members
absent last week, directors voted
on the basis of a phone survey of
• more than 90 percent of t.Jie as-
socia lion's membership, said
Howard Mushett, president.
BE REFUSED TO say bow
many members are in the
homeowners group.
or those polled, 73 percent sup-
ported recall, 20 5 percent op-
posed it and 6.5 percent were un-
decided, Mushett said.
THE BASIS FOR the assoe1a·
tion·s grievance with the two
councilmen is the City Council's
unanimous vote in December not
to comply wilh an association re-
quest to put a pier -bowl re-
development issue on a citywide
ballot in March.
Walker and Mrs. Wilkinson are
the only two councilmen not up
for re-election in March. Coun-
cilmen Patrick Lane and
Thomas O'Keefe will not ~eek re-
election. Coun<:tlman Tony
DiGiovanni will b(' running for a
second term
Water Color
Art Gets Eye
The affiliates of the Laguna
Beach Museum of Art will view a
waler color demonstration by
Laguna Niguel cnlorist Pa1•J
Cramer on Jan. 17 at 2 pm
The demonstration will follow
a s hort busine&s meeting of the
affiliates at the museum. Light
r efreshments will follow
Help Arrives
Cost is $1 for non-members and
50 cents for students. For more
information, call the museum at
494·6531.
Unidentified window washer hangs by a cable while a
rescue ladder draws near. He was working on a
WashingtOfl, D.C .. building when the scaffold gave way.
Another worker stands ~lranded above on the ledge of a
sixth-floor window. Both were rescued.
County -Firms Report
Moves, New Contracts, Purchases Talli.ed
B~r lmportt"r to Mo~e
Wisdom lmport Sales Co. Inc .. importer.
plan:. to QPt'n expanded headquarters m Irvine on
March l. The 42,000-squarc·foot warehouse wtH more
than clouhlt> tht• firm's present storage capacity
and mcrC'asc offin· ~pace to 5,000 square feet.
Th£• company moved from Los Angeles to
Irvine m 1973.
,tquatit• Sh,Jwroom Open•
Allan Ucck, nwm•r of Coral Reef Enterpnses,
has opened a ~howroom in the Pacific Design
Center. Newport Bcact\. His Aquarium Design In-
ternational manufactuAs and distributes aquarium
·furniture. He works with decorators and will color-code
the fish, wall units and casing to match det:or. A
24 -hour emergency service is available to clients,
and customers may subscribe lo a regular
monthly maintenance service
Fluor Subsidia"!I Hired
Fluor Corp., Irvine, has announced that its
F luor Utah subsidiary has been selected by the.
Corporacion Nacional Del Cobre de Chile
ICodelco-Chile) divis ion Chuquicamata, to
perform basic and general engineering services
for the expansion of the Chuquicamata Copper
Concentrator 1n northern Chile.
The expansion, which will have an installed
value of about $50 milllon, will increase capacity
of the existing concentraUng plant from 70,000 to
90,000 metric tons or ore per day. Engineering will
be done at Fluor Utah's headquarters in San
Mateo. Value of this phase or lhe project to Fluor
Utab js esUmated at approximately $2 million.
Arfloret.,. Nean C'o•pletl••
Ai-6oretum, the Toman Co.'1 fint entry into
the office construction field, is scheduled for com-
pletlon ond openin& io February at 18002 Skypa.rk
Circle, Irvine. The Irvine-based flrm '1 $1 mllUon, two story.
18,000-square-rool buJldinC uses volumetric open
spactt plannlnt in providing omce apace for in-
dividuals or amall busln~ses and offers central
telephone receptionist 1ervlce, reproductlon
faclllUes. cof'ft'e·kitchens, lavatories, conference
room• and courtyard •
1977 were Sl,032,479,000, compared with
$942,460,000 for the like period last year , and
$4,034,505,000 for the 12 months ended Nov. 30,
1977, compared with $3,646,752,000 in the 1976
period.
Net incomc was $108,250,000 for the three
months ended Nov. JO compared with S87,902.000
for the like 1976 quarter. For the 12-month period
ended Nov. 30, net in come was $402,477,000, com-
pared with $351 ,443,000 last year. Operatin~ expenses were $2.8 billion, up 10.9
percent for the past 12 months. Net plant invest-
ment during the like period lncreased 10.5 percent,
from $8.2 billion lo $9 billion.
Average common shares outstanding in the
quarter ended Nov. 30 were 168,588,000, the same
as in the 1976 period and the 12-month periods for
1977 and 1976.
Irvine Land Purclao•ed
Hunsaker Development Corp., Santa Ana, has
purchased seven-tenths of an acre of land al Main
Street and Red Hill Avenue. Irvine, and will con-
struct a 12,000-square-foot headquarters building
on lbe site.
The property was purchased from Irvine In·
dustrial Complex.
Mo-ped Fl"" Opens
A new company headquartered in Irvine,
American Mo-ped Associates. has announced
plans lo mark<!t. nationally the first four·stroke
engine offered in the United Stat~s.
T he Indian-Four will feature heavy duty
hydqwlic suspension, waterproof brakes and an
adjustable seat with storage underneath.
Marketlng.Pe,...11 6ra•kMf
Newport PhanuaceuUcala IntemaU<>ul. Jae.,
Newport Beach, hu announced that lta German
licensee, Rohm Pharma GMBH of Danmtadt.
Germany, has received approval from the German
health authoriUes to market isoprinoslne in the
Federal Republic or Germany.
Ai>proval ls based upon the German pem-
ment 's review of bolh the laboratory and human
clinical s~..dies with lsoprlno.lne. West Germany
reprHents the third laraeat pharmaceutical
mar.ket lo the world.
Webb A10ardf!d Co"tract
Del E. Webb. Corp., owner ot the Newporter
Inn, Newport Beuch, baa been awarded a $15.I
mllllon const.ruc::tlon contract to complete Pbue JI
of the planned 500-room Park·Taboe Hotel.Casino
at South Lake Tahoe, Nev.
Webb prevloualy was awarded the ti million Pbale l ('Olltract. w)dch was completed tn 1'75. •
Pbase r invOlved erectlbn of tbe bule 15-fioor
structure, Whllo Phaae II wW laclude tbe eomple•
tion ot \hO bulldlnl exterior u well " the base-
ment. a l)Ortlon of tho pobUc areas. the fU11 culno
.nd 1econd Ooor Of the tower. Plans alao will J>l'O-
vide enouah 1pace for aurfac• parldn1 of up to
1,000 can. Phase II wm be completed by July.
Tbe Phase n1 and flnal portion of c:onatruc-
tlon, ~hicb wlU Include 1ueat rooms, main
1ho•room. convention area and health center, ta
~ttid to bO com pl et.ct by lUly 11'1'1.
lf~IAun
Cancer
Threats
Noted ·
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Food and Dnai Administration
bas announced plans to require
warning labela on many perma-
nenl hair dyes that contain coal
tar derivatives suapect.ed of
causing cancer.
The ~ency also proposed Wed-
nesday requiring all bea\lty
salons to display posters warning
that some hair dyes contain in-
gredients that may cause cancer
and advising consumers to check
for warning labels on dyes to be
used on their hair.
THE FDA PROPOSAL follows
a finding by the National Cancer
Institute that a chemical used in
many permanent hair dyes, 4·
metboxy-m-phenyhmedlamlne
and its sulphate, caused cancer
when fed to laboratory rats and
mice.
The regulation would require
dyes containing the suspect
chemical to carry this statement
on their labels: "Warning -Con;
tains aa Ingredient tbat caa
penetrate your skin and bas beea
determined to cau.se cancer ID
laboratory animals.''
Lorna Rhoades, a
spokeswoman Cor the Cosmetic,
Toiletry & Fragrances Associa·
tion, said the industry would op-
pose the FDA proposal because
the label "doesn't provide all the
facts necessary for the consumer
to make an intelligent decision.''
SHE RECOMMENDED an ,
alternative of providing a
package insert that would pre-
sent the results of all the impor-
tant scientific tests to date on the
subject, including industry.
sponsored skin painting studies
and case histories as well as the
National Cancer Institute animal
!ceding studies.
Permanent hair dyes can't be
wuhed out like so-called semi-
permanent dyes or color noses.
A person ·s hair remains the dyed
color unW it erows out °" is
bleached out and replaced by
another permanent dye.
FDA SAID THE cancer·
causing chemical or its sulphate
generally is found in black,
brown and ash blonde dyes and is
less likely to be round in reddl5h
or golden blonde colors.
Leslie Dach, a spokesman for
·the Environmental Defense
Fund. said at least 400 product
colors containing the suspect
coal tar derivatives have been
identified. The fund petitioned
the FDA last October to take the
action announced Wednesday.
The largest manufacturers, he
said, are Clairol in the United
States. a division of Bristol-
Myers Co., and L'Oreal, lhe hair
products division of Cosmair in
Europe.
UNDER A 40-YEAB·OLD law,
the so-called coal tar balr dyes
such as those affected by the
FDA proposal are specifically
exempL from FDA 's usual re·
gulatory powers, allhough the
agency does have aulhority to re-
quire accurate labeling, includ-
ing wamlng labels.
The FDA baa &OUgbt repeal of
the exemption for years, and
Congress is expected to bold
hearings this month on that is-
sue.
Under present law, consumers
who buy hair color products over
the counter can determine
whether they contain the suspect ·
~oal tar derivative from the in·
gredlent labeling, bdt no such
labels are required on com-
mercial hair coloring products
uaed exclusively in beauty
parlors.
AN FDA SPOKESMAN said
the proposed warnln1 label re-
quirement would apply to all
permanent hair dyes that contain
4·methoxy·m-pheoylenediamlne
which 11 also known by the
chemical name 2.t diami-
noanlsole. The CC1metics induatry bur ...
jected the National Cancer
Jn.stitute f~ studies as it· relevant d cites numerous
oUier---=
Tennis Glass
Setby, SJC
Cars Baited
Frayed cables stranded some of San Francisco ·s cable
cars this week. Three stand idle al Hyde and Beach
s treets as a truck pulls a spaghetti-like piece or m etal
from the underground vault or pulleys and cables that
move the cars.
Disabled Students
Get Sign-up Date
"A registration day has been set aside for physically disabled stu-
dents who wish to attend Orange Coast College in the spring.
These students may register Wednesday, Jan. 11 from 10a.m.to1
p.m. in room 105 of OCC's Counseling and Admissions Building. Ap· ..
pointments are not required, and parking permits will be issued by the
Costa Mesa school.
Spring classes begin Feb. 6.
OCC counselors will assist slu·
dents during the registration Wliite N al"fled
period. Students will also be able
to consult with a counselor from
the Department o( Rehabilita-
tion.
Disabled students unable to
make the registration are ad-
vised to contact the OCC Ad·
missions Office at 556-5735 so that
other arrangements may be
made.
Regular registration for spring
classes runs Jan. 12 lhrough Feb..
18.
WnidorPlan
To Be Probed
In Niguel
The Laguna Niguel
Homeowners Association has
scheduled a slate of speakers for
its monthly membership meeting
Monday night.
Association members will bear
Environmental Management
project plarmer John Fulton and
EMA manager Robert L. Rende
discuss the San Joaquin
Transportation Corridor pro-posal along with several count.y
conaultanll working on that pro-
ject.
James W. Smith, the new
general manager of Avco Com-
munity Developers, Inc •• will ad-
dress tbe homeowners. '
Tho meeting begins at 7:30 p.m. at Crown Valley Elemen-
tary Scbool. 29292 Crown Valley
Parkway.
Superintendent
In Clemente
John While has been appointed
San Clemente city water and
sanitation superintendent to suc-
ceed Eu~cne Borawski, who re-
tired in April.
White's appointment lo the
$19,680 a year position is effective
Jan. 30, said Stephen Burrell, ci·
ty personnel officer . He is cur-
rently a treatment plant superin-
tendent for the city of Atwater.
A graduate of San Francisco
State University, White, 25, was
previously an. assistant plant
superintendent at Fort Bragg •
and worked for the city o( San
Francisco as an engineer.
Baha'i Chief
Due in Mesa
Harold C. Jackson of the Louis
Gregory Baha'i Institute in Soulh
Carolina will speak Saturday in
Costa Mesa.
. Jackson, the school's first de·
an, wm talk on the subject "One •
Planet .•• One People, Please."
The talk will begin at 7 :30 p.m. ,
at Brentwood Savings' communi·
ty room11640Adams Avenue.
Certificates "Needed •
Laguna to Begin
licen~ing of Dogs
Do11lcen.ses ror 19'71 •lll be lnued by tho city of Laauna Beach M•IAD.IDC Monday, accordlna to animal Mrvlces offidals. •
Due to a delay at the printera1 the new do1 license receipt boo1E1"'
hav. not yet been cteliver~
Jl'BICALE DOGS who were •P.•fed atle.r Jan. 1, 1'7$, are •.~ble for a one tlme re.e exempt
llfeDM IOOd tor two years.
The free UctQ¥ proaram ap.
plln OnJ1 to f em81e do1s spayed
aince that dat-.
Fee1 for older' llpay-4 females
ll • per year, or flO for two ·ye~. Unapayed femal• COIL Ill..,,....., or sao for two yean ~for llcena1al and llcenaea for
male dogs are S6 per year and~
$10 for two fcan.
DOG OWNEllS should bnnr ·
proof of apayln1 from a
veterinarian u well as a rabies
• certificate to th cashier at City
Hall to recclve t.be new Ucense.
Qu~Uona conCemlna upcom·
lDC rabia cllnlca hOWd be. re-
ferred to tbe Pet Res~lblllt,y •
Committee volunteer at G'f-:JA2.
' \
-
MARMADUKE
----
Thu™'-Y NII.Illy 5 11118
by Br~d Anderson
.
i ..;
; .. .:
I
s .. . -----, . ;;;-j~~ _;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;; .....
"Didn't you used to wrestjp 1n high school.
Luke?'
FUNKY WINKER BEAN
E-1;!
CA SEY
MOON MULLINS
GE RIATRI X
IT 'AA'I ~ CHE:m~ TO
TA"E ~ WITH u~ ON
iH& M~XICO CRU1~E THE
eNP OF 1~€ ML)Ni\-1
ANP l..€.AVe ~CK
AT THE VEI'$ !
' DENNIS THE MENACE
'
BOOMER by Wm. F. Brown ind Mel Casso"
ACfi,,ALl.'f 800\i~fl iJv C~tkf• r-~~~----::::=::::::---,
W.-./ TO F'l6LJI<~ our wJ.IA'T ~•a 'fiY ~Ol~ 1.1~£ ~ IH!M
A MA~ ~ ml6L.™S ~~n.r: ..
MISS PEACH
•
Ml'. ~~1MMl5 eNT&no 7Ui
l lCYCL.i IC~~ 1..AST' Nli;MT. °" , ... e ~l~T L AP Ml'! MAOi A n..1.1.v
GaAT TU~IJ, !'I.AT Nl>800Y NO'TIC£0.
~ l~TA>Jee,
~r.JOL.P, IF' A ~t:nV
61~1. CAME UP AND
li:'l5S~O W. ~Al·s
1He NEXi i~ING
Youo oo ?
PIZOSL.EM 15 .
~
~fu;
StHOOl ~lA-.~
WHAi'~ n.1 MEADl.NE p
ON THA'T' S"!OlrY, Al"THIA~.
.. ,~NCIPAI. 9ANteeo;
DaW HD ,.
fNTl.rffT ..
~
I NEW.f I ).floom ~o
I
GORDO
.I.
H~TE
11-11~
W AE
~"'F 'IEA~f
'W LITTLE
MINO
LIES f
FALLOW.
1-S
by Tom Batiuk
Wllr~lll ... Wlllllll ~IJIJ cfa~
rn~ i:srtl r1111!1 588 Ii l'"e 511f
s wiooer~
I
by Charles Rodngues
by Ferd and Tom Johnson
JUDGE PARKER
TUMBLEWEEDS
0
" • •
OR. SMOCK
t
"' . ~
MOTLEY'S CREW
.,,.,, .. """""', .......... , .............. ....................
LAY· OFF
NOTIC&e
f'U1' Ml! VOWN, Hll.Pl6ARP @ HAMHOCKER1 I AM NO"r
POR O~E 'THING, ~U AIN'T
'f £'1'11NJNE. EENOU6H!
GONNA MA~R_R_v_vo_o_!_! -t !
I M
i :
I 1
§
, ..
HMM, 'PHoeee
FRAYt...C:, M .C/. ~
WHY, YOU'RE:
A WOMAN
POC'f'OR .'
by Gus Arriola
by Harold Le Doux
COMICS I CROSSWORC:
PEANUTS bv Ch•rles M. Sdtuft
OK/iii 6EAUT1FVL, GET
OfF THE ICE!! WE'RE
60NNA fVH HOCKer'!
WO<f"?! 6ET LOST,
NECKHEAD! I lAA'\5 ~
HERE FIRST !! "'
. ~00 WOOlDN1T LIKE 10 6ET'
MIT WITH A HOCKE~ STICK
WOULO · '(00, 6EAUTI AJl.? .
HOW WOULD YOO LIKE
TO 8€ RmCE-FED A
PAIR OF GOALIE PAOS?!
I HAT CRYSrAL
SNoWfW.LI S
A8SOUJTEL'( USE1£SS!
by Rog~r Bradfield
by George Lemont
;!. GO'li"'A CHeCK w1-r>-1 suPPt.,.Y AN'
see IF i"HeY HAVf;
ANY INFt...Ai"'ABt,....f;
NAME: i"AGS .1
by Templeton and Forman
TODAY'S CIDSSIDID PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 Potter'a
wheel
6 Carpenter's
necn11ty
t I Fl1tflsl'l
t 4 01recto0n
tabored
bfeatri
49 Mille
1mtnd1
50 Mu11c11
team
52 Small
amount
15 G~;ek letter 56 Grttk letler
16 Sick 5 7 Dwelllng
1 7 E llClly occupant 60Ttme 000011te oeri:>ds
1 9 ;,~;~~Ylor Abbf
20 Nol d11ferent 61 Society
?I Reau"t structure
22 Ont0ns 62 Aw1ke
ret111ves 63 Cyclone
24 Point oul center
26 Feet aorry 6• Troublesome
27 Inclines plinra
30 Snapahols 65 Flowtrteta
tnl0fm1t plan IS
32R1se DOWN
une1pectedly t Young men
2 words 2 DIVI s
33 P1t11111 soec11tty
34 Cl)lrged 3 Cable cu
Plrt1cfe 4 Coarse
woolen cloth 37 Asian gulf 5 Female
38 Deer's animal
relative 6 ···-vote
39 Corn brHd Unolliclal
•O ••• G1l1h1d poll
4 I Didn't 00 to 7 Chatter
bed· 2 8 Parson
words Abbr.
• 2 Soc111 at11ir g Zeta
43 ldollzed • lollower
45 Circulated 10 Mon91 46 "L~ · ·•••• holde11
Ooera 1 t Amusing •e ShOlt 1111noa
s
UNITED Feature Syndicate
Wtdnt1dtr a Puu1e Solved
CA MP BA AL c M !I
A C f: A ... AE 111 A A WH EA T i. U T S A 111 Ill A
l f: TT E A! s A L L 1 ED
TR I ,, . IUIA T
ll T ! L A E AV RA G E S
T A M IE . " II E • A A A AN
0 R O• I! II AT I! s ... SA
I D EA l• ~ • r Hf:" co NY EA E• EN IT l E
E 111 11; s c " f: RE T A I M S •A O ij I l E AR UT 1 11 PA I S O N E D
M l R E s I T S RE AD
PE ND I J E AIM EE L y
12RHtmbhng
13 S1nct1h1C1
39 Troche
41 In 1n un·
determ11'led
manner
Var
l8P11rs
23 Sell·love
25 Aware ot
Slang
2&Ht1vycord
27 W1ler1ng
place•
28 Ca111 cltv
:?9TheMet .
• 0 '1
words
30 Sell·
sallsl1ed
31 Metal
lutener
33Carry
J6ASIOOOH
3e RtQ11111te
38 Moon'1 dark ., ..
•2 Boys narne
4' Informal
room
45 Trodden
way
461mmerse 111
wat er
47 Eared seal
48 Noblemen
50 K1ndof
ranch
51 Partook ol
53 Pollah river
54 Set ol three
55 Tl'lt "A" ol
'8 A '
58 Mine yield
59Slup1d
l)erson
-
; LOCAL I NATIONAL
.. . .
~.January 5, 1978 DAILY PILOT AJ$
· Airport Complex Filling
.
Premium for Medicar e
Going Up 50 Cents Tenants Annowiced for Phase of lroine Project
Tenants for the recenUy completed Phase XI
of the Airport Industrial Complex, Irvine, have
been announced. Phase XI ls more than 60 percent
leased. Tenants are: ·
-Caney Expona, Lt.d., of Tahlequah, Okla.,
and the KRC Investment Group occupy offices at
, 18005 Sky Park Circle with combined space of 2,500
square feet. ·
KeMelh R. Carpenter ls manager of KRC,
which ls a real estate, atocks, commodities and in·
vestment organization, and is vice president of
Caney Exports, which ls opening a live and frozen
cattle brokerage sales office in the Airport In-
dustrial Complex.
Carpen~er's father, Slate Sen. Dennis E .
Carpenter, R-Newport Beach, is pres~t of
Caney Exports.
-J .P. INDUSTRIAL SUPPLY, a new com-
pany, has 2,020 square feet of space at }8103 Sky
Park South. Owner Jesse Pattison said it will sup-
port manufacturers m their assembly and main·
"' tenance work, providing electrical supplies. elec-
trical tools, plumbing fi xtures and equipment and
, similar industrial products.
: -The Great Cover Up, a store, is open at
• 1~11 Sky Park Circle Drive. It sells paint, cur-
tains, drapes, vinyl, tile and wood flooring and
' other interior coverings.
' -SRW Computer Components Co., a new
: company manufacturing computer components of
; all types, occupies about 1,200 square feet of space
, at 18009 Sky Park Circle Drive.
. -THE FEDERAL EXPRESS CORP. of
Memphis, Tenn., has opened an office with 1,100
square feet of space at 18003 Sky Park Circle Drive
to receive packages ror air freight delivery in a
door-lo-door service t hroughout the nation.
-The western hydrocarbon processing m·
dustry office or Belz Laboratories, Inc., at 18007
Sky P a rk Circle Drive, is mvolved in water pl'Ob·
• lems or oil r efineries and petrochemical plants.
The otriee was moved from Huntington Beach.
--Dexter-Rosati. Inc .. a Torrance-based dis·
tributor of computer products, has 1,000 square
feet of space al 18003 Sky Park Circle early for a
technical headquarters supporting its dealers,
mainly scattered throughout South America. The
company distributes the Reality minicomputer
s~st<·ms manufactur('d by the Microoata Corp ..
lrv1nl', as w('ll as other computer products.
-EXCELLON AUTOMATION, A division of
Excellon Industries of Torrance, opened a
Souttiern Cali fornia sales and service office at
Elvis ' Dad Shnns
Birthday Tribute
M EM Pl I lS. Tenn < /\ P 1 -About 10,000 Elvis
Pn•slcy rans an• expected ID Memphis this weekend
to obs!'rv!' what would have been the singer's 43rd
b1rthd,1y But Presley':> father will have no part of
It
I am 11ol l'onnc•c·ted ID any WJY with what 1s
1 ~1k1n~ plat·<· this wt•ckcnd," Vernon Presley said.
I rt·Jllv clon 't know what is being planned. I pro-
hablv w 111tx.•11nava1lable this weekend ...
S1•(·ur1ty ofhc1als at Graceland mansion, where
l'n·sley died Aug. 16, expect large numbers to visit
the singer's f(ravestle Saturday and Sunday. Sun·
day ts Prf.'i.lcy's birthday.
Wine Festival Ends
\'RSAC. Y11i::oslavin CA P l Shortages of wine
and pretty ~iris for festival queens have combined
to closl.' the 40 year·old wine festival in this
\'IOt•yard area of t•astcrn Yugoslavia, organizers
announc•cd
Th(•y said that in recent years, most or the
area's production has gone lo make industrially
bottled spurkhn~ grape juice and •'girls enlisting lo
com pcte in beauty contests most orten were no
beauties at all "
"But in good socialist style, the organizers
added that beauty contests are "an obsolete, petty.
bourgeois happening" anyway.
lilEIT
BIDDER
UllUES
FRI. •"41 SAT.
PORTERHOUSE
S1'EAK ••• $3.10
SUNDAY
NEW¥0RK
STUK ••• $2.15
MON.
V. FRIED
CHICKEN • $1.85
Alt ........ ....,..'".,.,,,.,., wttfil .... Md .... .... ,.. .. ., ....... ....,..,..,.. ... ~ .... ......... ......... ~-.,,...., ........ " ..... .
17775 Soulheast Mam St .. with 800 square reel of
space. Excellon manufactures drilllng, routing
.ind programming equipment tor the printed
c1rcu1l bQard industry.
-"The Star ving Artist" studio has been
opened by Mr. and Mrs. William C. Ross at 18011
Sky Park Circle. with 2.000 square feet of space.
The studio does custom framing and provides
facilities where a customer may do his own fram-
ing. It also sells art supplies and palntings.
The Rosses and their associates t.each painting
in classes or five to 10 persons.
-"IT J UST SO HAPPENS" IS the name of a
new antique shop at 18011 Sky Park Circle. Owner Patr~cla Lee has 2,000 square feet of space and
specializes In goods from Brit.am
-Headquarteri. for Shm Again, a weight loss
program. has be\!n est ablished by Temeku
Laboratories, lnc • tn offices With 2,000 square feel
of.s pace at 17779 ,)Jal-' St.
The product 1s a soybean-based protein
powder.
-Orange Turf Supply, which provides turf
maintenance services and equipment, has moved
from 18001 Sky Park South to 17777 Main St. Owrier
Michael L. Kendall said the transfer was made to
increase space from 3,60(} squaFe feet to 4, 750.
-TII E BF.NTLEY NEVADA Corp. has moved
from 17932 Sky Park Circle Drive with 1 600
square feet in the Airport Industrial 'complex'. lo
larger quarters ul 18003 Sky Park Circle Drive,
with 3. 100 square· fl'l•l.
The company Rerv1 ces equipment that it
ma nufactur~s in Nevada to monitor machinery
and prevent tnt('rrupllons in machinery service.
The Dahlgn•n Sales Co., representing sport-
ing goods manufacturers, has moved from 17972
Sky Park Circlt• Drive
-The John J Madison Co , importer and
wholesaler of South American decorative ceramic
figurines. has moved from 17971 Sky Park Circle
lo 18103 Sky Park South in the Airport Industrial
Complex, 1ncreas1Jlft his floor space from 1.600 to
2,500 square feel
-Herbert llawl<1Ds Realtors has moved from
17802 Sky Park Bhd., tn the Airport Industrial
Complex. to HIOl I Sky Park Circle Drive The
move 1Dcrea-.('S floor i.pacc• from 700 square feet to
2.000
~\-UMe'-f
.. ii
..... 1,.........
D e•atla9
W ASlUNGTON (AP) -Elderly
Americana will have to pay SO cents
more a month starting in July for the
portion of Medicare that helps pay
doctors' bllh and other out-of ·hospital
medical expenses.
The mont.bly premium for Part 8 of
Medicare will increase to $8.20 from
$7. 70, the Department ot Health,
EducaUonandWelfareannounced.
Social · Security recipients 6S or
older and some disabled persons
automatically are eligible for Part A
o f Medicare with no premium
char a ed.
HEW ALSO ANNOUNCED that
monthly premiums will rise July 1 to
$63 from $M for 21,000 persona who
voluntarily enrolled in Part A. 1bese
persons mu.st pay for the coverage
like a replar insurance plan because
they did not qualify for Social Securi-
ty or Railroad Retirement.
Sol Lioowitz <above),
one of the Panama
Cana l treatv
negotiators, wiil
participate 10 a de-
bate J an. 13 with
Ronald R eaga n
c below) on the docu-
mcn ts .
NEARLY ALL THE 26 million
persons eligible for free hospital in·
s urance under Part A of Medicare
also voluntarily enroll in Part B, with
the monthly premium deducted in
most cases from their Social Security
or Railroad Retirement benefits.
The monthly premium jumped
from J'T.20 to $7.70 la.st July. IL h as
cllmbed steadily from $3 a m onth
when the program began in July 1966.
However, the premium pays onJy a
portion of the full cost of the medical
insurance.
HE W SAID THAT a full premium
'l1e announcement of the premium
increase comes on the heels of a $20
Jump in the deductible amount that all
Medicare beneficiaries must pay un-
der Part A for actual hospital ex-
penses. Starting Sunday, Medicare
beneficiaries became responsible for
paying the first $144 of their hospital
bill, up from $124.
THE LAW REQUIRES HEW to ad·
just the premiums and deductibles
periodically. would be $1J.40 a month. The govern-
ment makes up the difference from
general revenues. The increases in
the premium are limited to the s ame
HEW Secretary Joseph A. Califano
Jr. said, "This latest mandated in·
crease is further evidence of the need
for action on the administration's
hospital cost contalnment bill to pro-
vide the American taxpayer and the
senior citizen some relief from such
sharply escalating hospital bills."
, percentage th at Social Security
benefits are raised each year.
The raise in both the benefits in 1977
and in the premium in July works out
to 5.9 percent.
Verdict OK'd
FRESNO CAP> -A
man convicted in Kern
County after three mis·
trials of batter y on a
peace officer bas lost bis
appeal. Trial errors cit·
cd in the appeal by Gary
Allen Tindle were not
prejudicial, the state's
5th District Court of Ap-
peal ruled.
WANTED-
DIA MOND s • GE'fllS'J'ONES
Jewels by Josephs 1s •earehlng for diamonds and
gemstones from pmate Individuals and estates, Careful
examination and ev.iuatlon by our expertS. Highest
prices paid Call 540-9068 10oe dally, Saturday 1~. Sun~ closed Mk 1o; Betty Gr~ or Frank VanderWatl ·
iewels by ioseph
South Coast Ptaza • 3333 Bristol. Costa Mesa • 540-9066
when. you visit
COLUMBIA SAVINGS'
two Orange County locations
ANAHEIM • COSTA MESA
.IOIN ua POR R•PRUH~•NTS AND SURPRIS•••
This beautiful. Illustrated Orange
County Restaurant Menu Gulde Is
our way of saying "thank you'' to
all our friends in the community!
Have you ever wondered where
to dine locally on Beef Welllngton?
What aurprl.ses are to be found
on the menus of our local Oriental
restaurants?
The Menu Gulde of Orange County
haa actual reproductJons of menus
from the flneat reataurant1 in
Orange County.
Come In tor your FREE copy today!
While the aupply IH ta.
* * Thia treaeured volume offers cull·
nary temptations yoµ may never
know exlatedl
When you stop in, please ask us
about our free financial services
available with a minimum balance
••• or let one of our savings coun·
selora help you plan your own
balanced savings program to flt
your short and long term needs .
.. ,..
.. *
ONLY AT COLUMBIA SAVINGS
ALL OFFICESOPEN DAILY 8 ·8, SATURDAY 9·3
. ..
*SAVINGS .._
*
\
AJ8 DAILY PILOT • • Ousted
M .. 1n1ster .
. Returns
ELIZABETH, N.J. (AP) - A
legal dlapute over the ouster ol a
' Baptlst mlnlater who allegedly
atandered members of his
ehurcb from the pulpit haa been
returned to the con1reaaUon for
lta judpnenL •
A Superior Court Judge
Wednesday lifted h1.a order bar1 ring the Rev. Miles J . Austin
from the pulpit of hi• Westfield
church. He had been charged in a
suit filed by deacons at lhe Bethel
Baptist Church with slandering
church members during
sermons.
THE DEACONS also charged
that Austin failed in bis duties to
visit the sick, counsel young peo-
ple and pay his pledge or $320 to
the church.
Judge Harold A. Ackerman
nlled that ooly the congregation
had a right to decide on the
ouster. He ordered that a meet-
ing or the JSO.member congrega.
lion with a neutral moderator be
beld to decide the iaaue.
The congregation, in a poll
last month, voted to retain lhe
minister. That vote waa not held
under the terms designated by
Ackerman.
ATTORNEY WALTER Cohn,
who represented the congrega-
tion, said the ruling reaffirmed
that members of each church in
the Baptist faith , not the
deacons, control operations ..
The deacons claimed tbe
minist e r "s landered
parishioners from the pulpit"
and singled out members by
name for criticism.
--.,, . -~ ~ -----------"'
ThurM21y, January 5, 1978
UGINDr
c::J SINGLE FAMILY
r::::J OPEM SPAce
l:\:N·:J EQUESTRIAN ESTATES
f':B INDUSTRIA1.
~TOWNHOUSES "\
-APARTMENTS aJOOMMUNITYCOMWERCIAL
New Clenaente Homes·
Initial plans for development of 2,200 acres
on Forster Ranch in northeast San
Clemente are before city's P1anning Com·
mission. Proposed development would in-
volve 3,942 homes, to be built by 1984. The
building in Forster Ranch, along with Vis-
bee k and Reeves ranches, would shift San
Clemente's population center from
I
downtown section to area of Avenida Pico
interchange with San Diego Freeway, said
City Manager Gerald Weeks. Majority of
Forster ranch land lies in unincorporated
county territory, but it will be incorporated
by the city piecemeal as tract maps are
approved, said city planner Clay Dillman.
(JACK ANDERSON) REVEALS In the DAILY PILOT
ere'sarewa
LOCAL I NATIONAL
Rise la Demand
Power Supply
Threatened?
NEW YORK CAP) -Demand for electricity rose 1n 1971
almost as fast as before the Arab oll embar10. industry re·
searchers say, promptlnc analysts to warn that the ouUoolt for the
naUon ·s pe>Wer supply may soon become "qulte threatenJ.na,. ••
The Edison Electric InsUtute, a utWty-lnduatry raearch
iroup, aaid Wednesday In Its year-end report thal ln the )leaf just
ended electricity output for all the United States except the
Northwest and Southwest pew by 6 pereent, about the aame as the
rate of ll"Owtb before the embarao.
NO&TBWmt AND SOUl'llWEST states, lariely dependent
on hydroelectric power which was burt tbia year by droulhta, bad
a rate ol growth of around 1 percent.
The power situation in the Northwest wu ao crlUcal this past
summer that voluntary ralloninl waa called for by local officials,
and about 500 workers were laid off wben sel*eral alumlnum fac-
tories shut down befoce ralm relieved one of the wont drouahta bt-
the area ·s history.
Peak power demand -the amount of slectriclty needed dur·
ing the tDOSt extreme clrcumslances -increased 6.5 percerit In
1977. Utilities must plan on supplying the peak amount, even
though that means some of lhe1r racWUes will be unused tow much
of the rest ot the year.
W. DONBAJI CJtA WFORD. Institute president, predicted tUt
pe~ demand would arow an additional 6 pereent lD 1978.
•'The anticipated continued growth of demand ln the coming
years strongly emphalizes the necessity to construct new genera\..
ing plants ... so they will be ready in time to meet consumer
needs," he aaid. "Otherwlae, there will be electricity shortages."
Many industry experts already have warned that rotating
blackouts or government-imposed restrictions on electricity use
are possible by next year in the Southeast and by 1986 in all other
areas.
ON WEDNESDAY, ANALYSTS for Morgan Guaranty Trust
Co. of New York said that "unless correcUve 1t.eps are taken soon,
the outlook for the nation's electric power supply is quite threaten-
ing." It takes 12 years to build a nuclear power plant and S years
to 8 years to build a convenUonal ooe.
One analyst waa quoted by Mor&an Guaranty u predicting a
"hair-curling" power criail by 198.\. •
Now, if you keep $2,000 in any
Wells Fargo savings plan--ra=ook
or certfficate..-you can c · the
biggest reward wdve ever offered.
No--Charge Checking.
No monthly sexvice charge,
·no minimum balance to worry
about, and personalized checks
at no extra cost.
\Jp to 7112% Interest.
Wells Fargo rewards you
with the highest bank interest
rate the law allows: 5% on
regular passbook savings and
even more on longer term
certificate accounts-up to 7~%
when deposited for 6 years~
Safe Deposith
$8 size-or $8 credit toWards
\ a larger size (availability mhy
... vary from office to office).
,
lravelers Checks.
Provided, in U.S. dollars,
with no service charge as part cf
your Wells Fargo Reward.
Iersonal Service from
a Iersoruil Banker. TM
Personal effort built Wells
Fargo. That's why we introduced
Personal Bankers to offer you
the utmost in personal seIYice.
Your Personal Banker will
help you set up your Reward·
Account, and will pay individual
attention to all your banking
needs. \
...
....
IN IDE: •Movies
t
•Television
........
TED McCLAIN SCORES OVER LA'S JAMAAL WILKES.
r Buffalo Triumphs
l
f West Raps Lakers
r· ' ,, '.~ After 94-93 Loss
I BUFFALO (AP) -Randy Abernethy scored to put it in
Smith and J erry West a greed overtime (the Lakers won the I that the Los Angeles Lakers game)," said Smith. "It was the
made some key m ental mis-same play. Lou knew exacUy
lakes. But Saulh was a Jot hap. what lo expect.
pier about them th<i n We'>t was. ''He knew the side was clear."
After Ted McClain stoic an m· continued Smith. ''I was sup-
bounds pa.,s with 16 '>cconds Jefl. posed lo mess around and s hoot
Smith drew a foul from Loll with four or five seconds left.
Huds on a nd ~an k both free The lane was wide open and
throws with 10 seconds to play that's when he pushed me.
for a 94.93 Buffalo Braves' vie· "Jf that bad been me, I would I tory over Los Angeles Wednes· have let myself go, knowing with
1 day night. the big fella (Kareem Abdul-
1 Norm Nixon of the Lakers Jabbar} back there I wasn't go.
missed an l!Hoot shot with five ing to go far.". Smith, who I seconds to go that could have scored 30 points, concluded with I given his team the win. a grin.
I .. I have no idea what hap-The victory ended a five game
pened," Los Angeles coach West losing streak for the Braves and 1 said of McClain's ste al. "We couldn't have come at a more
s hould have called time out. opportune time, said coach Cot.-
Players have to be alert lo (on Fitzsimmons.
things like that. You clln't do "Every one is big. but this is
everything from the bench." the biggest win. We were on a
The next target or his dis-five-game losing streak. We had
pleasure was Nixon's shot. a horrible monlb (3-10). This win
"It was taken too quickly. It is a little sweeter, qainst the
was not the shot we wanted to Lakers, led by Kareem Abdul·
take." Jabbar, .. said Fitzsimmons,
Then West generalized his sounding a little like a radio an-
crlticism. nouncer.
"The f1r.1 t three quarters we Jim McDaniels. playing in
didn't expend anything. You place of the injured Swen Nater.
can't walk for three quarters played Abdul·Jabbar to a
and expect to win a basketball alandoft
game... LOS AHGl!LES "" -OerltWf "· wi.-"·
Smith, meanwhile, said the ~= .. ~-::.;:-'·1••••u.
Lakers shollld have known what 11uFFALO <•o -""''"' u, ••rM9 2,
to expect from him. Mco.ni.11 ie. w1111-'· Smla. •· MCC1111111. Lloyd I, WlllOlllll'lll¥ ~ 0-. .. TotAllt .. 16-H "4. "The same thing happened in Lo• Anoe• '11 11 'D 21.....a
Los Angeles when I scored to ·~ota1; F-.-t.a1An11111ao.2~:ro2:.......,.
give us the lead but Toll\ At._,IJllUl_..W.
RoOkie Stops Kings
Bedard B~ LA, 4-0
LANDOVER, Md. (AP) -
.Jim Bedat'd, who posted bis first
NaUonal Hockey League shutout
1n the WubJ.nlton Capltals' 4-0
' •lctor1 over the Los An&eles xmaa Wednesday night, remem·
bera a more ex.ciUn1 1ame in
• ..tllch he performed, but not a
more 1tdlfylq one. 1t ••1t wam't the m91t exciting rame, .. aaid Bedar~, a rooltie.
r · o..r¥r ... ,..,
' . Ola•llel •• , •
~·1 think I had ono when I was
about U that wu a Jot more bee·
tic, but tb1S was the moat aatls-
fylna."
Bedard~ 34 lbOtl CID hla
1 WU to tbe lbUt®t.
t • ••Tbe ml.in thin& -I t.h1nk the •11D dltt..-ence -It 'WUtl't Jmt
tM ant uve l hid to mu• and tllat Wll It. 1 UIUally maU oae
••• and tben the puck wu
...... &aid Bedard.
"TM .icmemen ,,.,. elm'· 9'!i1 tbe mm .net the PQa out.0 JilPt," .be added.. ·'Tbe .....
11am tl'8 point 1 ''"' au Iii# •allJ '°" Olll1 ... ..., OC' ..
• r •
•' .
Thureday,January 5, 1978 DAILY PILOT Bl
.
Trojftns Open Pac-8 Play
By The Ass~iated Press Wasbineton State at PuJlman
A number of questions con· completes the weekend's ·ac-cerning the 1977·78 Pacitic-8 livitlea.
Confercmce basketball race may The aeventh-ranked Bruins
be answered by late Sunday af. will be shootini for their 12lb te~~~.,°~e play begins toniaht at stralaht Pac.a championship. A
o • ._ palr of wins on the road at the Pullman, Was h., where outletofleagueplaywouldprob-
Southern Cal opposes ablyputthemlnthedrlver'aseat. Washington State.
Friday night, UCLA plays at UCLA,' with a 9-1 record, bas
Washington, California plays at the beat mark in the Pac.8 en.
Oregon and Stanford plays at tering league play but the
Oregon State. Bruins have yet to play a game
On Saturday night, USC plays outside of Pallley Pavilion.
at Washington, California plays Oregon has the second-best
al Oregon State and Stanford is non-conference record at 9-3
at Ore eon . A regionally followed by Stanford at 8-3:
t elevised game Sunday after·· -l¥-ashington-Stat-e at 8-4
n oon matching UCLA and Washington at 7-4, California at
6·4 and USC. and Ore1Qn ~ate
al 6·6.
USC is trying to bounce back
from a pair of horrendous COO·
terence seasons of 0.14 and 2·12.
Freshmen Cllff Roblnaon and
On TVToulglat
aaa .. 11el J3at10
(Tape Delayed)
Purvis Miller have helped the
Tl'ojans get off to a decent start this season.
"With our team at full
strength, I'm convinced we can
play wttb anyone in tbe
league," says ~SC -coach Bob
I
.,.
Boyd. •·we are going to be in
the thick o! it, UCLA is still a
slleht favorite to win the COii·
ference. "Washington Stale is one ot
the rn~t. talented teams in tlle
conference," added Boyd of the
Trojans' opponent tonight. use ls Sol in home 1ames and
l ·S OD the road thus fat. Guard
Steve Smith, who has been
sidelined because of a knee in·
jury, bas been elven medical
clearance to play toni,bt.
Washing ton State 'iS led by
sophomore guard Terry KeUy,
who is averaging 13.6 points per
1ame, and 7-f00l·2 junior center
James Doaaldson, aventjp:g
13.3 point.a and 11.8 rebounds.
Chest Pains
Hospitalize
Evert Woman.Athlete of Year
Wade FirUsMs Second in Balwting
Hank Aaron NEW YORK (AP) -Chris fJ!tez:t.Ji111 Indisputably No. 1 in women's tennis and planning to \give other competitors a
break, bas been named the Associated P ess female athlete of the
year for the third time in four years. ATLANTA (AP) -Henry
Aaron, major league baseball's
all-time home run king who was
hospitalized Tuesday with chest
pains, remained in an Atlanta
hospital today for observation.
Aaron, 43, a vice president of
the Atlanta Braves, s uffered the
pains Tuesday while driving his
son Larry lo a bus station.
"I felt a pain in my legs,"
Aaron said from his hospital
room Wednesday, .. and it moved
up into my chest. I decided that
when yoll start hurting like that,
the best thing lo do is find
somebody to do something about
1l."
Aaron called his doctor and
was checked into Piedmont
I lospital early Tuesday for ex-
tensive tests.
Aaron's physician, Dr. David
Watson, said Aaron was "doing
well."
He did not say when the
former slugger would be re-
leased from the hospital.
.. I'll be here at least through
Thursday.'' said Aaron ... That's
when the tests will be finished to
see what caused the ache. They
don't know the problem now;
they're st.ill checking."
Whatever the results sh<''N,
Aaron says h e wW have to slow
down.
"l'm over exhausted ••• I've
been' traveling too much," he
said. "I 'v e had too much
responsibility."
Aaron estimated he traveled 150,000 miles last year, either as
director of minor league person-
nel for the Braves or doing
public relations work for
Magnavox.
"I'd make a speech one day in
California and another the next
day in Denver," Aaron said.
"It's tiring. But I feel all right
now. I'll feel better when the
tests are done.0
Aaron also admitted the chest
. pains frightened him more than
any last ball ever did.
J'IL4S, BORG,
CONNORS BREEZE
NEW YORK -Top-seeded
Guillermo Vilas beat Manuel
Orantes, 6-4, 6·1 Wednesday
night and Bjorn Borg, Jimmy
Connors and Brian Gottfried
also won first round matches in
the $400,000 Grand Prix Masters
tennis tournament at Madison
Square Garden.
Borg defeated Raul Ramirez
6·2, 6-4; Connors toppled Eddie
Dibbs 7-5, 6·2: and Gottfried
beat Roscoe Tanner 7-5, 6-2.
CHRIS EVERT
The gracious 23-year-old blond f Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
won 11 of 14 tournaments and 70 or 7 atches in 1977 and was
ranked the No. l U.S. female fo.r: the fQllrlh consecutive year.
Nadia Comaneci of Romania won the award last year for her
gymnastics feats at the Olympics.
Evert, who hasn't taken off more than three weeks in a row
from tennis since she aradualed from hi1h school in 1973, admitted
recently that there are days when she can't stand the sieht of a
tennis ball.
"It used to be so euy for me to get psyched up for a match,
but it's been so difficult in the last two years;• she said "Now.
almost every tournament I play. I have three good matches and
two lousy ones."
Her opponents might noUhlnk those two matches per tourna-
ment are lousy enough, but Evert has announced she will sit out
the major circuit tournaments for January and February, at least.
The tennis queen received 110 votes from a nationwide panel of
sports writers and broadcasters, compared with 43 for Virginia
Wade, who upset Evert in the Wimbeldon semifinals last year.
Tennis players and golfers dominated the voting as third place
Vient to 15-year-old court upstart Tracy Austin with 34 votes, and
fourth place to LPGA money-leader Judy Ranlcin with 15 votes.
Rankin won $122,800 on the wn lour.
Fifth . and sixth in the AP balloting were golfers Kathy
Whitworth with 12 votes. a~d H~llls Stacy, with 10 votes.
~~ Clipped Short ~
Payton, Martin Hono~ed~
NEW YORK -Rushing
champion Walter Payton of the
Chicago Bears, whose yardage
total on the ground was the thlrd
highest in National Football
League history. was selected of· fenslve player of the year
Wednesday by the Associated
Press. Payton received 81 of the 84
• votes. Miami quarterback Bob
Griese &ot the other three votes.
Payton led the NFL in rushing
wltb 1,852 yards and set a siniJe-
game rushing mark of Z75 yards.
Meanwhile, Harvey Martin.
the chief ·mtimldator of the
Dallas Cowboys' "Doomsday II"
defense, today was selected the
defensive player of the year.
Martin. a five-year defensive
end out of East Texas State, nar-
rowly edged the Denver Bron·
cos• star defenslve end, Lyle
Alzado, ln the voU.na.
la:zTrades
NEW ORLEANS -The New
Orleans Jan have acquired
pard Slick Watts from SeaWe
and traded for\IVard Nale
Williams to Golden State.
In return for Watts. the Jau
wlll give Seattle a firat-round
selection In the National Basket-
ball Association's 1981 college
draft.
For Williams, Golden State
will give the Jazz a second-
round draft choice this year,
plus an undisclosed amount of
money.
Telt•cher Ad.,ance•
AUCKLl\ND, New Zealand -
Eliot Teltacher defeated Bob
Giltlnan. s.a. fJ.l 'Wedneaday to
advance to the quarterfinals of
the New Zealand Open tennis championships .
Eric Fromm also advanced to
the quarterfinals by beating
Chris Sylvan, 6-3, 7-S.
Oony Parun and Chris Lewis
also advanced. Parun beat Dave
Simmonds, 6-2, 6-C while Lewis
defeated Gary Slater, 7-5. 7-S.
In other second-round
matches, Karl Meiler defeated
Dale Collings, 6-2, 6-2 while Rod
Frawley beat Bill Lloyd. 7·5, 4-6.
7-5. .
1t'a4e Defeated
WASHING~ON-Kathy May
has pulled off the second major
upset ol the first $100,000
women's tennis tournament or
1978.
The 21·.Year-old M•Y ousted
1977 Wi mble don champion
Virginia Wade. 6·2. 3·6, 7-s.
Wednesday night to reach the
quarterfinals of the Washington
tournament.
Billie Jean King was defeated
the night before by unseeded
Regina Marsikova.
In other matches Wednesday.
Nancy Richey dereated Lesley
Hunt 6-2, 6-2 and Virginia RUzict
atopped Pam Shriver 6·4. 7-5.
Suri Sign• Renert1
The California Surf pro soccer
team has signed free agent Len
Renery, a defensive specialist
who played for the New York
Cosmos, Baltimore Comets and
San Diego Jaws before coming
to the expansion, Anaheim·
based Surf.
Renery is a 28-year-otd native
of England. but became a
naturalized U.S. citizen last
year. HI.a signing is the second
announced by the Surf. The OliJ:y
other player the team bas undtt
eontractls aoalle Dave Jotrest.
Net Oanfe O,.eu
RANCHO MmAGE -The
Wrd annual National Collegiate
Tennis Classic begins today at
the Mlasion Hills Tennis Club.
The event bu drawn entries
from lS unlveralUes -USC.
UCLA, Stanford, Callfornla,
Arizona State, Arizona,
Alabama. San Jose State, UC
Irvine, Dute; Tennessee,
Oregon, Louisiana .state.
Soutbe.m DllD.ols and Wlscon.sln.
ColdSoCal
F~, 93-75
POMONA :.-Sulferinc tb.roqla
one of their 'fl'orlt allootiDS ~ of_ the season, the
V JD guards of Southern
Calllornla College (Cotta M-.a)
dropped a 93-7$ noo-eonference
baaketball decislon to Cal ~
(Pomona), here, Wedoeldq
n11ht.
The Vanauardl, now 1.S. hMl
• 35 percent •boottnl pettenlqe lrom tbe field, nearly 20 below tbelr aeuon averaae. In the ant
~11, ~11 clictecl on only 25 pa-
;cent ot tbelr ahotl.
ffouthem Callfornla led bdet· b' at 11·10 befor-e Cal Poly ran off 10 atralpt poblla that doe
dded th1np earJT.
....... QIOlltttVft•
.,.... ': : , : ...... ' • , 2 ~ • I I t ,,_,,. 1 • • t ~ .,,,. ................ .
~ 4'1ta.ler tlOlt ........... • •.J• ......... ''' W•l'Mr 4 I I• TMlts JttlU'IS
~-......
•J OAll Y PILOT 1 nur>U.ii, Jotnui;rr !i I J 7U
HUNTINGTON BEACH RESIDENT CHUCK STRANGE SAILS OVER 18 PARKED CARS RECENTLY AT ONTARIO.
Edison Falls
With 0:05
Left, 66-65
By DAVfo: CUNNINGHAM
Ol 119 D•lly P1lol 51111
After squandt•ring jn IR poant
lead, Edison lt1gh of Huntington
Beach Jost, 66-65, in non league
basketball to v1s1t1nf..( Kcnnl.'dy
ll igh <La Palma) Wcdne:-.day
night
The only lt·ad Kcnm•tly ever
had camt· with five se<.:onds re
ma1ning 1n the game. when Rich
Diaz swished a lO fool Jumper to
give the Vightmg Irish their ont•
point victor)
Diaz scored the last seven
µ01nls of the game. and without
his clutch outside s hooting
t:d1son maghl be 10-2 now, tn-
:-.t<'ad of 9-J
Edison built its lH point bulge
in the second quarter and :.tall
led by as much as 12 early an the
lourth penoct before Kennedy's
iough man-to-man defense start
l'd Lo take its toll.
With 3:04 remaining the Fight-
ing I rash had cut the lead to four,
.ind Edison coach Don Leavey
'·ailed .tame out to put his team
into a oatienl. stall·lyoe offense which would take only the sure.
:-.hots .
Al first. 1l appeared the tactic
would \H>rk Edison chewed up
nt'arly half of the remainin.l!
t1mt', then Glt•n Currity !-.unk a
dnv1ng layup to put Edison rn
lrnnt hv :-.1x
But il1a1. runm·t·ll'd on tht' first
11{ h1:-; < lulc·h shoto., to l lll the lead
to four ai•a1n, and Ed1-.11n com·
m1ll<·d two cosll) turntJ\Crs m
the fin al fl<I s1•c·11nds lo open the
door for Kennedy
Thi· ganw \.\ 1nn1ng shut left
l.d1 ... on pl.1\t•1s and ran <;
-.1 unnt·d. for most or the first hair
f<.Pnnl'<I~ duln't look Jake 1t
lwlon~t·cl on the same• court with
thf' talcn!L'd Chari~crs
\ltk1 ~ld'ourl hit four of his
I trS l r I\ I' ... h11h and has Edison
learn ral'£'11 to a 14·4 lead in the
11pt'ntni.: f1111r rnrnutes of the con
I l•Sl
Hy lht· £'arly !-.lages of jhe
... ccond quarter the lead Wad
ha lloonl'd to 28 10. but the faucet
-.lJrll•d to run cold for the
Chargers aft<.•r that Numerous
tu rnovl'rS pron•d costly. and
Kennedy v. as able to !.'law its
wuy back and boost its record to
IH
KtMedy IM I
DIAi
All•l•r•
Burn\
\vp•tn\
W.tt1"-
L•mbdln
It II '4 IP . ' ' " ) 0 l ..
J J • ij
•• ' 0
13 • • " 0 0 I 0
L•wrtnt•• U J 0 1
16.11 [dl\01\
19 II pl IP
Mccourt • n 1 II
All•!\ I n l 1
80#tn I 1 \ I
~ tlN>rn.trt.1 J t Q I
C.•rr11v ~ o 1 u
Tutton .. o l ~
f rPudnbrQ 1 1 1 ~
(,ull• I 0 ~ A
Poi.t11lo. 0 0 I ~
Z1mmerm.,.. O 1 O
Total• 1fl U " .. Tohl\ JO \ 11 •>
korelly O..•rlef'•
10 70 U 71-
14 u~ 1• tt •\
Costa Mesa Hosts
San Clemente Five
San Clemente High's Tritons
are seeking to even their South
Coast League basketball mark at
2·2 tonight (7 l when they invade
winless Costa Mesa High.
Jumping l~ Vehicles:
· It's a Strange Thing
By HOWARD L. HANDY
Ol llw D•llY Pllol Sllfl
When the everyday motorist
travels a mountain road, has a
hlowout on a dangerous curve
Hnd goes off the side of the moun-
t a an in his vehicle, he is apt to fiy
through the iur for a considerable
distance
Such a jump would not be pre·
ml'dilated. however
Chuck Strange of Huntington
Beach isn't jumping off the side
of mountains in his pickup truck
but he is j umping over other
vehicles in premeditated flight
Strange, an egocentric on the
ltn<.' of motorcycle d aredevil Evel
Knievel. has no athlehc back·
ground for his specialty Of JUmp·
in~ automob1lt!s in his Chevy Luv
tr uck.
lie says his attraction to the
death -defying Jumping craze
comes from a feeling or bemg
hooked.
"I feel I am hooked on the
sound of crushing metal," he
says. "The sensation I get while
flyin~ through the air and not be·
ang able to see the landing r amp
is something J really can't
describe.
"I would imagine it's s1m1lar lo
being high on some type of
stimulant."
Showmanship and a flair for
bragi?adocio similar to that used
CHUCK STRANGE
by wrestlers m their heyday in
the early days of television are a
part of the makeup of Strange.
He Is accompanied by a young
lady with a shapely form who
verifi es his every statement as
gospel truth. That young lady.
Somm er Shadoe, 1s described by
Stran~e as his bodyguard.
11<.'r presence and hand-in-hand
Big Lead l' anishes
Oilers Hold Off
LB Jordan, 75-74
D) a Daily Pilot Wriler
1 luntington Reach lllgh School
pulled mto a commanding 24·6
l<.'ad in the first quarter, then
hrld on at the fini sh to post a
75.74 victory over visiting Long
Beach J ordan Jligh's P anthers
W<.'dnesday night in non-league
bas ketball action in the winner's
eym
A torrid first quarter in which
the Huntington Beach Oilers
stole the ball seven times, three
by Raco Thompson and two by
Curt Steinhaus, gave the host
team enough of an edge to hold
on at the finish when the Pan-
thers scored a gift basket as
time ran out.
Marco Pagnanelli was the
leader or the first quarter scor-
ing dnvc, canning nine points.
lie had one basket afler stealing
the ball mid way through the
period, then captured the final
six points of the quarter.
As hot as the Oilers were (8
for 15), lhe opposite proved true
for the Panthers who could hit
on only three of 16 attempts
from the floor in the same
period.
As the case when one team gets
off to a commanding lead, Jordan
was forced to foul more frequent-
ly and the Oilers converted at the ·
line to hold the lead all thew ay.
In the firs t period, Jordan
turned the ball over 11 times and
had 18 for the half. Of this
number, 10 were steals by the
alert Oilers defense. Three
steals, two by Steinhaus and one
by Pagnanelli, caused the only
Pa nthers turnovers of the
second half when they almost
caught up.
LaJ..-110
01;,..,
Grten
8•r~r
l•\Mn c ...... ,
PallerlOI\ Veller
LI..., by
J••ltr Hodqn
To1111
,, ",.. • 0 •II
t 0 5 II
I> 0 • u
0 0 3 0
0 0 1 0
2 0 • •
2 0 2 ' • 0 • •
' 0 0 1 3 1 2 I
:i.12'7'
l111H-.-ll "It, ... ThomPIOft t 1 1 t
Slelnh•us • • 3 12
P9slOIHI 0 0 0 0
Wootefl 12 ' 2 a
P99n1nelll I S 3 21
C.M 0010 •v•1• 2 1 2 s
Tolall 21 21 12 7S
kM•'°tO.rtan
L8 Jorden
HunllnQton BNch
' 22 22 ,._,.
2• 1' 11 :IO-IS
Area Sports.
walk to inspect the t akeoff and
landing ramps before a JUmp and
her apparent 1.:oncern fur he~
employer's safety after a jump,
add to the pageantry
Whal 1s lhe sensation Strange
feels when he makes a jump?
"It's similar to :,omeone fling-
ing you across the room like a
paper airplane." he says. ··on a
motorcycle, you a r e totally
aware or what 1s going on and you
can see the landing ramp.
··1n a pickup truck. you can't
see anyt.hmg but the hooct and the
sky above. It seems like you are
up there forever. sometimes··
So far, m 10 jumps, he has been
airborne for 35 seconds, a n
average of 3.5 per JUmp.
Hilling the landing ramp is a
terrific jolt.
"I imagine it is hke you taking
your own vehicle and jumpmg off
a three·story building," he says
How did he happen to get into
this field?
"I don't hkt• bikes, .. he says "I
used to compete 10 demohtaon
derby events and dad some pre-
cision spin:.. I was looking for
something different lo Identify
with. I started with ramp to
ground car Jumps and came up
with the pickup 1ump idea over
and us mg ramps.'·
He has four trucks to carry his
equipment to areas where he will
perform. It 1s an expensive un·
dertaking and he has destroyed
several pickup Jumping truck!>
along the way
His current ramps cost $20.000
and he as building a new landing
ramp for $15,000
His worst accident found b1m
breakmg two ribs and tnJ~nng
his back. He also broke his left
heel.
· Another lime, he suffered a bee
s ting and at Ontaril> Motor
Speedway recently, his truck hat
the retaining v. all after coming
of£ the landing ramp and the left
side of the vehicle was destroyed
but he was uninjured .
At Ontario. he jumped 18
parked cars but says he C<t n gel
as high as 40.
He has a vendetta going
against Kmevt>I
"Wherever 1 go, people ask me
what I think of Evel." he says. ··1
don't think much or him but I
have no choice except to answer.
As far as I'm concerned, I will
slam him every chance I get.
"I have challenged him to a
jumpoff on a winner-take-all
basis, increasing the number of
cars we will jump as we go along.
I am confident I can win but he
hasn't responded ...
His margin for error 10 landing
is slim. A one degree move to the
side by wind can cause a two-foot
change at the landing site a nd the
ramps are only e1ght·feet wide.
Strange will next be flying his
pickup through sp~ce in the
Houston Ast.rodome, J an. 13-14
and after that, it's pursuit of
,Knievel and a series of jum·
poffs-tf it can be arranged.
BASKETBALL t W.:GCELLAN¥
Saddleback 16-1
Gauchos Blitz
Harbor, 107-69
By CRAIG SHEFF
Ol IM Deily "111t , .....
There's nothing like a good
tongue lashing to get a basket-
ball team back in gear. Just ask
Saddleback College's Bill
Mulligan.
The effervescent Gauchos
coach chewed his clu~ out good
Tuesday night after it squan-
dered a big lead before narrowly
defeating Mt. San -4nton10
College.
And it apparently worked
because the Gauchos romped to
one of their easiest wins of the
season Wednesday night -a
107-459 victory · over vlsilln1 LA
Harbor Colle1e.
The ~ the Gauchos' loth in
a row, ran their season mark to
16·1 and set the stage for Satur-
day night's Mission Conference
opener against invading San
Bernardino Valley College.
"We bad a bad second half
Tuesday night and I chewed
them out pretty gooct. Then we
had about a 15-minute talk
tonight (Wednesday). I told
them I wanted them to play
some defense, and to s top using
gimmickry," said Mulligan.
·•We played aggressively
against Harbor and that was the
difference. After tonight I think
we're ready for conference play
t o be gin," said the Gauchos
coach.
Saddlebaclc blew out Harbor
early behind the shooting of Tom
Lloy and Rieb McElrath. The
Gau ch os. be hind Lloy's 10
points. jumped to a commanding
· 28· 11 lead and coasted the rest of
the way.
Saddleback enjoyed a S4·2S
halftime edge, but Harbor made
a brief flurry behind the shoot-
ing of Chris Thomas to cut it to
56-34 early m the second half.
But the Gauchos didn't ratUe-.
outscoring the Seahawks, 15·2 in
the next three minutes to grab a
7 1 ·36 advantage. It was a
) awner the rest of the way.
In that lS.pomt s pree Lloy bit
four buckets -. three of them
from the 12-16-foot range.
Saddleback's biggest lead was
99-54 with 5:25 to play.
Lloy finished with 20 points.
hitting all nmo or his field goal
attempts. McElrath and Rodney
Miller had 14 while Rick Pat·
terson hit 12 and was praised by
Mulligan for a gooct rebounding·
game.
Saddleback hit 59 percent from ..
the field (45 of 76) while Harbor·
connected on 27 of 66 ( 40 percent) ..
LAH .... (6tl
fllomn
WIM
Hollu!J
C•rretner•
Jol\ll\o"
Lovaledy f.,.u,
G•rvln
TrutlnlC" Fearen<•
Hlllon
To1e11
,, " .... 11 ' 0 ,, 0 1 ) ,
) l l •
0 0 • 0
' 1 • " • 0 I I
7 l l •
I I 1 J
0 0 2 0
I 2 I • l 0 7 •
21 u u ••
1m1 ~ ''""• • 2 2 ,. Mcl!lrelh
~ .....
!>lehl
lloy Green
Miiiar
8econ
P11tenon
IC.nlOhl
Heim
M ika Hiii
TOlll•
l s 1 11 . ' .. ' 2 1 JO
" l 1 u
l 4 ' ,.
2 0 1 • o O l It
l 0 l • 3 0 , •
0 I 1 I
•l ,, 12 101
Double Overtime
Estancia Suffers
75-7 4 Loop Loss
By LAURENE KEYS
Ol IM Dally Pllol Stall
Steve Trumbo sank a clutch
free throw with five seconds re-
m ainang and the El Moden11
ll 1g h (Orange > Va ngua rds
notched a 75-74 double overtime
victory over the host Estancia
<Costa Mesa) Eagles in Century
League opening action Wedne.s·
day night
Trumbo. a 6-8. 220-pound
!>enior. was lhe man to beat all
night and ln the final seconds tt
all came to rest with him. He
scored Z7 points in the game
• Wtlh 25 seconds remainanR an regulation , Estancia JUnaor
Danny Maddock lied the game
at 67.
The Eagles went in front by
three in the first overtime. Mad
dock connected twice from the
free throw line and 6·6 Brad
Cooper added another.
But th~ Vanguards cam e nghl
back to knot the score at 70 with
three free throws.
El Modena drew first blooct in
the second overtime perioct but a
bucket by Cooper tied it again at
72.
The Vanguards' Roger Conner
sank his second bucket in the
period and El Modena eased out
front again. This time it was
Estancia's scrappy S.4 John Car·
r1do that came to the rescue.
sinking two from the line to lie
the score for the 12th time in the
gam e.
The Eagles did manage to
surge ahead in the third quarter
when Trumbo left the game in foul
trouble with6:28toplay
Estancia led S0.41 a~ the end of
the third quarter, but could not
hold the lead as Trumbo came
back in the fourth period.
During the third period Estan
e1a went to the free throw line seven times and scored only
QllCe.
Doug Jardine was Est ancia'i;
leading scon•r with 25 points and
pulled down s<'ven rebounds.
RIM-IHI 1141 btMCl.t
l•llpf \p It II pf.
MPf~ j 0 ' • (00~,. • , J • (Ol'ln'' • l ' t\ Pri<• • s ) I)
Tr um DO . ,, M•ddOCk ) , ' • vor• • 0 J I '"''100 ) " 0 11 Lono , • • 10 &r•un\dor1 , 1 , • Wiiham 0 0 1 0 Jero1ne f1 ' 1S H•tOtrm--• ~ 1 I <•mp l l • .... ,..,. • I I I
TOl•I\ JI .. ) I\ Tot••~ ,, 10 11 "
Seo,...,""'"'"' I\ ll • 1& ) ,.. " 1, ,, ,, ) IS ,.
Irvine Dealt
88-52 Setback
A full court pres!-. 1n lhl' second
q u J r l <· r <1 n d s o m e s i z -
1lang shooting an the first half pro-
pelled Saddlcback <Sa nta Ami >
llagh to an 88-52 non league
has ketball victorv over host
Irvin e W<'dnesday nh~ht
Sarldlcuack, leading by just
two po1nL'> at the end of the open-
1n g quarter. exploded for 32
points in the second frame
behind a press that forced the
Vaq ueros into numerous
turnovers. In add1t1on. Sad·
dleback missed JUSt six of 29
fi eld goal attempts in the open-
ing half for a 79 per cent shoot·
ing performance
Irvine's third straight Joss
dropped 1ts record to 4-10.
I•••.,. nu 11115.a..it-ll
••11'41P ,, " .. "' Od~n r I I I llr•dlpy • , 0 10
Rud1 h 1 \ .. l•d•('Y 1 l 1 • MO"''"''~ I I 1 IJ • 8••<1< 0 0 I 0 w,,,,. ) 0 ' 10 !>Mii l 0 • I>
M ltl•r " 1 1 11 C Lt•r•r a ' 0 11
Davi\ 0 ,. I II "81•0 ) • I II
(ApnrUlt"IO 11 Q I 0 l8'tll • 1 1 ,.
JOyCt 0 7 u 1 r..,,..,o ' , 1 • f ,,,.,.,. & ) 1 IS TolAI\ 11 10 II \J 101••• JO 1• 12 ..
Score"' Quantn ervl.v IS 13 1' t-52
s.ddl•ll•clt 17 n " u ......
The game Is being played
tonight due t.o the Costa Mesa In·
vitational wrestling tournament
scheduled Friday and Saturday.
Pacing the SC attack is 6·6
guard John Carson, while Mesa.
s till seetln1 lta first \vfh in nine
s tarts this season, got a 29-point
performance Crom Chris Beasley
Tuesday nlaht.
Jordan put a full-court press-
ing defense to work in the
second and third periods and
used a fast-break offense to
score. When the Panthers began
to bit with accuracy <22 of. 39)
for the middle two periodl, the
Oilers' lead was cut t.o three.
Calendar .January Sale
$altings~~ 50% ·~
SALE
HOURS
10 am
Sullivan Honored · ·
Liberty Christian (Huntington
Beach) Hi1h lineman Matt
SuUlvan was chosen to the
second teaui on the All·CIF
el&.bt·inan fo9tball squad as
chosen by tho coaches.
Witb 1:11 lert t.o play, it was 73-SS and the Oilers appeared to
have the decision wrapped up
wben it wenl to 7S. 70 wlth 50
seconds left.
Pagnanelli then blocked a ahot
out of bounds with three secooda
to go and the score was 75-12. The
OUers ~ by u the ball was
brouebt in to a player und~ the
baaket for the final score u tho
buiseraounded.
~ OCC Hosts El Camino
O'i'ante Coaat Coll se's basketball team atteinpta to bait a
th.ree·1ame losln1 st.-eak tonlfht (7:30), bcstlni a talentad J:l
Camino Colle-e outfit. · Coach Tandy Gillis• OCO Pirates come Into the contest With•,.,
l'ecotd, but five of th toasts have~ by five poiats or leu. And th• •
other wu • nlae·p6lnt 1etback to Rlveuldo, a same in whtcb OCC
Jed mOl\.otthewat. El Camino bu • 12"4 record and ts the only team to def tat Sad·
dleback thll HUOn. Ffelhman Pete Neumann teadl the Bucs ill 1cort.n1 wlth a U.1
a\lera1e. loUO*ed by Jon~ (13.5), R.81 Orltll (U.•) aod Mark
Oman (91) •• &leamtnollsparttdbyMto~moreChai'lesTTammett
-
•
Kerwin Honored· ·
Cindy Ker.,in wu aeloctCd most valuable player in the Ml.I·
slon Confere·nce women'a
volJoyball circuit thl1 1ea1on
after leadlnf the Saddlebacl
Cotl~Je Gauchos to the loop cham·
piona .. lp.
Cnnle Gebley anil Mona
I'll~ ""9 WC> Hlttttid llnt tt1moolbeail~ferencuquad.
TEAMf1
to
8pm
ls~!~'°!ooos
...
• Inflatables
• Softball Bats
•Swimwear
• Sweat Shirts
i
I
t l
,.,, .
. ..
•!.
-~~ ..
t~ 1"
j
I
.. .,.
A~;~ETBALL I MISCt:LLANY ..
Area
Cage
Results
GWC Picked to FinUh Fi/ th
"-,,,_., ........ ,,,..._IPM P'dlat
lntne llllO 10, ~--•et '· 8••0llfrrr t, Sii-I, llW•v1011 ll,
Wltl!Mrl
N-m.-INl,,.,).Jt •.u-..·~E.~·~ • \I.., Horn It · l(.eijp ), y.,_, t HI-4 Pm~
• IC l(e1411 J, Godwin l, Oulltr 4 .. ,..,. .
M<1llllmo c.._,.,.. It .,.._. ....... ._lt .. ,4 . ~n 41 MuttU~!Qrl lu<.n EldrtOQoo J• ltmo~ II, Ct•M 1•. P•9f'•"~'" 1 •Nr•r 6 C1vlel t llollcin I KAr•ul 1 "• r w..,,,.,,
N•W••--""''""e...""' 11 °''.., VI-... l'4l<tf1<e 4' Ot.••" Vit-w Antt;1tOOOufot " ••nho1t1 J fW••••o•o_.r•n ,
•cnm•ot I •--. 1) N'il ). """'' ~~<~• 8rowwr 10 flltllvQI\ ' f•n
'"4•Ut1m• 0t .. nV1twlA t\
l•fl .. ~ "· IC-y 14 ""' ..... _.,. ........... ~·
t, l>llnn tO. H•r•er • LOll\1.., • H"'"
\c11roeo.r • R~bt •. ""'I••• • < Oc.n~<o I, Sm111\ 1
... ~ 1 .. -...
llT-'4,C..lt~•U
tot T•re ~llll•e 11 M<.l'e~n 1 •I-It ..._._'4. ..... J. C•"'""
Coc.lt ""-LW 11, T/\omc>..on IJ
•••r 10 Ootn1n1c u. Lo"t 1. H4'rt ,.,
nerendlni swe JC
hai.kctbaJj d1a.-ip1on
C)lpr.eq c.llege is not
n~arly aa good this
~t>ation as it was in
1918-n, but the Chargers
fieure to have enough
talent to capture lhe
Sou.LOero Cal. C.O*rence
crown once ~aia .
The Daily ~ rates
~oach Don Jehnson 's
Cypress fiv~ u the
ll'am t.o be~. Contcrence
pla) bw&ias Frid-.y
me.Qt .
G~kien West fi11:urt>i. lo
fin15h m the ro1ddie of the
vack
Jl'-'re U; how the Dall}
l'ilot handicaps tht>
rai:e
J. C11trea5 ·u~-4 >
The Chargers have two
good ones in sophomores
R.ory Lovell ao.d Rick
Cromwell. Cypreu' pa-
tient offense figures lo
fru~tr .. te many of lhe
eonft>relll!e teamir; most
of W,f\Ofti f ike to l't4r\ and
g•n Odds fl·I
2. LA Barbor <1·6>-
The Seabawlui have a
fine coacb 1n Jlm White
and a 11ery ~~r
in freshman Chris
Tl\tiorwas, but they w\11 be
hard pre!J6ed i.o overb awl
Cypreu. Odds: 4-1
3. I.A Southwt>i.t CI0-5)
Thi• C1>ugar-. ha~t
bt·t·n the sw-pn~ team
ul ttlt> b4X..'MI t1reu1t thu!>
for. but tht!'v will ha\.C to
get off to a fa st start Fri
da) <h.Oh~ C)pressl lo
ht• a contender ~>rt.•010 c; or don ( 6 .1 ) , L c e
Em a nu~I <IS·\) and
Charles Sauth CIS·3) are
1.he best of the Cougars.
Odd:; b-L
4. Saata Monka (7-8>
Tbc Curs41.1n, havC' two
standoutfi m Matt Jordan
UI 6) and Ron PbC'nix
18 7 I, but d~pth will b~ c.1
probl4-m Jim W•teoer 1s
aJso regarded us a top JC
coach and could lead
SMC to u rufl,hcr finish
Odds. 8 1.
5.# Gddeu \fest 17·9>
Couh D1ck St.n~k.lio tuis
<>oe <>l the beiot pJayers in
the c 1rc~.ut .w Tadd Zirbel
lfi-51. but it's downhill
artl.!r that A fifth place
(IOI.Sb <.'OUL<I be &.oo high
wrGWC Odds· 10-1.
45. toi. Angfl~ CC (8·6)
LACC 1s another team
th.it 1::. vasUy improved.
but lhe Cubs figure to
take a be-cttt~ on the
boards. Th~ best of the
Cubs are Chris Adams
Ui-212 > iiDd Bernard
S.uropM>ll (i-2). Odds:
10-1.
HtHIW... Colle MKe 31 21
MIUlfft Viele M, S..n C .. _ftlo JI M11\~0f1 "w'° t-twHmM • 11 .. nt-d1 c
H•m•nn 10. 8;,o1.., )I i.u.m.~1 ~
lr..,.thr l Rll'l<lllMYm •. ti11n1•r 1 mn·u11r\ l. l(uc.11
Alamitos Results 7. lllo Haodo <•·7>
Tbe ltoadruoo.ers are
mediocr<• at best, which
means they CJ01Uld finish
at l ea1>t three spot s
hi11:her Russ Zabel, a
~ood i.hoot.er •• p~cs Rio
Hondo. Odd~. 20·1.
PUBLIC llfO'l'ltE
1>en C•~-"'• Sutton ~ l'•t1t 7
•n<O<.k fli, AOem. 2. (Mr I. Horvath
l'or--•Y ll1W.O.,T'n<k....,y Rocj(•fPlln tw d,d)
Ant .. ,tor fAlllwnl
T IMt II I~ J •u • ~or.um'· Mulll9'1n J, K•I'° 1
H<1llllM• Ml!>\-V .. jO }t 11
0•"• ...... SJ, 11111 ... ,..,.., ..
l'lliT ~ VO )'"'•h l Y•••
nllh Orto In Caltl Cl•lmtnq Pur~e "' '"''-"•• Or ...... vi' 80 l 1tn1h J1f00 k'o<kl"r A1Jt1tht-Ct\ore«. l.UClfll f1r1y 0•"1 Hill' ~th••w, tl ~•rlrdhU ' Jon•" lO c,, oon • \t1tW.,nt t,
dfWOOO J
lley.oJ Go Fl .. 1 C.o Confer<:nce play
ht·~1n s Frida) with
Colden West hosting LA
Harbor. Cypress trek-
king t.o LA Southwest
and Rio Hondo v1s1ting
Santa Monica.
Vn1\1Pf\lt~ A1t1wn 10 f\towri 1
f\ofne»~on t O•'*MM'I tO Hoopt·, tu
~m--17...,._. l
(>~~d= .. !AdoOorJ IOO ;: ~:: U E•HU 1 Trw CuDIO & l
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M•llllff,. Dow\o H•lh }i 1)
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Cora.• oet M.M (.o•• 1 ~,,, 6
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t \\ J M<Corkf'fl .f 0."u 6
l e gune .f'.Cf'li ll •,~tr 4
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1 '"" 1. Sm1fh t(l 1-adthcr J. f.oro \
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V.,.um ow •1. ,,_...,. 'll•ll•r •O
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• 'ltt>fl IU. H•rln• A tuw '" •, t~uh
h;tr 11 ft H1thtt,.,./ } 1 '"''"'' l, µ011 111 , .. 11,1
H4IU1m .. f. tt, V11fh y 'J'1 1'
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M-UJOn \11•10 •2. s .. n Cltmenft •s
\1rn {lt"flwnlt--'<tJ"l'"J / f urn1·' f
c" ""''' 14, ,, ... ,.,, v ( .,,. ti
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Or no• 4 Y"u't I, fnornroo / 1, "n1n•1 • r,1,011 "
.... , .. _ """' IJ ••
Pro Scores
IUll~411 9.nblNU AtM<••IA°"
t1..He1o .. t..o.Anool<'•~l
...... HrMr I~ "'-'•• ll
l>ft1lfdt<PN• IOI. Cfev.1""11 •J
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fo,t)nfo ~.Col 1r•dOO
.... i.n J, (l\K ..... 0
Pttl\.burQh I VMU OUvf' ) -. ................ . NY l'le'\9.,tJ "'"""'W•l E111<1>111ot1
NV ltl-\I. l' ... flub+<t)
CI• •"l•lld 4 KIM!no J
l•m• .. IA
src•No ••CE -400 Y••O• l l"I•' -kll -. ,..,_ t.)40() L.-.k ........
IL•Pl>•ml
Som• ICl"'2• Fllfflt
INo<OOtm ... I
~ltttAlool ITr-•) ...... JI.
IT•••swel tM T---11)0
Scr•ICllH-~P•n '
THlllO ll&C£ UO urO) l Jt•r ....,, C•••"""9 ""-~
M r Al•mUO\ CooQ
lR• .... U 3M 1t.O 2 •O Wiiii~ Nt1!4n (WatSOD) z • I •o
lo•n•oo L1mi1 10..IU4'1 J 60
l1m• 1&11
Sc:r•1<...,• Al...,,110\ Alu Som~
Ki.-M•-, e.mddoo, ~·~ Jtll
U I! Uc.I.a >-.,;. .&~I .. aood &
l Wtlllo Nol-. Pllld US.Ill
'OURTH RAC£ lSO ~•rd\ 1
Vl'<H OICh .. up (tatmlllq Pt.It\• '"1>00
""~Moon IKnlQl\11 IS 10 • llO l 10 o ....... ..,..,.,~, J._ 260
TUN\ Ha_. IHI-I l .llJ ,.,... ..~
AllO r•n Frletlcltt •1.11. $-Qlt,
Ntqhl SP4'eO, Gottl.Mr Bo Ch.I roe
No \Cf"Atche-\
•I l'TM 11.llCA: -'" rArd; l l'ellr -& UD Cleionl .... P\Jr\e .... Mr WollowS..~
"'OUQltl 6.60 '80 7 &O MIQl\lf•lt ll(n1qlll) IJ )0 6 60
On '"••o• IW•l!4nl 1 IO Alw 'en pi._ f.11 Aoc-...,..._. Nutrw'
W1U11 ¥11 Hdttd Ptckftd, ZIP'S s.or.
~' r•tcl>ed Prim,,,,. Ror•t
u liuc.U ..-. WIMOw ,,.. .. , &
1 M•fj•l.rU.,NlllSU4.IO
WXTM "-'Cli JMI yerd'I l rur
o· & up AllOWe<K• ""'"" MIOOO ~· 0..., 18-1 • .. J.. 1 '0
BeM 'N -l.._'1.1 9 IO 1 60
\MOOw Moon Welk CM~l 1 10
''"'" 18 so kr~ ...... ~-Tl4tl•'
[A, .. ,, F••r 8""
i11vt:NTN ~ -w yerdt J
,,., ,,,_, 4 ""·Cl-• ...... l'M U*
Tru CuolO
<Wit06l,_l • 00 I 00 l tO
Basketball Seore8
lf<>W.un Cnl II SI Jo-1 P• It f1ur 111n,.t1 I\ Mor•w1An •\
l •'•V•U~ "'· N•w Wen"\P\hu• ••
1..•'>•lw rt. Wt-•• lly M , ..... t? ......... _,.,
P•nn St 11. ,..,,~,.It
J'tlf'-bvrOh JI W Y1r9u11.,. '6
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'>I Jolln •• NV 11, S.lon HMI .. OT .. _.,. l51161
0 ....... ""-",..,...,,.
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N (M~llllt k 14. ai.ct-OJ
~ c .. oune '°· c \A<Oll .. ~1 Ttn"f'•-• .......... Vlttl"'-•61.-1".,f\I._ C1nunn11111~ Tiii-61
·-.... !C .. 5e ltfl-•,.
Mltml 01"0 IS.~°"-M
,_ Olll<.D ... Jf, 1111 O...ow " " H IU~G.,Qn!MICl>f-00
ONo II ri. 1Cen1 St tt
Ar~•n••• u. Hol\tra 7t
OlrJAll\o""' $1 ll, Ark_,_ $1 ' Hew ,...o tQl. ...._ $o<lrnl tt
'' reuwrliealon ti, "' '-'*8o
r .. u Ttcn•.S.mlotd• c..o, ..... ,~ ..
I' rooo $.114, UC Rl,,.rilOt .0 '°""-•.,,0...-T«a 11 'lt't>llt*""~., Wyoml119~. o..-..
H1Gt4SCHOOL ~"'" \.9leM« 'ootlilffU,Or .... ,. , .•..... ..,... ..
VIII.a P.-~~-Atoe 17
OM .... ...,_
LaAOUe
..... ~-'1.~Gro.,.'1 It_...,.. .. ,,,..,...,,,
Lo. NnlllDI t0. L.I QllllU 5a COYtr ·-·
'~· ~ ~
HEN'S CLOTIDNG
3430 Via Udo, Newport Beach 673-0653
SEMI-ANNUAL
'SALE
E IGIH¥ aJl.CI. llD JMO. l n•r
<110~ & ..,p AllOw.,..1.11 f',.ru Y<JOO
Jrwlv Trrrlf1c
IC•••9"• I e .I() 4 00 4 00
MaA I<-llr-..,.tl II M) 1 ii)
On T ao.t\Co llC.t!1t1111 11 OU rim,. , • .,.
No K' •II.lit\
NINTN II/IC£ l jf ,.,. ... , J yo.tr
alOt..Q•ld .. ~~
C....l• N Trw
lCluluei
Ctltr~ &•9 1Hor11
M ... von(TIP-.1
T1--tt'll
440 l1il 300
1160 100 • '°
4cr"4L/Md W••I a Ster Pro lo.•d, w., •• ,.., 6w'1, o..>lt<"'<.11
U E .. cte I Cul• H Tr~ & • Clltr1• .... ~ .. ~-
Prep Soccer
Vtl'lllW
..Utlt<•"' Oclojle VIMlt
H•llllme ~
J"'uw V111Jty "•cl11e.u ,0u ... v-o
Htllf•,__14
IEIT•roa,c... illfta'
El T<Wo -'I•~. Avtl•. 4\\•\I\ -Mtcl..0110. Cnue
Co•I• Mt'• Sl¥lSf\er ,-11\Hl -,..,...,.,fr
Huggins Shoe
SALE
for MEN
G~ Siw .•. AA01M WlttlG fW l&OUGIS
In Siad( or Blown
Plus BrOken S1.t" In BAL.LY
:~::,u, ............. Now4895
IAlLY fr-67.95 to 74.'5
•
Odds and Ends
Y•'"••·••.H ............ Now2695
·~~~~ M~n's Shop
........... ...i
M•wporf l.adt
r1C1'11lout et/SlllllSS H,._ JTAT8M•HT Tit~ lallowlnQ pereons •'• ~ng -....... WAlLY Wl~IU.Ea fU CA•"M.
tUSJ Gollllnw .. I, We•tmlnttar, CA -WA LLY WIHICL•rt E .. TEqPRISES. 11501 An~nlo -.c-•.c•-•
Tlllt •-u h '~ l)y •
"'"" l•d per I/If,.,,,,. .... _ J .,.,., ••• GeowW,_
Tll\ 11.i-1 ..,., llJN ""l" -County C'-el 0r..,.. c_, en
o.< "· "" THOl_,E. SUl.UVAIC, WOIUC.Mlolt,
ntOllf'I &O~WM, ....... ........ ......,_,.... ._.,......._CA,_11
. Nlltf ""~-a..,. Cllell o.1141 Piltil, °"'· u.tt. "71,Jen >, u. ""
Thur&day, january 5. 1978 DAIL y "ILOT B:J
.PVBUC NOTICE ~NOTICE
f I
~ ...... ..... . "" ... ~ ... .... 1TnaOPCMJ~1t1a~ ,.......,..., ...... ---R.,.,, .. CM.tl"l.ln &"118 .. CTt' r .. voo o...w.
' .
'OM. V Ptt.O f Tele'Vision
1111 'KSl>A \'
EVENING uo e O-.NEWs 08 NEW&
EMEAOEHCY ON!I
P1rame01ca Gege end
DeSoto ~ma helfa 10
one mlH;on dolllta G HHlHOCKEY
Loa~ K1~ ~ Pflll.
•~pnia Flye<•
Q) THE BAAOY BUNCH
CD THE AOOKIE.8 f£l El..ECTRIC COMPANY ml AS.MAN 8EHAVE8 ··1n1•11go1nca"'
@) A8C HEW8
8 30 tJ MOVIE
• • • ' My$1enou> l•l•nd
C lff 1) Joan Gr .. nwOOd
M1<:h1&1 C•a•g I'••• mvn
ft6Cape fro.,, a cnnleoeruld
Prl•On end encounler
.irange crungs on an lal•nd
ti cna Sou1n Sea~ f 1 nr
~Om•n)
(I) MY THREE SONS ED OVER EASY
Nic;l>Olaa Jolln\on rftpnl·
lino plants, plonn1ng lnr
rellremont, fa5h1on <IA~•on-'Bug Off'
~ GROWING YEARS
' AOC>le:ic.&nt Munlod Devel-
opment
(f) C88NEW8
QOJ MERV GRIFFIN
Guft1S Jack and Ro1ko
Douglat, Susan Anton
Lann• Ken\ in ath•mps lo fend off the at-
I <·n t 1ons ol his c,1ster's 12-vear-old
g1rllr1md. Tura 'l'Jl bo). on James at 15,
tonight at 9 on 1':BC, Channel I.
7 00 0 NBC NEWS 8 UARSClUB 0 ABC NEWS
(I) I LOVE LUCY
Cl) AOAM-12 ED MACNEIL I LEHRER
REPORT
ED LA IHT1!RCHANGE
Na•IE"'t
(Ill NEWSCHECK re IN SEARCH OF
hr-or kt
OQJ MATCH GAME P.M ml EARTH, SEA ANO
SKY
1100 tJ ill THE WAL TONS
Ndl 1JI Patl-11 f P•rl , I
I TO TELL THE TRUTH
730 0 SIOO.OOONAMETHAT
TUNE
0 NEWL YWEO GAME
0 THE NEXT STEP
BEY ONO
0> THE BRADY BUNCH
a) LET'S MAKE A DEAL
A Ga1m•11 family """o "•••
tout>d ••'"II" on Walton 1
Mountain trnm 1he KOfn
~"" •111ecuon ot fo•m1" r•ft1(11lbor5 ata hurt onL11
o.ga1n wnotn tney d1&eo11er
011u con 1 run trom rac11m 0 CHIPS . °"" TWO Many . OlflCllf
b•k••r 1 oouble ceuaea
(.,'honne l L b f i ng•
tJ KNXT !CBS) Los Angel .. <, 0 KNOCcNBC) Los Anqelu!>
0 KTLA dnd I Lo'> Ancich•'>
0 MBC· rv 'ABC) Lo~ Ange-I .. r• "'Fl.118 1CBS) S.in D•t!QO 0 KHJ TV (Ind ) LOS AnqiiJ~'>
(IOJ KCST (ABC) San 011•rio
Cl) t< ITV (Ind I Los Anq>Jleb
Q') If.COP fV JIM I LO'> A11g1:lt>-;
fD l\C.l T TV 1 PBS/ L n·, Ani:wl1•-. m KCX.£ lV PB'11 H·~r11Hlljlvn BP.tt:l"t
triple trouble a 1•-year-
old auto lh1el naMrty
drown•. the ofhcera oeliver
• b•by In thtl back '4181 of
" c11r • 11111-0r 6 weddl~
proc11a1101' anarta tr art1c.
Q MOVtE
• • • ~arch For Survl•
al C tQ69J Oocumanl.uy
Tntt w<ld••la OI Iha 1un9'4!
and pra.,_ engage tn a
p .. rpacual Miolrch 10< watf'• 12 ,,,. ,
0 ll.oJ WELCOME BACK.
KOTTER
Here• VO\lr N-T11&ch
er' Mr Kotll!f • Job la
1hre11111nao when Vtct1
Principe! Woodman 1n1ro
ducaa ti computer
dn1gned 10 replace t1111Ch·
ors
0> CAROL BURNETT
ANOFAIENOS IE MOVIE
• • Mallar Of Ballan-
"" I 111"1 Err04 Flynn,
Beatrice Campbell A
young Scotsman ttt>C8JHll
h11 country and turna
ptrale when a reballlon In
iw.ntch hft was
flt •5 f~ hrs I
fD ONC«UPONA
CUUIC
"Wllel Klly Old'' FlltMn·
~-Old Katy c...-·a good
1n1ent10n1 c:onetenll)' gel
Ml Into trouble CMl""Q
h« eunt 10 #Ofry (P11tl 1
ofll)
QID MS YOUR OAINKINO
WATER SAFE?
•~09 WHArs
HAPPfNINGll
· Going Gomg Gong
Rafi lrHfndlhtp ""'h ~un
beComn a .now bualnMI
CHUl llV when Rerun
lt"ttNllN to ln1arl8'1 wtlh
!IA!'• dru m 9' becoming •
super !Ment IOI"' GI lRVTHOA
OOHSEOUE.HCES fD THE 8E.8T OF ERNIE
KOVACS
The Greet Submergo Tlwl
........_ Clutching H1tnd and ""
and vk>lflnce on l V
Cl) OVEI' EASY
Nd>olu Johr>son. rec>ot-
11ng pi.nit. planning tor
reuremanc. fllhlOn design-
ing
11:00 6 Cl) HAWAII FIV£..O
S1e.1 McGarrell ~
lhl unotticlll watchdog of
a tov• altllt bet-11n
18-yNr-old Kanak&, O.Vld
Kaluna and hl•-lheer1,
lhl 18-yN•·okl daughler
of an lnflueollal tycoon.
IJ JAMES AT 15
"Unrequited Love
T~I" Jamea ta palntuttv
reminded ol hit •""'werd
age •• too old for 1tte 12·
y--Old g1r1 wno por-•
him and too young for an
ettracuva calloge tludent
who only hoa eyea for h11
lather 0 ® BARNEY MILLER
The Bank An outrllQ'ld
Cll•Z9f'I cr••IH 8 dlltur
Dance wnen he leatnt 1na1
n11 dapo111 11 • spec1a11zec1
m1d1c11 bank has been
accident ally ruined
liJ f~ GI MERV GRlfflN
Gunia JKk and R8'kO
OouglH. Suaan Anton,
AID KarrH, High liwgy fill SPECIAL
"Flreblrd" Ealtl Holm'•
Roylll Oanllh Ballet par.
lormanc:e OI StreYlnaky a
WOf'll m IMAGES Of' AGING
•· N111h11 Bleu1ng Nor
CurM' ln1.gn11 Hilo lh•
e•pe<ltnCH end lllestylH
ot two eloerty couplet
11:30 0 d§J CARTER
COUNTRY
T ne Pny1ice1 Cl11ef Roy
TV's Carl Betz Dying I, r I' IJ Ir I.OS \ '\'C: El.l·:s 1,\ P • Co.1rl Hetz. a veter<1n
lt·ll'\'l._100 aC'tOr \\ho starred 10 "Judd ror th<•
l>l'f1·11:-1• :.iml the "Donn:.t Reed Sh<>w," 1s suffering
from lllOJ)('r alile lung r dOCCr, a ram1ly friend Said
1\1 t1 57 h;i<. hl'l'll ho!'>p1tahl('CI .it Cedars Sinai
\1 cd1<·al Ccnl<'r for th1· 11<1 .,t two month!>
Th<• friend, \\<ho asked that h1'\ name not be
usNI, ~:.ml lktl has known for !>everal month!> thl:ll
hl' 1:> d) ing but kept 1l s ec rct so he could cont1nu<.· lo
'\\ t1rk
· It " ll•rminal. hut he s un t'xtremely strong
m o1 n · tlw fr1<'ncl ~.11c1
T llE TALL, R UG G EDLl' handsome A1 ti
!),~;-.;A~E w WATCHERS! ~~
f'•'t•n"1nq o..,. 26 01••v • Lode• """ ollM d11lv While W•1ch ~1
)
t ru ""' L,,,,. comtorl•~• b<M1' will I•••• I~• Bllho• P1111h0ft 11
I PM "" "'••~d"Y' •nd '1 9 A M 10 AM I PM and 2 PM
f;n wr•·liii.,nd ri
I 1•1,. "" f •II 171 41 673 1434 lor 1nlorm.i1on 1nd r-r•11lon\ !I
0.<lbO• P•v1l1on 400 M11n S1 . Balboa
-l AOUL I ~ARE. S4 !iO CHILDREN 12 and under.$:> !iO i
:-, -:::;;:-----~ ----~-~
broke into ~how bu:-.1nc'>s with a summ e r stock com
pan~ 111 his native P1tt..,burgh. After a stint in the
Arm ), h t' r eturnN I to :icting a nd made his
Oroad wll.} d ebut In "T h e Long Walch "
He made a rnuple of slabs at film work , mclud
ing Powder ll1ver" and "Dangerou!> Cross1r. .... "
before turning to tclev1'>1on 1n the earl) 1950s He
worl-.cd th(' soap oper:i "Lovl' of L ife" before land
1ng a Joh as the father in "The Donna R eed Show.··
T h e pop ula r s1tua t1on comedy. also s tarring
Shcllc~ f''abares and P aul P eterson. ran for eight
~<'Jr<. ancl m ade Bet1 a naltonall:y recogm zed actor
Hut ht• <.:.t\\ his r olc as .... ometh1ng less than fulfilhng,
and \\ h<•n thl' show \\as canceled, Betz eagerly r e -
turm·d to the stage
"EIGIIT YEARS IS A long tim e:· Betz said of
his rolt.· OJ'> Miss Reed's second ba n a n a "l h ad to d o
.... omething co ch a nge the routine. T h e idea of domg
anothl'r T\' •wries was n ot uppermost in m y mind ."
Produc<•r Burt Mo n ash caught o n e of Be lt s
performan<·cs in the play "Night o f the Iguana" and
s1~n<'d h1rn t o play his la r ger -than-life lawy er in the
Southwt'st a nd Betz becam e "Judd for the
Defense."
TUBE TOPPERS
CBSf)8 00 The Waltons. Waltons·
Mountain ht•comes a refuge for a Germ an
fa m il~ flt·eing war in their homeland, bu t
the newl'Omcrs' encount er hostility.
KTLA 0 8 · oo ··search for
Survival " Th1!> documentan follows
Jungle and prairtt• animals on their quest
for ltfe i.:1vmg w<1ter
KCET J S 9:00 "f'irebird." T he
Royal Uani!)h Ba llet present s its
pNformance of Slr;n insky'::. famed
•·Fi re bird Su1t-e ..
leara lo• 1111 /Ob and Curll•
111ar1 lo• n11 Illa, all
D41CIUlotl Mayo• Teddy ..
•• lllngy with the town t
money .. II• II With hll
own
10-00 6 (fl 8ARNABY JONES
Cucum111n11 .. 1 'Mdenc.t
potnta 10 one ol J R 1 law
claHmates 16 the murd8'
er ol hi• glrllt 1end
0 Cl.AaS OF '115
"The Clau Jock" Tne
clau i..m11n (Roger Karnl
return• from Vietnam
whera hi h11 l>Mn a POW
to find hie ll1>ar1111<1 wife
(MerlClllh 81xter Birney)
With a a~11u1 butinoH
Clll-u NEWS 0 @J REDD FOXX
GUHll LIW Her1m1n Oon
Kno111 G NEWS
I!) COLLEGE
BASKETBALL
USC vt W&1h1noton Stai.·
EI) MASTERPIECE
THEATRE
Zeus Bv JO•" All"' a
myt1er1ou1 lllneaa. Clll1gulA
procla1m1 that hi' riu I DllComa God, and t>eg•n~
to ulMI 11 01 •n eicu..e for
D1zarra dlbllu.,t>ary I '1D SOCCER MADE IN
GERMANY
10:300) NEWS
11:00 tJ IJ IJ ([I ~ NEWS D HOLLYWOOD
CONNECTION
0 MOVIE
••·~"Grand Duel" ( 111741
Lee Van Clael. Peter
0 B•lln A young man
acculM!d or klUtng tne pa1r1-
arch ol ii poworlul lam1ly It
pro1ec111d by a men who
makH h11 own laws 12
hrs)
Q) THE 000 COUPLE
EJl) DICK CAVETT
Gua111· Part II of an 1nt8'·
v1aw with Paul Wlllaa, tor
mer Prof111or ol Plldoao-
phy
Cl) GOVERNOR
BROWN'S STATE OF
ST A TE ADDAl!.18
11:30 8 Cl) C88 N&WI
SPECIAL
"The PTMkllnl In franc."
Hlghdolll• of Pr111dant
Carter'• ...Call lo Omahe
BMc:h, • reception el
VerNllllea, atld 1111 lrll•·
view wtth French Prlll<Mnl
Valery Gitcerd d'E1lalng
D TONIGHT
Hof!: Johnny Ceraon.
0.-ta: Oevid Br1t1.-,
IUNk Perlmen 0 LOVE, AMERICAN STYLE •
· Love And Tht1 Wallreas '
0 ®J ST A ASKY &.
HUTCH
The Oman• T•o••r Wn11e
1nve111ga11no Iha 01a1n1 of
conc11"ona1ra1 11 •
aporta arer>a the duo
becomn embroiled In
another murder onvQ4v1ng a
be&utllul propr111reu, he•
lo•er. and en uaortm11nt
of wrMllert (RI
Q) NEWS ED CAPTIONED ABC
NEWS
1l:ao a Cl) oaa LA n MOVIE
• • ·~ "Coot 'M1n1on· Hun1
For A Lonely Girt" ( 11172)
Jarne1 Farenllno. Rey
Miiiand. Jllff•son Keyta _c._ tor • vauno 0111 wno m1y hold the key that
'"'" lrM hie c:ltlnl from murder dlerg19 (R)
MOANING
12.00 0 TWILIGHT ZONE
World 01 Ollferer>Ge ·
0> FOREVER
FERNWOOO
Runaways
Deidre Ber t hrong and Michael
~1 u I I 1 n s port r-u ~ l e en . age
runawo}S on tonight's episode of
ll awa1i F ivc-0. a1 n ng at 9
o"clock on CBS, Channel 2.
Church Threatens
MatahaMHon
Aleta.rd OreyfuH
Mon • .frt. 7:15, 9:15
DAILY PILOT
....
TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS
Loretta wondet• about her
cnlld'a lalhlf"; AbU 8ha1
hu plent ror Cathy Ell•·
nor puta another 1Cn.tm•
Into motion
• MOVIE • a ''Thi Sl••no• ORJth
01 Adolph Hiiier ( 19•31
G•le 8ondargaerd, Lud
wtlh Oon•lh A man lhlt I•
Hlllaf• aui:I dOuble plana
hoa dH1h ( I llr , 30 tnlt1 I
1230 D MOW
•a•, "wn.te Thi 9u"ell
Fl'(' plle8) lorn Adltnl
Dawn Addema A ~y
d1aoo.,.,.ed alfplane fuel It
~·'did by MCrll llQlf111
(1 hr 66mln I GI CAON-Wll8
12~37 IJ 0 TOMA o
met~ -11 1111 lmut·
•net llw11t1gator ( 1 hi' • U
min)
• a ·~ Looi. a.di ..
(111S2) Hugfl ISlnc:llllr, Guy
Mtcl>IOI\ Thi ~ 1 ....
yer 1n • murd« lrlal lalll tn
IOYe WOii the prOMCUllng
Oii~ Ct hr , 30 min.) u ae MOVll ** * ''Morning Glofy ... 119331 Kathenne HeptMn.
Oouglu FMbanka .JI. A
tmlll IOWfl girl llruoglM
tor I.ha m.nc. to go on
atege (1hl'.,30mln.)
3;00 GI MOVIE
• • • "Thi Print• Attlllra
OI 8al Ami" (1147),,,_~-.
Ov0<ak. George S
A oenntktea
thOM around to fur·
ther nia ~·-C2 tvt 30 mlnj
Q) NEWS
4;06 IJ NOONTIME
' Thi Accuted When a
fellow olllcar CC•auO•
Aklfla) llllgl(lly murder• "
youth. Toma 11 compell1><1
10 Und oul whether or not
Iha 6hoollng wu 1u11111eo
(Al
I 00 IJ TOMORROW 0 ISPY I f 'r i do1f•
D o y• iMt-.ffovie•
MOANING Robinson and Scoll
befriend a beaulllul Chi-
n ... girl In 51'1 Franc16CO
and •tumble onlo • pl-01 lo
gain cont•OI the ~.,,._
manl ol Chtna ID MOVIE
• • "Harr1e1 Craig ( IQ60)
Joen Crawford, Wancvll
Co<ey A woman allenelet
her family Ind trlonda Dy
trying lo dom1n1t1 lhem 12
h,.)
1.30 I!) MOVIE
• '1 "Mu11n11y ( 1e!>i1
Angela Lantbury Mark
See.ens Ame•ICan palrlola
a11emp1 10 get gold bullion
l1om Franc" to uao aga1n&1
Iha Brtl1sll In the War Ot
11112 (1 llr JOm,n I
1:80 8 N!WS
20000 N::WS
f> MOVIES
a• "lmpul"on ( 19721
A1a111noro Rey, Katherin"
Jutl>ee A crlm11 of paslllOn
•• commuted by • mem1>er ol the 1nt9fna11onal )el se1
(2 ,..,. )
• • •,. 'Hlgll Treato" ·
(1952) Liem Redmond,
Andra Moretto A plol to
er•••• lndu11rldl chao• In
Britain and Mize power by
tne daltructton ol kt:y
hydro a1at1<>t11 11 lhwar1eo
12 hll)
11909 I 1 nr 30 min I
2:25 8 NEWS
2;30 0 MOVIES
• '> 'A111gned Tn
Danger ' I 19•81 r.en1<
Raymond Noreen Na•h A
gang of ban~ robbers ttno
9 30 f> * * "High Lon-"
( 1950) John Bauym0te Jr ,
Chill Wiila A lug1Uve lrom
11\1 llw ,,,_.. ~ With IWO
men WflO lul~ "c:orne Nc:k
lrom IM gr11r1" to klll (1
hr,30mln)
to.00 U • • * "The Blue Oohll•" (111•61 Alan Ladd.
VerOntC• Lake. An IX·
M'fV>Cemln, lltJIPICled OI
murdenng hit Ufllalthlul
w1Ja_ must prove hi.a inno.
C41nC8 (2hrl)
AFTERNOON
12 00 Cl) • • * High Wall
( 19A8) Rob"'' Taylor
Audley loller A torme<
tomt>er pilot eci:uMd of
murdartng hi• wll•.
.111emp11 10 -al>l!ttt h<I
ir•nocence through psyc111.
.. ir..: 1raatman1 C2 hr• )
7 00 0 •••''"Bigger Than
Liie" C 1956) Jamea MHon,
Blrb8'1 Au.ii A -• lll· neu atteclt the llYM ol all
tile member• of 1 lamlly. (2
h••)
300(1_e •••"AN1gMTo
Remember' (111S8) Ken-
neth More, Aonlld Allen.
rhe "unalnkable" Tll1nlc
gon down on fl• maiden
"oy•QG as• n-by lrelgll1·
e< llandl by un1w1r1. ( 1
hr 30 """)
3 JO 0 • • • • An ""-lean
In Parla (111511 G-
Kelly Le&lle Ceron An
Am&rican ••·G I llnda
rom"'"ca and wt:ceu "'
Paus ( 1 hr JO min I
CBS Wim One
In TV Ratings
NEW YORK CAP ens hit the high point o f
11!> current tl•lt·\l~ton :.ea~on during the week e nding
New Year's Dit) h~ f101shini.: ahead o f both ABC and
N BC in th<' nNwork~ \1t1.•c•kl) bcittle for the prim e
time vie"' er./\ C Niclhen figures show
IL was th(• first w eek !>rncc lhe season began in
Sl'pleml>er that CBS rankec1 No. 1 in the r a tings
race. and only the second time tn 17 weeks tha t ABC
wasn t first
CBS finished the \\e<·k with a 19.4 rating, w hich
Niei:>en Sa)S m eans 1n .in :.tverage pri m e tim e
m inute d uring the week. 19 .i J>•.'rcent of the h o m es
in th e• counlr) with TV \\ t•n• \\.atch1ng CBS. ABC
h ad a rating of 18 8. NBC 15 5
CBS' STRENGTH WAS I ~ 10 of t he week·s top
20 progr ams. though A BC. a'> 1t has almost regula r ·
ly for the last 10 weeks. li~ted the two m ost-wat ched
progr a m s "L:.tverne ancl Sh1rl<'y" and "H a ppy
Days."
··L averne and Sh1rle} · ha., had a bigger au-
d ience than any other program l'lght or the l ast 10
w eeks.
C BS' lop-rated show was "60 Minutes," N o. 3
with a r ating of 28.2 anrt un estima ted audie nc e o f
20.6 m illio n hom es. ''L averne and S hirley" had 24.S
m illion.
THE WEEK'S RI\ TINGS DID not includ e C BS'
National Footha ll League playoff te lecasts D ec. 26
and Jan. 1. which t'xtendcd into pnm e lim e .
NBC's Saturday Night Movie, "Com e Bac k Lit-
tle Sh e ba," was ranked last, No. 58,..(or th e w eek .
The Top 10 p rogr a m s for the week
"Laverne a nd Shirley .. a 33 6 ra ting repr esent·
mg 24 S m illion h omes. and "llappy Days," 31.8 or
23.2 million. both A BC: "60 M inutes." 28.2 o r 20.6
milhon. CBS ; "Three's Compan y,"' 25.l or 8.3
m illio n , ABC; "Alice," 24.l or 17.6 million, a nd
"One Day at a T im e," 22 9 or 16.7 million , both
C B S; "Ba rney Mille r." 22.5 o r 16.4 million, ABC;
''Barna b y J o nes." 22.1 or 16.l miUion, C BS: ABC
Sunday Night Movie, "Serp ico." and "The Carol
Burne tt Show." CBS. both 21.8 o r 15.9 m illion.
THE NEXT 10 sh ows
C BS Friday n ight M ovie, "Zor r o," a n d
"Hawaii Five-0," a lso CBS. "Charlie's Angels,"
ABC: "M·A·S-H ,'. C BS , "What's Happening.""
ABC: NBC Monday Nig ht M ovie, "Chris tmas Mira·
c le in C aulrield. U.S.A.,"' and CBS Wednes day
Nii ht Movie, "Tar a n tulas: The Deadly Cargo "
tie; "Soap," ABC , and "Lou Grant," CBS. tie; a~d
"W elcome B ack , Kotter," ABC, and "Quincy
M . E.," NBC, lie. •
' I
I I I •
l I
1
. -
ENTERTAINMENT t.1iOVIES T>-IEAlER
ltlargare l O'Brien
Ex-child Star
Still Perforllls
By JERRY BUCK
1101.LYWOOO (AP> As a child i;tar she was
a moppet Suruh Bernhardt, with flashlnt eyes lhal
could pour forth a torrent or tears on cue.
Shl' play1:d a bit part in "Babes on Broadway."
then bccaml' a full Oedged MGM star at the age of 4
m the J~lf1lm "Journey For Margaret."
She hasn't mtide a movie in nearly 20 years,
although shl' ..,ta)s at·llvc 111 telev1s1on and in the
theatt•r
Hut tho:-.1· dark, flashing, Margaret O'Brien
l') l'b haH•n't <·hting~d "'hey re still her dominant feutu1~ f •
AT T iit; llt:IGllT O•' her fame, a t1m~ when
hc•r mother m;.ircht•d into Louis B Mayer's office
and wrungk-d $6,000 u week. to)'makers brought
out a Margart.·t 0 Brien doll .
"ll 's a collel'lor 's I tt•m now... said Miss
O'Brien "I looked all over for one for my
daughter I finall)' found one that still had the
name tag on 1t. but the· dealer had 1ust sold it.
"She• agrt.•cd to st•ll me her personal doll for
SSOO and I a:-.kc•d for the namt.· tag from the other
doll But the womi.in buying It said, Tm not giving
up my Marg<iret Q'Urien numc tag for Margaret
O'Brien or anyone else' "
In lht• wN•ks before Chnslmas Miss O'Brien
traveled to f1Vl' l'llll'S ucross lhc country to pro-
mote anoth<'r doll llolly !lobby
"IT'S AN OLO·FASlllONED rag doll that re
quire!> ch1ldrt'n to use their 1maginat1on again, ..
s he ..,1ud. "I tell children about my fantasies with
dolls. I teach them to pretend, which goes back to
the days before· the bwnic dolls that do everything
for you "
She ren 11led that during the making of "Three
Wis<' 1-~ools" Lionel Barrymore made he-r a rag
doll
In private hfe she is the wife of industrialist
Ho) T Thorsen and the mother of a 17-month-old
daughter. Mara Tolena Thorsen. They live in sub-
urban Vc•ntura Count~. far from the Hollywood
aowd
But ..,he doc·:-. rl'lurn frequently for work. Last
month she taped a tl'lev1s1on salute to Elizabeth
Taylor Uw~ w<>n• 1n "Little Women" together -
ancl t'arllc•r this year had a starring role in
"Tl•st1mony of Two Men." a syndJcated miniseries
1 mu1.Jco hy 1Jn1vcrsal. Two months ago she turned
I down a n•gulur role in a soap opera.
StlE APPEARS REGULARLY on the stage
.md t·xpN·ts soon to revive her role In "The Tunnel
of Lm·l· .. at a r e~1onal theater. She starred in the
• 11111• last <klolwr in North Carolina She said she
limits h1 ·r ..,lag<· .ipp1.·arunt('S to three weeks so
that sht• won't ht• aw;1y from her family too long.
This l'11minat1·., lwr from many roles because most
llwatl'rs n·qu11 t' longl·r app<.•urunccs, oflen up to
... 1x month:-.
M 1s.., O' llru·n ..,, • .\.., I cl•m 'L dwell in tho past
I m m<>rl' 111tt·n·st1·d 1n .,.. h.i.l I m doing now."
Askc'<I 1f ..,hl' mrss1·d hc1ng a major star, she
r <'pht•<I. ' I "'a'> l1tlll'. so I duln t get all the glamt>r
It was t'.l';11•r f11r m1· to adapt I think 1t was harder
• for the older stars for v. hlJm the studrn was mother
.ind ra1h1·r In lh .. eta,.., rif contract stars the
... 1ud10.., dul 1•\c•r) llung for )<JU
I think in .1 \\a\ 11 .., too bad they don't have
tlw g l.1mor an\mon· It .., hk<' a regular job now
'I m1 1111111 h 111 anll '011 f>Unrh out The studios used
111 promuh· ~our namt• so that )OU remained in the
hmt•hght 1•vl•n \\ht•n )OU wcren t working. Now, on
TV 11nlC'.,., :-our<· 1n a ..,c•nes nohody knows who you
dll'
MISS O'BRIEN SAID SHE hked combining
lw1 01·1·as1onal work as an actress with her duties
u.., a \~ 1 re· and mothc•r
"I wouldn't want to work every day." she said
But I do likt• 111 v.ork I think a woman has to be
u1·tiv(• and have other interests besides her home."
A nolh1•r passion she pursues is archeology.
and al l'Vt'fY opportunity she heads ror Mexico to
hunt for <1rt1facts and visit the ruins
J\ moving story. A romantic story.
A i.t.ory of env), hatred, friendship, triumph, and love.
lheTunung pomt
~-
· Now on the largest screen west of
· New York at Edwards beautiful
' Newport Cinema. Presented in full
70mm and Dolby six track stereo to
i · totally envelop you In sight and
sound. The moat dynamic motion pic-
ture of the decade la now at the most
dynamic thef1ter. See It again for the
first time at Edwards Newport Cln~ma.
~~ng
W.W.. HAMlll HAANSON FOP.D CArV\1€ FlSHEJ\
P€T€J\ CUSHING ono
AlfC GUINN€5S
Mon -Fri 7:30, 10:00
Sat I Sun 12:00, 2:30
5:00, 7:30, 10:00
• .. ,..,,.._,.
ST A YING ACTIVE
Margaret O'Brien
'Goodhar'
Ban Good
For Movie
Thursday, January 5, 1978
.
SCR Launches '78
In Coast Theater
The new Yt'<Jr 1n Orange Coast
theater gets off to an early start this
weekend as South Coast Repertaoy
• mounts a rev1vul of Henrik Ibsen's
classic drama. "A Doll's House."
Directed by David Emmes, ex
ecuhve director of the 13-year-old
professional tom pany. "Doll's
House" will be on the stage of SCR 's
downtown Costa Mesa theater
through Feb. 19
llF.ADING THE CAST arc Anni
Long as Nora und Charles Lanyer as
her husband. Torvald. Other pnn
capals arc Hal Landon Jr . L ee
S hallat. Don Tuche and Martha
McFarland. with four )'oung SCR
Conservatory members Karen
Ged1ssman, 9. Sean J cnan. 11. Enc
Stiller, 10, and Jacqui Todaro, 8
alternating 11!> the Helmer children
Intermission
Tom Titus
CALLBOARD -The Westminster
Community Theater has announced
aud1t1ons ror lhe Orange County pre-
m1erl' of the musical "Two by Two."
tht• story of the building of the
biblical ark ... director Kent'
J ohnson wtll hold tryouts Jan. 23 and
21 at 7 p m. m the theater. 7272 Maple
St . Westminster ... a cast of eight
peoµle 1n all age ranges is required
YOUR
DAIL V PILOT CAN
BE RECYCLED!
DAILY PILOT
"OH GOO"
"GUMIAU U.UY" IPGt
'.A "OTHU SIOE OF y THIMOUHfAtM"' ll'GI
A "AftHIEHAU"
"'V"\.OYI AND DUTH" tPGI
"THISrY WHO
LOYEO Mt" (PG)
"WIIAlDS"
~pec .. l"'lce T:Z :IO to 2:00 p.m.
fA T CITY C&n'RI CIMIEMAS I
'lnuptS-.& Sl.U
PROV'1. Utah {J\P)
The c11y's attempt to
ban the film "Looking
for Mr Goodliar" has
tripled audiences ~1t tht•
tht.•att•r showing lhl• H
ru t C' d f i I m , a n cJ I h l'
manager sa)s he may
c•xtcnd iL'> run
•·A Doll's House" opens Saturday
and performances will be given
nightly, except Mondays, at 8 p.m
with Saturday and Sunday matlnees
at 3 p m in the Third Step Theater,
1827 Newport Blvd . Costa Mesa
Reservations 646-1363
Orar194t Coast College
operates the official
center for Costa
Mesa.
The Ana-ModJcska Players will ·----------------------hold rl'adin~s for the murder
Open Daily 12:30 p.m.
"Wt• orq~1nall\
scheduled the p1t·tun• to
run until Jan IH, but 1f
business continues as
good as 1l ha." ~n 1t
will probubly pla}
longer," stud Uintah
Theater managt.>r
Robert Bathey
As he spoke, µ1ckct'i
marched in front of the
theater, carrymil s1Jlns
calling upon thcatl'r
owneri. to "Stop Smut ..
and "Protect Chlldn•n "
AT SEBASTIAN'S West Dinner
Playhouse, tht' mus1c·a l comedy
"Guys and Dolls" has been extended
through Feb. 19. The s how features
John Herzog, Jenny Quick. Michael
.Jam<.'S Collins and Blunche
Mickelson
The Damon Hun) on 1nsp1rcd
musical plays Tuesday through Sun
days at varying curtain tames m the
San Clemente dinner theater, 140
A vcn1da Pico. Reservations 492-9950
WINDING UP ITS engagement at
the I lurlequin Dinner Playhouse this
Yuu c;Jn.~c. d PROFE SS IONAL HYPNOTIST
Nuw y11u t.rn l'n111y .1 I 111.uH 1,tlly rt w.11J111i.: CJrtl'' .n .1
pwfcs~tondl I lypn1111,t/l I~ pn11thc1.1p "1 w1 thou t g1v 1ntot
up your Pfl'\Cnl 1111!
Hypnol1\m, onLt' l"'l"tki.d ,1111.:r1.J1nmt·111, '' n••w
rcc;ognited J\ .1 'dlUJl'lll· 11101 hy Dullur~. Ucntt~h .ind
P\ycholog1\I,, Buth puhli~ .1111.J pwfcs,ron.il Jcccp1
• mc;c of hvpno'" h.i' lfCJtt·d ,1 dem.ind lor pr oil''
\tonally trJincd ~h pno11,l\/Hypnuthcr.ip1'1'.
'i uu tou, un hL pdrl ol lhdl !>tlctl i:roup ol pruk'
,1onal\, f11rmdtly lrJ1ncJ in eth1cill hypnutll lt'(hn•
4ucs Tu 1, '' n how ~ uu c.m .ichre\(' the prc\t1g~ .ind
h111h mcom1 111 J pro'·"11>nal, call today 1u\l asl.. trn
.i free hrot.hure dc'>l.1 rtnni.: our even.JO' voc.suonal .ind
degree pru~ .till\.
Newport lntcrmitionat Univerlit'l ~
,\dmin1w.it1vc Olr1cc\-(7 14) 752-2541 ~ U
4100 B1r'h Sa , Ste 100, Newport B('dt h CA 92660
'NIU •• au1hotiled, u11der Sec11on 94310 CC! S1111 of Ca1.rorn•a.
Ollrce ol Prtvate Posuec:oncUry Educ.uon, 10 •ward d~rees ro
orudentl mHrrng O(jr grlldu111on requirements.
.... wnn. .. sra ••• ru.u. '""n Clfl ... A WISf, ltJACU
mystery "Ten Little Indians"' on Jan.
14 at 1 pm" und Jan. 15 at 3 p.m. at
th1: Anahl'•m Civic Theater. 1601 W.
Broadway (Loura Elementary
Sl'hool > • .Jay Conklin is directing
und will be looking for a cast of seven
men und Lhree women
BACKSTAGE The Mission VieJO
Rep •rtor~ Theater will hold a
general ml'eting next Wednesda) at
7 30 in the community Room of Great
Western Savings in L aguna Hills
plans will be discussed for the pro-
duction of a musical in the spring
further information may be ob·
tain<>d by calling Jay Rayl at
768-6574
OAUNTLIY (II
IHOWTIMU1 12JOOe2ille41Ue~ ... 111 ...
AMII UNCIOftelHlllUT MC LAI ..
THI fUINIHO 'POI.HT Cl'O)
010901 IUINM.IOMN OINVll
OM GODl(llOI
-· f14l ll ,.1 7tlJ A eou
"6f. A IUN. 2100.4.00 ...... l •OO I i...._ __ J 10;00
\ (. .... , ....... ,
WOOOY MUN
ANNll HALL tl'OI
~"' "MK 'AHTHH ST-ltCIS AGAIN fl'O) °""'' 4:U WHOltAYI .. •• "'"· C.lttt~ ,,.,.. , M.
'<>UH r "'"' Y Mil Y C-A Ut·IM9 ·--CIMflHIT 11 1'1.eMI
C Olr A WU. ....... 01 "' ....... .......... ...... ,, ., ...... =~~ IUtlY Ml AN A.NGll(l) C!:D1JmL·~1'.! .. :!9'!:50~AlllllS MAIO ~T"" cOMlcai ou .... •ot.ul-OU. ... I MAU .,, .. ,., "•-•J.. u t .1161
MHllOMYl&IO H.AltlAat c-•· tlMtM lOH .. OH ....... uu••-1•
c1nenome Ei scAeEn
6JU 2553 comPLEX
Cnapman A ..
~ S1nl• An• ,., ....... ,,
MATINEES SATURDAY & SUNDAY
"CLOSE EN U
OF THE THIRD KIND" (PG)
n ·~ 110-& ·~~10•~
"SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER" (R}
"LOOKING FOR
MR. GOODBAR" CR)
"1900" CR)
WORLD'S GREATEST LOVER"
"BOBBY DEERFIELD" (PG)
"ALICE DOESN'T LIVE HERE ANYMORE"
STRDIUm 5 scReen
639 1860 DA IVE·ln
"PETE'S DRAGONS"
"FANTASY ON SK1S ..
"THE HEROES" PO
"AIRPORT '77"
, tuSHldl fMllUIUI ••. ~~ ) ~ =~: -
ctfill.~Ji=7~'=5~
edwJrds 1ma CINIMA
•• ::~· •• •• .. • ., & ·2~
(!Y
LOOKL\'G FOii
llH. GOODILUl
''THE PINK PANTHER
STRIKES AGAIN"
PLUS (PGI
'ANNIE HALL"
CMAAL&B LEE BRONSON REMICK
I~~:' ~~
• • RLJ!>t ~ 1"1
..
•
.. DAIL V PlLOT •
Ward & Harrington
.FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY
.
Cleacly a good investment It could save your life
·Bring in the bowl games wit~ greater TV clarity. And enjoy
all your favorite TV programs in the bargain. It only
takes a few minutes to install this rugged, 9-ele-
It sounds the alarm at the first sign of 9anger. And now
it's an even more va luable investment, with
ment antenna. Then the fun begins. Includes
S3A signal. For VHF, UHF and FM.
Model wCOX-450-KS.
TRU BEAM ANTENNA KIT,
Reg. 19.99
12.99
Put trash in its place
~ This 01as11c bas~ct is bolh orelly and prac11cJI
Looks orea1 on 1t1e den bedroom 1us1 aboul anv
where In assot1Pd colors
14 x1o·x15'• 28 qr c.1fl~'"''
1.1odel ::A 111 J
WASTE BAS/\£1
Reg 2 29
1.88
LIFT TOP WASTE £JIN
44 QI capac11v 16"111 •• l
Model !:A5782.
Reg. 5 79
3.88
Keep your guard up
Handsomely·dcs1gned Suoer Guard Lock II 1s
up 10 8 11mes stronger lhan mosl locks
And II locks au1omat1cally when door 1s
closed. Easily 1ns1alled with a screwd1111er
Model • 089286
IDEAL SECURITY SUPER GUARD LOCK II,
Stngle
Reg 29.99
19.99
Model • 089284.
Double.
Reg. 37.99
24.99
• Builders' basics
Plywood Is a basic lngred1en1 tor most building
and do·1l·yourself projecls. Use l his sanded
• ShO? plywood for cabinets. a Jilayhouse, a
11ble IQp, hundreds of lhings 4' it 8' IC y,·
SANDED SHOP PLYWOOD,
Reg. 13.99
11.48·
-
/
factory rebates up to $4 per unit. Rebate
Glory, glory hallelujah!
A new easy way 10 clean your rugs
Johnson s Glory 1n a new spray foam lhal
you spray on mop 1n (s1and1ng up1)
and w•pe clean Do your rug 1n lhe
morning have company 1n thal
evening 24 oz
JO/JNSON S GLORY
FOAM RUG CL CANER
Reg 2 39
1.88
Nol av.1 '~ble al Ille Oran.,,, ::.lore
cards available at counter.
FIRST ALERT SMOKE &
FI RE DETECTOR,
Electric.
Reg. 24.99
19.99
Battery operated.
Reg. 29.99
24.99
We hope you never have to use it
Bui In case you do, keep a Kidde Fire Away
ex11ngu1sher on hand In your kilchen, aulo, boat
and recreational vehicle Unlike most home
exltngulshers, 11's elfec1t11e against wood and
paper !ires as well as burmng liquids and
electncal eQu1pment. Easy to operale, refillable
iyear manulaclurer's warranty
UL rated 1 ·A, 108.C Model:: t 10.
KIDDE FIRE·AWAY FIRE
EXTINGUISHER,
Reg. 16.99
9.99
Want the woodsy look?
Pick up some of these poles. Edge garden
beds and terrace slopes with them.
And you re Irving the rutlic life
!toles are 0· long tor con·
venlent ptacemanl.
PEELER POLES, Reg, 4,99 .
3.88
Cut cleaning bills down to size
A 111p lo the cleaners 1s not necessary, 1us1
becau~c c101h1n9 picks up a few spots All
you need 1:; K2r m lhe house, 10 loll
oul large or sma'I spot<; 1 01 tub"
Model ::554
K2r SPOT LIFT ER
Reg 98c
78c
t lo1 i1<1a1lablc al the Oran1•' st •r
For flourishing fruit and flowers
Choose Bandtnl Super Bloom to Increase and brighten
blooms on tlowerlng planls It also gives greener
leaves and s1ronger rools. And for spring citrus
lecd1ng. lhere·s a specially balanced fertilizer rich
1n iron, sulfur and zinc. For all lru11 trees.
YOUR CHOICE BANDIN/ SUPER BLOOM
OR CffRUS FOOD,
Sib bag
R!'Q. 1.59
98c
10 lb. bag.
Reg. 2.95
1.98
Make your own rock garden
Use wh110 rock to accent
your landscaping rn a
dramatic way ChoosP
from small, medium and
large stze rocks. 80 lb b<l'l
WHffE ROCK,
YOUR CHO/CC SIZES,
Reg. 2 49
1.98
-
•
l
.... w-
INSIDE: •Stocks •Erma Bombeck
•Business •Ann Land rs
Carl Karcher:
Faith m
God, country
and free
enterp rise.
At right,
the cart
that began
it all.
The Bar Scene
The people I talk to say they've NEVER
met ANYONE in a bar. I always feel like
saying I haven't either -at least
anyone I'd want to meet again.
Once or twice a year, I venture
out to the sine I es· bars to see
what's new.
Before I go, I listen to my
dauabter's records and watch
American Bandstand IO I '11 be with
it. Then I primp for hours, aqueeie
my extra 10 pounds into a pair of.
alacks and pracUce small talk in
front of the mirror so l won't be
nervous.
But then I get to the bar, with its
music blaring out the door. and
aome doorman 'Wanta to check my
I.D. Everyone around me looks
about my children 'a aae. When.
you 're 33 yeat'$ old and you 10 to a
place where they check everyone'• id~UficaUon, you 1et to thlnklng,
tbat maybe, J• ma1be, )IOU're
Coo old for it au.
I WI.ah I eouJd tell you I love
1loela' bJrs. I really wllb I could
• t.U you that. To be very honest, I
llnd the whole experience palntul.
For atarten, there are ioreeous
womel\ In them wbo have pro-
bably never knGWn • 1tretebma.rk In their Uv•. And num who atnrt
Uke pea(liQOJ and look like Bu.rt
Reynoldi, *1d whO IHtn to have
• nothln1, beaer !ta cSO than wu tbetr
Porscbh an'd anbutton their ·.wn..
Amons &he NaUUtw peopJe the
11'1rllo• up.-hit the d\1eo
119QOcll, tMi'9 'II • air ot PHd·
Solo
By Cheryl Romo
DAILY PU.OT
•
eotur.ing_._._. __ c~ i
Carl Karcher I ! • ~ :
Thirty-six years ago, the president of Carl's Jr. restaurants l !
hitched his hot dog cart to a star.and made the American1. !
Dream come true. · ~ i
By DENNIS McLELLAN
OI-. DM11' l'IMISUlf tn 1941 Carl Karcher was a 24-year-old
bread salesman for the Armstrong Bakery lo
Los An,aelea. He was looklng for ways to make
extra money when one of the customers on bis
route put up a hot dog cart for sale.
Using his car as collateral, Karcher bor·
rowed the money and paid $326 for the cart with
the red umbreJJa on the comer of Floreace and
Central Streets.
He sold hot dogs and tamales for 10 cents
apiece and soda pop for a nickel. After a 16-hour
shift the first day his sales amounted to a whop.
pmg $14.80.
''I never dreamt that what we have today
would happen," says Karcher, now 60 and presi·
dent of Carl Karcher Enterprises, Inc ..
The former Ohio farm boy who never
finished the eighth grade parlayed that lone hot
dog cart into 2H Carl's Jrs. and Taco de Carlos
restaurants that grossed $85 million last year.
THE RESTAURANTS, LOCATED throughout California, employ nearly 7 ,000 peo.
pie. The privately-held nonfranchise company's
expansion program calls for 50 new units a year
and it is expected to break the $100 million
mark in sales in 1978. . "Next year is going to be an exciting year:•
says Karcher, seated on a sofa in his spacious,
wood-paneled office on the second floor of the
corporate headquarters in Anaheim.
A big, quick-to-smile &enial man, Karcher
says, "I take great pride in saying we have
never had one year fall behind the prior year.••
Sliding glass doors open onto a terrace on
one side of Karcher'• luxurious office and pie·
lure windows command a view d the " million
commissary and distribution eenter bein& con·
slructed next door.
Needless to say, the man behind the now·
familiar yellow Carl's Jr. star baa eone far
'McDonald's with their 15-ce.nt hamburger
• .. changed the public's lifestyle.·
I
beyond his original goal of reachini ~ a day ln
s ales. He attributes the company's success in part
to h is employees and to the customers
themselves.
"I GIVE CREDIT to my success, above alJ,
to God and to my great parents," be s ays, ad·
ding, ''we should all lhank God for good health
and the place we Ii ve in."
Carl Karcher ii a deeply religious famUy
m an wbo.has ~real faith in God, country and
the free enterprlSe system.
There are constant r eminders of the foun·
der 's beliefs throughout his office .and the
t modern two-stocy build10g.
Displayed near his large oak-topped desk is
an American flag; a bust of the Sacred Heart ot
Jesm rests oo a bookshelf. And a life.size band.
carved statue of St. Francis of Assisi stands in
ao alcove at the top of the main stairway lead·
ini to theS«Ond·flooroffices.
Printed on the cards stacked at the foot or
tbe statue, and which Karcher hands out to vis·
tors, ls the prayer of St. Francis and a message
from the president:
"AFl'ER 35 'YEARS of business it is clear
that only in a God-fearing nation and a free en·
terprise system could $326 in capital, a willing-
ness to s ucceed, and a loyal family vi
employees, see the realization of a man's
dream." The story of how the hot dot cart grew to be
a multi-million dollar enterprise never strays
far from thought. The lobby Is overwhelmed by
mammoth black-and-white photo reproductloos
of the cart and the early restaurants.
Karcher, who beiins every busine.u meet•
ing with the pled&e d alleiiance and a prayer,
tells the story to all the new members of the
company's management training program.
His address includes his s uccess philosophy
and a run-down on the company's future, noting
that the new managers' ind.tvidual success de·
pends on themselves.
"You have to be full of enthusiasm," ad·
vises the president, who says he finds it exciUng
just to get up each morning. "You should never
permit a negative thought to live in your mind
for one second." ·
KARCHER, WHO ALSO believes there's no
substitute for hard work, quit school in the
eighth grade to help his father on the farm dur· ine the Depresaion.
He made his first trip to California ln 1937
and worked briefly in his uncle's feed and seed
store in Anaheim before going back to Ohio. He
returned to the coast two years later, married his
wife Margaret, and got a job wrapping bread
at Armstrong Bakery, before working up lo
route salesman.
Karcher . who h as a phenomenal memory.
can recall all the significant dates and places in 4
his life story. And he still has the receipt from
hi s hot dog cart purchase 36 years ago.
"We bought and opened Lhe cart on July 17,
1941," he :-.ays, adding the second cart on the
corner of Flort'nce and Alameda was added on
May 30, 1942. The third cart came seven months
la ter. And the first s1t·down drive-in was opened
in Anaheim in 19'5.
Karcher doesn't view his getting into the hot
dog business as much of a gamble. It was
rather simple, he admits, to make a hol dog and
open a bottle of pop.
••1 GUESS l 'M someone who likes lo see
progress," he says v.1lh a smile. "Running a
bread route was a long day I looked at the cart
and was very impressed. I did it to get ahead."
The first Carl's Jr. opened in Anaheim in
1956, followed by a second unit in Brea. But the
big push for the company, and the fast.food in·
dustry itself, was in the mid '60s.
"1 think it's something that really just
(See CARL, Page CO
-The Priest
After a year of being an
Episcopal priest, the Rev.
Jacquenne Means finds it
difficult to understand the
strong reaction.
' By MARY POWERS
INDIANAPOLIS CAP> -ln her first year
as an Epi.scopal priest, the Rev. Jacqueline
MeaOJ learned to handle Iona how's, guilt and
interviews. Now she Just wlabes the church
would learn to handle her.
i
!
' • .
I I
I
1
Since &fn. Means became the first reaular-
Jy ordained woman Episcopal priest last Jan. 1,
at least a dozen parishes have split from the 3
millioJFmetnber denominalion (fver the issue of ~
women priests. Eight persons have left the in· •
ner.cJty All Saints Episcopal Church, where sbe ··
serves as an usodate priest. But she says her
ordination also attracted a few persons to the
parish.
After a year of dlacu.sstng and expJatnln1, Mn. Means, who became Indiana'• first woman
Bpllcopal mw:on three and a half yean qo;
aald 1he ltll1 findJ lt difficult to understand the
d~ ructJon ••alnlt •omen prleata.
..I've met wttb several blahopc who oppoH the
ordlna&ion ot women arul It ·a iny own need to say
to thete men that we caa bave diflerene• ot opt·
Dioo but we can sUll be toaether In t.M church
and make the.church stronger," ahe 11ld .in a.a in·
tervlew. r . ' Mn. Meana, Cl, a motber-ol lour and a 1
lic.,ed ~c'lltnurae, 1ay11he'a earer for
o. Of her role to wear otf \o •be can de-
JDOfe U~ to ber Job u chaplain at the In·
Wobii • J>r;llcii, Neit fall •he's plannln1 -~ ..,. COii•&• mminal jua&lc• COW'IM 10 ~ ,_ more efttctl•e at tbe prla-. She = .._ MllMMt'.~vinc• .lOc:al_,.!!~pal --to_,_. I MllWa1 ~,_f~ wom• on ,..nrart,Pa••O> .
{'2 DAILY PtLO r ERMA BOMBECK
'Farni]y-Centered' Births Increase tl~ue J ewelry
January 1 Own Gamet.I
JUnas, Bracelets, Pt.'nd11nb, Pins
From 521 00
ofa·P,,,.f;!!?:!.ur oftJ..
By BRENDAN RlLEY
CARSON CITY, !\e\
<AP > ··Family
centered" childbirth in
which fathers Join
mothers in the hospital
dehvery room, accounL-.
for a large share of de
liveries in this country
now, a leading pro po.
nent or the concept says.
l>r. Henry Davis says
birth methods such as
t}>e Lamaz e and
Leboyer tec hniques
have caught on in
popularity in recent
Hars aod new studies
indicate the babies are
the b~ttt>r off for 1L
Oav1i. c1tt:s a survey
s howing Lhait pre-
tlclivery ini.truction in
pain-relieving, relaxmg
brt>alhlng techniques for
mothers and s upport
.. coachmg .. in dehvery
rooms by fathers are
now the most popular
methods with n e w
parents.
The Lamaze method
include:; breathing and
coaching. The Leboyer
technique goes a s tep
further with dimmed
lachts, a quie t at
mosphcre and gentl1
handhn~ of babies dur-ing dehvt-ry including no whacks on the babiei. ·
bottoms
Dav1 1-i i.a ys new
stud aes indicat e tht'
methods. which also
keep the mother and
chi Id together after
birth, help estabU~b an
"identity imprint" with
the infant.
Davis and his partner.
Dr. William O'Sbaugh-
nessy, have been using
................................................................... • • ·~ the Garment ~ • • I District l
I I • ,.n IANUA~~ l ~-l . . .
Marvelous Markdowns Throughout the Store
in addit ion to our always
SUPER WHOLESALE PRICES
• Blouses • Dresses • Slacks • Jeans
• T -Shirts • Eveningwear
·COSTA MESA
1927 HARJOR ILYD
642.0051
ANAHEIM
2952 W. UNCOLH
761-2031
• • • • • • • • • • • • • •
•..............................•...•............................ ,
the Leboyer method for
the past sever<>~ears.
He says "Leboyer''
babies stem m o r e
secure, "and kids have
to develop a sense o(
security before they can
develop independence ...
He. says the babies
·"are relaxed, _lookin&
around right. after birth,
ready to meet the world.
l n their early months,
they seem to be very ad-
vanced motor-wise -·
they will try to do things
like crawling and walk-
ing sooner.
"It's not that they're
superior types. I think
they'll just look forward
to the good things. ll's
like the difference
between optimists and
pessimists," he says.
He says fami l y·
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~centered methods were
not popular at first with
many doctors or
hospitals, but more and
more patienb asked for
tbe techlliques to be
u!>ed and they are rapid·
Jy gaining acceptance in
lhc medical world.
Davis and bis wife,
Joan, have 11 children
--five delivered witb
the Lamaze method and
the last two by the
Leboyer method. From
his own experiences and
from what he sees in his
patients, Davis says the
methods "build close-
ness in couples. They
want more out of
c hildbirth than what has
traditionally been or.
-Cered.
"Husbands have been
really enthusiastic about
it," he says. "Some are
hesitant at first, but
after they have gone
th r ottifb it, they're
a I m ost more en·
thusiastlc than the
wives."
The Lamaze method is
Wt W'•ltllll' Or. N"',..n loNll. Ql 14111 ..... ,..,,.. . ...,.,." .... II' M-y lwt_,.
doctor, Fe rdinand named after a French ~~=~~~~~~!~!~l~i!!!~ Lamaze, who brought to
the Western world the
breathing techniques
which bad been de·
veloped in Russia.
The Leboyer method ·
is named after another
The Gorden Announces
Its Fall & Winter Sale
French doctor.
Frederick Leboyer, who
incorporated changes
such as pulling the ~
newborn baby stomach-
down on the mother's
abdomen to retain the NC!IW~.O prebirth curved position • ..,, ....... _ ....
oC the spine, and waiting
a few minutes before
cutting the umblllcal •~~tii.
cord.
After the cord is cut,
the baby is bathed in
warm water, something
akin to lta. familiar en·
All Merchandise
1/J-'h Off
,a !f~·CfftPtamz;,.
. :J}w11f#1/ r #'*t"-f
VlllUdoPlua
~2~ Via Udo, Number 13 , __ .. ..._...._ .
675-0321. Open Mon.-sat.1o.6
vir onment inside t he ~~~=~~=====~~~~~=~:._ mother. The mother is
encouraged to nurse the
chlld witbln the first
hour or .so after birth.
Stats in Status
CITATION-WHEEL
. SWISS
•OFF
mr.o.1&nica
Cut fr•h from huoe wfle911.
Moist Ind full of flavor.
T ANltU TRADER•
SOUPS
SAVES6e
llEO. Sil.as
ll's been a loog time
since I worked on my
status. Ob, a couple of
summers ago I rolled up
the car windows and
pretended it was air-
cooditiooed. And I ~ed·
to sit in a public place
and trace words acr06S
the paees of a book as
fast as I could turn the
pages and make believe "she'd be smart to go
I was an Evelyn Wood after the big money -a
graduate, but nothing game show contestant.
big. Do you have any idea
You can imagine my how much the Secret
~urprise when I picked Square is worth or what
up the paper the other a bundle you get ii you
day to learn that. status. :; o 1 v e the $l O, o O o
/
31•.z•
symbols have changed Pyramid?"
conaiderably. Large "But bow do you get
homes are considered introduced to these peo..
tasteless. Bi& can are pie? Formally, I mean:•..----------------------------
16 '-tV fflwort. E-.y to fix.
Add hot MW• el'"'"" w"8
s«W •
out. Degrees and t1tl't .. Formality la out. My
are tacky. Having a live-.friend,Jan,ismarrylnga
1P orthodontist is unim· guyshemetlastweekina
._...,.,,. preaslve. Fat no longer 'StarWara'Une."
ff means affluency and "But does she really
I• le 17 ' jolliness. And marrying knowhim?" C 0 lrms a doctor is no longer the "Mom! 'Ibey saw the .oF OHIO ~~=~~e:!;~~~:~ :~~i;~::aes!r!:~
~ -ufh ~ sf 'Ai 0,.. Dllllr ,.',..,.. The last one was a the same as oura. Old is CJU 08 ~ 18%8 w..y 'ti',... real kick in the head. Not in. Youth is out. Poverty Phonr. 5 40.6991 ·. COSTA MESA · ,._ .......... ...,. . _.., 12 t.i,.. mar ry a doctor! Bite is beauutul. A!nuency is llm'oiot ..... oo()oo;jOl"-f _..,. .. .,.. E -.. ...... your tongue! obscene. Cauaea are
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•iiiiiinc.-iii.viiiiiiiiriiiElliiiiiiiiiCiiiiiiiiiJIEiiiiiiiiiEiii:8iii---...-.._iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii·iiiiiiiaTiiiMiii. iiiiiiiiiiiiii-iiiiii.:.I I asked my daughter, right on. Employment is "ls this true? Have doc-boring. Take care of
---------------------------tors really fallen out of your feet. Teased hair is
favor as the nation's No. the pits. Owning a home
l moat desirable mate?° is lime·con aumin g •
.. Assuming a girl Records laatforever."
wants lo get married "Let me get this
these days," she said. straieht. Status to you is
OUr annual sale for cooke
wilf start Monday, January a and con-
tinue for ONE WEEK ONLY through
Seturday, January ,,, We hope you wlll
take thl8 opportunity to lr!dulge )'OUrHlf
with all thole handY kitchen toola and
accee10f1et you've l'>een mlNlng. 20%
to 60% off selected merchandise
througnout tne atofee •••• butch8fblock,
cookbooks, coppetWar•, earthenware.
gluaw•e, Imported food&,
Unens, wooc:tware., ••
Umfted quenmy on IOfM Henw. All
lalee final. tMJor ad cardt. ouh or
tt'9Ck orly. PlMM no mall°'~ ~(Sorry, no w.e otwga)
®
WD1LIAMS-SONOMA
WOMEN'S
Better Shoes
Sharply Reduced
Our 147th
Yealurlng a •~id~ a11ortme nt of thi• •~•on• •tyll'•
and C'olorw •• \"o t all 1ise• in e1:ery Mt~·I~.
'1:har1es Jour4an • • • Julianelli
Short Un" ••• Fine Quality
Vafuea from
$63.00 to S87.00 Now ••• 3995
Allilfl, Howard Foi, Banclolino Boots,
and ·~· Onaldo.
A good adottm.nt of foll fa.hiona 2295 3195
Valu. from N to ·
s.44.00 to S56.00 OW • • •
lllairis caiUll CGllection • • • Anialfl • • • CIJizio ........ °"' It Mleet 9reup of caauolt; 2195 flats and tom• 90ndef1.
Valv" from al to "6.oo to s56.oo nOW • • •
3195.
I
t
. i ,
•"<I ~ -r
HOROSCOPE I RELIGION Thursday January 5, 1978 DAILY PILOT C3
SOt~I COAST
, M'ORS <'<>·OP
., •• , ' • " ,, •• It ,,, •• ,,, •"'-'•Y"" ~ Wt htn t•••••4in :-;-"'<•,..,,_<Mii Ah -eM [,_,,__H_o_r_o_s_eo_p_e_..) Few Leave
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY w....r .. w..e
Mlelnt
ltU .._..,_ lf~ll
C..teW...-541-0JH
PERMANENT
WAVING
q..ffwr. I !-,Ml L orhed
' ho" cn::I O'T\ ''"" rq o I <)IOIT.nq c. pe•m'ln""' w Jv,,. 0? you
1ecomnend 11?
(M S. C, Hurit. Boorh) 0 "9-, Ye,, but 11 depe....::15
•on what ,.,lf.ln you qo to. p.,.,,,,...,.,,.., wovi"'! .,,., bleoc"ed
hair i\ a tOOJChy ti.I"'}. •~idly
w!iere o~poroer.ced ope<OtOf'
0'8 lllllol~
Qwsti011: I ,, P'' bf,. r , 'I"'
n IOU".h-1-4') C'WV"i n Pf""""""'"' "" the lornn tfoy'IMr\. R W .
I Jewvv• a .. 1 ~·I
A111ww: y,,,, it 1\ rn.,.t · ·
Y°"' tor 1 ,.,, 100 domo<J•--i '
Mor" cnn j,,,,,.er\ w.11 b.,
llWolvtK:I ,f 11 11 h.<fov bJ.,.yl-.,d
rorh« rt.a. 1! 11 ••I"" hnterl.
By SYDN EV OMARll
FatDA Y, JAN. I
ARlt;S <March 21-AprH 19>. Examine
spintual values, concepts. You have a chance to
rectify errors, reunite with family member,
make amends for recent "sliJtht" to loved one
TAURUS '(April 20-May 20 >: You get good
idea or who cares, who couldn't care less, where
you are going and how to arrive at destination.
GEMINI (May 21-Jun·e 20): Go slow, play
with time, mold it lo your advantaae. You are
stronger than current circumstances Indicate.
Get organ1zed. Know a relationship 1s
··serious." If single, you might be maklng
marital arrangements.
l:ANCER (June 21-July 22 ): Avoid direct
• confrontations. Not time to lay down gauntlet.
Finish rather than initiate projects. Aries, Libra
persons figure in scenario. Emphasis on
routine, service, dependents and pets. One wh o
harassc.>d you is going lo fade, and will disap-
pear.
LEO <July 23-Aug. 22J: Physical allracllon
should be kept in perspective. You do make ex-
citing, new contact. Be independent.. bnghL. not
subservient, true to principles.
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22 > · Follow through
on hun~h; learn through process of teaching.
Aquarius, Cancer persons figure prominently.
Accent on legal ties, money in escrow, property,
basic values. You conclude important transac-
tions. Lel go of past concepts. You gain by ac-
cepting fresh, new, vital procedures.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22 >: Movement.
travel. messages and relatives are part of your • personal scenario. Gemini, Sagittarius persons
figure prominently -and so does the number 3.
Accent on communicating meanings where, In re·
cent past, there was strict censorship.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Accent on col·
lect1on, payment, assembling necessary data.
Aquarius, Taurus and Leo persons figure in pic-
ture. You locate lost articles, gain greater in·
sight into problems. Soon you will know that
what you need for greater freedom is on th<!
way.
C;4 fvAM1'o
. HAIRSTYLTS"r
SAGl'ITARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Lunar
cycle gives strong backing for plans, programs.
Circumstances veer in your favor. Be percep-
tive, analytical. take notes. Yes, member of op-
posite sex is in picture. You win favors of those
who mean the most to you. 2630 Avon. Suite · D" Newpon Beach
(714) 645-7290
ThaNcl to you
ltworkl .~.
RllAlllf=US ••
CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-Jan. 19): What you
need to kmow is obtainable, once you get
backstage peek. Reject surface indications.
Gain confidence or family member. Be aware of
budget, art objects, luxury items.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb. 18>: Emphasis on
deciding who is a friend, who is intent on using
you. You gain rare insights into truth. Key is to
be able lo handle what is discerned.
PISCES <Feb. 19-March 20): Seriousness of
purpose is necessary and should be advocated.
Capricorn, Cancer figure prominently. You get
surprise backing from one who pulls strings,
calls si~als.
GI FIS and ACCESSORIES
SALE
Don't let time
s lip by for
THE SHONSTROM'S .
once a year sale
.20% to 50% off
Starts January 6
1028 Bayside Drive • Newport Beach • 675-5433
(Bayside Drive at Jamboree>
CITATION-WSBBL
SWISS E
0 0FF
The Church
By GEORGE W. CORNELL
NEW YORK (AP) -More than ~>
women have been ordained as Episcopal
priests since church leaders voted to allow
female ordination, but despite vocal op·
position to the policy from some factions.
relatively few church members hav~
drop ped out. according to a church survey.
The survey, based on informal ques-
tionnaires to domestic dioceses that wen'
returned in mid-November, as well as ad· ditional reports, showed that in addition to
the women ordained in the year since the or
di nation of women was authorized, 62 other
women deacons or candidates are headed for
the priesthood.
Through mid-November, 96 women had
been ordained in the church, according to ~
reportonthesurveyreleasedThursday.
About two-thirds or the women priests
hold paid PoSitions in the church or serve
as ministers in secular institutions -col-
1 eges, prisons, hospitals. a nd others.
Twelve are in charge of congregations as
pastors. assistant p astors or interim
pastors.
The women working as chaplams in
secular institutions also serve in local
parishes in a variety of diocesan capacities
or teaching in church schools, the survey
s howed.
Twenty of t he ordained women are
primarily in secular employment, such as
college teaching, banking and graduate
s tudies, but do Sunday assignments, filling
pulpits or other parish tasks, when they
can.
The church said its survey showed 13
congregations voted to leave the church
and 18 voted to withhold funds from na-
tional and diocesan church programs. Ten
congregations declined to allow visits by
their bishops. T h e church h as 7,192
parishes.
Diocesan bishops were found to have
placed 32 priests or deacons under some
form of inhibitions from functioning -sus-
pension or facing it -for fomenting de·
partures from the church.
The s urvey also showed that 3,400
members of the 2.9 millioft-member church
decided in 1977 to leave the church because
of the ordination of women, prayer book
revisions or a lleged "secular or
hum anistic .. trends in the church.
• •• Priest
(From Page Cl)
parole or as an alternattve to the state prison jn
lnd1anapolis.
"Jn some ways the prison has helped keep
me out or trouble because as long as I'm work-
ing there I won•t be asking for a parish or my
own." As an afterthought, she noted that either
the bishop or the parishioners make that de-
cision.
.Mrs. Means, a former Roman Catholic,
says she's optimistic, predicting that women.
will become assistant Episcopal bishops within
five years and that the Catholic church will be
ordaining women priests within 10 year s.
The Episcopal hierarchy approved the or-
dinaUc:m ot. women at a September, 1976 meeting
ln Minneapolis, ending 200 years of male
dom ination in the church. Mrs. Means said the
decision helped reamrm the important role
women have always held in the church and
family •.
"Women are the ones that often get the
family organized and into church on Sundays. '
They've always been the Sunday School
teachers, the altar society and choir members, ..
s he said "After .a lifetime of seeine only men in
leadersbJp roles I guess some people just can't
imagine a woman in a similar position:·
About two-thirds of the 75 women who have
been ordained since Mrs. Means still don't have
jobs, she said, and the strain has hospitalized
one woman and sent others to psychiatrists.
With no female Episcopal role model, Mrs.
Means said this year she thought a lot about the
Roman Catholic nuns she knew as a child.
Raiaed a Catholic, Mrs. Means stopped at·
tending church after she eloped at 16 with
Delton Means, a Methodist, because they were
unable to reconcile their religious differences.
After they were out of the church for seven
years the couple decided thetr four children
needed formal religious training. Th"'y choae St.
Matthew Eylacopal Church near their eaatsJde
hom e and the family-ls still a ctive there.
The year bas meant adjuatmenta for both Mrs. Means and her family •
.. A IOt were adjuatmenta that every cleric must mate. getting used to the nltht meet:ln11,
long boan and learntng not to bring all my pro-
ble1m lane.•• Others, like the year.Joni blitz of
pbotolf8Phen, reporters and qu.t&ou. were
Wllque to Kn. Meant. "I bad one reporter call and at me bow lt
felt to be spllttlng the Episcopal church apart.
Well, rve learned not to accept the guilt Implied.
in that question,·• she said. "Some people have
·been w aiting for a long lime to leave the
eburch. and for them the ordination of women
and chqes in the prayer book are jwit ex·
cwies.··
She aafd her own acijustm_,t wu difficult
, b e caute until October 1be refuHd to
aclmowledg~ anY. probleml. "I've alw.,a been
a sensitive person, but I WM IUfPl'tle4 to find
myseU taking everytblq ~.'For the
&at four« ftye months I" •• o••ed with d• fendinl m.J ordlnatloA. I IMilaa ..,.,na 1JQ a
tool.
.. About October the 1"-llDallY eaUibt ap
With me and for the enure montb f w11
hoepltaliled. I Juat sat aad ~t." sao.11.
Mn. Means said 1bo t..ned lo defed bft'
rtibt aa a woman lo make tM deelllon she dld.
".U 1W78 waa encDn1 I•• wonted. I was womed about fatlln1, about wt»ether I mado th
riaht decision and boat wbether I wu motivat-ed" for the rt.•ht i-e&IGU." She 1ald \he doubtl all
Yanlahed when ebt stepped Jnto 'the churcb.
Jn Mn. Mean'• •rnall church olJ'lce tbttt'•
cmly oat cl• to ttie atteotlOn ~ oa her Just a,..,. ..,-a nnall franMcl ~of
New ~arr 'nmet front .,.,. Uilt tnctuhl bet
picture. "NaUonal church leaden have t.ruted
me lutt 1lU any otb.ec prilU aDd l'm. lb&nltlul
for tbat..
I' I \
FERNLEAF COURTYARD
2640 E. COAST HWY.
Corona det Mer /
, , ~==::=:::~ ''~ ~ ~ p\\or,o~o~i::
CotM In GRd G.t Acquainted
lrown HtrotlCJll our st.ops
and
~ ~ , .. till " 5 Enf oy compffmntory W lrte!
.. ' " '' I \
' , ,,
I' I .. '
,, ,
~~
" ,, .
Vlllt us Uing our
GRAND OPENING
SALE
stoff ord
etC1•
die
Shella for the Collector!
Commercial Shelli •••
Nautical Gifts
WlndChl•s
er non
SWEAR
STARTING THURSDAY. JANUARY 'sHt
Up to 50°/o OFF
W fttclff Pima
548-4121
M-.T ..... WM.. lri..W.104 n.-s. 10.t
lcAoal .....
67S.1904
M...-,ttnSllla•t
10.5
S..,IJ.S
• FLORSHEIM • AMALFI
• MIRAMONTE • CAPEZIO • HILL & "DALE _
• FLORSHEIM • BALLY
.
• STRIDE-RITE
, '
' I
..
I OA.L 1 PILO f
· Form Letters •• .Carl
Still Thriving
DEAR ANN
<FnmPaaeCl>
c:au1ht on -and made a bl& hit," Karcher says.
••1 think McDonald's with their 15 cent ham·
burier, back then, changed the public's
lifestyle."
Jle laughed. "Everybody's going out to eat,
thank God."
~ LANDERS: In spite of au your good efforts, we
stiJl received far loo
many seasonal form let-
ters written under the
guise or "thoughtful
I
I
The fast-food industry is said to be the
fastest arowing industry in the Unlted States.
And while there seemingly are dozens or fast-
food operations on every city block, Karcher
views the competition as good.
"COMPETITION IS WHAT keeps us
sharp," he aays. ''It keeps us on our toes." He
doesn't feel the "eaUng out bwllneaa,. bas
reached a saturation and predict.a co~tinued
erowth.
. . messages to family and
close friends." (This in-
cludes anyone whose
last name they can
spelJ.)
Among all the form
letters a rriv e d
someUung new. A fancy
announcement inform-
ing us of all the deaths
in the family. How tacky
and tasteless can you
g et ?
In retaliation l plan to
devise, for next year, a
form letter of my own
which gets the message
-across to e ve n the
dullest clods -the idea
being, if you don't care
to send a personal letter,
note or card, send
nothing.
Here's my message
for Christmas, 1978:
D ear Friend: Since
hearing from you. Sister
.Clara Mae ran off with
the milkman, and happi·
J y they got married
before the baby came.
Grandpa fell in a hole on
his way to the outhouse
and ha s been o n
crutches ever since. We
finally got Uncle Joe to
quit messing around.
Brother Billy joined the
Foreign Legion, thank
the Lord. He is an idiot.
We think of you often
and wonder if you are
dead or put away again.
Write a letter if you feel
Jike it, otherwise just
leave us off your list. -
Your Country Cousin~
Uo you think they'll
~et the drift, Ann? -
HOPEFUL
DEAR HOPEFUL:. J,
doubt It, but it's worth
the sh°'. Let me know
the reactJoo. will you!
.'.DEAR ANN
LANDERS: My bes t
friend asked me how I
would feel if she had sex
with my brother. I told
her s he shouJdn 't ask me
such a question because
I couldn't give her an
hones t answer. She
looked dumbfounded. 1
then said, "I don't think
l could res pect you
anymore if you did such
a thing." <This girl and
my brother are both 16. >
Well, sbe ignored m1
advice and bad sex with
my brother anyway.
Now I don't know what
to do. I am very uncom·
fortable in her presence
and so is my brother.
She hangs around our
hou se uninvited.
Whenever she comes in,
he leaves. I think she
JUSl wants to be friends
with me so she can see
my brother. I'd ap·
predate some advice
from you. -
MARCELLA IN SAN
JUAN DEAR MARCELLA:
Cool the frieodablp for
the time belng. She Is ·
sure t.o get &.be message
if you &ell her you have
other plans and that she
can't jWJt drop in the
way she used to.
After a while, tf you feel
more comfortable aboat
her, resume tbe
friendship. U you seue-
she Is still arter your
brother-chop it.
DEAR ANN
LANDERS: My wife
••1 like to think we've been a leader ln this,••
be says. noting they were tbe first to have a
carpeted dining room with padded booths. Food
also ls delivered to customers at thelr table.
. "We've added a serve Yourself salad bar,
which bas been very exciting," he notes. "Gee,
what we're going to do next I don't know. We'll
come up with something."
Ka.rcher, who has a weekend house in the
Cypress Shores section of ~ Clemente, lives
five blocks away from bis office In the same
house he and bis wile bought nearly 30 years ago. ·
He belongs to numerous charitable and
community organjzations and is kept bu.sy with
12 children and 21 grandchildren. He was asked
what be does In bis spare time.
"My spare time-if there is such a thing-is
family oriented. .. be says. "I've never played a
game of golf in my life.
"WITH A LARGE family and a large com-
pany you're never in need of something to do.
You 're always on call."
AU of bis children worked for the company
part-time while going to school and three
brothers, three sons, a daughter and a son-in·law
currently work for it. Karcher notes, however,
that .. everybody ln thls company bu earned their way."
--------------------and kids aren't speulng
Corporate plans call for po6Sible expansion
into Nevada, Arizona and Texa•, but tbe presi•
dent doubts the company will go internaU~nal. to me these days and I
am not s ure the dog
likes me anymore
either. We had a kitten
who started to act wHd
and crazy. Ile tore the
draperies and ruined
two upholstered chairs.
. He seemed to be going
from kittenish playful·
ness to getting really
vicious -so much so
that I was starting to
worry about the safely
of our youngest child.
My wife and I bad a
big argument over this
nutty cat and the next day she had lt destroyed
------------------------~---------------becaµse I raised ao mucla~ hell. Now tbe
whole family treats me
like I have s~me
loathsome disease. Can
you come up with a solu·
tion? I feel like a heel.
· -PURRFECTLY
UNWANTED
DEAR PURR: Go to a
pet abop and bay a mild·
mannered, swee&•
tempered ldUen. It may
well be the one yoo bad
w11 a U&&le goofy.
.. Again, wbo knows,•• be says. "I like to
think as long as we have room for expansion in
the United States, why look acrosa tbe ocean?"
Karcher, who feels America ls going
through a moral decline, nevertheless bas great
faith In the young generation. "I think we have
one of the greatest young generations coming
up that this country bas ever seen. despite all
the criticism.
"I'm so thankful to be an American. In so
many parts of Asia and Europe they don't have
the opportunity to do what we can do Jn this
country. There are still greater opportuniUes here.··
Says the man who turned a $336 investment
into a lortune: ••Wbat it really takes is that you
have to have a product the public ia BOiog to buy. . .
"But above all else you have to be en·
thusiastic abo"' it. You've got to make it hap-pen yourselt •••
PUT YOUR BEST
FACE FORWARD!.
See for yourself the wondrous
results of the facials at our center!
Watch those lines dlmlnlsh •••
Hoa• glcal face llflllla
can begin With your first visld
Wcitch howqulddy ACMlcu be controeled
For men and women of an age groups
The skin cate you need Is available at --
.. fFamdy
SKIN CARE CENTER
C.-For .......... TODAY
•• -.Solo
<From Pac~ Cl>
and women, are still playin1 tho
old, "l'm just here to talk to my
friend. Oh, this ia a bar?" and
"Are you a regular'.'" whlch is
usually followed with "No, I never
come here, this is my first time."
<Slow pause.) "Didn't I see you
here last ruabt?"
I never know what to do so I try
lo find a corner where l '11 be as in·
conspicuous as possible. I like to
watch the dancine Cl haven't
learned a inew dance since ''The
Swim" went out In '69 and I have
never, ever learned bow to dance
slow -I lead).
Invariably, I attract the
weirdos. The klnd of people wbo
·Sit at your table and won't leave.
The kind who have Just bad a fight
with their girlfriend and want to
tell you bow rotten she is.
I find myself listening to drunks
because I don't have the heart to
walk away and I tip the cocktail
waitresses too much because I
heard once they think women are
lousy tippers.
Generally. I refuse to accept a
drink unless I can buy the next
round which means it can get ex·
pensive when you have six people
squashed around the same table.
The people I talk to say they've
.. NEVER met ANYONE lo a
bar." I always feel like sayine I
haven't either -at leut aayoae
I'd want to meet again.
But, all in all, golng to a singt~·
ANN LANDERS
bar is always a learnlnc ex·
peritnce. And, after a couple or
hours, I pack my Ured body and
my clot.bes that smell or cl1arette
smoke into my c r and bead on
down the hiehway.
Thtre la always a feellng of ac·
complishment: I've proven once
again how old I am. and, as
Dorothy says to Auntie Em in the
"Witard of Oz" -I always feel
there's no place like home. For aix
months anyway. •••
SOLO/ZING
ORANGE COAST SINGLES.
Special celebration of Mexican
Three King& Day holiday. Mexican
food .. BYOB. $2.50 members, $.Hor
guests or $1 if you bring rood.
Party to.be held Saturday, Jan. 7
attbebomeofHellaTurretf. For in·'
formation, call Hella evenll\ga 4t
545·8160.
Li's Cblnese Restaurant, at the
corner of Adams and Magnolia in
Huntingtoo Beach, will be the scene
of a diMer party startine at 6;30 p.m .• Wed.Jan.11.
LIFE AFTER DIVORCE.
Workshop to be held from 8 to 11
p.m., FridayJan.6atMornlngland ..
2600E. '7thSt.lnLollgBeacb.
It ls open to anyone who ls In the
midst of a divorce, is divorced, or
has been widowed. There is a ~
donation. ForlnformaUon call (213)
433-9906.
Co•~ la a11d •ro1Cse
' · 4'535 Campus Drive, lrYln•
955-1977
~ ANTIQUES 'N
ACCENTS
~OYS 'N TINSEL
GIFTS
GALORE
SALE IN PROGRESS .
oo~rm~
~~
~
SEMl-AN~UAL SALE!
Step lfvefy for terrific savings on super styles by the top
·names in fashion shoes: Red Cross Shoes•, Sociallties and
Cobbles. You'll find a collection that runs the gamut from
daytime casual to evening glitter. Don't let anything keep
you away from this spectacular women's shoe event -it
only happens once a season!
SJS.90 -SJS.90 Reg. '22 -S3S
CAMEO SHOES
sount COASr PLAZA
COSTA MESA-LowwLeYtl-NM' M411 Co. •
546-5210
I
I
(
I
I I
..
Business Thu'*1ay, Januaiy 5, 1978 DAILY PILOT f:S
Pastrami Wings It tQ London
Lock Closes· j:
Even before Lock No. 19 near Keokuk, Iowa, on the Mis-
s issippi Rtver closed for the winter this week. boats and
barges laden with grain found the going wugh. The
towboat James E. Snyder smashed through ice to open
the way for the last of the winter traffic along the river's
northern stretches.
By BUGH A. MULLIGAN .. ,""' ... ~ LONDON -The Duxe and
Duchess of Argyle did it. Gov.
Jerry Brown of California did lt.
Now I've done it, flown the
"Brown Bagger," the no frills,
pack-your-own lunch fhght
across lbe Atlantic.
But they dtdn 't fiy back on the
Concorde, as I did, whlcb was
another story.
FREDDIE LAKER, a British
chap who Wied to sweep out
aircraft hangars before he rose
up in the world to own his own
airline, bad to fight his own gov· emment for years to bring about:
his dream of a low-priced air
shuttle service between New
York and London.
His Skytrain, already dubbed
the Brown Bagger by New York
cabdrivers, began service late in
September offering no frills
flights to London at $135 <or to
New York al $105 because of cur-·
rency differences> and caused
Pan American, TWA and other
competitors to provide similar
rock bottom flights. Now prices
are f alµng and frills are being
snipped trom the Miaml and
Foct Lauderdale runs.
Tickets foMhe Skytrnin can be
bought only on the day of the
flight, but the ticket office locat-
ed out on Queens Boulevard in
the wilds of J immy Breslin coun-.
try gives telephone advice begin-
ning at dawn on how many seats
are still left.
I CAUED AT eight in the
ntorning from my Connecticut
hideaway and was advised by a
pleuant English accent, rem·
iniscent of Greer Garson in
".Mrs. Miniver," that 310 seats
remainedoutofS4S.
When I reached the ticket wln·
dow at 10:30 a.m., I handed over
my passport for perusal, my
credit card for payment, my
suitcase for checking and, on the
big board, chose seat No. 4A,
which was a window in tbe non-,
s moking section. The little
charmer behJnd the desk told me
Countinns Promoted
J was passenger No. 70 .
The place was empty. The.
whole transaction took three
minutes, pretty close to an
airline counter record in my two
decades of flitting about the
globe. She told me to be back at
the same ocnce by 9:45 p.m. to
catch the last free Laker bus to
the United Airlines terminal at
Kennedy or else proceed there on
my own.
INVESTING SO cents in a sub-
way ride into Manahattan, I wan-
dered alone Madison A venue
·peeking into some of the special-
ty food shops that pack picnic
baskets for the transoceanic
shuttle.
For $46, one featured "a Con-
corde-style supersonic snack for
the no· frills passenger." It in·
eluded a thimbleful or caviar,
roast squab in little booties and a
haH botUe of Moet-Cbandon bUb. bly.
I walked over to Zeb's
sandwich shop behind Grand
Central Terminal and had the
take-away man build me a dou·
ble pastrami on rye with a side
order of cote slaw, letting it be
known that his handiwork would
be consumed somewhere off Newfoundland.
"BIG DEAL.'' BE said, scowl-
ing, but he threw in a couple of
dill pickle slices for the road.
The laat bus to the airport
evoked the last.train from BerliD.
Quick, Casual Airline Service,
'Mistaken Ithntity~ Mark Flight
piled high with durfle bags, c backpacks, blanket rolls and
guitars, as if the occupants, some
carrying babies in pajamas, were fleeing with all their _____ _.. ____ _,
earthly U:npedimenta.
Alter passing through security,
there were no further check-in
procedures and the Big DC-10,
arrayed throughout with nine
selrts across the ais,e, pulled
away from the gate at precisely
llp.m.
ALREADY THERE were
veteran Brown Baggers who
knew enougl) to assert the ter ..
ritorial imperative. With a tough
reftlgee mentality, they scarfed
up every pillow and blanket in
sight and stretched out on the
empty seata for an all-night nap.
Our ranks included 258
passengers and two infants that
night. I was one of three wearing
a tie. As soon as the seat belt sign
went off, the 10 stewardesses In
tall Trilby hats't ~Ued the drink carts down the aiales, offering li-
quor at SO cents and beer for a
quarter. There was no wine or
champagne to set off Chef Zeb's
delectation.
A cold dinner was sold in ad-
vance for $3. I asked the bearded
cha~ across the aisle what his
tray contained. "Chicken.•• he
said, "No, wait, maybe it's
shrimp." He never could decide.
FOil SZ, I rented earphones for
the in-rugbt movie, despite the
jests of aome student.! wbo pre-
dicted it would be an old Army
V.D. film. It turned out to be
Jackie GleasQn in ••Mr.
Billions,.. which immediately
put the whole plane to sleep, ex-
cept for a crying baby and two
Australians who went to work on
their duty free liquor purchases.
The $2 hot breakfast, which I
essayed, was a disaster of burnt
sausage, a tired omelet and the
usual British put-down of coffee.
But the old Brown Bagger was 10
minuxes early getting into Lon·
don 's Gatwick Airport, and the
cringing porter immediately-
mlstook me for Gov. Brown.
"Where to, Governor," be nat-
tered through yellowing teeth,
"the taxi stand or the train to
Victoria?" I took the train, oC
course, in the spirit of Freddio
Laker_'s economy breakthrough.
Telephone Bil& Fall
By'l'beAsaoclated Press
January telephone bills may be
a little bit smaller.
The Internal Revenue Service
says the federal excise tax on
telephone service dropped from s
percent t.o4 percent on Jan. L
The tax on local and toll
telephone calls, as well as
teletypewriter services, has been
dropping 1 percent per year since
1972 under federal tax law. The
telephone excise tax is scheduled
to be phased out completely by
Jan. 1, Ul82, but President Carter
is proposing that it be ended late
next year.
NEWS TO USE therestoftbeworld. ( J
meast.irement used by most of
So the American Natl()Jlal
Metric Council bas put out a
Metric Consumer Information A telephone subscriber who
has combined local service and
long-distance telephone coeta ot
$10 1n January will pay .to cents
in excise taxes instead of 50
cents.
METRIC'S DUE - A docu.
ment that will have a major ef·
f~ct on this nation's future ls the
Metric Conversion Act. moving
the country into the standards of
Kit.
The kit Is available for $1 for
postage and handling and ln-
cludes a wallet-size convenlon
card and two booklets, .. The
MetrJc System Day to Day .. and
••A Metric Reference for Consumers."
Order it from MCIK-ANMc.
1625 Massachusetts Ave. NW.
W ashingtoo. D.C. 20036. Jim VUlers, general manager of Newporter
• Inn, will join staff of MGM Grand HoteJ, Reno. He
• took over at Newporter in April 1976 and will be
replaced by Dorsey Brady.
named president of the Newport Harbor Jayceea.
Fox, vice president of Warren Fox Leasing of :--------------'-----------------------
Costa Mesa, waa named by the board oC direct.ors to
..
..
* Raymond E. Carpenter Jr .• Newport Beech,
has been named director or sales at American
Telecommwtlcations Corp., El Monte.
lie will be responsible for Implementing sales
slr atcgies in the firm's telephone and central office·
equipment product lines. He will also direct the ac.-
t1v1t1es or regional sales managers. He is former
director of sales and marketing at Brand-Rex of
Wtlhmantic, Conn.
* Warren C. Fox Jr., HunUqton Beach. bas been
fill the unexpired t ~rm or Michael Hobbs, who re-
signed this month. Fox's term will run Ulrougb June
19'18.
* Maggie Ma.rawakl has joined Cochrane Chase &
Co., Newport Beach advertising, public relations
and m arketlng firm, as a copywriter.
She was previously with Campbell-Ewald in
Detroll
* Chancy M. Lott, vice fresident and project
·--~~------~---~~~-~--
manager or in the Corona de Mar office of William
L. Pereira Associates, planners, architects and
engineers, has been appointed to the board of dlrec.
tors of the Orange County chapter of the Amertcu
lutltute of Arcblteda. He will fill the unexpired
term oC George Blaael. who resigned to become
presidentoftbeCalifornia Council of Architects.
* ' <i Six new directors have been elected by the
( Newport Cea&er Auoclatton.
Elected to fill two-year terms were Eullne
Loop, Avco Financial Services; Larry Barre&&. Bar·
rett Property Services; Tbomu Yud&. Crocker
National Bank; Thomas Santley, Pacific Mutual
Life Insurance; Mawice De Wald, Peat, Marwick,
Mitchell & Co.; and John Stelnbru11e, Steinbrugge
• & Thomas, Inc. They join five olber directors to
serve in 1978.
* Carol A. Brown. Santa Ana. baa been named
brokerage representative for the Southern
CaWomia brokerage operaUons of the Paal Bnere
IJf e IJllaranceCo., NewportBea(:b.
A MIW Ylil'S Wl$M
lo.YOUR
lltTaHIAL1M
Now la the time 'to
think aboul U71 and"
mate '1'1111 plana to eftJOJ' It more. Kay ,.. aua..i .. that )'OU mah t.b:ls )'oar No.1 rao&mimt
Resohe-that JOU ..ur.'
seek the profeaalooal
advice of 10'lr llhlllcian wbeoevw anJJalnJ oc-acbe9 penbt.; )OU do,
tile odda are t.bat ov •lncere •lab for ' :HAPPY NEW YEAB IOI'
Joa will cane trQe. l'or •ood Jaealtb aa4 Ila=• uoau, •o toe •
YOUR l>OC'l'Oll CAN P.RONB US WMG 70Q0
~ • aildldne. Ptdi: up
·Sf'*r pr.serlptloa It ptn1 nearby, or wo
wll dell.er prompUy
Wlthwt atn dmli. ~ 1treat IOHf s-eoplo .. tra1t u wltb tbelr
· pNtcrtpttona: ._., •• : GOmpaiu94 ,..,
CAPJTOLIZE
WITH
CAPITOL·
··: . . . .
~Ccq>itoJ
Re • 15· goOd
for the I economy •••
Yours
Tax Shelter your Income now and rt wUl shelter you In retirement. The
money you S4ve for retirement not cmJy
hefps your personal econont}4 but it
also stimufateS the general econolTl)'
Republic puts your S8Yings to
work to create jobs with the loaning of
mUllons of dollars for the building of
homes end Industry. Each dollar of
your savings contributes to ~ healthy
business cllmete.
riow is the time to 8SSU1'e your
economic futwe. With a tax-sheltered
IRA or Keogh retirement plan. You pay
no Income tax on the rnoney you put
Into these plans. nor on lhe Interest.
until wtthdrown at retirement. Whh just $1500 a year ln an IRA.
tndtvlduel Retirement Account. your
future could look llke this:
Mde4 --~.... ......... ndr•ntd Aa. atMltare4 ptM ......... pin mooe,
10 Years 23,548 15,758 7,7'iXJ
20 Years 75,670 44,098 30,571
30 Years 165,653 95,067 90,.586
F1guTes 1re bued on a 25S h:ome ta btacket. wfth
fvt1d• In• 7.75l5 per ennum. ~ certllk.ca account,
cont!~ oo ~ity. fl'e*'-1 ~ne permit
ar1y wflhdrlWI, IU~ IX> subltanU.I n!ductlons In
lntlfrftlt umlngs. (Now• ~m~ 1pollH may
open an IAA occoum elaQ. II the ~ng IPOl.&M
qUllllllalJ
The Keogh Plan for eelf-empfoyed
fndMduas allows yauty contlibutlons
up to $7500 for~ greater eamln~
St.art earnl~ Interest today on a
retirement pllln and get tho tax
deduction th8t yau deserve. Call or
drop by for more lnformatton.
............ .....,.., ...... .,.,.°""' ... ~
&u'IDACCOGl'nSl'llCIR!Dn> ffOPOO IS .
f'cw)'CMar .-+a. II Glloll •optn8abudily
C6 OAllY PllO T
l'l'BUC NOTICE
P'•CT"10U1 •11~,.I U .. .,..\lAT•""4•f ' .. '••lflirfll' .• ......,.,_ ·~....,_...,.,...,..
•\
IOWN ,.;;() (;QU .. TllY TO••llNC.
•4f II•••• ('°'i. ....... C•-i•»
••tf'I ..... •·•"'V IU \.1w1.n ,<..U"tot..
Mt .... l.'•J•21
r '\ \ r.v\lflf" .. \ • Qil""" tt'd i.r •*' •"
f"ll.,•dv•I
lt•11'yA Pl••<•
Tf\1\. 'tllltPN-nt w•\ fllrJ •ti" ,,_
, (Nf'lt t Ci•r• of Or ,....,. w~r1ly \HI JIU\
:I ""· ,..,.,,
P11bll\...i Or-C.W.U 0•11~ f'llOI
J •n. s, u." l•. ma
PUBLIC NOTICE
~lltnt1on • L M•1oftih.lra
31tl w. J.i1 .. -8 1•d.
~,I/
LO• An•tlH , Cotlllornl• '°911
PuOll\fWd 0.-tlnq! (04'\l lJ,111ly V1k)t
J .. nu•ry s~ ,.,. 0 18
PUBLIC NOTICE
Thurldar. January~. 1071
PUllUC NOT1C£ PUBUC NtYl'ICE
. . ..
PUBUC NOTICE
tta.6
lllc;T'ITIOU$ IWUNHS
HllM& al"Ul111441•.r
1 II• lltllowl119 ""'"'I .,. doln Duwna•~
IHN Of'ER ... flONAL S'l'STfM$,
1121 T•NIO-r. C.I• /!NW, CA t26Jit
Oouqo .. , C lllcll••d\, tU T •Nl~r, Cata Me .. , CA tui.
Collin l . H•tch, llOI T•N~r.
Cetl• MeM, CA m.
8•r" F °'"'""· 1U l1 0.l•••r•, HU"llfl1llCMI BM<h, CA '1'4
11111 D<alna» It C-ltG by •
Q.•rw••I ~rwup
Collln I. H•l<ll Tllll 1 .. 1_1 ..,., ttfed With Ille
Counly Cl~M el Or•111111 County
Dot< 21, 1'7'.
LlllYY'ht-
H.Cllett&T-1<.,.
Ut N••-' ~Ori•• ........
H•w,_.1 -..ell, CA nt'O
Piii
Pu1111.-Or-C..•I O•llY Piiot
Oe< H. 1''1 Ja<1. ), 11, 1', lttt
PUBUC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
.. ICTITIOUS IUSINEU
NAMa nAT•MENT
The 101-119 P«Mn Is dOlno bull· ,,....,.
PR0f'E'510f4AL REAL ESTATE
SEllVICt'., 1n1 0rlll'99 Aft., Colle
Mes•.CA976t7
Craig W B•l'-Y. 71.l? 0... Vista
Or . ec>.ta ~CA n•211o
Thi\ t>uuneu 11 conouci.ct 11v .... In.
dl•ldual.
CrAl9W.a.tley
~his st•l-t "'~ lllecl with 11\e
CO<Jnly Cltrt. of Oranve Co<inty on
~1t.1tn. ... ,~,
Put>li\twd 0.~ C:O.il Dt lly Piiot.
o.c.22.2', 1m,Jen.J, u. ""
PUBLIC NOTICE
11 IRVINE 'TOW: 71 IRVINE
lOWIHG; Jl lln'INE TOWING COM-
PANY. 1•112 c.crwtrvcllon Clrcl• W•n.
fntlM ,CA
O•n R.. AS11crart. 2'70 Grate t.n ..
CotllM.U,CA'26l6
Thi• 11<1>1..u it condU<teCI by en 11'1>
dMdU4ot. 0.,.ltAll>cntlt
Tlllt •t.-1 w•~ lltl'd with t"9'
County Cl*'ll ot Oreoge County on J•n.
J, 1918.
"7UI
Publlshed ~111\1111 0-t Delly Pilot. Jan.5, u, 1t,211t, 1'7t
PUBUC NOTICE
BANK CHAIRMAN
Rlcherd Stevena
BANK PRESIDENT
James Lynch .
Bank to Launch
Its First Branch
Irvine National Bank plans to build lts fa.rst branch
office near Hoag Hospital in Newport Beach.
The bank has purchases 2.2 acres of property at
Superior and Placentia avenues and l5th Street and
will build a 5,500-square·foot office.
The bank, head-----------quartered at 2171 Caro-represented as belng af-
pus Drive, Irvine, has filiated with another
been in operation since bank in tbe Dec. 29 edi-
1973. It bas grown to tion of the Daily Pilot.
more than $30 million in AN INDEPENDENT
assets. bank it features a
Richard S. Stevens is pefSo~al savings center
chairman and Jamcs'designed to meet the
Lynch is president. The banking needs of women,
two were erroneously divorced and widowed
persons, young adults
and the elderly.
The center uses \rolun-Hike Slows
NEW YORK (AP) _.teer servt~es o{ a range
The price of gasoline of professionals who are
rose more slowly in 1977 cont~cted to help solve
than the general cost of the fmancial and relat~
living, according to the problems of th ese
Lundberg Letter. a Los groups.
Angeles·based newslet-
ter that surveys 20,000
service stations each
month.
Call 642-5578.
Put a tew word•
lo work tor ou.
BUSINESS I STOCKS I LEGALS
Spring Cl.asses
•
College Plam
Bwiness A.itb
Tbe Collowlng 1&re amona bualncss·related
courses to be offered at Oran10 Coast CoUe(l.ci,
Cost.a Mesa, this spring.
Spring classes wUl begin Feb. 6.
-A COURSE DESIGNED to help students un·
derstand solar equipment and how it can be uied
ln comfort and Industrial pro<:esses will be ofrered
for the first time.
Tltled "Solar Healine and Cooling" (Sta-
tionary Engineering 115 l. the class meets Mon
days. Wednesdays and r-~ridays at 11 a.m.
-"COMPUTERIZED ACCOUNTING System" Is designed to help the accountant who is
not familiar with computers and the system
analyst who 1s unfamiliar ~ith accounUna .
Listed as "Information Systems 130'' in the
class schedule, the course teaches students how to
set up an accounting system. It meets Wedneadayg
this spring from 7 to 10 p.m.
-A CLASS FOR AllT students, designed to
operate as an advertising agency, is "Advertisinf
Agency." There are no prereq\lisites, but student.I
may aubmitporUolios for admission. MeeUnr time
is 3 to 5 p.m. Mondays. Wednesdays and Frid-rs.
-"BUSINESS ETJIJCS.., which m~t.s ,)on.
days, Wednesdays and Fridays at 9 a .m .• offers
students the opportunity to d iscuss ethical
behavior relating to business a,.d economic
freedom. Guest 5peakers will be featured.
Reaistration for sprlni classes runs Jan. 12
through Feb. 18 in the admissions office. Regisln-
tlon information is available at 556-.5735.
Booklet Offered
At Association
A free 150-page book of hints on retirement
planning is offered through Jan. 13 at branches or
• Glendale Federal Savings and Loan.
"Retirement Game Plans" explores s uch
aspects of retirement as insurance needs, medical
care, hobbies and opportunibes for extra income.
Over 1 'he Counter
NASO Listincp
MUTUAL FUNDS
llp• and Doamu
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STOCKS I BUSINESS
Thur day"s
Clo8ing Prices
-.
'.
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
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' • 1.1. ~
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ThutMSay, January 5, 1978 I JN DAILY PILOT CT
Credit Nixed?
Take Action
By SYLVIA PORTER
Tlllffl••W*
The ease with which one -can open a charge account.
get u new credit card or get a loan from a financial inslitu
tion is dependent on the dossiers kept on virtually every
borrower in the files of more than 2.500 credtl bureaus in
the United States.
Credit bureaus do not rate risks; they collect inforrna
Uon from creditors aa well as from public records and
other sources. Tbls loformatlon is used by banks,
merchants, and other lenders in considering whether to
grant credit.
LENDERS MAY JlATE APPLICATIONS ln terms of
what they call the .. Three C's or Credit:"
Character: Personal characteristics revealed
through the factual records or credit history, which in-
dicate how you are likely lo perform as a borrower.
-Capacity: Financial ability lo repay a loan, judged
on the basis of your job ,
Capital: Assets
that can serve as col· lateral for a loan.
If you are denied
credit by a lender and
the rea::.ons for the d~
nial are not specified in
Money's
Worth
detail. you have the right to request this information in
writing.
IF YOU ARE RflJECTED BY A creditor and, arter re
ceiving detailed reasoning, are not satisfied with the de
cision, you are entitled to a free copy of the report on
which the decision was based.
Request it in writing within 30 days of the date you r~
ceived the letter of rejection. After that. it wlll cost $.1 to SS.
If there are inaccuracies in your report or you wish to
comment on a past discrepancy, the law entitles you to
enter an explanatory statement of 100 words or less This
must be added to your credit report
Several weeks to a month later, request another cop}
of your report to see whether your statement is included.
YOU ALSO HA VE THE RIGHT to ask any credit
bureau to re-check information in their files.
H the information is incorrect, the credit bureau must
immediately remove it from your file. Ask the bureau to
notify creditors who received the false information in the
past six months.
An lmfavorable item in your credit file wil1 not nag you
forever. ln most cases the item must be removed after
seven years. A clean slate after bankruptcy can take 14
years or more.
IF VOU ARE TURNED DOWN because of inac-
curacies in the report, reapply to creditors when all inac-
curacies have been corrected.
H you have followed these guidelines and still find you
are being turned down without a logical reason, contact
the appropriate local, state and federal authorities who
govern the lender.
Check your phone book under U.S. Government for the
O((lcc or Saver and Consumer Affairs al the Federal
Reserve Board; also look for the Federal Trade Com-
mission's Bureau of Consumer Protection.
CHECK ALSO FOR THE nearest local Consumer
Protection Agency and any consumer assistance agency
under your state's Banking Department.
Do not give up requesting credit. Mistakes in credit
riles will not be corrected unless you make every effort lo
be sure your file is accurate, clean and up lo date
Nen Mamt<Jlning or re~11tabluhtng a credit rating
Dollar Slwws Gai~,
But Stocks Decline
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market surrendered a
broad advance gained earlier In the day. wlth the new
cloud of pessimism attributed by analysts to residual
doubts over the strength or the U.S. dollar.
The Dow Jones average of 30 industnal stocks. up more
than six p<>ints earlier. lost 8.66 points to 804 .92. The
average lost 17.59 points Tuesday and Wednesday.
A-.erf~an Leaur•
Do1Clone•,t t•erage•
New Yor11C1'PI FINI Oow·J--•v•r•"' STOCIC$
lO 11111 20 Trn
U Ull U St• lnctu•
Tr•11 Ullll 6S Stk
ODtn Hlgtt L-Cll>~ Che! bl,. 111.11 I01 st '°'., 6 .. '"SS 711 06 11) SJ llJ ~7 I .. 111 11 111 SI 110 1' 110 H 0 73
2 .. H HS 91 77' '4 llO II 7 7t>
NEW YOltlC CAPI
N£W YORK Appro• llMI Prevlout O.v
WtO •90 MOnlh •C>O 'fu r •OO
Twt Y .. " t06 J•ll I I• clelt 1971 lo Ihle
ttl• lo d•lt •
Ul.fS
'"p'
1,00 ,•00
40S.'OO 7U.~ ?.ll•,'00
·HY Sloe:~ HIO
1J,SIO 000 11.0.0.000 13,610.000 10 • .00.000 u '20,000 1',0JO,IJO •s.•.ooo 11,610.000 u .,,,..,
WHAT AMl!JI DID
HEW YOlllC (API
AMII( SALES
Due to late transmission
today's listing wlll not ~:"''::-: 1-.;;;a.::;ppe~.;.a.;.r..;.1;..n...;t.;.h.;;.e...;o:...;:.a_11...:.y_P_11_o_t._
~: :1
1 Gold Quotatloft• Uo 7. ~: ~·, IY TlltA.-1•.W l'r"• Up t 9 S.ltt1H -Id QOld pt'l<.-IOdO Up •.3 1...,. ..... Mornlnv 11•1"9 .... lO, down
Up U S,S.st: tller-ltolrtQ ll&J,10,"""' .. U Up • 1 .. i,111 a1-.-11•l"9 •111 4J, dow1t .. It Up U ,,._._.f_.., ... ~0.-.. 21 • tl: } : Z.rlelu ' 4-1 1$ lllf Otwfl '7 .to. t "'-'O
U• ) J e,aH uu~ •1 H~ & .._ ..... ,.-k•, ..._ .,_. ,.. I '1U, ts, CINll IUS Up • lt\Qelll•rd \tlllllll P•ICe\, ••• .,_ ~= :.. • .... IO,-... li. .
I
l U Q 0>.11. Y PILOT Thurtlda1. JatM.i~ i 1979
Pu nch
~ ,, "'J."!---.. I -
1 ~1
I ...---\ -
. -.
.
: Tiit: SERIES WILi. INCl.l'OE sc\cral guest
:,.,...t'1·lt-h11l1l0:-. and a nctY.ork studw Lour
: 'I h1· 111w111ng ll't'lun" on J an. 6, Y.1!1 look at what
! ~·l':-.t•arl'11 and ll•g1slalion have lo say ubout violcm·1•
: : un ll'll'\lsJOn The McMcn<.imins will explain how
' ~111d "hy programs rnfllwncc the habits of childre n.
. . • • • • '
Ttll' .l:tn 1:1 1wsswn will take a glimpse behind
I 111· sn•rw'i tr) Sl'l' how ll'IC\'1:-.1on ·s com edies,
ti! a mas, sports. gamt'!-., news and documentaries
.1n· protlut·t·cl :111d what makes them "com-
m1·11·1.1I" ., .
i., .. ~ A LOOK AT llOW Ml~ORITIF.S u-.c TV as an i in:-truml·nt of '>0('1al t•hange and how screen
., ~1·r-.011.ihl11•-. h1·1·11mt• ht•n>t''> and heroines will bl' ! · JHl''>1·nl•~I l.111 "II
~ • l'lw 1111ti11111111• .Ian 21 w1ll l110\,. al t1•lf'\ 1!-.1011
:: : lt•1•h11ol1rg ."' .111tl wlt,1l tin• [UtUIC holds for the HI
.... du:-.tn "' ~ "' # • . . . .
# ..
~ .
' "' .. :· ,
t .
,, Ill 111101 m .1111111 .il111u l llw -,1·111·-.. 1•h•1111·
R ite Wr o nged
Police Seize Body .. ~ MORHlS TOWNSlllP, N. J (A P ) -Burial
:.•~• ••erv1ccs for a Morristown man were interrupted i ~ when police seized the body moments before il was
, : to he lowcn·d into a grave. ~ : P olice look th<• body lo the county medical ex-~: am mer for an autopsy because of suspicions that
1 : Vincent Ciraldo, 65, m ay have died as the result of a
f'l • robbery and beat.mg. The autopsy results disproved
:: '. the report, authorities said. ~'.
e.: .. A PALL BEARER SAID one of the officials who
confiscated the body during services at the Holy
'Rood Cemetery here told the mourners, "I'm from
~~e medical examiner 's office and we need that
oody ."
Suspicions were raised after CiraJdo, who was
dclm ou.s from lack of food and suffering ins ulin
; s hock, called police Friday and said he had been
1 robbed, authorities said. Ciraldo later changed his
I stor y a nd said there had been no robbery. Saturday,
h e died of a heart attack while hospitalized.
ON TUK~DAY, AT ABOUT the s ame lime a
Mass was bring celebrated, a Morristown
policeman heard rumors that Clraldo died as a re-
s ult of a be~ting. Police asked for an autopsy, and I representatives of the county medical examiner
I f .rushed to the cemetery,
After the autopsy, Ciraldo's body was released I by authorities and he was buried.
\
: Fake Gun, Bomb
\ Stirs Co,uncil
I i OAKLAND CAP ) ....... Only six more years and I
I can reUre," slahed officer James Boyle after an
l Eate job seeker displayed a fake bomb and gun at a
ty CouncU meeting to empb.uiie bis desire for
ork.
Henry Robinson pulled the a.lckel-plated pistol
Tuesday night. then aasured councU members It u ,.a phony gun" before making a pltcb for jobs
-ror Oakland residentl.
-RE 11IEN REI.I> A cLVSTf!R of silver cy11n·
den bound together with tape, 11endlng epec:tatora
scurrying for lbe Hits. The bomb also was a fake.
"This la not a real bomb.'I ~obinson Hid. "I'm
tired of being broke •M 1 want a Job." -
I
/
..
T perfect
combination ..•
Secunty and ease or us.I
Our~le. strong Mu ter com-
01nat1on lock •1500
Reg 2 89
1sa
attractive
killer
Attract.:. and krll!> desttuc11ve
snn ls &nd slugs Available in
2 ' Ill 110 .. 01 pallets ::ir meal
Reg I 3q ggc
.t '
you saw right!
we've cut the price!
Black & Decker's new and versatile S'h-lnch cir-
cular saw for almost all of your home and
workshop building projects. Double Insulated. UL
approved. Lightweight. Model #7300 .
extend your
electric power
819 25-foot extension cord with 3/16
wire UL approved. heavy duty fOf
ell your p<>wer uses! #2516-025.
Reg. 615.
399
get carried away
over thresholds
Quality, low-proflle extruded
aluminum with replecable vtnyt In-
sert. In Alacrome 1tyle X. 36-lnch.
Reg. 4.49.
311
tasting finish
In flying colon
Glidden Spred Satin lateK Waif
Paint "" goea on amoolh and aiays belautltut long«1 Ci.an. up with Juat
water. a.ot. of oolofa. ~· I.It
gallon.
&~
extra 12-feet
of power
12-foot 16/3 extenSJOn cords for use
around home or workshop. #2516·
012. Reg. 3.29.
219
hang your hang-ups
all over Iha place
Organize any room, garage,
worbhc>p, etc. Display board for
kld'a room! ~· tNck. 2·xA' board _
maaonlt.e pegboard. Reg. 89'.
59°
Iha old
smoothie
Receive lowly and luting flnlsh
from Y'Oll' brush or roller. Glidden
Low Loan Wall and Trim Paint.
Reg. 12.79 gallon.
put your mark
where It counts
Burgess Vlbro-Marker .•. the
eleclrlc engraver wrth power
enough to engrave almost anythrngl
Sale and easy to use Reg. 7 .69.
549
messenger
board
Pin menages to this bOerd. bltls,
memos, etc. for convenience. 12··x-
16" w1th wood lrame. Reg. 1.89.
111
kids can't
knock It
l<ld·lHtad Gllddan latex Seml-
Glou Enamel glYM you a non-
yellowlng, Improved durablllty
enamel linlsh. Reg. 14.99 gallon.
10~
"'-w "»·~:
~
Air Auto Luggage Rdck 3495 AM /F M Stereo S tk
1$93562Liell160FBR
1970 TOYOTA COll()HA'.
4 DR SOM.
Auto Air Nice Car New 1 695 Paint Sti< 119824 1 Lie
ll622NDM
1971 TOY COROLLA WAGON
/""'i .... -
~
4 Sod A ll Adck Lii!' 1695 Yellow Suoer Nice Car S1k
11I04841 Loe 11662CUG
1972 TOYOTA
CORONA ,_.Kii
C;,0~
2 dr Hdtp One Owner. 4
sod Air AM w/taoe. Low
Low Miles Stk 11105631
lie #321FMB 2195
1976 TOYOTA CELICA GT
A1r Stereo Mags. V Roof. 5495 Rack 2 4.000 M iies.
B eau tifu l Beige. S tk
1105881. Lie f20 1TRU
•75 TOY OT A CELICA
Forest Green, Very Low
Miles. Air. 4 $pd, Rallye
Wheels. Stk #106'121. Lie
1501RFC
•7 3 VOLKSWAGOM SUPEl
IEEnE
Stick Sl\ift. Autom111e.
42.000 Miies. Hard to Find.
Stk 1101201, Uc #862HXX
• • • •
NEW 177 264GLA
4 Door Sedan
T Too Sunroof Automatic Air Cond1t1omng. Power
Windows Power Brake~. Power Steering Ser
11VC26465Hl-045066
$8678
177 TOYOTA CORONA
4 Door 5 Speed AM FM S1ereo Cassene Atr Luxury
lnlenor. Factory Demo. Ser :;045815
DAILY PILOT
TH -E EARLE
IKE
SA¥S:
Come in and take advanfCICJe of our after.
holiday sale and see why we•re the #I
Volume Import Store in Costa Mesa.
177 245A WAGON
Automatic. Alf Cond11Jomng Power STeenng, Power
Brakes Stereo. Pmstnpe, Ser #VC24545Hl-147224
SJ6J8
NEW '78 TOYOTA .
COROLLA WAGON
!>Speed. AM radio, Trtm Rings. Ser II 119833
Low Miles. Mags. Stereo 42.9 Tape. 5 Spd . Almost New
Radials. Stk #30099, Lie
1892KYZ
1974 TOYOTA COROLLA
WAGON
/7tc" ~\) .___ ~0.-..-...-.....
47 000 Miles. 4 Spd Rack 2995 Stk 1130037, lie 11232KMS
1973 TOYOTA CORONA 2 DR
HDTP
SPECIALS OF THE WEEK
,
1974 MGB RDSTR 1976 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE
AM/FM Low. Low Miles. Lie #233NDO Royal Blue. Stereo, Only 8, 100 Miles. Lie !f621 RXH
1975 OATSUM
1%10 4 Dr Sdlt
Low Mtles Good
Transportation. Lie
# 110NJT
·12roYOTA
COROMA 4 DOOl
1975 VOLVO
245 W090"
4 Spd Rack. Power
Steering Low Miles
Lie #832NAJ
1973 VOLVO 145
Pale Green. Auto. Air
Cond M ichelin
Radials. Lie #840PKE
$3999
1970
VOLKSWAGOM s.-
4 Spd, Silver. Lie
#948AKN
1974 CAPRI V.6
Georgeous Blue wilh
Auto. Air. Stereo
tape . V-Rool Lie
#852LOZ
1974 VOLVO
145 W.,...
A uto. Air. Rack
Ermine White. Lie
f899LJO
1975 TOYOTA
Celc•GT
Super Ntce car. Lots
or Extras. low. Low
Pnee. Lie f946MXT
1976 LUV
PldlllpTrwda
4 speed. Nice car. Lie.
#450PUU
2 YEAR OR
24,000 MILE
·SERVICE
NUCY •••
With less than 18.000
Miies. Auto. a"d Nice
Camper S hell . Lie
t1C49189
ON liit0$T UHO .. SI
CREDIT
UNIONS
WEtCOME!
4 spd Stereo v Roof.
Rallye Wheels. Super Car.
Stk 1130056 Lie 1925HDB
1970 TOYOTA COROLLA
SPRINT
White wtlh Red Interior 4
Speed. Stk 1130058 L•C
#974CJP
1973 VOLVO WAGON 145E
4 Spd . Nice. N ice 3599 Automobile. Stk •30064.
Uc #070HPP
1971 VOLVO I 42E 2DR SDN
Auto. Alf. Fuel Injection.
Just Rebuilt Eng .. Slk
#3066, Lie t6810JW
1973 DATSUN COUPE
'
DAILY PtlOf HMffs For~ HMltt for $4M H.Ht ~ 54* ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ,.,..,... I 002 G••rel I 001 G1Mr.. I 002· , ....
U)O-
1bt Blunt Merbtplece on thl Or'lrWI Coat .....................................................................
.......... ._.._,
'-"" ';C)C)O iiwt DAILY PILOt CLASSIFIED ADS Morc!-41M ...,,,, ... ... 7000 ""
aooo '°" ·--·-· , ........ l ... ,,,_, ~~ You Con Sell It Find It,
)et ...... ·-· I'*~ T rode It With o Want Ad (642-5678 ) One Call Service
Fast Credit Approval
( ....... 1
~:!:!~.~.~~ ........ ~~!!.~~ ........ ~:!!!.~~~ ....... 1 ~:.~.~ ........ ~:.~~ ........ 1~~:.~~~ ...... .
=~ .......... !?~~ !:~ .......... !?~~ !~~ .......... !?~~~!:~!'! .......... !?~~ ~~ .......... !?~~ ~~!'! .......... !?.~~
ebinoo
HORTH LAGUNA
ESTATE
~ \1 ,.., .,.. un•an \ wv..
Ii lllt t .1 UH Hiil houi-.c;
I' 11 o I .• f .1 r JI \ l
1la1\t' ~I .000.IMJU
EMERALD BAY
I \\d i.:t ·' 1111 "ll'P" I•
h111 '\t~I IMtU
II \\11 ~·"' I 1111 Ill I .111
\It'\\ ~ l'~,IMKI
I I.I~ \It\\
llH ~11. ·~~•
,\ -..1111$1\ litl .1 Ill! I ltl l
( 11 I 1• 11 11 I -. 1\
p.irl.. ')I ~1 101 .. I I I 11 \ I ,. \\
J Ill< <; ·:.~1.wu
CORONA DEL MAR
I Cameo Il1j!hlandi..
I UH SliUOO
SIX UMITS
Heal E.. ... tate
4 IDRM +POOL
S55,000
Ill~•· lo h1•.1l h frtirn th1-.
l,.· .. ulllul l{drtkn home
ti.•st hu\ in I lunlinl!lon
lk·,tt h l>:.!:llMI down or '"
... urrw ~:!Ill 111unthh IJJ)
nl\ nh I turn ' 91;;1 ti71i7
!~lfiAlll
WELCOME ABOARD!!
We have JUSl launched our firm into
the world of <'<>mputeri?.ed multiple
listing scrv1c:c When you list with us.
lhl' eumputer will make your informs·
t1on available to Hll Sl.l lt>speople within
our board C/\pprox1matcly 3,000 )
within minuks
Come Ill & let us dt•monstrate the
·high !'J>l'l'U Ll'fm1nal · . 1L 1s nothing
short of m1ra('lllou:-.'
759-081 I
fiuf ~
Gitut We.ettu Brdg.
i150NfWPORT.CENTER nwvr 7r'l0811
REAL EST A TE SALES
Opening for two licensed s alespcopll'.
expe r ienced or unexperienced, but
must havt• willingness to work & strong
desire to s ucceed Well established oft'.
s uper loc. progressive..• eommiss1on.
PERSONAL training. Start the New
Year RIGHT. Call Larrv Wh1tl'stdl•s
for more infor
I .' 111111lt·\ lur 1nu1nw
··r 11'111 t'ml•nl ~IH!I '1UO
MODEL HOME
PRICES LASHED
$3000 1002 G.-rol I 002 G1Mrel I OQJ G ... r.. I 002 ..............................................
LINGO
REAL ESTATE
NEWPORT BEACH
644·7020 ,
j})
COMMERCIAL
LEASE
CORO .... .A DEL M.AR
tn !111 111 ,1rl 111 l '•ll"OllJ
•lt·I \I 11 \p111•"11n;it1·h
1111111 q u. 1 • I 1·, l un
~··1111t1 ll•••f ptu' :.! 'mJll
1p 11I111• nl 1'.1rk1111( f<1r
11• '" 111 .1ut11mut11h-' ti5·
I'• r '111,irt• tool
COLE OF NEWPORT
••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
"l'\t•11111u11th old hurrw in --..-----------------m•r.t ol1•,11 ahl1 JI I ol Of
('11-.ta \ll•-.;1 '.\1 :1-.tf'r
h I'd I (I fl rn fl p I' II... l 0
I I 11 Jl It ,1 I ,, l t Ill nl
I' I II I ........ I II II .t l I \
land" ·'I" d ,\. dl•1111 al<'<i
11111 n I ak•· ,111\ .trllJl(l'
t all ... ,~ 77XH
)Q.. KEY
"<!)"'REALTORS iiC
C.ABECOD
$53,000/S2. I 50
TOT.AL DOWN
W1n•l111J;! ruatl" J\
"oann~ l :.tun rl'ln•;.it'
l'n\ Jll' .iroumh 11rol(•Cl
~edu<lt•d entn to I J\ ash
11' 1nl! rutJm (,ourmet
k11i lwn "'t·rlouk.., 'un·
hint' l'llUI l\ .1rtl' \\ tlld
PENINSULA POINT
4 Htlnn . l lw horn<' All amc.·nittt's
Lo' l'I:>' art•a, few st<.'ps to beach .
~ l 8!1 .!JOO
LIDO ISLE
Nt.'"' I\' r1·rnodl'll·tl I bdrm , tlc·11. -1
bath:·.'. h\'lng rm w cathedral ceiling
I.gt.• ma:-.ll'r bdrm s111lc. $224,950
llG CANYON
4 UH , lam rm. :J baths Heaul1fully
dceuratc.'<l ttroadmoor Plan :l, on extra
large lot. S325,000
BI LL GR U N DY , RE ALT 0. R
341 8uy\1d ,. 0 11v•· N B b7S· 6 161
W ES l.LY N .
TAYLOR, CO.
ll EI\ L T OH.S :-.im:t• UMH
· "INCRB>llLE" IRVINE TERRACE
Tantalizing custom 2 & den charmer.
Spacious rooms full of comfortable
t"o ntentme nt .. Superb quality &
design . Copper hooded rplc. slate
entry halt & a modest view of ocean &
Catalfna. $275.000 Incl. land.
WESLEY tl TAYLOR CO., REALTORS
JI I I S-J~ Hila Rood
MEWrORT CENTER, M.I. 644·49 I 0
1n. \l.r<>H-.
675·551 1
In!( .. t.111 Y. .I\ It-Joh l<
'"l'<.'PHll! lllJ">l1•r ltdrm
pl u" 1•n tl•I ,. 1· I rl'.1 I•
G~rol 1002 G~ral G.-ral I 002 GeterClll I 002
1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .........................•.•............•..•..
GREE~BRO Ck
HEW YEAR
Sf'ECl.Al
II urn • sdt1 1 " .111\t11ll" -------------------1>t7 •m11
f .1 lltlt 111 l ,111\.-l1tl 111•wl1 I
I ·1.,,,. I 11 I \,.,'I hlllj.! Ill
(. fl ' 1i " jl ·'
MANAGER--REAL ESTATE
NEWPORT BEACH
I' I " I " ' I fl ti ·' I I ,.
l.111tl ,1 """ \ ~·11".11 BIG YARD
l11o1t1t· 1 .. r l'JiH (',111 l11r lloorn 111r :! ,w1mm111g
'"ur .1ppl .111tl ruor 1• 111· 1111111~ h.1"k1•thall 1·11urt •II'
1.111 •• 111 i11:1 whalt•\ l'r Cl!'>l' vou m1i.:ht
.r----=='=' ==' == ltkt· 1n th•~ b1i.:· h1i.: \ anl [~
-
·• ~ .1ltlw1•11d11la1ul1.h:!->JC: , I"' •·I\ l h .. droom ;i hath
hurn1· Y.1lh hwll in ''land
J\ pnrnt· upporlunily with an uutstancl-
tnJ.! rt«ll c..•sl&lll' organi1.at1on + h igh
C'arnrngs ! E xpc r icn<.'C 1s a must.
Pr('sllgious lo<.'at10n . All applications
held in slrictcgt conl1dcncc. Please
reply to Ad 1Hi8. Daily Pilot. P.O. Box
1560. Costa Mesa, CA 92626
k1td1l·n tJmtl) room & ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~Olf COURSE lu'h rnurt' • .rrl 1 ntn· -::
1002 HOME IMn•·t' haH' gone-~ •1il' 'G I 1002 GeMf'al
Jll\lflU... :1'lti.J4JO C.\LL ~ra ~·rw·r ... , nH au' 1 •.• r -;·,1 11·11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ····uilE·o;;;.ic;;.····
,.:.11· \tr.1 Ir • I· ll 111111· !p SELECT 1978 IEST
trl'I p.11111 •111 1.111.,.. '" IMVESTMENT
'''" , r '""" ''11 •~"' PROPERTIES \ compll'll'h rcmodi.'led
LAICEFROMT WE..,TSIHI. h11m1• CONDO INVESTOR'S :o.t.i...1t r l11lrrn & hath in·'
I I II
I t II
·11111 ~II\ I 11~··
I I I' I f ' I
tllll•tU • t't l::•&I• "'t
•l•\i l •\\ '1011 (,)tl'f,I
SPECIAL , 1· p ,, r ,1 1 1 " 1 11 ..:
S 4 7. 500 lll:m••'• I• ti k1t1 hi 11 &. 11
r 111,artf• ·•I • .11t•w", 11rn 11?1· .111 l.11111 h r ourn I
11•1 h L11 ,,h ,round!> "11 h Bdrm t. l'I ,.,,fl II c,111 h
l•••I S~· llltl•·tl 1 nln 10 \Ulll .11111 lh• 'l'll••r' .ir1
,.,,., "'", II, 111~'. 11111111 Jn.\111u:. & rcJ'>OllJhil'
OHE STORY CONDO
:! Pools & pullinA vrel•n :!
&-tlrms. 2 balhi. ltJt..,i·tl
hcJrlh fireplat'l' & l.1ri.:t·
I 1' 1 ng room :">;, • .,..port
&·.1ch mJtlre-sl!! S7fi.500
PETE BARRETT
-REALTY-
642-5200
WHAT .A IAllGAIM!
Lusk Really has lo orrcr
to new and exper1enc:l-<l
salespt><>ple.
• Hel·e1' e lop comm
•lm·enlt\'r proRram
•t rtiarunlt't.'d Suh•!'> pro
i:ram
•lirt•at rrfttrr<il 111 u
i.:ram
•Plu ... much more
$58,900
c:r111111tl ll'\ e-1 I rl11or
loY.11hum1'. lm·uted.,.. alk
inj! dL~lanlO. lrom shop-
111 n i.: N n n e 11~ h b o r s
above, 1111ly I years old.
1'11111. J8CUZl.I , &
t'lubhoui.c• l''l\'l' 111111
from S Coas t Pl urn
754-7100
6 AS'TRll ~ ll•ul h tul• Inc
ri!
RED CARPET "
WE'VE GOT YOUR
CJll today ror 1·011111lt·n
hJ.11nkrv1ew 9tiO 1:11.1 t 1l'an 3 hl.>droom "!. hath 1---------..,1 -.t.11t,•r home' Sl>7.900
I S.•<1room '\'alcnna 111
BACKIAY El Toro' Stl2.2!i0
WORLD'S SMAUIST UMl(i)U! HOMI
It started ets a so of the hwy CdM
gara ge and grew into a house. not a
very big house. but cozy! l bdrm~ 1
kitchen, l bath. 1 li ving room aod 1 TV
s et th&t appears out or the ceiling.
There is also 1 very big front yard.
zoned R·l and s uitable for building
Priced at $129,500.
U,.. l()U I: li()Ml:i
REAL TORS', 675·6000
2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del M11r
Jlso 1n Mt•'>J Verdi· .• 11 S•lti 5990
MEMOltAILEJ>A YS -thruout the years
can be yours as you enJOY the tranquil
contentment of the ROLLING HILLS
in Newport. Why n ot be nature's
neig hbor in one of our m ost
presti~ious ureas? Pric:ed a l S259.000
Call 640-6161
WALNUT SQUARE chai;ming 2
bedrm. 2 bath Condominium with n<'w
l'arpeting. new paint, new rtoors. new
draperies, large yard. Whal an
opportunity al $64,500. Cal S4Ml41
Serving Cost;) Mes~-lr v•ne
Huntington Ch·<1L h·Ncwport ub:tch
. l hMrel ~ 01•z GeMnll I 002 ...........•.•... , ........................... .
SI 0,000 REDUCTION!!
to SH!l.92.5. 4 Bdrms. & family rm
townhouse wit h mountain & golf
t·oursl' \ ww Fl'c land. Owner lea' mg
area: must sel l . short cs<:row
poss1bl<>.
GeMral I 1002 G~ral 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
MAMAGER--REAL ESTATE
NEWPORT IE.ACH
A prime opportunity with an
outstanding real estate organization
+ hl~h earnings! Experience is a
must. Prcstigiou~ location. All
a pp lirations held in s tr1c:tes t
confidence. Please r eply to Ad #68.
Daily Pilot. P .O Box 1560, Costa
Mesa. CA 92626.
4.rLEX
$165,000
Uru•1uu income property
wlroom to udd 'I. addi-
t1onul' units Xtru large
owner 'i. unit w•formal
din rrn & dduxt• mast
swlc Xlnt 10cumc. Call ror details 64tl 7171
,, , Y • r ,. 'fl. ,,
MUST SEU!
<rr<'al t·11ndo. 2..bdrms .. 2
bath.,, h:r pal111, lower
flnor, <iwel COll\erUenl
lucauon
$51 ,000
VIEW!!!
OCEANYIEW ·
llow ever you ltke tt!
l!OU'IC, Conrto or OWD
}our 11wn Aµartm~·nll
~2t
Merten Re~ Estate
640-5357 ·------· BY OWNER
Custom
5,000 sq ft.
Rmtch Estate
Stable, separut1» maid or
guei.t home. enclO:>l'd _
,.,1anrl for aviary or
Jilt mat t·nl'lo~ure on ap-
pro,lmJtc :l' • al·rc!'t.
745 E. Peralta
Hills Dr., .Anaheim
~oY.n h\ appl only lo
I) U il I 1 (I I' d h U \' l' r.., •
:>'*~1(1 l)lMI I j I~ I 5:.! HWJO
Courh•...v t11 Bkrs ------· MINIR.AHCH
S76,500
Pri ffil' Jrl'<I J Bdrm
hou!>C' + hnr-.t.' <'Orr ,1is
l'AREL
WALKER
675-4144 rn ~IAlrO•
.., II II' h I II • I' ., II r m ,. I ;>JC .!JJ:J ~.;~~ '.::.'.' .·:.-. .. :.~''.,·~~, ... [®' -·~~-ill!
C.ompletely up$!rnded in
side and nut New prof
land!lCaped J bt>drm,
cust o m ui-.cd hrick
fireplace + many more
new reaturCl\. A musl sec
to r eally apprecl ule
Asking Sl 18.500. 644·'1t70
J &>droom. rorner lot VA G.....-.. I 002 GeMr.a I 002 too' :!'; ,\rn·!'t L'Jll now
75:! liOO
"''''"l'"'i: m.1:.ll'r htlrrn :' ~
"'d111tl.., rrtrt•JI <h~m·r ----~·-'--'' .111\111U!'> S111tm1t any
TWO YRS OLD
DUPLEX
' • I I•• tlt1· l11·.11 h ( l•'.111
I ,\ l 1111 t pl I!. ti r IJ".
1ih11.,, I 1 .tr 1•11 s 159,900
JACOBS REAL TY
675-6670
olfl'I' i'!oli '\11(1) ...
-.~ 1.L 11111• 1l1·nl"> Y.tlh ,,
1' .11 h I' 1 I nl t • 1.1"1I11•1 I \ii I_ llliillliiillii61•ililiilii~:I
STAR GAZEKfl~
t-.;..;;;..;...;..;.;:....---n, CLAY a.. POLLAN
H r-0.11 MtM, ~ K y Au•,Ji"I fe '"• Sl•n y
To d•veloe> mtnog• for Fridoy,
•.od ...... th '°''~"'O 10 ,,..,..,... otyo.xZ~blnh..._
mecneb I Irvine
realty
"" CANYON IROADMOOtt
Pini\ 3 VII/every room built around
garden. Great location -high on
bluff overlooking Upper NewPort ,Uay & golt course, 4 BRs wi pool &
jacuzzi. Avail. Cor lease/option ......
$.164,500. Lynne Valentino 644·6200.
<C·51)
MARVELOUS
MONACO
Call u~ about th11t 1m
ma1·uli1ll' 001• ownt•r. 2
bedroom. c11nvl•rl1blc•
cll•n hum1• 111 ll;.irbn1
V 1 l'.,.. 11 " m 1• .., T h ,.
ownt•r :-; inl'l1rulou~ 1 .irt•
to c•\f•n mainti•nanrr
nc'('d "iii 1 mpn·'~ you
/\ml thP h11~hh c·om
JX•llt1H pnce of S\36.500
Cc•c ~ 111 pleai.c your
pocketbook can 644-7211
/Jn NIGEL
Gl\ILEY &
l\SSUCll\ TfS
~»HERITAGE
• • RE ALTORS
Heal 1':-;tah•
If • I • I ' J'' n ~ IJ '
FEE s~~1~~~~~1111c>», ~ [~.IE!IHll Lcrm.t. ~ $72.500 •••••• •••• • •••••••••••• ••••• • •••• • ••••••••• •• •
3 Bedroom + fam1I:. in
l rv1 11r's Grocnlrcc'
S9't.000
WATERFRONT
HOME
with boat dock. Could be JBr & 2 Br rcnlal units or
single family home. Ex·
oollenl location w.'vlew
$449.000
-
.Salleb•111 Realty
673-6900
bdrm~.<! halhh c.ich un _ ~---•••"·~·
il. One 1•xtru larl{c lront i...--------• OWlll'r.., Ulltl Bit IOh.
Crpl1· l'n1•1•tl al S175,000
B,\Y /\VY. clupl!'X :!
Bdrm horn(• + I bdrm
ttH'r .:a1 Ji.!('. in xlnt I()(· a
urin l'nc:c'(J ats1;:; ooo
673.Jtifi.1 1;.12 2'.!5:1
associated
BROt<lRS R EAL TOllS
101\ W l o•boa • • l IU 1
IOACRES
Hanchn C·J lifo rn ia.
Prime avocado coun-
try 11 Great inrorne
JlOIL•nllal. Good Ccrm:;
,1va1I Con~1ckr l'X·
l'hJnl:l' $50 000 Cdll
S<tO 1151
~HERITAGE
• -· REALTORS
IR.ANDHEW
S64.900
HOUSEALOMi
ls worth this price! Bul
you ran llvc near tbe
beach In Corona dcl Mar
and have rear tenant.a
bdp pay. $175,000.
MORJMS RI.ALTY * 494-8057 *
JOH I
COIOMAORMAI
Primo area. Jo11 to & on
the beach· Uvti Jn one &
r nt the other. lJnlts ~ t>rid« fl( nwMrthlp.
completely repainte4. suuoo 'YAUl'f 640i-ff00
•
(
t
. . . ...
W.....P....Wt Housn for s• Hot.us Fo,. Sde Thursday, January 5 1978 OAILV PILOT
...•..••..•..................•.••.........•••...•••••..••.•........•••......•..•.......•.... ··············•·•··••·· •••.•.•................ C... cW M. I OJZ Co-Ito MMe I 014 M.:atie4• lffclt I 040 a...,.o MICJHI I OU &...-. CJ1111 I 052 .....,_, .. oeh t 069 Houwt for Sate other lecUstot• ~RMI &toh • ................................................................................................................... •···•·•················ ;:;;;;,;·;;,;;.····1;,6;· ·~i;·H:;.:~········· ;.;:;;;;:;;;;;t;··ic,·~·
UHOH uo.ooo oowMTowM LOWEST ••• ••••••••••••••••••• Fors• i 1 oo ·······s··u··~·rr··s···· ··-:-s I l ,4SO OOWM S.-\1 r.AI humt.~ tu , hoo: t· T.,.o ( .111( l4>tt.i~t' on ••••••••••••••••••••••• ""
C
,....,. ...... ,.... l'rtll,L.• IN. 'Ii L:w 11<>1t r 01u1r 3 t 1 .,, " ,.-·t M -.... t I h .._."~ ~ MA.R llor11 1111 lot• :.I & I liH. 54h.l:!7 lot l'~'lll t:llr nt r ... u ~ .. rm ~ • uJ ~. n_..wp c COSTA MESA •
• kR I Bl\ ho1Jtl' on R ,t .,. no ctn or a' low a~ roncf l.1\I' in unt• •ml :! Brt. 2 H \ LllJl \\-ldL· cor cu11tlo on luoJ\ .:n•t:nlwlt l>Ot bl.J:o, Wll>t: '
lut U\«! '" I runt un11 $.'~•I •In llurn tor h.:1ot n-c1t one •ml.I "att·h wu1 nrr lo t adull p;irl. f'lll'\e tu M·hools & !>huµ t.UXl.'ttY H0\11': rv.o 2 ht:llrcwm. 3 01'1•
"'hill' bwldtnl! .!net umt ~lt·d111n . <.:.all nu•. 11~ 1n•d0 ll m1·n I ~· r<1"" $;.'ti 500 p1n.i Well pril'ecl .1l J..o,cly 2 llr &. balh in hl"!lroom unit.. in IC~
onn·;arullu1 o 111,1,111ct ~~1101;z Ht·.il1 !!.t 1t Jll\ 11r1 re<.1 HA.LrlHCHIH $1J5.000 \\llh lJnd II\ JduJtpclJ>t&rk c;ur1tcvu11 '.!~\t,a.1lli-.J.irc11 sdh~r
111.: '"' 1 n 1 1 o I Sl~.lltlO L 21 Sl ,1h11·1•1l' l'luclt>d ' l:Ornl•r lot w IJeaullful '"'" ~t:i.t,5oo ,.. a ·11 n > --------· 962-5521 ~;:s·'_14.13t9>12< <' t' rot.F.SWORTUV lndi.t·i.i It Vt:ry vnvulll 18 jQuall ~,..; IUMITS l<E.\l.TOKS f;IOOO'.!<l pord1&pa11ow plentyof Plac
f'.t.:ht mun1tu uld Ju11tlllliillliii-------o1 LOVELY NEIGHBORHOOD FIXER UPPER n~..r1i. N>bt-t., <'hmtwri., Prop tt e ..., CALL 955-0350 11-1~-d' <.:..JI fnrinto * 8 U .... ITS _ 4 ....._ L-~. 0.........__ ...... ~-... -•."'"I• huminp1n11Ub.1rd fl-l'ders. 1'!"2_,,.!0• !>H·0.125 " ~-.. 11Uf'1'11'9' un-~ '" *** lllO(JS1':£o'rtO!\lSANU l't <' L S 11w1mm1n~ 14000U•ll .. il NtW~ll
World Real t~l•lc 1'1ght monlhi. old Ju:-.t populCIF' MOdel la beautlfulty clean and Ii OWNER MOVING $!18.!>0ll pool. jacuw, 11hufflt•brd.
fl C flH l.0'"1 C:U'V"f'tAl'\ilV
~IL,., TO l f'• U"V l ~ C..U-• .. n t:.
1---------·I h!>ted! C::ill for info F'eady for ih new famllw. Great A..fRAME LLUE o;oc11ll aL1.1v1Ul>S iiuloro' 5"'1·o.i2.'> r Thi~ 11.irbur \1l'w hm ::,1i50'mo. Onl y $:!1,UOO. Lil'
World Rt•al 1·:.,t;1t(' nel9hborttood. wolklnq distance to Hlf.l"f ha!> h<'t•n highly Upflrrl " r I • 5 H09328 :?!I
100+ UMITS ..
t' a n t 11 :1 l 1 c P r 1 d e
Ownt•rsh1p units, ontt •
ye11 rs uld Nt>ar stt1le
UniV1.•rstty. v~ry stroea
rt!flta.I ur1•u. $2. 750,000.
Pft'ftdHome
1 J\t•drm, 2 Bath super
larg1• h1.~lrms, flr«i:plul'e,
fl'fll't'd ) ard, l'OVt'rt•d
Pi.illO '4 tlh hU!!C lm l'k
b(lrlwqul', rully 1nsulalt'l!
& ')ound provfcd .
n·rJrtlll' ull· in t•ntr} Jnd
kJl1 tum. Lou nlllll\ \lri.1!'>
J -i Ht_. S hool $90 900 l hr u out N .. w 1• "l l'i·ic Broms < l_r 64 t~:JI -·or ..,, c ·-, • ' " t:AUFORNIA \>Al:ffl<.: 497-1720 fJnla.'>t1c: m~tr llll 3 ad<ll· Nt:w TOWNll0l'S1': Jlir Mobllt.' Home Heally C.O.taMesa 1024
·····•······•····•··••• lWftoklnq T ownhorne 1
One slop :.hoppml! hdur"
)'OU huy ' I'rt·v1l'W 101·11 uon~. JHl'lun•.,, ma J.li.' anti
hrochuri·:. At the l 'ondo
l nformJt1on l'l' ntt-r
l>i\~A
1•01N r
llltJ 881:!
SOl'Tll tionul lllt ,.,, :l tJA. Slt•p :?t ~bi.1, F R ,$lH.!JOO. Park. 2706 llarb0r,Soill•20H
I \l.,l ",'. \ LAGLT"IA dn Flt w wcl hur. ht•aut pool 5571MHor675·07-15 CAL L540 Sll37 IMQuaH~ liialPlace SPAMKIM' MEW
lllIYJ-:HS CllOll'I-: <H'
('(ll,Ul\:O. NOW
l "'HH:k lo'\~ I ltl <.:
·• Df-:AC'H b.i<'kY.Hd w 1 ~·u1cb11 & -111!.l 1~51 497·3331 J•H·u u 1 OWN ":K 1:-i DY OWNt;n . Blit Canyon HOTICE
M<>VI C .\NU Si\YS Towohome 2 Br. 2Ba. how Dally Pilot C..1~q.
"S1':1.L ' l'PI drµs. :Sl 3'! 500. l'h 1f1l>d ad!'o d11tplay lht•ir Properti••
1 IO'IJ !hr' c U!'>lllm :1
lwdroum :! 11.ilh homt•
"1th lln·µl.ll·t· lit ft•n tt'd
'ard IS 10 loH•ly l-.. 1 ... ls11h•
.ICCJ.
l"Quail ~ liiiiilPlac• . Properties .
752-\920 " 1400 OUAIL Sl HtW'°41l llACH
HEW YEARS
SPECIAL MESA
VERDEYIUA
\'erv ~harp 2 btlrm c•cindo
111 Ml''·' \•'nit•. C'oslJ \IL-.a', hc· .. t .1r1•a ~harp
I \ U p g r ..id t' ii U 11 I l
" "arm L·art btoo1· rot
11 r ., pr 1 \ a'" 11 .111 •1
.\11>11~ .itc-.1 "1•i11·r~ h(>lllo( hi
,, h11ml· Suh11111 '"ur
F 11 ,\ 0 r \ ,\ II fr C' I'
.• 1;1 'H!ll
l<Kt 1t .. 1 W1111 l i.i .. 1 :ti
$rn ;,1111 WcirltJ W 11k
llrokl'I'!. lii:I 1~,.h
lW..&inq T ownhotnt 7
Onr 'lOl, hopping bdurl'
Hiii hu\ ' f'r,., ll'W loc:1
11'1n p1< t" rt"" "'''I'" &. h111t•hurt">. ;\t llH' l(IOUIJ
lnt11rmJllon l'1·ntl•r
Tout'hstone lll'.ilt\
'16:l OAA7
BYOWHER
Nt>:oil IJcl 'far. :mr :ma.
l.1m rm. l'ntlosed pal10
fop <·oml. man) \trai.
llt" I~ rruf dl'l'OI'. SK:.!,S'MI
7.)11 1-lli:l t•Vl''
11\\'.\'1-.H JH:Sl'FH \TE
'\1-,w1°0H r 1n.11;1rrs. :1
llr i! Ila Fil ~~~1.•1111t
ll>A nr .tJ.!l .. 111 11 'I.!
Tuw hstun•· lh•ally
•1t,J·llN17
PACIFIC SAMDS
l...ir.:e'l :I Br mudcl, I '•
b.s, l'V Stont' l-ri1h-~Jll,
1 m1 tu lit•J• h II)
U\Hll'f
1;~:1 ~'°'' S:U> lH~I
OUR
BEST BUY
_. spa1·1ou!'I h<lrm ... 2 full
bath~. l.ic 111 mi: rm w
bnck lpll', countr) kllth
lor (am1lv din1n.I( I ~'rt
dr yard fur kul' & dui!~
Walk to M·hool:1 & )lOlf
c:ourse. Onh SW !IOO
~ COLLINS
& ASSOC.
964-2425
MOVE OVER
I
Irvine I 044 lalJYna HUis I 050 ••.•...•..............•••...••••.•.•.•••.•.••.
WOODlmDGE Townhome 3 Br, rlln rm. f>l{~(.'(Yl1' II\'. rm. 2bJ 1600 sq fl
41,t \\ oo(lbnd1Ce ho ml· ~ iS 100 551 12:14
S Hdrm or '4 »ctrm +d~n th , r,.,t.el.'d Int fulh Lovely 4br, lrg fam rm
lndsc-pd llll'al fur pool w fl'PIC' Liv rm, dtn rm
All upJ.!nh•cJn \luu·an Bltn t•h10a closel. J'ruf
p.ivc" ult~ A c LI\, din d~o. 3 car gar. Yr old
rm., J bJth ·c <.ur ~.ar. (Mnt'r 7685U!3_. __
'\r park Walk lo lakP LGIJlftoMlguet 1052
~llSh .OOll Brltr Ownr •••••••••••••••••••••••
5.'\2 tt2 I or 8:J5 :!5:iS
WOODIRIDGE
RT\OA OMOOH. 4 BH,
furn rm , pool & :!>pa, all
u1dsl'p~ • dc•l'krng. ft•lll'·
m~. i:or&evu:l 1 mprov1·
mt•nti-. model hom••
1·A1ntl. Move 111 r c ud.\
\J.!1.•nt . &tO 55411.1
PRESTIGIOUS
SEA TERRACE
3 UR & lamtly 1oom
home. t:uan.t ... d 1:11tc
l'ommun11y. Private
1Jto11dt llC'l'tlMf, pool:.. ll'll•
Ill' 1·wrls. Pril·•o-0. lido"
market at $147 ,500.
J A..MCHOIAGE
IMYESTMENTS
17141496-7711
$ 199, 90 O 11:13 OH2l or 640·0m1 messages wllh lct11b1hl) and 1mo;•ct ·1 Our ad!>, we SUIMIT A.LL OFFERS! o~::.'il'EHAUO. mu't ~l!ll are r•oud to ::.a). ""'II'
PACIFIC COAST bcJul 3 Br 2 Ba. dt>n, all eet r esu I t.s. Phone
751-1910 1400 QtJAIUt HlWrollf ltl(H
TRIPLEX. C .M .
PROPERTIES new k111 h Wes trhfl 642·5678
hme SlW,000 Jh ownr -
631-0400 Anytime 1121Oxlord1.n. >~8.0391_ ~.!c:';.~~.~.~~~~
Gr<' dt t:a:.htd c lcw,
Ol"\\l'r :1br. l!bu, Crplr. ycf •
121 2hr. lba. p1tlloS, cnrl.
fll.U' ~165,UOU
***
NEWPORT
HEIGHTS
PRICE SLASHED s 10,000!
A "rac·eful. un hed 1•ntry
introdu1•1·' 1h1!t lovcl\
home h.1nd,um1.•I> re
modt>ll-d with 1mJ)r•:~1>1vc
lava r<ll'k l1n•plJlC .'!.
hl•amc1t n ·ilinlo(l> In
NEWPOHT ll AH IHJH
II I (; II :-; <.: II 0 0 I.
UISTnH'T. lhl' 1·111.y 1lc•
lt i:hl 11> 1111 hllJ.!1· \'llrnt·r lot
w11h ullt·~ .ffl'\'S!. &. rcx.1m
for your Ooitt ! s1u:,,c100
1~76 •••••••••••••••••••••••
EXECUTIVE HOME
Only once 1n a~lle do
you rind a q uulhy home
come on the market lhal
'' PRICF.O RIGllT at Sl!>1.SOO You will find a
largl', 4 BR. FAMILY
horn\' loaded with t-X
lr!l.!>. llu.i;l' ) ard, patio.
f1rcplal'\'. fru1 l trees,
OCEAN VllO:W . t:nJOY
cook1111: thu'e !'oleak-. on
lh\' polio ~;is llliQ. while
Lhc kids play IJaskdball
nr vnllryl>all on tht'
p.t\l'li 1·mirts. THUl.Y A
t',\MILY llOME
TWO
ACRES
t 'lxer upper how.e. 3 ur
~arage, hunkhoul>t', out
bldgi.. fenceo . Lots of tr~. Pnced !or qwck
t.ale ,\l(l mo t>76·S717
OR s:a 2080
rom ~" Hllr,642-180! -~
Loh for Sale 2200 .........................
FINISHr3> LOTS
tn \'orba LllldJ Four lntic
rcud' t o bu1 ld Plans
permit. 'treet Is in . Ono
lot or u II $47 .000 to
$49.000 t'lcai.•· call
PAC1FIC COAST
FIVE ACRES f1l0PERTIES Jlard to fine! hor:-.c pro 631 0,.00 .., •
pert). b rand nl'w, 3 lllt. 2 . • "' Aftytilft•
HA home, huitt' fa mil~ Rer~y lo build on lol fan'
room, wet b~r. Crpk · 3 l••t.UC oct.'an ''leW & 0walk car gar Won t l.asl Hkr . ( 714 I 677 ~)l h> tk•.idt. L.tlCUll~ .
OH 522 0530 ..._Owner/ aict>nl b73 7296 _
'l,1·w C11111f..,,, 2 Hr ~' _ BJ
.! fq1k "· (1•rJm1c t1h,.
1'1trh,•n' .~ halh J'uol &
'flit ti7~ 1•112 llrukn
1026 ......•........••.•....
WHITE WA. TER YU
1-:xeL Townhomt' m l'r
Jc1ukinlo( harbor & south
ro.1 .. lhnt> with night
h1otht' J Rcdrms. 212 ha.
ram rm r11tr 2 Stor~ rnd
urut 11rof lambt·apLod &
•h-1·111 ult'fl c;.1, HHt~ on
'uncl•t l.. "d li.ir 1 1 ml
hrh n1111m punt JJ L'
.., " u n a 1· I u h h o u ., t·
T r ;1 n ... r l' r ,, u I I k
ERNEST & JULIO
In luM·wu~ 1·nrth tonl'' &
onlv ';mill' lo lhe l1cu<'h,
I:. th" 1\l',ir ll('W 2 :.LOI)
tflW!lhome, with lluor to
u:11Jnlo( "'int•r .ick' You.
to. t·an be t•onnm:.,l'ur or
the ~rape' l'oob. Josr1111I
& lenrus cpurts ..idulls
onl> pll.'..c.e Onl\ Si I 500
TURTLHOCK
l'nnw Int' J flit, 2 Ha.
1.1m 1 rn, ronnul <Jm.r rn,
.1lnurn 1Mt111i. & rnor••
l> t~l.5'IO 8JJ ll!JJ ' Cnob~tructed oct-an view, J .Quail ~
Mooan·h summit. 3br or Place ONLY $71,850 2 & dt>n. ""IL' ur lsc Prapertiea SIJl,000 Ownr 49i"1177 For lh" I bedroom hom!' 751-1920 ~
lit-:HTllA HI-.:'< RY
ltEl\LTOHS
"I~ Del Mar 492-H21
PROFESSIONAL
IUILDIMG
HLILOEHS -~nb 1 lOO t'om1Mtl' Coa!.tal Com-..!~ .. ~!••••••••••••• m1,\1on l'reparat1onl>& Sul>m1~s 1ons. l::x
SIX UNITS , 'pnd int·. all pencncl'<f 581.0027
2 Br J Bu, encl.jlar .. rent ----
$180 mo l'3 $115,00U E'IERALO B.\Y, lge lot wllh new c·,1q1L·b .ind ----------114000tJAl~U NlW..oitTHACH
MONARCH SUMMIT
:! Bedrooms plus dt·n
with o<.'ean v1ew11. In
terior & l''Clt!r&Or uµ
~radl-d. 1-:xcl'lll'nt 1111 j
1100 nrar duhhouse , pool
& IJCUlll. $112 1100
San Clemente prof bl!.11-t 552.8756 Jft hPM 111 presllJ:ioui. pvt CdJi1.
MESA VERDE
TRIPLEX
HEW LISTING
I .1 ... 11 Ill\ t· I m1·01 l'n 111•·
lu< .11t1111 I "'lit \11•.,.1 '
''"'' .11 ... 1 \II u111t'I h.1u· Jill\ ,1!t• jl•tllll' /I. 111\IC!l'
l.111n•lr 1 rrn . I ri1k 111
""'"''' 111111 ll<'tll·r hur l\ 1111 th1 • 11nl''
•• 1 .. ,.011·11
p11 ''l'~"1 o n (l\loOt'f
l,,.Quail ·~ liilPlace
Prapertiea • 751-1920 1400 OUAIL ~t Ht W,O•l llACH
OPEN 4Ll:I KHi ! )IJl'n tl<11I~ :J ,
\1.'l "1·kumc Sl~l.500. lmmt'tlcate Job tr an,ll•r
ha:. ll!fl th11' ramhhni.:
:iwu "-;.J ~·r uf i.:rni inu!> lx»tl'h hom1 '•11·.1nl Jnd
li\lnJ.: 1 Br :i 11.c. 2 reach 111 \1t•w 1 l>r.1mat11· l'ntr\ to rntormill ll\'111•' 11l;,..11nQ fpl t• lo.. SJUlla. • "
ri·r rm w wet bur & gus a rea!! Koaranf.( hrtf•k
lurJ.!I!' 101cn'<l 1 ndowd
p<1tio cto-.e to new park
'4 1lh pools
,\,U
IRVINE'S FINEST
\ :1 hl.'<lroom pool huml'
I.hat 1., t'low to park with
t•·nnh 11>Urh l'nt t·d lo
~di Ut $!111.54141
MESA DEL MA.R 11114. Nr liar hor, school:; fireplace! Wt•ll pl.mnNl
5 BDRMS & shopping 331151 Blue k1trhcn of l<JP koot<'h "P· RAMCH REALTY Sl~GLE STORY Lantern Open Oaily. ph's and f1xtun''· lam1lv 551-2000
I 'l'M S'>ll 1100 1:11· •11;p ecnt1•r. :I lwdrnom "llh Tht' Igo• littl hum• '""'' ·' · • ~ • -' '· pn\alc parc111 s rl'lreat
pl1clo• col 11\\lll'l'hlf• 1111 11 Fountain Valley 1034 Opt•n 011 .1 rl•lo(ular Univ. Park
0111 I l>dr111 1 .o n h e l11r din ••••••••••••••••••••••• ha:-.1:-. fnr 1n ,p<'rl1on t>i:an llomi'. htl(hl~ up
rrn In ul.1ll·cl .11t11 ,,1\1'' anrli.uhm1~!>.llllllll 1.tflt·r'' J,!rarit:d Willow Wuod
• '"'' J.!' \\ ·" I ro" ll1KH " EXEC TOWMHOME BKH 5:lll '!JI I !\tdl NC'ar park & pool. 3
""' 11 l-111 h1•11 ,1 11·" \\.ilk Ill .tll '11 .... 1 ... 1111 I l pj.!r:t1ll'll. !flt•allv l11e.it HuntinqtOf'I AR :! I, II.. . II r () r
t'\I. :J hr .'', IJ.1 111 f"ouo H-'-..;..·r I 042 l.1r-1\l:Ui)('d w u~ bn1·k
c) (. ( ,\ \ 111.1 ~·· ''"'' --( ,11 ••l!hl """ 111 ..,,.,. 1.1111 \.1111•\ (.'<1n1l·n 11·nl ••••••••••••••••••••••• pa\10 & planleri.. itJr
11 11 111 1.111 11 , , 1 1 •1 ~ lo 'h11pp1111( ~ o,1·ho11b i----------1 door 11p1·n1·r , 1·1•r.1m11·
:..i,.:Wll l·om,Fll\or\\ll'rm' SUGA.TE 1111• t:"tul!.1te hnm1·
J Monarrh Bay Plaza
Laguna Niguel
49f>.7222 Sl 1-0836
PRIVACY!
Foothill pal10 homl' :!
Bcclroom:-. lotallv 1m
matulul1'. surrounuecl h~
i:rc~nbcll. l11l·aLcrt on
l-r1rm·r ol <11111•l nil rll-
i<ilt' P r11•c•u Lo ,,.11 111
s;~ '.MKI 1:111 I
Ko/an
R•.•.11 f ,,,,,,, 111<
J M o11.11cl1 B,ry P 1.11.i
661 1161 831·3888
MEWPORT DELIGHT
l..cK'alt'd ne;ir the l.imou•
NewPort H.1rk Jiu> 11r
lhc BluH, Th1<; 4 BR l'On
do is u rl'i.il dd114ht Cal
u" for .1 pn 1 ale showmi;
SI 18.JOfl
VALLEY 640-9900 -OCEAMVIEW
A HEW YEAR'S
TOAST TO THE
HOUSE WITH
THE MOST!
ofllt\' !.Wles :JV~lll 1 II Kooms L arge pJrk1n" C ._ L t ./ munily. Pl11ns avail.. ,., etftt, ... 1 0 I 714400 9723
.U't:.1 Rc•nl at 55· per sq \-r'fph I S.00 -- - ----
rt Con'iider lradt>s & ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ain. DesKf.
terlll!) ~252,500 49:1 U:!.33. 1 Lot Prmr1c View Mem. Resort 24 00
. ~ft\. Park, N.B.
~~_2"" __ Call75907S9
•••••••••••••••••••••••
hcartiful View
J~1,?a,gg·'l-'j.'l1 ~~ ...... !~~~
' Nl-:WPORT: Gr(•al l(l(·a
f\Jrn rrov.ood cabin QP :;
11crl'' Franklin slO\C.
starnl<'!>~ ~tt't"I s ink,
<'arpNi.. insulation &
panchni.t. S2J.J30. Call
Gt'Or)lc Jo'rt>~'. Ben llinklc
Real g,,tale 542·3456.
Smtta A..na uon for :1mall 1>1u.10e~ ••••••••••••••••••~~.~~ ~i:i~v1sab1ht} A~t.
FIXER-VA
No down, low do:.1n~ C't)'·
h, 'JlJ<'lOUt. 4 llr w 1 air
~ C s l P I a r. i1 a r r ;1
& 1•;tll '
Old World
I,;-~ Pf-op«ty 2000 ~t~~~~ .on ~h~ sc:'l~:f;
••••••••••••••••••••••• tx•.1utLful deluxe 24 x 60'
COMPUTEL Y Mobile home. Lived m 1.
RESTORED moi. Area's m oat
Olli S panish muns in o bt•aullfu.I p ark. Call
with un ocean view :1 un l714)9'.!2 74511. Hlylhe. CA
rls ·oOL' mire t o Dana
Point Manna $215,000 Rentals NORI NS REAL TY ••••••••••••••••••••••• I * 494-8057 * Hc.sHf'vmthed r;. •••••••••••••••••••••••
a llland l I 0.6 ......................... MEwPORT HEIGHTS
DUPLEX
I\ hari.t.11n' C.tll for 1.1l>-Ul':t-;PWJ\Tfo:R T~H<;fo: .SI ll 000 b"f3..IW37
t.ul' IA>\!ol"t 1inc1• "alt•rfronl VACA.MT & Mission Viejo 1067
\ 1h II hi I 11 I :1 11 It " I\ \
w l I .. , \ I ti • pl ... ' • "" OU ,,
Cjllll'I 1111 d1• 'o,IC l.rn .1l1 ·1j
1n pr t•,111•1,.u '\1 "I'"' t
l 'lc·.t'<' I II
Irr ~JntJ \na lll·1.:hts
'" c.i ChJrmt01! homt• loh of rcwun to 1!111" 2
IM•tr1111m' d&nlrlJ.! c1n•c1.
l!Mom lur l'nlcrlainrnlo(.
I-xn·ll•·nt art'u. ~1111.'l;,ll,
H" H I .1 II !>10 1720
Extra 'lharp 2 RR unrl,,
both '4 pn \ Jte p..illu:..
Owrll'r v.111 help fm"m·e.
Ll '<l IUOl'S :J BR. 4 BA
l'\orth Ba) fronl home.
Yrl\. or .. hort t.-rm Avo1111
Ian I LOR/\ \A:\<.:k: .•••..••..•.•..........
l<f'.11 I s t.11t· l'harmmit slartcr wood
d t•t:k pal1p Own1·r
d1•11per ate' N<'t'li fast
!.all' Univ $54,900. Be:.t
c·ondo buy! Ca I I now
. .:11 JWKI ('\ l'S '11\J OJ!ll ,1l onl) Sl9'J,SOO <.:all Lil Inti RE H~ork dav. W AITIHG
PLHn:u. REALTY
S.lb:.~ HANDYMAN'S :1 llR :!~Ba home. ~ood
.U'l'a ~12 000 i\i.:ent 1----------3 Bdrm. 2 ba, caq•l'I
drps. pJllo, l.md::.tdPL'<I .
fnl·d . hedul1lul 111·"'
5-17 .)5.50 or 11311·37:!3
540-3666
Ll&;:b:M
TARlllL
":t I In Callfomlo"
Call 95S.OlSO
R c.. TAVL.O" c oMrV\N y
' R C.AL10n ".I C l V l-OPt ilfl
HE \l,TOH. 6734062 ------Hcwporthach 3169 .........••.••..••.....
X>aut1Cul Wt'"l Newporl
bt.•ar hl ront homt-5·6 Br. DREAM HOME ;.:n .011\.1
I .1nta .. 111 uppctrl untt \ :1 hclrm 1·nodo, dltl. i: ... r
l11r 1 ho· h .11111\ 111.1 n w ,.k p,11111. nu t:irp<;t, pa.int &
1 ng ,1 l.trJ.!I' "ort.. ,lfnp ;11 cl r .IJH'., \'a'"' n t B}
h um•' 1\1~ :-1•par ;t\1 ""nrr S55.950 ~16:1-0029
t.111ldm1: an tiao k "u1t;ihh ,,., m ,·1·h,1n11 wood HwttinCjtOf'l hoch 1040
\\ul'k(.'r , ~ll1l"l11,·1;at1 1)( •••••••••••••••••••••••
· · lk'tt••1 huri 1 ' l all $2000 DOWM
·~1:>mOJ
\11',,J \•·rile <:olf (.'luh
~, Br, 1.111ta,1w 11("" •,
,\c·rc S:!~1~1.UOll Shown b\
;tJ)Jll. uni~'. li'ICI l'ana1
<.11
\lo(I ~Ill l".llH
i.:cl'~ you mlo lh1s :!
nn. 2 Bi\ rnndo that's l'l<~C to tht> bench. super
sharp & low paym1·nL ....
Off1•r ed at S l!l,flllt>.
llurry. r· all
898-7855
· rdlsW
4 BR. Crpk. 'cry dean
S71.7U5 ,\pproi. 15541 ~q fl
Ov.ner oul of '>lillC
'lf.04U4
lrviM I 044 ..•.••••...........•.••
WA.tolT EYERYTHIMG?
\'u•w, loc·alrnn. i llR.
forrn11l d1n1nl{ room,
famtl.1 r•1um. w 11 µk
75:! I 100 >· • ·. ..
:-h.tlw ruol , :J LIA. l'lll !11.• LOtJlll'a B.ach I 048
~;.at slrf't•t. O\ t'r ~200 ~<1 ••• ••• •• ••• • •• • • ••• •• •. It Qf ~umptuou' ll\·10~
arl.'a Your ch oin· ol
carpetin~. l..oc·ut("d in lht•
Turtle Rock ll1ghlands.
Ask.Ing $185.000
YA.WY 640·9 0 -WOODBRIDGE
CROSSING
LUYLIYIMG
1 n t h i s e a l'i y (' a r c 2
Bdrm. 2 \>:.th O·Y 0 ; an
eJsy walk to M ain
lleal:h.. Easy terms wtth
private frnanc1n1-:; it 'c;
1.':.t.'>Y lo s1•r this ''acant
property. Only S85.SOO
NORIHS REAL TY * 494-8057 *
'll'Sa cM Mar I hr. 2 ha.
"ic"ir 'hop<. srhool~. tt•n
n1' )ll0,,,110 ()" nt•r
~..-,7 IOWI
Thr Village of Wood
bndJ?t'. The he~l of both
wnrlcl'l. Arr h1lC<'lU rail)
un1Cfue 2&:l hdrm .. t H~s T.LCare tal'hlod & detad1ed 11•
SPAHISH STYLE
Rt•d tile roof, arc hed
portico enlr) . 2 BR • h\•
rm. "' bay window &
(11>1 Dmm~ rm. Spuoous
rr.1r 1Crounrb SN• today
at Sl~ 000 1 lurl")'
M1i.~1011 Ile alt v l!lt·073l Asw~ 4.5 Loan
\ttr,11 tl\f' 3Br Hll'n \II
to b1:h. New lanrl11rJp1n.:.
rJlt drJ>!! Ofr 557 2005
·1 Bdrm. 2 Ra ~ti5.000 :-.1dcnc·e<; from $!Jli .!J!.IO
Clo~t· to Golden W!'i.t 5.'ill·lllil
Collt·l(1' & 'hoµpmi: l'l'n -
lcrs
So California RJty
546·5605
1Wlden/l•n1ton .-~ --. -
FASt.aide Costa Mua. 3.2 S&S llrsalc Sr1ec1ahi.L-;.
bedrm homes & room ror J ,$ or s hdrm models
more units. 300· deep lot o~all. some w /pools .
Hurry-lots of polentrnl 11684002 .
JUST
IMAGINE!
l!ruod ne"' :1 bt'drm home
"l !Opeclacular ocean
View m prime N La~una
loc. Plus add1t1onal
house to help wt pymnts.
Owner mot1vnled Sub·
mit oil orrcrs World
Wide Drokeu, 6734645.
here! Call646·5880 Pennington ~ropert1e~
SA.LI IY OWMER ~~HERITAGE 3 Br. 1~ ba Condo. Li v
rm. din rm & ins ide
iriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiml laund rm. P vt. patio.
.. thl' room you'll havl'
with 3 bdrms .. 2 b a • !ipread over 2200 sq fl.; 2
fireplaces, one in ram
rm. & one an the mul'il.
bdrm. End unit which
gives you a view of Owner. 3br, 2ba. Top
mountain!!, & extra lar11e cond. Nu crptl, open
lot. beam, ocean vu. Pr'ln <>n·
ly JH. 1121.000. 41M·l007 REALTORS
pool & aar Upgraded
No l'ommrm wall 2 story find what you want in Sf.S.450 Ph 952.3521 NO
_!>a1ly Pilot C111B!llflcd:1 ACTS
CoroM d9I Mar I 022 Coro.to de.f Mer I OU ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
CaE
110111 ILllRS ca.
OVER SO YtAA S OF SERVICE
HOME & RENTAL UNIT
Charmin~ Home On Old Corona Del
Mor Duplex l.ol With Rental Unit In
Rear. Hard To Find a Bedroom, 2
Bath Owners' Unit W/Fireplace
A n d JJ 1H " c K fl c h c n . W ~ 11
Decorut(!(f, Nie ty Landsca~ With 2 Sunny Patlo. . Convenient To
Tonnl~ Coud!! And ShoppinJ(. l' riced At Sl$4., 000
(j>UAUTY
LOCATION
tr you're loolcin1 ror the
bc:tlt, then lhl11 Is one
home you 1hou.Jd see.
Central air. Karastan
c~t1 microwave oven,
VanU11l papen, butchtr
block countcra, 1rten· belt loctUbn, Malibu
p11tlo llteti, S Bl\, P'R. 21.11
btlths, l"P In Pf\. Priced
•tSl22.500
red hi ll _
""~'-7'>00
FUMll.IS ..
.. can be costly! Don't
miss this opportunity t.o
1te our new U1tin1 w1lh
fantastic city & ocean
views, s pa c i ous &
icrac1oui. 3 bdrmli , main·
tenancc Crt•e ho me
SlW,500
4 Bedrooms
Unusually large raml11
dwellln• with pri vale yatd, In Immaculate
COtld. Near 1cb9ol It ten·
nls but. aw., trom noile.
Sl3U00(W>
~ewpor1 leach 1 069 . .•....•....••..••.....
OCEAMVIEW
COHDO. REl>UCB>
$THOUSANDS S
nL'<IUCed for a l 3 1-l :,.,tlC
\·acant & sdler 1s an"
ious Beaul1ful 2 hr t'f\<l
unit w/fpk. (.'om mu nil v
J>OOI, s<1una & Jal:u:t.7.1 At
this pnt·c 1t won't la:.t'
Hurry! Call 6'15-0303.
FORESTE
OLSON
ll\IC. P •At•U••
•Harbor View Homiit
2 Bdrm. & den (or :1
Bdrm ) and 2 hath horn<'
llahao lll<' in <'ntr)-&
kitchen Sl31l.SOO "' cl\\ner. Pnnc1plcs on!)
011 l 640· 1 .. .10
OPEHHOUSE
us tin 10901-________ _.:!ha 1'\1rn <il'119565H7l
••••••••••••••••••• •• •• 2 Haus.es-I Lof•CM
I I 'I•·' lt~I fl I 111111 •I!• ,111 . :-;t•\t l>our tu Sl ( 'P1 1h 11 Reduce<I $IO 000 NI:, \ll BF: \Cll 2 br. 2 ba
Dwrwr .,,urt -.,..-i.L IT'' i:ar.•1!1' & vrd. $650 s>«J,
2 i.pdl'tuU<. :J Bdrm mri lrlS.ll!!ll "'t"'
,.~ 10 1\\ 1.1 nd 1
\for;h .111 Hl1 \ i;;; lfi(lll
uO fo't . h.111rm11 4 llR, clt'n.
pwr. "" t• .. 11111,uL1 J\Tar-.111111 Hltr li7!"1 i1;00
Chlll·rh & ...,< hool puhlH·
.. 1'11nols, kindt•n~ar•lPo
lhru K \1-ro-.-, lhl.' ~l Cun\
111 shopp1n~. fro'f'" ay~
TUSTI "I. 2Br . t ',ha con
tl<l ij:.12·0015 ~56.300. -----
hOlN'' Fr 11k -.. b('JOlf'(l <><.:l<:A~FHONT 2 Br gar! ~1·1 I ' J.!' ii. M 0 H 1:' utrl J)(f. ~375 mo. w;ntef~
~!,J,500 !:>11l1m1111tf1•r ITT5 11>.'l:! ·.
Newport ~~~:!~ ...... !?!.~ .~\~~e~uto
Condo llfrnt-:·s YOUR c11ANcr. • ~1m1 a.>Ws
l Rr, 1 hlk to O<'n. Clo,
QWL'l, ulll pd. No pets.
$275 WIOlt•r. 548 14:!5.
$79 500 lleaul J UR home, $2500 .._ ______ ....,.lmt!WK
• • dn. Call now, 24 hr r-_ _ _ Unfurnished
12 Blo1·k 10 Wt·~tclirJ scrv1cc8<16·68'79 agl. Wider close-out =.::.::.~·•••••••••3••2•0•2•
l'l:na. <.:01y 2 Ut'drm _.. ..
homt• ~ilh pool Xlnt OlherRealt-tat• Theoniy 4 lefl. Duplcxl'S "••••••••••••••••••••••
II\ IHIOH \'I E\\
bo I ..,. .. nr S.C. Plaza Bkr
)' Cell now. 645 7221 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 557•9710 •---------~-.;:~~·t:~ .... !!~~ HOME&IHCOME l~~:~:t:~ ~~I $100/Mo.Rental Large 2 bedrm duplex :!Blt,,1ew.$52S/m o. WU.h overstud garage.> 428' a Deitonia
Wntcllff Realty COSTA MESA Qwet & private. n'ur 2 BTl,den,$625 mo
!97R Skyhnl'. 2Br. 2 ha, ma)Or' shoppinJ. PerfrM 19"7 Port C0trd1ff
ph.L'>h p.il.io porch (or that starter or relltcml'lll 3 BR. den.\ M!W, $975.
... pec1al couple or person home. Call 540-l lSl 212.J \ al'ht Rad1unt 2hr & dl.'n or 3br. 2l>u,
c·onwr lot. :111 upi.:rudr'>
Call for Details & dct•o fr11tur(';, parc1uel
HARBOR Vl f:W llOME entr, hy ownl.'r. $l3!1.7~.
3 Br. 2Ba with m any 644·74fi3, r><10·lUO
who enjoys luxury. Ltwe 2 HR. den, view, $600.
h loeatlon, :.wimm1ng 27 Moolanas Este
Jl()Ol. etc. (S08l3) $23,900 ~ B It, snst mo.
:appts. Plans to add 2 -----
more bdrms. Mo.!>t de· 1---------1 <.:Al,IFORN"JA PACIFIC 2012 Port Weybndge
Motule Home Heally ~~~~~~~~~~~ 4 BR. ram rm , dln rm.
2706 llarbor. Suite 208 1-View, $975/mo.
sireable area. Only
$139,500.
~ R..atton, Est. tt07
(7t4) 17Me00
311 + IOMUS
For Ad Action
Call a
Daily Pilot
AD-VISOR
642-5678
CALL540·5937 a Mesa4 PIPX , !lin1de 2019YachLResolute ...
level. all 2 Br l BJ. In·
VUONG, 24x60, 2 Br + rome $1200 m onthly.
Jo'H, t op cond. & Joe. nr $175,000 . 963-7600 o r
beach. $37 ,500. Agt. ~-0784 ll\1\.1<1 \I "
I,• \' 1
1111 I Cmt H•1 Coron~ dfl M.11 646-4380 •~-----------------14· PL EXES Hunt Bch ,~~~~~~~~~
Signature "73. 24x60 plus Covmgtons, prime loc.1-
enclosed porc h. $31.000. Imm a c. 11 1 g h In 1·. HOM EFINDERS j
FJltate Sale.Agt.646·4380 PP/Agt. $18~.ooo ca Thou11andsofRcntals ~ 540-4464 All areas all pnrei; •
Trailer space 8x36 adult ------Sample $109.000
Fantastic Newport home
wt.thin walking d1stenccl~~~~~~~~~~
of the waler . l\ings1~e
b~drms 1ncludtn f u
separate master 11ui le
Luxurious living room
w /m a!i>slve brick
fireplace & parquet
Doors. Bonus r oom .
could be 4th bedrm Famhy r oom, same
room w/bltu bbq & plen·
ty ~room for your gamt
table. Call L0Cla1 ,
park. ~·Q 6173 --·,-u· .... ·1·T·S--.. 1$80 l Br. rum. Ult! pd. ___ ._. ,... $200 2 Br, won'l la!!l, ut.
Eight months old Ju11t S29:> 3 Br. klds/fncd yd
6'6-7171. Cl'flf flt t • 11' fll9 IO II N(' • !•Bill
.. s.f ... Otlallt• ~00 Aq.f\. ot. de11gbttul living, tan blkl from beach.. »11 community llOOl & te.nn1uouru. 4 Br 2~ Ba l171.ll00.
~ .. odl I 06 IHch I 069
·······~·······························-······
caE:·
810181 ILllRS ca.
OVER 60 YEARS OF SERVICE
LOVE LIDO ISLE n
Many Fammcs Do. Here's A One Of
A Ktnd. BenuUful, Custom Built, 3
Jlr Hotne On A Spacious Street To
Strada Locntion. Bright, Cheerful Decor. Lrgo. l.iv . Rm. Wllh
fireplace. Lovely Sun·Room , Plus
An Attractive Patio With Southern •~xpo~ure. Prl~ed At $235,000. A
'Joy or NewPQrt .. J.l!;ting.
ustod! Call far Info. Uf'}.'TlMES J:o:RVIC E
Ml-0425 557..0822
World Real t;fitalc
TRIPLEX
<ONK YEA& OU>>
Attnc\ive East Costa
M~ 2 BR units, l ~ or:! batbs, dtn. arc11. Pnv.
patloa, 5 u p. t1l11gle
llU"a•es· Ea. apl... w/frpl.
$11.\000. AGENT 1552.0434
Tustin 4-plcx. corner lot. 1
3br frplc, 3 2br unit•.
Prln only. Coll bkr.
Drake Ir AHO. 838 5700
FREE
RENTAL LIST
We have homes in ev
area. VIil age Rea
Estate, 10082 . Garflel~~• Ave, H.B. 963~567. ffO'."lt
Fee
MOR!NTI
THINK BUY! J.
Newpott.IS~•. ntW4·plex, Cheaper than rentln .
all lee, hltiu, lndtcpn11. Easy o.nd profitable wi
apa(lou• owner• unit. lilUo caMh needed. Cal
Fu .. t uur dcprtcl1llon. Bill, 64~78
Walk to nU\ St. 642·77~:! * ltlD CARPIT 1t
«lrm-0'7112 -----------· ...;.._....;..;..._ .... , .. ..ct 120
WANTED· Rf!!'ld ntJal In .. ••••••••••••••-•••••
c<> 2, hr4 unl\11. 'u•l AtlJ'eruvo Baltw.a Isla
bl e ocic-an view. rlK'IUHw/paUoA1 •
C 'llr&Ao or Dina Pt W111ter or yrly. Rel.a. req ..
, uru.;7 1830 , h f7~or (213)'fN..7~
.. . .
!11 .111.t 11<"\!o ' ·' I.Jr . r .. m rm . :!'-. hat lrph \fW
(l\('0 -.!>;!~ IUll. t;;IJ l 1 :1:1
;itlt'r ti
<!Hr. <! t.i), 2 ha, l(ttr , fnrd
Id. IHI Kith._ IH'l I) t\
~;l()lllmo 54fi 7SOli
2Br. llla lnrrl yd, hell
Ill li.t. + "tt•ntv rn 2lafiL "1.-~ .
.! l'tr ~r uni\, frpk, nu
k 111-, or pt'ts ttllO mu
t.''45 E\den. f.4!1 5ftS7 ur
:! n llll5 5056
• a '*
REMT.ALS
:• llH. I Ha
2HH,:!b.i
:1 Bfl, 2 0.1 .
3 AK, 2' i ha
1 nn. i 1 t ha
4 nn a B3
!°IBR .3HJ
:1HH 21 J bJ HVllms
u ·rnsqn
Ui.17 WESTCLJFf'-Nfl
ACT.541·~2
beutiY••---Ofr iipacc in Newport·
Au'port Ar~4. &~on,
1w0t· :.crv . cunl ere1M. c
rm. lulc.b. r.c.i.·y '>Cr\'. d1•
I~ & <:opy mouhuw
Frum S:.>f.I' I 714 l 7~ 71711
nu EfFICIEHT
AlTEaMATt¥E
Mo lo mo. rcnl 1nrl
fl (' l' 1· JI I S f' r v
flt'r:>uwWud pban.e CO\'
t"rlJlc. cont. rm, 01.ail
scrY., underg1"9\l.Dd prka.:
& mar-e ill Ne.-port.
TKf; EXECUTIVE
SU1TF.. 640-5470
I
I
•
-
Add it. .Buld it .. 01ctPt.r rt .. Hammer II Carpet ~t...Ct>mttt 1t...Wu t-1t .. Hoe 1t •.• Cliean 1t...Move •l...Prt!~~ L .P amt 11 •• Nail it ... Plaste< 1t •.• F1x 1t •. SERVICE DIRECTORY
ThurS<lay. J.muary 5 1978 DAILY PILOT 04S ,
PJumo 1t ••• Patch 1t. .. P1pe it .. emo e ' ...
Roof IL.Landscape it ... Tite it ... Tr1m it. Sewi1 ..
Haul it .. Add !L. Plant it ••• Alte r it .. Learn it
. .
.... mee t... C•p•U•Ylce C-.,,,/Coecr• &.•..-, Hu1tdH1u9 L_.1c.lmll) ,_,...,. .. .,..., ,_.ti ll'••rillt .. ...................... ........................ ....................... ....................... ....................... ......................... ....................... ......................... ....................... .
B'JAw>b•ntS.•n ~dlpW 41 ..,,._.na c&ean CEMENT Wl>HK AU WJo:t-:OING CLt:ANlJP5 m a Rl!:ALLY CLEAN t.ANDSCAPTNG finep.Un1JnC1o1tstiu b6i.a) Interior. exterior Pllll\.l llEPAJRS/RENOOELS
'"' TllP·~A.f~£s1u Colw hnght.eOt"rli wbt lunds. Brasonabte ~ct• W~kly lhnit•utt HOUSE' C..U G1nehl.tm Re•onablepnces pnNS Try me. fr est, ; a I . s a p r e m ~ ~a!Jte,qqaf wiock
aa.25£ Ma'4 SA t·pu. 10 rnU'.I b1ucll C\f'•tt a.t. CaJl 750 6Q5 Jo'Teeest flC. Gtt1 l"reees1 &45·5123 54T -5Mt __ ..!!_cflurd. ---~ wortmnshlp. CuU Ja<.'k Eqeoes.16-38 ~ ~7 o ~ ~n rm~ haU f15 Av11: Di& It Landscape Mala· uc:e1 H~t>ffhuuUDB M•a.y CUSTOM PA.lNTING. ._,_. ___ _
_...,..,. !I SS Go 50 dC::" Stood C'iv c..lrector tcnance Mow & Edge Rras. rehable, ref!> Own ....................... Exterior SpeclahSl 15 YOUNG MAIC 5,.,.. ex:,r •--.. ...... -.. ..
··--••••••••••-·• Cpt ~" 15 ;;: eir::: ••••••••••••••••••••••• l'ull m<11nt , hJul1oa. trllJU &l2 7207or646 4871 Brickwork Small Jobs. yl"5 lcxll! reb Uclb<m· tn waU~cw...tq. Frc~ ROOFS 1m.tanecl ttllC'tGr)' ~tu&& • N Do work mysl'lf lt~s I J Huffman "Son. ~ dean up:.. rototllUne -tU .. t&a...-l'!!..IRLS -Newport.. Co:.ti.1 Mcu & dl"d1111s1'd. caar •ot'tr. ests.411M15mAmfy dt.rect. estah 15 yn, Call dayt. Matu~ om11a . ~OUU OJr1'r C.\&il.OnlAlU1Add, Freeest675~16 • ~,....-tn111e 67Sl17Scv~ ~ e1tL"L Won'\ be ua --H.voldGwio.s'92911 ~St. .-ea · pat 1 o ~ cab 1net1, -Housedearung & oHlee --dfti>ldD 1081 ' Prof pa1Al'1j, ~AD&· ---------
Stt•Jm C.:luo llolld a~ fomuca New rom1 Res ._....,. .. Str'tlcH ~l)t'(:•ahsts We w~lrnrne Movlftg ---. 1na. ac&Q. ww1t 1u1r. Leak iW4WU' ~·&.•. ea.,_... SpN·iaf Cpt • u,hol & l'Olllln1. ~"4 or ....................... R.k: act.-ount:. Spet•u1ls ....................... Flr..l dass exl/lnl paint-Fr ee ••l 957·194 l , All r 9C>la, fre• eat .
...................... Lir lMrd'fuar. 3 rm. no ~l l..M:&booded _ HANDYMAN Carpentr1. Apts & Condos Uay, "Two Mt!n W1lJ Movl! 1 ~11 Pa~ing . J3i..GD WoMward l\oetllG!l
Cupentry, a n1 type i.i hmit US.JS, h .. lb & C aJ ,.. __ ,_ . dW electnc .. 1, plurnlt1n« Ii ~or month Dondl'tl. You" We h andle big CablneU . etc... ,,._... M~ ~Hl3 :M
Pand, doors, et. al110 bathrm frtt l I JP-E eoet' ... ~_... ..... ~-~BA ld floor:. 847 2'181, 551.ucM lit• d . 101rd. It l'rll Ill 0 \ e ~ 0 r r I l' e & 25ynetp fTl.S!M n•t.r,_.,.-hrs Cmm·1. he/est .48 t719 • • uom. nc~ ..... Ul -~09525 'hOUloehold Otslllnce & -• • ...................... -
aft5. ~~mr~1 '31 s 3 so. 1na. 1oork F11ianc1ne HANDYMAN local alil() pat'lnng Ext. Spec. Reasup~~e. \IU\'NEATP.ATCH RoolsForLess.Alltypcs. 1 _ AvailaWe Doo Mt1.at.er NOJOB1'00SMALL HOUSECLEANING 1sour Loweat l e«nl rate Ftec est. Refs. -Joas•T£XTUR£ l..lc/bond'd . t l\llaT. t'Tet•
Decltanc. remodd.ae. ~ CAaPETll:rA.IU 848-4iAt CALLS48-{)0g busiou~ Rel1Jble Llclnmd C.I T lll-M4 ~. ----Freeesl. lllS-1 esllmati!. 114-0411 or
pmr. No Job l<X limall SS7-6IGl Ehdric.. wading !>erv1ce Janice·~ !tug Ph1MT-7?1B PROP'ESSJONAL Pa.kit· 537-4JD -~I.es 87S4Meve. -----uun••••••• .......... ••u•-•-••u uu•uu i:t'tiyAnns_!t~l80o ,~p .. r ... --Ing IAter/Exter. Jileas, :t~,,P~~~~~. rws.r.tc. _____ _
lndcp•mdcntc.arpllWr<ld Cone,.. Et.£crtUCAL SERVICE Sk1plollder. !Jump tru1·k SUMSH1MIGtlLS ............. ! ......... workcuarl4203ll allmales..CalJ~l).41U 111 .............. _ ..
dlliotl.l>. remo<tl, etc •••••••••••••••••••••• UUJ...SSlShr,&SMALL Jlauling, tree work. All typesorhomeandor P.,....Eo"P"''NTING -P .......... Y-C_._ ----Removals trlmm1n1t
Mibffd.liU-M tl. CoMrete work . JOBSau.m:l grad1n&, demll ~le fttt clnmnl pacluiges. .,., ~ n.o. m.I' -tDVY ........ , . ~og. ~est. Ut'd ;
r-a.ar__.._.---Rlock, bnt"k, 11lump & - ------8.11-1257 Specaa! Apls & lt.E. ~;~;·~stHec:1t~~e;e A211St~~ye$~~~Siaasrm ... ••••••·~•••••••••••• lnsrd.9158.9295.84?~ ~r-• ~.,.....,n; contrt-\C walls. Sccunty t4~8ectric H--" ---work Bonded/insured. ~ ... ,_l\Acw ,,,. ~........ ItEPAJIS/REMODICLS •••••••••••••••••••••• Bltitden 834.fl 11 u c 3271.10 l>4S IZl74 -ng PTt"e ens Si Jlhr serv1t·e ~ "'._ Pru:es 1ocl matrl1 law Reasoaable. qll&l wort IW.afilllmfi.'4iw'Cfs~h
Ual'l)etAl.IAwllJlly Y ......................... 5409525 lndependeot P a per 0..u-Jlaair.6're.e.e&L. ~ill-.. _ ...... ._,
or mine Retain Cl-mentwork Onvewa~. EL~CTRlCI AN·Pnced OOC ST\JOENT. 811 .._ llau~er The fanesl Lu:l2Dl81.Ted6Ja..708S Pinc • 8 •114 Oak
deaaioc&oo!QBt'wurk h1 dewalkh, p11t1u!\, & nght·frec estimate on ton truclt. Tra11h. trim, Jhovegoodrefereoces& t·r~fl.smaoship lflllllll ---HO•&SAVEAS. rt.. ~~OIMal~etellnc
a&.&M11er sav~. Jo'ree blockwall fence. Call largeors m11ll,abs «c.Ran<ly 642~70l lwork very•ell. t..c uurd ~(!'>"lr~e!it WCH.AELS PA.LNT1NG: ut1&1:1eJbac Frellcst. & acc. aeuon•bl~. tJal..~ Jb:.~4.298 ~ 873-0359 ----~2'"' 6733658 at .. •ou.su Ir com.a. $10hr.lloeeal6 Ter ry's "wpl ·B •Y
People who need J)l'Ople --- -~ s. i7Wl~ alt. 5pm. R'rVice. 8o!A. MIC OK. ~61
The fa!iolest de~ 'the l'rJldt YWT old i;tllff for Ha\'e somc.>tlung you want .aio..ld alway. cbedl the The fllSlelt draw 111 the• SELL •die ll.ems w11A a Panti-c Elrtr/lotr g;: 751·315Gor804SU ---.------
We11t. • Da.I) PW>t new good 1e~ 1o111t h a lo !11!11~ <..1asaified ac.11 do Servi.ce Diredary tn tbe We1L •• a Dady Pilot Daily Plfut Cla.uwed Ad pr"d ~nesl. neat. 'reu SEU. uile llerru. ..0 • a-u1f'd Ad ~ II 01t.,i.ified ad. G42 SB78 rt Wf'll 642 56711 __ DA_lLY PILOT (...\Malfaed Ad Wl..ss71. 00! 56'?8 uc·ci !164-l<MS Dave . s. idleltemS 6\G.5171 o.ty ~-'•ed Ad.
........... al 4450 ..... c ants 51 ....................... ..................... .
4 OflUXE OfC"S
Cool rm .. sett 25. all
paneled. l\m . ....,." m r e
aT. l or 2 }r. lo.se. Laite
P'orcat are •. Kcal
Ua.r1u.a:.
7t4-58HJllJ
HfAIM!lt>1lllnf: •hill' )'QU
111' .1.\. .'WI (..11~. elde<ly
qil~ Rd) 6\2 1583.
548 3289
SCRAM-lffi
ANSWEIS
Pers.ck SJSO HefpW-.. 7l Help Wanted 7100 HelpW..t.d 7100 tWpWelllied 71 ....................... ....................... ....................... ......................... ..... ~ ............... .
* MICHa.t.E•s *
Outcall lrh!!!>llC
l<>AM ?AM 131 4W
Spirffmdleodw
t8t5So EJ Camino Real
Sal\Oemcele FUiiy be. 1\ppro~ 400 fl. rt C 2. NC. at llO ~:. 17th St,
WO/mo ~!i411 1 1~
Par appC ff2..7Z96
Thn v~ Ec"'1t' - - ---~m 4'1 l umbtl u..t.:.LAXLNG MASSAGt;
S:.!80 he S,,,.e OH1ce
!lllllq fl und'r » 1~78
Deacli w. w. 142 :t834
11': 0£8T HobJ&mtS-L&c M•seur
I m pnu.1 to UY tb.i I ~all S.l,4t4-~1 ll
!lave wurated Lor durt - ---
\ Cilf~. !,J\led, scnmped. MASSA GI
•LAGUN/NIC U Y.l.•
ZTiilS ~ [(.d
Relaltllllt·,;n.4 rt
Rellll11w~. l.J.J6.~q ft
hudgt'll'(I. IOVCSll.od, JUS\ fl&URI MOOElS --a I ~ J!lve my Inds
'khat I nner had, ESCOl'TS
I lllh« up ttnl1s .eyeball OUTCAl.L OML Y
CXc, 2Bl!sq I
Ava1mmt"tl IN {Ji!BT 611·311 t
A.f. Ste R I lost. Fomd UM ~eow. autoDOCDOUS
831 up or 544 0933 • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • female 41!, ~'LO", t 5Gf
~dt~al 4500 ull'll l:,l't.\ Cat, fem...Je, wants n1te owl coaa-~horth11tr V1t' S.m Joa-lerparL I' O Boa 27i.
• • • •: • • -• • • • • • • • • • • • • qul1l I !ills & San M 1 g ut!l CM t:a62'7 WQOSqO.t(~aJµro l>r,t'dM.~~5 -
perty wUiOO sq ct "'JAJI *S ... 11io..1oy~ * UIDd ola 5'i-lt>S:l 2!1Sei LOST· F"1l Old f:.n(bsh A" ~
Kandolh \\ c. t:M ~http do~. "Shati:'I",
INDCfflllAL~J'A('fo:
!>'or rot ID Coa.l•• ~h-~a uao .. (t • swt.abk for
M~"1<>n V Golf C1lUn;e,
l<ew 1.rd R:ll Zl8S ;
77114!1 I nk for Joan
wart OUSf' or m fg La!I lrubSdkrlemale
64G-!ii21or646~e':. \pproa l y r Vic
-u.,,bard1t;arf1eld. l'l.o
lllsilwf/l1tn d / VI'' tfiH 51!17
,..__. t'nund Sh1·11 m1i. ll'll\Jle. •··~-··•• •• • • •• • • • • • It t &Tl. blk '!\ttaln.. VIC'
IMliMI .\tlanh &: Mati:noh a . SOOS JI Ii !lhJ 7UM
.111 t:1rt & loL Shn11 for f'oulld. J11..11·k ff'm;,k Poo-
1lfb) 01Aoer. UJU(\1w m tile s .rn Ju4a C.ipo
f'OAl'y, 11:row1a" huli• ,\1rpor1 !'lea l'Ollar.
t'S'i Ill xlnl lon111on. tlrown rollar 4~7fft
UutcaUN.~e
973-032SI
·0017 or U!l-1l~evi.. f't.EASf J-.W_. 71H C E A, N t ' R 0 N ~ 1..c~t lJlf71 , Jl:dc!. blk ..... -. ....... _._
A RI< i;T II• al •~U · llib Rewanl. 642-291' Practfral fem nune It lite ~ m,000 )'T. A.l:l'flt ~work.. daya. M
·4758 LOS"r· Pt>male Cdllt.", fat. Fn. a lll'a, at s.s oo XlDl
t>thle & w~1t e, vie relt ~ reaume a11L
'"'""---a.. SOlS Raker/P'au-.1ew, C M. EYs/Wkack tti-4472
-...,.--·1·1 ~"9 2645 -•••-.. •••••••••••••• ---------...., W..._. 71 OD
w ·reooliettul.: 13 8~ Lo't MJlf' blarlr l'at ·-~-----···-·
turn 011 your uive<>l w wh1ll' reel Mesa i---------i ruU Sandy Ro:.s, Vprde area. ,.,!l 4518.
·as Co B37 3744 Heward
.. Lo• 5125 ulJt trc btir • U.• rule
••••••••• •• ......... ~·ttl'r max. Bo!Jia l 'h1l·a
M.lad& lrd T.D.'• WA.NS AV AJ LAB LE
~·nottm.pclttaaL
....... 493·1 lOZ
& t:dmJ:t'T M~ ff!l?5
Yoa fem 1rub s~uer.
-'1cs."1 deJ MN. J.J 2J 7 ii..
SG-iW
H.-,Wodtd 71 HltpW-.d 7•M ................................................
COOKS
Full On·Tbe·Job TraWQa. Now~ apphcat.loos
Moa thru Friday 3 5pm
lP. Macs
Orcmg1C...tr'•Ne.,,..,Retl _ _.
1 .. 42 ,W-A.-
H•tillgl• IHdt 1.0.1..
I
l i
-. I • • .. •
l'J8 OAllY P1 Of
"-• WMhd 1 '40...., W..ted Hlllp W.t.d 7100 Nat t"o n•t'<ll 2 up,
• ••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • •• • • •• • • • ••• ••• •••• ••••• •• •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • tt-l.rphontt ~..i~•i>euote to
l:ncutiTe Sec'y
\lu•l t .. • ''II "t trll't I\ lit'
•· ""V"' ., h 11111 \llllll Ir H•• ht.o• ,, 1.nt PJll'tl tt.H
n Oh I .1;,h11111 1111.,111· ~
pl• J,,,. , .ill i. .. 1-.1•l'n
11 111,\\I ll'\I. :-..ol.1n
1·n1111111•n,11r,1to• "" .1h1li
I\ llonn11• lha \ 1<bu11
IC .. \ \11 pm I l.<"1p 01
~ M ~!* 11&>41
LOT M .a \Hlll'lr: Crom our off ht Jn Jl<fn.1. A,... S.tlan + t·o111 m ~
OUSEKEEPERC &Im L:!. !I day», lit vri1 or holllUh Cu paid in' For
-o\I' l -lll 7~ 11110 m\avw" n 1ll MO 60!1\
.. \t nlll~ ~Ill
\\\•:.ire •·urr ... ntJv 't't'lo.1nl( l.\ 'I i J 1 11 h1fl > 'I G 11 'r AUD 1T0 ll
rt•llJbll-111111\ ulu;ah lo l!TIITM'd . u1>4•nin1:" Lido 1'''\J,ll'r\t 11J1t t1n>t' /\l)l1
1010 thi-hou'>t'lo.t't'I''"' < "'haJ,..,ct·nt IA•· 1'11.\ h ~n Uro"n" Motel
t1•Jr11 ~:,1·\•ll1•nt com LVH 'S JJll>fi ('u,1 l llw\', Sn
p.am lk"1~:r1u l.ai.:una
Factory Workers
4 Day Work Wk
40 Hours
1'ri11I>· In l'c..•r """
&let" Industries
.!1111 Dm t• ~I rt•t•l
'l'\\ port 11<.-.1t·h
.\..ro·" l·r11m OC: Airport
.\pply9.im noon 7 3 Mt>tlll'lilaon~ 11 7
<\too toh P1.;r1Wnnl'I < 'h..ir-'e Nur-t.> t;ood ~Jl & rnn.1tt' bt'n ... \1 t'll M.ARRIOTI HOTEL V4.'n1t' t 'om 110,p, titH
000 Newport Clr Dr l'cnkr St. CM 5411 ~5 Nt.>Wpurt Bea<'h
Equ.!l Opp f:mplyr m
Hotet PIX Opr
J 11 :1opm shirt 32 Hrs
"k Au-porter Inn Hotel,
l.'ont:il'L Mr. llannun.
~l3'm0
llou'>erle11nl'rs N et:d etl.
M.tturt• T11p S·car nt:l'
t>t2 }40J, &i5-~l439
MACHINIST
4 Day/40Jluur Wl'l'K
tlent.>ral m•1dunl' w1Jrk
<JO qualtty 11t:rollpJc·c
cumponl'fll' & ui1 ·
semblle-s Must bl• uble to
work from dt·lml••d pl.111
rnng ~ht:l''' & hlut•pnn~
i\pµly In l'l·r!-.Oll
· Munda) Thur.,t.lay
Eclft' Industries Inc I oo•I 1111·p.1r.1lwn Ill J llou~t·kt•cµt:r. m11ture. :!101 DoH·Sl. -.:n
\Ion 1"11 l lti.t lkh ru.:ht shrH. t l 7 in gue5l --
··~'II I • home c;~t 646-0716 MAIDS
• , J-\1 ll & I' t1 nH• (j 11111! FoodSenlc~Asst ll?L."SF.KP:l';Pl'.lt·Mon & bc:nl'fits Holid;1v lnn. Substitut~ I-r 1 o 11 l) · I! t> 11 t' r" ~ l.uguna ll1lls. Cont.ill
flfl l .ill llu::.". • :!1 • hr~ h . .,i·kl·l'l'1nl-! Jlld watch ;.. l'cri.on.ncl aljt) 5000
1,. 1 ''·''·:).I w pt•r lir. 1\11 1 h1ldrc11 i & !J. SJO wit. ply to t rv1n1· I n1f11·d lrHnc:urt:a 55:!-711-tS )laJOlcnancc M:on. ~outh
.s1·h1111I 111 ,.tri 1 t .!!11 l I) C arl·•• plumhing hll•
\lton ,\\ 1', In llll' \ i 11 1 HOUSEKEEPER • JTpc:nl.ry. U" n lc>Uh, & ;~;;1•110 8t1Chl'l o r father tran s p. Full llml'
t-:11u . .ll oppnr f.mploycr w/ll't'naj.(ers "anl:i full S4Hl93.1
thuri:c hou::.t:kt•cpt·r. No -
I irll or rart tl~c. da) smoke: ur drink. Must MA."i\Gt-:\IENT
huur-\I I·' 11r ~·ef'lo.l'nds like lw,1llh fooc!.. & a II\ c l , Pl';Ol'L .. : 1'1-:11-;{)N
l'<·rtl-1 l Jllh ror ('\ l'lllOI: lv hornt• '\u II\ I' IO llrs I f.Xl'( nl'('tl~ r ll 011' as
,fUlll'nl. r1•t1n-<l or thus1· & ~ ,11 .. r y f It:,. 1 h le soc 111 "hnlt'S,1lt• surph
'"'ho "1"h to supplrmt•n1 lii3 t>Sm ,.. u l l v t' a p 1lal1 / t• t.l
1;1m1lv 111n1nw 1\pplv .1l I C...ll·H>:~
\Ii l>11n.1ll1s 700 W Cua~t llnu~1·kt•1·p1·r for •·ltll-rh I
"" \' NH • worn.m '"'.,on ~tu"l hav1• •MANAta:~n:·1J'l'•
· t•llJ'&hH•.(1Ut 1>15 l~1!i:1 I Thl• Ul•purlrnt•nt ol 1.uhor :-... 1\'!oo that S:!t .000
GENERAL ll 0 l' SEW I\' ES &1 IJl.'r )l'ar l't wh.lt 1l lul.t''>
S T l' U 1<; ~ 'I' S 1 1 for a family vf l tu ll\ t'
llow.•·•·h'.mt•r., ncc1k1t.1 1·11mfortat.1v If \llU ,,. LABORERS 1,ir n~1 l P lo ~l001"'k not m:ikmg.th1 ... &·wuultl
, 1 11 1 t 1 1.u; ll)(Jti, li7J 8158 • like lo makt' u1, tht• chf .~•·11 1• mmt•i IJ •·} -I J('n•nt·t• c·all mt-;ibout a '""I! A ,,hurt 11•rm a-1 ll"lkJJr/lilt• C"ook hvP m for miinai.:'t'ml'ot tr.iint•<• ,,~111111·111.-llull•lav & mat t•pl Aft 11 tall 1 '1 ll ll · . ,. pw.1 ion ,, r .trn·
\I a l' •1 I 1 11 11 µ '1 } ' K~! J3IS;! t il4 JM.12 ~.!HH
'llurH"'I 1ud1·s lrnm1.-<ha11·
nfJt•ning .. all l\hlfto; t.lc111
t'unvalt•M t·nt L enlt•r
·~771:.t
NURSES
LV.H.
1\111 & Part Time
llc'llpt>ni;1tih· & d~n11m1t·
111d1v1dual nec:dcd to tuk1•
d1.irgc 111 i;mull. modt.!1 11.
<'nnv all•.,t•cnl fat•1h ty .
l'\I '&.111 Rhh Appl)
l;J111cld Convalescent
Jlnsp
17141 GJr11l'lll Aw. !Hi
17111144~71
NURSES A.IDES
f-.)1.p .. r d only. t:;lderly
111,1n 111 conv hu'p
C.,,11 !-tun K.i m 8pm .
!->.it Stil) rui:ht~ llpm.Jlam
C.ill <:ollecl (21S)
4!15 l:IOJ()
HURSES A.IDES
&ORDERLIES
-.;,.t.,lt>d tu i:1vc lender
I0\111~ t·1ire 1n thr cldcrlv
pJtll'nh. Will tra10
qu .11 1 f ll'tl µ1• r..,on nel
E.1rn whll1• you ll'arn. All
shift-. av:11l Apply. 1415
::.Up.•nor N B
NURSES AIDES
7 :1 Exp1•r. 11rt'f'd . Mesa
\el'dt' l'Hll\ 110:-01>. tWl
l'entl'r St, c.::.1 ~18·5585
NURSES A.IDES
7 :1 :Ill i':i.pt•r vrel'd .
C'uunlry Club Conv
llome. 549·3061
P,RODUCTION
TYPIST
IBM SELECTRIC II
Exper1Crtl0cd <H.'l'Ul'ttll' T:vp1!'>l nt'l·ch•cl
1 mmed1:.ill'I v 70 wpm (must 1
Part 1'1ml·
Thursday & Jo'rula} Day Shilt
Saturday Nti;ht Shift
TYPESETTER
Experienced. Day shift PObillon
ExC'ellent Working Condillcms
Apply in Person
Secretary. 1anlbllloub, Ill
tra\.'ll\oC youn~ p~r~uo
" l~ pm{. 'l4•110gr11ph)' &
l'll:rll'JI t''Pl'r Op
por\11011 v tor .. dvanf'C•
nwnt C:ull 7!.2·9M1 \Ion
..... 11
J~!~1~0t~~.~al!~ra
Chr1-,1m.1'> mone)
S.11.11')· and romml!!!llOn
C.111
li.11 OJ;n .1"k for l>on
SKntary P/tim9 TELEPHONE
4 ll llrs a day. St:lr Murler SAi 'ES w/pleasant personality & L
phooe manner. Xlnl typ Work Purl-lime 1n one of
ing, nice appear. Call our cin•ulatlon s11lci.
752·2fll211sk for Barbara rooms " i.t1ll have
SECRET A.R_Y ___ , p I ca s u re t 1 m c for
·Rcu DAMAC,f:p
JIOTPO SALE. ~
W. W ~r nr 114rbor,
Santa A 919 2921 .... l
l" H f'AU>
For \\. 01') rs Rl•friJ:
v.ork1n1 n0l~7 8~
Oran9e Coast D~ily Pilot
yrurself. You <•an work Challen~in~ pos. for a near home & !>lill pu n.ul'
pcrsonwhollkes vancly. outside act1vitu.•s. We
Some expcr In per~onnel puy WllRC:. + <·omm. PM ... -~~----..,. & Jnsuran(·e work de & AM tiri; avail (.'all for
330 West loy St •• Co1to Meso
A">k for Paul Ward
.,tred. Sh llO. typing tiO. details
lrvmc lndust'I Complex Lot. Ans:elt•'I Times
Call for appt.. 540·763\l ~0·0301 1-:ot:. \n .Equal Opportunity .l!:mployt'r
HefpW~-HetpWmted 7t00 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
REAL ESTA.TE Sales wanted, cxper. nee.
J>rofess1orial, hcl•nsed Over lH Who Are Tho~e
Sdle:.people wanted, Guys·> N.8. 6758UO c.tll
generous comm1si.1ona. for appt
SIECRET A.RY ·SR.
Xlnl ~ecretana1 s kills, +
i;tal1sl1cal typing · &
figure aptitude required
for al't;'tn~ depart Mui.l
be self mollvatl'd & have
good public rclation.o; at·
litudc. Xlnl Co. benefit.:..
714·8J3..9329
Advanl'<' training. Salt's help, e~p 'd, for Secretary
642·5062 Judy's sports wear, Lido EXEC SECY
Century 21 Crocker bland. ti7J..~ National Educ·atlonal ~_!_~· 19th.,CM s .1les l udy, mature, firm i~ look1?g for top
Ren! ~tale Sules People llullmurk Gill Shop, notch exper d secy to
wantod. Up to 90/10"'~ ll.B. P/limt" 10 ~tart. work for the Pres. & Sr.
comm. spill. Nwpt Bch Some eves 1140 1557 Vice·Prt:s. of Finance 631 0000 • Apphca11l must be an at-
SA.LESLADY trat·t1vc, well Rroomed
RECEIVING for maternity boutique. professional 10d1vidu11l.
OW TRLICK DRIVER
NN.'dt'CI, exp only. Mw;i
h H' 111 Co:. ta l\ksa.. 8 S.
Mon· l-'!'1646 9638..
AVEL TRAINEF.. We
will train. Good typing
req'd. Noo smoker. No
tru,·el rxp nt'c. Full
travel ben<'llls Cal l
ti40-611 l !l · 5 Mon l"ri
'RUCK OR IV F.R &
COUN1'1':R SALES, PT,
over us. ('Xµer nee.
Walt's Wharf, (213)
5!18-443.1 Fred INSPECTOR Must be 1•xper'd. Sul + Slulb of lypmj! 70+wpm,
Ex1wr 1n qualitv u ~ t•omm 5.575734. SH80+wpm&someac Typ1~t.lnyourhome,
f h ----1·ounl10g expcr rcq'd fortempQrury JOb. suranc4: orme<-compu-SALfS MANACEH (jood startmg sal, xlnt. 557.07;w
ncnts :S~llll Mfi: pla.nl In t•xpc;'d, full -tune for working cond. & co. ----
1!. H Call 8 !14·5:!51. i;pec1ally bhop. 631-993ti ~n<flts. Apply m person • L'll Reccpt NU. area. ~:!.__ --or759-99Sl 9-12: 1-3.30, or mall re-P/Urne. Approx. 30 llrs
802~ ••••••••••••••
llu~prt al11.1t1 n11 pl Jn -~ -_
,l\ail.iht. M.rrt T11<l a\ • lrnml'<l•alc ?l1t:lllngs full 1 MAHA.GER
VOLT Of" p umc. l"o ex per nl'c. Agl!S 17 thru 28. S40-4H8. I for maternity l)(!ut11111l'
Manne Corp )lu'l bt• <''\P<'I' d . !->JI
'<ur .. ing a1dr & ~om<'
h.,ekp'Jt for disabled fem.
1-~"<P prd'd but not re-
crwr'cl l..1vt' m or out
I' T tl98-2233
Receplion1.,l'Typ1:.t. ----_1 -bumeto: perwk.640-M-46.
needed full time for SainM...,Womtn HationaiSystems Wait /W.-1.L.. ___ arage Sal '62 MGA,
N e w p o r t ll e a c h OPPORTUNITY OF Corporation er m-rreH mowers, lbl, mb!'J
publ1<1h1ng tirm. Good LIFETIME 436111 hSt H ti h Luncb sh1ft0f\.ly .. D1nner 34 Acacia T Ln. lrv. k~loogc of i:ramm;ir Private Club Mem re ' P c houseexper .preld.App· tUruvPlc )Ja ,9·2. CSMml.laJ. 675-6730 tNr. O.C. Airport) lv Victor llugo Jon. 361 1-----·--+----+comm !>57 57:14 Ta~AAV ... A VIC&•
-----
IHS COOROIMA TOR ' 3848 Campus Dn•e 1'0,..1 t 1 o n r eq u1 res' MANAGER
546-4741 thorough l..nowlcdi.ie ot r JOM'ph \1;ii:oin "' i.t•l'k
Offic~ Attt!ftdant
"·•lure, res p per1'on.
I' Umc Wkmh t :wpm·
12 JO:i m $:! an hr
llJvnew :\lanor. 350 W.
B.I) St, <.:~t &l2 J505
RECEPTIONIST
bershlps or :.ail bo<il _E.O.K ___ Cliff Dr. Laguna Beach.. Month Old Ile Mtie sales al wat<'r front loc.i Fr ..,. "' l\ltlen. has sh t1on. lhgh inromc. ln·Secreta.rytoV.P.ofNat'I Mon· 1""twn3·.,pm. goodhome.1>44
I \nn .. ., From Jll pha~l'!-. or i:roup 1 m i.: t'flthu.-,il!!>\lc, e~iwr d
11rJ11i.:1·<:0 \upurll hl•Jlth. ca:.ually & pro J ind1v1dual for Mt'n ,..
P\t men's nthlel1c cluh.
N B. Xlnl working conds
Hrs !i.30um-2pm & 2pm
lOpm. Mon-Fri 7S2-7905.
tcn...,lml( <'Xt'1t1ng social Co. Gen office, aptitude WAITRESS
art1n1ics Exp. in retail for figures & short.hand a Part time, over 21. hepbc.rd/Colli
1:qu.1l Oppo1 ... mplil' t•r pcrty msur.inte, a" wrll 1 Ocpt M~r po~illon 1\ppl)
<l'> dt•nral skills. Lia.son 111 pl.'r:.on Jl Jo'>l•ph
ht" n t•omp:.i r.1y & 1 !'s )la!(nin. So Coa~t I' law
OPPORTUNITY traffic :.all• pn•r'd: car'<. plus. Salary open. Xlnl Costa Mesa. 64z..9764 male, blk w/
books , etc. Neal. rnni:e!>. Call ror appt shots.SSl-0988 1
GENERAL OFFICE
·~• t "pm, 10 kn. l:QO<I
P·". 111111 ., mok1•r N l'IA
\tl•mll ... \lannt.> W 1 lla11
dulph. ('\I
•.ENElt \1.<WC'BKl't\G
.. ,pt·r 1 "'Id, 10 kt·v .1tltl .
I\ pin~ •II wpm, J.!nod
o·nrnpany lll'nt'l 1l s. rt•l 's
1t·11'd . !'l.l'"Pllll ll1>.1d1
l·', time & I' \11111· K
ll~dt·r, 1>12 2:?11
b rokt·r'i . Xlnt Cu l' .. O EM F
ht'tl1!t lh i 14 -833 !JY.?7
--Manal(cmt•nl Ucvt·lop· lnstnit t1onal J\1dc <2 I for ment Tr.aUlee. Lt•ad1ng
rnJ01 cla:i!.t•s. 3 Ilr!> a Jntcrnallon:.U Co nt>t•thl
•,l.1v, ad~1ys u "-k. Approx amb1llvu:. pcr~on of un
$4 hr. Ucracal cxper & que,..t1on11ble chura1'll'r
:ih1llly lo assist msl~Ul' for its s:tlt·~ munJi:enwnt
lors n~1 ti , Apply al Sad training proi::ram A hove
1lld1uck \ a1l<'Y l.~1fr~d avcragl' earn1nl(i. Ir
St·houl [)1 "l ri rl. 251.iJ I quahf1c..'() CollCltl' t•du<.· u
LJ1,l·no Dr . .\1\' Person tion prcferroo. Te1ll'h11111
1wl (Jlfrn· sales, or managern1•111
If vou art• nol m<1k1ng $6
l'l'r hour. call u .... Full or
Jlil.rt llmt· "'ork uvaila·
hie Mu~I havl' depend a·
hit• tran' Ph l''ullcr
l\ni<,h <.:o 75" 6471
Pa111ll'r. E>.1wr . nl·al ap
pc.·or.int•t•. Mul>l hl• de
pi•n1la!Jlc Goocl puy for
nj!ht pen.on 548·5100,
s12mos
PASTl::UI' Artist wankd.
RECEPTIONIST
Small M1ss1on \'1eJO Mfg
<.:o nl:'t'CIS neat uppeunng,
1.:oorleous, exper person.
llkkp g exp helpful but
not nee· typini:-req 'd mm
50 wpm. Call Lrll1an
51:11·3830
Recept/ SKrdary
pkas.inl & t'llJOY dc:ihng 546·9790. Jo:q u a I 0 P WAITll!SSIS Free to good ho e ~ute
with the puhlk. Refs. re· portunity Employer F/time. Exper prel'd but German Shepb ' pup-~w rcd..:.2_54 · 1782 SECTY/ BKKPR, mu~t not nee. Apply in person, PY 675·9082
SALF-'i pf:OPLE have exper. in R.1'.:. & Thurs 7am ·lpm, Dick ~~·-----t---
WANTED construction. Salary Church's Rl'stourant, "'"Puppi
Tosull 1111\1•rll~in~ Good open. Box 561, CdM, Ca 2ffi8Newportlilvd,CM MS..S283
produccri. $25,ooo to 92625 W ... ITRESSES BLACKBLACK A• $35,000 a ycur. l'ar al ---------"' o Jowunre. husc• Tak mi: •SECURITY OFCRS1r F.xpcr'd food & cocktaill\ J months old. ee.
1nterv1cws now, cull Estab'J securi ty firm Duy or night. Apply in 673-3343 '714)49'~·4560 ne1.'tls reliable men & Pc rs on. Mr. G ':. 1-------+---' -----women ror uniformed Rt-staurnnt, 3100 Irvine, man shcp, 8 ml o!>M
SAi.ES -P/l1me. f"ahrH· :.ecurilv positions 1n NB tmd. l''em. Love evet:
Shop,(.' M . Co:.ta riicsa. l'\111 or pt l ---------yone but. prot tive1
( .!'n uffu" J.!lt l " r, rr.1 lnl l.n<.ht· M dllll l'er,.on one rn.111 1n,11r,1n1·1· nt>todc..'1:1 lU {'arc for li ve
lrtokl•r' 111111°· !'ti·•' pl.rnh rn t ommcr<'lal
1..rll' 111·1· ll.l'.I 1111'1 I\ \1 ,, lllng l·.i.pcr &. tran,,,
background helpful Fur
1nlC'rv1ew call .I <in•·
Md:lva1ne 55, l lH I
t::O E L llJ'J
E>.p prd'd or will trnm
F l11ne pm. l'o benC'flls
1\p· 1\. l'c·nn\,,l\c'r, Hi60
l'lJ('l'llll.1 \\I' ('\I
for mcchcal f1cltl . Typ inn. It 1>1c • + gen oil'
work. Mature• llB area
~-1420 Call &-16·4040. l.mcla sch~ules avail. Retirees Welders SJ6.l t40
HE Salt~ wekomt·. Phone collcrt. t'rl'C puppies, Ger.
Century ~l 1\tlanw I!> 00" SA.LES-•ET AIL main ok. for appL (2131 Ericson Yachts Shepherd 011x, ~ wk.f. intcn1e"IHI! for ,,;iJ1>, Off1c·1• :.uppht•" & -;la lSS-0156 old. 4 mul e, 2(e~
t.J-'"l;f II \l 01 l IC ~ •. "" 1 q1111J.~ '.1n1·cl clu111·-. lu "" r ..... "'"' ""' .1t .1 ti mi· \111 •I .... \ .. I' rno•l .1 (
I 1 : 11 fl ', I' l •' 11'-.I n I 111
1111·111.tl \'"' k1n1· 1·111111
111· • (.' J 11 w k d a y"
x ·~1 I 10557 0150
.l<1111lor lull hmP
l..1.1:u11.i &•Ja:h Lumtwr
1·~1 6538 ~10-8267
Phone Schedulers ~'Opll'lorthcir 2nc1 nrrl(l' tioiwr~ t-'ull & J>1L1ml' - ------11..is I'' t1meopc11U11,?S for 645-005
·• Op,.n1ni:' l n1ciuc in AhciJ Tov.n <:enter. 1)(»1l1on:. a\·a1l. l'honl' Stt'v with i:t·ner:il office ei.pcrd ":L
lfloalth l'rni:ram l'arl . al'rllS'i lhl' strrel from ror appt. 567·9'41! uk for bk11ls Ac<'Urale typ11>t. Ht4iarc Welder~ Fwftitw• SOSv'
1111w na, or l';H nini.:' c :<'mt·o. For appt l all Mr West. Nev. port Sta Call Pat for wlen iew full benl'f1ts: Medical, ••••••••••••••••••••••
'1.<I ml'lll'ulou., moll\'illt>d \lanud Arla mt• Urkr or honers ln,i: appl. 830-SSl'l dt.>ntal, opllcal. Pltasc SfOREWI DE SAIE
11id1\11lual'i <;rt bl'nchh Louise· JulcJu, M~r ·----- ------apply at Seeunty Ofc., New&usedfuro.apl's.
'leth.m1c
'"•1 111111.1·1 Ill !">l'\I, .Ja111ton.tl p/l1mt• Tnp
\It 11 I 1 \p11h· l•\ leol pa\ Lai:una 8 c:h. Adul~ 1,, 111 lllll 11 :nx t ll. uni\ !11!1 .l923
i::xPt:r mt•l'hJnh <:cl
"ork1ni: 1·ond fnnh
furn Sal.1rv op••n \11pl) m pcr,on 6AM 111 11'\I
~'t" manai.:er Shl'll Sl.1
twn. :11:11 1 larbor & Ua1e
l'I C.: M
llt·allh ~xam1ml1c~. N fl 831 ·2l>4tl Satdwlch Shop Girts Service Sta. Allendanl, 19:1l Deere Ave, SA. nusc. Wilson's B~ain
(7141540 7U2 ---·---Near 0 C. Airport. Mon exper'd. 1-\IU or p/time.1---------•1 Nook. ~s & 814 W.l9th,
----1----------l'r1 lOam J pm. 5.56 0780 Apply Arco Station. J7th CM. 642-7930&548·3$2 • R.t; Salespeople far appt &!nine, C.M_ Women for Houseclean·
\II " ,I\ ,\I I l II l.I
'""'·'· •1 ,, •1, i'l,o phu111 ' .• 11, pl1·.1 ,.
Gettef'al Office
""' t•l1•1·trnn11•s 1·0 "'xlnl
l11•n .. l1h " lookrni: for
c·apJhlr 111dlvldual w ';:d
ph rl'l'l'Pl slolb & at'<'
I\ 11111.1:. ~)wpm. $n<IO/ mo
\pply hc\Wt.>l'09 llt1m
I.ark E111:111crn111:
.llli6 W llilh ~l. N I\
642 !l:?OS
~1ECllA~I C. Cl.AS!-./\ l mg. Pnrt. lime or full 11-zft .longcuslompiett lt,r Lun n up & ,mo" f'la.<,l.Jc nJection W ... o..JT!r.D • .. r,·1·ce Station Att•n KEYPUNCH ' ... "'"'.. 1..·~-'wtchShop " , " -t1mr. Top salary . portable bar it.h .,. 0 I> cert1f1calion. \Jmforms Mold mi: Call Lusk Really, ...,...ca:NERAL HEJ.r dant, exper d
1
•. Day & 642.7207 or G46...sn mulUpleit tuner, 8 ack Pata ~.ntry pr. uy furn1·ht:·", c'c>mm1<.•1on SET-UP MAN "'"' •361 Eves ... '·11 •-p lime /\p h l 11 ,.. ' :u "~ """'... P /T Mon·F'n. Call • · ru ac · • -----------1 & tumlable·all are ·1i. "' ill n-nui1e '-om G • ·•co3 F.i<""'r'd 2nd Sh1fl ' I Sh II Stall 11th&. pult•rs Hl'Q sspccd&<1r-+onpurts wu <.., FO~ REM....... betwn8·3,833~19. PY! e 00. YA.CHTSALES 1ns-plu& two cus f'Cl
K .• "'" 1._ _________ I -----lrvrne, NB. E,-rv>r1encro yacht sales wr"'•"ht iron bar s , t'lltill'\ cy to u1sc ex M EDIC!\L Scrn•t:ir~ I t:xper'd, Jrd Shift. 1• Seer cl ary-Purchasing --. · ,..... • · Sh..._ )l(•r helpful. Sal open n t· c .. p t 1 0 11 1 s t Restaurant rnr promlpcpt Orange Service ~ta. Night Attend pcl"SOn wuntcd by rnp1d arp! 581·7446. ,1.
Xlnl ht:ni•hts & work in~ t-:xr E 111ENC1-: O. for MAIMT. HELPER HOW HIRING C'oost Build in R n rm 2 Or S rutes o wk. Apply, g ro w i n g F U J l I
<'.<>nds. J\ppl.y. Nation?'l 1tu..,y G I' 's olfi<·e. Mu111 lst Shifl DA.YHELP locatrd in Tustin . Shell,17th&lrvlne,NB YAMJ\Jl i\Dcnler.Ca ll **I BUY••··· Sv~teu~s C.:orp • 4 3H~ know ll'rminoloi:y. in OPERATORS Applybetwn 2.5pm Previous construction · SOUTHWESTERN Good used Jo"rnitur• &
n1rch St. NB (Nr OC ~urantl' knuwll'<IJ!t' aml AllShifts W__...'sOld cxpcr. r tl(!uired. Type Service Sta. Attend. YACHT SA.LES Appliances-Ok 1 wU1
Airport) EO_!'.:. IJkc people. Slart111i: al Apply .;;;fOfted 60wpm • no shorthand. F/Ume days. Ute mccb'I 714/673-9211 sell or SELL for You. 1 l..a..·~al Sec'y. Mag u pre-S700. mo. 646·1631 Mon Orani?e Coast Plastics Contact Pegl)'SJS.3001 knowledge nee. Neat ap· 1---------MASTERS A.UCTIOM
ferrcd. Non·s mkr only. 1''r1.9·S RSOW.18thSt,C.M. Hca;.,.9en ---------• pear.&handwriting.Ap· YARD MAH 646-8686&1lJ.962l
GIRLFRIDA.Y Small, friendly 2-g1 rl M.-J.c~lockOfc . ~~264~0~S.~B~rl~s~tol~,S~A~~ SECRET.a.RY J?ly2S90Ncwport8l,CM Renta1Centcr hasopen·1---------.,.,.
one gi rl offire. lite book ll D. ore. 848·1400 Lab ';;pe';', & xray nee. Printer for l.250 Multi. 1-"" kl Ser vice Sta. Attend. in gs for 2 men. CASH PAID kecpml(, 10 key. type, · . . Jtood worlung cond. 40 hr. Reste111rant H...._ We are curren~y se~ ng P/time. Exper"d. Neat Mechanical knowledge For gd UAed furn. anU..
phone personality. LEGAL SECRETARY .!" B~lntermst..r.<t5·7172.:_ 4-day work week. 2 DISH;\:ASHE'irs. 1 conscientious mdlVldual appear. & handwriting. helpful, neat handwnl· ques&clrTV's,957-8133 1
'162-SS!ll _ __ Pre~t1 glous Newport Yledical Ofr expcr Xlnt llcneht.s. 979 7660 WAITRESS, Barbary with good. seoretarial /\ppl.y 2500 Newport Bl ing nee. Weekday orr. o~ h L· w firm seeks S •: d ------skills. EDJOY excellen ,.... ' ' Will tr··.. J930 Newport .,.,ac u · · oppor. r'. t·o n<•t• !-. · / Coast Restau r a nt be -11t "-...... l;IRL FHIDJ\Y, tor CPA expr'd Sl'Cretary. Salary loc..U sall's r<•p 10 rail on PnnUnR Collater, p time. company nn s. Bl CM
nk JO Ctl\1 Re1•cnl ci.p open Xlnt. benel1ls. doctors. SIO!\I + t•xp Now arceptmic ap~hca--~---------Apply9am-noon Service station attendant1--'--------
n o t n el H k k Pg "°'93111 _ i:uarn. Start 2 1 Fnr 111 lions lor Mon & .rues Restaurant help for Jack-Mon-Fri. Personnel for day shift. 4673 Cam· PeoplPwhonttd People
l..nowh"li.te helpful, ncx1 . ll'rvw coll 1\1' (.Op<'hn rultht bh1fts. Applv 9a~-ln-The·Box, immediate MARRIOTT HOTEL pus Dr .. N.B. Corner That's wh:1tthe
lill hours. 67~2070 L c It a I Sec r ct a r Y. 213 545 3ik17 11>m. Pennysaver. 1660 operung.s on all shifts al 3 900Ncwport Ctr Dr Campus& !\lacArthur UAILY PILOT
. • Cnnunul & c1\ll htig:i--Plac·ent1a<.:Obt11 Mesa. CostaMesastores Pleas<' Newport.Bt'ach SERVICBDIRECTORY t.trl l''rul.1y. hl<' bkkpJt, t100 Charm1nit ornce in ~-1CAL RECEPT . . . F..qual Opp Emplyr m/f Serv. Sta Help needed im· is all about'
l\PlllA & order desk l «Auna Brat•h Muhl ~ apply 111 person : med. 1''1111 or p/t. Apply, ----
!'hone person.ill LY " h'ave xtnt sec'y skills & ~ / l l me f 0 r h 11.""' PRODUCTION =~ E lit.h Sl, 990 E. Cst Hwy, Nwpt Antiqyn 8005
m\L't. Co.t't Oisl.rtbuto~ ab 1 e t 0 8 s sum e I t'Cl1atnc1ans ofr. ~.all 12058akerSt. _Bc_h. ________ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~706.1 <.: M respo11s1b11ily. Pleasing ~14-0070 2235Harbor Blvd. Seeutary/lkllpr
rnrl. outgoing, various personality 9 a ~ust . Medical Ass1i.l unt. l'>.p'd PLANNER ~---------1 ComtrucUon. Exper'd in MUSICIOXES
editerranean rum: ta •
ble w/6 chrs, 1 leaf $21~
bookcase/shelr w/2 d~
on bottom $50, cabinet
ror stereo/storage $135.
also drPsser w/mirror
SlOO Cold). Aft Spm.
645-7"57.
resp. phon1n~. promole Salary open. 4 7.17 pref, hal'k & front olf1ce. $16,000 RETAIL escrow documents. real
goodwill, bookkeeping at 1 _... Secretcry Heioblc hours. Abo I' art FM Paid est. property, recording
prh'ate tenni1 club. Ask F ?·u1. N.B. I time X·rnY teehn1t·rn11. F);tah'l t'lectromt• co. in CL£RKt' of loans & 2nd TD'•· rorTodd642-2000 or ·P•, ner. ··aw Newp<>rl Beach 11rea. pnmeOCarea.BSorBA .l 'Iborouah know'l of bk·
----firm. Gen l prac. Exper. 714 '646-5194 de" Prefer 3 yrs exper. lrpng theory & appllca-GllLS HEEDED wtxlnt akUls r eq'd. Ma.1< ----,.. tiorl!9. Salary Open. Fee
SHIPPING/REC
Opening for person elt·
per'd m small olc pro·
cedures. Shipping & re·
ceivinJ! of mert•s &
women s clothing. Lite
typing & fili ng. Call
betwn lOam & Spm for lo·
tttview 644~.
CLOCKS
Slot Machines, Nfcltelo-d leaf headboard, do~
deons, pbonographe. sz. 2 twn H box sprini
World's largest selec· matt. Elec blanket
ti on. A I e o «I fl s , Clltm bed3prd. 963·3377
furniture, onliquea. Loveseat, beige & bro
American International; Com er aroup Cons 1802 Kettcrinit: Irvine. radio & recoNI playe
754.rrn. Open Wed.·Sat. Antique walnut. dropl.c
Card helpful. Sal com· Motel Clerk & Mold. 9·3, !i in production control UTOT!M Pal.di Also Fee J obs.
Sandwich delivery• 5 mensurate. Call Laura, days. NC'ar Coast. Hwy & planning. Convenience Mnef1
days wk, 4 hn day. Own 7S9-0234. Newport Rivel. $2 fi5 hr Also FM Jobs Help Wanted ~ Posfflons
lraMp. Earn ovr $3.50 ---------Mariner Motel. 3026 w. Pnt.hflnders
hr. Call 8am-lpm, LEG•L$E""Y "-asLllwyN.ll Pcrsonncl Servlce tst.2nd&3rdShlft.s AYail_.• Shoe Sales, oppty for H·
THE LOOK
table. 536-3271 ~ ~ ..,. ""' N Noexper. req'd. We train Good hrs · · Sm. business litigation ----120 ewporl Ctr Dr th b. __. U per M/F. , no
r.1rm 1n Npt Cntr seeks MOTH. ER'S llELPER Ste225 NewportBch oso 1.r ....... App cant." MIGUEL Sun . Xlnl benefits, I•--------Twin Mediterranea 11 1 apply at Utotem Stores T J ........ ~ ... ..-.""'UI eiq>c.r. legal 11ecy. Mual Live in. Newborn & 5 yr Cal 64t-0672 1 ed l Ptl"IOIMI A.CJtftCY !<Diary + comm. op "''"",.. "'""• sofas. both for SM. lg Good Job
2 dayi1 per week Cur
PC11.11oners prer. Pcrmo ncnl m.22119
have x l n t 1.1 k i 11 s . old. Own room & !;Diary 1•--------• ocat a : 27001 Forbel Rd. Ste 49 gr ad e root w c a r • SALi Mediterranean rocktai
Shorth:md req Submit _Engl spk'g. SS7·9797 -------1~ ':.1t!~:-O~v~sSl~y t3 flags Cent.er) WestcUtrSboes. Mr. Cur Silver. onginal oil paint· table, $40. SS2·8878 a
resume In t'ont1dcnce to MOTORCVCI F' 9'aalty A..1WC1Ke Laguna Beach tlJ-1477 reo. Mll-86114., NB 1ngs & potpaurrt all 20<;. 6PM
1\d •981, 011ily Pilot, DELIVF.RV . TECHHICIA.M Weuean::u•I •-oW\aNiauel S l t. d off. Christmas dccora·_:__-----.. ----t I P 0 °-1"'60 Costa El0 ctront" b"ck1round ....... ophisl ca e youn g ,,......, ,2 off. Antique oak 42 rtJUnd t Hardware nlcresllnic ou. x " · -We sup·ply b1kt'. Flume ' " ......-.... itye-p over j~~~~~~~~~~~I Girl ""'iday & .......... .. ... .i •1 CA.........., r•.,,'d. No du1re"" n"" • .,...,.......... •u ' woman. r• 2721 L,.--tHw ble/4 ctlatn1. "matcU111 poGltion open ln retail .. csa • ,._, (P/t.Jme). Call 640·8111 .... " " ~-.. bookk f rt de -Y• saJ~ stctt. Receive & s.5 Age open Im med 1----------1---------1 ceper or~· c:or..defM• hi-ba-ck upbol. ch.-itY. stock hardwa.re. see LIGALSICRETARY --·-------1 evallabl11ty , good a • •s.cnt..tn.G.Ofc ales-.part.tuo.e. 67)..S?SZ Burgundy. Xlnt co
Mike J obnaon. K.W. tiiEWPORTCIHTER MOTOllROUTE benefits. Mission Viejo DoJ09ibDe09ie? TooManyToUstl!! 7-llSl'ORE. F\lll or Part 837<&o9$ •
W ri 1 bl Co., 1 26 Bright. esper secretary t>a1ly Piiot. r oute tn Mf1. Co. Call Lillian, Po1ltlon open !or a Employen Pay All Fees nme Clerk. Apply in u.u na dolu1to •at«
RocbesU:r,CU. w/&ood akil1I needed b~ Newport Beach. After-S81..a830. memorial ~Qllelor to 1JaR~Agenc1 person. UH3 Crown Dnuerdated 19101'Wtq w/cuatom bdbr4 ~·---7...;.:30--to-Z.-M-0-n-.1 at&onley w/general civ l noons Monday tbrouah1---------talk w/famWn about 4mOBl.rcb,StelCM Valley Prkwy, L•I· m1nw '50. Old wooden MQO{bltotr. '1Slt.1003
M W~• open. Apply practke. Salary opeo. f'\1day plus Satu~ay & f\mcraJ fs cemttary at• ~Be.ch 833~190 NirueL tnmb SS to sso. Bevld W. IOll
---• • Jolli' R ~1800 ~nday mornlnp. Gros• n •• .a:ty Control rancem.uta btfon oe.t. cal APPC/Dtab 'SS .... ..a ........ Zl-25 -cld for m!.tTor'SlO. 980-387, ................... -6 .......... • .. .,..., oeer, $400 per moolh. 150 cub um Cornmlastoa avera1• ..,...,....,"~ 1 •• 1m E. Dyer Bd •• Irvine. Uve-ln bouaekeeper. Lov. deposit l'OQ\li rod. Oood ManMer betw.en '"°"''°° per bartender ttnet. No ex· OYins Sale· ''11 ~----------i lng,reliablomaturefor2 torcdle estudentor2nd •• week, Sal11 •xp pre· Pft'· nee., ftcntlbl.o hrs. WHOLESALE Saulrt S14SO· P't'l Hatd cblldren It worklng Income. Call 842·4821. ~paco ~rOduttlt co. rerred. Contact Mr. l&altbeelncuL$3.00Per TOTHETRAOE $1)5• color TV $ o
DISK--·s mother. R Ir 8. good Mk for C\n!ulatton. needa esper d pen.on for Pate. bhm 1().3, Moa·ft'I. hr + tips. Call Mr. Ben· ENGUSH dry ; *95; mutb -ulary, + uso of o r.1---------1 non-delt.rucUve teeUna. 545-118 t*t at 83S-6M(O UM Wed Mlkeofftt988·382.0 We are •eeklllJl reliable Must chi\'t. '06-9605 or dhncnalonal J~n & &Thurl.
lndlvldual1 •blo to WOl"k 122.2111 worktnl to MU..Q ~ S~LES_;:,Jr. Wome11'1 SHIPMENT • '4,,. ne;cible hOUt"I. EnJ07•---------1 procedure&. Stnd re Fasblom. El(JICl'.•J)rtf'd.
1oodcompanybeneflt.a. LocbrRMAff..cl. 11umo to N>' Boll R, Adunc~ment poaslble. On8ale Applytasn·~ Fqr pvt mcn'a a.thtril.c N~wpoO BHch. ca Apply tn .,.raon, Tbt on PYI. Penonntl club, XJ11t 'MW'klnc con· 921;eo &ic:Ond Giant~ 2m W.
MAlllOTTHOTIL •· lh 8:~am to 3pm Ol!eanlront,N.u. SOON-atDr llon-Frl. Oall Jon , !'l~Dtr.th Unl~trllly Athltllc Club.
OIJil JCmplY r mlt -'TS2-~'l"ll05_.....~::.,;.....~;__-I
,
. ' " ..
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Thur1day, Januuy 5. 1978 DAILY PILOT DT
.......... ,., ,, ',, .. ~ ................................ "'"" .... 31,0CIO ~ ............... : ......................................................................................................... .. ,.,. "''· '" ''"• ._,, "' '' ••••" '~"°"""'"'.., """ 7'0061" lf76Fl4TXl/9 Opol '766 ..... _ t770 a........ ttza
....... " ~ "' t "' Good .-.... .. .. " ... 7712 -~ --w ............... u. & .................................................................... . .... ...., ~ '"" 8• • t Dn' t '°' ""'. ':11~~"&'!~~:!.' 'N~"':'. on I y I". oo o m ti , " • '1' Ov• I Cpe . A• tn. 6' VW now •••••" sn ';i °'"j 'l:,'~"" It'·~··· •••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~rut at' "1dnu1 de"k Ne-.pan l1l11nU, 2ti m•11 urea: Nd.I tunc·un $500' (IJ87t>l-'ll AM Jo'M, r.id1als, lo m1, roof. ~Int lran1 car ,.,~'!~. :.?n.
6
p~t ot er WANTED w ~ ' rt'lurn • h1"h bo .. t lenicth 957·1 lOl t»t ofrby J/9/78. ~·3486 SAQDLllActC !~361~! ~!..~· 114 6·Sll411, _!_700 00 3708 __ 1"~
11
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b.ick ~~•H>I ch:11r 1-:, t-:"
11
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1
d.i)'s l93 117~ CH~s and V.AWr IMPORTS '" ._..,_... Val•o 9772 W Cllt'\ ~ Sta Wag Xlnt
TOP C.\Sll UOI t. \I( 1,~1 71~ wknd~ 1,1 ~0,.0 ,.,,_.,., ... , , _ _..._ 9750 ••••••••••••••••••••••• cond Al' \lakeofr l'.\ 11> fO tt ., l) L H 1978 BMW· -ii ~~~.. _ ..... _.. ---.... , ....... ,a:" 1-:t.tn w \Tnu·;~ loots. s~.. '77 Ford nso. Xlnt ND· s ~ -••••••••••••••••••••••• 18fOU YOU "'' -
\JlT ClliH.;t'f'S, 1;oi.o: "c.o. & OtgCIM 1090 SllJ fOIO nng cond Wli.bell, ~ter~C> HERE .... ow• ~ .. : ........ !?!.! ltU ll'OISCHf SIU YOU. Chl'•.> lmp1a1 .. Wen. SIL VE R ·" U \ H " ........... ., ... '"" •• .......... •" •""" "' & m'"' "'"' Mu•t «II " • 156 C:OUPE YOL YO Jood <'Ond N>w ""' •
Y IN i-.; 1o·u l(N & \ 'i ~1·w H1 Jn<l 'I.am<· 1'1J1w~ lti " b 125 II I' 'k1 lioal $5200 f~2 !i.i!S4 COM-_1 lrc:Md N•w '77 h> eiu·elleni <'ondilion • b~I')' Sarnr. '3:!0/olr.
TfQU!-:s 6'5 ~ 111 mt'r <O!>l .,., trlr, l>l'.1l11 ~. •11100, bi.t - -n.s1 HONDA Car$ wtlh factory chrome SN> U.f for a l~ dOUar 751..0018. tlJ.l-7814 . -l~Jlh Musit C.Cntt'r ofr 536 7790utt 5pm 1971 Toyoto P1c1tup lhlui... IODY SHOP h
06
MUST csUmato! -----"er DIA ... " 0 ..... 17 ......... "', •• II H ............ , & ...... mo w ..... I U I. M.t.lQUIS YOI, VO .,. Moh •• ' 2 d' hdt •.
. 94ctloost'd1,j $475 1Mi8.'136 Johni.on Sea St'out Tri 548 121:1 .. OWOPIN Toc:!!:YFrOM! SEEi!! Ml$St.lQNVIEJO auto.PS,PB,below 8 Jue Also m isc 1>ton
1
·, & J~ rv llull. new t•r1.:. OD. l'tt· 5.ADDUl•cte 13 t·lllO 4tS..12 tO Blc S2895 S8l·94.\4 2 ~raJds 21.1 l361l'l72 llJlrl.,., 10 ('omfJ .i t·t dbl ti ... 11 t..1nks It.Olli'. Cht'V) Luv P U, 1976. Dtrl EXCELLeHT Uai..JIVERSITY Y.AWYIM,ORT$
--Th<·Jtt-r ori.:.•n. 'ltoo CT w trlr S24!15 7~t 1;.1111 t.ires, • spd s tick. XJnt SELECTION OF ....,. 83 I ·2040 495.4949 ORANGE COUNTY Otrysltr t92S frWelm ........... , "" '"'''"'"k" .......... ---..... on •. ow.,, Zl.000 IMWRESALES ow. ... bll• YOLY.O ..................... ..
'"•· ,.,. up to w•,, """'· '°'" lmn, "201 T...._.ation mi !:'51wknd•"'4-251J We m., hm "'"' "''" Honda c .. , • GMC ""'""' '71 911 T°''" EXCLUSIVEL'VVOJ,\'O 1911; Ce1rdo' .1. 1111\•er &. dloou""'" 5.00 VS t, " '"""' ..... ., ••••• ., ..... ••., F m :;;J;1.; ,.LJ .... m ""' '""'"'°'Y C•ll T nocks «4K ml, 1 nd" <od/hlk w ht. "n" tn p . Ith,
'4ilJ29,000, tash $15.llOil C 5 ......
0
• 2~1lurhor Bl\d trim. leath<'r l mmac Largest Volvol>f>ull·r buckt-1 ,,t'Jh, t·enler co11 +oo VS-2 rt't•lll $17ooo1s-l"'JMochln•1 8093 ~. ~•! S2300 Dn>t• Wts "''"""-" 6<H>IO IOIO<> .. •Coontf! '°'"· "" """""I. "' ('USh $9,SOO 'Ii) v·~ I •••••••••••• ••••• •• •••• R...+ 9120 U.\k for Gn·~ 831-1040 495.4949 (.'(r..ta '11'"•1 s.co !lG-all ---DUY or U :ASE Xlnt 1·ootl $49SO. K46·J•l.Jll ~AOO. cash S<!,5011. Ollw1 '"iini..: .. r c1..iu,1· 1Tou1·h o ~.·••••••••••••••••••••• Vans 9 570 ;; It~ llond,1 7.000 mi '76 !I 12 E XI nt cond. 011u;cT nr $-10 !t:.!hl it~s avu1l.1hli· (".dij 11\Jll• 1 lluttunhtJJ.•, • llall l.ib oi·t•r 1·ampc>r, ....................... ._1650 Cull Loaded! Mu),l :-.di
"'';J""· Tu,.,''' '''""' "''"" "' "' ";"" l~;out """ '""'' "'
0
1976 """ 1 1 t I ·r ""'"''"' """"' $12.lOO 01' ""''" '" ' ~~~ "''"' ... 1rl·t1h lllJnl 1a11 \Jt t,P\ll/792133 · ~t· iU>•t· op orY.knd.., • • Conti efttat 9930
\l.1n ·, t.port 11111: '•l11patt1111, l1Jt11Jnt1•1·1l Van, lull~ co111·t·rt1•1I, 9 •s1 &••OAOWAY 1976HOMDA ..... :'. ............... .
diamonds t I l..1 .. ..1.ir \\.I! thl 111t1111l1•rJ 11 .. 1 ~.J. Motoriud l ilcH 9140 ~:;;;~ ~r~,9 mu .. 1 :-.el' SAMIA AMA 4 'l1t.>t.'11. AM FM r11rlio, 71 !II IT :>'ii<' T .tt~J Al· 2025 S. Manchester ti:! B.lk int «\l. ;ill ir-·r ~ ~·'Ph1re Sl400 1 JIUt'. !il'll "' ~111 11111 '\o l'rt·ilit r<· ••••••••••••••••••••••• · 83.,
3171
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16
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•7(/0. Joe, S.C6 !ttt..'17 1111irt-d I Jll Wilrehuuse 11; c; \fC cu~tnm \ .. n ~ iruJ~ IOObPJi'"\' 1 1mrn;1c, SUl.500, 675-0"i4.5 Anaheim 750-2011 \ t '\,·~ ronl llf\·~ U --· J1'322JOI 'PurhMax1Moped \\hill' lnfUllU•IAffDllMHGM/4Clf•Hf ------~'°(' ... II cl\., 1213! 1:1;:
•ftlock 101 S -d .... lu m• '"" \ "" d "" $~UOQ. 0" '*USl!O hlW's * S A.llDl.f14Cll '•s PORSCHE C. Aotoo. UHd J:t! "" '"' wknd' <nu ••••••••••••••••••••••• $-M-Goods 8094 64~ 1238 ·i o I' S4t. ti.3611 V AWY IMPORTS Reblt eng, new tnl tre<1h ••••••••••"•••••••••••• 11-&0 llllll r-·~ 74 200'.! A\Jlo 598LPO f~-Aforean mare. brokc •••••• ••••••• • •••• ••••• --l'ffl Ch~'~ \ .. n l ton Xlnl '75 2002 4 sµd s R 14!16:!1 831-2040 49 5.4949 paint, S·mags. $5900/0fr AMC 990 5 Conett~ 99 32
lo ride & tlrivt'. bile fr;11lma~l<'r .!(1(1, ~llh Motorc:lcles/ wnd S-W>O iS2002A!:>cr 2236 Jensen 9732 M9-&&2le~es __ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• llatede Mor..:an .:t•ldw.: ~Jlamon b1n1J1n~,, &. Sc -s 9150 Call714-830I034 '7•,·"'~"'4L·.AS H·•OJPUJ' p v Ilk ·' I . C I '
Eng West ·r"' 171·'
1 1
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11
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JJ0-1011 ---6 Uodge Va n. vs. PS, ~ " 'r ,. 73 Jlf mmt cond Con· dii.counl·9ll·S mags. 15. m ....,a t" 1 uto, T top. 11 tMMI ma, oadl'd ---"'"'OI! <ic.ir complete &1974 250 Yamaha MX· JUlo. 53600 nr be~t ofr. '77320aAS ,R1ntSK vert' w \nrf hdtp Robert Ryan·"Cartern" a.tr. s tereo, etc $33!)5 s11:;0. ofrt•r. 752·752! ~mteous 80101.,.,.ttt...uit.. J'Jnk u~cd 4 Terry kit fronl fork, Uog &.1l·Sl9'1 or 675.6465 aft Closed 0.. Sultdays AMIFM 11 trk, 5S?-45Ji 311·51.h St, U.H. 7l(:96.lj133 a(l~-~kdl.)'s
""""'''"'"'""" """"' 5'7 8311 '"°''" "'· ISOO. C•ll 6PM '°'''wk•<" 636-2'03 -"'''°"'~ .... '910 ......_ 9935 W ~MTED - -9G2·98911a(tl'r7 p m ---r
" rv Radio ------Lf;ASE Your Pori.che ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• TO p CAS~ nu"'"' ff H1R s.;.... 1098 .,, """"' .,...... "" To Pl." y ""' . ""'' K ......... Ghia 913 5 "'"' th.. '" ., "' "l ""' It"' I ,, It l'<>WO< ·72 Cit ..... , S>:' .... ,;, .. ,,
I'\ I D t'O n Y O lJ R ••••.,; •• • •., • • ... ., ,. • '2mm M okum rnloSS!iU II " u II " S " " ,.. v ., ,. •,.., • • •• • •., • • • •., JI o o u o " L • • " n • • AM""'· "'"" "" S2SOO "'""'"' ,,.,,,,, .i, """'' · H.:w. t:l,R y w A TCll FS 1 1 T . Clean. 75" 8165 wkdyi. J)1n•c·l11rv Jd eall ,72 GHI .._ 7~_ 125<! l'all lloh t~ll ~Ill :-ll'rt'O S:! 1.100 644·0.1' 8 · •· · ..... , 1•r·1 14··11H c·olor V s · "" j:~:viB~E~i\ ~.i:!!·t?· ~!1!1_,,;P s&s TV 1>42.5340 ·7~ llood;J Trial ... hike· ~12 5r.7H, Pxt :i22
FIN L· L'l/f'N & .,· W5:!.'-ewportllhd,CM Xlnt cond Br.ind Ol'W ..... --W~ed
9590 "' '" '' t\ '' -$601 646-111'19 aft 6 __. -· 1 ...... 1ol1ts k1ml •
t::xccllent 11hupe ~ 1975 PORSCHE 73 r-: ... tJtc Sta Wi.:o, ::Mm>. Ferd 9.t40 TIQUF.S 6'15·:.f.!OO 'ilK"O ~m:-.. ;rll Walnut --
Sl~ or IJ<-i.I •iflct Sl'<' <it '77 llnnda Cf360T Lo m1 LUGGAGE TAGS 1~9 Pl1.1cent1a. Apt 2261\, Mu"t 'l'll M al..c 11fr
••••••••••••••••••••••• S2300 644.2223 914 2.0 tape, all pwr cqpt ~ll~)t) •••••••••••••••••••••••
<.:M. 833·2575 llft 7PM lrnm your bu~int·" t·11rrl
Send one card lur Nl<"h
t..v1 plu.:. one rip.ire \h· .;.1nv 19·· Tnmtron rolor '73 HO Super Ghde
rrturn p erm.inrntly T\ lkmote. Xlnt rnnd. minUAeng.$1000
WEWIUIUY
YOURD.ATSUN
PAID FO R OR NOT
TOflDOLUR
· FOi TC>fl C.AIS
BMW RES.ALES
1973 2002
4 ~Pl'l'd with sunroof
(65051
Mazda 9738 •••••••••••••••••••••••
5 t.peed, s tereo tupc, aJ. &IS 5089
loy wheels w /rut11uls. CadfUoc 991 S
low miles & MJNT! ! .. If ••••••••••••••••••••••• you're looking for a iuce
914, lh1i. 1me·s for }Ou!"
IEOINl 1
...
-PHIL
LONG
FORD i.t·:Ued attract!\•• t.iit & S31!1 I.HO 1046 . _ ~':!·OSO'J ____ ,
!!lrap, meet1n~ a1rl,10~· ~1.,itnoi·n, dr TV, 19 .. llonda Trail 70, lo ml, xlnl
lento. r1eqw&retmh~rn1,::. L'I ru Work~ /.!rt·at S275. Art 5 cood1uon. $375 Behl ofr
BARWICK DATSUN 1973 I.AV ARI.A
AutomatH'. 111r t ond &
sunroof. C003NBZ1 iB CREVIER MOTORS
Isl & Broady, 3}
SANTA ANA ' OS!i t l r or a call ~1k '192 3!133 675-1°"4
""l,1u J 14,111 ( .q11 ... t I .a llu
~nonahzed lai.: 1•or1n,e l ___ __ _ _ _ 831-137S 493.3375 1973 3.0CS 835·3 I 71 •
"'•llpaper, ratmr ur ats&Marine MotorHomu,Sate/
·Day Glo" PJp1·r & .,.,,. Ecppmtn+ lhmt/Stor• 9160
will bock 4' tr1 n1 your ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
tuits.. Or try two l·.inls 9010 Rent a 1977 Excut1ve
b1trk to hack •••••. ••••••. ••••• •• ••• ;\1 otorh om t-11r .\I 1n1
l'RIC&'l motorhomc from Herh S2t'aor 31s:, 7' DINGllY. Sport Yak 11 · Jo't1edlander Call any ol I 5 tags Sl bO ea pla.,llr. $6 5 or bsl offer these numbt·r~
A 'ita11sS1 50ea 7~1 l>tS'l 898-6777
II/or mr1rC'SI '10l•a loak, Merine 3
!-Jalc•<; Tax lorludt•d Equipment 9030 5 7.7777
,'l;OC"Al<l>' ••••••••••••••••••••••• 828-8888
I, l'HICI-: SJ\Lr-:
WE BUY
CLUNC.ARS
lrTlUCKS
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
2K..'H lh1rl>or Rlvd CO~"r A M ~SA
546-1200
-4 i.peed with :-.unrool
1261)1(.'.G I
1974 2002
4 ~P<'l'tl. alr rnnd &
:> t c r c 11 c a ' ~ l" t t 1·
176.1'1C<.;1
1974 3.0Sa
Automatic air <.-ond. &
sunroof tlli8KLF>
1974 l .OCso
1\ulomat1c. i.unroof &
le<1ther inter ior
(~LNT •
2 I 50 Hwbor l .. d.
Costa Mno 645-5700 Tl 914 19M. W ebcr t: arbi.
dlr, If xtras, rbll.
72 ~1a11IJ rotary cni:. W.4recelpts S469S
HXl. I <Ir 'Nian, radio. 49f·2J30 '-'~ ( ', ~·11111• <.,; d cnnd 1)5 SC. 2nd -;~nr. oriic. I of
i;,5 711SO _ the rin~t. Many .xtra.s.
$7500 ~92 3176. Met-cedes Bem 9740 -- -----
•••••• •• •• •• •• ••• •• •••• 19fA SC }';ur11 model. ~d
1970 MIZ 250 mttharucaJ bod~, $4300
4!17 4282 Au1omat1r, u1r rond & --------
Or~ County's
St•lllt Center
•
1976 CADILLAC uvaw
All leather. sten.•o lapt'.
crwse control & 11.ll the
delu11e extra&.
t629NRO>.
$9888
IS> '77 & '76 Seville!!
To Choost' ,.'rom
l••• ,., • .,, •• 1 .... o...e-....... , •• .. ~ •~C·••1 1.....,_
76 Gran Tonno. Blut-
~ "ht 1 1 n} I loP. Stereo.
8 lr. AM Jo'M. $3500/IJ!it
731-«3.1
I Jr.1w Your o" n 11r "'"'"'
nitmt'. a11tJr~s'. 1•h11n1· ''"
.... II makl' Olll' l'Olrd pt•r
1.1)! Add 25• l'IH h
St'nd l"ht't'k or 11111111·~ ur
<l1•r to
PILOT PRINTING
P 0 llox I ~,(I
j ll l " n ylon, i.un """ rJft~. bottom pa1ol. VHF
r11cl111s. pn·:-.~ure water
\IOTOR 110.\11-;s
FOH 111-:'\'J'
1-"rnm S Ill() ~ k 7711 01;.11
'Yl'>tl'mi-. foncler s. b1IAt' H~NT 1"1rc1Jull :.!:J Sl'll
pumps, horschoc:. b uoys, l"OO\. ;\UlO; ;ur <"l". l'fl.
WE I',\ Y TOI' l>OLl..1\ll
!"OH TOI' l'SEO (.'.\HS
1'0111-;H;N. DO~I ESTll"
or t'l.ASSlt'S
1976 S30ia
.i !'.peed with o;unro11r
tl::RIN DJ. 4! lo choo1>l' from.
1976 2002
'h:re<i < 11•11a1z1 Roil1 Royce 9756
1975 MBI 280
SEIMN 1\ut<m1Jl1c. air
rn111I &: C'rUIM' <'•mtrul
t!.159Nl>M I
······••·······•···••·· "l DEALER IN U.S.A. 'JR ROY [R CARVER
Nabers
Cadillac
'76 Granada 4 d r. xll\l •
cond , 01 r . AM /F~t
slcreo. hrwn w/lan int.
S33B 7S2·5131 da~,
962 81;77 t•\ l'
i7 1'111tn Waj:lon. 9000
mllh ,\I any xtras Mui.t
,l'f I. $.1'100 !>lll-!)500
etc. 673·811!! s lerc•r>. s lix; 6 645 :!:!x:1 tr rour cur rs extra cle11n s~~f1rst. Polaris i.1lver with air
ron d . & 4 i.peed
<22'JPOR l.
SAODLE14cte
VALLEY IMPORTS
831-2040 49 5.4949 r ROlLS·ROYCE '7! Waio:nn. P t S, P / II.
AM/FM radio, Gd conll
$1100640 m t I
1 ·1~t11 Mesa,<·,, '•:!flW afs, Power 9040 '72 23' Mio1 Motor ll1m11· l.AUERIUICK
292.'i llarhor Bl\ d. 1WOJ•mboret "'"'Port e ... c,.
:?flll41 H II hrn n11..,1
C.11\t.1 M,•,,1 'i l!l '11 llO . ••••••••••••• •••••••••• 1 T Chevy Chas~•:. mou11t I BM St• l <' c I r 1 r I I w'rll•an cpt"d 0111•11 Ho.HJ Tv~wnL<•r, ~h.111 Of111·l· SEA RAY'S .., c 1ntr l'l.Ouo m1 .
(
00<.tu Mt•:.a 979-2500 \"---...........
83 I ·2040 495.4949 ;.1 f'"ont t 'nuntry Sci Wgn
111·Y. 1111·~ \Int cond. 1 J),,.,k :J4 'li(J' s.1:. ctl I Sl>:.00 bst CJll l!~I iO.N ChJ1r '>25 lt1i·'"'' I
11" r S.!~ S1tl1•h11.11 ii
llll'pple .. 111te1 <.?IMI ""'
t nfr<•r Thi S:!~1 -. ~I 11:,:ir,
\1111" ./:11 k1·1. )'rn•I , 01111 \· l.1ng ~:ion
'•~11 "lllK ~Ill~· \l,.in s \
Auto Sff'ViU, Parts
& .Acc~uories 9400 •·•·•····•·············
Iii ·;7 ( 1·rl \1 U'I •Ill!
Part, •1••1 '\o l'.rrl..t•r
llr.1n1..1• I 11! •1•17 ~111111
540-6555 11> Old~ Ot>lla 8X ~2W ~l.'11 In• •·,tor' hJntl ".:o•·tl :11111 co ... -.1 ll~y. N II 11.r part-.
TOP
DOLLAR
PAID
J.'OH Cl.I'.\"
l•thu~r.1plh < h.tJ:Jll . 631-2547 •179.21:.iu
'liro, t>Jh < ·''"l'r & IMPORT CARS ulht•r :. Lu" 1ir1rc' ?art \"ntrt1Lt·~porlf1sh1•r:? GnodH•ar -.no"'llt1•'
• ....: :JXYt I OY.rwr. Jn mini contll· G 711-14, :!1)() m1 used S.tll ALL MODELS lion & lomi<'Cl' Custom In· 751...t9S4 SP M l.ufttberforSale ll'r111r plloc \ r> F WE •A~ 3411'1 V II F , 'unlog, ouln!( Autos for Sol~ MEED
rM \ W V.m. nct•dh work, J.:I'" \(' T)(' natur.tl l!ai. •••••••••••••••••••••••
I '· rdnJ!Nal1on & rnokinR. ~al 9510 CUAN "'""l M' I. p a rh. m,,,.,. l111n1111 11111 w 1•11c·ln:s. ur". uc:iu. C RS
111f1·r. 'm Kuw.1~.1k1 .1~1 rww t'hr~~l1•r rn.1mfolcl~. ;,··~:~~;;;·~;t~:~··~·u· .... _ A ~..!Oil White l\rni.: wall r1.l>~r~ & l'lbuws 11lu• ex HOW n I a <jt) IX •. " " b<ilter.\. tires. \al\(' Jllh r .t.U .. .11.,,y "'e • c et• or .,a~."'' lra furl. ('all Dale at ,."' "'"' Ford Truck. tnJ kt• 111 ft•r S'l l)O &11.1 da~ s 8911 i..1:11
1.i·•;>J151irr1:P .\I 198·27<1.• ---Anti I 540-5630
• l!l" St-11t)lrd OMC 011trlrivt>. ci•j 9520 II tnurlrepurtcr !>llU1>tl'llO Bu1rk 150 111' lrlr $1250 OHCS lrllll~f\1 1\1
>:r <IJ)f\ marhlnt•. ('JSC & Nd,, • .... ork .. It o.ward ... ~ .................. ~·mu1me· !111
'"'nd + booki. !.Jc; 'H l'I 67:J 1670, &H 7252 ~ h 1 7 7 er. I 8 t <· -IO ~ 2626 HARBOit Bl VO. .1[! ~' 30 -----Sch~1no frame, i.:ood
--1974 Bo~ton Whaler 17". 8S nmnl'r $650 1>45575.'l COSTA ME!A __ ~. n Gu I A CJ u 11 ri 11 m llP ":"orude l.o hour~ -: --Wt I
" Y.rous.:ht iron ,1.111d & Very cle;io .l\ll xtrJS 55 Chc\y, Belair" rt•ol..r UY
11 tesi. $55 21 C11mm 'I 549.3221 ~~l \'1-n ~harp s21.1011 USED CARS!
lawnmower $12.5 l.1kl' -----642-4720 We re lbe n<'w Chl'vrolet
n<"\\ lrR refng 11.n Mll7 G RF.AT FISHING BOAT• R~naff~d -dealership 1n the Irvine
l'•lf•I table, Sx9, 1 ui.tom ~= nr~ ." :~vl~~l:K"ia ~a~'. VehicJn 9530 ~~ 113C~n~=~· We n cl'd
ll .111 .1t·1·esi.. $600 or hi;t Slt't'll" 1 Ens.:1~e com-•:••••••••••••• •••• • ••• JOE
••Ir 642 7t-!S aft:> 3ll ~<'IY reblt l::lectromc Com't 4 'eat strl"ct lc·.~al
I "' '>lilt' D:in;1 l'n1nt
Ya<·ht Club memhc"h1p
Cal I John 646· 7~'14
l!eJr 1nc·ludes depth dune bugey SllOO C1ll MAC PHERSON
rmMr & bruod OCY.. un-.E9·~ -CHEVROLET
u:.ro 2wi.iy F\I radio & Hravv steel Go Curt 21Auto<:t>nlerDnH•
HlW $7500 Call f'Vc:; & frame sso No ar«cs., fRVINE
Hurnt Oransi<' llrcH"allc· wknd:i;~937~--t:all Rich a ft 4 pm , 768-7222 ~tudro CoUch ~ ltobtfr:<. "· t ''Vh 1 3.6.. ·•c 645 78.57. Costa Mes11 ---S(5 S~lJ/W TV )>rt S20 2 nu~ on • a l.'r I . ..., _ . _
Wrought iron wall lamJ>!I llP M<'n·: trlr, elec. mtr. 4 Whfff DriYft 9550 A.utos. lmporttd
'4'/sh3dei., h<!sutlful. will comp., Rigged ror baas •h•••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• -1ec Clothe.1 lml1e:1. sm. fo.hin~. 82500 642_ R247 -JEEPS "77" Nfa Romrto 9705
to8.S5to$75. 6731'.St2. 16' Con v<'rtcd Coast CJ. 5 · 5 c J . 7 · s •••••••••••••••••••••••
CUSTOM BUU.T WOVF:N Guard Onat T';in dir•scl. Cherokees: Wagonecrs: Alpha Romeo '67 Gullia
WOOD SALE Now on tra <' 8 b 1 n • I h · ( 11 4 > Pick-ups. up to$1,200 dis· Super, l"l.IM itreat. looks
thru Januar y 11 t 375~ counts. 5yrSO.OOOm1le t.ircat. $1750. Call Jan
Oecotalor DcP?t "r co 24• Sklpjar k . nyl>ridiie. warrantys available. ~ ------
pie say we have the.~e11t twin 170 Volvos. 170 hrs, Copefmtd Mfrs Inc ..... 9707
pncea In the cou~ty S6ll VHF, sumlog, nometer. 2001 E tst. SA 558 8000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ':!"5l 19lh St . CM li45·-W4 belt 11y11. glv trlr, twin e 971 .t.UOI
6 pc. din~u .. i.el Ho. battertes,551-4758 COSTAMESA IOOLS•DOOtt
Danish modem aofa SSO. INtt. Salt 9060 AMC Ir Jllft New eO(fne, automatic
Vower mower $40. ••••••••••••••••••••••• TOO trans-.. atr co nd .• 1
fl3.
5
l47 WANTltlSULTS? MANY AM/FM 11terco & sun-Offic•'-wll•e & 8!~1....0U!' boat lhru Jllt'S roof. Pr1 . pty 13,300. Call
.,.,_.. 101$ SOUTffWISTHN MUSTSELL90 494-86lhvenlnas.
•
41
••--••••••••••••••••• Y.ActfTSAW JAJ!~A':fYBY,_t '72 AUDI lOOLS, Auto,
JBM Correcting Selectrtc FUJt/NEWPO•T 'w n. ..... AJC, aunr<. f1M make mpewriter. Nur new Dau ma. Plu.tCaJJ olr."9C·JCS8. •so. C•ll after sPr.t ._.._. 14t.a023 -------
·.lJU <714>m«U ~HARBOf\BLVD. IMW • f7fJ
&W lalander Bahama, ~l• Me1a
1970, 6 HP t:vinn.te, (714)146·1~
Ml•rr('{lt·~ lit-n1. i3 21Sl.I {l0Sf0 SUNOAn ------
14 BMW 2002, Y.hl u1r.
Blaup ;ter. ma1nt n•e
SS!!!IS . 675 -1277
213 968-8.1 ll
~1-;l, m1111 lo m1
5!11· (fJ75 116 n B S1 h c·r Sh udo'°' .
\IOI tnnd Wht
1973 CAOILI.AC 11Y.01 ~~,m 1ti5 2007
COUPE DE VILLE Lincoln -9945
-------
s 111.<MJC1 lwsl r1rr f.JI ·0545 L.F •\SI-. Y11ur \fl-11 •·•ll·., lto111n f'ull power & •~ tn nu·t· ••••••••••••••••••••••• cond1t1on < 97911 F.W I _ \l \ll K IV
Now redut·ed to '" cap; 9715
fri1m lht• t'\IH'I h ill
11 11r1111 n I., .• 1' 111 ~ Toyota
; .,,, l ''.'i:! ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9765 O..,.LY 52295 1.u.ul1•rl lo\\ m1leaJ.!1·
f"'I 1•.1111 ... 1,-, 1110 new. ,\i.kin~ ····•········•········· 1972 CAPRI BEFORE YOU
SEU YOUR
TOYOTA,
S.ADDLEIACJC '!-'0111 <'.u 1wragcd from
V AWY IMPORTS p•m h."' lf;i1t• ll:lt · 704:>
8l t-2040 495-4949 >;;IJ 'Hlli \'6. automatic. AM rM
rl.ldro ~ onJ) 31.000 tlllll's (971~lJI.
SADDLEl.ACIC
Y ALLEY IM,ORTS
•ll-2040 495-4949
111;; 1; •1 •w,l.1n .• 11111(1 n11
ull <IJ)l rl'Jns 'f' + S3fl SOU
or TOP on ar1rirnved <"rt~lrt \lust ,1•11 bc1·,1u:.e
ofl ... .,., 'UH 75"1 i.110 St't' us ror a toµ dollJr
r..11mat1.·'
._ . Mavericlc 9947
,2 El J)o Blu<• "' "he ••• •• ••• •••• •• •• •••••••
lln}I tori "" xtra ... >.Int 75 t l.Xior brown. radru
com.I S:Ul'I C>7.1471 I hrr , .r1r pwr ..,teer , 1970 MIZ280SE
MARQUIS TOYOTA
MISSJON VIEJO
831-2880495-1210 Ll:.:ASI-.: Your Cacllll.1t JJY.r lirk.., Low m1fc,..
from the <"\pnlo, al S2.1'JS G73 7i"'1 72 c·apn. ~d c·1md. ;ru111
trmb. a c. Sl8'HJ h!>t ofr.
11-H !1971
9720
Autn. eltt 'uoroof. 111r
toml, pY.r Y.1ntlow ~.
sl<'rco. radi;11, & t:'l,f.IOO 77 Corolla Ma3d;1rtl int. 11n~111.il milt•.,• "ThtHll!> dt'IUx<" l''(I ·'la.kc ofr or
1·nm1nat1ng molnrrur ,.., ln.p. 546 574-1 aft ti
"11.Yl' lhrnu.:houl •" Onr '73 Cornlla. -1 spcl '1.l><>d
llor11011 l.1•J,10" Mtrcwy 9950
759-1252 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·ru t:ad ·I Or. all powt•r.
gOOd ennd1t1on. gel lire.•:-.
SIOOO hM ofr 5!"1:.! 11:111
<HlANG ~; <.:OL'NTY 'S
MEW HT
1.1'1,COL'i Ml.;RCURY V1:ah'r~h1p •i. now OPEN
···········•••···•·····
*DRIVE A*
*LITTLE ... *
SAVE A LOT
SHOP&COMPARE
BARWICK DATSUN
.... rn .Ju.111l0.q11,.1r.111 ..
831.1375 493.3375
Tlte '78s Are HH"e
/lll models & colors
·~ot~ Defi•tryTodoy!
Lall! r hance COit f:iotn .. t1r
~a1 ings on all remutn.inl(
77 mode~ 1n stock
COSTA MESA
DATSUN
2845 HARROR BLVD
5~0.6410 540.02 l l ---
NEWPORT DATSUN
'77C .... anc•
Demo & executive sale now going on ~urry 1
R88 DOVE$TRF.ET
<Near MacArthur Blvd .
& Jamboree Road l
NEWPORT BEACH
833-1300
ul ;i krncl ' llH21lN R I cond11wn s1200.
CREVIER MOTORS 1m 1142
ls( & Broadway
SANTA ANA 1977° ,, Tnyola SR·5 p1 rk 835-3171 up tm. Stereo, ~l:iR1>, _ _ __ 5000 miles. $4950, l1rm .
'76 MR 3001> dt•an lo Sill ·.'>ltffl
m11c.,. hke. 11<'·~ _514.i~io Triu. -9767
r n v Pt v J.. I(''· 71;/1 IJS/12 •••••••••••••••••••••••
\111 77 1~1 \I.. ~11n1 All 1!>75 Triumph Sp11f1r~
'tra..., Silver r1:d 1 \ nl, lo ·'lcchanil·ally ext·cllcnt.
ml,•" arr, $20'.9so ~lrrt•u (Jpt· & l>Ull<'r
171416'10 ~()111 ~hJrp inlt>nor tit t''(lcnor
Pn Ill\ SJ 496. Cc11l Don l!lffJ M<'rcl'd~ 230, 11 r}'I 4 \J F "' 1>10·2500. eq•o
spd on column !)uper in~s after 6 pm. call
cle.in, make nUcr :-"'8 SlllJ
t\sk for Suz&1.nne 646· 7711 v_;;__--
or!H2 1!>99 U11tUWOCJtft 9770
1975 M RZ 4l<> SJ,C' 13
tr>tal m1 Ori.: own1•r
1-'ully E'qu.tpped Ind. sun
roof & ('ax~ette Ca I I
7~66 fo~appl.
1900 280S o1 dr Whl cxl,
blue Int. Stick shift. Gd
Mich. t ir e~. U<'ckcr
Red10 SSOOO 1175 1530
•••••••••••••••••••••••
llUGJ.:SELECTION
:'olEW & L'Sf.:O CAHS
Top rash U for your VW .
Paid fur or ftOl Call
K<'•th or J e rry
BOBWITiiAM VW
7600We1tm1nster Ave.
893·7551 or638·7~
·71 Couped<' Ville, J r <'al
beauty. lon<lcd . P r1 v
Pty .. S17:J5. 847 6668 or 6:11.2333
'71 CAO Orville. In ml'!I
lmm:ic. shapl.' All 11lrui;
S!>tOO bst ofr 642 125:!
RAY FLADEIOE
l.IN('()LN ~1ERCURY
Iii Ill Auto CA!nter Or
SUFw> ·Lake Foreit ex11
lllVINE
830-1000
1~;-U~ Ville, liluc. i6 Monarrh c;hra, 2 dr
!Ike nt.'w. IH OIHI mi. nnl~ 'unrool lo~ded. llk1·
S7 000 540-«Zl neY. S.IX50 V. kndi. & aft
·---6P\f ll:JO :m:1
Fmd what you wunt m 1975 MonJrrh 8 cyl. Arr
D<uly Piiot Clas11ir1e<l!I \In) I tnp, t'l<' Good conn
c__.o Sl3SO. PP 846·1440 or 99 I 7 ~o. 9264 ••••••••••••••••••••••• . l!n2, 2 dr Mercury Mon 76 Camar!> '·Y npw «<ind t~.co. opera windows, PS
24.400 m1 i1 r 1.s. p , R. ~ir Pll. R H. air. lo m1, xlnt t·ond. con:.olt AM f M coml 9ii0-4454 ::.ter. Velour inter JOS -
V 8 Only S4600 l>ays MustmtCJ 9952
714/640-1972. Nighla •••••••••••••••••••••••
7WSS9-6464. 'fiG Mu s la n ~. ll 1 gh C...-;;:;e.f 99ZO JM:rfOrmance pnrt'I. Lo
•••••••••••••••• ••••••• m1, $1200 Ph 546-6253
'68 F:.thck 2&1. Nu clutch. ---------·r carb, more Nd& body
it wrk. SS.'>O 642 RSOO ·----: : ·oo 1-'asthut'k 302 V..S. A·I
'• cund. auto. n1r, P /S ,
• r :1d1ali.. l>n' ate part.>
it • StRSO 711'1 li!"JT . . ----• it 'GS 289 Cfa1">51c. PS/PB.
• • fact aJr. Best offer
• • 640-Q'I ----* • Oldsmobil• 9955 • • ••••••••••••••••••••••• AOGER MILLER SAVS. '62 Olds 88. Gd mech
..SHOP IY fl'HONF cond P S. P 8 . Radio .,
494-1 Ill IU.ff'7 heater~ ~8·3632_
) i
'
1973 Cuti~ Supreme.
Loaded Sl4.9~.
645 0758
9917 •
'
I -.
DI OM. y lltJLOT ThurldJly, Januaty 5 11178
MOre POpular ·llian Ever
' Flre•lrcl TRANS AM for '78
PRICE
OUR
PONllACS . .
ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST •1LICTION
ALL MEW GRAND AM COUPE or SEDAN FOR '78
:1 distinct wely sporty mid-size car
Back by popular dernand
SEE ONE TODAY
6 TO CHOOSE FROM
$3195
1975 PONTIAC G. PRIX SJ
V-8 auto. trans factory alf cond111on1ng. Power
slef'nnQ. power windows stereo Li!ndau top
~hd1nq root mags left steering whf 598RET
s4371
1975 PONTIAC LE MANS
V-8 auto trans factory air cond1t1on1ng. power
steering. radio. Laudau top 169LPD
s3271
1975 Pl YMOUTH VALIANT
6 cyl outo trans taetory air cond111on1ng POwer
steering radio Landau top. 866 MOE
s3071
1976 VENTURA SJ. CPE
6 cyl. auto. trans. factory 11r cond1hon1ng, pawer
steering, radio. raflye, 268Re\it
s3479
ALL HAVE
FACTORY
AIR
COMOITIOMIMG
1975 CHEV G.T. VEGA WAGON
4 cyl auto. trans. factory air cond111on1ng. radio.
rallye. Utt reek. 661LSS
1975 PONTIAC ASTRE
4 cyl. 4 speed, factory air cond1tlon1ng. radio,
rallye. 768PCW
s2378
1975 DODGE rOWER WAGOM
V·8. auto trans. factory air conditioning. p0wet'
steering, l"IDIO, raflye, 4 wheel drive 1873537
-54978
1976 MERCURY CA~
4 cvt. " speed, radio_ s~~
s2919
Grand new luxury. Grand new Prix.
DRIVE ONE TODAY
<
WE SOLD
THESE CARS
MEW
197 6 PONTIAC F. llRD FORMULA
V·B. auto. trans. factOtY air cond1tconcrn;i. Power
steering. stereo tape, rattye. tlU, J72PL Y
1972 PONTIAe iU'4D SAFARI
V-8, auto. trans. f~ory air conditioning. PoW8f
steering. power windOws. rack. 3-42FWZ
s1778
.. .
1975 CH•V IMPALA
V-8, auto trans, facfory air cond/Uon1ng. power
steering.' radio. Landau top, 306MET
5317&.
1975 FlflDIRl>l ESPRIT V-8. auto. trans. flCtory air condltlonlng. power -steerl~. FM stereo. ratl,ye ~ele. 35tMWJ
.'3'''
4 cyl, auto trans. factory air cond1tconan9 power
steertng radio. tut 616NLP •
s30J8
1976 AMC SPORTAIOUT
8 cyl. auto. trans. factory air cond1t1oncng Power
steering stereo tape. rack. tilt, 888NZI
s4271
1977 MONZA CPE
4 cyf. auto trans. factory~lr cond1hon1ng p0wer
steering radio. Laudsu top, 007SAI
s3971
1975 PONTIAC G. PRIX
\1-8, auto. trans. factory air conditioning. power
ateerln~. power windows. FM stereo. Land•u top.
787NL
s311a
I·
..
I 7
Huntington Beach
Fo1•ntain Valley
EDITION
. -.. p-·~---
Afternoon
N.Y. Stoeks
VOL. 71 , NO. S, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAL~FORNtA THURSDAY, JANUARY S, 1978 TEN CENTS
Bonfa Blasts BB COWicil's Deeision
By ROBERT BARKER
OI Ult o.11 r P»et SWf
City Attorney Don Bonfa ac·
cused the Huntington Reach City
Council todav of inco111petence and hypocrisy and with m ed·
dling in the affairs or tbe
city's legal department.
Ronfa's verbal attack on city
leaders was the latest salvo an
the controversy that h as
followed a physical altercation
between Ronfa 'and Deputy City
Attorney John O'Connor Dec. Z'l.
The city councll said Tuesday
night it wouldn't aJlow the use of
city funds to pay legal fees that
might result from the latest Boo-...
fa.O'Connor imbroglio.
City taxpayers already have
paid more than $10,000 in SUP-
port Of the City attorney lD 8 pre-
V IOUS grievance case between
the two men.
Mayor l\on Pattinson con-
tended lhat legal expenses in the
latest flareup could cost tax·
payers up to $100,000 it counsel
is provided. Tbe council indicat-
ed unaqtmou&y tbat it la unwill·
ing lo pick up such a tab.
Ronfa placed O'Connor on im·
mediate suspension without pay
and sald he would discharge bis
deputy as soon as tbe necessary
written notice ls prepared.
Pair Capture
Lightning
Strikes
HB Home '
Lig htning struck in Hunt·
ington Beach Wednesday, blow·
ing a smoking. two-foot hole in
the roof of a home as the rains
came with a veoReance.
Raymond Hirko, 12, and bis
mother, Mrs. Cathy Hirko, were
in the Andrew I hrko home al 5982
Rrass1e Drive when the 3:52 bolt
struck, knocking out power in the
house and stopping clocks.
I They were uninjured, firemen
said, although young Raymond,
I seated m front of the television
set, h ad the daylights scared out
of him when the TV screen lit up
like a giant flashbulb.
Firemen from the Heil Sta·
lion, just around the corner,
raced to the scene and tore
s moulderin& 1bin1les from
around the hole in tbe roof.
Rain so heavy at times lt
drum med on cars and rooftops
as heavily as hall apparently
caused little serious fioodin.g in
Huntington Beach or Founlaln
1 Valley.
Orange County Fire Depart·
ment spokesmen likewise said
they r eceived no reports oC
rtoodin~ or damage to areas of
the west county withm their
JUrisd 1cbon.
A high tide of 5.9 feet at 5:30
a.m. today coupled with storm
surf cresting up to five feet was
initially considered a potential
flooding threat to Sunset Beach
and Surfside Colony.
Seal Beach police said they
had no reports al all of the tldal
overflow which occasionally
s loshes into the beacbfronl
hamleL'> each winter.
A Fountain Valley Fire
Department spokesman said
flooding and traffic problems
usually generated by a storm or
Wednesday's magnitude wer e
considerably less tban usual in
that city.
The at-times heavy downpour
apparently waxed and waned
sufficiently to allow adequate
runoff before lhe next deluge.
* * *
Orange Coast
Hard Hit by
HeavyStomu
BJ PIULIP&OSMAKIN .... Diiiy .........
WednesdaY'a rainstorm bal·
tered Soutb Oranae County and
flooded streets in throbbinl
waves olheavy downpoun that:
-Hurled ll&htnlng into a Hunt·
tniton Beach home with such
force thatfiremen atl nearb)'lla·
lloa reported beinC jarred from
tbelrbeds. -Flooded Costa llesa City
Hall.
;-Send bluff• 1Uppln1 onto
NORntERN CAUFORNIA
HITBYIW~I
,.,..,.....
PRESIDENT CARTER DECORATES GRAVE OF U.S. SOLDIER
At Omaha Be•ch, Homage and Vow to Protect Europe
Carter Promises
European Freedom
for the occasion were troops ol
the U.S. 1st Infantry Division
that Joat 2,000 men al Omaha
Beach oo D-Day.
Representatives or the French
armed forces joined them, as
did some American Legion
members, survivors of the
wartime French resistance
movement and a French military
band. •
Carter, who walked alone with
Giscard to the edge of the· cliff
for a view oC the beach at the
end of the ceremony, was
bundled in a abort wblte rain·
coat and scarf.
Giscard d'Estaln1 •ore a
sweater under bis ·gray suit but
was otherwise unprotected from
tbe cold. Mn, Carter, in cloth
coat and boot.I, carried a scarf
in one band.
The two leaders then drove
from Omaha Beach to Bayeux,
the fint French town liberated
after the D-Day landJng. There a
fla1-wavlQ1 crowd of several
thousand cheered as both Carter
and GI.Icard d'Estain.1 en1acec1
In eampeJp«JJe poUUoklof.
The city councU also dlreded
City Admlnlstrator Bud Behito
b:> tell the city's legal st.a.ff not to
asalst Bon.fa in the matter.
Bonta aald that be bad no ln·
tenUon ot using his staff tor this
purpose. But he said the city
council's action represents med-.
dling into the affairs of b1a de.
partment.
He said tbe city administrator
has no authority over legal
I
employees because lo Runt-
iJlgton Beach the cJty attorney ii an elected pmq,ai.
"The city councll ls incapable
and incompetent to manap any
departn:Jent. 11 Bonf a ch arced.
••They can• t m • n..-I e
themselves. They are way ~~
their heads.''
Bonfa ;i5' cfalmed. that the
council is "very hn>OCrltlcal"
because it previously Alred an
outside counsel lo defend the
chief of police against a
grievance by an offlcer.
"It cost t.he city more than
$20,000 and I have the bills to
prove it," he said.
Bonfa said that his office was
wlfling and capable of support•
ing the chief but was not asked.
Bonfa also said that 6e has re·
cei ved "expressions" from
(See BONFA, Page AZ)
Rape SuSpeet
Police
Laud
'Heroes'
By ARTHUR R . VINSEL ott•o.i•r,.. ... ....,
Two young Orange Coast men
who didn't hesitate to get in·
volved are credited with saving
a 16-year-old Huntington Beach
girl from the violent attack of an
alleged would-be rapist.
"It was beautiful work.
They're heroes," says Hunt-
ington Beach poJice detective
Art Droz of tbe two rescuers,
Robert Maness, 23, of Hunt-,
fngton Beach, and Michael
Spears, 24, of Costa Mesa.
He spoke or the capture last
Thursday by the pair of a sus-
pect who allegedly dragged the
teenager off busy Beach
Boulevard into a erassy eulc:h
near Adams Avenue.
Loo .De&rl Vickery, U, a Hunt.-
lngton Beach short order cook,
today remained In jail cuatod,y
in Heu of $101000 ball.
He is accused of the attempted
rape in a criminal complalot Is.
sued earlier lb.UJ week by the
Orange County District At·
torney's Office.
Investigators say Maness, tbe
1nltial witness, and Spears to
whom be cried for help, pounced
on the suspect as he pinned tbe
girl down in a field.
She was not sexually assaulted
before tbey intervened, but her
• clothes bad been partially tom
off and she wlfs bysterical,
police said.
•'They saved her a lot of
anguish •.. a lot of mental
tormenL .. a lot of trauma. I
talked to her again the other day
and she seems to be doing Just
fine now," said Detective Droz.
..
The fact Maness, a Huntintton
Beach resident and advertlsing
tnajor at Golden West College is
a normal, red-blooded young
man may have saved the high
school eirl from the horror ol violent rape.
"I was drivtng doft Beach
Boulevard and I noticed this _girl
walking al<mgslde the road. I
always look at girls.'' be ex·
plained rather shyly.
"Then I saw a man walking
(See HEROES, Page AZ>
Special Session
BULLETIN
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Go'f.
Edmaad Brow• Jr. &ed•J or·
dered a special MUI• of &lie
Callfonala Lellslahlre oa pro-pert, tnea aad 11ked tile
law•a.ken to aead bla a Sl
bllUetl tu relief •w b1 ._.. • ol &hJ.t m•&b.
HE GOT INVOLVED
Huntington Beach'• .Maneaa
Delly "1i.t SUft ~
HE RESPONDED, TOO
Costa Mesa's· Spears
• Slwwers Forecast
Friday and Sunday
• 1
By JACKIE BYMAN recorded a 24·hour total of .62 f °' .. OeMy "*' stMt inches for Santa Ana. The season 1
Water, water everywhere, and total there is 5.64 inches, corn. 1 more to come -but. maybe paredto4.46lastyear.
some sunshine this weekend, At sa.,tiago Peale on Sad.
predicts the National Weather dleback Mountain, be said, 1 Service. today's tally was l.S inches, for f
a season total of 17.2 compared •
lo 11.0 last year. .
One inch or rain provides an
estimated 10,000 acre feet of
replenishment for the county's
underground water basin.
Orange County Water District
officials said today.
KICKED 'CAT'
RMSESSIINK •
DURAND, Ill. CAP > -Jack
Yau.n walked out to bis barn in '
early morning dimness and saw
in the doorway that same old
stray cat that bad been banging
around.
"Well, I up and gave It one
hell of a good kick," Yaun said Wednesday.
Yaun failed to see the white
11trtpe down tJ:ie animal's baclc.
The sk\lllk retallated.
Coast
eatlier
Coortdel'tble cloudiness
tonigtit betollllng partly
cloudy Friday. Fifty per-
cent chance of 1bower1
tonight decreasing to 40
perc·ent Friday. Lowa
tonight 46 to SO, Highs Fri·
day S8to62.
JNSJDE TODAY
Tldrtr-u "°'' cioo. Corl • ICarchn hUdwd hll hot dog can to o .tar oo4 m.cm hf.a Ammoar. nr.o,,, eom. trw.
~ocfav, he°""' dMI c~ ot
Corl'• Jr. ff~•. Se• '"'t'";,.,, P.Qfi er~
HF
tamps
Thieves'
Target
Huntinaton Beach police saJd
today they believe a stamp col-
l~ction burglary ring has struck
three lJmea in their city and
may soon blt other Orange Coun·
ty c:ollectors.
Police Detective Marty
O'Reilly said stamps valued at
$45,000 have been taken from
three Huntington Beach collec-
tors during the past two weeks.
O'Rellly has advised all area
stamp coUecton to lock up their
treasures because the t hieves
are using a mailin1 list of
philatelist club members to
select their vicUms.
Police believe the thieves
fdund a stamp collectors club
rpalllng list at the home of their
fi'rst victim who lived In a
mobile home park.
0' Reilly declined lo identify
the victims because that in-
formation would tip off other
burglars as to where to find lhe
valuable 1tam1>9. he said.
The first victim, a 72-year-old
former McDonnell Douglas
Company employee, told police
an old mailing list of other
s tamp collectors was taken in
the Dec. 23 burglary.
The burglary victim told
police the mailln& Ust could tip
off the burglar as to where other
promineJlt stamp colte~tors in
the area are living.
The name and address of the
second victim, a 74-year-old
trailer park resident in aoother
part of the city, was on that list.
O'Reilly said the stamp
thieves struck while the victim
was away from his home. As in
the first theft, a door was pried
open to gain entry.
In the second break in , which
occurred Dec. 31. a mink coat
was also taken. Despite this,
O'Reilly said he believes it was
the work of the same stamp
burglars.
"They were more selective in
the stamps they s tole th~ second
time," O'Reilly said.
The third s tamp theft oc-
curred Monday while lhe 41·
year-old victim was away at the
Tournament of Roses Parade m
Pasadena.
From Page Al
BONFA ...
~evcral attorneys an the city who
are ''outraged" by the council's
action to withdraw le&al sup-
POrl
lie said that there have been
offers of free legal service.
Honfa renewed his attack on
lhe council by saying its action
was politically inspired in order
to make tus office appointive an-
5tead of elective.
He also said that O'Connor
was working wllh Ronfa's
1)()hllcal opponent.
At Tuesday n1'ht's council
meeting, attDrney Gail HutlDn,
who plans to oppose Bonfa in the
next municipal election, told of·
fic1als that o·connor was denied
due process when he was sus-
pended without pay.
She contended that O'COMOr
wasn't given legal notice in writ·
• ing prior to the disciplinary ac·
uon
She said that the alleged
failure by Bonfa to follow due,
proress requirements "was a
negligent dereliction of duty and
an open invitation for more
lawsuits based on the depriva-
tion of right.a of employees."
City Administrator Belsito
said today he is contacting a
special legal adviser to see if
O'Connor's suspension without
pay is justified.
He said that O'Connor has not
been adversely affected yet
because the next pay day is Jan.
13.
Deputy City Attorney Mark
Travis also told the council
T.Uesday niibt he thoue bt O'Con-
npr was wron&ed by the SUS·
~nsion without pay.
He said the clly'a Mana.ce-
ment Employees Or1anlzaUon is•
prepared to take whatever action
ij\ needed ln the matter.
ottA..al COAIT ""'
DAILY PILOT
o.lty ,. ... ,._.., o..-, ,....,_
CULVER DRIVE IN IRVINE WASHES OUT OVER SWOLLEN FLOOD CONTROL CHANNEL
Maintenance Workmen tn1pect Oam99e Near Main Street; Culver W1t1 Cloaed
Front Page A l
RAINS ••.
that caused drlvers on Campu.s
Drive and other streets to stop
their cars; some car engines
were dead.
Res idents this morning were
trapped in their neighborhoods
of the Woodbridge, University
and the Ranch developments,
which became penins ula com·
munitles surrounded on three
sides by flooded streets.
Irvine police dispatchers and
records clerks were busy
answering telephone calls from
residents asking how to get out.
Traffic was routed north along
one of the few unflooded sections
of Culver Drive, to the Santa
Ana Freeway, east to the
Laguna Freeway then south to
the San Diego Freeway.
Police officers stood at flooded
major intersections to dissuade
motorists from trying the un·
derwater roads.
City m aintenance crews
worked through the mght shor·
ing up undermined sections of
roads, with the worst road
destruction on Culver Drive,
where at one point, at the San
Diego Creek Bridge, nearly a
full lane was washed out.
Closed roads today Included
Culver Drive from Main Street
to Barranca Road and from
Bryan to Irvine Boulevard; Jef
frey Road from the San Diego
l•'reC'way to lrv1nt' Center Onv<'.
Barranca Hoad from Culver
Drive lo Jeffrey Road; and all or
Ridgcline Drive, which was cov·
ercd in mudslides
Police e:>llmatcd R1dgelinc
would not be fully cleared of
debris for a month, though city
public works said the road would
be passable by late today. bar·
ring more rain.
Parts of Culver were expected
to stay closrd for a week for re·
pair.
The police department report·
ed that a majority of its com·
munications lines were put out
of commission by rainwater
seeping through lhe roof, though
e mergency lines remained open.
Roof rainspouts couldn't han·
die the loads and water backed
over floodproof copings.
Firemen and Pacific
Telephone laborers worked four
lo five hours to keep the remain·
ing lines open and restore the
doused ones.
Phone panels were dried with
hot compressed air blowers;
!'iome had to be hand-dried by
towel.
Throughout the county, there
were nwnerous traffic accidents
caused by slick or flooded str~ts
and low vislbillly through the
drenching downpours whlch
came in waves.
Fatal Pl·aM Crash
Blamed on Weather
• By The Associated Preas
Torrential rains and gale·
force winos flooded streets, tore
down lrees and power lines and
ciiused a fatal plane crash.
But in the Sierra, the storm
brought good news, leaving
behind the best snowpack in four
years.
By late Wednesday everung,
the storm had dropped 1.14
inches or rain on downtown Los
Angeles, pushine the season
total to 7.18 inches, the weather
s ervice said. That is compared
with 5.30 inches last year and an
average rainfall by this date of
5.02 inches.
The California Department of
't'ransportallon and Highway
Patrol issued wind warnings
along the winding Gr apevine
section of Interstate S, with wind
speeds of up to 60 mph recorded
Wednesday. Despite the snow,
rain and wind. few roads were
reported closed Wednesday af.
tcrnoon. .
But CalTrans said state Route
2. the Angeles Crest Highway,
from Rig Pines, to the Route 39
J unction had been sealed oft
because of heavy snow. Stale
Route 99 between Arvin and lhe
junction of slate Route 58 in
Kern County was closed because
of sand on the road. Arvin was
:.ever ely damaged by hurricane·
force winds and blowing sand
last month.
By late Wednesday afternoon.
th e CHP said cars were
hydroplanlng on most Los
Angeles freeways when travel-
ing faster than 35 mph. But
speeds rarely exceeded that,
since minor accidents and
engine floodouts kept traffic
s lowed down or stopped during
the evening rush hour.
Severa! Janes were flooded as
deep as four feet on transition
roads from the San Bernardino
and Santa Ana freeways, as
were Janes in both directions or
the Golden Slate Freeway near
Griffith Park, said the CHP.
In the eastern San Gabriel
Va1ley city ot San Dimas, mid·
afternoon winds of up to 80 mph
were responsible for extensive
damage to buildines. Winds
caused an estimated $50,000 to
Sl00,000 damage to a furniture
store after winds blew off part of
its roof.
Power outages were reported
in Rosemead, San Gabriel, El
Monte, Sierra Madre, Monrovia,
Glendora, San Dlmas, Laverne
and the City of Industry.
1t reportedly was sel afire by a
hght.ning boll Wednesday after-
noon, a county fire department
spokesman said.
Three persons died Wednes-
day after their Piper PA-22 got
lost in heavy storm clouds and
crashed in Cleghorn Canyon
while en route from Ontario to
Chico, authorities said . The
slngle·engine plane crashed
about an hour after leaving On-
tario Airport, said a Federal
Aviation Administration official.
In Sycamore Canyon -left
denuded by last July's fire -no
l>erious mudslides or flooding
was reported, said Santa
Barbara C<>unty Flood Control
District officials.
' \
RCA'• Signal Sensor
•lectronlc remote
control
Marine
Held in
Killings
By The t\saoclated Press
A young Manne photographer
apparently selected his victims
as he went on a s hooting.
stabbing rampage at Camp
Pendleton that left two senior
co-workers dead and rour olhcrs
wounded Sgt. Earl J . Holley, 24, of
Staten Island, N. Y., was arrest-
ed Wednesday, sitting with the
.22·caliber automatic pistol he
allegedly used to kill two senior
photographers at the base audio·
visual center.
"We have reason lo beUeve he
knew who the victims were and
he sought them out,'' said Lt.
Col. D.W Brown. head of the
public affairs office at the na-
t10n 's largest Marine base, 25
miles north of San Diego.
Master Sgt. Daniel P Hurley.
42. of Uniontown, Pa., and Staff
Sgt. Gilbert N. Donham. 38, of
Ladelle, Ark .• died of mulUple
gunshot wounds, a M arlne
spokesman said.
Hurley lived Jn Oceanside with
his Korean-born wife and five·
week-old daughter, a Marine
spokesman said. He was dead at
Lhe scene and Donham died in
an ambulance on the way to a
hospital.
Other Marines who knew
Holley \Did reporters he felt vie:·
tlmi2ed and ridiculed by other
non-commissioned officers in
the photography and audio·
visual departments and was
quoted as saying he would seek re·
venge.
Acquaintances saJd Holley had
unclipped an ammunition belt
and laid down his pistol, then sat
on a table with his legs crossed
waiting to be taken after the
spree was over.
"He'd done what he bad to
do," one said .
A Marine account of the ram·
page said Holley attacked three
of his victims at the center, then
ran to a nearby photographic
JaboratDry where he shot t.hree
other men.
Dollar Takes
'Sluup · Rise'
LONDON {l\P) The
dollar rose sharply 1n
Europe today follow1ng
maJor US. government m
tervention on foreign ex·
change markets tQ prop
the currency
But tr adi ng \~as
cautious, and many of the
market's big operators
stayed on the :.tdellnel>
waiting to set-whether the
Carter adm1nistrat1on
would conttnue 1ls support
a d i on.
'fhe British pound was
quoted at $1 88 m midaf·
lernoon. a drop of nearly 8
cents from its Wednesday
close at $1.9590 and down 2
cents fromits opening to·
day al $1 90.
F rom Page .. 1 J
HEROES ...
rapidly behind her. It just looked
funny. 1 pulled up at the red
light and looked in the rear view
mirror. I saw him &rab her from
behind and drag her into the
field."
Maness hit the accelerator
and, tires squealing, sped into
an adjacent service station, yell·
ing to bystander Spears for a.id. ·
Spears, an Orange Coast
College engineering major from
Costa Mesa. ran lo help as Ma·
ness confronted the suspect later
alleged to be Vickery assaulting
the teenager on t.he ground
Neither is a physically large
man, compared to the s uspect.
"EveryUtlng happened so fast,
it just seemed the right thing to
do," says Spears. "It took bolh
of us to get him off her and sub-
dued. I guess we wrestled him
for several minutes."
"They really did super work.
It was just a lucky thing he saw
what he did," said Detective
Droz.
Maness Is more blunt about
what he and Spears did while the·
shaken teen·aged victim ran back
to the service station to call police
who found Vickery held captive
inside on a1TivaJ.
RCA 15':S199onal
XL-100 portable color TV
·]G----'eJ ! : I RCA I _-· I I. XL-100 . i :: ~~J~! I Model EX354
lftt Pro(ecla IS
There were no serious injuries
reported.
A Whittier home suffered an
estimated $17,000 damaee after Easy-chair conven-~fr~r.~:: lence. Change chan-
nels, control volume.
turn set on and Oll-
a II from across fhe Coast Patrons Rush
For ~ng Tut Ducats
room.
RCA 19'~ColotTrak table model
.,
RCA " ColorTrak
........_ _ (
. t
t -
-
r
j
SUPER VALUE
For a ColorTrak
Table Model
• One of a Kinds
• Ftoor Samples
• CloH-Outs
RCA 19 .. Dlagonal-78 Extend.cf life
Chanls Model FB443, One only •••
$389 90
RCA 19" Diagonal Potlable Modal
FX-•86 ..• S379 90
RCA 19 .. Diagonal Portable with
Remote Control. Model FU·478R •••
'489.90
RCA 19" Otagonal Tablo Model with Remote Control, Model FA..-88 •••
U71U~O
Several Olhera to Choose From
lncludlno Console Modela. Subject to
Pl1or Sale.
\,f.-\hou l 0111· f ,,,,,,,,,,,,.,. 1'1·011•1·1io11 1•1uu.
275 East I 1th St.
Costa Mesa
l
t
17
. .
•
orangeeoasroanvP•101 Editorial Page ............................................................. 1hursctay,Januarys. 1878
Robert N. WMd/Publl"'9r l'hofM5 K""ll/Edltor
Barbara kftlbfchJEdJtcrlal P• Edltcw
I•
Attorney Dispute
Bas Gone Too Far
The altercation between Huntington Beach City At-
torney Don Bonfa and Deputy C1ty: Attorney J ohn O'Con-
nor strains the imagination. ·
The men have fe uded f or years, but the recent ~hysical confrontation in which each claims innocence
while accusing the other or assault and battery is distur b-
ingly childish.
It is an embarrassm ent to the city and its residents.
T he question of who attacked whom in the latest
e pisode is now pr etty well beside the point. That the dis·
)>ute has been allowed to !ester and escalate over t he
years is of more concern .
It already has cost taxpayers t housands of dollars
because the city council chose to provide legal counsel for
"Bonfa m a grievance dispute with O'Connor . And in the
ultimate ironical legal twist, the city may end up paying
O'Connor's legal fees as well.
B ut the city council this week look act.ion to declare
enough is enough.
T he council m embers voted t o terminate legal
• ~ounsel for Bonfa in the dispute. They also directed Bon·
fa's.staff not to assist him in the matter.
The decision signals at long last that the city will not
pour more money into the apparently endless struggle.
And that's good. JC the two men want to pursue this
ridiculous quarrel, Uie city wants no part of jt.
We say amen.
Misguided Tax Use
Huntington Beach City Council members thought the)
were doing the right thing when they authoritcd
:-.pending up to $8,600 to help finance the All Ameri can
Surfing Cham pionships in the city.
The competition was designed lo increase the stand·
ing of surfing as an amateur sport and to benefit athletes
c>f the aquatic world.
That was why city officials say they got involved and
why they committed taxpayer money.
A number of thing~ probably should have been looked
.it more closcl>.
But the primary concern to city leaders should have
heen how the taxpayers· money was to be spent.
The American Surfing Association. the sponsors of
t he competition. financed a flight of a visitor from
I ronolulu with cit) monc)
They also staged a luau with a $10 admission charge.
But not ever) hod) had to pay. City council members
and dcpurtm<.•nl heads were offered free, complimentar)
t ickets to the dinner.
It 1s understood that many paid t heir own way.
But the qucst10n remains, why should city council
members and depa rt ment heads be given a special
privileg<.• with taxpayer money?
Still Not Equal
J Mile Square Park golf eoursc in Fountain Valley is a
publicly owned cot;irse. As such, it should be open equally
tn all taxpaying golfers.
But an effort by Orange County supervisors to achieve
that end didn't g~lerenou1h.
County officials had negotiated with course operators
to e nd what s upervisors viewed as preferential treatment
offered to members of the Men's Golf Cl ub.
That treatment allows club members to phone one
hour ahead of the public to reserve early morning tee·off
time for weekends. As a result some other golfers com·
plained and county officials set about finding a solution.
The ~olut1on approved will offer all golfers a chance to
~all om• hour early for weekend tee·off reservations -if
they either Join the club or pay S8 a year plus a refundable
:i30 dC'poSll
The new arrangement doesn't sound hke equal treat·
ment either. A~ long as Mile Square is owned by tax·
11ayer~. till golf c rs should be given the same opportunity to
make n•scrvattons on a rirst-come first-served basis.
• Op1n1ons el(pressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists Reader comment 1s mv1ted. Address The Daily Ptlot, P.O.
Bol( 1560. Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321.
Boyd/Cat's Eyes
By L.M. BOYD
History recort1s that cer·
tain ancient Turks claimed
they could tell the time of
day by looking into a cat's
eyes. Might be something to
It. Believe I recall having
read somewhere that lbe
pupils in a cat's eyes con·
t ract and expand predictably
in r e l a t ions h i p t o the
whereabouts of the sun. wm
research lhls further. Stand
by.
Was just 99 years ago lhal
Re ar Admiral Daniel Am·
men brought the fi rst bowl or
goldfish into this country
from Japsm.
W ha t qualif i es
a rchaeologist Iris Cornella
Love for membership in tho
Dear
··Gloomy
Gus
Were it only an appoint·
l•• oftlce, the prob-lem• ..,..,.. now taclnJ
Wilb the dt)' attorney ana
bl• und.rllo•• would.
have beeO dJspoled of
lot1t •10.
Proper Job Club is the fact
that she seven years ago dis·
covered the whereabouts of
the Jong lost st.atue of the
love goddess Aphrodite.
She'd put in a Jot of time
a r ound the Mediterranean
diggings in search of it. but
that's not where she found
Praxiteles' masterpiece. In
the basement of the British
Museum in London is where.
Question cropped up as to
how "fire" came to m ean
d ismiss ed from a job.
''That's obvious, dum dUm,"
writes a swtrt client. "Fire ift
also a synonym for discharge
me.ning t.o get rid or in a
hurry, zap!" AU rlsht.
Young Inex pe rie n ced
seamen aboard ship in the
old BriUsh navy wer e al-
lowed 14 inches or s pace in
which to t llnf their canvas
h mmocks. The older petty
offlc:ers wete authorb ed 24
inches of apace. Some hls·
toriana feel th1a admlrall~
rule to give more room to the
aelllOnechallors was • subUe rttognltlon of that thine c a)led
middJeqespr.ad.
f'tlteen percenl or Ute people
ln this country provide
all lbe rood, 'ooda and 1ervlcH tor the entire
populatJon. Or so HY the
1tatl1liclms. lnteroaUn1, if true. And ir tru., fl'• qul&.e a
meuure ~ U;S. tffbnolo11,
It ll not? BUt whal are. thoee
othtr 11 out ot JO ..,., .. do< lnl, meaqUm., pray? Thlt
C!U •et pritt)' deep. Tlme lOf' a nap.
Earl Waters • ,~
Truck 'Crackdown' Questioned
Has the Californi.i H1gh\\<1Y
Patrol cracked down on speedtng
trucks? Its recent report of more
than 5,000 citations having been
hsued to speeding truck drivers
during the month or October s\Jg.
gests that, at long last, the com-
plaints of motorbts have seeped
through lo CHP Commissioner
Glen Craig.
Almost from the inception of
the unrealistic ~ mph speed
l1m1t, the
motoring
public has
been pleadin~
for protection
from lht.>
behemoths of
the highways
w'h i c h
thunder down
from on hJgh
on f r eeway
travelle rs, t ailga t ing and
<>lherwise terrorizing drivers
who have the temerity lo stand in
their way by observing the
i:.peed limit.
Last summer Craig announC"ed
a "crackdo\\n" on the trucks and
thC' October report. tendt•d to
:.how al was being <·arricd out. And, althouJ.'(h lhe activity shown
amounted to barely more than
one truck stopped dunng the
month by each stale traffic of-
ficer. it still would be significant
had the target indeed been those
roaring beasts of the road aboul
whom the public has been com·
plaining.
BUT AN examination of the
facts cast !>ome doubt about the
"cr ackdown." Whale there are only 1:1.bout 90,000 tractors reg·
1stercd m California an estimat-
ed 300.000 such umts enter the
state each year. These are the
motonz{!d components which
pull the huge freight trailers seen
rumbling up and down the
freewavs
based, are a~tually on California
highways, the relatively small
number compared to the total of
passenger cars. m ight make s.ooo speed citations seem a
bea vy enforcement effort.
However, CHP f>O urces dls·
close lhal the count was not limit•
ed to the type of trucks which
come instanUy to the mind of the
motorist but included a myriad
of other types. There are nearly 3
.million ''trucks" reglstered Jn
the state. These mclude panels.
p ickups and atation w~goos,
whic h w e re n o t counted.
although many two-axle and
other small tnacb were. So the
total of S,000 is no way lndlcative
of the CHP effort aaainst the
mammoths nbout wblcb the
public c:omplalns.
lN OOMPAa.ING the CHP "'°" ord oo speed ci\allou to t.rucb
against theoverallot89,t52111ued
to vehicles of all typet it IDl&bt
atJU seem a aood performance.
bolo' moro than 5 penent. especially when tbe number ol
truck8 is matched a1ainst the near 12 million paasencer
vehicles register«l. tsut. companng total registro·
Uoos la a false meuu.rement.
With rare exceptions passenger
c ars stand Idle far more than
they are in use and many of them
never or rarely venture out. on
• the freeways. Not so with the
monster trucks whose bl1b costs
make it essential to get the
highest usage possible. The only
real measurement then would be
a comparilon of mileage
travelled on state highways by
trucks venu.s passenger cars.
One thlng the report clearly re·
vealed ls that speed ~cupies
nearly SO percent of the emphasis
of the CHP for tbe total number or tickets written for violations or
a ll types was only 195,194.
ALSO misleading is the total or
traffic officers on the Chr', re·
ported as 4,165. The fi ve-day
week reduces the number avaiia·
ble for duty lo about 3,000 while
sick leave. courtroom time and
other causes further erode the
number to where there are prob·
ably nq more than 2,000 l'eporting
for duty oa any given day to toVer
a 24-hour period. On certain
holidays, when super efforts are
made, the patrol may field as
many as 1,000 at one time but
overtime earned then reduces the
CHP s trength on s ubsequent
days.
And,· although 1t is not knllwn
how much of the tame these
trucks, out of state and home ''You'l'e str~ddlirig ihe wron~ <A~I."
It is this force which must not
only cover both sides of the
state's 3,794 miles of freeway and
more than 11,000 additional miles
or s t ate hig hway. but also
thousands oC miles of county
r oads.
Nicholas Von Hoffman
Is Remedial Education Money Wasted?
W AS1UNGTON -Every fow
m.onths from one section or the
country or another comes fresh
news confirming the fact that
many children pass in, through
and out of school without learn·
ang lo read or figure.
So parents and other tax·
payers demand that kids who
d1dn 't learn
a n y thing b<'
held back, a
practice that
was given up
some yea rs
aJ(O when
somebody
noticed t hat
t h e firs t
grade at P.S
40 had 11 SIX·
footers in at
Being a 14-year-old Big Stoop
in a class of other wise bright
and proficient 10.year.old chums
is thought to cause anxiety and
inferiority feelings in the larger,
laggard scholar who may then
wap his little buddJes around m
a paroxysm or misplaced resent-
ment.
To get around this problem It's
being suggested that kids who
lTbD.'t even know the easier part
of the multiplication table be
Mailbox
s hun ted o ff to s p ecial
classes ... a scholastic chain
gang where they wiU crack their
rock-like heads learning that 6 x
8 equals 48. 1f they don't learn to
read. as they probably won't, at
least they will be failing oul of
sight And no more diplomas for
·the boneheads; henceforth all
they ~ct is a certificate of allen·
dance.
8 EIUND all this concern and
activity are some propositions
wllich may or may not be true.
Proposition one 1s that schools are to teach reading and writ·
an~: proposition two is t hat when
they don 'l It ·s the teachers' fault
and the taxpayers are getting
cheated; number three is that if
you don't have an abnormally
depressed J.Q. you can and you
m ust learn to r ead and do
elementary arithmetic.
Of course. a ll depends on
number three. We know from
ourselves and our friends it
doesn't follow that if you can
read you can count. Some of us
are whizzes al numbers and can
barely read; the reverse ls even
more common. As fo r the goal of
a totally literate society, while it
may be possible Lo ~each every·
one but the ment ally bandi·
capped how to read, it also may
be very expensive. Somewhere
we hit the law ol d1minishlng re-
turns.
TH E COST in teach ers, re·
medial reading inst ructors,
counselors a n d th erapists,
physical and psychological, to
drive Nasty Nate and Snipe Sal·
ly into learning bow lo read 1s
much too expensive. The society
isn 't going to get its money back
on that investment.
Is Jt necessary to leach every-
body_ how to read and figure?
Wh at about using the millions
that math instr uction is going to
cost us to give away hand.held
calculators to all those who can't
count but signify a desire to do
comparison shopping at. the
s upermarket? IC ther e is no
readily apparent reason why so
much money should be spent so
that everybody -literally every·
body -in our society. can do
long division, the need for .M>O
percent literacy is not apparent
either.
Work is another queaUon. It
ls generally agreed on the basis
of the scantiest information that
you can't hold down a job if you
lack these two basic skills. U
that's so, the reas<>n has less to
do with the work lt.seU than with
how the job requirements are
set up. Why does a bus driver in
an exact·change-only system
have to know how lo add and
subtr~?
Teachers who are suppo~ to
"tarn" the recalcitrant Jlunces
don't care for proficiency ex·
ams: they prefer to speak of in·
structing their obtus~ charges in
such things as ''life coping
skill s," an odious expression
hatched in the gastrointestinal
lAlct of a professor cf ed-psych
no doubt. The danger is that
pupils will be made to pass an
exam in this amorphous subject,
and those flunking li fe coping
will be adjudged socially incom·
pelent al an even higher finan· '
clal cost to the community.
All children must go to school.
There is nothjng eJse lo be done
with them once they escape in·
fant exposures, but all children
don't have lo learn while they're
there. For some. romping about
with the coping s kills teacher is
the answer. while the rest of us
acknowledge defeat and admit
that occasfonally high standards
a ren't the best standards.
Congressmen Preparing for Televi8ed Sessions
To the Editor:
Many thanks for your kind re·
marks regarding my efforts an
o btaining a o n e-year
moratorium on the relocation or
foderally protected witnesses to
Southern California. I am
pleased by the J ustice Depart·
ment's decision. and I plan to
watch carefully when a Senate
J udiciary subcom mittee con-
ducts hearings on the witness
protection program sometime
next year.
be disappoin t ed i n the
performance of the House, I am
certain.
MARK W. HANNAFORD
Member of Congress
Re ... o• tor Do•bt
To tbt EdJtor:
It is high Ume the citizens of
Huntington Beach sat. up and
took notice of the kind of clty al·
torney they have elected and are
payint some $40,000 per year.
Those who are ••cuy waicbers"
EARLY t hi• m o nth, you or who have been present at
editoria lly m entlo ncd the more than an ~caslonal ctty·
"salutary effect" ol television mH Una must serloualy doubt
cov6rage on the F lorida stltte the wladom of conUnutn1 the
le1i1lature and spoke of con-popular eleettoo of t.be city at·
1resslonal debate on the subjoct. t orne y t l ven Jn the i nept or televlsl9n and udlo access to ptrform1ncetho curre11t of·
the Ooor oC the House. On Oct. ltcebolder bu turned in.
37. the Houle approv d by a vote Perhaps lt fa Ume to pennJt th
f 342 to '4 Hou e Retolut.lon 866, city council to hJre a true pro.
which provldts for television and f esalonal to do the Job -one wh<>
radio c:ovfraio or noor procted· i• anawttable to th• city.
1n11. The cameras end c•ble are The curr~t debacle with Jolin
beln1 lMtalled riaht now, and J O'Connor la reprehenslbJ•. Jt
xpeol that the TV and radio · t.arnlabea ~ c1ly'a lm11• and.
networkl Will tie. tfklna fuU act· reputation and contln\ltl whit
vanttge Of thlJ pro1rcssive move ctn now be conaldeNd nothln1
1>1 Lhe ~when we recoa more Ulan a pereon~.cr~• or
vcnelnlatUUtQ'. """"""...,.,.,vendeul. lt b rkllcuJoua that
Tb• Ammcan ~Pl• d uv beC•vM DOn Bonfa I.a eled.ed .
to 1M ftntbaftd bow t.Mlr a.ov· anti amwer.~ Cl\ly to \be"~
C!mmeist cp.r1te•. They wJll not pie Olli oam1 JI not uacUy' a
•
household word, hence remov1I
by recall ii virtually impossi·
ble), he can remain in omce,
use tax dollars for his defense,
and ou.sl one of the best men in
the department who will have to
conduct his Utigatlon al his own
eitpense.
Mr. Donia's term has been
marked by poor advice, oft.en
untimely 1tven, uns e e mly
behavior, and pursuit of self·
ser ving in~rests al the expense
of the taxpayers. As be is fond ol
s tatin&, he ls answerable only to
the people, the few w~o vote.
Let 'a Ci~ hJm a lcM&d attd clear
respon.ao ln AprlJ!
Gl!:ORGE ll. SNVDSR
(~t p.re&ldtnt ot
liOllE C.oundl -1gre>
1"11eu lfiflfUW
To lh,e Edltor:
I wonde1r it today's 1cbootlng li
reepom1ble ror the 1naccur1c1 or
today'• newa~per re~rten.
Twenty·tlve 1ear1 •co al'IJ
third 1radc 1Wdent knew that it
took •bOUt. U blockl to make • mile. TMre wu a pllH ttuh
2,IOO le t from 1feadowl1J'lt
Altj)Ort. ODe newspaper rtp0t1.er
1t.1t.ed lt wu •• iplle, UOtbii' news report.er atattd l#O tall" u41 the thl~ ntorter mted
three mile;s:. How could any re-
porter translate one block lnt.o 36
blocks?
A REPORTER from another
paper did a nostalgic article on
the airport. He stated lt consisted.
of 80 acres when In fact tt ls •9
acres. Thia reporte r state<l thal
the airport d.idn 't cost the city •
dime. The city ts beint sued for
$5 mUUon by a pilot. The <!ity tax·
payers paid over $1,200 to bury
electrical wires on HeU Street
because airplanes were cuum1
them. The taxpiurers·pay for all
tbe tire department calls for
wreclrl and tor police. The dty
hu to pay lor hlJber Uablllt,y a.
aunneo becaUM ol the lirp<wt.
I bavo a feellni lhlt these re-
portGrt Jus' ttlb IJ>(ormatlon
lrom the nearest penoo 1taftdJnf
ned to tbtm without Judainl
tacts for themselves.
CHARLES COOPER
l
CALIFORNIA
50 Birds
Killed
By Slick
SAN DIEGO CAP ) -
A m ysterious oil slick
has killed about 50 birds,
m ostly sea due.ks, amd
harmed about 25 others
in San Diego Bay, the
s tate Game and FJSh
Department says
The Coast Guard
Marine Safety ottice
said patrol boats dis-
patched after the dead
b1 rds were discovered".
found •·a lJghl sheen" of
011 on the water on the
Coronado side of the bay. Service Baited
,.,.w,,....,...
Thursday, January 5. 197tf OAIL Y PILOT A5
A TToaMIY /4 f I.AW !
North Pounded by Rain · BANKRUPTCY $95 :: ·
DIVORCE $95 • :: Unrontnted
By The Aasoclaled Preas
More drought-defying rain and
snow were forecast for Northern
CalllornJa today in a one·day
follow-up to the powerful storm
that slammed into the state with
h owling winds and gushing
showers.
In nearly all districts of the
top half or the state showers
were predicted into the m&ht.
Travelers warnings were issued
for blowing snow in the Sierra,
expected to descend lo 3,500 feet
at times. Chains were required
on most mountain routes.
PARTS OF THE BAY Area
reported thunder, lightning and
hail during Wednesday's storm.
Some areas reported winds of 40
miles an hour.
"THERE 18 AN AIR of op·
tim1&m here, but we're trying
to be realistic," said Bill Clark
Wednesday at the state Drought
Information Center in
Sacramento.
Clark added the droua:hl is not
over . despite the pr~pitat!Oh. 640.2507
Major reservoirs art ttill very -~~~~~~~~~~
low aod rain JI Aeeded this
month and ill re'bruary. Of
critical importance in gauging
the slluation will be the depth of
the Sierra s nowpack next
month.
1978 CARS I
and TRUCKS•
3 Prized Redwoods
"Lost to Vandalism
PIERCY (AP) -Three of
California's prised ancient
redwood trees will fall today. the
victims or vandallam.
OFFICIALS said the
source of the oil was un-
determined but no spills
had been reported.
The National Weather Service
Stuntman Eve! Knievel talks with found another wet weather
The three giant trees, each
reaching some 100 yards above
lhe ground and measuring more
than six feet in diameter, were
hacked at the base with a
cbalnsaw.
THE GROVE WAS popular
with touris ts. Two of the
stricken trees bad walk·througb
tunnels carved at the base and
were popular settings for photo-
graphs.
limous ine chauffeurs he hired to takt• system stationed off the Oregon
work furlough prisoners to and from theit Coast, suggesting even more
They speculated that
OJI from street surfaces
may have beep washed
into the bay by heavy
rain. But a Coast Guard
~pokesman said it was
"hard to believe this
"-Ould be enough to kill
the birds."
Jobs Wednesda y 1n Los Angeles. The precipitation may be on the way
livery se1'\ ice.· upset the sheriff's depart. beyond the foretast period.
ment, and Knievel has decided to call a Wednesday's showers dropped
halt to it. rivers o( water onto the land.
-------------------One Lh~derstorm dumped an inch of rain on Oakland Intema-
FRANK TODD,
<·urator of birds at Sea
World, said a light, high·
s: r ade diesel oil was
res pons ible ror the
deaths. Jle noted the
birds "displayed all the
~y mptoms of s uch a
spill "
Disney W Orld
Expansion Set
BURB/\NK CAP) -Walt Disney Productions has
unveiled plans for a major addition to its Walt Dis-
ney World complex In Florida.
The pro1ect, to be called The Experimental
Prototype Community of Tomorrow (EPCOT).
.. will be dev<ited to the ---------
advancement of mterna· Land, Transportation
llon<tl Airport between 4 p.m.
and 5 p.m.
MARIN COUNTY reported the
·heaviest rainfall, ranging up to
1 1~ inches by Jate afternoon.
Rain-slick roads caused many
accidents, \Jlcludlng a whopper
or a 22-car pileup on Highway 17
bet ween Los Gatos and Santa
Cruz just before dawn. Tralfic
was backed up for an hour and a
half.
All the precipitation activity is
buttressing notions that the
California drought is getting a
good working over.
1 ne 1njurect bl rds
were taken to Sea World
<i fler Project Wildlife
volunteers "ashed off
tbe sllck and pl~cd
them in heatmg pads ..
t1ona I understanding and Space.
and the solution of the ---.:..--e-----------------:::
.,.
T o dd said lhe
<'reatures will remain at
Sea World for several
wct•ks until they re-
cover.
Dog Ban
Delayed
SAN l>IEGO (AP>
A ban on dogs at most
bca<·hcs an San Ui cgo
would <:OSt $100,000 an-
nually, the City Council
has been told.
problems of people
everywhere through tht•
communication of
ideas." th<.' company
haid in its 1977 annual re-
port.
Disney said the EI>.
COT Center would have
two maJor areas, Futurc
World and World
Showcase. The company
made no estimate of
when the n(·w C('nter
would be romplell'd
FUTURE WORLD
'~ 111 rndude a major in-
troductory them<.' show
called Spaceship Earth,
Dis ne y said, accom·
panied by what the com -
pany called a "global
mark ct pl ace of new
ideas" called the Com·
mun1core. Beach patrols and
tom m unicatJOns gear
are needed. A I so planned a r e
A final vote on the pro· pavilions dealing with
posed ordinance was de-En erg y . LI re and
Javed Wednesday. Health, The Sea. The•
State Senate
$150 Tax Cut .
Gets Support
SACRAMENTO (AP) -A plan to give four
ruilhon California homeowners property tax cuts
of $150 or more appears to be gaining support in
the state Senate.
But there was still no
decision Wednesday on ( ) the plan for across-the· · .t.,TATE
board tax cuts -roughly ..__ ______ ~
1 the same amount for
both rich and poor
One tree was cut all the way
around the base, with only a 2·
foot core remaining. Tbe others
were slashed randomly wlth a
series of cuts.
JIM IUBBERT, manager of
state park lands ln the Piercy
area, said the trees stood in a
grove of old redwoods, ranging
in age Crom 1,500 lo 2,000 years.
The grove, in the Smitbe
Redwoods State Reserve, is in
northern Mendocino County,
some 200 miles north of San
Francisco.
One o( the trees was more
than six feet jn diameter and
two were some 11 feet across.
The grove is just some 100 feet
• orr caU!ornia Highway 101.
Hibbert said the damage w~
irreversible and the trees woufd
be downed today by a private
contract.or. He said the highway
would be closed to traffic for two
or three hours.
Despite htg.h winds and the
severe damage, the trees were
not ln danger of falling over and
did not pose an immediate
threat to traffic, Hibbert said.
THE TREES WERE s truck
ALL MAKES!
833-0555
some time between Monday af-Alk For Our
ternoon and Tuesday, he said. UASE The state parks department is SPlCWJST at
investigating the vandalism and HOWARD CheYrolet '
will seek felony criminal ca.-0'°"" .. ""au..1s••
charges should anyone be ar· ""==N=EWPO==R=T=B=EA=C=H=:r rested, according to department -
spokeswoman Gene Cone.
The Mendocino County
Sheriff's Office was investigat-
ing the case, but had no suspects
or motive for the vandalism.
Call 642-5678.
Pul a taw words
to work for ou.
homeowners. Another Democratic caucus was
scheduled for today lo decide whether to offer the
plan to the floor.
The plan faces a rival bill giving the biggest
t ax break to poor renters and homeowners.
WOMGn Dles in Ill-lated ·Leap
LONG BEACH (AP) -A 22·year·old woman
bled to death Wednesday arter severing her
Jugular vein when she crashed through a window
lo escape a roaring apartment fire that killed
Angel Palanco. 2, who was left in her care, po· ·
hces aid.
LOWEST PRICE EVER ON THIS
FAMOUS REALISTIC® CB I
The woman, tdentlfied as Paula Archuleta,
• managed to save her year-old ttGOghter , Angelica,
by banding her to a neighbor through a small
opening in the ground-floor window before taking
her ilJ.fat.ed leap, fire officiab said. ·
lllgh Cot1rt Geis Bear•t Ap~al
SAN FRANCISCO CAP1 -Patricia Hearst's
federal bank robbery ~oaviction, upheld by an ap-
pellate court. now heads tor the U.S. Supreme
Court.
The 9th U.S. Circuit Court or Appeals refused
Wednesday to reconsider it.a Nov. 2. 1977. ruling
upholdin& the l\liltY ver~lct.
PliteU.e Aba•do••fttt Oppe.ed.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -'Ibe city attorney's of-
fice has formally conteated Southern Callfom la
Gaa Co.'a appllcation for atate permission to aban·
don a naturll aaa plpeUne and ltaae lt to Stabdard
OU ot Oblo to tranape>rt Alaskan crude oU to Tesu.
• Clt7 Attc1'1le7 Burt Pines' b1otiOll ot>POtmi the
plptilhle abandoftment WU nlecl Wednesd11 at a
1tat. Public Utilities Conunll&laa bearina lDto tbe
utiUt1'1 request to aba.odoll a JJO.mUe atretc:h of
pipeline runnlnM from near Blytbe to Moreno,
Calif.
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Bearded Solons Return
St.•nators John Dunlap. 0 Nap<1, left, and
Alan Sit•roty, D Los Ang t·le '>, chuckle over
r e m a r k s. a I) o u l t h l' 1 r be a rd s . a s
lawmakt•rs n •L111 lll·cl to ~..tl rJmenlo
Sit·roty's b1.•:.ird v. <1 s Ill'\\ to the '.'>C.'t'111.·.
Dunlap had worn his la~t \l'HI'.
Union Leader
To Pay Funds
WASlllNGTON Ii\!' i The administrator of
<1n Ohio Tcam..,lt>rs un11m health Jnd welfare fund
must pa)' 1Ja1·k ::;5r.o.ooo that tht· L<1hor Department
s:ud he ovt•rl'h<JrJ.:l·<l tht· fund 1n v10h1t11m of the· 1974
federal pcnston law
Thi! onkr ll> re11a)' lh<.· mom·) """ part <1f J con-
scnl order announted by lhc <kp:.irtmcnl sl!lthng
lhc go\crnml·nt's suit ai.:a1ns l the admin1slrator
and tru-.tt'l''> of lht• Ohio High" a\ l>n' crs Welfare
Fund.
UNDER T i ft: ORDER FILED in !JS. District
Court m I>a_\ Lon, lhl' <Jdm1n1slrator, Robert C. Knee
.Jr . will rt•s11rn as <1dmtn1:-.lrator and sever all rela-
tions "tlh Lhl' pl iJO
Th<' orikr .i1 ... u p1 <1\011fl·.., lhal the fund's six
lrul>IN'!. mu ... t rt·:-.11-:n h, th" t·nd r1f l!J7K.
Om• lr U.,tl'l'. Willi.irn l'rl'"'n or Cleveland, was
forC'cd h' lfw i.:ov1·ri111wnt tu r1·-.11w in 197fi as a
trusll'l' of thl' Tl•J m tt·r I llllJ...,o has('d f'C'ntral
Slall'S PenMon Fund, a ::.cparate plan undt•r 1n·
ves(lg;_1t1on for allcgecl mis management ancl tics
to organi1t•<I n1 m1·
T ilt.: LAROR UEPARTMf.NT alll'gl'd that ff'<''>
paul Km•c, ,1 Da)'lon iJllof"IH'} for ~1dm1n1slcr1ng thl'
Ohw fund ""en• far i.:rl'atn than the value or thl'
:,ervr<·c•-; which Km·t· <H'l uull.~ prnv1ded the plan "
Knt•l' r<'Cl'l\.l'fi :)87H,91 5 In 1971 and $627,746 In
1!17~, fr11m the fund, set up IJ y trucking companies in
lhl' i,t;1l1• ;.md hv tht• Oh111 Conference of Teamsters.
II prov1clt·s d~·ntal. 'urJ:1cal and other medical
li••n(•f11 .., to .rhout 27,tl<JO Ohio truck dri vcrs and their
II 1·pr nt11•n1 .;
Knt•t• ~ 1.1111..r . HolH'rt C. Knc~ Sr., ad-
1111n1 ..,tc•n ·d th1· lund in 1 .1rl11·r ~l'ars.
:u \RK GEltT!'.f-.R. A TOLEDO attorney
n•prt·..,•·nt111i.: 1 ht· fund .inti K nl't' issued a statement
""~ 1ni.: the· dt•rc•n!l<Jnt... · rl1d no wrongdoing" and
:rgreed to the <'On'>t·nt or<ll·r to a\OJd htigat1on with
lht' i.:o ' <'rnm<'nt
Thn•1· of th•· run1I .., S I\ trustees represent
managC'm<'nt ;ind 1 hrl'l.' ri•prf''>Pnt the union. Two
manai.:t·mC'nt lrl1'-.t1·l's T>an1l'I Gunn of Akron and
Walt(.>r UrcwstN already have resigned, leaving
univ Rotwrt I" T<>dd of Columbus. who 1s expected
to st l'p down soon In add1tton to Presser. the other
union trush•C'.., <trt• .lamc'i M . Felt1s of Spnngfield
Jnd Rohc·rt Cas..,1d\ of Canton
THE 1.ABOR OEPARTMENT began its tn-
\'l'Sl1gat1on of the fund in May 1976 following queries
from The As.,OC'i.1led Press concerning the ad·
mm1strat1vc fr£•s. Independent pension experts told
the AP lhe fees paid Knt"e were far in exC'ess of
those paid <1dmintslrators of similar pension and
welfar<' plans.
Under term" of th<' court order, Knee must re·
pay $560,000 to the fund by Jan. 31 und resign as ad-
ministratnr by Feb. 28. He also 1s barred from as-
soc1at1on with two other Ohio Teamster plans he ud-
mm1stcrc<l.
ALSO, THE WELFARE FUND must sever its
relations with its present consulting and accounting
firms and Kn<.'e's former law firm. "The trustees
must undertake a comprehensive review of ad-
ministrative proC'<'dures dcs1jlned to assure com·
phancc with the pension law m the future," the
Labor Department said.
Assistant Labor Secretary Francis X.
Burkhardt said the court order "fully accomplishes
the department's purpose of protecting the in-
terests of plan part1c1panl'i and beneficianes."
Loan for Embezzler
ALBANY, N.Y. CAP ) -A 19·year-0ld woman
from suburban Colonie has been sentenced to two
years probation for embezzling money from the
bank where she worked.
And where will the confessed embeuler get the
money to repay the bank? From a loan at the First
National Bank of Scotia, where the e mbezzlement
occurred.
U.S. District Judge James Foley said he round
the arrangement unusual, but accepted it. Wendy
Westfall had pleaded g uilty to taking $2,150 from
the bank between February and August 1976.
She ts to pay back the bank in monthly, $61 in·
slallments for four years. Th.at comes to $2,928, in-·
c ludina interest.
•
Thu™'ay. January S. 1978 s DAILY PILOT tl J ~,
Plans for DB Wedding Ballooning
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Ollllo D•ll~ "li.ISi.tl
Love hui, ballooned between Pam
Down and Rick Wlngo and they're
certain to be high as a kite on their
wedding day Saturday, when all the
world 1s mv1ted to witness their aenal
marriage over Huntington Beach
ground-bound, however. due to space
hm1talions.
Wingo, the ruture Mrs. Wingo,
Pastor Don Gess. of Huntington
Beacll's Central Baptist Temple, and
balloonist Capt Michael Caldwell all
will be squeezed into the crowded gon.
dola
Freeway to the more down-to-earth
aspects or holy matnmony, a recep-
tion will be held.
lion, which wantt>d lo do somettuoi
different to mark the opening of 1 '
new office there.
Somebody thought of Gene's, u
bndal shop, and wondered if they
knew of any upcoming wedding
clients who might want to carry the
Wingo. 22, of Santa Ana, and his
bride·t<>-be. 18, of Orange, will be wed
rn a hot air balloon hovering 50 to 100
ft-l•t over the ml city's Huntington
Center
Once thl' big gas bag goes up to the
strains of "Her1: Comes The Bride,"
(or 1s it "Tht:re Goes The Bride"? l,
the weddm~ ceremony will be under
way, according to organizers.
The public is invited to Join the
nt!wlyweds and their entourage for al
p m champagne and wedding cake
reception In lhe center or the shopping
mall.
Huntington Center Merchants' As-
!iOc1ation members have lald in a big
:.tock or the bubbly stuff for the festive
oecasion and attendants will be pour-
ing us long as 1t 1 asts
marriage experience to new heiehts. ,
The future Mr. and Mrs. Wineo de-:·
cided it sounded like fun ' '
·l THE YOUNG couple. employed al ._
THE VAST MAJORITY of the
publtr wc•cldtng party which turns out
for th1: 11 am rites must remain
ONCE THE BALLOON returns
from the dizzying heights overlooking
Beach Boulevard and the San Diego
THE AIRBORNE wedding c hapel
takes off from the parking lot near
Gibraltar Savings and Loan Associa-
an industrial plant, will be the third to
be married aloft aboard Capt
Caldwell's balloon, which is operated 1 by Aerostat1c Rainbow Wagons of . b
Solana Beach. \
{but watch da wicked wabbit)
STANDARD
BARE ROOT TREES
Peach. Plum, Nectarine,
Apricot. Apple. Cherry.
BARE ROOT ROSES
Pear, Fig
YOUR
CHOICE
297
Thia ia the growingeat atate ao be
prepared to harvest fnyt if you plant
theH. For ahow and grow.
SEMI-DWARF _
BARE ROOT TREES
If apace is tight. these do
nicely. and yield full sb:e fruit.
Peach. Plum. Apricot, Apple.
and Nectarine (ah. a ripe
nectarine. love it).
YOUJ\
C HOICE 497
SCOTTS
TURF BUILDER
Everybody haa to eat. And
ao it ia with the lawn. No
feed.lng, no nice thick gr .. n
lawn.
2000 SQ. FT •••••• 4.59
4000 SQ. FT •••••• 8.29
6000 SQ. FT •••• 1 1 • 99
ORTHO
BUG-GETA PELLETS
You must choose. It's elthe~
the flowers or the snalla.
(Look at it this way. what
dld the flowers ever do to
the •nail.a?)
1 48
2~ LBS.
BAN DINI
AZALEA
PLANTER MIX
Ever notice how colorful
.Azaleas are? Feed your• and
you too can .ay. "18 thl8 the
freeway to Cuca:ID0tl9a?''
2CU.FT. 263
REMINGTON UMB 'N TRIM
ELECTRIC CHAIN SAW
8" 14" DELUXE
3900
STANDARD
PATENTED 97
Include Ben Hur. Blue I
Heaven and more.
GLADIOLA
BULBS
Get a bu.nch of th••• in
the gl'OUBd right away.
Come spring you will go
bananas over the ... ·
5c EACH
VILLAGE BLACKSMITH
POLE PRUNER
Two HCtion deal k"P• you
safe down below as you top
the high ones. January la the
most Important pruning
moQth.
6 97
#3901
FESCO PLASTIC
TRASHCAN
Wlt.b anappy plastic Ucl.
No rwit. no conoalon, no
nol ... no foolln' mouncL
Juat a good trash can
for a price.
32GAI. 499
77c:00Ft.Rou
You lmow, lt'• to ti• up th•
boa.epuui. WI••· U.... tomatoes. cmd mch. (Loob un that old
macram. 1tuft we uaed to MIL)
I
BANDINI
ORGANIC
PLANTER MIX
Formulated from a blend of
decompoM<l organic• which
createa ide<ll root environ-
ment fo.r shrub•. trees. and ro•••· ~CU.JT. 97c J CU.JT. 1 :a~
2CU.n.2"
~SCOTT'S ~SPREADER
Handlff any kind of dry
fertlliaer, adJuatable
1i... tlow, up-top leTer shut-
,. ,'I "--:... otf. 1f you put Scott•
-
.......
thru ll. they'll love ya.
2288
TRUPERLONG
HANDLED SHOVEL,
OB RAKE
-
~
How do l hen'• the nerve to
writ• about theM tools which
1 bcne not personally looked
at? I truat Hcttlonal not to
hype anyone.
-
-
297 YOUR
CHOICE
HAMLET
METAL
BUILDING
99°1~x10'
With all th• rain. do you need someone to
tell you that a weczther40ug hOUH wtth
alidlng doona beat• lecmng thing• out to
mat?
•
•I
•'
..
...
..
I
Ii
,.\ J-1 DAIL V PILOT
MARMADUK E by Brad Anderson BOOMER
AC1U~L.'( &:t'Mt~ 'r .. 1..1 OZ~Are . \'' \'.~Jl.~ L ~ t. I? ~ r1f-A\
j A MA56 ~ f'RC81..~S )i.U~7E't..F ..
V)
----------.,!§'" ••• ~--------------~;::..1~~--~;;;;;;.--..1
Didn't you used to wrestle m high school,
Luke?
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
ll -12
CASEY
MOON MULLINS
GERIATRIX
IT "AA'r ~ CHEAP't:IZ TO
TAKE: ~WITH u, ON
THE: M~'f.tCO CJlW% T~
eNo OF iH€ ,w:)Ni\-1
~0 \.-EAVE: ..XJ.::'K
AT THt: Vl:T~ !
DENNIS THE MENACE
F~THAT
you WANT
'$20 ?? You
LEFT OUT A
L.E:TTr:r<"
GORDO
1
HA.TE:
TIA!f:;
-\1E
.._"t: ... e.v~:
.{iy
LITTLE
WAJD
LIES
l=AJ.WWf
1-S
by Tom Batiuk
by Charles Rodrigues
Uf A 5KEO ~ow rn£
f IFT'( COLOllJE~
WERt t>Ol~ti!
by Ferd and Tom Johnson
JUDGE PARKER
TUMBLEWEEDS
PU1 Me '70WN, HU .. '71!6AR'7
AAMHOCKER1 I AM N01"
GONNA MARRY VOU!!
'
• e . ~ ;
f .
':
Q ~ .
"PilNC.IPAL. 8ANteer>; oawHo J'NTl~l!<ST .. ••
DOOLEY'S WORLD
OR. SMOCK
MOTLEY'S CREW
LAY-OFF
NOTICE5
by Gus Arriola
by Harold Le Doux
F=OR O~E: "THING, '11'.>IJ AIN'T
F=CMINtf'JE. E:NOOOH!
NANCY b.Y Ernie Bushmilltr
..
'
_,.,,.,,..,,
"""'"""'''-'-.....
COMICS I CROSSWORC
PEANUTS by Charles M. SChult
fiXKf'/?! GET LOST,
NECKHEAD! I WAS "
HERE FIRST!! S "'----~ _,;,._-""'.::!.. l
i
I. .
~
HOW WOULD '100 LIKE
10 BE FORCE-FED A
PAIR Of 60ALIE PADS?!
t •
by Roger Bradfield
1HAT CRYSTAL
SNoWBALLIS
ABSOLUTI;LY
USELESS!
f i
J
by George Lemont
:t G01'i"A CHE:CK
VVl'IH SuPPt,.Y AN ' see IF 'IHeY HAVe
ANY l'JFL.-A'IABt..E:
NA/V\f: "TAGS.'
by Templeton and Forman
TODAY'S CIDSSlllD PVZZLI
ACROSS
1 Potters
wheel
6 Carpenters
necessity
t t Flalf1s11
1 4 01rec1>0n
sign
1 5 Greek feller
11) Sic~
11 Eu tlly
ODl>OS•te
19SH1ve tor
victory
20 Not d1tl1r1nt
21 Reauire
22 Onions
1e111ives
;>4 Point out
26 Fe111orrv
27 lnGhnes
30 SneosMts
l1t>ored
breath
49 Mike
1mellds
50 Mus1c11
t11m
52 Small
amount
56 Gree!\ teller
57 Dwelling
occup1n1
60 Time oerioos
Abbr
Ei t Society
11ructure
62 Awake
a:! Cyclon,
cenlet
64 Trouble1ome
olents
65 Flo~rfeu
p11n1s Informal J;.>R1se DOWN une~oecledly ' Young men
2 words 2 Diva s
1'3 P11ta11s 5pec1ally
3• Clli rged 3 Cable car
cart1c1e • Coarse woolen clolh
37 Asian gull 5 Female
38 Deers en1mal
rel11tve 6 ... votP
19 Corn t><ead Unoll1c1al
40 ••• G111h1d poll
41 Oldn't go lo 7 Chftller
bed 2 8 Parson
words Aber
4 2 Sot1ar alt air 9 zeia
43 ldohzed • fOllower •s C11cu1a1Pd 10 Money
'6 "La •••••• • llotdera
Opera 1 1 A111us1ng
48 ShOfl lt'llnDt
UNITED Feature Syndicate
W.onelday'e Puule Solved
CA MIP 8 SAL CIO MB
AIC ER A • 1r AfE IC:llW IA R
NIH I~ A TR UI& , s Alll 1111 A L E TT EA • s A L L f IF 11'1
TIA I 1r • G IA 11
ST E L A E A. v f 11 AIG EIS
TA MIE• A ME .... RA AN OI A D• I .fl TA 1 f]. ! j s " ID E A I• 11 IG IC I •Ir 'Ill IE A co NV ER l!l E .... EN IT LE
If ill £•Is C l A E
A E T A I ILi S • A 1 OM f Z E
AA u T t"' Jl R I S ON E 0
M l RE S it I TS RE AO
Pf HO ST E Ala. EE l y
12 Resembling
13 Sanct1f1ed v.,
18 P1trs
23 S.lf·love
25 Aware ot
Siano 26 He1vycord
27 W1t111ng
011c11
28 Cat1f c•tv
:?9 Tile Mel e g 2
words
30Sell
1111atied
31 Metal
tu ten er
33 Carry
JS As 1oon as
36 Reauts1t1
38 Moon'tderk ., ..
39 Troche
41 lnanun
determined
manner
•2 Boys name
44 lntormai
room
45 Trodden
WI'(
46 immerse "'
weter
• 7 Eared seat •8 Noblemen
501<u1dot
ranch
51 P1rtook ol
53 Poltsll rtvtr
54 Sel ol three
55The"A ot
'BA
58 Mine yield
59 Stuo•d
person
. . , .... -
I I
'
17
Irvine
*
VOL. 71, NO. 5, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
Today•s Closing
N. 'l'. Stocks
t
4
THU RS DAY, JANUARY 5, 1978 TEN CENTS'
Brown Calls Legislative Tax Session
SACRAMENTO CAP) -Gov.
Edmund Rrown Jr. today or·
dered a special sesswn of the
California Leg1slature on prop-
c r t y taxes aod asked the
lawmakers to send him a $1
billion twc relier bill by the end
of Lhis month
In a w1de·ranging addre!>s to a
JOint Se\,'HOO or the Leg1slature,
Hrown aJso said he will supPQrt
''!>ubstanllal mcreasci. .. in state
funds for mental hospitals and
<:ommuruty care programs. Rut
he did not spell out specifics.
The Democratic governor also
called for aboljtion of the busi·
ness inventory tax, long sought
by the business community.
He also said he will ask the
Leg1slalure again this year to
appropriate funds for new stale
prisons. A similar Arown re·
quest was denied last year.
Rut Rrown said in his
"St ate·of·the Slate" message
that property taxes are .. first on
the list" of challenges facing
Califomlain 1978.
"H·omeowners and renters
want relief. The rapid economic
growth has driven up assess-
ments," Rrown said
"Refore this month is out, you
should put on my desk a bill.ion
dollar property tax rehef pro-
gram."
Rrown asked for a lax relief
bill contairung no 1ncrcuses 1n
other slate laxes, and said 1t
should include ''stnngenl <:On·
trols" on local government
i.pendmg.
He ordered the special session
convened 112 hourl> after the
con~lus1on or hls speech
Rrown dtd not give reasons for
convening a spec1al session
when the Legislature is already
convened in its regular session.
Rut that is a parliamentary
maneuver that can get around
delays required under regular
house rules without going to
Republicans to get a two·lhirds
ma1ority.
Rills passed in the regular
session don't take effect until
Jan. 1, 1979. Rut a bill passed in
a special session lakes effect 90
days alter that session is ad·
journed.
Brown's desire for quick ac-
tion on property tax relief is
clearly fueled by a voters' tax
initiative on the June ballot
which would cut local property
taxes by about two-thirds.
The measure, known as the
Jarvis Initiative, would cut rev·
enues for cities, counties and local
schoois by about$7 biltion.
h·vine Hardest Hit by Storms
.. 0
Cle ... > ...
::) v
lAABUCO AOAO
IAVIH£ CE>ITEA
z 0 ci ,.. ,..
Ir 8AAAAHCA ~ 15 ~ PWY ;.. !t 0 • w z
.J ;.;.r 1·.... ' ~ . :;..;; _____ ...,.,.~;,
llAAltA>lrA RO.
.. ..i ..
lt cP
I o'"' ., ... 14
O.tly ...... ~ .. It .. "9"Y
FLOODED -Map s hows
I rvine str eets closed b y
rainstorm outlined in wavy
lines. 'Culver from Main to
Harranca was expected to
remain closed a week.
Teacher Suit
Proposed in
Saddleback
Saddleback Valley Unified
School District Trustee William
Kohler wants the district to sue
teachers for the cost of last
year's strike.
Kohler proposed Wednesday
that t rustees find out how much
the strike cost and bring a suit
against the teachers for that
amount. The trustees did not dis·
cuss his proposal but Kohler
said later that be hopes they will
consider it during their next
meeting.
H e explained that the
Pasadena school system is suing
its teachers for the $330,000 cost
of a strike in its schools. Since
the courts have said this could
be done and the state Supreme
Court has denied the teachers•
appeal, he said, similar action
now is open to other school dis-
tricts.
He said the court's action now
can be considered the law so
strikes are illegal.
Coast
Weather
Considerable cloudiness
tonight becoming partly
cloudy Friday. Fifty per-
cent chance or s howers
to11ight deer-easing to 4'0
percent Friday. Lows
tonl1bt 46 to 50. Hieha Fri··
day 56to62.
•NSIDE TODAY
Thlrl1tlfz ~i ago, Carl
1Corchlr hUdNd hU hot dog
earl 10 o -'4t Giid m* NI
Amulca11 DNom Coml lrw.
TodQJ, lie OUlftl UMt chcdft o/ •
Corl'• Jr. Tft'taunutt .. Sn P'~, POof CJ.
••• x
* * * Slwwers
COntinue
Locally
By JACKIE HYMAN
OI tile OaJly Pli.t Sl•lf
Water, water everywhere, and
more to come -but maybe
some sunshine this weekend,
predicts the National Weather
Service.
The forecast is for a 50 percent
chance of showers tonight, 40
percent Friday and clearing on
Saturday, with a slight chance of
showers again Sunday .
Weather speci a lis t Don
DePauw said the unusually
heavy rainfall Wednesday was
due to thunderstorm type
cumulonimbus clouds, which, he
said, are unusual for Southern
California.
DePauw said Wednesday's
conditions are what is known as
a squall line, a fairly unusual
weather eondition in Southern
California. It occurs just ahead
of a weather front where cold
and warm air collide.
A squall line results in severe
weather, includrng he avy
downpours like the one that
swamped the Orange Coast late
Wednesday afternoon.
DePauw said high tem -
per a tu re s tonlght and
Friday will be in the low 60s and
lows will be about 49 degrees.
• The squall line resulted in a
circumstance also unusual for
Orange County -more than an
inch of rain in many places dur·
ing a 24-hour period.
Officials at the Moulton Niguel
Treatment Plant in Laguna
Niguel this morning reported a
rainfall or 1.13 Inches for the
past 24 hours. The season total i.s
6. 78 inches, up from 3.58 inches
last year at this time.
In addition. about 30 seconds
<See SHOWER, Page A2>
Legion Chief
Sees 'Death'
Of Canal Pact
Robert Charles Smith, na·
ti onal commander of lhe
American Legion, predicted
Wednesday night in Newport
Beach that a wave of protest
from "the people" will kill the
new Panama Canal treaty.
Smith spoke to a crowd oC
about lSO Orange Coast Legion·
naires and their wives during a
dinner sponsored by Newpor\
Harbor Post 291.
He said ratllicatlon of the
treaty, which would phase out
U.S. control of the canal and
Canal Zone, is going to be the
most pressing issue facin& the
9Sth Congress wblcb reconvenes next week. (Related story, A4.)
The Legion.• nationwide has
launched a campaJan ln opposi-
tion to the treaty 1D which "the
rank and me members and their
friends are going to be 1endin1
their lnput to their con1ressDlell
•nd senators," be said in an ln·
t'trvlew prior to.his speech.
He believft there is ll'tat 0.1>-
poaltloo tot.be tratJ •mOQC the Ame.rtean pfl09le, but beoause of
apathy, that.::~oppOlltlon mlcht not be ex~;
Smith aald the Lelloo HD pro-
vide the meaAI for t.he public to
exfreaa ita vltwa oo tb• treaty.
•complacenc~ of the
American people ii the bluest
problem o( the. Ulilted State. at
WI tf~" be commeot*L "l'd
Uk• to see a ftllur.enc• ol llC·
UvUy. J bop• It WOD't take
IDHW hall~ k> wake ........
CULVER DRIVE tN IRVINE WASHES OUT OVER SWOLLEN FLOOD CONTROL CHANNEL
Melnten1ne9 Workmen lnapect Damage Near Mein Street; Culver W•• Ctoaed
Dollar Takes
'Sharp Rise'
LONDON (AP) -The
dollar r ose s harply in
Europe today following
major U.S. government in·
tervenlion on foreign ex·
change markets to prop
the currency.
But tradin g w as
cautious, and many of the
m arlcet's big operators
stayed on the s idelines
waiting to see whether the
Cart e r administration
would continue its supPQrt
action.
The BriUsh pound was
quoted at $1.88 in midaI·
ternoon, a drop or nearly 8
cents from its Wednesday
close at $1.9590 and down 2
cents from.its opening to·
day at $1.90.
Area Stzuknts
Help Capture
HBSwpect
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of ... 0.11, .......... .
Two young Orange Coast men
who didn't hesitate to get in·
volved are credited with saving
a 16-year-old Huntington Beach
girl from the violent auack of an
-elleeed would-be raptst.
•·It was beautiful work.
They're heroes," says Hunt·
ington Beach police detective
Art Droz of the two rescuers,
Robert Maness, 28, of Hunl·
in gton Beach, and Michael
Spears, 24, ol Costa Mesa.
He apoke or the capture last
Thursday by the pair of a sus-
pect who allegedly dragged the
teena1er off busy Beach
Boulevard lbto a grusy gulch
near Adams Avenue.
Lon Dean Vickery, ~. a Hunt..
lnaton ~ch abort order coot,
t.Oda1 remained ln Jail cuatoc1¥ ln lieu ol $10,000 tJall. Ha ta accuted of lb• atte1nJ)ted
rape lD a criminal comi>laint ls-
aued earlier tbll week by the Oranae County District At·
tomey'I Offlce.
lnveat11aton aay Maneu, the
tnltlal wltneea, and Spean to whom be cried for help, pounced
oo th• •uel*t as be pJmted the
pl down tn a 11eJd.
Sbe WU id IU'11Jl)' UHWted
Wore a.-~. bUt ta.'
(leHIDOll,.P ... .U) •
Fatal Plane Crash
Blailled on Weather
By The Associated Press
Torrential r ains and gale·
force winds flooded streets, lore
down trees ,and PQwer lines and
caused a fatal plane crash.
But in the Sierra, the storm
brought good news, leaving
behind the best snowpack in four
years.
By late Wednesday evening,
the storm bad dropped l 14
inches of rain on downtown Los
Angeles, pushing the season
total to 7.18 inches, the weather
service swd Thal is compared
with 5.30 inches lasl year and an
average rainfall by this date of
5.02 inches.
The California Department or
Transportation and Highway
Patr ol issued wind warnings
along the winding Grapevine
section of Interstate 5, with wind
speeds of up lo 60 mph recorded
Wednesday. Despite the snow,
rain and wind , few roads were
reported closed Wednesday af.
ternoon.
But CalTrans said state Route
2, the Angeles Crest Highway,
from Big Pines, to the Route 39
junction had been sealed ort
because of heavy snow. State
Route 99 between Arvin and the
junction of state Route S8 in
Kern County was closed because
of sand on the road. Arvin was
severely damaged by hurricane·
force winds and blowing sand
last mont.h.
By late Wednesday afternoon,
the C HP said cars were
hydroplaning on most Los
Angeles freeways when travel·
ing faster than 35 mph. But
speeds rarely exceeded that.
since minor accidents and
engine rtoodouts kept traffic
slowed down or stopped during
the evening rush hour.
Several lanes were flooded as
deep as four feet on transition
roads from the San Bernardino
and Santa Ana freeways, as
were lanes in both directions of
the Golden State Freeway near
Griffith Park, said the CHP.
In the eastern San Gabriel
Valley city of San Dimas, mid·
afternoon winds of up to 80 mph
were responsible for eittensive
damage to buildings. Winds
caused an estimated $50,000 to
$100,000 damage to a furniture
s tore alter winds blew off part of
(See STORM, Page AZ)
Coast
Highly
Damaged
By PIDUP ROSMARIN
Ot .. o.M.,.......,.
Wednesday's rainstorm bat·
tered South Orange County and
flooded streets in throbbing
wavesofheavy downPQurs that:
-Hurled lightning into a Hunt·
ington Beach home with such
force that firemen at a nearby sta·
t1on reported being jarred from
their beds.
-Flooded Costa Mesa City
II all.
-Send blutrs slipping onto
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
HIT BY RAIN-AS
STORM GOOD NEWS
FOR SKJERs-A3
Pacific Coast Highway in San
Clemente.
-Pelted parts of Laguna
Niguel and Irvine with bail.
-Forced flood-fearing Laguna
Beach merchants out into the OD·
slaught to pi le s andbags in froon>f
their stores.
In Irvine the situation seemed
worst. The city was pelted by af.
ternoon hail the size of BB shot
that caused drivers on Campus
Onve and other streets to stop
their cars; some car engines
were dead.
Residents this morning were
trapped in their neighborhoods
of the Woodbridge, University
and the Ranch developments,
which became peninsula com·
m unities surrounded on three
sides by flooded streets.
Irvine police dispatchers and
records clerks we re busy
answering telephone calls from
residents asking how to get out.
Trame was routed north along
one of the few WI.flooded sectio.ns
of Culver Drive, to the Santa
Ana Freeway, eas t to the
Laguna Freeway then south to
the San Diego Freeway.
Police officers stood at flooded
major intersections to dissuade
motorists from trying the UD·
derwater roads.
City maintenance crews
worked through the night shor-
ing up undermined sections or
roads, with the wors t road
destruction on Culver Drive.
where at one point, at the San
Diego Creek Bridge, nearly a
full lane was washed out.
Closed roads today included
Culver Drive from Main Street
<See RAINS, Page A2)
..
\~ OAIL ti 1l l
... w,,......
PRESIDENT CARTER DECORATES GRAVE OF U.S. SOLDIER
At Omaha Beach, Homage and Vow to Protect Europe
At Omaha Beach
Carter Promises
European Freedom
0:\-1/\HA Hf:AC ll , France
1 r\ P 1 Pn·..,1dcnt Carler JOtncd
the prcstdl·nl or f''rance today at
this World War II beachhead
and. surrouncfrd b.> stark while
markt•rs ovl'r American grave!),
vowed that ' Europe's freedom
w 1 I I n t• \' c r a g a 1 n b c e n ·
d.ini::cr1·d "
i\ t .i <,1mpll'. moving c•crcmony
.1 I a n Am 1• r 1 l' an m 1 I 1 tar y
1·1·mt:lt•ry <1tcip lhC' windswept
c·hff O\Prlook111g Omaha Beach,
l'.irtcr and Fn•nrh President
\ .dt'rv C1scard d' t<:~t:ung placed
;tlmost 1dt•ntical wrt'aths at a
lironze mcmor1al to t h e
Pendleton
Marine Held
In 2 Killings
Americans who died in the
liberation of Europe from Nazi
rule.
G iscard d 'Estaing told a
solemn, chrned gathering: "All
this Franee remembers. She ex-
presses her gratitude for all
those who fell ror her freedom,
to their families and lo all their
friends."
Carter and the French leader,
who fl ew to Normandy from
Paris aboard separate helicop·
ters, stood side by s ide during a
prayer for the 9,386 Americans
buried near the beach where
many of them fell during the D·
Day Allied landings of June 6,
1944.
At one point, the American
president bowed his head and
passed a hand across his eyes.
The taller Giscard d'Estaing
"tood ramrod sLrrught, looking
'ilra1ght ahead.
Fan.en B app9
'Berry: Good'
Storm Hailed
By JERRY CLAUSEN
Ol tlw 0411tr Pll•t Stall
While rams that fell Wednes·
day and early Thursday are
<'ausing some harvesting prob-
1 ems for Orange County
farmers, most concede that the
much·needed water is doing
* * * f~ro• Page A I
STORM •••
its roof.
Power outages were reported
in Rosemead, San Gabriel, El
Monte, Sierra Madre, Monrovia,
Clendora, San Dimas, LaVerne
<ind the City or Industry.
A Whittier home s ulfered an
estlm ated $17 ,000 damage after
1l reportedly was aet afire by a
lightning bolt Wednesday after·
noon, a county tire department
spokesman said.
Three persons died Wednes-
day after their Piper PA·22 got
lost in heavy storm clouds and
c rashed in Cleghorn Canyon
while en route from Ontario to
Chico, authorities said. The
single·engine plane crashed
about an hour after leavine On-
tario Airport, said a Federal
Aviation Administration official.
In Sycamore Canyon -left
denuded by last July's fire -no
serious mudslides or flooding
was reported, said Santa
Barbara County Flood Control
District officials. They noted
that following last week's rains,
the newly planted canyon region
appeared in good shape, with
plants sproutine on the scorched
ground.
"The ground just seem s to be
soaking up the rain like a
sponge," one official said. "It's
kind of surprising." ·
But in Oceanside near San
Diego, five homes on Roberta
Lane were reported flooded,
with as much as half a foot of
mud covering their noon. Resl·
dents said a hill behind the homes
had been graded by a developer,
so when the rains came they
washed part of the bill down into
the houses below.
A train which runs daily
b e tw een Escondido and
Oceanside was halted by the
rains Wednesday about three
males outside of Oceanside.
* * * Fro•PageAJ
much more good than harm.
A county agriculture com
mission spokesm an said early
today that farmers in the Irvine
Ranch area itre having some d1f·
ficulty harvesting cauliflower.
celery and broccoli because of
mud but that Lhe rams are doing
the ''strawberries nothing but
good."
He said strawbernes grown on
small acreages throughout the
county are not scheduled for
harves ting until late March
through JWle. "This rain will
leach the root structure and do
wonders for the crop," be added.
Fred Keller. Irvine Com-
pany's aericullure vice presi·
dent, said the inch or rain that
fell across the company ranch
has slowed down cauliflower and
celery harvesting and has halted
work in broccoli fields.
"We can't get the tractors lo,"
he said, adding that the com-
pany's avocado harvest also has
been temporarily stopped
because of the rain.
However, Kl'ller was happy
about the condition of Irvine Co.
grazing land. Late last month he
had predicted the firm would
Import hay to feed its 1,000 bead
of cattle.
He indicated this morning that
gr,asslands ar e now in good
grazing condition.
A Rancho Mission Viejo
spokesman said Lbis morning
that the latest s torm had dropped approximately 1.25
inches of rain on the ranch's 40,000
acres of grazing land.
The county's southernmost
ranch is running only 600 bead of
cattle on its range this year. Gil
Aguirre, vice president for
ranch operations, said last
month that his company is
stocking no range beef cattle
this year because of drought
conditions. Normally, he said,
the ranch runs up to 4,000 head
or cattle during the winter
months.
HE GOT INVOLVED
Huntington Beach'• Menees
0-'IY ...... Slottf ...._
HE RESPONDED, TOO
Costa Mesa's Spea,.
Fro• Page rl I
HEROES HAILED. • •
clothes had been partially tom
off and s he was hysterical,
police said.
"They saved her a lot of
a n guish ... a lot of mental
torment. .. a lot of tra uma. I
talked to her again the other day
and she seems to be doing just
fin e now "sajd Detecti ve Droz.
T he fa~t Maness, a Huntington
Beach resident and advertising
m ajor at Golden West College is
a normal, red·blooded young
man may have saved the J\.lgh
school girl from the horror of
VJOIPnt rape.
"I was driving down Beach
Boulevard and I noticed tbjs girl
walking alongside the road. I
always look at girls," he ex·
plained rather shyly.
"Then I saw a man walking
rapidly behind her. It just looked
funny. I puJled up at the red
light and looked in the rear view
mirror. I saw hjm grab her from
behind and drag her into the
field."
Maness hit the accelerator
and, tires squealing, sped into
an adjacent service station, yell·
mg to bystander Spears for aid.
Spears, an Orange Coast
College engineering major from
Costa Mesa, ran to help as Ma·
ness confronted the suspect later·
allegt•d to be \'1ckl•ry assaulting
the teena~cr on lhe ground
Neither is a physically large
m an, compared to the suspect
"E verything happened so Cast,
it just seemed the right thing to
do." says Spears. "It took both
of us lo gel him off her and sub·
dued. I guess we wrestled him
for several nunutes."
"Thev really dad super work
It was just a lucky thing he saw
what he did," said Detective
Droz.
Maness 1s more blunt about
what he and Spears did while the
shaken teen.aged victim ran back
to the service !)talion to call police
who found Vickery held captive
inside on arrival. .
"People bitch about crime.
but they don't seem willing to do
a nything about it." he said.
'·I think it's time the public
wasn't afraid to get involved."
Autos Kill Man
A 40·year-0ld man was killed
Wednesday night in Orange
when he was struck by one car
and then run over by a second
autQ, police reported. Tbey iden-
tified the victim as Joseph
Ernesto Garcia of Orange.
Ry The Asi.ociatt>d Press
A young Manne photog rapher
·IJ>parently scl<'ctcd his victims
.1s hl' wcnt on a shooting
"tabbing rampage at Camp
Pendleton that left two senior
t'o·workers dead and four others
v.ounded
In his remarks at the
c·em etery, Carter noted that
90.000 American servicemen
from t\\o \\.Orld wars lie 1n Euro
JH'Jn graves and that 200,000
uniformed Americans serve in
Europe
SHOWERS •.
Sgl. Earl J . Holley, 24, of
Staten Island, N. Y., was arrest.
NI Wednesday, sitting with the
.22-calibcr automatic pistol he
.a llegedly used to kill two senior
photographers al the base audi o· visual ('enter
1 • W c havf.' reason to believe he
knew who the victims were and
he sought them out," said Lt.
C'ol. l>. W Brown, head of the
public affairs office at the na·
t1on's l<irgest Marine base. 25
miles north of San Diego.
Master Sgt. Daniel P. Hurley,
42, of Uniontown, Pa., and Staff
Sgt. Gilbert N. Donham, 38, of
Ladelle, Ark., died of muJUple
g uns hot wounds, a Marine
spokesman said.
Hurley lived in Oceanside with
his Korean·bom wife and five·
"'eek -old daughter, a Marine
s pokesman said. He was dead at
the scene and Donham died in
an ambulance on the way to a
hospital.
Other Marines who knew
Holley told reporters he felt vie·
ticnized and ridiculed by other
non.commissioned officers in
the photography and audio-
vi5ual departments and was
qlloted as saying be would seek re-
venge.
DAILY PILOT
"We arc determined with our
al lies he re that Europe's
freedom will never again be en·
dangered,'' he declared.
$4,900 Loot
Taken in
Irvine Theft
Burglars broke into a home of-
fice and an elecLronics distribut-
ing warehouse in Irvine, taking
$4,900 in goods in the two crimes
reported Tuesday.
Barbara A. Carr, 40, of 4022
Escudero Drive, t old police
someone broke into her home of.
nee and took an adding machine,
a calculator, an electric
typewriter end a vacuum
cleaner. She valued tbe loss at
$1,250.
Burglars stole $3,654 worth of
office supplies and electronic
equjpment from Graymark En-
terprises offices and warehouse
al 1751 McGaw Ave., company
omcers said.
Taken were calculators, an
alarm clock, a microwave oven,
a cassette recorder, an electric
typewriter, a radio telephone
and an oscilloscope.
of hail felJ on the Laguna Niguel
area al 4:30 p.m. Wednesday,
observers say.
At Orange Coast College in
Costa Mesa, Charles Lewis re-
ported figures of 1.50 inches for
the past 24 hours, 6.36 inches for
the season and 3.76 inches for
last season at this time .
Bill Shields of Laguna ~ach'
Hardware noled'<a 24-hour lotal
of .44 inches, for a season lOtal
of 5.16 inches compared lo 4.29
last year.
Rainwatcher J. Sherman Den-
ny of Huntington Beach r eported
1.09 inches for the past 24 hours,
6.28 for the season and 6.32 for
last season at this time. He said
an unusually large amount, 4.03
inches, has fallen ln Huntington
Beach between Dec. 22 and to-
day.
J obn Gietien of the Orange
County Flood Control District
recorded a 24-bour total of .62
inches for Santa Ana. The season
total there ls 5.64 inches, com·
pared to4.46 lastyear.
Al Santiago Peak on Sad·
dleback Mountain, be said,
today's tally was 1.5 inches, for
a season total of 17.2 compared
to 11.0 last year.
One inch of rain provides an
estimated 10,000 acre feet of
replenishment for the county's
underground water basin.
Orange County Water District
ofCicials said today.
RAINS DAMAGING. • •
to Barranca Road and from
Bryan to Irvine Boulevard; Jef.'
frey Road from the San Dieeo
Freeway to Irvine Center Drive; Barranca Road from Culver
Drive to Jeffrey Roed: and allot
Rid1ellne Drive, wblcb wu cov-
ered in mudalldet. . •
Police eaUmated Rtd1ellne
would oot be fUlly cleared ot
debril for a mooth. thOQ&b city public wm'ltl said the roa4 would
be pauable by late todJl7. bar-rtna more rain. •
Parta ot CUiver were eoectecl
to 1tay clOled tor a weet lor re-
pair.
The police department nport-' •
td that a DllJortty of It.I COID·
munlcaUonl lines .,.,.. put out
of cQmJUJ11lon b1 rainw~ter
1eep1nc throuab the rOOf. thouah erner1~ llnel r.malned open,
Roqf 'l'alJ\IPOUts cOuldn't han-
clle the loedl aQd water backed
over n~ copiJils.
FhtJOon and Paclllc
Telepbcme labonn worked four
to five houri to keep the reJOaln·
lnl lines open and l'eltore the
doused ones.
Phone panels were dried with
hot ci'!freaaed air blowers;
some to be band-dried by
towel. •
Tbroqbout the COQDtJ. tblre
were DWMnJUa trafllc acddellU
t:aued by 11let'• flooded nreeu and low Yialbll~ tb.roqb tbe
drencblDI downpour• wblcb
cametnwave1. There,.... no eerlOWI IQJurtel
~rt.d.
Dam ... ID Saddlebaclt Valley
a.r .. 1 WN reported 1Upt.
T.1. Meado~, Oruae ccuni,
W a tier Worb Dlllrict' • feDeral man.,er, •aid rain waten ID tbe
Saa Juan and ~abUCO ctelb
would 1\lbltantlally add to \Ill·
der1tound water bulnl. !
Then wwe m.IDcir mad ~
ltm1 • tbe CrOwa VaJIQ 8111111 Oaop~
'
' RCA 17'~XL-100 portable
color TV with Slgnal Sensor
remote control ~~~
\
RCA's Signal Sensor
electronic remote
control
RCA
XL-100
1 llt ProjecU , 7 R"110lt
Model E8398R
1r d11oona1
Easy-chair conven-MOM.atMOTE
lence. Change c han· JUST S2tt.'5
nels, control volume,
turn set on and otf-
all from across the
A°CA 19'~•111M1Colomak table model
~ ,.
~' ~
[
-111·
-. • • -
-
Ii
I~ II
I~
SUPER VALUE
For a ColorTrak
Table Modef
RCA 15'~i.oon•I
XL-100 portable color TV
Model EX354
•One of a lhMh
•FtoorS ..... s
•Close-Outs
RCA 19'' Ofaoonal-78 Ei«ended Life Ct\assls Model F~3. One only •••
$369.90
RCA 19 • 01agonat Portable Model
FX-<466 ... S379.90
RCA 19' Diagonal Portable with
Remote Control, Model FU-4 78R • • •
$469.90
RCA 19" Diagonal Table Model With
Remote Control. Model FA-488 •••
$.479.90
Several Othors to ChooH From
Including Console Modela. Subt«t to
Prior Sale.
1,1.· 1lu1111 0111· f ""'""''.,. 1•1·ott••·tio11 Plu11.
275 East 11th St.
Cosfa''M.sa ·
I
17
Laguna/South Coast l\fternooa
N.Y. Stoeks
I
VOL. 71, NO. 5, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JANUARY 5, 1978 TEN CENTS 1
Clash Erupts Over Beach Craft Shows
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of tM D.11111 ~0•1 St•lf
Rrass beds on the beach.
merchants' rears or competition
and a beef between the chamber
of coml'T)erce and the Lagwia
Craft Guild spa_rked an hour and
a half debate in council cham·
bers Wednesday night.
Jn the end, the council voted to
allow three craft shows on Ma.in
Reach Park th!s year -but left
it up to the chamber and the
craft gwld to iron out their dif-
ferences.
The Laguna Craft Guild,
which bas conducted craft sales
in the city for the past decade,
asked the City Council for
permission to hold eight of the
s hows this year on the park
s1dewaUcs.
Rut chamber of commerce of-
ficials opposed the Sunday craft
show dates, claiming the Main
Beach Park area should not be
used for commercial activities.
The chamber was joined by
several merchants who claimed
eight shows would create com·
petition trom craftsmen who do
not pay rent on business build-
ings or taxes.
Other opponents to the shows
criUcii.ed t.be merchandise of-
fered for sale, with one woman
saying brass beds strewn on the
park, ''do not enhance lhe Image
of Laguna Beach."
But craft guild president Tom
Leslie sald his group requested
the eight Sunday dates to
replace dates on the Festival or
A-t-ts groun<t during the cham-
ber-sponsored Winter Festival.
The cra!t guild, he said, bad a
falling out with the chamber Jast
year over fees charged the euil<l
and individual craftsmen. He
said the craft guild wanted to
get out on its own.
Rut councilmen appeared
more concerned about patching
up differences between the two
local groups, with Mayor Brand
asking Les Ue, "Why can't the
chamber and guild get along?"
Chamber general manager
Frank Ruck said las t year's
Winter Festival went in the red
$700, and said the guild stlll
owes the chamber $1,000 tn ex· hibitor fees.
But Leslie said his group dld
not do that well in sales at the
festival last year, "and we just
didn't have the $1,000. We are
broke. When we get the rest of the money, we'll pay back the
chamber."
That, be said. is why the craft
(See CRAFT, Paie AZ)
Brown Orders
Special Session
Mflt "*l ...... ll>f4ary ........
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov.
Edmund Rrown Jr. today or·
dered a special session of the
California Legislature on prop·
e rty taxes and asked the
lawmakers to send him a $1
billion lax relief bill by the end
of this month.
In a wide-ranging address to a
joint session of the Legislature,
Rrown also said he will support
"substantial increases" in state
funds for mentaJ hospitals and
community care programs. But
CULVER DRIVE IN IRV1NE WASHES OUT OVER SWOLLEN FLOOD CONTROL CHANNEL
Maintenance Workmen Inspect Damage Near Main Street; Culver We1 cto1ed
HB Council
Laslwd by
Attorney Storm Damages Coast By ROBERT BARKER Ol ... o.I,,,......,
: Laguna Merchants Fight Flood With Sandbags
I By PlllUPROSMARIN Pacific Coast Highway in San Residenta this morning were
City Attorney Don Bon!a ac.
cused the Huntington Beach City
Council todav of incompetence and hypocrisy and with med-
d ll n g in the affairs of the
.city's legal department OfllleD<tllfl'lltO&aH Cfemenle. trapped in their neighborhood.I
Wt>dnt>sday's rainstorm bat· -Pelted parts of Laauna of the Woodbridge, University
tered South Orange County and Niguelandlrvinewithbail. and the Ranch developments,
floodl'd !>lrects in throbbing -Forced flood-fearing Laguna which became peninsula com·
Ronfa's verbal attack on city
leaders was the latest salvo in
the controversy that h as
followed a physical altercation
between Ronfa and Deputy City
Attorney John O'Connor Dec. ZT.
waves of heavy downpours that: Beach merchants out Into the OD· slaughttopilesandbags in front of -Hurled hghtrung into a Hwit-their stores.
inglon Beach home with such In Irvine the situation seemed
force that firemen at a nearby sla· worst. The city was pelted by af.
lion reported being Jarred from ternoon hail the size of BB shot
thei r h<'ds that caused drivers on Campus
Flooded Costa Mesa City Drive and other streets to stop
Hall their cars; some car engines -Send bluffs slipping onto were dead.
* * * * * * Sunshine Saturday?
Slwwers Forecast
Friday and Sunday
By JACKIE HYMAN
Ol tN Daily ~I ... Slelf
W atE'r, water everywhere, and
more to come -but maybe
some sun~hine this weekend,
predicts the National Weather
Service.
The forecast is for a 50 percent
chance of showers tonight, 40
percent Friday and clearing on
Saturday, wilh a slight chance of
showers again Sunday.
of hail fell on the Laguna Niguei
area at 4:30 p.m. Wednesday,
observers say.
At Orange Coast Collete in
Costa Mesa, Charles Lewis re-
ported figures of 1.50 inches for
the past 24 hours, 6.36 inches for
the season and 3.76 inches for
last season at this time.
BiU Shields of Laguna Beach
Hardware noted a U·hour total
of .44 inches, for a season total
of 5.16 inches compared to 4.29
last year.
* * *
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
HIT BY RAIN-AS
STORM GOOD NEWS
FOR SKIERS-A3
munltles surrounded on three
sides by flooded streets
Irvine police d.Jspatchers and
records clerks were busy
answering telephone calls from
residents asking how to get out.
Traffic was routed north along
one of the few unflooded sectiorut
of Culver Drive, to the Santa
Ana Freeway, east to the
Laguna Freeway then south to
t.be San Diego Freeway.
PoUce officers stood at flooded
major intersections to dissuade
motorists from trying lhe un·
derwater roads:
City maintenance crews
worked through the night shor-
ing up undermined sections of
roads, with the worst road
destruction on Culver Drive.
where at one point, at the San
Diego Creek Bridge, nearly a
full lane was washed out.
Closed roads today included
Culver Drive from Main Street
to Barranca Road and from
Bryan to Irvine Boulevard; Jef·'
frey Road from the San Diego
Freeway to Irvine Center Drive;
(Bee RAINS, P1ge AZ)
The city council said Tuesday
night it wouldn't allow the use of
city funds to pay legal fees that
might result from the latest Ron-
f a-O'Connor imbroglio.
City taxpayers already have
paid more than $10,000 In sup-·
port of the city attorney in a pre-
vious grievance case between
the two men.
Mayor Ron Pattinson con-
tended that le1al expenses ln the
latest flareup could cost tax·
payers up to $100,000 if counsel
is provided. The council lndicat.
ed unanimously that it Is unwill-
ing to pick up such a lab.
GROUP PUSHES
RECALL EFFOKI'
Based on results ot a recent
phone survey. San Clemente
Homeowners' Association bas
decided to continue its efforts to
initiate a recall of Mayor Donna
Wilkinson and Councilman
William Walker.
Of those polled, 73 percent
supported recall, 20.5 percent
opposed it and 6.5 percent were
undecided.. See story Paee Al.3. ~.-
Weather specialist Don
DePauw said the unusually
heavy rainfall Wednesday was
due to thunderstorm type
cumulonimbus clouds, which, he
saJd, are unusual tor Southern
California.
DePauw said Wednesday's
conditions are what Is known as a squall line, a fairly unusual
weather condition in Southern
California. It occurs juat ahead
of a weather front where cold
SnmDpark Slaapes llp
.ad warm air collide.
A squall line result.a ln severe
weather, lncludina heavy
downpours like the one that
swamped the Oraqe Coast late Wedn~ aftemooo.
DePauw uld hlsh tem·
peratur•• tonlth' and
Friday will be 1D tbt JCJW 60ls ucl
low• wW be about 49 d811'•·
Tb• 1quall llile nsulted ln a
dttumatance alao unusual ror
Oran,. OountY -more than 81\
inch of rain m many Pl•ee• d&ll"-11\a a 2H1our pfftod.
(0llJclalt at Wt Mquttoft Nltuel
Tnatmeot Plant l~,·.~aJ.~•
NS.uel lh1I meti1lD6'repo&Ud a
rafnlaU ol Lll Jaeltel lor ~
pett "biNis. Tbe ...... tGtal ti t.n ~ .,,ttoom s.a ..-
liilt r-.!• .... .... Ja-• .......... ..
Plane Crashes in Storm
aecUon of Interstate 5 with wind Jne f aater tbao as mph. But
speeds ot up to eo mph recol'decl 1peed1 rarely exeeeded that,
Wednelday. Despite the uow. einee minor accidents and
rain and w1od, few roada wen en1lne fioodouts kept traffic
reported c1oMd Wednesday al· 1lowed down or atopped durint
ternooa. tbe eveninl rush hour.
But Ca1Trau •aid •tat. Reim. Se•eral lenes were nooded u 2, the ~.a.t.::CNtt J!lllt,,.,, deep u four teet on transition ti'Om Ble'.~ to tbit Jl()Ute • roaai lrom. the Su Bernal'dlno
fonctlca ·bad ~ Haled oft and Santa Ana freeway1, u
\eeaue of beaVJ snow. State were 1aniii JD both d11*Uont ol
Rout•• b«lweeo Anln and the tM Golden Slate Prffttay, near
Juncllan ot ltate Route 61 ln Gritfttlt Pait, said theCHP. ktrn CcMlllt1 wu cloMd beea111e Jn ~ eastens Su G•brltl
Ol 1Ud • tbe road. Arvin wu V•lltJ dtY of SU .Dlmu. mid·· 1ev~ ~by bunicuw.. atteraoam Windl ot up to 80 mPh
forff WIDlla Md ~ und wtnt ,._..,able for ateulve Wt~ u.1,. &o bi1U4Jq1. Winds
81 lMe W.tMaday afternoon; H-.cl~lll -U.Sfli $!50,000 to tb• C.HP said can were $1.0IP..._ to a~
QiNPl•llt.81 o• aott JM t .,..._.Wtftai.,._Offp.rt~
.... ,,....,. ... ~ :-. .. .,~ .... Al) .........-·-----
he did not spell out specifics.
The Democratic governor also
called for abolition or the busi·
ness inventory tax, long sought
by the business community.
He also said he will ask the
Legislature again this year to
appropriate funds for new stale
prisons. A similar Brown re·
quest was denied last year. Rut Brown s aid in his
"State-of-the State" message
that property taxes are "first on
the ltst" of challenges facing
California in 1978.
·~-, ........ ACCUSED OF SLAYINGS
Sgt. Earl Holley
Pendleton
Marine Held
In 2 Killings
ByTbeAssoclatedPreas
A young Marine photographer
apparently selected bis victims
as he went on a shooting·
stabbing rampage at Camp
Pendletoo that left two senior
co-workers dead and four others
wounded.
Sgt. Earl J . Holley. 24, of
Staten Island, N. Y., was arrest·
ed Wednesday, sitting with t.be
.22-caliber automatic pistol he
allegedly used to kill two senior
photographers at the base aud.Jo-
vis ual cenler.
''We have reason to belleve he
knew who the victims were and
he sought them out," said Lt.
Col. D.W. Brown, head ot the
public affairs office at the na·
lion's largest Marine base, 25
miles north of San Diego.
Master Sgt. Daniel P. Hurley,
42, of Uniontown, Pa., and Staff
Sgt. Gilbert N. Donham, 38, of
LadeUe, Ark., d.Jed of multiple
aunabot wounds, a Marine
spokesman said.
Hurley lived in Oceanside with
bis Korean-born wife and five-
week-old daughter, a Marine
spokesman said. He was dead at
the scene and Don.ham died in
an ambulance on the way to a
boa pit.al.
Other Marines •ho knew
Ho Uoy Lold teporten. be felt vie·
tJmlsed and ridiculed by other
non·commt11loncd offleer1 1n
lb• pboto1raphy and audio.
v11u•I d parttnellta •nd •••
quoted u~bewouldffekre. v 111•, Acqualntanca said Holley bad
unclipped ao ammu.oition belt
aod Jald down hb putol, then aat on a table with hit lep tiOlled
wallinC to be tden after the
1preew•over, "He'd done What he hid to do.'• one aalcl.
<See BEUEU, Pace,AJ)
....
"Homeowners and renters
want relief. The rapid economlc
growth has driven up assess·
men ts," Brown said.
"Before this month is out, you
should put on my desk a billion
dollar property tax relief pro-
gram."
Rrown asked for a lax relief
bill containing no increases in
other state tues, and said it
should include ''stringent con-
trols" on local government
spending.
Trio Held
On County
Theft Rap
Three men arrested on the
roof of a Laguna Niguel gun
shop early th.is mornina have
been booked into Orange County
Jail for commercial burglary ot
firearms.
Sheriffs deputies, responding
to a silent burglar alarm at 1:35
a .m ., beard noises on t.be roof oC
Saddleback Valley Gun Center,
?:1601 Forbes Road, and called
for res.nforcements, a sherifrs
watch commander said.
Deputies surrounded the shop
while two others, armed with
shotguns, climbed the building's
fire ladder to confront the SUS·
peels beside a roof opening, the
watch commander said.
Arrested and booked later
were Clarence M. Gammage, 23,
of Camp Pendleton, Elston D.
Gammage, 21, or Los Angeles
and Floyd A. Hopgood, 21. of
Camp Pendleton.
Deputies said the three sur•
rendered without resistance, de·
nying they had anything to do
with the 21 new rifles. shotglm.S
and pistols tied in a bundle near
roof's edge.
The store's roof vent had been
pried off with an ax and a rope
ladder dropped 'tnside the store,
deputies reported. The guns ap.
parently had been tied together
inside t.be shop·and pulled to the
roof with a rope, the watch com·
mander said.
'Coast
Weather
Considerable cloudJness
tonight becoming partly
cloudy Friday. Filly pe.r-
ceDt chance of showers
tonlabt decreasing to 40
percent Friday. Lowa
tonJght 46 to 50. IDghs Fri· day ~to82.
•NSIDE TODAY
Thlrt11.U f/«Jfi OQt>, Corl
Karch4r hUdwd Id.I hot dog
corl to a car and ~ Me
American Drtom COtM ,,,,..
.Todo11, hit 0t0n1 IM chafn o/
Carl'• Jr. rtltail~•· SH
Ftaturlng, Pog. Cl.
•••es AtY_...._ A11 ....,,,,_, .....
~~:::.--"' : --~ ='.:t. ~ 55· ~ Au-....r: ~ ~==.c..11
OOll 1 8" A'4 = :=-:.:: ~ r-J:':. .... ....... It' ... ,....... ,...._ cw ......
... •••• Q .... ~
1
\:.! DAL ' Pit f L SC Tl'lurlday January 5 1978
.4i Omaha Bearla
Carter Vows
Europe Safety
0 M A II A B I': AC It . 1'' ran c e
!'AP l Pr<':.td(•nt Carter Joined
the president of France today at
this World War Jl beachhead
and, surrounded by stark while
markers ovl·r Am<'ri<.'an graves,
vowt.•d that "Europe':. freedom
w 111 n c v t· r again be en·
dangered "
Al a simple. moving ceremony
Jt Jn American mtl1tary
cemetery a1op the windswept
cltff ovcrlooktn~ Omaha Beach.
Carter Jnd French Pre:.1dent
\'alcry G1scard d'Estaing placed
"lmosl 1dl'ntu:al wreaths at a
l'l ronLc memorial lo the
Dollar Takes
'Sharp Rue'
LONDON <A P > The
dnllar rose :.h;.irply Ill
Europl· tot.lay following
m aJ<>r U S. govt•rnmcnt 1r1
lt·rvt·ntion on fore1j!n ex ·
<'hange markets to prop
thl· curn•ncy.
But trading was
c·aut1ous. and many of thC'
mark<•t's big opt•rators
'i lJYl'cl on lht• stckltncs
\\Jilin$! lo M·c \\hethcr the
Carter adm1n1strat1on
would continue its support
action
The British pound was
quoted at $1 88 in m1daf·
ternoon. a droµ of nearly 8
cent:. from its Wednesday
elosc• at SI 9500 .ind clown 2
n•nts fr umrts opening to·
day at Sl 90
Americans who died 1n the
liberation of Europe from Na.z1
rule.
Giscard d 'Estaing told a
solemn, chilled gathering. "All
this France remembers. She ex-
presses her gralttude for all
those who fell for her freedom,
to their families and to all their
friends "
Carter and the French leader.
"ho flew to Normandy from
Paris aboard separate helicop-
ters. stood s ide by side during a
prayer for the 9.386 Amencarus
buried near the beach where
many of them fell during the o.
Day Allied landings of June 6,
1944.
At one point. the Amencan
president bowed his head and
passed a hand a<.'ross his eyes
The taller Giscard d · E~taing
stood ramrod straight. looking
straight ahead.
In his remark s al the
cemetery, Carter noted that
90,000 American servicemen
from two world wars It(• in Euro·
pean graves and that 200,000
uniformed Americans serve tn
Europe.
"We are determined with our
allies here that Europe's
freedom will never again be en-
dangered," he declared
Pointing to more than two ccn·
turies of French·Americcin
partnership, dating to the
American Revolution. Carter
told his French audience·
"We're proud of what we've
done together. We're sure our
friendship will be everlasting."
Brought by bus from Germany
for the occasion were troops ol
the U S. 1st Infantry Division
that lost 2,000 men at Omaha
Beach on D-Day.
Front Page A J
RAINS DAMAGING. • •
O:Hranca Road from Culver
Drivl' tn .J('ffrC'y Hoad; and all of
H1d~l'lim· l>nve, which was cov-
N<•d 1n mudslides.
l'ol1ce estimated Rid~eline
\\oulli not lw fully cleared of
d1·brt'i for a month, though city
public works said the road would
111· µac;sable by late today. bar·
rin~ more ratn
I' arts of Culver were expected
to MJV closed for a week for re-
pair.
The police department report·
t·li that J ma1onty of its com-
m uni cations lines were put out
of c·omm1ss1on by rainwater
~ecp1ng through the roof. though
t m<."rgency hnes remained open.
Roof ramspouts couldn'l han-
dle the loads and water backed
over floodproor copings.
Firemen and Pacific
Telephone laborvs worked four
lo five hours to keep the remaln-
ng ltnes open and restore the
doused ones.
Phone panels were dried with
hot compressed air blowers;
some had to be band-dried by
towel.
Throughout the county, there
were numerous traffic accidents
caused by slick or flooded streets .
and low visibiUty through the
drenching downpours which
came in waves.
There were no serious injuries
reported.
Damage in Saddleback Valley
a reas was reported slight.
Ther,e were minor mud prob-
lems on the Crown Valley and
Oso parkways. County road de-
partment crews were shovellng
mud off roads in the Silverado
Canyon area. where mud re-
portedly formed a natural dam
ecross Silverado Creek, causing
flooding.
T.J . Meadows. Orange County
Water Works District 4 general
manager, said rain waters in the
6an Juan and Trabuco creeks
would sub8tantially add to un·
derground water basins.
' Jn HunUngton Beach, a home
Jn the north part or the city was
jtruck by lightning which
OR ANOE COAST L•K
DAILY PILOT
burned a hole through the roof
but was quickly doused by
firemen stationed just around
the comer.
Damage in Newport Beach
was slight although city of·
f1cials said streets in low-lying
Balboa Peninsula and Balboa
Island remained flooded hours
after the storm passed.
Much of Costa Mesa was
turned to an asphalt-bottomed
sea as many gutterless roads
were transformed to channels
complete with flooded cars and
floating garbage cans on State
Avenue near Wilson Street.
A section of 19th Street was
wholly under waler; Costa Mesa
police detoured trafhc onto
smaller downtown area roads.
Costa Mesa Cltv Hall
employees reported about an
inch of rain -on the second floor
-because drain pipes couldn't
handle the fast-falling rain.
Firemen drained the backwash
with water pumps, confining
dam age to a soggy carpet.
In San Clemente there was
slippage of bluffs along Pacific
Coast Highway, one lane of
which was closed because of
mudslides, from Estacion north
to Camino San Clemente.
Firemen in Laguna Beach
helped downtown merchants pile
sandbags in front of their stores
lo prevent flooding; it. worked,
according to reports.
Several small mudslides were
reported in that city, one in the
800 block or Bluebird.
* * * Front Page A I
STORM •••
its roof.
Power outages were reported
in Rosemead, San Gabriel, El
Monte, Sierra Madre, Monrovia,
Glendora, San Dimas, Laverne
and t.he City or Industry.
A Whittier home suffered an
estimated $1'1,000 damaae after
it. reportedly wu set afire by a
lightning bolt Wednesday after-·
noon, a county fire department
spokesman said.
Three persons died Wednes-
day after their Piper PA-22 1ot
lost in heavy storm clouds and
crashed in Cleghorn Canyon
while en route from Ontario to
Chico, authorltlea said. The
slngle-enetne plane crashed
about an boor after leaving On·
tarlo Airport, said a Federal
A vlattoo Admtnlst:ratloa Official.
to .sycamore C~on -left
denuded by lut July 1 fire -no
aerlou1 mud.llldes or f1ood1D1
wu reported. uld Santa
Barbara County Flood Control
Dl1trlct offlclala, Tb•r. notod that foll~ lut week 1 ralal. tbe newly P1antAld canyon reaton
appearecl ln 1ood 1bape, with
plants eprouUn& on tho acorcbecl croand. ,
'"be ~ juat IMllll to ht • akin• up the rain Uk• a
1pon1•." .-ometai aatd. •1t•1 klnd of MJiliilAI .••
But ln oeu.n:atde Qtar San Dte10, ft" ..._. oa Robena
Lane wen reponed ftOOd~.t.
wltJt u mucb •hall a foot or
m1.Lcl c~ tM1r noon.
Fro• Pagr . t l
BERSERK. •
Brown saJd Hollev had sought
private talks with his superior
otf1cer:. s hortl y before
Chri&tmas tn \\-htch he com-
plained of d1ssat1sfacl1on with
his Job ailer be111g transferred
from photography to the audio-
visual supply room.
"Specif1cally. he pressed some
grievances toward more seruor
men" m th~ photo departmen~
Brown said in a telephone in:
tervlew Wednesday.
A Marine a<.'count of the ram-
page said Holley attacked three
of his victims at the center, then
ran lo a nearby photographic
laboratory where he shot three
other men.
"When he came into the first
building. he shot one man and
ignored two others. then went to
a supply room and stabbed two
m e n. ignoring several other
\\Or kers -a man and 1t
woman." Brown said
El ~orro Trailer Gutted
Holley then went to the photo
lab where he opened fire on
three non-comm1ss1oned of-
ficers. again selecting them out
of a crowd. the colonel said.
Countv firemen from Lae una Hills and
Emerald Ray worked 30 minutes to ex-
tinguish a stubborn fire in a mobile home
Wednesday <.1fternoon al El Morro Mobile
Jlome Park. The homt.'. which was vacant
at the time of the 3: 15 p.m . blaze, is
owned by Paul D. Sullivan. Cause of the
blaze, which did $13,000 damage lo the
structure, is under investigation, county
fire officials said today.
Laguna Girls
Injured in
Mo-ped Crash $105,000 Fund Studied Two sisters on a mo-ped bike
were dumped to the pavement
near LagWla Reach High School
this morning, but both were
treated and later released from
South Coast Community
hospital.
By ANNE COOPER
Ol llw 0.flf P'tlol SU.II
The $105,000 made from the
!>ale of property adjacent to
Dana Hills High School for a
county street right-of-way will
be earmarked for the high
s<.'hool. but the school board
wants a sciy on how it's spent
Capistrano Uruf1ed School Dis·
tncl trustees voted unanimously
Tuesday to accept the county's
offer of $105,000 for 1.6 acres
The land will be used for part of
the Stonehill Drive extension.
Su pert n lendent Jerome
Thornsley recommended to the
5<.'hool board Tuesday that the
runds be turned over to Dana
Hills administrators and com-
munity, to be used at their dis-
cretion.
Trustees have said at previous
school board meetings that they
are looking for a way to fWld
seals <tnd ltghtmg for the Dana
Hills stadium. San Clemente
ll1 g h currently has the only
s tadwm with lights and seating.
used by the three d1stnct high
schools
Capistra no Valley High 1n
Mission V1cJO has had $359,250
set aside from girt monies for a
second fully equipped stadium in
the district. Funding came from
thl' M 1~sion Viejo Company,
which requested that the money
be used at a Mission VieJO
school. Dana Hills, an older
school than Capistrano Valley, ls
located in Dana Point.
"The administration and sup-
port groups at Dana HiUs have
strong feelings about priorities
for the spending of the fWlds
which will accrue to tbe district
with the sale or the Stonehm ac-
cess property," Thornsley said.
"My recommendation is to
I Candidate
Rejected in
Laguna Race
A c heck wilb the county
Registrar of Voters shows that
petitions from 11 of the 12
Laguna Beach council can·
didates qualify them for the
M arcb 7 election.
But the petition of taxi driver
Tom Adams was disqualified,
according to City Clerk Verna
Rollinger, who said t.he former
candidate did not have the re-
quired 20 signatures of qualifted
registered city voters.
Mrs. Rollinger said the order
in which candidates will appear
on the city ballot bas also been
determined, as the result of an
jmparUal lottery.
Laguna Beach candidates, in
order of appearance on the
ballot include:
Barbara Smith, Phyllis
Sweeney, Mike Esko, Howard
Dawson, Diana Dike, Wayne
Ba1lln, Kelly Boyd, James
Bishop, Maggte Meggs, John
Gabriela and Adena Gay.
E,.._PageAI
CRAFf •••
gu.Ud needl etabt da)'I t.o con· auct the.Ir abowa. .
Councilmen voted to allow
three dl)'s of craft shows at Main Beach Park without apecl·
tytn1 which dat• tho aulld may
uao. That ls to bo determtned in
a meeUni bttween the chamber,
craft ,wfd and city oUlolal1.
Tb• council did n°' preeludo
th• potalblllty that the lulld
'may have other craft aboww -
but •UDO!~ that llaln Beac.b Part 11 oft·llmltl for futUN
ib0w1, SDdlcattnl &Mt tile IJ'OUP ml1ht me ,._ Aveaut, &be
l•UH) 11oandii or a itltin tho
southern~ ol town. ·
• I ! •
,>
give the discretionary choice to
the school ," he said, "but that is
a matter of philosophy.
"I have great confidence in
the Dana Hills adminJstrators
and parents ... said trustee
William Thompson of Mission
Vie10. "This is really rather a
modest sum. I don't have any
qualms whalsocver about letting
them decide how to spend it.
.. As an elected school board
trustee. I ree l tl is my
respons1b1Hty how district fWldS
are spent .. s aid Edward
Westberg of San Clemente. "This
1s a s ale of property paid for by
taxpayen from throughout Ute
dis trict
"I have a fear," Thompson
said, "that through a lack of un·
derstanding on the part of the
board, we might not allow the
funds lo be spent as parents and
administrators wish. This is a
two-headed sword."
The amended motion unan-
imously approved by trustees
provides that the $105,000 from
the land sale will be earmarked
for Dana Hills High School. 'Ihe
school staff will present a te<:·
ommendation for its expen-
diture to the· district school
board.
"I want to offer some as-
surance that unless their recom-
mendation 1s way out in left field,
we will accept it," said
Thompson.
Laguna Beach police officer
Terry McAdam said a small
sedan, driven by student Tori
Lea Peekham, 17, of 31862Sunset
Ave., South Laguna, collided
with the mo-ped, spilling its
riders onto St. Ann's Drive near
Park Avenue.
Sisters Mary Anne Widen, 17,
driver of the mo-ped and Lisa
Marie Widen, 15, both of 1313
Terrace Way, were treated at
the scene for cuts and bruises
and transported to the hospital
following the 8 a.m. crash.
RCA 17':..VOne• XL-100 portable
color TV with Signal Sensor
RCA 15'~on••
XL-100 portable color TV
remote control ...... ~·. ~
RCA's Signal Sensor
electronic: remote
c:ontrol
Easy-chair conven·
lence. Change chan·
nels. control vol ume.
turn set on and off-a 11 from across the
room.
RCA
Xl-100
.__
T~t Plolttll 17 Remolt
Modtl £831111\
11· 011110"11
tf~llMOTE
JUSTUtf.95
"' -:0 -
...
~
RCA 19'dill90Nf Colol'n'ak table model
SUPER VALUE
For a ColorTrak
Table Model
Model EX354
• One of a Kinds
· •RoorS .... 1
•Close-Outs
RCA 19 · 0 1agonal-78 Extended Life
Chassis Model FB«3. One only ••• $369 90
RCA 19" D11gonal Portabt• Model
FX-466 ••. 1379 90
RCA 19" Diagonal Portable with
Remote ContrOl. Model FU-478R , ••
$.469 90
RCA 19" Diagonal Table Model With
Remote Control, Model FA""88 •••
U7990
S•verat Others to ChooH From
lt1elud1no Console Models. Subject to
f»rlor Sale.
1~1,· lhoul Our f 'o11su111f•r Pror1••·tio11 Pl1111.
,
275 East 17th St.
Costa Mesa ....................
20....w ... .-cer.. •.
Phone 642·18i2
Store HouiT Otil'y M Stt. 9-5 30 ...............
All warranffes
handl.cf by UI -
right here at th•
store. Master Charge
VISA -budget· .
P.Gpllllti crranged·
l
\6 SC
Or.lnge Coast Daily Ptlol Editorial Page ....................................................... _ Thurldey, January S, 1978
Rober1 N Weed/PubliSMr Thom.s Keevll/Editor
~rtMra Krelblch/Edit0tlal Page Edhor
Cities' Elections
May Bring Change
Thl' rnunt~ ·.., lhrl't' most southerly cities LagunJ
Beach, San Clt'ml'nl t· and San Juan Cap1strcrno fa<.·c
Man·h 7 t·1ty {'Ou11<.·1l 1.•lcctions in \\ h1ch nc•w maJonl11.•..,
c-trc possible und thut might mean major changes of
din•ct1on in tho::.e munic:ipahtics.
La,:?una B(•ach ha.., 11 non-incumbent candidates n
mg "-Ith Councilwoman Phyllis S\\ceney for three corl
teslL·d {'1ty (•ouncil seals !\tr:-. S\\ecncy has said she
a.lmo:-it didn 'l run for rc·<.'lect10n, hut c hange d her mmd
~!aiming s h e !-tl'('S no candidates who would continue the
current city council's policies. \\ h1c h she dcscribcs as
p rotcctmg the tit) 's scc·n1c bcaul\ and 11111quc population
mix
In Sc.in Clemente. Councilman Tonv DiG1ovan111 face-;
I 3 non-incumlJl•nt ~and1<lak.., Ill the race for three Cit\
council seats. D1Giovann1, the uni) Democrat o n the c1l\
council. has said his Hcpublican friends te ll him he ...,
more conscrvatl\'C than <rny of his fellow councilmen.
The present <'II~ council ha-. taken a traditionalh
consl·rvative !)lalll'(' on many l"i!)UCS, f1ght111g s tate and
Cedc·ral "intcrf(•rcrH:e" tn what t'tl\ counc ilmen say 1s cit)
bus inl'ss -· cvC'n when lhl'ir posit ion has meant turn mg
do\\ n tempting l cdcral funds.
T en cand1<lall''> all' run111ng tor ~an .Ju,m 's three <.'On ·
tc·-;t<·d dly c·ot1nl'1 I :-.t·..ils . mdu<hng incumbent John
Swl'l'ncy.
A n ew allia nc·f' 1s po .... :-.1hle on S,rn Juan·s cit~ counC'il,
\\hi ch has s plit 3-2 \\1th the majority favoring gro\\th
m unagement and agncultural preservation measur es. A
new :-.la te of c·otm cilmt•n might rcvl'rsc much of what the
c·urrcnl city council ha!-. hailed as progress.
The largl' number of residents in the thrl'e cities who
have gone through lhL• ftlmg procedure to become can·
didalt•s refkt'l!-t high interest in the March elections.
Changl's in go' crnment, wht'n they come. aren't
~ii\\ a)~ for th<· h<.·tter. hut their 11oss1bihly n early "lwa) '>
rnakl·s tor 1•:-.c·1t1ng ell·<·t1CJns.
Preparing for Growth ....
Sun Clc nwnt<.'·s population will s hift dramaticall y in
the t'ommg rlN-;Hlc a ... the Forster , Reeves and V1sbeek
Ha1H'hes Ill 11111 t hc·ast<.•rn San Clemente arc built out 1n
t hou .... ands of rww hom<.·s.
c; rad111g alrt>ad.' is under '"ay on the Forster Ranch,
loc,1tl'(l ea..,l of the San Diego Freeway and south of the
Jo:st rt'lla < prt•\ 10usly l S horecliffs golf course.
Hy 1!)84 , :l.!M2 new homes are to be built on 2,170 acres
t here· -all that remams of the great ranch which onc:e
:-pn·.td from El Toro to 0{'eansidc
,\ g rC'al <l<.·al of plan111ng has gone mlo another area
'' h1C'h was orwt.• part of the For!-ttcr Ranch Mission
\'il•to H11t S;m Clemente's acres of new homrs will not be
.1 fl l.1nnl•d (•ommunil~ ltkl' ;\lts~1on \'1<.•JO , th<') \\Ill be part
111 till' l'it~ nl S.111 Clem1mte.
\\'hilt· it t·an hl' argued that publit· fodlities and
-..en 1r<•s shn11ld he t'cntrall) lot·atcd, relocating the~
the population shifts "Ill be nu :.1dvantagl• if 1t leaves a
1h.•p11•...,st•d do\\ nlo\\ narc· a .
( '0:1''<'1l'nt1ous mo111loring of new ho us ing projects by
San Clenwnt(' c.·1t1zcns may help the city avoid growin g
pain" t·xpt•nt·nced b) othl'r Orange Count) c1t1cs .
• Opinions expressed 1n tho space above are those of the Daily Pilot.
Other views expressed on this page are lhose of their authors and
ar11s1s Reader comment 1s invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P 0.
Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321.
Boyd/Cat's Eyes
l\y L.~1. BOYD
lllstorv rrcords that ct•r-
tain :.mcicnt Turks rla1m l'd
thl'Y could tell the time of
cla y by lookin~ into a cat's
,., cs. Might be something to
11 . Believe l recall having
1 ,•ad somcwh<'re th••t the
pupils in a t'al'c; eyes con·
tract and expand prcd1t'lably
111 r e lations hip t o the
whereabouts of the sun. Will
re!>earch this further. Stand
by.
Was JUSt 99 years ago that
Rear Admiral Daniel Am-
men brought t.be first bowl of
goldfish into this country
from Japan.
Q . "What's the. most
popular new car color now?"
A. Blue. With white second.
Then silver.
Pour out of fi ve of the peo·
pie in Canada who speak
French speak only French.
R e ports of child abuse
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
IC the pas&. office a.nd
Amtrak haven'&. con-
vinced u• of 1overo-ment'• lnefflcl,ocy. l.b
ener1y pro1ram cer·
lahaly abou.ld. ' c.s.c.
111mp considerably during
tht> winter months, sad lo re·
port.
What qualifies
archaeologist Iris Cornelia
Love for membership in the
Proper Job Club Is the fact
1h:rt she seven years ago dis·
rovcred lhe whereabouts of
the long lost statue of the
lov<' goddess Aphrodite.
She'd put in a lot of time
a round the Mediterranean
d1~~1ngs in search of it. but
that's not where she found
Praxiteles' masterpiece. In
the basement of the British
Museum ln London i.s where.
Question cropped up as to
how "fire" came to m ean
d Is m issed from a job.
"That's obvious, dum dum,"
writes a swift client. "Fire ts
also a synonym for discharge
meaning to get rid or in a
hurry, zap!" All right.
Youna inexperienced
seamen aboard l'hip in the
old British navy we re al
lowed 14 inch • or 11pace in
which to sling their canvas
hammocks. The older petty
officers were authorized 24
Inches or space. Some his-
torians feel this admiralty
rulo to give more room to tho
seasoned H.llort was a subtlt
rocoplUon oflhat thin.I called
mlddleageapread.
Fm~en perc~nlof the people
in thla country provlde
all the food, ~oods and
aervlcea tor the entt(et
populaLion. Or 10 say tbe
atatlatlotans. Jntercst1n1, If
true. And If true, ll'• quit• a measure Ol U.S . t~hao1ot1.
I.I •t not! But v.-hal ato those other 17 out of 20 people do;;
ln.1, meanUm., pray? Thia
can set pret\y deep. Time tor
a nap.
Earl Waters
Truck 'Crackdown' Questioned
llas thl' Cahforn1a H1ghwav
P Jtrol cracked down on spcedin~
trucks'' It!> rel·ent report of more
lh<tn 5,000 c1taltons ha\ing been
1s..,uC'd to speeding truck drivers
during th(' month or October sug-
1-:l'sts that, ut long lust, the com
pla1nb of 11111tonsts have seeped
through to C.:HP Comm1ss1oner
CilenCra1g
Almost from the 1111:ept1on or
the unreahst1t' 55 mph speed
l1m1t. thl'
rno t or 1n g
public h as
bC'en ple<tclrng
for protec:t1on
from thl·
ht'hemoths of
the highwuys
w h i (' h
thunder down
lr om on h1i-:h
on fret-" ay
lravellers, ta1l~..it1n~ an<I
othrr" IM' terronz111g driver-..
" ho ha Vl' the temt•nt v to s tand in
thl•ir wav by obsen 1ng the
spt•('d limit
Last summt'r Cr.11g .innounel'<I
.i "c r a<·kdo" n" on the tru<'ks anti
I he ·Oct<>bl'r r C'port tC'ndcd to
:-hO\\ it was being <«..rried out
1\nd. although the aet1v1ty sho"'n
Jmounted to barely more than
one truck stopped during the
month bv each st.:itc· traffic of
ficer. it still would be significant
had the target indeed been tho!:ie
roaring beasU. pf the road about
whom the public has bl'en com·
pl<uning
BUT l\N examination of the
focts cast -.ome doubt ahout lhr
"crackdo ..... n " While there arc
only about 90.000 tractors reg-
istered in California an estimat-
t•d 300.000 such unite; ·enter the
:-.tale eat·h ) ear These arc the
motortZl'd components "h1ch
pull the hu~l' freight trailers seen
rumbling up and down the
frt•ew ays
And.· although it 1s not known
how much uf the time thC!>C
trucks. uut of state and home
based, are actutilly on California
highways, the rclat1vely small
number compared to the total of
passenger cars. might m ake
5.000 speed citutions seem a
heavy enforcement effort.
However , CIIP sources dis·
.. close that the count was not limit-
ed to the type of truc ks which
come instantly to the mind of the
• motorist but Included a m YTiBd
or other types. There are nearly 3
million •·trucks" registered m
the state. These include panels,
pickups and station wagons,
which were n ot counted.
although many two-axle and
other s mall trucks were. So the
total oC 5.000 is no way indicative
of the CHP effort agaiJlsl the
''You're str6ddl i l"1~ -the wron~ <4~1.·
Nicholas Von Hoffman
mammoths about which Ule
publJe complains.
IN COMPARING the CHP rec-·
ord on speed citations to trucks
againsltheoveraUof&9,052issued
to vehicles or all types it might
still seem a good performance •
being more than S porcoot,
especially when the number of
trucks is matched against the
near 12 million passenger
vehicles registered.
Hut companng total reetstra-
tions is a false measurement.
With rare exceptions passenger
cars stand idle far more than
they are in use and many of them
never or rarely venture out on
the freeways. Not so with the
monster trucks whose hi&h costs
~ake it essential to get. the
highest usage possible. The only
real measurement then would be
a comparison of mileage
tra\'elled on state highways by
true ks versus passenger cars.
One thing the report clearly re-
vealed is that speed occupies
nearly SO percent or the emphasis
or the CHP for the total number
of tickets written for violations of
all types was only 195,194 .
ALSO misleading is the total of
traffic officers on the CHP, re-
ported as 4,165. The five-day
week reduces the number availa-
ble for duly to about 3,000 whUe
sick leave, courtroom time and
other .auses further erode the number to where there are prob-
ably no more than 2,000 reporting
for duty on any given day to cover
a 24 ·hour period. On certain
holidays, when super efforts are
made, the patrol may field as
many as 1,000 at one time but
overtime earned then reduces the
C II P strength on subsequent
days.
It is this force which must not
only cover both s ides of the
stale 's 3,794 miles of freeway and
more than 11.000 additional miles
of s l ate highway, but also
thousands of miles of county
roads.
Is Remedial Education Money Wasted?
WASJllNGTON Every few
months from one section of the
country or another comes fres h
news confirming lhe fact that
many l'h1ldren pass in. through
and oul of school without learn·
ing to rC>ad or figure.
So parents and o the r tax·
payers demand that kids who
d1 dn 'l ll'urn
anything be
held back. a
pracltce that
\\aS ~l\Cn up
some \l'ars
ago wh(•n
so m e b o d y
noticed that
the f irst
grade at PS.
40 had 11 SIX·
footers in 1t.
. Being a 14-year·old Big Stoop
1n a class of otherwise bright
a nd proficient 10-year-old chums
1s thouJ:ht to cause anxiety and
inferiority feelings in the larger,
laggard scholar who may then
wap his little buddies around in
a paroxysm of misplaced resent·
mcnt
To get around this problem 1t·s
being suggested that kids who
dnn 't even know the easier part
of the multiplicatron table be
Mailbox
s hunt ed o ff to speci al
t'lasS<'!'> ... a scholastic c h<11n
gang whl're they will crack their
rock-like heads learning that fix
8 equals 48. If they don't lccirn to
read, as they probably won't, at
least they will be failing out of
sight And no more diplomas for
the boneheads; he nceforth all
they get 1s a certificate of attcn·
dance
BEHIND all this concern and
activity are some propositions
which may or may not be true.
Proposition one is that schools
are lo teach r eading and writ-
in~; proposition two is that when
they don't it's the teachers' fault
and the taxpayers are gelling
cheated; number three is that 1£
you don't have an abnormally
depressed I.Q. you can and you
mus t learn to read and do
elementary arithmetic.
Of course. all depends on
number three. We know from
ourselves and our friends it
doesn't follow that if you can
read you can count. Some of us
a re whizzes lit numbers and can
barely read. the reverse 1s even
more common. As for the goal of
a totally literate society, while 1t
may be possible to teach every·
on<-but the mentally handi-
capped how to read, it also may
be very expensive. Somewhere
"'c hit the luw of diminishing re·
turns
THE COST in teachers, re·
ml'dial reading instructors ,
eounsclors and thera p1sts.
physical and psychological. to
drive Nasty Nate and Snide Sal·
ly into learning how to read 1s
much too expensive. The society
isn't going to get its money back
on that mvestmcnt.
Is 1t necessary to teach <'very·
body_ how lo read and figure?
What about using the millions
that math instruction is going to
cost us to give away hand-held
calculators to all those who can't
count but signify a desire to do
comparison shopping at the
supermarket? If there Is no
readily apparent reason why so
much money should be spent so
that...everybody -literaJly every-
body -in our society, can do
Jong division, the need for 100
percent literacy 1s not apparent
either.
Work is another question. Il
is generally agreed on the basis
of the scantiest information that
you can't hold down a job if you
lack thebe two basic skills. 1f
that's so. the reuson has less to
do with the work itself than with
how the job requirements are
set up. Why does a bus driver in
un exact-change-only system
have to know how to add and
subtract?
Teachers who are s upposed to
"larn'' the recalcitrant dunces
don't care for proficiency ex-
ams: they prefer to s peak of in·
structing their obtuse charges jn
such things as "life coping
s kills.·• an odious expression
hatched in the gastrointestinal
tract or a professor of ed-psych
no doubt. The danger is that"
pupils will be made to pass an
exam in this amorphous subject.
and those flunking life coplng
will be adjudged socially incom-
petent al an even higher finan-
cial cost to the community.
All children must go to school.
There is nothing else to be done
with them once they escape in-
fant exposures, but all children
don't have to learn while they're
there. For some, romping about
with lhe coping skills tucher is
the answer. while the r est of us
a cknowledge defeat. ·and admit
that occasionally high standards
aren 't the best standards.
CongressDlen Preparing for Televised Sessions
To the Editor ·
Many thanks for your kind re-
marks regarding my efforts in
obta inin g a one-year
moratorium on the relocation or
federally protected witnesses to
Southern California. 1 am
pleased by the Justi<:'e Depart
menl 's decision. and I plan to
watch <'nrefull y when a Senate
Judiciary subcommittee con·
ducts hearing!' on th<" witness
pTolet'tron pr~J(rem Rometime
next year.
£AflLV this month . )'OU
e ditorially m t nlloned the
''salutary ctfe<:t" or tclevl ton
coverage oo the Florida state
legislature and spoke of con
1ression11l dcbaLc on the subject
of t.elcvi~lon and radio 1cc to
the noor or the Hou!\e. On Oct.
27, the Hou.st approved by 1 vote
'>f 342 to 44 House RcaoluUon 866
whlch provides for television and
radio covcr1ac of floor proceed·
mgs. Th c1meru ind cable are
t>eln1 lnstall~ ri«ht now, and I
expect tbat the TV ind ndlo
l)tlwoHi..1 will be tektne full ad
rantaaeoft.hll procr~ivc mon
!)y the Congress when we rtt00 ..
•eneloJanu.rJ.
The American people deRrve
to aee firtth~d how their OV•
emmcnt. operatH. They will not
•
b e dl11appolntcd in the
performance of the House, I a m
certain
MARK W. HANNAFORD
Momber of Congress
f..o.,~lfl lnd~ed
To the Editor.
I read your editorial entiUcd
"A Lovely Present," <a bout the
FesUval of .Llghta boat para.de>
and indeed it was. I am en tx·
patriate. newly urrived rrom the
vast wasteland of the northeast.
n piece founded by the Dutcb ln
1623 and called M nheltaa.
I used to enjoy New York City
durin1 Christmas. IL wu alto a
fairyland and sparkled -Ftt\h
Avenue, Park Avenue. the U&bt.s, the atores. R1d.io City,
and the people -. even 1mldlt.
the bustle, bultle, pushlns and
1hovln1 there was Lhe frft.od.li·
nesa or Chriatmu. .
But tho FmJval of Lllhll boat p.arade was ahlohMly lovely. 1
enjoy•d lbla Cbrl1tma1 In
Southern C.Ufomla and love my
n•w home. Thank you,
Southland.
dling," Dec. 20, shows how far
government s trings twist.
Private Hillsdale College, that
has never taken government
funds, is being harassed for hav-
ing students that do.
The students may be setting
lh<'m as veterans, for disability
pay. pensions or any other In·
divldual reaso n. But if they
choose to use them for education
instead of dothes. vacutlons or
beer, KEW. the Health, Educa-
tion a()d Welfare Department,
saya the cducot.ors are the recip-
ient.I of the ft!deral eld a nd so
arc 11ubJect to t.helr govemment
control
It. fs a good wamlne. to keep
hand off aoven1rnent. 1t.rlngJ,
that the ciUes should heod. To
touch tbosG strtni , oo mau.
bow U1btly, b to be etUancSed In
1ovornmeot'1 m)'ltlc mue. GOLDIE JOSEPK
T .. Canreff
To the Edit«;
It. occurrtd to me today t.bat' ~baJ)I ot us aro rtl]>OQlt·
blo for the u.tly treatment aome
men ere bestowln1 upon bJ. How ROBERT GORDON Ions have ,.,. wome:n (I WU
_ ... .,.8 • ~ oace) been ao usual with ou.r
1 Mew• •• ~ .. • \ bodies and ounelv.? How •p
To tho !:dlt.Or: • hn• -e Chased aftU men Yollr edltOrial. ••c1mpm Med-wllllnllY~r••idanatralr
•
I am shocked always by the
women here who dress ao lewd·
ly. Is tl an accident or un-
conscious copying ol ot)lers? Or
is il a call out to men. It m~ be
ignorance that makes a Slrl or
woman dress so immodestly. Or
I!\ It a bold statement or her d.e-
a1re? A desire to be loved. .
llow many women think they
ran have love If a man phyatcally
loves them or Ls attracted to
them? Flnally, ls It a bold neiat.·
Ing of Jona-standln1 volue1
naturally attached t.o women such
as modesty, aweet..nesa, humllity.
qulotnas and considcr&Uoa?
Women will have to a.mine
•th el r everyd1y actlona and
dreaalnc. 1t aeema to me that
men are atlll the ume: a.
woman 1tt.r1cta them. Women
are lucky. Let us enjoy th role,
bulboawareofwhatttentallt.
PENNY ALEXANDER
J
I •
CALIFORNIA DAILY PILOT AS
North Pounded by Rain"
AnOl.HIY AT LAW •
BANKRUPTCY $95 '
DIVORCE S95 J Unront~sted
By Slick
By Th~ Associated Press
More drouibl-defyine rain and
snow were forecast for Northern
C1llfornia today in a one-day
follow-up to the powerful storm
that slammed into the state with
howling winds and gushing
showers.
.. THERE IS AN ,\IR of op-
hm1s m here, but \fe're tryina
to be rea.l.LsUc," said Bill Clark
Wednesday at the slate Drought
Informat ion Center in
Sacramento.
Clark added the drought is not
over. despite the pr~fpitattort. -';==~'~40..;;2;5~0~7;;;;~J~ Major reservoirs are Mill very ;
low and raln ls .11 .. ded tbls
month and in rebr uary. Of
critical importance In gau1ing
the situation wUl be the depth of
the Sierra snowpack next.
month.
SAN DIEGO CAP> -
A mysterious oil slick
has kiJIC<111bout SO blrdl,
mostly sea ducks, and
harmed about 25 others
in San Dleao Bay. the
state Game and Flab Deparlmtnt uy1.
T he Coast Guard
Ma rlne Safety omce
u ld patrol boats dis·
patched after the dead
birds were discovered
round •·a light 1been'' of
nil on the water on the
Coronado side of the bay.
In nearly all districts of the
lop half of the state showers
were predicted into the night.
Travelers warnings were issu~d
for blowing snow in the Sierra,
expected to descend to 3,500 feet
at times. Cha.ina were required
on most mountain routes.
3 Prized ·Redwoo~
Lost to Vandalism
OFFICIALS said the
source or the oil wu un-
determined but no spUl.a
had been reported.
They speculated that
oil from street 1urtaces
may have been washed
into the bay by heavy
rain. But a Coast Guard
spokesman said it was
"hard to believe this
would be enough lo ktll
the birds."
F R AN K T O D D,
('Urator or birds at Sea
World, said a light , high-
J( r ade diesel oil was
r esponsible for the
deaths. He noted the
hirds "displayed all the
symptoms of such a
bpill.''
(
Service Bolted
PARTS OF THE BAY Area
reported thunder, llghtning and
hail during Wednesday's storm.
Some areas reported winds or 40
miles an hour.
The National Weather Service
Stuntman E\'E:>I Kni<'vel talks with found another wet weather
limousine chaul !curs he hared to take ~ystem stationed off the Oregon
work furlough prisoners lo and from their Coast, sug,esting even more
jobs Wednesday in Los Angeles. The precipitation may t>e on the way
livery service upsel the sheriff's depart-beyond the forecast period.
menl, and Knievel has d ecided to call a Wednesday's showers dropped
halt to it. rivers of water onto the land.
-------------------One thunderstorm dumped an
'
Disney World
Expamion Set
BURBANK (AP) -Walt Disney Productions has
unveiled plans for a major addition to its Walt Dus-
ney World complex in Florida.
The project. to be called The Experimental
Prototype Community of Tomorrow (EPCOT>.
"will be devoted to the ---------advancement of intema-Land, Transportation
inch of ram on Oakland lntema-
llona I Airport between 4 p.m.
and 5 p.m.
MARIN COUNTY reported the
·heaviest rainfall, ranging up to
1 1~ inches by late afternoon.
Rain-slick roads caused many
<iccldents, including a whopper
of a 22-car pileup on Highway 17
between Los Gatos and Santa
Cruz just before dawn. Traffic
was backed up tor an hour and a
half.
All the precipitation activity is
buttressing notions that the
California drought is geltin& a
good working over.
PIERCY (AP) -Three of
California's prized a ncient
redwood trees will fall today, the
victims of vandalism.
The three glant trees, each
reaching some 100 yards above
the ground and measuring more
than six feet in diameter, were
hacked at the base with a
chainsaw.
One tree was cut all the way
around the base, with only a 2-
foot core remaining. The others
were slashed randomly with a
series of cuts.
JIM IPBBERT, manager of
slate park lands in the Piercy
area, said the trees stood jn a
grove of old redwoods, ranging
in age from ),500 to 2,000 years.
The gr ove, in the Smithe
Redwoods State Reserve, is in
northern Mendocino County,
some 200 miles north of San
Francisco.
One of the trees was more
than six feet in diameter and
two were some 11 feet across.
The grove ls just some 100 feet
• off California Highway 101.
·1 he lnJ urcd bl rds
were taken to Sea World
after Project Wlldhfe
volunteers washed off
the slick and plv:ed
them in beaung pads
t1onal understanding and Space.
and the solution of the ---~--------------:~iililimilillmlii problems or people
.,.
Todd <;ai d lh t!
c·reatures will remain at
Sea World for sncral
weeks until th (•y rt··
cover
Dog Ban
D e layed
SAN J>IEGO (AP) -
A ban on dogs at most
beaches an San Diego
would cost $100,000 an·
r1ually, the Caty Council
h as been told.
B e a c h patrols and
<'Om municat1ons gear
arc needed.
A ftnal vote on the pro·
posed ordinance wa~ de.
Javed Wc.'<inesday.
<'very"'here through the
<'Ommun1 ca t1on of
ideas," the company
said m its 1977 annual re-port.
Disney said the E P
COT Center would ha"e
two m aJOr areas, FuturC'
World an d World
ShowcasP. The company
made no estimate or
when the new center
would be completed.
FU T UR E WO Rl,D
will include a major m -
lroduclory theme show
called Spaceship Earth,
Disney s aid, accom -
panied by what the com-
pany called a "global
marketplace of new
ideas" called the Com-
municore.
Also planned are
pavilions dealing with
Energy, Life and
Health, The Sea. The
State Senate
$150 Tax Cut
'
Gets Support
SACRAMENTO (AP) -A plan to give four
million California homeowners property taic cuts
of $150 or more appears to be gaining support in
the state Senate.
But there wu still no
decision Wednesday on ( ) the plan for across-the· ·!:)TATE
board tax cuts -roughly .... , -------· the same amount for
both rich a.nd p oor
T HE GROVE WAS popular
with tourists. Two of the
stricken trees had walk-through
tunnels carved at the base and
were popular settings for photo-
graphs. ·
Hibbert said tJie damage was
irreversible and the trees would
be downed today by a private
contraetor. He said the highway
would be closed to traffic tor two or three hours.
DesRile bJgb winds and the
severe damage, the trees were
not in danger of falling over and
did not pose an immediate
threat to traffic, Hibbert said.
THE TREES· WERE struck
ALL MAKES!
833-0555
some time between Monday af. Ask for Our
ternoon and Tuesday, be said. w•r The state parks department Is M-Sr£CIAUST at
investigating the vandalism and HOWARD Chevrolet will seek r elony criminal eor-o1 Dove •ndOui ol 'it•
char ges should anyone be ar-...... _N_EWPO __ R_T_B_E_A_C_H_.:.J
rested, according to department ----------
spokeswoman Gene Cone.
The Mendocino County
Sher ifrs Office was investlgat-
iDg the case, but had no suspects
or motive for the vand alism.
C•ll 6•2-5678.
Put • ~words
to work for ou.
homeowners. Another Democratic caucus was
scheduled for today to decide whether to offer the
plan to the floor. ·
Tbe plan faces a rival bill giving the biggest
tax break to poor renters and homeowners.
Wonaan Dia ln Jl£.lated Leap
LONG BEACH CAP) -A 22-year-old woman
bled to death Wednesday after severing her
jugular vein when she cr ashed through a window
to escape a roarin1 apartment fire that kjlled
Angel Palanco, 2, who was left in her care, po. •
lice said.
LOWEST PRICE EVER ON THIS
FAMOUS REALISTIC ® CB I
The woman, tdentmect as Paula Archuleta,
• managed to save her year-old daughter, Angelica,
by handlnl her to a neighbor through a small
opening in the eround-Ooor window before taking
her ill-lated lea9, fire officlala said. ·
BlgJa Co...i Get• Bearat Appeal
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Patricia Hearst's
f ederal bank robbery convictlon, upheld by an ap·
pellate court, now beads for the U.S. Supreme
Court.
Tbe 9th U.S. Clt(Jllt Court of Appeals refused
Wednesday to reconsider its Nov. 2, 1971, r uling
upbolcllnl the 1Ullt1 verdict.
rt_Peu..e Ah•dO••etet Oppo.ed.
LOS ANGELES <AP>-'lbe city attomey'1 of.
lice bu formallT C<Jat•tecl Southem California
Gas Co.'• appliealloa for 1tat6 permlulon to a ban·
don a natural a• pJpellne aQd lease lt to stuci.nt Oil of Oblo to tranaPort Alukan crude oil to Tex.,.
• • City Attorney AG.ft.Pm•• motion oppoata1 the p~llne abudomneat wu ftled Wednflday at a
atate Public UUllti• Comm.t .. lon bearina Into tbe
uUUtY'• reqqeet to abandon 1120-mlle'atNtcb ol pls>elice J'UDDlnJ from near Blythe to Moreno.
Calif.
ArC• CotaMll • ..._,.,. .-,.
SAC~O (AP) -ClarJc Kltle, H · ecuU" fl &be Callfomia Art.I CouneU S. Jea:-t.=.JOti JD a COdlllct over ~ alloeatiM. ol
p-aatc.oiadl Cbalriua Peter CoJote ot S.. ~ mco Aid WedlMld&J &be coeflfct la bitwem &.be ••m-art lonna 1aeti M opera.,,....,, Mt~ tiDl&.&M Ml~ola •e•Mrd.-. .. m1Dotlt7 cUlWNI. I
ADD AN ARCHER® ANTENNA
AND SAVE EVEN MORE!
I DUAL
MIRROR
MOUNT
Reg. 3415
21!!
CCMIOMA • lilAi . ..., ........ "'"":
COITA..sA ·-= .... -_ ...
Get superior
coverage f
Adjustable tip rods.
f!OUMTAIM VAWT .............. .............. .......... .... ,~ ....
FIBERGLASS
TRUNK-GRIP
..
UT18°/o
Reg. 21 11
StainleH 1t eel
shock 1prlng.
No-hole mount•
ing on trunk lld.
16 cable.
Reg. 169'5
21-1522
' ..
7
Orange Coast
. EDIT I ON
Today•s Closing
N.Y. Sto~ks
VOL. 71, NO. S, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNIA THU RSDA Y, J ANUARY 5, 1978 N/C
~
TEN CENTS 1
Brown Calls Legislative T~x Session
SACRAMENTO CAP) -Gov.
Edmund Rrown Jr. today or·
dered a special session of the
Califorma Legislature on prop
~rty taxes and asked the
lawmakers to send him a $1
billion tax relief bill by the end
of this month.
$1 Billion Relief Bill Tops Agemla briefly on a wide range or issues.
But be gave details of few items.
Rrown described 1977 as "a
good year" in which Callfornia
enjoyed "an economic boom un-
parallelled in lhe nation.
In a wide-ranging address to a
joint session of the Legislature.
Hrown also sit.id he will support
"substantial increases" in state
funds for mental hospitals and
tommunity tare programs. Rut
he dad not spell out spec a fies.
The Democratic governor also
called for abolition of the busi-
ness inventory tax, long sought
by the business community.
He also said he will ask the
Legislature again this year to
appropriate funds for new stale
prisons. A similar Rrown re·
quest was denied last year
.Rut Arow n sa id 1n his
"Stale-of-the State'' message
that property taxes are "first on
the last'' of challenges facing
California in 1978. '·Homeowners and rt'nters
"'ant relief The rapid economic
~rowth has driven up assess·
ments." Rrown said
··Rd ore this month 1s out, you
should put on my desk a billion
dollar property tax rehef pro-
gram."
Brown asked for a tax relief
bill containing no increases in
olher. stale. taxes, and said it
should include "stringent con·
trots·• on local government
spending. . .
He drdered the special session
convened 11 1 hour:> after the
conclusion of his speech.
Brown did not give reasons for
convening a special session
when the Legislature 1s already
convened in its regular session.
Rut that is a parliamentary
maneuver that can gel around
delays required under reguJar
house rules without gomg to
Republicans to get a two-thirds
maJorily.
Rills passed in the regular
session don't take effect until
Jan. 1, l!n9. Rut a bill passed in
a special session takes effect 90
days after that session 1s ad-
journed.
Rrown's desire for quick ac-
tion on property tax relief is
clearly fueled by a voters' tax
101tialive on the June ballot
which would cut local property
taxes by about two-thirds.
The measure, known as the
Jarvis Initiative, would cut rev-
enues for cities, counties and local
schools by about $7 billion.
Brown's fourth annual address
to the Legislature was a few
seconds short of 10 minutes long,
which contmued Rrown's tradi-
tion of brief formal speeches.
ln that time, .Brown touched
''This is California -a good
environment, a healthy economy
and a commitment" to social
justice.
Brown said in addition to re-
questing funds to build new
prisons, his administration will
also be cracking down on prison gangs.
Reaction lo the speech was
predictable. Democrats praised •
it a n d Republicans wer e
generally critical.
Student Pair Capture Rope Suspect
,. 'They're Heroes' Says Police Detective
HE GOT INVOLVED
Huntington Beach's Maness
By ART HUR R. VINSEL
Ol 119 0~1ly Pilot St•ll
Two young Orange Coast men
who didn't hesitate lo gel in·
\Olved are credited with saving
a 16-year-old Huntington Beach
girl from the violent attack or an
alleged would-be rapist.
'·It was beautiful work
They're heroes," says Hunt·
mgton Beach police detective
Art Droz of the two rescuers,
Robert Maness, 23, of Hunt·
1ngton Beach, and Michael
Spears, 24, of Costa Mesa
lie spoke of the capture last
Thursday by the pair of a sus
peel wh o allt·g<'dly dragged the
teenager o ff busy Beach
Boulevard into a grassy gulch
near Adams Avenue
Lon Dean Vickery, 24, a Hunt·
ington Beach short order cook,
today remarncd in jail custody
in lieu of $10,000 bail
lie is accused or the attempted
rape in a criminal complaint is-
sued earlier this week by the
Orange County District Al·
torney's Office
Investigators say Maness, the
initial witness, and Spears to
whom he cried for help, pounced
on the suspect as he pinned the
girl down in a field
She was not sexually assaulted
before they intervened. but her
clothes had been partially tom
off and she was hysterical,
police s::ud
"They saved her a lot of
anguish a lot of mental
torment. .a lot of trauma 1
talked to her again the other day
and she seems to be doing just
fine now," said Detective Droz.
The fact Maness. a Huntington
Beach resident and advertising
major at Golden West College is
a normal, red-blooded young
man may have saved the high
school girl from the horror of
violent rape.
''I was driving down Beach
Boulevard and I noticed this girl
walking alongside the road. I
always look at girls," he ex·
plained rather s hyly.
"Then I saw a man walking
rapidly behind her. It JUSl looked
funny. I pulled up at the red
light and looked in the rear view
mirror. I saw him grab her from
behind and drag her into the
field "
Maness hil the accelerator
and, tires squealing, sped into
an adjacent service station, yell·
mg to bystander Spears for a1d.
Spear s, an Orange Coast
College engineering major from
Costa Mesa, ran to help as Ma·
ness confronted the suspect later·
alleged to be Vickery assaulting
the teenager on the ground.
Neither is a physically large
man, compared to the suspect.
"Everything happened so fast.
it just seemt.'<I the right thlng to
do," says Spears. "It took both
of us to get him off her and ioub-
dued. I guess we wrestled him
for several minutes."
•'They really did super work.
Jt was just a lucky thing he saw
what he did," said Detective
Droz.
Maness Is more blunt about
\\hat he and Spears did while the
shaken teen-aged victim ran back
to the service station to call police
"ho found Vickery held captive
inside on arn val. ..
"People bitch about crime.
but they don't seem walling to do
anything about 1l," he said.
"I think it's time the public
wasn t afraid to get involved."
O•llY Pli.I Sl•tf ~-
HE RESPONOE.O, TOO
Costa Mesa's Spears
Violent Storm Batters Coastal · Area
People's Protest
Legion Chief Sees
Canal Pact 'Death'
Roht•rt Charles Smith, na-
t 1 nn a I commander of the
J\mt•ra can Legion, predicted
Wednesday night in Newport
Beach that a wave of protest
from "lhe p<'ople" will kill the
new Panama Canal treaty.
Smith spoke lo a crowd of
about 150 Orange Coast Legion·
naires and lheir wives during a
dmncr sponsored by Newport
Harbor Post ~l.
friends nre going to be sending
their input to their congressmen
and senators," he said in an in·
tcrview prior to his speech.
He believes there is great op·
position to the treaty among the
American people, but because or
apathy, lhal opposition might
not be expressed.
Smith said the Legion can pro-
vide the means for the public to
express its views on the treaty.
"Co mplacency or the
American people is the biggest
problem of the United States al
this time," he commented.
Dollar Takes
'Sharp R-ise '.
LONDON (AP) -The
dollar rose sharply in
Europe today following
major U.S. government in·
tervention on foreign ex·
change markets to prop
the currency.
But t r ading was
cautious, and many of the
mar ket's big oper ators
stayed on the sidelines
waiting to see whether the
Carter administration
would continue its support
action.
The British pound was
quoted at $1.88 in midaf·
ternoon, a drop of nearly 8
cents from its Wednesday
close at $1.9590 and down 2
cents from its opening to·
day at $1.90.
He said ratification or the
treaty. which would phase out
U.S. control of the canal and
Canal Zone, is going to be the
most pressing issue facing the
95th Congress which reconvenes
next week. <Relall'd :;tory. J\4 )
1 he Legion, nationwide has
launched a cam paign in opposi·
lion to the treaty in which "the
rank and Cilc members and their
Carter Pronrises
European Freedom
Coas t
\Veatber
Considerable cloudiness
tonight becoming partly
cloudy Friday. Fifty per·
cent chance or showers
tonight decreasing to 40
percent F r id ay. Lows .
tonight 46 to 50. Highs Fri·
day 56 to 62.
ll~SmE TODAY
Thlrt11·l'iz yeora o.go, Carl
Karcher hitcMd hia hot dog
co.rt to o. atar o.nd mo.M hit
Ammcoit Dr~ com• trw.
Todo.11, he OtDnl the Clloin of
CClrl'• Jr. re•fauranJI. Sc•
F1otM~, PaQe Cl.
•••ex . .. C4 ... ....
Cl M M CJ •1.J
(I
M 9W M M
OMAHA BEACH , France
(AP) -President Carter joined
the president of Fr ance today at
this World War II beachhead
and. surrotmded by stark white
markers over American graves,
vowed that "Europe's freedom
will never again b e e n ·
dangered."
At a simple, moving ceremony
a t a n Am erica n m i litary
cem etery atop the windswept
clilf overlooking Om aha Beach,
Carter and French President
Valery Giscard d'Estaing placed
a lmost identical wreaths at a
bron ze memor ial t o the
Am er icans who died in the
liberation of Europe from Nui
rule.
Gl scard d 'Estaing' told a solemn, chilled gathering: "All
tbJ1 France remembers. She ex·
presses her graUtude tor all
those who tell for ber freedom,
lo t.belr flmilies and to all tbelr
trlends.0
Carter and the French leader,
w~o flew to Normandy from
Parts aboard separate h Ucop-
ters, ltood aid• by alCSe durtni a
prayer for th 9,388 Americans
buried near the beacb •here
man1 of them fell dwiq tbt D-
D17 AWed ludinp o( June 8,
19".
Al one point, the American
president bowed his head and
p assed a hand across bis eyes.
T he taller Glscard d'Estaing
stood ramrod straight, looking
straight ahead
In h is rem a rks at t h e
cem etery, Carter noted that
90,000 American se rvicemen
from two world wars lie in E uro-
pean graves and that 2~,000
uniformed Americans serve in
E urope.
"We are determined with our
a I lies h er e tha t Europe's
freedom will never a1ain be en-
dangered," he declared.
KICKED 'CAT'
R.4.ISES STINK
DURAND, Ill. (AP) -.Jack
Yaun walked out lo bls bam In
early momtna dimneu and saw
1n the doOrway that aame old
stray cat that had beoo han1in1
around.
"Well, t up and cave it oae hell of a 100d kick," Yaun 18.ld
Wednttday. '
Yaun f.U~ to see the whlte
ltript dowD UM anlmal'a back; ' TM mu NtalUlticL !
I
Hail, Floods, Lightning Reported
By PIOUP ROSMARIN OltMOallyf'lletS~lf
Wednesday's rainstor m bat·
tered South Orange County and
flooded streets in throbbing
wavesofheavydownpours that:
-Hurled lightning into a Hunt-
ington Beach home with such
force that firemen at a nearby sta·
tion reported being jarred from
their beds.
-Flooded Costa Mesa City
Hall.
-Send bluffs slipping onto
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
HIT BY RAIN-AS
STORM GOOD NEWS
FOR SKIERS-Al
Paclh c Coast Highway in San
Clemente.
-Pelted parts of Laguna
Niguel and Irvine with hail.
-Forced flood-fearing Laguna
Beach merchants out into the on·
st aught to pile sandbags m front of
their stores.
In Irvine the situation seemed
worst. The city was pelted by af.
ternoon hail the size of BB shot
that caused drivers on Campus
Drive and other streets to stop
their cars; some car engines
were dead.
* * *
Residents this morning were
trapped in their neighborhoods
of the Woodbridge, University
and the Ranch developments.
which became peninsula com-
<See RAJNS, Page A2)
* * * Slwwers Forecast
Friday and Sunday
By JACKIE RYMAN
Of U. O•llY .. II .. Slaff
Waler, water everywhere, and
more to come -but maybe
some sunshine this weekend,
predicts the National Weather
Service.
The forecast is for a 50 percent
chance of showers tonight, 40
percent Friday and clear ing on
Saturday, with a slight chance oC
showers again Sunday.
Weath er specialist Don
De Pauw said the unusualiy
heavy rainfall Wednesday was
due to thunderstorm type
cumulonimbus clouds, which, he
said, are unusual for Southern
California.
DePauw said Wednesday's
conditions arc what is known as
a squall line. a fairly unusual
weather condition in Southern
California. It occurs just ahead
of a weather front where cold
and warm air collide.
A squall line results in severe
weather, including h eavy
(See SHOWER, Page A2)
' -
N C fhur.CU1 J 1'1.1!1} 5 1111
Fa.-...er. Bappg ~ .
'BerrY Good'
Storm Hailed
By JF.RRY C'l.AVSEN
0. Ow D•ily ,.,,.,''•II
Whalt• rains that fell Wednes
day and early Thursday are
l'ausang some harvesting prob-
1 ems for Orange County
farmers, most concede that the
much-needed water is domg
* * * E'ronc Page A l
SHOWERS ..
downpour'i ltke the one that
,1w am p('<i the Orange Coast late
Wednesday afternoon
DePauw satd high tem -
1,e r a tures tonight and
1-'riday will be in the low 60s and
lows wiU be about 49 deerees.
The squall line resulted in a
r1rcumstance also unusual for -
<>range County -more than an
inch of rain 1n many places dur-
ing a 24 hour period
Off1<.·1als at the Moulton Niguel
Trl'almt'nl Plant 1n Laguna
N1gul·l this morning reported a
rainfall of 1.13 inches for the
past 24 hours. Tho season total is
fj, 78 inches, up from 3 58 inches
last yt•ar at this lime.
In addition. about 30 second~
of hail fell on the Laguna Niguel
area at 4:30 p.m. Wednesday,
observers say.
At Orange Coast College in
Costa Mesa. Charles Lewis re-
ported figures of J 50 inches for
lhe past 24 hours. 6 36 inches for
the season and 3 76 inches for
last season at this time
Bill Shjelds of Laguna Beach
Hardware noted a 24·hour total
of 44 inches, for a season total
of 5.16 inches compared to 4.29
last vear.
Rainwatchcr J . Sherman Den-
ny of Huntington neach reported
t .09 inches for the· past 24 hours,
ti 28 for the ~eason and 6 32 for
last season al this lime. He said
.m unu:-.ually lnrgc amount. 4 03
rnch<'s. ha-. fallt•n in Huntington
Beach hclwl•t•n Dec. 22 and lo·
clav
much more good than harm
A county agriculture com-
mission !Spokesman said early
today that farmers in the Irvine
Ranch area arc having some dif·
ficulty harvesting cauliOower.
celery and broccoli because of
mud but that the rains are doing
the "strawberries nothing but
good."
He said strawberries grown on
small acreages throughout the
county are not scheduled for
harvesting until late March
through June. "This rain will
leach the root structure and do
wonders for the crop," he added.
Fred Keller. Irvine Com-
pany's agriculture vice pres1·
dent. said the inch or ram that
fell across the company ranch
has slowed down cauliflower and
celery harvesting and has halted
work in broccoli fields.
"We can't gel the tractors in,"
he said, adding that lhe com
pany's avocado harvt.•st <ilso has
been temporarily slopped
because of the nun.
However. Kl'ller was happy
about the condition or Irvine Co.
grazing land. Late last month he
had predicted the firm would
import hay to foed its 1,000 head
of cattle.
fie indicated this morning that
grasslands are now in good
i.:razang cond1t1on
t\ Rancho Mi ssion Viejo
spokesman said this morning
that the latest storm had
dropped approximately 1 25
inches or rain on the ranch's 40,000
acres of grazing land
The county's southernmost
ranch is running only 600 head of
cattle on its range this year. Gil
Aguirre, vice pres ident for
ranch operations, said last
month that his company 1s
stocking no range bed catUe
lh1s year because of drought
conditions. Normally. he said,
the ranrh runs up to 4,000 head
of cattle during the winter
months
* * * * * * From Page Al
RAINS DAMAGING. • •
mun1lH"'> surrounded on three
s1dl•s by fl oodc:cl streets
J rvmc· poll ct· rtispatchcrs and
rl'lords rlerks were busy
ans .... erani: telcphont' calls rrom
res idents usking how to J?Ct out
TrJfh<' wa.., roulf'd ncirth along
one cif lhl frv. unfloodt'd sections
of Culver Uri\ c. tu the Santa
Ana Fre('wa}. cast to the
L<1guna f'r'*way then south to
thl' San Diego l''rceway
Polrcc officers stood at flooded
major intersections to d1s:tuade
motorists from trying the un-
derwater roads.
Ci ty maintenance crews
worked tllrou~h the night shor-
ing up undtormlned sections or
road:-.. with the worst road
destruction on Culver Drive,
where at one point, at the San
D1t•go Crl'<'k Bridge, nearly a
foll lane v.as washed out.
Closed roads today included
Culver Drive from Main Street
to Barranca Road and from
Bryan to Irvine Boulevard; Jef.
frey Road from the San Diego
Freeway to Irvine Center Drive;
Barranca Road from Culver
drive to Jeffrey Road; and all of
R1dgeltnc Drive. which was cov-
(>J"ed in mudslides.
Poltce estimated R1dgeline
would not be fully cleared of
debris for a month, though city
pubhc works srud the road would
be passable by late today, bar-
ring more ram.
Parts of Culver were expected
to stay closed for a week for re-
pair.
The pollce department report-
ed that a majority of its com-
ntunlcaUons lines were put out
of commission by rainwater
s&epln1 through the roof, though
ctnergeocy lines remained open.
•Roof ralnspout.a couldn't han-
dle the loads and water backed
O"ANOI COAIT
DAILY PILOT
over flooctproof coping!i
Firemen and Pa c1f1{'
Telephone laborers worked four
lo five hours to keep the remain·
ing lines open and restore the
doused ones
Phone panel:. .... ere dnt·d '-"Ith
hot comprl''>:-.ed air blower-.
~ome had to be hand dried by
towel.
Throughout the county, there
were numerous traffic accidents
caused by slick or flooded streets
and low visibility through the
drenching downpours which
came in waves.
In Huntington Beach, a home ·
in the north part of the city was
'>lrurk by liJlhtn1ng whrch
burned a hole through the roof
but was quickly doused by
firemen stationed just around
the corner.
Damage• in Newport Beach
was slight although city of
ficials said streets in low-lying
Balboa Peninsula and Balboa
Island remained flooded hours
after the storm passed.
Much of Costa Mesa was
turned to an asphalt-bottomed
sea as many gutterless roads
were transformed to channels
complete with fiooded cars and
floating garbage cans on State
Avenue near Wilson Street.
A section of 19th Street was
wholly under water: Cot>ta Mesa
police detoured traffic onto
smaller downtown area roads.
Costa Mesa Cilv Hall employees reported about an
inch of rain -on the second Ooor
-because draln pipes couldn't
handle the fast-Callin& rain.
Firemen drained the backwash
with water p umps, confining
dam agetoasoggycarpet.
In San CJemente there was
slippa1e of bluffs along Paclflc
Coast Highway I one lane or
which was c losed because of
m udslides, from Estacion north
to Camino San Clemente.
F iremen in L a1una Beach
helped downtown merchant.a pUe
H ndbap in front of theJr 1tore1
to Pre\'ellt Ooodln1; lt worked,
according to report.a.
Several small mudllldet were
r eported in that olly, one in the
800 block ol Bluebird.
Southern Califor nia Edison
Co. reported power blackout.a
Wedneaday altemoon, and early
tod ay, In Fountain Va lley,
Newport Beach, Costa Mesa ~d
Irvine.
In Fountain Valley, &Q Ul\der·
1round c1bJe lailed at 2 •.rn. to.
day, afftctlna 90 CUllOtfttl'I 1n
th• area ot San Lorenco wal ol
Euclid St.i'e«. Power was ex·
pceted to N restored Wt morn· J~.
Tti• NftP()l't·Colta M.-ia area
waa hit with a britf power out• •I• at the onset ot the atorm at •
noon Wad.nH day. About 1,950
homea on 18th and 17th street.
between Newport Boulevard and
WeatcUlf Drive w•ra •lillout
1laetridt1 lor is mlnut.te after a
palm frond wu blo•n by wlnda
1nto•hlah.volta10111to. _
. .. , .
Crowds
Hithy
Tutlllania ..
By RA YM ONO ESTRADA JR.
Ol IN 06'1r Pli.t 1i..1~
About 45,000 Oran1e Coast
resldents flocked to six area
•.tores this week. bravlng long
lines and ram to buy most of the
uv ail able tickets for the treasures
of Tutankhamuo Egyptian art ex.
hi bit in Los Angeles.
Delly "" .... " ....... KING TUT FANS LINE UP FOR TICKETS AT COSTA MESA'S SOUTH COAST PLAZA
Ducats for Egyptian Art Show In Loa Angetea Go Fa!J on Orange CoHt
Orange Coast store managers
said the culture·seeKing crowds
were or all ages and very well
mannered as they waited to buy
t Ile tickets for I.he four-month
t.Xh1b1t opening Feb. 15 at the
Los Angele~ County Museum of Art
Stamp Burglaries Told Store officials said most of the
Tut tickets were sold Tuesday,
The Orange Coast stores were
alloUed between 7,000 and 9,000
tickets each.
Huntington Beach May Com·
pany and Broadway department
store officials said several hun-
dred ticket buyers waited in the
rain for several hours Tuesday ~tnd W('<inesday before receiving
the tickets. Lines also were in
evidence at Broadway, May Co.
and Bullock's ticket outlets in
Laguna Hills and Costa Mesa.
Huntington Reports $45,000 in Theft Losses
II untingtoh Beach police said
today they believe a stamp col
lecllon burglary nng has struck
three times in their city and
may soon hat other Orange Coun·
ty colleetors.
Police Detective Marty
O'Reilly said stamps valued at
$45,000 have been taken from
three Huntington Beach collec-
tors during the past two weeks
O'Reilly has advised all area
~t.imp collectors to lock up their
treasures because the thieves
are using a mailing list of
philatelist duh mc·mbers to
'elect thl>ir \<1tt1ms
Police lwlu·ve tll<• I h1ev(ls
found a s tamp (•ollectors club
mailing list at the-home of their
first victim who lived in a
mobile home park
0 ·Reilly clcd)ncd to identify
the v1ct1ms bc<"ause that in-
formation would tip off other
bur~lar:; as lo where to find the
valuable stamps, he said
The Cu-st v1cl1m, a 72 year-old
former McDonnell Douglas
Company employee, told poltce
an old malling list of other
stamp collector:; was taken in
the Dec. 23 burglary.
The burglary victim told
police the mailing J1st could lip
off the burglar as to where other
prominent stamp collectors in
the area are living.
The name and address or the
second victim, a 74 ·year-old
trailer park resident in another
part of the city, was on that hst.
0 ·Reilly said the stamp
thieves struck while the victim
was away from hfs home. As m
the first theft, a door wa~ pned
open to gam entry.
Store officials said that by
Wednesday afternoon only
"singles"' and tickets for exhibit·
times during the week were still
on &ale. M.ost tickets for
weekend exhibit times were sold
during the first few hours Tues-day.
NB Doctor Eyes
Governor's Post
Jn the second break in , which
occurred Dec. 31, a mink coat
was also taken. Despite thls.
o· Reilly said he ~lieves °'l was
the work of the same stamp
burglars.
"They we.re more selective in
the stamps they stole the second
time," O'Reilly said.
Store ofCicials at the May
Company, Broadway and
Bullocks sald they expected all
the Esyptian exhibit ducats to
be sold by today. ·•
OUlcials at the Los Angeles
museum expect about 1.3 million
Southern Californians to view
the precious artifacts.
Some three million people
have seen the exhibit in
Washington, D.C .. Chicago and
New Orleans where it closes Jan. 15.
Dr Eugene Atherton, the
Newport Reach physician known
for his authorship of environ·
m<'ntally oriented 1nit1ative
t·ampa1gns, will be seeking the
Democratic nomination for gov
ernor.
Atherton has until Feb. 23. to
gel the signatures of 10,000 reg.
istercd Democrats in order lo
qualify as a candidate for the
June primary election.
Otherwise. a spokesman for
the Orange County Registrar of
Voters said. he will have to pay
a $982 filing fee to get his name
on the Democratic ballot in
June.
Atherton's last try for elective
ofhC't' C'ame an 1976 \\-hen he ran
against Tom Riley for the Fifth
District seat on the county
Roard of Supervisors. He
finished a distant third to Riley
and MaxBUlSwanger.
Atherton, who has associated
himself with a variety of causes
~enerally aimed at protecting
the county's natural environ·
ment. has written a handful or
initiative peititions which have
been presented to Orange Coast
area voters in the past two
years.
One. which qualified in
Newport Reach and was enacted
by the city council, calls for the
dedication of five acres of park
land per 1,000 residents of new
developments. The city pre-
viously required two acres per
1,000 people.
A similar measure also
authored by Atherlon has
qualified for the March ballot in
San Clemente.
In Newport Reach. Atherton is
currently working on a petition
requiring dedication of access to
bluff tops alongside the Newport
Ray or the ocean.
He Is also circulating another
pelltlon he wrote which calls for
Teacher Suit
Proposed in
Saddleback
S addleb ack Valley Unified
School Dlatrlcl Tru1tee William
Kohler wants the dblrk t to sue
teachers for the cost of last
year's strtke.
Kobler proposed Wednesday
that trustees find out bow much
the 1trlke cost and brine a au.it
agains t the teachers for that
amount. The trustees did not di•·
cuu hi• proposal but Kohler
11ld lat.er that he bopea they will
consider lt durlna their next
meetlnf .
H e u plaln ed t hat t h e Patadena tchool 1y1tem 1• aulu
Ila teachers for tht $330,000 eo.l
of a atrikt 1n Ila 1cboola. Since
the courts have said thla could
be do... and the atate Supreme
Court bu denied the te1cben' appeal, he 1ald, almUar acUOQ
now l1 open to otbt.r 1cbool d.11· trlctl. h
ff• 1&1.d the coart'a action llOW
can be eonaidered the law ao
1trlk11 .,. llle1at In tbe put,
teachers have contended that
their 1t.rtk11 AN not c:overtd by
tbt law Mcauae they'te not
1pectfically mentioned ln the law.
•
a C'ounty ordinance requiring ln·
erca!:ied park land dedtt'ation
from dl·Vt>lopers and would pro
''Ide incenl1 \es for low-co!>t
hou~ang
\
The third stamp theft oc·
<'urr-ed Monday while the 41·
~ear.old victim was away at lhe
Tournament of iloses Parade an
Pasadena.
The show also will travel to
SeattJe, New York and San
Pranclsco.
RCA 15'd11gon1I
XL-100 portable color TV
Mooel EX354
111e p, Ol"(ll 11 Remote
MOOtl E639111
RC A's Slgnal S•nsor
electronic; remote
control
Easy-chair conven-
ience Chanqf' Chllrl
nl'lo;, r.on tr ol v11lum1•
turn sel tJn .incl ult
all from across thf'
room
tr OoaQONI
HOM.HMO Tl
JUST $2'U5
RCA 19':..eoon•• ColorTrak table model
... _
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0 -· ' RCA Cotomak ..__
T~t Oaft111
Modfl ~X'IS
19 0•1001111
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--
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111
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SUPER VALUE
For a ColorTrak
Table Model
• On• of a Kind1
• Floor Samples
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RCA 19" Olagonal-78 Extended Liie
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RCA 19 · Ol1gonel Portable Model FX"466 .. S37g 90
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Including Console Model• SubJecf to Prior Sele
Isl.-\ltou f Our f ·ousu111t•1· ,.,.oft•t•fiou l 1 lu11.
275 Eaat 17th St.
Costa Mesa · "_ ......... .....,._
t 0-. ..... e.,.,,,..
Phone 642-8882
Stor• Hour& D•1ly S.6 $ r g.5 30
' .
All warranties
hanclleil by UI -
right heN at the
store. Master Cltarge
rlSA -~ud9et
,~ .. •rr.angecl
o·•ngocoastoai••P·•o• Editorial Page
----------------------------------------------
l6 ~
Tnurr.d1y. January ~. 1t11
Robt-rt N , Weed/Publisher
8arbtr• KN1blch/Edltotl•I P.... dltor
Time to Throw
Hats in the Ring
One> \\eek from today, filing will Opt•n for re~idents o(
~ewport Beach who '-"ant lo run for tht.• four (•1ty council
seals "hich will bt.• the subJec.·t of the April 11 muniupal
election.
To qualify for the city coun<.'il, a <.":rnd ida lc must be a
registered voter f(':-;11ltng in his own district among the
four under contention this year -the fir!)t, third, fourth or
•si'<th. .
The first distnet tcikes in the Peninsula and Lido l sk>,
the third 1s Newport llcights, Bayshores and Linda lsll'.
the fourth <.'overs the Ila\C-rt.·~t-.'.\1 a1 mcrs-DoH·r Shon•-.
<irt'a and includes The Hluffs: the :-.ixth takes m Inine
1't•rracc and old Corona dE:l Mar.
J<'lling opens Jan. 12 :.ind closes Feb. 2 except in ills·
lriC'ts where the incumbent docs not file. In tho!)e dh
U-icts, riling \\Ill rem am OIJCn iJOOlh<.•r fl\'C da~ '>
There is no CO!)t to file. although <.'and1dates will be
charged if th<.>y choose to have a .statement printed along
with lhc sample ballot.
This }Car, there 1s a new rl'gulat111n \\ h1l'11 .1llows can
did ates to withdraw tlwir I sling bt:fon.· the Fl't,. :.!
deadline if they decide not to run
Of course.', we'd rather st'l' 1><•ople throwing their hat:--
inlo the ring, instead of pulhn~ tht•m out. Th1i. }l'CJr prom-
ises to be an mtcreslmg} car Jor cit} government since two
of the incumbents Trudi Rogers in the first cJ1striC't and
!\la) or Milan Dostal in the fourth -h;n e indit'ated the)
will not run.
Those who would have their city go\'ernmcnt do more
or less -with its tax money oughl lo be willing to rnn
for c·1ly c:ounc11.
~al Energy Waste
In qu1c.·t eontc.•mplalion fostcrNl h; remark!) thal thl'
FehlJ\'al of Lights was a fnghtful \\'astc of cncrg}, wt·
r·ahH' lo till' <:ondusion th:Jt tht;> Chnstmas boat paradt.•
:1m1incl ~f'\\port llp1hor ll'-t'd a drop of ent;>rgy when com-
p.trt·<l to the ''<isle (' JU!)cd-hy tr all 1c congestion on the
l" ppc•r Bay hndgc>.
J\s olkn :is four limes :J day during the work week.
motorists an• stallNI 011 Pac1f1c Coast Highway from the
hricl!{c hal'k to .Jamboree Road and the amount of
i.:usolinc wasl<.'d ancl smog contributed by those idling
c·n~rne.s is staggering
Ewn mun· d1stn·:--sing 1s the fact that it" ill continue
tor 11t•:uh '''o mon• H·ars until the nc,., seven-lane
lidrlgl' 1s h11tlt Ofliti;tl~ al CalTrans say thrir origrn;il
,.,1.11n<.1tL· of l'omplt•t111n h} th<.' end of 1979 has been moved
h.Jt·" to fall ol HJ80. and that date could chan~c -for lht•
\\ 01·-.t· .i It'\\ m"rc t1 mes.
School Sessions Stall
li'ollnw1n~ a n<irrow Tuesday night vole, it appears
t h;i t a eitiwns · advisory committee appointed by the
'\1:\\ pnrt·'.\h'sa School District has had enough public he<1l
.ind('> flt.•cing the fic.•ry subJect of 5chool c losures.
Tht• committee's decision was a classic non-decision·
.1 dt•('larat1on that no more recommendations woulrt hl'
11wde tn sl'hool trustees on elementary school closures for
I wo \ t·ar:-..
\\'hill' this certainly eases the minds of parents whose
... 1 uil1·nh allPnd \'ictori a, California or Mesa Verde schools
111 Co-.ta '.\h· .... 1. a maJur question remains unanswered.
(';in till' clist11c:t afford to wait two years before it
dus1·-, fl\lll'l' ... dwols hccauscs of what appears to be an ir-
1 t'\ t•r ... ihlt• dt•i·linm~ enrollmc.•nl situation and the advcrst!
d lt•<'ls ol thc• Serrano decision"' .
\\"(·II. t hl· c:1tw.:ns' advt!)ory committee, which had
1 :ikc•n firm stands in the past. has decided to tackle bud gel
nil'> ;incl II-a\ e lhr toughC'r and more sens1l1vl' task to
'<.'hool tnt~lt•('s.
TruslN'" c·onl'civably could reject this non-
' 1·c·1111111wnd.1t ion and tell th<.' committee to g<.'l back to its
,1:--.1gnnwnt. or perhaps appoint a new committee.
,\tan' rak. the l'Omm1ttcc has apparently choked on a
1111c·1.tl issi11• 1\t h.·ast Lh<1 committee action serves as a
1, ...... on a ... to what can happen Lo a group when faced with an
11npopul•1r cll•<:bwn
• Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Pilot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
ar11sts Reader comment is invited. Address The Dally Pilot, PO.
Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321.
Boyd/Cat's Eyes
By L.M. BOYD
lhstory records that cer-
tain ancient Turks claimed
they could tell the lime of
day by looking into a cat's
t'yes. Might be something to
1l Believc I recall having
read somewhere that the
pupils in a cat's eyes con-
tract and expand predictably
1n r<'lat1on:i1hip to the
whereabouts of the run. Will
research this further. Stand
by.
Was just 99 years ago lhot
Rear Admiral Daniel Am·
men brought the first bowl or
goldfish into this <'ountry
rrom Japan.
Whal qualif ies
archaeologisl Iris Cornelia
Love for membership 1n the
Proper Job Club is the fact
Dear
Gloomy
Gu
Ir th pust office and
Amtrak f\a vto't con·
vinced u or cov ro-
mcnt's indficlenc1. lht
encr1y prosram cer-
laln11 shOUld. c.s.c.
,
that sht' seven years ai:to di~·
covered the whereabouts of
the long lost statue of the
love goddess Aphrodite.
She'd put in a lot or time
around the Mediterranean
<liggmgs in search of it. but
that'!\ not where s he found
Praxiteles' masterpiece. In
the basement of the Bnti!.h
Museum in London is where.
Question cropped up as to
how "fire'' came to mean
dismissed from a job.
"That's obvious, dum dum, ••
write• a &wilt client. "Fire Is
also a synonym for discharge
muning lo get rid of in a
hurry, zap!'• All right.
Young inex perie nce d
seamen aboard ship in the
old British navy were al·
lowed 14 Inches or space in
which to sling their ranvas
hammocks. The older pclty
officers were authorlxed 24
inches of space. Somo hls·
torlans feel this admiralty
l'ulc lo "Ive more room lo the
seaaoned sa.Uort was a subUe
recognition of that tblnt calJ~
mlddl asupread.
Fifteen ~ttcnlof the people In thl1 couotry provide
all the rood, arooda and
servlcu for the entire
populatton. Or so say the
1laU1UcJans. lnteresUn1. 1{ we. And 1r true, lt'1 Qitltt 1 m 1 uro of u s. t«hn<>lon,
ls It not? But ~h•l •• • thos•
other 17 out of 2IO people do-
ln1. rneanum~. pr~f Tbt
can 1et preuy d p. Time tor a nap.
Earl Waters
Tn:ick· 'Crackdown' Questioned
lids tlw C';rltforn1.1 ll1ghway
Pl:ll rnl t•ruckt.•d d1!\\ I\ on spt•t.•dm.::
lrut i..-. ., Its n·u·nt rt.>port of mor~
lh;1n !'>,OOO cilaltons ha\'inS.: bct:n
1s:.m•d to spe('ding tru<.'k drivers
during the mouth of October sug.
..:c•-.t-. that al loni:: last, lht.· com
pfjtnt:-of mot1111!->lS have s('ept>d
through to Clll' Comm1ss10nt.'r
l; lt•n <.'r:11~. • i\lmosl from the 1nl'l'pl1on of
tl11· 11011•altst1c 55 mph spet:d
l1m11. tht•
motoring
public· has
h1•l·n pleadin).(
I or prulcc·llon r r 0 m l h l'
bchC'moths of
1111' 111.:h\\ a~ s
\\ h I (' h
1 hunctc-r do" n
I rom un high
11 II f r l' l' W ii V
l r .1 \ t• I h • 1 < l ;1 1 I ~ a t i 11 ).( :rn ti
11lln·r\\1s<' lt•rror171ng driver~
who ha\ c lhl• h•nwr tt \ tu !-.land 111
lh1·11· way hy uhstrving the
sµt·cd ltm1t.
L&isl summer C1a1g announcc<l
;1'"cratkdn\\n"1111 thc trut·ks and
the Cktober n·1mrl tendt•d to
shm\ It wa:-bt•111~ <::trrit·d out
And, <ill hough lht• acll\ 11~ :-.ho\\n
<.1mountt.·d to hurely more than
ont• truck sloµpcd dunng the
month In· t·arh 'late traffic of
r1n•r. tl still would be ~1gn1flcanl
hjd thl• larg(•t indt·ed hcc·n thoM'
rn;inng ht•a!'>ts 11f the road about
\\horn the pulJltt has bt•t•n com
plaming.
RllT i\N examination or lhl'
fads cast some doubt about lht·
··cruckdown." While tht•rc ore
only i.1bout 90.000 tractors r('g·
ii.ten•d m Cahforn1a an c·1n1mat-
ed 300,000 such units ent"r the
stat<' <'ach y£'ar Tht-Sl' are th1·
motor11t•d comµonents "hi ch
pull the· huge fn·1.i.:ht trailt•rs :-.een
rumhling up and <lu\\n lht'
frN'W:I) S.
And. althcn1gh tl is nnl kn<>wr\
how much 11f the t1nw lheM'
truck..,, out of !>late und homt•
based, arc actually nn California
h1i;:hways, lhe rclattvcly small
number compat('d to the total of
passeni:icr cars, might make
5,000 speed citutions seem a
heavy enforcement effort.
However. CllP sources dis-
close th:.it the count was not hmtt·
cd to the type of trucks which
come instantly to tho mind of the
motorist but in<'1udcd a myriad ·
of other l.n>cs. There are nl'arly 3
million "trucks" registered in
the state. These include panel~.
pickups and st ation wagons.
which were not counted,
olthou~h many two-al(le and
()ther small trucks were. So the
total of 5,000 is no way indicative
of the CUP effort against the
"You'te. stroddlirig 11ie wrong c~mel."
Nicholas Von Hoffman
mammoths about which the
public complains.
IN COMPARING the CHP rec,
ord on speed c itations to trucks
against theoverullof 89,052 issued
to vchtcks of all lypes a might
sllll seem a good performance,
being more than s percent.
especially when the number of
trucks ,i; matched against the
near 12 million pas~enger
vehicles registered.
.uut comparing total registra-
tions is a false measurement.
With rare exceptions passenger
cars stand idle far more than
lhcy are in use and many of them
never or rarely venture out on
the freeways. Not so -with the
monster trucks whose high costs
01ake it e!)Sential to get the
highest usu~e possible. 1'he only
real ml'asurement lhen would be
a comparison of mileage
travelled on s tale highways by
t rucks versus passenger cars.
One thin~ the report clearly re-
vealed ts that spe('d occupies
nearly 50 percent of the emphasis
<>f the CUP for the total number
of tickets written for violations of
<.Iii types was only 195,194.
ALSO misleading is the total oC
traffic officers on the CHP, re-
ported as 4,165. The five-day
w~ek reduces the number availa-
ble for duty to about 3,000 while
~1ck lea\'c, courtroom lime and
other causes further erode the number to where there are prob-
Jbly no more than 2,000 reporting
for duty on any given day to cover
a 24-hour period. On certain
holidays. when super efforts are
made, the patrol may field as
many as 1,000 at one time but
overtime earned then reduces the ·
CIIP strength on subsequent
days.
Jt 1s this force which must not
only COVl'r both Sides Of the
state's 3,794 miles or freeway and
more than J l.000 additional miles
of s tate highway, but also
thousands of miles of county
roads.
Is Remedial Education Money Wasted?
W l\SHINGTO!IT Every few
months from one section of the
countrv or another comes fresh
news confirminJ( the fact that
many children pass in, through
:.ind out of school without learn·
inJ! to r('ad or figure.
So parents und other tax-
payers demand that kids who
dtdn 'l learn
anqhing bc
held back. a
pract1cc that
was J.!'""n up some year ...
ago when
somebody
noticed that
the firi.t
j!rade at PS.
·tO had 11 six-
foolers in it.
neing a 14-year-old Big Stoop
in ;i class of otherwise bright
and proficient 10-year-old chums
is thought to cause anxiety and
inferiority feelings in the larger.
lag~ard scholar who may then
wap his little buddies around in
a paroxysm of misplaced resent·
ment.
To gel around this problem it's
being suggested that kids who
don't even know the easier part
of the multiplication table be
Mailbox
i;hunl~d off to 1'1Jt•<·tC1 I
classes .. a scholastic chain
gang where they will cratk their
rock-like heuds learning that 6 x
8 equals 48. If they don't learn lo
read, as they probably won't, at
least thcy will he failing out of
~1ghl . l\nd no more diplomas for
the boneheads: henceforth all
they ~ct ls a certificate or atten-
dance.
BEHIND all this concern and
activity are some propositions
• which may or may not be true.
Proposition one is that schools
are to teach reading and writ-
ing; proposition two is that when
they don 'l it's the teachers' fault
and the taxpayers are getting
cheated; number three is that if
you don't have an abnormally
depressed l.Q. you can and you
must learn to read and do
elementary arithmetic.
Of course, all depends on
number three. We know from
ourselves a nd our friends it
doesn't follow that if you can
read you can count. Some of us
arc whi7.zes at numbers and can
barely read; the reverse is even
more <'ommon. As for the goal of
a totally literate society. while it
may be possible lo teach every·
ont! but the mentally handi-
{·apped how to read, it also may
hc very expensivl'. Somewhere
w(' hit the Jaw of d1minishm~ re-
turns.
TllF. COST in teacher'>, rC'·
medial readinJ: instructors ,
coun:.elurs and th era p1!)l.<;.
physical and psycholo~ical, to
drive Nasty Nale and Snide Sal-
ly into l,.arning how to read is
much too cxp('nsive. The society
isn't going to gel its money back
on that investment.
l s 1t necessary to teach every-
body. how lo read and Ci~ure·r
What about using the millions
that math instrurt1on is going to
cost us to give away hand-held
calculators to all those who can't
count but signify a desire to do
comparison shopping at the
s upermarket? If there is no
readily apparent reason why so
murh money should be s pent so
that everybody -Uterally every-
body in our society, can do
long divii;ion, the need for JOO
percent literacy 1s not apparent
~1ther.
Work is another questJon. It
is generally agreed on the basis
of the scantiest information that
you can't hold down a job if you
la(•k the.c two basic skill&. .IC ,..
that's so. the reason has less lo
do with the work itsetr than with
how the job reqwrements are
M'l up. Why does a bus driver ln
Jn exact change-only sygtem
have to know how lo add and
s ubtract?
Teachers who arc supposed to
"larn" the recalcitrant dunces
don't care for proficiency ex-
ams; th('y prefer to speak of in-
s tructing their obtuse charges In
su<'h lhins:s as "life coping
:-.k11l s.'· an odious expression
hatched in the gastrointestinal
tract of a professor of ed-psych
no doubt. The danger is that
pupils will be made to pass an
t•xam in this amorphous subject,
and those flunking life coping
will be adjudged socially incom-
petent at an even higher finan-
cial cost to the community.
All children must go to school •
There is nothing else to be done
with them once they C!Cape In·
fant exposures, but all children
don't have to learn while they're
t here. For some, romping about
with the coping skills teacher is
the answer, while tho rest oC us
acknowledge defeat and adrnit
that occasionaJJy high standards
o ren 'l the best st andards.
CongressDien Preparing for Televised Sessions
To th(' Editor
Many thank~ for your kind re-
marks rcgardml( my efforts m
ob ta inini a one-year
moratorium on the relocation of
federally protected witnesses lo
Southern Californ ia. J a m
pleased by the Justice Depart·
ment's decision, and I plan to
watch carefully when a Senate
Judiciary subcommittee con-
ducts hearings on the witness
protection program ~ometlmo
next year.
EARLY thl!l month, you.
editor inlly mentioned the
"Sa lutury cffoct." Of lolevision
coverage on lhc Florido slate
leglslnture and l'lpoke of con-
grcsslonot debate oo the aubject
of television and radio acce.u to
lho flOOT of lhe House. On Oct.. tr. the Howse approved by a voto
ol 342 to" Houso R soluUon-.
which provld tor t.elevtalon and.
radio coYer3g~ of floor proceed·
ings. Tb cameras and cable att
belng lMt.lle<t right now, and t
p cl that the TV and rad.ic)
networka wan be t.klna fuU od-
~·anta e ot thlt pro reulv~ move
~1 the ~ w n we recon-,
r~nelnJanuary.
The Anwrit1n peopl deserve
lo lte l'lnlhind J\Ow lhelr aov· 1rna1eato.,-1ta. They will not
• •
be disappointed in the
performanee of lhe House, T am
certain.
MARK W. HANNAFORD
Member of Congress
Lo11elt1 Indeed
To the F.dilor :
t read your editorial entiUed
"A Lovely Present.," (about the
Festival ot Llgbl5 boat parade)
and indeed il was. I am a.n ex-
patriate, newly orrlved from tl\e
vast wasteland of the northeal!il,
a pla co founded by the Dutch In
1623 and coiled Manhattan.
J used lo enjoy Nb York Cil.Y
during Christmas. It wu also a
fairyland and sparkled -Fifth
Avenue, Park Avenue, the
li&hll the •tora~ Radlo Clty,
and ibo pe0ple -even •midst
tho husU , bulUe, puatilna and
Quote
'•My own position ii that
~rm anent puce can best ba
malotalned 11 lhere la noL a falr·
l1 radical, new independenl na·
tlon In the .heart. of the N kldJo.
Eut ana.0 -Piriltee& JllilQ Cut.er.
shoving there wa1i the friendli-
ness of Chrtstma.o;.
But the Festival or Lights boat
parade was absolutely lovely. l
enjoyed tbls Christmas Jn
Soulbem CalilomJa and love my
new home. Thank you.
Southland.
., JlOBERTGORDON
MeddU•fl Les•••
To the F.ditor:
Your ooiU>rlaJ, "Campu5 Med· 1
dting, '' Dec. 20, shows how far
government st.rlnU twist.
Private JUUsdalc Colleee, thtt.,
has never taken government.
funda. ii beiol( harassed !or h.av·
1na students that. do.
Tho 1tudents roay be getting
them u veterans,. for dlJabWty
pay, pmtloas or any other lD·
dlvldual rcuon. But 1f they
choot• to use tbeni (~ educaUotl
wtead ol clothes. vacations or beer, lt:£W. the Health, Ed~•·
lion and Welfant Department,
says tM edueatort are tho reel~ lco~ ot the federal ald a nd IO
are aubjecl lo tht1t fovc:rnment
coolrol.
11 l• a 1ocid wUn.1n1. tO keep
band ofCJf:.emmeiat ·~· that tho abOWd hoed. To
taudl. tbOio a~. no matter
how lightly, is to be entangled in
government's mystic mate.
GOLDIE JOSEPlt
Parld•fl Needed
To the Editor:
Four monthS &IJO some cons,.
miltees In CHU Haven and
Newport Heights prevailed upon
the city council to provide a
second bike traU on JUver5ldo
Avenue, eliminalinii the e~
zone front parking In obvious
disregard for the preasina need
for a II J>Of'Alblo P<>$l office access
sorely nttded by some 2,800 bo:ir
h o lders and 1,200 dally
customen at the post oltice.
On Jan. 9 members of the
public can mako themselves
heard at a city cou~ b.eutna in pusco or bY i>eU«on. Petf·
lions req~ rtsloration Cl arem iooe Ing lD frcnt d
tbo post ace are available to
thole concerned. 87 ealllnl
642·aic>O they. c~ .tan ..
Your ant.ta~ to bri1'S ttill
sltuatJon to pabll~ attenUon will
be moat appreda~. JOHN A. MILLER
•
"'~ =~:~~'='-r:=:· -=--:.=:,,,.,:::. = ~ -
•
I
l
(
17
Saddlebaek
EDITION
* *
Afternoon
N.Y. Stoeks
VOL. 71, NO. 5, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JANUARY S, 1978 TEN CENTS
Saddlehack Schools to Sue Teachers?
By LAURIE KASPER
Of I .. O•U1 ...... St•H
Saddleback Valley Unified
School District Trustee William
Kohler wants the distract lo sue
teachers for the cost of last
year·s stnke.
Kohler µroposed Wednesday
.that trustees find out how much
the strike cost and bnng a su1l
against the teachers for that
amount. The trustees did not dis-
cuss his proposal but Kohler
said later that he hopes they will
c·ons1der 1l during their next
meeting.
He explained that the
Pasadena school system is swng
its teachers for the $330,000 C05t or a stnke in iL'> schools. Since
the courts have said this could
be done &nd the state Supreme
Court has denied the teachers'
appeal, he said, simiJflr a ction
now is open lo other school dis-
tricjs. If e said the court's action now
can be considered the law so
stra.kes are illegal. In the past,
teachers have cootended that
their strikes are not covered by
the law because they'r e not
specifically mentioned in the
law.
Although Pasadena's teachers
are expected lo appeal the de-
Dlilly "1 ... .._ .... o..., ........
CULVER DRIVE IN IRVINE WASHES OUT OVER SWOLLEN FLOOD CONTROL CHANNEL
Maintenance Workmen Inspect Damage Near Main Street; Culver Wea Closed
Storm Damages Coast
Laguna Merchants Fight Flood With Sandbags·.
ByPHILIPROSMARIN Pacific Coast Highway in San
011Mo.11,,.1i.tsi.11 Clemente.
Wednesday's rainstorm bat--Pelted p a rts of Laguna
tered South Orange County and Niguel and Irvine with hail.
flooded streets in throbbing -Forced flood-fearing Laguna
th Beach merchants out into the on-wavc5 or heavy downpours at: slaught lo pile sandbags in front of
: -Hurled li ghtning into a Hunt· their stores.
ington Beach home with such In Irvine the situation seemed
force that firemen at a nearbysta-worst. The city was pelted by af.
tion reported being jarred from ternoon hail the size of BB shot
their beds. that caused drivers on Campus
-Flooded Costa Mesa City Drive and other streets to stop
Hall their cars; some car engines ·
-Send bluffs slipping onto were dead.
* * * * * * Sunshine Saturday?
Showers Forecast
Friday and Sunday
By JACKIE HYMAN
()I tho O.lly ,., ... 51•11
Water, waler everywher e, and
more lo come -but maybe
some sunshine this weekend.
predicts the National Weather
Service.
The foreeast is for a 50 percent
chance of showers tonight, 40
percent Friday and clearing on
Saturday, with a slight chance of
showers again Sunday.
. of hail fell on the Laguna Niguel
area al 4 :30 p.m. Wednesday,
observers say.
At Orange Coast College in
Costa Mesa. Charles Lewis re·
ported figures of 1.50 Inches for
the past 24 hours, 6.36 inches for
the season and 3.76 inches for
last season at thJ1 time.
Bill Shields or Laguna Beach
Hardware noted a 24-hour total
of .« inches, for a season total
of 5.16 inches compared lo 4.29
last year.
* * *
Residents this morning were
trapped in their neighborhoods
of the Woodbridge, University
and the Ranch developments,
which became peninsula com-
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
HIT BY RAIN-AS
STORM GOOD NEWS
FOR SKIERs--A3
munilies surrounded on three
sides by flooded streets.
Irvine police dispatchers and
records clerks were busy
answering telephone calls from
residents asking how to get out.
Traffic was routed north along
one of the few unflooded sections
of Culver Drive, to the Santa
Ana Freeway, east to the
Laguna Freeway then south lo
the San Diego Freeway.
Police officers stood at flooded
major intersections to dissuade
motorists from trying the un-
derwater roads.
C ity maintenance crews
worked through the night shor·
ing up undermined sections of
r oads, with the worst road
destruction on Culver Drive,
where at one point, al the San
Diego Creek Bridge, nearly a
full lane was washed out.
Closed roads today included
Culver Drive rrom Main Street
to Barranca Road and from
Bryan lo Irvine Boulevard ; Jef-'
frey Road from tile San Diego
Freeway lo Irvine Center Drive;
(SeeRAlNS, Page A2)
Weather specialist Don
DePa uw said the unus ually
heavy rainfall Wednesday was
due lo thunderstorm type
cumulonJmbus clouds, which, he
said, are unusual for Southern
California. Snowpa~kShapesVp
cision to the U.S. Supreme
Court, Kobler predicted this ef-
fort will fail.
A little more than half of the
Sa ddleback district's 700
teachers walked out of their
classrooms for four days in May
when they failed to reach an
agreement on an employment
contract with the district.
No one h as ever discussed
what the stnke, which required
the hiring of s ubstitutes, cost the
district. Rut Kohler said the collective
bargalning required by law cost
the district $45,000. Jn addition,
he said, the district lost "a lot ol
money you can 't r eally pin-
point." Primarily, he said, this
resulted from administrators be-
ing away from their regular
jobs.
Tbe trustee said he believes
enough of the other trustees will
s upport his proposal lo bring the
s uit.
This morning, however, none
or the other trustees contacted
by the Daily Pilot would commit
themselves lo it.
Loa Young, the board presi·
dent who levied sharp criticism
against teachers after the strike,
said it is too soon to talk or an
(See STRIKE, Page AZ>
Brown Orders ·
Special Session
SACRAMENTO (AP> -Gov.
Edmund Rrown Jr today or·
dered a special session of the
Califorrua Legislature on prop-
er t y taxes and asked the
lawmakers to send him a $1
billion tax reLief bill by the end
of this month.
In a wide-ranging address to a
joint session of the Legislature,
Rrown aJso said he will support
"substantial mcreases" in slate
funds for mental hosp1laJs and
community care programs. Rut
European
Freedom
Promised
OMAHA BEACH, France
(AP) -President Carter joined
the president of France today at
this World War Il beachhead
and, surrounded by stark white
markers over American graves,
vowed that "Europe's freedom
will never again be en-
dangered."
Al a simple, moving ceremon~
.a l a n Amer i c a n m i I it a r y
cemetery atop the windswept
cliff overlooking Omaha Beach,
Cart<'r and French President
Valery Giscard d'Estaing placed
almost identical wreaths al a
bronze m emorial to the
Americans who died in the
liberation of Europe from Nazi
rule.
G is card d'Estaing told a
solemn, chilled gathering: "All
this France remembers. She ex·
presses her gratitude for all
those who fell for her freedom,
to their families and to all their
friends."
Carter and the French leader,
who flew to Normandy from
Paris aboard separate helicop-
ters, stood side by side during a
prayer for the 9,386 Americans
buried near the beach where
many oC them fell during the l).
Day Allied landings of June 6,
1944.
At one point, the American
president bowed his head and
passed a hand across his eyes.
The taller Giscard d • Estaing
stood ramrod straight, looking
straight ahead.
In bis r e m arks a t the
cemetery, Carter noted that
90,000 American servicemen
from two world wars lie in Euro-
pean graves and that 200,000
uniformed Americans serve in
Europe.
"We are determined with our
allies h ere that Europe's
freedom will never again be en·
dangered." be declared.
he did not spell out specirics.
The Democratic governor aJso
called for abolition of the busi·
ness invenlory tax, long sougbt
by the business community.
He also said he will ask the
Legislature again this year to
appropriate funds tor new slate
prison.s. A s imilar Rrown re-
quest was denied last year. Rut Rrown said in bis
"Sta te·of-lhe Stale" message
that property l'axes are "first on
the list" of challenges facing
r
CalifQmia in ms.
"Homeowners and renters
want relier. The rapid economic
growth has driven up assess-
ments." Rrown said.
•·.Ref ore this moo th is out, you
should put on my desk a billion
dollar property tax relier pro-
gram.''
Rrown asked ror a tax relief
bill containing no increases in
other state taxes, and said it
should include "stringent con-
(See BROWN, Page%)
Gun Sales Up
Self-protection Motivation
VISfA (AP) -A rash of home invasions. rapes
•nd shootings is bringing a run on handguns along
9-'ith warnings from authorities that watch dogs and
night lights are safer.
"People are creating their own panic,'' said
sheriff's LL Paul Franklin.
In citie8 and hamlets throughout northern San
Diego (;ounty, gun shops report sharply increased
sales.
A year-old office of crime prevention specialists
in Vista said more requests for advice have been
handled this week than in the 11 months of the
federal-financed pilot program.
Last week, George G. Mottino, a 68-year-old
farmer, was shot to death by gunmen trying to force
their way into his home. Masked gunmen have
broken into several homes, raping women .and four
masked men broke into a Fallbrook physician's
home and robbed him and guests.
Bailed f)g Police
Pair Seize Suspect
In Rape Attempt
By ARmUR R. VINSEL
Of ... o.tty l'ii.c It.et
Two young Orange Coast men
who didn't hesitate to get in·
volved are credited with saving
a 16-year-oJd Huntington Beach
girl from the violent attack of an
alleged would·be rapist.
•'fl was beautiful work.
They're heroes, .. says Hunt·
ington Beach police detective
Art Droz of the \wo rescuers,
Robert Maness, 23. of Hunl-
i n glon Beach, a nd Michael
Spears, 24, ol Costa Mesa.
He spoke or the capture last
Thursday by the pair of a SUS·
pect who allegedly draeged the
teenager off busy Beach
Boulevard into a grassy cuicb
near Adams Avenue.
violent rape.
''I was driving down Beach
Boulevard and I not.iced this girl walking alongside the road. I
always look at girls," he ex-
plained rather shyJy.
"Then I saw a man walking
rapidly behind her. It just looked
funny. I pulled up at the red
light and looked in the rear view
mlrror. I saw hJm grabber from
(See HEROES, Page A%)
Coast
Weather
DePauw said Wednesday's
conditions are what Is ltnown as
a squall line, a fairly unusual
weather condition in Southern
Callfomia. It occurs juat ahead
or a weather front where cold
and warm air colllde.
Plane Crashes in Storm
Lon Dean Vickery, 24, a Hunt-
ington Beach short order cook,
today remained in Jail custody
in Ueu of $10,000 bail.
He is accused of the at~mpted rape ln a crim1nal complaint Is-
sued earlier this week b)' the
Oranse County Dlstrlct At·
tomey'a Office.
Considerable cloudiness
tonJ1bt becoming partly
cloudy Friday. Filly per·
cent chance or showers
toni1ht decreasinc to 40
percent Friday. Lows
tonight 46 to so. Highs Fri·
day 56to62.
A squall line result.a lo severe
weather, includlna heavy
downpours lJke the one that
1wamped the Orana• Cout late
Wednesday afternoon.
DePauw uld high tem·
p•ratures tonl•bt and
Friday Will be In the low IOI uc1
low• wru be about49desrees.
The aquall line resulted la a
cJrcum.at.anee also u.nusu.J for
Oran1e County -more than an
Inch of rain lD many ~ dur· Ina a 2'·bo\D' period. -iotttctall at the MOUiton ~
Treatment Phuat In La•una ~ruel tbb ~ ""°~ a , ralnf all ot i; U IDchei fQt ttM
S>alt U bcJUis. The MUOD tOt&l b
e. 78 incbel, up• from J.11 tDdiiii ~t yura& tldl ~
JD 9.rW!Wt, about IO Ml ark
By 'fte Aslocl•&ed Preu
TorrenUal rains and gale·
force wiDda flooded streets, tore
down trees and power lines and
c1u1ed a rataJ plane crash.
But in lbe Sierra, t.hl storm
broufbt eood news, leavlng
beh1ad tbe belt 1DOWP9Ck in four an.
BJ late Wed.netd&J' eftllini,
the atorm bad dropped 1.14
lncbea ol raln oo downtown Loa :Ana••··· PUJbln• tbe HHOD total to '7.11 llicbel, the wtather
aervlce ii.Id. Th1t 11 compared
Wllb 5.30 laebl9 lut year Ind an
aYer••e rUifall bf t.bla date ot
S.02l•cbee. Th• Cdfamla 1>9p1rtment OI
IJ'ransportaUoa ·and Hltb•AJ'
Patrol bned ~nd warnt.no ilCllll Ull 1'llMUal Grapeme
Ing f a1ter than 8S mph. But
speeds rarely esceedtd that,
since minor accident• and
engine Ooodouta kept traffic
slowed down or stopped durlnc
the evenlnl rusb hour.
Several Janes were fiooded as
deep u lout feet an transltloo
roact. rt0m tM San Bemudino
and Santa Ana freewu•. u
were lanes 1n both d.lrecLlona ot
the Golden State ~·near
Grtrt'lth Park. •aid th• CUP.
Jn the utern San Gabriel
Valley city ot San Dlmu. mfd·
an.moon wmdl ot up to IO m'Pb
were ~lble for titteDlive
damase to blalldlnt•· Wind•
camecLan tltlmated $50,000 to
$100,000 a.am... to • turia.ltme
1tore after wtndl blew Ott part of
(&M 810Ul, .... AJ)
lnvest14aton say Maneu, the
lniUal Wlb:leaa, and Speara to
whom be cried for help, pounced
on lbe suspect u be pinned the
1irl down In a field.
She was Mt auually auauJted
before they intervened, but her
clotbea had been partially tom
off and abe WH b11terical,
police said. w
.. They saved her a lot of
an,uiab ••. a lot of mental
torment. • >a lot of trauma. I
talkecl to bu .,a1n the otber da.1
and •he aeems to be dolq JUI&
fln• now:• aaid Detective Droc.
The fact Ml.Dell, a HcmUDitan
Beacb resident Qd ednrtlainl
major It Oold.n W.t Colle•• ta
a nor al, Hd·blooded )'ODDI man m., haft und the~ ·~l llfl from tbe bclrrGI' at
INSIDE TODAY
'l'hirf1/"b .,.aTi ago, Carl
Karclln hitch«l Im hot dog cart to a l1or and moo. hit
Amnicoa DNom eom4 trw.
!l'odol/, lw own. tM chain of
Corl'• Jr. rc•t®ront•. Stt
Ftaturing, ~Cl.
•••ex •• Cl .. ..... Cl M M
~, ..,,
a .. ~
jM
I
School
Location
Backed
By ANNF. ('OOPF.R
0. IN O•llY Polol Sl•ll
The $105,000 mude from the
<,alt' or property adjacent to
Uana Hills High School for a
rountv strt·et right or way will
bt.> e~rmarkt'd for the high
.,chool, but the school board
wants a say on how it's spent.
Capistrano Un1f1ed School Dis
tnct trustees voted unanimously
Tuesday to accept the county's
offer or $105.000 ror 1 6 acres
The land wall bt' used for part of
the Stoneh11l Drive extension
Superintendent Jerome
Thornsley recommended to the
•chool board Tuesday that the
funds be turned over to DanJ
Jhlb adm1n1strJtor., and com
mun1ty, to bl' u ... c·d al their dis
l'rc•twn
Trustees have said at previous
:-.rhool board meetings that they
Jll' looking for a way to fund .,,.at:; and hghtm~ for the Dana
lillls -.tad1urn S:.i n C'lcmt'ntL'
ll1 gh currently h:.is the only
stadium w1lh lights and seating,
used hy the three <.11:-.trict high
~l'hOnh
('ap1slrano Vall<'Y High an
~1 1ssHin V1cJO has had $359,250
:-.l'l aside from gift monie'> for a
:-.•·<•und fully ('(1u1pped stadium in
thl' cl1:-.lril'l Funding came from
th1· M1ss11>n V1cJO Comp:.iny,
\\ hH·h n'<1ucsll'd that the money
lw used at a M1ss1on VieJ(J
-.chool Dana Halls, an older
-.chool than Capistrano Valley, as
located an Dana Point
"The adm1nastrat1on and sup-
port groups at DanJ I l11ls have
:.t rong feelings ab<>ul praont1es
fur lht' sµcndang of thl' funds
''h1rh \\ill accrue to the d1!'.tnct
with the sale of the StonC'hJll ac
tcss properly," Thornsley SJtd
·•My recommendation 1s lo ~I\ l' the discretionary cho1cl' llJ
lhl' Sl'hOOI," he Saad , "but that IS
J matll'r of philosophy
.. I have grf'at confidence rn
the Dana llill!> administrators
and parents," sa id trustee
W1l11am Thompson of M1ss1on
Vit•JO "This as rc;.11ly rather a
modl•st sum I don't have any
qualm-. whals<>cvcr about letting
tht•m dec1cle how to :-.pend at
"As an elected school board
t r u s t e ~ . I r e ,. I I t 1 s m y
respons1b11ily how district funds
arc spent." .,a ad Edward
Westberg of San Cll•mente "This
1s a sale of pro1>t•rty paid for by
taxpayers from throughout lhc
d1 ... tract
"I havl' a fear," Thompson
said. · lhal through e1 lack of un
der'>tJndang on the part of the
board. \\C might not allow the
funds to ht· spent as parent.:; and
admanaslrator'> wash This 1s a
l\\O hraded sword."
f'rom Page 11 l
BROWN ...
trols" on local government
spending
lk ordered the special session
convened 112 hours after the
ronclusaon or his speech.
Jlrown did not give reasons for
convening a special session
when the Legislature is already
convened in its regular session
Rut that as a parliamentary
maneuver that can get around
delays required under reg".tlar
house r ules without going to
Republicans to get a lwo-th1rds
majoritv.
Rills passed in the regular
session don't take effect until
Jan. 1, 1979. Rut a bill passed in
a special session takes effect 90
days alter thal session is ad·
1ourned.
Brown's d<'sire for quick ac·
lion on property tax relief is
clearly fueled by a voters' Uu
initiative on the June ballot
which would cut local property
taxes by about two·lhfrds.
The measure, known as lhe
Jarvis Initiative, would cut rev·
enues for cities, counties and local
schools by about$'7 bllhon.
I
DAILY PILOT
HE GOT INVOLVED
Huntington Beach's Maness
D.ily f'll.c S\9ft -
HE RESPONDED, TOO •
Co1ta Mesa's Speers
Latest Salvo
HB Attorney
Raps Coqncil
By ROBERT BARKER
Ol IN D•lly P'li.t SU.fl
City Attorney Don Ronfa ac·
cused the Huntington Reach City
Council todav of locompetencde and hypocrisy and with me -
dling i n the a H airs of the
city's legal department.
Ronfa's verbal attack on city
leaders was the latest salvo in
the controversy t h at has
followed a physical altercation
between F\onfa and Deputy City
Attorney John O'Connor Dec 27.
ang to pick up such a tab.
Ronfa placed O'Connor on im·
mediate suspension without pay
and said he would dischar1e his
deputy as soon as the necessary
written notice is prepared.
The city council also directed
City Administrator Rud Relslto
to tell the city's legal stare not to
assist Ronfa in the matter.
Ronfa said that he had no in-
tention of using his staff for this
purpose. But he said the city
coubcil's action represents med·
dling into the affairs of his de·
partment.
,.,. ........
ACCUSED OF SLAYINGS
Sgt. Earl Holley
f'rona Page A I
The city council !>aid Tuesday
night it wouldn't allow the use or
city funds to pay legal fees that
might result from the latest Ron·
fa -O'Connor imbroglio.
He said the city administrator
has no authority over leaal
employees because in Hunt-
ington Reach the city attorney as
an elected official.
Pendleton
Marine Held
In 2 Killings
HEROES HAILED. • •
City taxpayers alreadr have
paid more than $10,000. in sup·
port of the city attorney 10 a pre-
vious grievance case between
the two men.
"The city council is incapable
and incompetent to manage any
dep1utment," Ronfa chareed.
"They can't manage
themselves. They are way over
their heads."
behind and drag hn into the
held "
Maness hit the aC'celcralor
and. tires squealing. sped into
;m adJa(•enl serv1r~· station, yell·
1ng lo bystander S1wars for aid
Spears, an Orange Coast
College engineering major from
Costa Mesa. ran lo help as Ma-
ness confronted th(• suspect later
alleged to be Vichry assaulting
the ll•enager on the ground
\lt•athcr 1s a phvs1callv large
man. c-ompared to lhe suspect
··Everything happened ~o fast,
Farmers Happy
1t just seemed lhe righl tblng to
do~" says Spean. "ll took both
or us to get him off he r and sub·
dued. I guess we wrestled him
for several minutes."
"Tht'V really did supe r work.
It was just a lucky thing h e saw
what he dJd," said Detective
Droz.
Maness as more blunt about
what he and Spears did while the
shaken teen-aged victim ran back
to the service station to call police
who found Vickery held captive
1ns1deon arrival
Mayor Ron Pattinson con·
tended that legal expenses ln the
latest flareup could cbst \ax·
payers up to $100,000 tr ~ounsel
is provided. The council andlcat-
ed unanimously that it ls unwill·
FrotaPageAl
STRIKE ...
actual suit. However, she said,
"It's something that wlU have to
be investigated lhorou1bly." .
Ronfa also claimed that the
council is "very hypocritical"
because it previously hired an
outside counsel to defend the
chief of police against a
grievance by an officer.
"It cost the city more than
$20,000 and I have the bills to
prove it," he said.
KICKED· 'CAT'
&USES SIINK
By The Associated Press
A young Manne photographer
apparently selected his victims
as he went on a shooting.
stabbing rampage at Camp
Pendleton that left two senior
CO·workers dead and four others
woundpd.
Sgt. Earl J. Holley, 24, or
Staten lslanl!, N.Y .. was arrest-
ed Wednesday, sitting with the
.22·caliber automatic pistol he
allegedly used to kill two senior
photographers at the base audio·
visual center.
Strawberries Get
Extra Rain Boost
Not to be open and not to obt8.U\
information on the proposal
would be irresponsible, she said.
"I haven't even thought about
at " said Trustee Mary Phillips.
'Trustee George Henry said he
would not support a lawsu!t
against the teachers at thJS
lime. Although he doesn't agree
with strikes, he said, "to go
back now and open another
wound in my opinion. would be
a wro~g move for this board or
any board."
DURAND, Ill. CAP) -Jack
Yaun walked out to his barn in
early morning dimness and saw
in the doorway that same old
stray cat that had been hanging
around.
"Well, I up · and gave it one
hell or a good kick," Yaun said
Wednesday.
"We have reason to believe he
knew who the victims were and
he sought them out," said Lt.
Col. D.W. Brown, head of the
public amurs office at the na
lion's largest Marine base, 25
miles north of San Diego.
M aster Sgt. Daniel P. Hurley,
42, of Uniontown, Pa .. and Staff
S~t. Gilbert N. Donham, 38, of
Lade lie, Ark., died or multiple
gunshot wounds, a Marine
spokesman said.
By JERRY CLAUSEN
a; tN 0 •11' ""°' Sl•ll
While rains that fell Wednes·
day and early Thursday arc
causing somt' harvPsting prob-
1 ems for Orange County
farmers, most concede that the
much-needed water as doing
much more good than harm.
A county agricultur e E m·
mission spokesman said rly
today that farmers an the vane
Ranch area are having some d1f·
faculty harvesting cauliflower,
celery and broccoli because of
mud but that the rains are doing
the ··strawberries not hang but
good"
Ile said strawberries grown on
small acreages throughout the
county are not scheduled for
harvesting until late March
through June. "This rain wall
leach the root structure and do
wonders for the crop," he added.
Fred Keller, Irvine Com·
pany's agriculture vice pres1·
dent. said the inch or rain that
fell across the company ranch
has slowed down cauliflower and
celery harvesting and has halted
work in broccoli fi elds.
"We can't get the tractors in,"
he said, adding that lhe com-
pany's avocado harvest also has
been temporarily stopped
because of the rain.
However, Keller was happy
about the condition or Irvine Co.
grazing land. Late last month he
had predicted the firm would
import hay to feed its 1,000 head
of cattle.
From Page A J
RAINS ..•
Barranca Road from Culver
Drive to Jerrrey Road; and all or
Ridge line Drive, which was cov-
ered in mudslides. . . . Police estimated R1dgellne
would not be fully cleared or
debris for a month, though city
public works said lhe road would
be passable by late today, bar·
ring more rain.
Parts of Culver were expected
to stay cl06ed for a week for re-
pair. The police department. report·
ed that a majority of lts com-
municaUOM lines were put out
of commission by rainwater
seepina through the roof, thou.ah
emeraency lines remained open.
Roof rainspouts couldn't han-
dle lbe loads aod water backed
over floodproof copings.
Firemen and Paclflc
Telephone laborers worked four
to rive hours to keep lhe remain·
in& lines open and restore the
doused ooes.
Phone panels were dried with
hot cotnpre11ed air blowen:
some had to be band-dried by
towel.
TbrO\llbOUt the county, there ..
were numerous traffic aeclden\li
caused by allck or flooded 1trMta
and low vtalbility tbroufb tho
drenchlnc downpoura wblch
camelnwav • Ttatn were no Krlous h\J\irt•
reported.
Dam.,e ln Sad41ebaclc ValleJ'.
area.I WU ripotted 1U&bl
T .J . M~ Ol'IJ\tl Counl.J
W1.t.tr wora otatnct' ceaeral mua1er, Mid rm wat.en lD tbe San Juu Ud Trab'1co ere.a
would aubltantlally add to un·
d1r1toand Wlllr ball.Di.
He indicated this morning that
grasslands are now in good
grazing conditiOJl.
Yaun failed to see the white
stripe down the animal's back.
A Rancho Mission Viejo
spokesman said this morning
that t he lates t s torm had dropped approxfmately 1.25
inches or rain on the ranch's 40,000
acres of grazing land.
Trustee Carole Neustadt could
not be reached for comment.
The skunk retaliated.
The count.¥'s southernmost
ranch is running only 600 head or
cattle on its range this year. Gil
Aguirre, vice president for
ranch operations, said last
month that his company ls
stocking no ra nge beef cattle
this year because o( drought
conditions. NormaUy, he said,
the ranch runs up to 4,000 head
or cattle during the winter
months.
* * * From Page Al
STORM •••
its roof.
Power outages were reported
in Rosemead, San Gabriel, El ·
Monte, Sierra Madre, Monrovia.
Glendora, San Dimas, Laverne
and the City of Industry.
A Whit.tier home suffered an
estimated $17,000 damage after
it reportedly was set afire by a
lightning boll Wednesday after·
noon, a county fire department
spokesm.an said.
Three persons died Wednes--
day after their Piper PA·22 got
lost in heavy storm clouds and
crashed In Cleghorn Canyon
while en route from Ontario to
Chico, autborltles said. The
single-engine plane crashed
about an hour after leaving On·
tario Airport, said a Federal
Aviation Administration official.
Io Sycamore Canyon -left
denuded by last July's fire -no
serious mudslides or flooding
was reported, said Santa
Barbara County Flood Control
District officials. They noted
that following last week's rains,
the newly planted canyon region
appeared in good shape, with
plants sprouting on the scorched
ground. •'The ground just seems to be
s oaking up the rain like a
sponge." one official said. "It's
kind of surprtsm.."
But In Oceanside near San
Diego, five homes on Roberta
Lane were reported flooded,
with as much as half a foot of
mud covertni their floon. Resl·
dents said a blU beblnd tbe homes
had been araded by • developer.
so when the rains came they
wubed part of the hill doWD into
the bouaes below. A train whlcb run• dally
between Eacondldo and
Oce&111lde wu halted by the
ra11>1 Wedoesday about three .
mUea out&lde of Oee&Datcle.
Tb• en1lnHr report1dl:r
stopped the train about 4 p.m.
after be couldn't back QP and
couldn't '°forward because the
roadbed under tbe tracb bad been washed out. The tr.in waa
expected to roU ac• eometlm•
tod•Y· xtemln flood1iia ... ~
ed ln maQ Pirta at Oc..utde.
Tb• Fire ~bad CO bOr.; row aud ba-,1, from nurbi
Camp PtDdlelOG to 1boN up
cree•Mdl. A TbrlflJ dra1 atore ln
Ocean.aide npOi1iCS!y aQfttNd •
partial p,11~ ol the roaf eftS'
a cellliildialndoded.
RCA 17':...0-XL-100 portable
color TV with Slgnal Sensor
remote control
RCA'• Slgnal Sensor
electronic remote
control·
. en HOM-9l1MOTI! Easy-chair conv -JUST Utt.H lence. Change chan-
nels, control volume,
turn set on and off-
all from across the
room.
RCA 19':...0..,. Colol'n'ak table model
~ ---__ ,_
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111~
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• ~
~ .~·
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For a ColorTrak
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RCA 15'~1~on•I
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Modal EX354
..
• OM of a kinds
• Floor s-.s.s
•Close-Outs
RCA 19" Oiagonaf.78 Extended Lila
Chassis Model FB443, One only . • •
1369 90
RCA 19" Diagonal Portable Mod&I
FX ... 66 ... 1379.90
RCA t9" Olagonal Portable with
Remote Control, Model FU.,.76R • ~.
S469 90
RCA Ht" Diagonal Table Model wi!h
Remote Control, Model FA-488 •••
'479.90
Several Others to Choose From
lncludlng Console Models. Subject to
Prtor Safe.
\,f.· \houf 0111· (on.,,,.,,,.,. ,.,.off••·tio u 1•11111 .
27 5 East 17th St.
Costa Mesa
' .
Orange Coa· .. t Daily Pilot Editorial POge
---------------------------------------------------
tG ~B
Tl'luraday, January 5, 1978
Ro~t N Wee-d1Publlsher Thomas Ket0v1t Editor
Barbara Kre1b1ch Edltorl•t Pao• Editor
MAC Candidates
Deserve Attention
b llw n:1nws 'il•ltlcd after Tuesday's filing deadllnt·
f~ir thl' Mt'>'ilOll \'1rJO Municipal Advisor) Council's
M<.1rl'h dcC'twns. eight candidates remained as contend
<•l''i for lhrt'l' pos attons.
Six of those r e maining candidates will be battling for
two four y<·ar terms m the March 7 election. The other
l\\U on till' bullot seek the 01wn two·) car term.
Th.lt 's not too bad a show mg of interest in a board
that ,1llhuugh technical!) pov.erless carries subs tan
H<il \\ l'ight w1lh l'OUnt\ supervisors over decis ions affect
mg t ht• an· a
t'ons1derang the potential influence of MAC. e\ en
111011· c.1nd1clates \\'ould have been welcome. .
Tht• MAC \\ a!'i t'rt·ated b) u 'ote of the people. lks1
d1·nh presum..ibl) v. c•rt• concerned about their fote tn <•
t'nlllll' gO\ t•rnrncnlal mechanism \\here they could ha\ c
hllle impact as "unincorporall'd terntor )."
l'nlortunalcl), interest 111 ha\ mg an impact m local
<1f1 ;.11 rs has apparently d1m1nished o\'cr the ) ears S tnCl'
tht> l\l J\C's inc<.'pt1on.
We'd like lo Sl'l' m orl' interest in the MAC Perhaps :i
ll\'<•ly campaign b) the ('and1daks who have made their
:-.erv1ccs uvatlahle \\'Ill stimula te others to s how greater
parl1C'1pat10n in hl'lpmg go\'ern Lhc rapidly growmg com
rnunil)
City Finding Its Feet
Thl· )car 1!)77 mark<•d the city of Irnne's sixth year
ol incorporatwn In man) ways il was a very good year
tor< lran1w County's newest municipality.
Thl• )ear brought ~in l'llcl to a 21 2 ) ear dispute over
what re!>ponsahihtit•s new industry bears toward absorb·
1ng some of the hurdt:n of I mdmg housmg for its workers.
1·uttrng into lhl· pea c:cntagc who must, by n ecessity, be
t·om muter cmplo) t'l''-·
J\ !though the M.'tllt:'mcnt of the Orange County Fair
11011-,rng law~ua t out of th1· courts resulted in relatively
I cw housing lllllts, t lw rn mt· Company s howed a willing-
111.:-.-. lo COO(H'J'<tl l'
It \\a:. an 1 m poi taut ach1t•\ l'ment, and d e monstrcite<l
lhc .1h1hty of tht' <·11:--to function independently of the
I r\'lnt' Compan\ IJ) M'p:trale ncgotiat10n.
Tht.· <:ompany built the town. and the new city is onl}
11ow finding its own fet•l. taking the tentative s teps
toward an mcv1la hl1.· anclcpendcnce from the fixed plan-
ning goals ol a torporalc mentality.
And indt•pt•11<lcnt the c 1ly must strive to be. if it ever
1!> lo n •;wh 11'. ov. n maturity, und be a city of its own
aim"
Voters Need Issues
Nine candidates for two seats on the city council of a
Lown of 45.000 pc•rsons may seem a slim number of Irvine
<.'it 11c·ns intcres t<.•d in the job. Some call it political
apathy.
To Irvine voters who have lo weed the list lo JUSl two,
runt· m a't -.c•cm a passl'I mdccd.
A<.'tu;.111}. \\C think it's a good numbe r; large enough
that some c11n·rs1ly m approach to local government may
:->ncak m: small enough to fit a medium-sized room for
somt· ml•claum sized discussion of the local issues.
Tbt• 1ssu<.•s so far in lhe fledgling campaig ns have yet
to h1• dl•ftnl'd . The new campaign reform ordinanc<>,
<:ustom lwwn by the present council for this election, sel ·
t111 g t·o11tnbut1on J1m1ts, is certain to be one.
lb the llr:-.l and no doubt especially the last-reports
of rnntnbut1ons and expenditures are m a de, one candidate
or <•nothl'r perhaps a ll of them -will d enounce this
one's spl'nclin~. ot· thatone's g ift.
But who gives what to whom should not be the only
1!,SUl' of the c·ampa ign. Property laxes, zoning, industrial
growl h. l'Onst'rvation o f us able open spaces and other is -
s ues demand de bate.
VC>tl•rs <ll•scrvc an a rray of issues cle:.irly defined in
\\<'II planned community forums that are more than op-
portunit1l's for cund1clates to plant a few friends among
t lw a uclicncc Lo usk a few friendly, well·reh earsed ques-
t ions. • Opinions expressed in tho space above are those of the Daily Pilot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment Is Invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O.
Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321.
Boyd/Cat's Eyes
ByL.M.BOYD
History records that Cel'·
tain an<."ient Turks claimed
they could tell the time or
day by looking into a cat's
eyes. Might be something to
it. Believe J recall having
r e ad somewhere that the
pupils in a cat's eyes con-
tract and expand predictably
i n relationship to the
whereabouts or the sun. Will
research this further. Stand
by.
Was Just 99 years a go that
Rear Admiral Daniel Am·
men brought lhe fint bowl ol
goldtish into thl1 c ountry
from J apan.
What quailfles
archaeoloeiat Iri• Cornella
Love for membonb.tp in the
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Proper J ob Club is the fact
that s he seven years ago dis·
covered the whereabouts of
the long lost statue of the
lo ve goddess Aphrodite.
She'd put in a lot of time
around the Mediterranean
diggings in search or it, but
that's not where she found
Praxiteles' masterpiece. In
the basement of the British
Museum in London i.s where.
Question cropped up as to
how "lire" came to mean
di s mlsaed from a job.
''That's obvious, dum dum,"
writes a swift client. ''Flro ls
also a synonym !or discharge
meaning to get rid or in a
hurry, upl ''All rtabt.
Youn• Jncxporlenced
seaD'le11 abOard ahlp in tho
old British navy were al·
lowed 14 !Aches of 1pace tn
whlch to .UU their canvas
hammocks. The . older petty
omcer1 were authorized 24
inchea ot apace. Some his·
torlans feel this admiralty
rule to ~vo moro room to the
stascoed sa.llors was a 1ubtle
recoanlUonof tbat thlllf called
m lddleatet}Jl'.UCL
FlCteenpercentofthepeoplo
ln thla country provide
all the food, atood• and servlees for tile entlro populaUon. Or 10 HY \he
1laU1Uct1n1. lnteresunr. lt
true. And If true, it'• quite a
mea•un ot U.S. ~.
l• It noU BUt What are tbole
oLlter 17 OU\ ot 20 people i:lo-
ln1, meantime, pray? T!lil
can •~ pftlty dffp. Tl.me for
a nap.
Earl Wate r s
Truck 'Crackdown' Questioned
Ila:-. llw t'altforni.1 ll1gh .... a~
l'Jttol cr.itkt•d d owu on spN·ding
true· ks., Hs n·t'l'llt n•port of more
titan 5,000 c·1tallons hav1ni.: been
issued to SJ><'eding truck dn ver:.
1Jur1nt.t the month of Oc tober sug.
i.:csts th:ll, at Ion~ last, the c·om-
pl ;11nt-. or moton ... ts ha \'l' :.ct.>pt•d
through to ('Ill' Comm1ss1onc1
<:tc•n Craig
Atmosr from ltw innr>llon uf
lht• UOl"l'ah ... tH· 55 mph :-.pl'cll
I 1m11, l ht•
Ill II t II I I 11 j.(
JI II b I I {' h , ....
lwt•n plt•Jcltng
for prot.cct11m
f r o m l h l'
hl'hC'molhs ur
I tw h1glrn J}..,
\\ h I I' h
lhuntll•r do\\n
lrnm on l11~h
on frt·cwa)
t r ;1 v <•I fl• rs. t a 1 I~ a I in g ;1 n d
ot hl•rwbt· l<'l'l'CH 11111g cl rivers
..., ho havt• lht• tt•ml•rttv to stand 111
tht•1r wuy hy ohscr ving the
"Jlt•c·d limit.
Las t summt·r Cr;11g <1nn11unrt·CI
a "('rt1c·kdown" 11n the truc·k:-. and
th<.• ()(•tobcr rt·port ll'n<kd tu
:-.ho w 1t .... a.., being c·arra·d out
/\nd . ulthough the ;,iC'tiv1ty i.hoY.11
a mountf'd to barely more than
one truck stopped during tht·
monl h by cach slate tr:.ifftc of·
f1<'l·r. it st11l would be !-.1gn1f1cant
had th<.' target mdeC'd been thosl'
roaring bt•asts of the roar! :.ibout
\~horn the public h:is IJcl·n com
platninJ.(.
BUT AN examination of lhe
f Jt'lS <.';1..,t !-.OffiC doubt about tht-
"crackdO\\-n." Whtie there arc
only ;1bout 90,000 tractors reg·
1stcrC'd in California an estimat·
<.'cl 300,000 such units enter the.•
stat£• each y<.'ar. These arc t ht.•
motonled components \\ h1 ch
pull thl' huge freight trailers seen
r umbling up ~ind down the
fre<•way:-..
And, althouJ,!h it is not known
how much of thl' ttml' thes1•
trucks, out of stale and home
basC'd, arc actually on Cahrornw
hi~hways, thC' relatively small
11um bcr compared to lhl' total of
passenger curs, might make
5,000 spN~d c1talwns setim a
hcu vy enforcement effort.
However, Cll P :;ourccs dis-
<.· lose that the count was not limit·
l'd lo the type or trucks which
<·ome instantly Lo the mind of the
Nicholas Von Hoffman
motorist but included a myriad
of other types. There are nearly :t
million "trucks" registered in
the i.tate. These include panels.
pickups and station wugoni.,
wh ic h were not counted.
although many two·axle and
other small trucks were. So the
total or 5,000 is no way indicatiw of the CHP effort against the
tn.rn1 mothx about whic h the
public complains.
IN C'0~1PAKI NG the CllP rec-·
ord on xpccd citations to trucks
against the O\'erall of 89,052 Issued
to vehicles of all types it might
still seem a good performance.
heing more than 5 percent,
t•SpC'Clally when lhe number Of
trucki. 1:-. matched against the
near 12 m1llto n passenger
\ ehitles regt'S't.l•rt'tl
Hut comparing total registra-
tions as a falsl• m easurement
With rurc C'xceplions passcngur
c·ars stand idle far more than
they Olre m u~e and many of them
never or rarely venture out on
the freeways. Not so with the
monster trucks whose high costs
make at essential to get the
h1ghesl usage possible. The only
real m cai.urement then would be
a comparison or mileage
travellt•d on state hi ghways by
trucks versus passenger cars .
One thing th<' report clearly re.
\1ealed is that speed occupieli
nearly 50 percent or the emphasis
of the CllP for the total number
of tickets written for violations of
;ill ty pes wes only 195,194.
ALSO misleading is the total of
traffic officers on the CHP, re·
ported as 4,165. The five·day
week reduces the number availa-
ble for duty to about 3,000 while
sick lea,•e, courtroom time and
other causes further erode the
number lo where there a re prob·
nbly no more than 2,000 reporting
for duty on any given day to cover
a 24·hour period. On certain
holidays. when super efforts are
made, the patrol may fi eld as
many as 1,000 a t one time but
overtime earned then reduces the
C H P strength on s ubsequent
days.
It 1s this force which must not
only cover both s i<Jes or the
s late's 3,79'1 miles or freeway and
more than 11 .000 additional miles
of s tate highway, but a lso
thous ands of miles of county
roads.
Is Remedial ·Education Money Wasted?
WASlllNCTON -Every few
months from one section of the
country or another comes fresh
news confirming the fact that
m any children pass in, through
and out of school without learn·
an~ to r cad or figure.
!-io parents and o ther tax-
payt>rs demand that kids who
dido 't learn
a n y thing bl'
held back, a
practice that
was given up
som e years
ago wh e n
s omebod y
noticed that
the fir s t
grade at P.S.
40 had 11 ~ix ·
rooters in it.
Being a 14·year-0ld Big Stoop
in a class or otherwise bright
and proficient lO·year·old chums
is thought to cause anxiety and
inferiority feelings in the larger,
laggard i;cholar who may then
wap his little buddies around in
a paroxysm or misplaced resent-
m('nt.
To get around this problem it's
being suggested that kids who
don't even know the easier part or the multipUcatlon table be
Mailbox
s hunted of f to s p ec ial
classes. r .a scholastic chain
gang where they will crack their
rock·like heads learning that 6 x
8 equals 48. If they don't learn lo
read, as they probably won't, at
least they will be failing out of
s ight. And no more diplomas for
·the boneheads: henceforth all
they get is a certificate of atten-
dance.
BEHIND all this concern and
activity are some propositions
which may or may not be true.
Proposition one is that schools
are to teach reading and writ·
ing; proposition two is that when
they don't it's the teachers' fault
and the taxpayers are getting
cheated: number three is that if
you don't have an abnormally
depressed I.Q. you can and you
mus t learn lo read and do
elementary arithmetic.
or course, all depends on
number three. We know from
ourselves and our-rriends it
doesn't ronow that IC you can
read you can count. Some or us
are whizzes at numbers and can
barely read; the reverse is even
more common. As for the goal of
a totally literate society, while it
may be possible to ~each every•
one but the mentally handi·
capped how to read, it also may
be very expensive. Somewhere
we hit the law of diminishing re·
turns.
THE COST in teachers, re··
medial reading ins tructors ,
counselors and therapis ts,
phys ical and psychological, to
drive Nasty Nate and Snide Sal-
ly into learning how to read is
much too expensive. The society
isn't going to get its money back
on that investment.
Is it necessary to teach every-
body. how to read and figure?
What about using the millions
that m ath ins truction is going to
cost us to give away hand·held
calculators to all those who can't
count but signify a desire to do
comparison shopping a t the
supermarket ? If there is no
r eadily apparent reason why so
much money should be spent so
that everybody-literally every·
body -in our society, can do
Jong division, the need for 100
percent literacy is not apparent
either.
Work is another question. It
is generally agreed on the basis
or the scantiest information that
you can't hold down a job if you
lack these two basic skills. Jf
that's so. the reason has less to
do with the work itself than with
how the JOb requirements are
~el up. Why d~s a bus driver in
;rn cx;ict -<."hangc·only system
have to know how to add and
subtract''
Teachers who are supposed to
"larn" the recalcitrant dunces
don't care for proficiency ex-
ams : they prefer to speak of in·
structing their obtuse charges in
s uch things as ''life coping
skills,"' an odious expression
hatched 1n the gastrointestinal
tract of a professor o( ed·psych
no doubt. The danger is that
pupils will be made to pass an
exam In this amorphous subject,
and lhose flunking life coping
will be adjudged socially incom-
petent at an even higher finan-
cial cost to the community.
All children must go to school.
There is nothing else to be done
with them once they escape in·
fant exposures, but all children
don't have to learn while they·re
there. For some, romping about
with the coping skills teacher is
the answer, while the rest of us
a cknowledge defeat and admit
that occasionally high standards
aren't lhe best standards.
Congressinen Preparing for Televised Sessions
To the Editor:
Ma ny thanks !or your kind re-
marks regarding my efforts in
obtaining a one.year
moratorium on the relocation of
!eder&illy protected witnesses to
Southern CallCornia. I am
plea1ed by the Justice Depart·
mf'nt's decision, and I plan to
watch carefully when a Senate
Judiciary subcommittee con·
ducts hearings on tho witnoss
protection pro1ram sometime
next year.
EARLY this month, yoa
editorially mentioned the
''salutary crrect.. of tclevlllon
coveraae on tho Florido. state
leelslature and epolto or con-
1rei1alonal debate on the aubject
of telovl1lon and radio access to
the tJoor of the House. On Oct.
1:1, the ll'ouSe opproved by a vote
of 3'2 to 44 Uoufte ResoluUon 866
#hlcb provide. fortelovlaion and
radio toVt>ra&• of floor proceed·
ln11. The cameru and cable are
beanc lnltalled rl_Jbt now, and I
axptd that tho 'TV and r8d.io
1MlWOlti wUI bit tnll\f Ml Id·
,.ntase ol thll pr~tn me>" P1 tht' ~ wMn'we NCOSl" HnolnJanuary. ·
Tbt AIDf'rlcao ~ple d~no ro ,.. ftnthMd "°" thtir ao.·1 emaientirtes. ne, wmnat .
be disa ppointed In the
performance of the House, I am
certain.
MARK W. HANNAFORD
Member of Congress
Loeel11.J•Red
To the Editor:
1 read your editorial entitled
"A Lovely Present.·• <about the
Festival of Uabtl boat parade>
and indeed lt wu. I am an ex·
patriate, newly arrlvtd !tom t.be
vast wuteland of the nonbeut.
a place founded by the Dutch In
1623 and called Manbattao.
I used to enjoy Ntw York City
dunni Cbrtstmu. It wu alto a
·fairyland and sparkled -!U\h Avonuo, Park AYenuo, the
Jllht.1, Ule 1tores, Radio CltJ,
and th• people -•ven amldlt
tho buaUe. bustle .. puahlnl and
sbovln1 there waa tbe,trfendll·
DOH ol Christmas. .
But the Feith•al of tJthti boat
parade wu abeohitely 16Vllt. l
enjoyed thlt Cbrl1tmaa ln
Soutbena Callfamlm and kn'e my
new home. Tballk 1011.
Southll.nd.
ROBEl\T GORDON
dling," Dec. 20, shows how far
government strings twist.
Private Hillsdale College, that
has never taken government.
funds, is being harassed for hav·
jog students that do.
The students may be 1etUn1
them u veterans, for disability
pay, pensions or any other in-
di vldual reaaon. But if they
choose to ~ them for educat.loo
inatead of clothes~ vacations or
beer, HEW, tho Health. Educa-
tJon and Welfare Department.
aay1 the oducatora are the reelp. l~ntl ot Uie federal ald and to
are 1ubJect to thcJr 1overnmcnt. conttol.
1t 1t a pod Wlrni.nf, to keep
band ort 1ovcmment 1trtnp,
that tho cities ahoWd heed. To
toucb thole atrinp, J>O matter
'how .llibtlr. ta to be alua.Md to
1ove~'• m,..Uc 111a.ie.
GOLDIE JOSEPK
r .. c....rt
To the l'..ct1&or! n oeC'ar'NiJ to me tocla7 Ualit'
pertaaPawme "'•, ... res~ ble for t.b9 iacly tre.atnMet IOale
men are bMlinrinl ut*l •· ~ loaa ..... •• womea <1 wu ance> beili 10 cuUl ,nth our bodla ..s Clllinel,., now -.
.......... dlMed ..... ·-Mil
" ~-aftalr? ,,. . ......
I om shocked always by tho
women here who dress 10 lewd·
ly. Js It an accident or un·
conscious copying of others? Or
Ss lt a call out to men. It may be
Ignorance that makes a etrl or
woman dress so immodestly. Or
ls It a bold statement of her de·
alre? A desire to be loved ••
How many women thlnk they
con have love lC a man phy1lcaUy
loves them or ii attracted to
them? Finally, is lt a bold nesat--
ln 1 of IODl•lltandlng valuu
naturalty attached towornensucb
u mode:Sty, sweemeu, bumlUty,
quletncsaandconslderaUoo?
Women wlll ba~e to enmlDt
tholr everyday actloaa and
dre11lng. It seems to me that
men are 1Ull the aame: a
woman altract:I them. Women ara luck)'. ~ u.s enjoy the rolit,
but be a wan of what It. entans. J!BNNY ALEXANDD
CALIFORNIA Tttu...O.y, January ~. t97tr DAIL y PILOT A.i
f5lJ Birds •
Killed North Pounded by Rain . A.noaHIY AT LAW <
BANKRUPTCY $95 :
DIVORCE $95
Uncontested
640.2507
1Jy Slick
SAN DIEGO <AP> -
A mysterious 011 bliCk
has killed about 50 birds.
mostly sea ducks, and
harmed about 25 others ,
in San Diego Day, the
:.late Game and Fish
Department says.
The Coast Guard
Marin e Safety olf1 ce
e;a1d patrol boats dis
patched after the dead
b1 rds were discovered
found "a light sheen" of
tul on the waler on the I d
Coronado side or the bay. Service Ha t e
... w, .......
By The Associated Press
)tore drougbt.4fefying rain and
saow were forecast for Northern
Ca llrornia today in a one-day
follow.up to ltle powerful storm
that slammed into the state with
howijng winds and gushing
showers.
Jn nearly all districts of th~
top half of tt1e state showers
were predicted into the night.
Travelers warnings were issued
for blowing snow in the Sierra,
expected to descend to 3,500 feel
at times. Chains were required
on most mountain routes.
PARTS OF THE BAY Area reported thunder, lightning and
hail during Wednesday's sLorm .
Some arerus reported winds of 40
mlles an hour
OFFICIALS said the
:o1ource of the 011 was un·
determined but no spills
had been reported.
The National Weather Service S tun lman Evcl Knievel talks with found another wet weather
limousine chauffeurs he hired to take system stationed off the Oregon
work furlough prisoners to a nd from their Coas t, suggesting even more
They speeulated that
oil from street surfaces
may have been washed
into the bay by heavy
rain. Hut a Coast Guard
:,pokei.man said it was
"hard lo believe this
'\ ould he enough to kill
the birds."
Jobs Wednesday rn Los Angeles. The precipitation may be on the way
livery service upset the s herifrs depart-beyond the forecast period.
ment, and Knievel has decided to call a Wednesday's showers dropped
halt to it. rivers ol water onto the land.
-------------------One thunderstorm dumped an mch of rain on Oakland Jnterna-
FRAN K TODD ,
<'urator of birds at Sea
World, i;:.llll a hghl, high·
grade diesel oil was
responsible for th e
deaths. lie noted the
h1rds "d1spla~ t•d all Lhe
~ymp tom~ or such a
bplll. ..
Disney World
Expansion Set
BURBANK (AP> -Walt Disney Productions has
unveiled plans for a major addition to its Wall Dis-
ney World complex in Florida.
The project, to be called The Experimental
Prototype Community of Tomorrow (EPCOT),
"will be devCJted to the ---------
adv ancemenl of mtema-Land. Tr ans porta lion tional unders tanding and Space.
t1onal Airport between 4 p.m.
and 5 p.m.
MARIN COUNTY reported the
heaviest rainfall, ranging up to
Ph inches by late afternoon.
Rain·sllck roads caused many
accidents, including a whopper
or a 22·car pileup on Highway 17
between Los Gatos and Santa
Cruz just before dawn. Traffic
was backed 'Up for an hour and a
half.
All the precipitation activity is
buttressing notions that the
California drought is getting a
good working over.
·1 ne inJurca birds
"ere taken to Sea World
arter ProJecl Wildhre
volunll'crs washed orr
the i.l1C'k and pl\_ccd
them m healing pads.
and the solution of the --------------------
.,..
Todd said the
rreaturt"i will remain al
Sea World for M•veral
we1·k-. until tht•y re·
('OV l' l
Dog Ban·
Delayed
SAN DIEGO !AP)
A ban on dogs al most
beaches m San Diego
would cost $100.000 ao·
nually, the City Council
has bee.n told.
prob I ems of people
everywhere through the
communicatio n of
ideas," the company
said m 1ls 1977 annual re·
port.
Disney soid the EP
COT Center would have
two m aJor areas, Future
World an d World
Showcase. The company
mode no estimate of
when the new center
wou ld be completed.
FUTURF. WORLD
will include a maJor in ·
lroduclory theme show
called Spaceship Earth,
Disney said, accom-
panied by what the com·
pany called a "global
m arkeLplace of new
ideas" called the Com-
murticore. Beach patrols a nd
~ommunicat1ons gear
arc needed. Also planned are
A fmal vote on the pro· pavilions dealing with
posed ordinance was de· E n e r g y . Li f e a n d
Javed Wednesday. Health, The Sea, The
State Senate
$150 Tax Cut
Gets Support
SACRAMENTO CAP) -A plan to give four
million California homeowners property tax cuts
of $150 or more appears to be gaining support in
the state Senate.
But there was stlll no '. J decision Wednesday on (
the plan for across· the· ·.'-)TATE
board tax cu~ -roughJy '---------the same amount for
both rich and poor
homeowners. Another Democratic caucus was
scheduled for today to decide whether to offer the
plan to the noor.
The plan faces a rival bill giving the biggest
tax: .break Lo poor renters and homeowners.
1t'0111G• Die• in IH·fated.Lea.P
.. THERE IS AN AIR of op-
llmiam here, but we're trying
to be realistic," said Bill Clark
Wednesday at the state Drought
Inf o rm a tion Cente r in
Sacramenlo.
Clark added the drought ls not
over. despite lhe pr.clp(tabon
M &Jor reservoirs are eitill very
low and raio 11 J&eeded this
month and in 'ebruary. Of
critical importance in gaugme
the situation will be the depth or
the Sierra snowpack nexL
month.
1978 CARS I
and TRUCKS .:
3 Prized Redwoods
Lost to Vandalism
PIERCY (AP> -Three or
California's prized ancient
redwood trees will fall today, the
victims of vandallsm. The three giant trees, each
reaching some 100 yards above
the ground and measuring more
than six feet in diameter, were
hacked at the base with a
chainsaw.
One tree was cut all the way
around the ~ase, with only a 2·
foot core remaining. The others
were slashed r,mdomly with a
series of cuts.
JIM IDBBERT, manaeer or
s tate park lands in the Piercy
area, said the trees stood in a
grove of old redwoods, ranging
in aee from 1,500 to 2,000 years.
The grove, in the Smithe
Redwoods State Reserve, is in
northern Mendocino County.
some 200 miles north of San
FJ'anclsco.
One or the t rees was more
than six feet in diameter and
two were some 11 feel across.
The grove is just aome 100 feet
• off Cailiomia Highway 101.
THE GROVE WAS popular
with touris ts. Two of the
stricken trees had walk·lhroueh
tunnels carved at the base and
were popular settings for photo-
graphs.
Hibbert. said the damage was
irreversible and the trees would
be downed today by a private
contractor. He said the highway
would be closed to traffic for two
or three hours.
ALL MAKES!
Despite high winds and the
severe damage. the trees were
not in danger of falling over and
did n ot pose an immediate
threat lo traffic, Hibbert said.
THE TREES WERE s truck 833-0555
some time between Monday af. Ask For Our
ternoon and Tuesday, he said. LUSE SP£CIAUST ot The state parks department ls
investigating the vandalism and HOWARD Chevrolet
will seek felony crim in al c:ioc-o10cw •• ,,.,o"1"''1
charges should anyone be ar· .___N_EWPO __ R_T_B_EA_c_H_-J
rested, according to department ----------
spokeswoman Gene Cone.
The Mendocino County
Sheriffs Office was investigat-
ing the case, but had no suspects
or motive for the vandalism.
Call 642-5678.
Pul a few words
to work for ou.
LOWEST PRICE EVER ON THIS
FAMOUS REALISTIC® CB I LONG BEACH (AP) -A 22·year-0ld woman
bled to death Wednesday arter severing her
jugular vein when she crashed through a window
to escape a roaring apart~ept fire that killed
Angel Palanco, 2, who was lert in her care, j>o-•
llcesald. The woman, ldentirted as Paula Archuleta,
• managed to save her year-old daughter, Angelica,
by handing her to a neighbor through a small
opening in th• iround-tloor window before taking
ADD AN ARCHER® ANTENNA
AND SA VE EVEN MORE f Reg. 169'5
her ill·fated leap, fire officials said. ·
}
ri
DUAL
MIRROR
MOUNT
Re,g. 34ta
21!!
Oet .. uperfor
coverage I
Adju1tebl•
tip rod'-
FIBERGLASS
TRUIK·GRIP
..
UT18°/o
Reg. 21 11
., .
21-1522
VIM •
CHARGE ff /MOST STORES}
Our TRC-42' gives you ''on the road'' safety an d peece of
' mind for hazardous winter drMngl All the regular features
ptua "LED" reaetout, extra lar_ge S/RF meter, noise blanker, AN~ AF gain. Buy now and drive with the confidence of own-
ing our best 40 channel AM mobile CB radio at a spectacular
41%HVfngal
'RADIO SHACK OWNS AND OPERATES tB ELECTRON/CS FACTORIE.SIN 6 COUNTRIES/ . Moat llWM
ldto av•itab141 tt
RHioSl'teck
0..lllrt.
Look '"' thtl .ign In yOUf
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Strike Cnts Production
VERNON (AP) -A month.old
strike by worlcera at a Jobna· M~vllle roofing plant hlll reducod.
producUoo at the Vemoo faclllt.y to
10 percent of capaclt.y, tho eomP&Q.T
claims.
The plant's 140 workers, members
of United Paperworkua Local 30'1•
walked out Dec. 5 to back dem.andl
for tncreased waaH. tmproved
pen$loo beneflbi and vacatioos.
Blll Fulmer. the union'• ftundal
aeer•tary, said W•dnesday the wonen want a $$-cent hourly ra1lo
ln UM flm ,.. ol a three-par con· tract foUa.ed by 9 percent 1ocre ...
ln tbe MOCed and tb:1rd years. Thell'
bel\lrly ,,.,. &Vttqe l'.56 .. ·
IDdustlles Betdn Decllne
WASHlNGTOitor (AP) -Three
mciiQUii ol 1troai.1aln1 for fador)o Ol'>-
dVa bave Cllllded, witb captt.al 10ocfS
ID4utdt1 le.alal tbe d.ecUMI, tbe
COhlOMr'ee ~aa,a;
Tb• ca.,.tal tOixtll lnduttn• ........
17 toclleltAI the ••·term lnvt1bDilll& plu1 of bulintea. The NOYemMi'
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Auc111t. ot. ·~in stptemb.r 1.1 pereeat ID • Tbe Wt deCllM
... .1.t pwttllt IA .JaJi. •
Thurad1y, January§, tlil78 s DAILY PILOT C7
In The Red
Credit Nixed?
Take Action
By SYLVIA PORTER
Tlllnllll• .......
Tht• ease with which one can open a charge account.
get a new credit card or get a loan from a financial iosUtu-
llon is dependent on the do11sicrs kept on virtually every
borrower in the tiles of more '-'en 2,SOO credit bureaus in
the United Stales.
Credit bureaus do not rate rtsks. they collect lnformu·
lion from creditors as well as from 'public records and
other sources. This Information is used by bunks.
merchants. and other Junden; in considering whether to
grant credit.
LENDERS MAY RATE APPLICATIONS in terms of
what they call the .. Three C's ot Credit:"
-Character: Personal characteristics revealed
through the factual records of credit history. which in-
dicate how you are likely to perform as a borrower.
-Capacity: Financial abiUly to repay a Joan, judged
of{ the basis of your job.
Capital: Assets
that can serve as col-lateral for a loan.
If you are denied
credit by a lender and
·the reasons for the de-
nial are not speciCied in
Money's
Worth
detail, you have the right to request .this information in writing.
IF YOU ARE REJECTED BY A creditor and, after re·
ceiving detailed reasoning, are not satisfied with the de-
cision, you are entitled to a free copy oC the report on
which the decision was based.
Request it in writing within 30 days or the date you re·
cei ved the letter of rejection. After that. i~ will cost $3 to SS.
H there are inaccuracies in your report or you wish to
comment on a past discrepancy, t.he law enUUes you lo
enter an explanatory statement of 100 words or less. This
must be added to your credit report.
Several weeks to a month later, request another copy
of your report to see whether your statement is included.
YOU ALSO HA VE THE RIGHT to ask any cred.ll
bureau to re-check information in their files.
If the information is incorrect, the credit bureau must
immediately remove it from your file. Ask the bureau to
notify credit.ors who .received. the false lnformallon in the
past six months.
An unfavorable item In your credit file wlll not nag you
forever. In most cases the item must be removed after
seven years. A clean slate after bankruptcy can take 14
years or more.
, I F YOU ARE TURNED DOWN because of inac-
curacies in the repor~ reapply to creditors when all inac-
curacies have been corrected.
Jr you have followed these guidelines and still find you are being turned down without a logical reason, contact
the appropriate local, state and federal authorities who
govern the lender. ·
Check your phone book under U.S. Government for the
Office of Saver and Consumer Affairs at the Federal
Reserve Board; also look for the Federal Trade Com·
rnission·s Bureau of Consumer Protection.
CHECK ALSO FOR THE neares\ local Consumer
Protection Agency and any consumer assistance agency
under your state's Banking Department.
Do not give up requesting credit. Mistakes in credit
files will not be corrected unless you make every effort to
be sure your file is accurate, dean and up to date.
Ne.xt: Mamlaining or re-.est.abli:Jhing (l credit rating.
Stang Hydronics
~Drops Earnings
For the 12 months ended Sept. 30, Stang Hydronics Inc ..
San Clemente, has reported. net income of $556,320 from re-
venues of $14,074,086, compared with net income of
$1 ,227,025 from revenues of $15,206,926 for the same period
~~-.
This represents 73 cents a share for the 12 monthe based
upon a weighted average of 759,860 outstanding shares,
compared with $1.62 a share for the same _period in 1976 on a
weighted average of 758,230 outstanding shares.
For the fourth quarter ended Sept. 30, Stang bas reporl·
ed net income of $321,028 from revenues of $3,638,174, com-
pared with net income of $418,329 from revenues of
$3,924,582 for the same period in 1976.
Earnings per s hare were 42 cents Cor the fourth quarter.
baaed on 760, 760 outstanding shares, compared with SS cents
a share on total shares outstanding of 758,360 tor tbe s ame
period tn 1976.
William J. Stock.
president, said that
( T'.6.KJNG J although the results a achieved in 1977 were
STOCK leas than satisfactory.
_ _ they we.re about as an·
-----------tlclpated from business
trends established
tbrou1hout tbe year. The overview for the business in 1978 appears more
favorable than it did a t this Ume tut year, be said.
Stang specializes in dewaterinl 1y1tems for the con-
s truction industry. It also provides pumps and pumping
ayatems, pollution control equipment, fire fighting equip-
ment and commercial aircraft ground support equipment
tor other lnduttrial and commercial markets.
Golden Weat Btlfl• Site•
Golden West Homes, Santa Ana, has purchaled a 10.
acre site in Chino and alaned an 11ret1ment to aequire • elmllar size site in P endleton, Ore.. where it lntenda to
build mobile home manufacturing facilities.
Golden West will belln cooatructlon tmmedi1telt on a
12 000.square-foot plant. In Chlno, which should be complet-ed ln JuJy. The company plans to transfer production of its
Kin•aton and Somerset product lines from a 50,000.squU'CI·
foot leased facility Sn PUlterton to the now plant 1n Cblno.
ln Pendleton, the company plans to commence con-
atruetioo on a 72,CJOO.equ.are-foot faclllty lo April. and lt 11
anUC?ipatecl tbat operations wlll be&iJ1 In November or
December of next year.
At tho oreao.n plant. the comp&r\1 will .Produce ftl Key
Bbcayne, Key West alld C•lnlo proc!uct lln~1 which are
not C'fl'rC~ ottcud to cUJtomota lJl lD• Pac.trle
Nort.bnst.
Sll6AE •• SeD Slftll
Direct.on of San Djjp O• Ir Elecitrlc Co. llan
auUtoflllcd the ule and b1u.meo of up to 1~,000 aha.res or pme'l'te4~ .. . . •
Tbc 1tbc!k wDI be otterid for 11.lt In Febru1r1. 1978. SDGU trill us.e moa.., r.JMd f10m the ottmnt to PaJ ott
a POftlan ol the COIUP"D3''• &bort·teJ?n debt and IO cont.lbue t.be~~ram.
The board a.1IO ddelu.d • qun.tfy dlridUd of 34
t'ellb a ~ • t.be COtDP<J'• fOmmOD 1t.Ock. payable
Ju. u '° ............ Cll ...-.s ~ l1i D77. 'l1Wt dlfi4d.llv..MmiM&Wi»&idJath01UtQ.u&rW • .
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Orange C oast
Slates Series
Orange Coast Coll('ge will prc:.ent a four-part
.January lecture series titled "Television -An In-
ner Space Adventure and Outer Space Retreat.
The :.crres meets <in successive f-'riday even·
rngs, heJ,:mnmg Jan. 6, from 7 .30 to 9.30 in OCC's
Fine Arts Hall 119. Adm1ss1on 1s free and the public
1s invited to attend.
SERIES LECTURE RS MILT AND Ann-
'.\1 ane McMenamin will look at television from a
J1l•rs1wC'll\C ru; educators, pt·rformers, researchers
.end "nlt>rs.
11 t• '" d1retlor of dr:1 ma al Long Beach Jordan ll1~h ancl has ht•<.'n a r.id111·TV performer. writer,
rt'Sl•arl'ht•r mul :.idmin1stral0r. as 11.cll as a teacher
for 20 ~ears She is a dr.cm.:i director at Lakewood
l11gh St·hool and an a rln•ss. TV script researcher,
rhon·ographcr. mood J nd theater d1 rector
TUF. SERIES WJl.L INU,UDE several guest
t•e h•hnt1es and a nl•lwork studio tour
ThC' opt•ning lecture, nn Jan 6, w11l look at what
n·searC'h and lt•gislatwn huve to say about violence
on television. The M<·Meni.tmins will explain how
and why programs influ1•nre the habits of children .
The .Jan. 13 scsswn will lake a glimpse behind
the scenes tn :;l'C how klcv1sion's comedies, 1
dramas, sports, ~amt•s. news and documentaries
are produced :.in<.! whal mukes them "com ·
mt-rcial."
A LOOK AT HOW MINORITIES use TV as an
1nstrumcnt or social chanSle and how screen
11ersonalit1es b<'comc heroes and heroines will be
presented J an 20.
The final lecture. Jan. 27, will look at telPvision
technology and what the fu ture holds for the in-
dustry
F or information about th<' series, phone
556-5880.
Rite Wronged
Police Seize Body
MORRIS TOWNSHIP, N. J . CAP> -Burial
services for a Morristown man were interrupted
when police seized the body moments before it was
to be lowered into a grave.
Police took the body to the county medical ex-
aminer for an a utopsy because or suspicions that
Vi.ru:ent C1raldo, 65, may have died as the result of a
robbery and beating. The autopsy results disproved
the re port, authoriUes said.
A PALL BEARER SAID one of the officials who
confiscated the body during services at the Holy
Rood Cemetery here told the mourners, "I'm Crom
.Ute medical e xaminer's office and we nttd that body ."
Suspicions were raised after Ciraldo, who was
delltiOllS frotn lack of food and suffering insulin
-shocJc, called police Fttday and said he had been
' -robbed, authorities said. Ciraldo later changed his
story and said there had been no robbery. Saturday.
he died of a heart attack while hospitalized.
ON TUESDAY, AT ABOUT the same time a
Mass was being celebrated, a Morristown
policeman beard rumors that Ciraldo died as a re-
sult of a beating. Pollce asked for an autopsy, and
representatives of the county medical examiner
, rushed to the cem etery.
I, After the autopsy, ClraJdo•s body was released 1__ by authorities and he was buried.
r·Fake Gun, Bomb
Stirs Council
,
/
perfect
combination ...
S.Curlly and ease of utel
/ Ourab4e. strong Master com·
Dln8110n IOClt M 1500
/
Reg 2 89
1aa
attractive
klller
Attracts and kllla detttuchve
snallt and slugs Avallable tn
2'h-fb. box of pellets ;Jf meal.
Reg 1.39 ggc
I.
you saw right!
we've cut the price!
Black & Decker's new and versatile 5'h-inch cir-
cular saw for almost all of your home and
workshop building projects. Double Insulated. UL
approved. Lightweight. Model #7300.
extend ·your
electric power
Big 25-loot ttxtenalon eotO with 3116
wire. UL approved. heavy duty !Of
all your power uaesl #2516-025.
Reg. 6.15.
311
get carried away
over lhmllolds
Quality, low-profile extruded
aluminum with replacable vtnyt lfl.-
Nrt. In Alacrome e1y1e X. 36-lnch.
Reg. 4.49.
.3aa
extra 12-feet
of power
12-loot 1613 extension cords for use
around home or workshop. #2516-
012. Reg. 3.29 .
211
hang your hang-ups
all over the place
Organize any room, garage,
wortcttlop, n:. Display t>oatd for ~kf'e room! W' thick, 2'x4' board ·-muonne pegboard. Reg. 89". 59c
put your mark
where It counts
8urge11 Vlbro·Marker ... the
electric engrever with power
enough to engrave almost anything!
S.fe and euy to uae. Reg. 7.69.
549
messenger
board
Pin meas.ages to thlt board, blllt,
memos, etc fOf convenience. 12"'x-
16" with wood frame. Reg. 1.89.
111
kids can't
knock tt
Kid-teated Glidden Late• Semi·
Gtou En.,,,.. glvet you a non-
yellowlng, Improved durablllty
enamel fini.tt. Reg. 14.89 gallon.